Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hawaii changes alert protocol after false alarm

Blunder caused panic across islands amid tensions with N. Korea

- Oren Dorell

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said Sunday that people should trust government alert systems as Hawaii announced a new protocol after a false alarm over a ballistic missile threat.

The recent blunder in Hawaii, which set off widespread panic amid escalating tensions with North Korea, was a “very unfortunat­e mistake,” Nielsen said. The emergency alert Saturday morning sounded on hundreds of thousands of cellphones and warned of an imminent missile strike.

Vern Miyagi, administra­tor of Hawaii’s Emergency Management Agency, told USA TODAY he took responsibi­lity for the false alarm and for the 38-minute delay in recalling it. The message read: “Ballistic Missile Threat Inbound To Hawaii. Seek Immediate Shelter. This Is Not A Drill.”

On Saturday officials knew within

three minutes that the error happened, but it took 38 minutes for the message to be sent out by the Emergency Alert System because that button was not programmed and in place, Miyagi said. “That’s on me.”

The agency implemente­d a new alert protocol in the wake of the mishap.

Tests and actual missile launch notificati­ons from now on will require activation and verificati­on by two people, the agency said. And a scripted cancellati­on command has been written and can be issued within seconds of an error, Miyagi said.

Nielsen, speaking on “Fox News Sunday,” said she would hate for anybody not to abide by government warnings. She said the alerts are vital, and she doesn’t want anyone to “draw the wrong conclusion.”

Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard described the trepidatio­n that spread across the island as thousands abandoned cars, ran for cover or cowered in the hallways of their homes in response.

“You can only imagine ... the panic, the terror, the chaos and confusion that ensued when over a million people in Hawaii, plus many visitors who were visiting Hawaii, got that alert on their cellphones,” Gabbard, a Democrat, told ABC News’ George Stephanopo­ulos on Sunday. “Now understand­ing that they literally just have minutes, minutes to say goodbye to their loved ones, to find their loved ones, to try to find some kind for shelter somewhere.”

The drill sowed panic and confusion but also showed that emergency management officials need to step up outreach efforts about what to do in case of a real missile threat, Miyagi said.

People should “shelter in place,” which means immediatel­y putting as much distance and as many concrete barriers as possible between themselves and the outdoors, where deadly radioactiv­e fallout would dissipate after the first day or two, he said.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige also suspended all future drills until Hawaii’s Emergency Management Agency has completed a full analysis of what happened.

“I know first-hand how today’s false alarm affected all of us here in Hawaii, and I am sorry for the pain and confusion it caused,” Ige said in a statement. “I, too, am extremely upset about this and am doing everything I can do to immediatel­y improve our emergency management systems, procedures and staffing.”

The agency issued a timeline Saturday that said the alert went out at 8:07 a.m., two minutes after a drill started a during a shift change.

State Adjutant Maj. Gen. Joe Logan validated with the U.S. Pacific Command that there was no missile launch at 8:10 a.m. and immediatel­y notified the Honolulu Police Department of the false alarm. The governor and the agency relayed the messages by social media, on television news channels and by the Wireless Emergency Alert system by 8:45 a.m., according to the agency’s timeline.

Logan promised a written report, and state lawmakers announced they would hold a hearing next Friday.

Gabbard told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that the incident was a reminder that “we are facing a very real nuclear threat from North Korea.”

Such mistakes in the past brought the U.S. and the Soviet Union to the brink of unintentio­nal nuclear war, she said. People in Washington should be asking, “Why are the people of Hawaii and this country facing this nuclear threat from North Korea today, and what is this president doing urgently to eliminate that threat?” she said.

 ?? GEORGE F. LEE/AP ?? Hawaii Gov. David Ige, left, and Maj. Gen. Joe Logan join a news conference at Diamond Head on Saturday after a false alarm was issued of a missile launch on Hawaii.
GEORGE F. LEE/AP Hawaii Gov. David Ige, left, and Maj. Gen. Joe Logan join a news conference at Diamond Head on Saturday after a false alarm was issued of a missile launch on Hawaii.
 ?? EPA-EFE ?? This screenshot shows the actual emergency warning sent to residents of Hawaii on Saturday morning. It was recalled more than half an hour later.
EPA-EFE This screenshot shows the actual emergency warning sent to residents of Hawaii on Saturday morning. It was recalled more than half an hour later.

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