USA TODAY US Edition

Hawaii worker reassigned after bungled missile alert

- John Bacon

A Hawaii emergency management employee was reassigned and the state agency he works for has received death threats amid fallout from the botched ballistic missile alert that triggered panic across the island paradise, officials said Monday.

The 10-year employee has been temporaril­y reassigned, pending an investigat­ion into the incident, to a job that “does not provide access to the warning system,” the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency said in a statement.

The agency created to protect the lives of Hawaiians now must also deal with death threats. Emergency management spokesman Richard Rapoza confirmed to USA TODAY that the agency received the threats via anonymous telephone calls.

“We understand that members of our community are angry about Saturday’s false alarm, and we are looking at these messages as individual­s blowing off steam,” Rapoza said in a statement. “While we take any threat against our personnel seriously, we are doing our best not to escalate the situation.”

Hawaii is about 4,500 miles from Pyongyang, and the vocal military threats from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un are taken seriously by state officials. The state has been working to upgrade the missile warning program.

The chaos began Saturday at 8:05 a.m. during a routine internal test involving the state’s much-ballyhooed Emergency Alert System. But the employee hit the live-alert button by mistake, and at 8:07 a.m. this alert was erroneousl­y pushed to cellphones across the state: “Missile threat inbound to Hawaii. Seek immediate shelter. This is not a drill.”

Three minutes later, the agency had confirmed that there was in fact no missile threat. Police were quickly notified and social media announced the mistake. But the text explaining the error wasn’t sent for 38 minutes, in part because no such text had been prescripte­d.

Finally came this missive: “There is no missile threat or danger to the State of Hawaii. Repeat. False Alarm.”

The confusion resulted in controlled bedlam as Hawaiians dashed for cover, hid in basements and reached out to friends and loved ones.

In Manoa, the Durkin family huddled in an undergroun­d bunker built in their home after the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.

“We just started throwing supplies into the bomb shelter and closed the top and got on our phones to look for updates,” Paraluman Stice-Durkin told Hawaii News Now.

Gov. David Ige quickly issued an apology for the alert.

Changes are already underway. Alerts now will require activation and verificati­on by two people, the agency said. And a cancellati­on command has been written and can be issued within seconds of an error.

Federal Communicat­ions Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said his agency is investigat­ing.

“Based on the informatio­n we have collected so far, it appears that the government of Hawaii did not have reasonable safeguards or process controls in place,” Pai said.

 ?? CALEB JONES/AP ?? The above alert was sent in error Saturday across Hawaii.
CALEB JONES/AP The above alert was sent in error Saturday across Hawaii.

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