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Maui emergency management director defends decision to not sound sirens in fire

Maui County’s emergency management administrator on Wednesday defended the decision not to sound warning sirens in a wind-whipped wildfire that swept into the town of Lahaina.

When asked at a news conference if he regretted not sounding the sirens, Maui County Emergency Management Agency Administrator Herman Andaya replied, “I do not.”

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Questions have been raised about warnings in the wildfires, which have so far killed a confirmed 110 people and devastated the town.

Sirens, located mostly by the coastline, are primarily used for tsunamis, Andaya said.

“The public is trained to seek higher ground in the event that the siren is sounded,” Andaya said.

“Had we sounded the siren that night, we were afraid that people would have gone mauka,” Andaya said, using a term meaning to the mountainside. “And if that’s the case then they would have gone into the fire.”

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The Maui County website about testing of the “All-Hazard Statewide Outdoor Warning Siren System” lists wildfires as among the hazards for which they can be used, as well as hurricanes and volcanic eruptions.

Counties in the state of Hawaii will tell you, that sirens have not been used for brushfires,” Andaya said.

He said the agency’s protocol had been to use two other systems — Wireless Emergency Alert and the Emergency Alert System. Those deal with text messages to phones, as well as messages through televisions and radio.

People in West Maui have said that the power was out before the wildfire erupted. Winds gusted at around 60 mph and more on Aug. 8 when the fires began. Power lines had been knocked down, officials said.

“They didn’t give us no warning. No nothing,” Lisa Panis, a resident of Lahaina, said in a phone interview with NBC News last week. “No siren, no alarms, no nothing.”

A cause of the wildfire has not been determined. The fire that devastated Lahaina was one of three that erupted on the island that day, officials have said.

Hawaii Attorney General Anne Lopez has already said her office will conduct a “comprehensive review of decision-making and standing policies” before and during the wildfires. 

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“We view this as a way to learn and to share, in this case from our tragedy, to share how to best protect people across the planet,” Gov. Josh Green said Wednesday.

Some members of Hawaii’s state Senate are also calling for an independent third-party review.

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