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   Message 26,778 of 27,547   
   byte detective to All   
   Re: Maui Democrat mayor faces calls to r   
   02 Sep 23 05:33:57   
   
   XPost: alt.politics.democrats, alt.wildland.firefighting, hawaii.politics   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics   
   From: posted@bosley.biz   
      
   On 06 Jun 2023, Gerald  posted some   
   news:u5oi6c$smnq$5@dont-email.me:   
      
   > Democrats are incompetent and totally useless during times of crisis.   
      
   HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) - More than three weeks after a raging inferno   
   gutted historic Lahaina town, leaving at least 115 people dead, not one   
   state or county leader has taken responsibility for the failures that   
   led to the deaths of what’s likely hundreds of people.   
      
   Public outcry hit a new high after a news conference Tuesday, when top   
   officials fumbled through a series of questions about communication   
   breakdowns that happened as flames razing Lahaina.   
      
   When asked who was calling the shots that day at the Emergency   
   Operations Center, Maui Mayor Richard Bissen said, “I’m not sure who was   
   in charge.”   
      
   Special Section: Maui Wildfires Disaster   
   At another point during the news conference a reporter questioned the   
   director of the state’s emergency management agency saying, “We don’t   
   know how many people maybe died waiting for a response. You don’t think   
   there was anything your agency could have done?”   
      
   Maj. Gen. Kenneth Hara responded, “Personally I don’t think so.”   
      
   The continued lack of accountability has prompted many to sound off on   
   social media, saying things like, “Really. This is what you say when so   
   many lives have been lost” and “It was their job to be on high alert.”   
   The response has also been called “unprofessional.”   
      
   Particularly baffling to some: Why the mayor wouldn’t say where he was   
   during the disaster.   
      
   Political analyst Colin Moore said Bissen, in particular, must increase   
   his “level of transparency” about his administration’s wildfire response   
   if he wants to remain on the job. “If it looks like public officials are   
   trying to hide something, all that does is add fuel to the fire,” he   
   said.   
      
   Moore said over the past three weeks there’s been too much   
   finger-pointing between state and county leaders. “In a catastrophe of   
   this magnitude, that’s not satisfying,” Moore said. “There were failures   
   and those should be acknowledged. For people at the very top, this is   
   their responsibility.”   
      
   Moore says the time to accept responsibility and move on is quickly   
   running out.   
      
   “I would like to see more apologies made. At the end of the day, the   
   purpose of government is to protect people. Government didn’t protect   
   people on that day. And so it was a failure,” he said.   
      
   “That failure needs to be acknowledged.”   
      
   HNN asked Bissen about calls for him to resign. He responded that Maui   
   is experiencing extraordinary grief, anxiety and strain” in the wake of   
   the wildfires and that his administration has “been involved since Day   
   One” to meet people’s needs.   
      
   “While the past 23 days have been difficult, it is also unprecedented,”   
   he said. “I will continue to bring forward state and federal resources,   
   work with our affected communities and leverage all we can to help our   
   recovery efforts and our island’s future.”   
      
   Hara, meanwhile, said he understands community frustration but has no   
   plans to resign.”   
      
   “I believe that a lot of the anger is the result of misinformation,   
   disinformation and malinformation,” he said, in an emailed statement to   
   Hawaii News Now. “I stand by my colleagues and my own experience,   
   education, and actions during this unprecedented disaster.   
      
   Gov. Josh Green also issued a statement about leadership concerns,   
   saying this is a time “for us to come together as an ohana and heal. I   
   won’t judge anyone. This is not the time for that.”   
      
   https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2023/08/31/mauis-mayor-faces-calls-resign-q   
   uestions-about-countys-wildfire-response-grow/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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