The University of Delawares Disaster Research Center
(DRC) often studies how individuals react to a coming hurricanehow
they get warnings and what they do about themduring a period of
preparation that can last for days as the storm slowly advances.
On Jan. 13, by contrast, residents and visitors in Hawaii were
alerted to an impending missile attack for which they had perhaps 20
minutes to take action. After 38 minutes, they were told the alert was a
false alarm, triggered by an emergency workers mistake.
We know a lot about what people do
in terms of a hurricane, how they make decisions on such things as
whether to evacuate, but this incident in Hawaii was different, said
Tricia Wachtendorf, DRC director and professor of sociology. We wanted
to study how it fit with our other research projects while also offering
a chance to learn something new.
Two days after the false alarm, Jennifer Trivedi, a postdoctoral
researcher with the DRC, arrived in Hawaii and began interviewing people
about those 38 minutes when many believed they were under attack.
While many residents and tourists reported being frightened during
the incident, Trivedi said the most common reaction was confusion during
the alert and frustration after learning that it had been issued in
error.
I was somewhat surprised at how calm people were, Trivedi said.
Some believed it was an actual attack at the time, and some didnt
think it was real, but almost no one used the word panic.
What people did report, she said, was a sense of confusion. In spite
of recent global tensions, particularly involving North Korea, most
people told Trivedi that they didnt have a clear idea of what action
they should take in case of an actual missile attack.
The main theme was that there was a lack of information, she said.
Where should they seek shelter? Should they pick up their kids from
school? Are there public fallout shelters? They realized that they
didnt know the answers to these kinds of questions.
Trivedi also attended a public emergency-management meeting. It had
been scheduled before the false alarm, but the 100 or so residents who
attended had questions centering on that event.
She and Wachtendorf are examining the data she gathered and plan to
prepare some quick-turnaround reports geared to academics and
practitioners.
Ive been hearing from various experts that this is an opportunity
to learn about gaps that exist in the emergency preparedness system,
Wachtendorf said.
The incident has already led to the firing of the worker who
broadcast the warning, the resignation of Hawaiis state emergency
manager and changes in the procedures for issuing alerts in the future.
But helping individual residents prepare for this kind of disaster
appears to be another key step, Trivedi said.
A lot of people told me that this pushed them to get more
information about preparedness, to think about what to do in a real
emergency, she said. Theyre frustrated that they didnt have answers,
and they want to get that information now.
Article by Ann Manser; photo by Evan Krape