Hawaii's governor couldn't correct the false missile alert sooner because he forgot his Twitter password

Authored by cnn.com and submitted by Amcal
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Story highlights A false alert about a ballistic missile threat went out January 13 in Hawaii

It took 15 minutes to relay news of false alert on social media

(CNN) When Hawaii pushed out a ballistic missile alert earlier this month, Gov. David Ige knew within two minutes it was a false alarm. But he couldn't hop on Twitter and tell everybody -- because he didn't know his password.

"I have to confess that I don't know my Twitter account login and passwords," Ige told reporters Monday after giving his State of the State address. "I will be putting that on my phone."

The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency issued the alert -- sent to cell phones and broadcast on the airwaves there -- at 8:07 a.m. on January 13. A state official told Ige two minutes later it was false, CNN affiliate KHNL reports.

It took another 15 minutes before the state relayed that news on social media. And it took 38 minutes after the alert was sent for the emergency management agency to send out a second message telling the public it was a false alarm.

Under mounting criticism about the delays, Ige told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser that while he was unable to get into his Twitter account immediately to alert the public, he did during that time make calls to his leadership team at the emergency management agency.

bellingman on January 23rd, 2018 at 16:16 UTC »

Twitter has fuck all to do with this. The same methods that were used to broadcast the incorrect information should have been immediately used to transmit FALSE ALARM.

hairy_butt_creek on January 23rd, 2018 at 14:50 UTC »

It's not the governor's job to correct a false alert. He may have quickly wanted to and tried to using Twitter, but the agency sending the alert should have had a quicker way to send out the alert was a false alarm.

Besides, out of everyone who got the alert, how many people follow the governor on Hawaii on Twitter? It'd reach maybe 1% of the users who got the alert.

Kasper-X-Hauser on January 23rd, 2018 at 13:55 UTC »

Wow. For once a politician provides an excuse that I actually believe and understand.