LAHAINA, Hawaii − Marina Sanchez and Dustin Akiona drove through dizzying, winding roads overlooking the ocean, desperate to find a way into Lahaina with the hundreds of dollars worth of supplies they had gathered for their neighbors− water, gas, flashlights, batteries, baby food, diapers. A law enforcement roadblock was making it difficult for people to get into the historic neighborhood that had been nearly leveled days earlier by what has become the deadliest wildfire in recent U.S. history, killing at least 93 people and destroying nearly 2,000 residential buildings.

Sanchez, 28, leaned out the window of the Toyota Tacoma, phone in hand, trying to get enough cell service to post an Instagram story asking for volunteers for help to complete another supply drop.

“I can’t believe they’re making it so hard to go and help people,” Akiona, 31, said Saturday as they inched closer to the checkpoint.

Sanchez told Akiona they would find a way to get to Lahaina with the supplies. 

“Even if I have to swim,” she said.

Five days after the fires began in Maui, residents said it has been difficult to get food, fuel and other resources to those in the worst-hit areas, including the hundreds of people who lost their homes. Law enforcement road closures and slow communication from a government that many accuse of failing to adequately warn them about the fires has prompted residents to create their own aid systems as neighbors turn to one another for shelter and other necessities. 

Neighbors provide food, protection

Residents leaned on one another, too, days before as the fires swept through their neighborhoods.