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StickyBun said:
Unfortunately, its sound like their warning systems didn't work and water in hydrants was non-existent. Shame on the folks that were in charge of keeping security hazard measures in place. Not sure it could have been prevented but it seems it could have been greatly mitigated. Tragic.
As many may recall, my family lives on Maui.
As Dora passed us to the South, the winds picked up.
Many areas in Maui still have power lines hanging from poles (not our neighborhood),
anyway as soon as the first poles went down, Hawaii Electric SHOULD HAVE SHUT OFF THAT GRID. Once power was disrupted, communications went down over there (We are in Kahului)
But there was NEVER one of those annoying “phone alert things”. We knew nothing of the fires until the morning, watching the news. Two days later, we DID get one of those notifications - telling us what routes were “CLOSED”
Our neighbor two doors down owns Lahaina Pizza Co., Across the street owns Aloha Hats, BOTH on Front street. BOTH now just ash. The video most seen of the flames on the right side of the street was Lahaina Pizza Co. Galleries and jewelry stores, the Banyan tree! The Elementary School all burned. Next door neighbor does the family / newlywed / sunset photography portraits at Hyatt. All are remaining positive, in light of their business losses.
Maroon is correct the “historic” district was a blast furnace, the fire moved so fast people had to abandon their cars, and jobs and flee to the ocean. the boats in the harbor caught fire, and their fuel tanks ruptured, falling debris ignited the gas on to the surface of the water. MANY died in the water, initially sinking, bodies have started to float to the surface / retrieved against the sea walls.
Maui memorial has been tasked to try and identify the remains, but the heat was so intense in many instances there is only ash. dental records in many instances are useless - I guess in intense heat the teeth incinerate also.
Any yes, Carpetbaggers are coming out of the woodwork offering to buy the land that the homes were once on for “pennies on the dollar” all while family members are mourning, and many are still missing.
That said, while all the rich “movie star” folks are yelping “DONT come to Maui” They obviously havent thought it through. Yes, let us recover for a while...BUT...THEN VISITORS NEED TO COME. Lahaina is only a fraction of this beautiful island, South Maui, Hana, Iao, Kapalua, Heleakala, waterfalls, golf, fishing, dining, hikes, bikes....We need you here.
its not bad enough the destruction, but now, IF NO ONE COMES, YOURE PUTTING PEOPLE OUT OF WORK ALSO. There is more to Maui than Lahaina, and for most folks who come here, Lahaina is an afternoon shopping, dining, etc. OTHERWISE, lounge at the pool, enjoy your day at the beach, dine in Kihei, go to Ho’okipa, golf...but we need visitors to help our recovery.
V83