Los Angeles Times

Late warning

Emergency cellphone warnings didn’t go out until after mudslides started

- By Joseph Serna

Emergency alerts reportedly weren’t sent until around when the mudslides hit.

Santa Barbara County officials chose not to send an emergency alert to cellphones warning of mudslides until destructiv­e flooding had already begun in Montecito, officials said Wednesday.

The message, similar to an Amber Alert for abducted children, was sent about 3:50 a.m. Tuesday to all registered cellphones in areas that were under voluntary and mandatory evacuation­s because of heavy rains that threatened mudflows in the wake of the Thomas fire, officials said.

It’s unclear how many people actually got the alert. But by then, tons of mud, trees, rocks and other debris were rolling down hills that had been burned in the largest fire on record in California. At least 17 people died, and more than 100 homes were destroyed in the slides.

Jeff Gater, Santa Barbara County’s emergency manager, said the alert was sent because of deteriorat­ing conditions and followed one issued by the National Weather Service. Officials expected heavy rain, but the downpour was much worse than anticipate­d and it became clear mudslides were occurring.

In the days leading up to the storm, the county had issued numerous warnings about the possibilit­y of mudflows on the county’s website and social media, through news outlets and

via community informatio­n emails that residents can sign up to receive. Gater said more than 200,000 emails and other warning messages were sent out. But the county decided not to use the push alert system to cellphones, out of concern that it might not be taken seriously.

“If you tell everyone to get out, everyone get out, the next time people won’t listen,” he said. “If you cry wolf, people stop listening.”

Deadly natural disasters in California over the last few months have sparked debate over how best to warn the public about an impending safety threat. More than 40 people died in October when fires swept through the wine country. Some residents said they got little or no warning, in part because Sonoma County decided not to use the cellphone bulletins as the fire approached Santa Rosa subdivisio­ns.

The wine country fires, as well as December’s Thomas fire, highlighte­d weaknesses in emergency warning systems that officials are now trying to address. Among the problems: Cellphone alerts are not getting to those targeted, and television warnings are not being broadcast properly.

It’s unclear how many people would have heeded an emergency evacuation order had it been issued earlier in Montecito. Numerous residents said they knew about the mudslide risk from warnings but decided to stay in their homes anyway. Some said that after fleeing from fire in December, they doubted the rains would pose much of a risk.

David Cradduck, 66, was one of many people in his Montecito neighborho­od who stayed.

“I think all of us have learned our lessons on this one. We were all bad children and ignored the warning,” he said.

After the fires, some said they had disaster fatigue.

“We were all tired of it,” Cradduck said. “Now here we are, shovels in hand, trying to get our vehicles out. Mother Nature came back and dealt us a big blow, but it’s our fault. We should have heeded the warning.”

Gater was also skeptical about whether more alerts could have changed minds, especially in the early morning hours when many people were asleep.

“A lot of people don’t listen to their phones when they go to bed,” he said. “That’s why we messaged people on Sunday for something that was 30 hours away.”

Mandatory evacuation orders issued Sunday had focused on foothill communitie­s home to about 7,000 people above Montecito, areas closer to where the Thomas fire had burned. Deputies had gone door-todoor there Monday night, including in Romero Canyon, where scores were stranded Tuesday and Wednesday after the mudslides.

Voluntary evacuation orders were issued at the same time for about 23,000 others, including in some neighborho­ods where mudflows buried homes and killed people.

“This isn’t an exact science in terms of actually defining where something is going to happen,” Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown told reporters Tuesday. “Obviously a lot depends on Mother Nature — the magnitude of the rainfall, the magnitude of the mudslides.”

Gater said that although research by the county and by federal experts suggested mudflows were likely to result from the storm, officials didn’t think they would go as far south as they did. Debris from the burned areas overwhelme­d creeks, sending the flow into neighborho­ods and then onto the 101 Freeway.

Despite the destructio­n, Gater said, he believes the warnings and preparatio­ns paid off.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? MUD AND debris clog the 101 Freeway in Montecito on Wednesday. Santa Barbara County officials chose not to send an emergency cellphone alert until about 3:50 a.m. Tuesday, though more than 200,000 emails and other warning messages were sent out before...
Al Seib Los Angeles Times MUD AND debris clog the 101 Freeway in Montecito on Wednesday. Santa Barbara County officials chose not to send an emergency cellphone alert until about 3:50 a.m. Tuesday, though more than 200,000 emails and other warning messages were sent out before...
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? OFFICIALS said they worried early morning phone alerts for potential mudslides wouldn’t be taken seriously. Above, a firefighte­r Wednesday searches for victims.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times OFFICIALS said they worried early morning phone alerts for potential mudslides wouldn’t be taken seriously. Above, a firefighte­r Wednesday searches for victims.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? MUDFLOWS surround two destroyed Montecito homes. After last month’s Thomas fire, some residents said, they had disaster fatigue when rains neared. “We should have heeded the warning,” one said.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times MUDFLOWS surround two destroyed Montecito homes. After last month’s Thomas fire, some residents said, they had disaster fatigue when rains neared. “We should have heeded the warning,” one said.

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