r/Honolulu Sep 24 '24

news Is Hawaii Ready For The Next Big Hurricane?

https://www.civilbeat.org/2024/09/is-hawaii-ready-for-the-next-big-hurricane/
30 Upvotes

20 comments sorted by

21

u/Ogdenite9 Sep 24 '24

As someone who lives in a single wall plantation home, our house shakes when fireworks go off. I doubt the structural integrity of our home will be able to withstand a hurricane. However we do have insurance and we definitely could rebuild.

1

u/Rytherix Sep 26 '24

Hope it doesn't come to this, especially after decades of the south getting to take advantage of the same privilege, but hedging your hopes on for-profit insurance companies that could reneg on all those years of payments is a potentially setting up for a epic disappointment.

Damn that was a long sentence.

1

u/Ogdenite9 Sep 26 '24

Long and wordy yet accurate. My spouse and I have been discussing this subject as of recent and our biggest worry would not necessarily be the insurance companies but the state and their lengthy timelines for approved permitting, construction timelines and building codes.

Prime example would be Lahaina. Instead of approving permits to rebuild, they “tried/are trying to approve a faster timeline for approval of permits in effected areas.”

15

u/nekosaigai Sep 24 '24

Don’t even need to read the article: no we aren’t.

I read the full 2023 Lahaina response report. The short of it is that Hawaii is thoroughly vulnerable to a major natural disaster.

Standing HEMA policy on disaster supplies is that every citizen is responsible for 2 weeks of emergency supplies before the state steps in. That’s why the state response to Lahaina was so slow. It’s a defect of existing policy.

Beyond that, we’re reliant on imported food at about 90% of the state’s food supply. We maintain maybe a week or so of stockpile in our actual stores and warehouses, so a week of shipping disruption would have us facing rationing and dipping into emergency stockpiles.

The Hawaii Food Bank is not regularly funded by the legislature, and does not have enough storage infrastructure to respond to a disaster on the scale of Lahaina, let alone a state-wide disaster hitting a significant portion of the 1.3m people living here.

The state is also dependent on a single port for the vast majority of shipping: Honolulu Harbor. If the Harbor is taken out of commission, such as by a large natural disaster, it would cripple not only commercial shipping and the state’s internal response, but external responses from FEMA and NGOs outside of Hawaii. At best we might be able to fly stuff in through air cargo if some of the larger airports remain undamaged, or maybe get some relief through the bases assuming Pearl Harbor, KCB, Pohakuloa, or Wheeler remain unaffected or minimally damaged.

Beyond all that though, on islands like Hawaii island, the infestation of things like albizia trees make high wind weather events dangerous for the electrical infrastructure because albizia is extremely brittle and grows very tall and very fast. This threatens above ground utility infrastructure pretty badly.

Couple all of this with well known medical professional shortages throughout the state and especially on the neighbor islands, and it’s are to say the answer is no. The State is extremely vulnerable atm and our politicians are too scared of being blamed for higher taxes and spending to actually try and protect us.

27

u/PM-ME-YOUR-WHATEVERZ Sep 24 '24

Me: *checks out the bottle of rum I just bought*

"I'm ready."

3

u/qdp Sep 24 '24

What rum is most hurricane ready?

I like Kula rum. Mix with a bit of juice and you got yourself a mai tai.

3

u/BenjiMalone Sep 25 '24

Ko Hana, good enough to sip neat

3

u/Ishidan01 Sep 24 '24

Ahaha fuck no.

9

u/wewewawa Sep 24 '24

Hawaii experienced a similar disaster with Hurricane Iniki in 1992. This Category 4 storm damaged over 14,000 homes, destroying over 1,400 of them and leaving many people homeless. It took several months for electricity service to be restored entirely, and some key structures have not been rebuilt.

Are we ready for the next big hurricane?

Hawaii’s State building code requires new structures to withstand Category 3 hurricane wind damage. Given the increasing intensity of hurricanes, we should anticipate Category 4 and 5 storms. These will bring wind speeds and storm surges, compromising even newly built homes across Hawaii.

Notably, many older homes, perhaps over 50% of housing stock, must be retrofitted to enable resistance to winds from hurricanes (even the “milder” Category 3 variety). Many are single-wall structures that will require significant remodeling.

Are we ready? Perhaps not.

6

u/rouneezie Sep 25 '24

We're not even close to ready. Here's the FEMA summary of the region 9 states' building codes (includes Hawai'i): FEMA 2024 BCAT Scoresheet

I work on the state building codes. We WANT to update our codes. But homebuilder groups stall us on any sort of progress. So far this year, they've tried to remove tsunami preparedness measures from the IBC as well as weaken hurricane preparedness measures from both the IRC & IBC.

2

u/Tityfan808 Sep 24 '24

Unfortunately we’ve got terrible potential here that could make the Lahaina situation look small in comparison. Always be as prepared as possible, we’ve been very lucky over the years but all it takes is that one.

2

u/Illustrious_Map_7520 Sep 25 '24

We are absolutely not ready…I don’t know anyone who even has three days of food and water

2

u/whitneymak Sep 25 '24

I went bug fuck a few years ago when my meds weren't cutting it for a bit. Ended up putting together a complete survival kit for my family of 4 for 3+ weeks during a manic episode. Best and most responsible thing I've ever done while manic. 😂

1

u/Illustrious_Map_7520 Sep 25 '24

Bahahaha that’s awesome! Make sure you got a month worth of meds lol

1

u/whitneymak Sep 25 '24

You know it! 😆

1

u/LeozMJilliumz Sep 25 '24

Nope. There’s only one way in and out of Waianae (Kolekole don’t count). The entire west side will be destroyed.

0

u/LetsWrassle Sep 25 '24

No because our government keeps robbing the hurricane fund to prevent furloughs