Current:Home > FinanceTrendPulse|Hawaii Gov. Josh Green calls ex-emergency manager's response "utterly unsatisfactory to the world" -InvestTomorrow
TrendPulse|Hawaii Gov. Josh Green calls ex-emergency manager's response "utterly unsatisfactory to the world"
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-10 00:49:36
Washington — Hawaii Gov. Josh Green said Sunday he wished sirens would have TrendPulsealerted residents on Maui to evacuate as a wildfire quickly spread through Lahaina, calling the response by the island's now former emergency chief "utterly unsatisfactory to the world."
"Of course, as a person, as a father, as a doctor, I wish all the sirens went off," Green told "Face the Nation." "The challenge that you've heard — and it's not to excuse or explain anything — the challenge has been that historically, those sirens are used for tsunamis."
"Do I wish those sirens went off? Of course I do," he said. "I think that the answer that the emergency administrator from Maui, who's resigned, was of course utterly unsatisfactory to the world. But it is the case that that we've historically not used those kinds of warnings for fires."
- Transcript: Hawaii Gov. Josh Green on "Face the Nation"
Herman Andaya, the head of the Maui Emergency Management Agency, resigned Thursday following significant criticism for the agency's response to the Lahaina wildfire and the failure to sound the island's warning sirens to alert residents to evacuate.
When asked Wednesday if he regretted not activating the sirens, Andaya said, "I do not." He said there was concern that if the sirens were activated that people would have evacuated toward the fire because they are typically used to warn of tsunamis. Instead, warnings were set via text, television and radio, he said. But residents reported receiving none of those alerts because power had been knocked out in the area.
Hawaii's official government website also lists a number of disasters, including wildfires, that the sirens can be used for.
Green said there are still more than 1,000 people unaccounted for and it could take several weeks to identify the remains, and in some cases some remains may be impossible to identify. He also said it's possible "many children" are among the dead.
The cause of the wildfires is under investigation, and Green said he did not know whether power lines that were in need of an upgrade were to blame. But he said the consequences of human error are amplified by climate change.
"We have to ask the question on every level of how any one city, county, state could have done better and the private sector," he said. "This is the world that we live in now."
"There's no excuses to ever be made," he said. "But there are finite resources sometimes in the moment."
- In:
- Hawaii Wildfires
- Maui
Caitlin Yilek is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital. Reach her at [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter: https://twitter.com/hausofcait
TwitterveryGood! (8)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Utah man killed after threats against Biden believed government was corrupt and overreaching
- 'No real warning': As Maui fire death toll rises to 55, questions surface over alerts. Live updates
- In Oklahoma, Native American women struggle to access emergency contraception
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- St. Louis activists praise Biden’s support for compensation over Manhattan Project contamination
- So-far unfixable problem with 2023 Ford Explorer cameras frustrates customers, dealers
- UPS says drivers to make $170,000 in pay and benefits following union deal
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Last chance to pre-order new Samsung Galaxy devices—save up to $1,000 today
Ranking
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Statewide preschool initiative gets permanent approval as it enters 25th year in South Carolina
- 3 hunters found dead in underground reservoir in Texas were trying to rescue dog, each other
- Sweden stakes claim as Women’s World Cup favorite by stopping Japan 2-1 in quarterfinals
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- San Francisco 49ers almost signed Philip Rivers after QB misfortune in NFC championship
- Target recalls more than 2 million scented candles after reports of glass shattering during use
- Lauren Aliana Details Her Battle With an Eating Disorder as a Teen on American Idol
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
2023 Atlantic hurricane outlook worsens as ocean temperatures hit record highs, forecasters say
Target recalls more than 2 million scented candles after reports of glass shattering during use
Disney plans to hike streaming prices, join Netflix in crack down on subscription sharing
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Texas judge says no quick ruling expected over GOP efforts to toss 2022 election losses near Houston
Northern Ireland’s top police officer apologizes for ‘industrial scale’ data breach
With hundreds lost in the migrant shipwreck near Greece, identifying the dead is painfully slow