PAHOA, Hawaii — Here’s the latest on lava pouring out from fissures caused by Kilauea volcano on the Big Island :
2:30 p.m. Hawaii County officials sent out an emergency alert ordering all remaining residents of Lanipuna Gardens, where a few hundred residents live, to evacuate.
1:30 p.m. County officials say two new lava fissures have opened in a community where some two dozen homes have burned down. County Acting Mayor Wil Okabe says after a pause in volcanic activity Tuesday the two new fissures bring the total to 14. Residents of the Leilani Estates subdivision were evacuated last week after a volcano eruption led to the first fissure opening on a street. A nearby subdivision was also forced to evacuate.
Officials warn that hazardous fumes continue to be released from the cracks in the ground.
Hawaii Gov. David Ige says he has called the White House and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to tell officials that he believes the state will need federal help with the lava.
8:10 a.m. Scientists confirm that volcanic activity has paused at all 12 fissures that opened up in a Hawaii community and oozed lava that burned 35 structures.
Officials warn that hazardous fumes continue to be released from the cracks in the ground.
Residents of the Leilani Estates subdivision were evacuated last week after the first fissure opened on a street.
They’re being allowed back to check on their properties again on Tuesday. Officials say they may return from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day until further notice.
The nearby subdivision of Lanipuna Gardens was also forced to evacuate. Officials aren’t allowing those residents back in because of dangerous volcanic gases.
The Hawaii County Civil Defense agency has set up a community information center at a church.
4:10 a.m. Hawaii Gov. David Ige says he has called the White House and the Federal Emergency Management Authority to tell officials that he believes the state will need federal help to deal with the erupting volcano that has spewed lava from fissures and prompted evacuations.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige speaks at a community meeting Monday in Pahoa, Hawaii. Two new cracks in the ground emitting lava and gas have opened up in a Hawaii community where multiple structures have burned down.
AP
The eruption and lava has destroyed 26 homes.
Evacuated residents do not know how long they will be displaced.
Ige says he made the calls to federal officials because he believes it “was very important that we assure that state, federal and county assets would be available to keep” residents safe.
12 a.m. As Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano spews lava and forces the evacuation of nearby homes, it can be difficult for people not from the Big Island to understand why anyone would risk living near an active volcano with such destructive power.
But the people here are largely self-sufficient and understand the risks of their location.
The slopes of Kilauea offer a lush rural setting and affordable land that contrasts sharply with Hawaii’s more expensive real estate.
Living on one of the world’s most active volcanoes comes with risks.
A dozen lava vents have opened in streets of the Puna district and 35 structures have burned.
The Puna district is a region of mostly unpaved roads of volcanic rock about a 30-minute drive from the coastal town of Hilo.
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