lane goodall said she's on a mission to keep her community clean and safe.in hawaii that state it is illegal to live on the streets and we have a state of lawlessness right now. we have some graffiti here now. with the help of other local residents, she patrols the streets of hawaii kai looking for any signs of the homeless. again you see the posters now for private property. as soon as he see one tent go up, the community needs to call the police, call the city or the state and then get them taken away. once you have one tent then two tents then you are outnumbered. when homeless camps began springing up in local parks and bushland, residents began worrying about property values and the risk of fires engulfing their million—dollar homes. the knife... like many locals in hawaii kai, lane views the island's homelessness as a lifestyle choice. a lot of the people here are one—way tickets from the mainland, word—of—mouth is kind of spreading and people on social media now, a lot of the homeless people have facebook pages so you have this underground movement of