Trimmer dies after fall from tree at Waikiki hotel

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

HONOLULU — A tree trimmer has died after falling about 40 feet during work at a Waikiki resort, officials said.

HONOLULU — A tree trimmer has died after falling about 40 feet during work at a Waikiki resort, officials said.

Reid Barcelona, 26, of Honolulu was trimming a coconut tree Monday night when he fell, his mother, Stasia Barcelona, said Tuesday. He landed on the pool deck at the Hilton Hawaiian Village, said EMS District Chief Colin Wong.

Barcelona was the fourth tree trimmer to die in the state since January 2011. Five died between November 2009 and November 2011, and three between January 2011 and July 2011, said William Kunstman, spokesman for the state Department of Labor and Industrial Relations.

The Hawaii Occupational Safety and Health Division will investigate the death, which the medical examiner’s office said was an accident. Police do not suspect foul play.

In response to the spate of deaths, the state and the Aloha Arborists Association held a series of tree care safety workshops on Oahu, the Big Island and Maui, Kunstman said.

In November, the state recommended penalties of $10,000 for a Maui landscaping company after an investigation found one of the company’s tree trimmers fell to his death from a coconut tree while using a rusty line patched with duct tape. In September, a 71-year-old tree trimmer died after a coconut tree fell on him in Kailua, Oahu.

Tree trimming was Barcelona’s “niche,” a career he began three years ago with Weslynn Specialty Contractor, owned by a family friend, his mother said.

“He liked being outdoors,” she said. “He didn’t want to be indoors. He liked the fresh air, the scenery.”

The Kailua company’s owner, Wesley Jay, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Stasia Barcelona said her son looked up to his boss, who was very cautious, and dreamed of someday taking over the business.

“There’s no way anyone was at fault that we’re going to blame,” she said. “Every day climbing those trees, it’s not easy.”