Current:Home > MarketsNew report highlights Maui County mayor in botched wildfire response -Profound Wealth Insights
New report highlights Maui County mayor in botched wildfire response
View
Date:2025-04-17 21:09:06
A report from Hawaii Attorney General Anne Lopez focused on the actions of the Maui County mayor in the response to the devastating wildfire last summer that killed more than 100 people and razed the historic town of Lahaina.
The nearly 400-page investigative report released Wednesday raises new and troubling questions about Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen and his response to the blazes.
"This is about never letting this happen again," Lopez said in a news conference, emphasizing the report is not meant to point fingers.
As hurricane-force winds raged on Aug. 8, 2023, igniting fires, several schools closed and the state was preparing an emergency proclamation.
But at multiple times during the day, Bissen said declaring an emergency was "not necessary." At 3:15 p.m., as the fire grew in intensity, state officials tried to reach him, asking if he was in the emergency operations center. They were told "no."
Instead, with reports trickling in on social media, Bissen finally signed the emergency order at 8 p.m. that night, hours after Lahaina burned down.
Last August, CBS News confronted Bissen, who had admitted not calling Maj. Gen. Kenneth Hara, the director of the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency.
"I can't speak to what — or whose responsibility it was to communicate directly," Bissen responded at the time. "…I can't say who was responsible for communicating with General Hara."
Along with killing more than 100 people, the Maui fire destroyed thousands of homes and businesses. The staggering economic loss is estimated at more than $5.5 billion.
"Very little was done to prevent something like this from happening," Sherman Thompson, former chair of the Hawaii Civil Defense Advisory Council, told CBS News Wednesday.
When asked if the government response was negligent, Sherman responded, "I think it crossed the border, it crossed the line."
CBS News has reached out to Bissen's office for comment, but has not heard back. However, Bissen posted a statement to the county website Wednesday evening which read, in part:
"We understand the state Attorney General's investigation and the hard work that Fire Safety Research Institute put into describing the nation's worst wildfire disaster in modern history. Today's Phase One report can help piece together what other fire-stricken jurisdictions have called the most complex megafire they have ever seen."
"I remain committed to bringing Lahaina residents back home so they can take additional steps toward healing," he added.
- In:
- Hawaii Wildfires
- Maui
- Lahaina
- Wildfire
- Hawaii
Jonathan Vigliotti is a CBS News correspondent based in Los Angeles. He previously served as a foreign correspondent for the network's London bureau.
TwitterveryGood! (79)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Oregon man sentenced to death for 1988 murder is free after conviction reversed: A lot of years for something I didn't do
- Little Amal, a 12-foot puppet of a Syrian refugee, began its journey across the US in Boston
- Human skull found in Goodwill donation box in Arizona; police say no apparent link to any crime
- 3 years after the NFL added a 17th game, the push for an 18th gets stronger
- Company pulls spicy One Chip Challenge from store shelves as Massachusetts investigates teen’s death
- Texas AG Ken Paxton’s impeachment trial defense includes claims of a Republican plot to remove him
- Australian minister says invasive examinations were part of reason Qatar Airways was refused flights
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Probe of Florida building collapse that killed 98 to be completed by June 2025, US investigators say
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- French President Macron: ‘There can’t, obviously, be a Russian flag at the Paris Games’
- New data shows increase in abortions in states near bans compared to 2020 data
- Bruce Springsteen postpones remaining September shows due to peptic ulcer
- Blake Lively’s Inner Circle Shares Rare Insight on Her Life as a Mom to 4 Kids
- Spain soccer chief Luis Rubiales accused of sexual assault by player Jenni Hermoso for unwanted kiss
- Supreme Court Justice Kavanaugh predicts ‘concrete steps soon’ to address ethics concerns
- NHTSA pushes to recall 52 million airbag inflators that ruptured and caused injury, death
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Father files first-of-its-kind wrongful death suit against Maui, Hawaii over fires
Judge says New York AG's $250M lawsuit against Trump will proceed without delay
Carrasco dismisses criticism of human rights in Saudi Arabia after transfer to Al Shabab
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Freddie Mercury bangle sold for nearly $900K at auction, breaking record for rock star jewelry
Rail operator pleads guilty in Scottish train crash that killed 3 in 2020
Gov. DeSantis and Florida surgeon general warn against new COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine