Conservative News Daily

Congresswoman suggests Hawaii’s primary defense failed in Maui fires.

Amid the Devastating Wildfires,‍ Hawaii’s Warning System Fails

Amid the already ​devastating wildfires raging in Maui, Hawaii, breakdowns in‍ the warning system appear to have exacerbated the catastrophe.

Hawaii Democratic Rep. Jill Tokuda said in a Sunday interview on CBS News that the sirens ⁢used to alert local⁣ occupants of⁣ impending danger “likely did‌ not go off” during the fires.

Tokuda noted that people in ⁢her state rely ⁣so heavily on the alerts that “everybody​ who’s ever lived ‍in ⁢Hawaii knows the warning sirens.”

Testing the First Line of​ Defense

She emphasized that this system is so important that the state tests it monthly.

“It goes off once‍ a month, at the beginning of the month, at ‍12 noon. And it blares. And ⁣if it ​doesn’t, it gets fixed because that is our first line of ⁢defense,” she said.

The sirens seem to have been silent from the beginning of⁢ the fire,⁣ which a Maui County press release said began on Aug.​ 8.

Alternative Warnings

“Neither Maui nor HI-EMA activated warning sirens⁤ on Maui ‌ [went off] ⁣during the wildfire incident,” Hawaii Emergency Services Administration confirmed on Friday, according to⁢ NBC News.

People in harm’s way instead had to rely on cell​ phone, television, and ‌radio⁤ warnings.

These were not available in ‍some places.

Tokuda explained that the very fire that was the cause for the alert took out the​ infrastructure⁢ that was​ necessary to communicate the danger.

“The warning ‌signals that were ‍on cell phones, we had no cell coverage or electricity in some of these ‍areas,” she said.

She pointed out that even had the sirens been activated,⁣ they would have failed to enable ‌residents to make the⁢ appropriate decisions without the availability of cell and television coverage.

“The reality⁤ is with those warning signs, it⁣ tells all of ⁢us to ‌turn on the television or look at our phones or turn on the radio.”

“You might think it’s ‍a tsunami, by the⁢ way, which is our ‌first instinct. You would run towards land, which⁣ in ‌this case would be towards fire.”

Continuing Hardship

Tokuda called the resulting devastation “absolutely heartbreaking,”‍ and Hawaii residents and ⁢visitors alike face continuing hardship in the foreseeable future.

As ​of Monday, Reuters reported that 96 people had died, and officials said the ⁣death toll ​is likely to continue to climb.

“We were never expecting this disaster and​ tragedy,” Tokuda said. “No one ⁢ever does.”

“This is a‍ national crisis.”

The post Hawaii’s ‘First⁣ Line of Defense’ ⁣Likely Failed During Maui Fires, Says Congresswoman appeared first on The Western Journal.



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