Having been interviewed by the Honolulu Advertiser for its series on emergency preparedness, we waited for the paper’s delivery wondering how it would play the story. Would it focus on comments from the state’s high-gloss press conference on Saturday or dig deeper? The very first paragraph set our mind at ease:
“Persistent questions remain unanswered about the state’s plan to communicate with residents in the event of another devastating natural disaster such as the Oct. 15 quakes, say critics who complained bitterly about what seemed like an information vacuum during the 24-hour outage following the quakes.”
Paragraph 2 highlighted residents’ upset over State Civil Defense’s delay in allying fears about a possible tsunami. Paragraph 4 mentioned HECO’s two-hour delay in explaining why the power was out throughout Oahu, and the following paragraph questioned how information will be given to residents quickly.
Seeing It the Same Way
It’s clear others share at least some of CHORE’s perspective on the 10/15/06 communications failures. It’s also interesting that after their prolonged argumentative defensiveness in the face of criticism of their performance, some of the key players in the communications chain now seem contrite.
The general manager of all Clear Channel stations said the Clear Channel staff has been given new training. “We assessed what we did. We always try to improve. We’re going to work hard to do a better job,” he said.
That refreshing attitude is also a noticeable shift from his earlier somewhat self-satisfied descriptions of how flagship station KSSK performed during the emergency. One would hope it’s evidence of a new emergency mindset among all station personnel, including on-air personalities who seemed to be stuck in entertainment mode during the blackout. (Maybe this is the last time that we’ll recall KSSK’s decision to air the pre-recorded John Tesh show while half the island was still without power.)
HECO says it is assessing ways to prioritize restoring power to media outlets so information can flow quicker, and it has installed a direct communications link to emergency station KSSK. The utility, along with other emergency responders, now has a list of unpublished radio station telephone numbers so its personnel can get through during a crisis. (As noted here several times, that’s a lesson we learned at HECO during Hurricane Iwa 25 years ago!)
Even the State Adjutant General says in this story, “We’re going to get on the air right away,” a concession that State Civil Defense personnel were slow in providing information to the public.
Ah, Yes – the Public
The Advertiser story concludes with our continuing concern that the public has been shut out of the dialogue over how we’re to be served with emergency communications. “This (Comprehensive Communications Review) committee was a committee of insiders. The process still has a weak link until the public has a chance to ask questions.”
CHORE urges fellow citizens with similar concerns to call the Governor’s office to register your support for a public meeting on the emergency response plan.
CHORE was launched in 2006 after officials responding to an earthquake emergency obviously didn't measure up; see CHORE's earliest posts. Their performance left an opening for average citizens to weigh in with experience-based suggestions to improve crisis communications. The many deaths recorded after California's wildfires also revealed gaps in officials' ability to communicate effectively. Visitors are invited to comment with their own ideas.
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