My kids are here for dinner, in some cases accompanied by their significant others. I’m in the office, and I hear that obnoxious BLURT! from one of their cellphones, signifying an official alert had been sent out. “What was that?” I yelled, thinking it could be an earthquake. Before they could answer, another phone BLURTED, then another and another till they all had their turn.
Turns out, it was an evacuation warning, something folks take very seriously around here these days. The warning came as somewhat of a surprise to me because I have been regularly checking the awesome “Watch Duty” app and knew that there was no fire nearby.
Turns out, the alert went out across the county and left folks wondering what the heck was going on:
I just got an evacuation warning in Palos Verdes. But so did everyone I know in LA countywide. There are no fires where I am. Can you please confirm this was an error @CountyofLA
— Julie Hamill (@hamill_law) January 10, 2025
I’m assuming many people got this alert. But it’s not meant for everyone. Check on Watch Duty to keep tabs on mandatory evacuations. #LosAngeles #LA pic.twitter.com/2hZ4GNEEyN
— LA Born & Raised (@LABornRaised13) January 9, 2025
Here’s the problem with this alert: it was a mistake. Seriously, who is running things here? (Don't answer that—we actually already know.)
…[the alert] was meant for people in the order and warning zones for the Kenneth Fire in Woodland Hills.
"I have been informed the evacuation warning that many of us just received on our phones was mistakenly issued countywide due to a technical error," County Supervisor Janice Hahn said.
In a later message, emergency officials clarified that it was for the Kenneth Fire only.
FYI, not a single one of us here at my house received that alleged clarification.
LA County - which shoveled millions of taxpayer dollars to crisis communication PR firms during COVID via no bid contracts, just sent out an accidental evacuation alert to millions of people who are already on edge as a result of catastrophic wildfires.
— Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) January 10, 2025
Massive fail.
More incompetence:
WATCH: Desperate Wildfire Victim Accosts Gavin Newsom, and He Does the Most Embarrassing Thing Ever
Authorities tried to explain away the debacle, but they still ended up with egg on their faces:
Officials said they tried to make the alert as compact as they could, however, varying factors such as where the phone is registered may have affected the outreach.
"There are no evacuation orders or active fire threats in Culver City at this time," Culver City Police Department said in a statement. "A County evacuation warning alert intended for the West Hills Fire area only was distributed to individuals outside of evacuation zones." [Note: Culver City was just one of the many areas that received the alert.]
One can’t help but be reminded of the massive fail by Hawaii in 2018:
The emergency alert claiming a ballistic missile attack was inbound was sent at 8:08AM. It took until 8:45AM to state it was a false alarm. 37 minutes where anyone in Hawaii who doesn’t sit on Twitter dot com all day thought their island might be incinerated. Fire people. Fix it. pic.twitter.com/hhCIrNLg1D
— Jerry Dunleavy IV 🇺🇸 (@JerryDunleavy) January 13, 2018
Conclusion: it was not climate change that caused these wildfires, and it was not climate change that sent out this alert. It was people—incompetent people.
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