North Carolina’s Incident Management Team will be in Hawaii for two weeks to support the Hawaii County Civil Defense agency. (Right) McDowell’s Emergency Services Director William Kehler is the acting public information officer for the N.C. team during the deployment.
Photos submitted from the N.C. Incident Management Team show red hot lava along the horizon. The team from North Carolina has been called in to assist with the volcanic devastation that continues.
Photos submitted from the N.C. Incident Management Team show red hot lava along the horizon. The team from North Carolina has been called in to assist with the volcanic devastation that continues.
Lava spattering area from an area between fissures on Wednesday. MUST CREDIT: U.S. Geological Survey.
Ten experienced emergency managers and fire service officials from North Carolina departed Saturday for Hawaii, to serve on an incident management team requested by Hawaii’s state emergency management agency as response continues to the erupting Kilauea volcano.
North Carolina’s Incident Management Team will be in Hawaii for two weeks to support the Hawaii County Civil Defense agency. (Right) McDowell’s Emergency Services Director William Kehler is the acting public information officer for the N.C. team during the deployment.
Photos submitted from the N.C. Incident Management Team show red hot lava along the horizon. The team from North Carolina has been called in to assist with the volcanic devastation that continues.
Photos submitted from the N.C. Incident Management Team show red hot lava along the horizon. The team from North Carolina has been called in to assist with the volcanic devastation that continues.