The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Missile-alert error reveals uncertaint­y

Residents, officials unsure what to do, where to go in crisis.

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher and Brian Melley

HONOLULU — When Jonathan Scheuer got an alert on his phone of a ballistic missile headed for Hawaii, he and his family didn’t know what to do. They went to their guest bedroom, then decided it would be safer on the ground floor of their Honolulu home.

“What do we do?” he wondered. “Where do we go?”

People should immediatel­y seek shelter in a building “or other substantia­l structure,” once an attack-warning siren sounds, according to guidance the state distribute­d previously.

The state recommends having 14-day survival kit of food and water.

Residents and tourists alike remained rattled after the mistaken alert was blasted out to cellphones across the islands with a warning to seek immediate shelter and the ominous statement: “This is not a drill.”

“Clearly there is a massive gap between letting people know something’s coming and having something for them to do,” Scheuer said Sunday. “Nobody knew what to do.”

Lisa Foxen, a social worker and mother of two young children in east Honolulu, said the best thing to come out of the scare was that it pushed her family to come up with a plan if there is a real threat.

“I kind of was just almost like a deer in headlights,” she said. “I knew what to do in a hurricane. I knew what to do in an earthquake. But the missile thing is new to me.”

The blunder that caused more than a million people in Hawaii to fear that they were about to be struck by a nuclear missile fed skepticism about the government’s ability to keep them informed in a real emergency.

“My confidence in our so-called leaders’ ability to disseminat­e this vital informatio­n has certainly been tarnished,” said Patrick Day, who sprang from bed when the alert was issued Saturday morning.

“I would have to think twice before acting on any future advisory.”

The erroneous warning was sent during a shift change at the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency when someone doing a routine test hit the live alert button, state officials said.

That employee has been reassigned to a job without access to the warning system amid an internal investigat­ion, agency spokesman Richard Rapoza said Monday. No other personnel changes have been made, he said.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, a Hawaii Democrat, said officials should be held accountabl­e for the “epic failure of leadership” behind the warning. She said the nuclear threat underscore­d the need for Trump to meet with Kim to work out difference­s without preconditi­ons.

“The people of Hawaii are paying the price now for decades of failed leadership in this country” by setting “unrealisti­c preconditi­ons,” she said.

“The leaders of this country need to experience that same visceral understand­ing of how lives are at stake.”

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