KDH News covers government, military, education, crime, sports, political and other news in the Killeen-Fort Hood area.
Homeowners association president Larry Veray poses for a photo at his Waiau Gardens Kai B townhomes in Pearl City, O’ahu, Hawaii, Wednesday, May 27, 2026.
Cars are parked in front of Waiau Gardens Kai townhomes in Pearl City, Hawaii, Wednesday, May 27, 2026.
Homeowners association president Larry Veray poses for a photo at his Waiau Gardens Kai B townhomes in Pearl City, O’ahu, Hawaii, Wednesday, May 27, 2026.
Cars are parked in front of Waiau Gardens Kai townhomes in Pearl City, Hawaii, Wednesday, May 27, 2026.
Larry Veray had a plan to bring cheaper, cleaner energy to his townhome complex in Pearl City at no cost to residents.
As president of the Waiau Gardens Kai B homeowners’ association, Veray prides himself on keeping association fees low while building reserve funds, and he wasn’t about to ask homeowners to bear the cost of outfitting the complex with solar panels and battery storage units.
Instead, Veray found a way to save the planet and cut electricity costs for homeowners without asking them to pay more.
But Waiau Gardens Kai’s seemingly perfect deal came crashing down on May 8, the last day of the legislative session. Lawmakers put a $40 million cap on the state’s solar energy tax credit program, which normally awards about $100 million annually. Making matters worse, the cap is retroactive to 2026, meaning projects that got underway with the promise of a tax credit to make things pencil out face uncertainty.
“What the state did was basically shoot the project in the head,” Veray says.
The solar energy industry is now rallying to save large commercial and industrial projects like the one proposed for Waiau Gardens Kai and hundreds of others like it. The industry’s trade group has called for a special session so lawmakers can fix at least the part of the bill that makes it retroactive to 2026.
Cuts to the solar tax credits fly in the face of Hawaiʻi state law, which requires all of the electricity sold in the state to be produced with renewable resources by 2045. Gov. Josh Green has promised to do something, but administration officials say it’s too early to say exactly what.
Rocky Mould, executive director of the Hawaiʻi State Energy Association, said he’s encouraged by Green’s promise to help. But he said investors need answers soon.
“We need a clear assurance to the market that the tax credits will be there for projects that already started this year,” he said. “We’re in an emergency, and we need help.”
Officially called the Renewable Energy Technologies Income Tax Credit, the solar tax credit lets taxpayers subtract 35% of the cost of a solar system from their income tax bills. It includes large solar systems for commercial and industrial facilities, like shopping centers and warehouses that produce the electricity, but not the so-called utility-scale solar farms that produce electricity and sell it to Hawaiian Electric Co.
Credits for rooftop residential properties are capped at $5,000 per property.
While the credit is just one of nine the Legislature established to encourage certain industries or economic activities, the solar credit is by far the largest. The state has awarded $1.36 billion in credits since 2006, according to the Hawaiʻi Department of Taxation, including more than $100 million in 2023, according to the department’s most recent data. That compares to $43.5 million in credits to support film and television production.
So when lawmakers were looking for ways to avoid raising income taxes this past session, they capped the solar tax credit at $40 million per year through 2030, after which it will be eliminated entirely.
The move came as a shock to the solar industry, Mould said, particularly the provision that makes the $40 million credit cap retroactive to 2026. That means projects recently completed or placed under contract almost certainly won’t get what they were expecting.
The eight largest solar companies alone had lined up 265 commercial projects in 2026, Mould said, and had locked in $436 million in private capital. Now projects are simply pulling out, and solar industry proponents worry many will follow.
“That’s just a sample,” Mould said. “We’re not even talking about the residential market.”
In the case of Waiau Gardens Kai, Veray turned to Ted Peck, a former director of the Hawaiʻi State Energy Office, to craft a deal: A private investor agreed to pay for a large solar system, which Peck’s Holu Hou Energy LLC would install, and lease it to Waiau Gardens Kai for 25 years. Residents who signed up — Veray says 88 out of 114 residents joined — would lock in a 20% discount on their electric bills for the life of the lease.
Following the legislative action, Veray says, the investor has pulled out.
As chief executive of the Hawaiʻi Primary Care Association, Emily Chung manages 14 federally qualified health centers providing essential healthcare to more than 160,000 Hawaiʻi residents annually on Oʻahu and all the neighbor islands.
The association in 2026 had plans to install solar with battery systems to power five health centers, including Waimānalo Health Center and Wahiawā Health on Oʻahu. Working with Collective Energy Co. LLC, the association had plans to roll out the initiative to all of its centers over time, Chung says. But the Legislature’s budget bill put that in jeopardy.
“It’s going to be really difficult for us,” she said. “We’re trying to adjust to the new reality if there’s no special session to fix it.”
While the solar industry was hardly the only loser this past session, the tax credit change not only strikes a targeted blow to the state’s renewables mandate but runs against the intent of another of the governor’s policies.
In 2025, Green issued an executive order establishing a state policy “to maximize distributed solar energy paired with battery storage, with the goal of dispatchable solar generation on every rooftop and parking area on land constrained Oʻahu by 2045.” That included facilitating installation of at least 50,000 solar-plus-battery storage installations by 2045.
With all of that now at risk, Green’s administration is looking for answers.
“We’re definitely working on it,” said Mark Glick, director of the Hawaiʻi State Energy Office. But, he added, “It’s too early to share details.”
This story was originally published by Honolulu Civil Beat and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
For copyright information, check with the distributor of this item, Honolulu Civil Beat.
Area police reports indicated:
Police have disclosed the name of the suspect in Wednesday’s shooting in Copperas Cove. Davarious Jashawn Lee, 18, has been charged with aggravated assault causing serious bodily injury, a first-degree felony.
A lockdown at Chaparral High School on Wednesday afternoon was triggered by nearby police activity that ended with the arrest of a man who allegedly flashed a handgun and threatened a group of juveniles, authorities said.
Two suspects have been arrested in connection with the fatal shooting of Sedell Barrios, 19, of Harker Heights in March.
Police responded to a report of shots fired just after 8 a.m. Wednesday which sparked a lockdown at four Copperas Cove ISD campuses.
Area police reports indicated:
FORT HOOD — An Army doctor accused of extensive sexual misconduct appeared at a preliminary hearing Tuesday outlining the evidence against him.
The Killeen mayor and other city leaders issued a statement of support for the community following the shooting death of an area high school student at Fort Hood’s Belton Lake Outdoor Recreation Area during Memorial Day weekend.
Your browser is out of date and potentially vulnerable to security risks.
We recommend switching to one of the following browsers:
Sorry, an error occurred.
Already Subscribed!
Cancel anytime
Account processing issue – the email address may already exist
Must be at least 8 characters, not contain repeating characters (e.g., 111), and not contain sequential numbers (e.g., 123).
Would you like to receive our daily news? Signup today!
Would you like to receive our daily news? Signup today for the Copperas Cove Herald!
Sign up to receive a daily list of Obituary notifications.
Would you like to receive our daily news? Signup today for the Fort Hood Herald!
Would you like to receive our daily news? Signup today for the Harker Heights Herald!
Would you like to receive sports news from all the schools we cover? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Copperas Cove Bulldawgs? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Belton Tigers? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Ellison Eagles? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Florence Buffaloes? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Gatesville Hornets? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Harker Heights knights? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Killeen Kangaroos? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Lampasas Badger? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Lometa Hornets? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Midway Panthers? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Salado Eagles? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Would you like to receive news about the Shoemaker Grey Wolves? Signup today!
Sports Updates Tuesday – Saturday
Thank you .
Your account has been registered, and you are now logged in.
Check your email for details.
Invalid password or account does not exist
Submitting this form below will send a message to your email with a link to change your password.
An email message containing instructions on how to reset your password has been sent to the email address listed on your account.
No promotional rates found.
Secure & Encrypted
Must be at least 8 characters, not contain repeating characters (e.g., 111), and not contain sequential numbers (e.g., 123).
Secure transaction. Secure transaction. Cancel anytime.
Thank you.
Your gift purchase was successful! Your purchase was successful, and you are now logged in.
A receipt was sent to your email.