Mākaukau ʻoe i ka wā e hiki mai ai kahi pōʻino?

Let us connect you with real-time information, shelter locations, and recovery resources before, during, and after an emergency or natural disaster.

Inā pilikia koke ʻoe, e kelepona iā 911!

ʻōlaʻi

Hiki i nā ōlaʻi ke pā me ka ʻike ʻole.

Time of Year to Expect: Anytime

Kahinahina

Flooding can happen suddenly after heavy rain, tropical storms, or dam breaks.

Time of Year to Expect: November - April

Hurricane

Hiki i nā Hurricane ke hoʻoulu i nā makani pōʻino, ka wai kahe, a me ka hoʻopau nui ʻana o ka mana.

Time of Year to Expect: June - November

ʻAiʻulaʻula

ʻO ka tsunami he mau nalu ikaika i hoʻoulu ʻia e nā ʻōlaʻi ma lalo o ke kai, nā ʻāina hoʻoneʻe, a i ʻole ka lua pele.
Time of Year to Expect: Anytime

lua pele

Hiki i ka pele pele, ka lehu, a me nā kinoea ʻona.

Time of Year to Expect: Anytime

ahi ahi

Wildfires can spread quickly, fueled by dry vegetation, high winds, and drought conditions.

Time of Year to Expect: May - October

Nīnau pinepine

  • Provide non-emergency information and referral (I&R) to community resources.
  • Reduce burden on 911 by triaging non-life-threatening calls and directing them to appropriate services (based on NEMAA research).
  • Share real-time information on shelters, feeding sites, and aid distribution during disasters.
  • Collect, aggregate, and feedback community needs data to emergency managers and VOAD partners.
  • Provide multilingual access through interpreters and translated resources.
  • Offer trauma-informed, culturally appropriate communication (Inform USA standards).

Pehea e hiki ai iaʻu ke hoʻohui i kahi kumuwaiwai a i ʻole papa inoa ma ka waihona?

Hoʻopiha ʻia ka waihona 211 i nā ʻano like ʻole a i ʻole nā papahana a inā loaʻa iā ʻoe kahi mea e hoʻohui ai, e ʻoluʻolu e hoʻohana i kā mākou kikowaena kikowaena e hiki ai iā ʻoe ke hoʻohui i kahi kumuwaiwai hou, hoʻohou i kahi papa inoa i loaʻa a ʻoi aku. Aia ka lawelawe ma ka moku'āina holoʻokoʻa, no laila ua hōʻike ʻia nā mokupuni āpau i ka waihona a me ka ʻikepili.

Nuhou Kokiki

E kala mai, ʻaʻole i loaʻa iā mākou kekahi memo. E ʻoluʻolu e hoʻāʻo i kahi hulina ʻē aʻe.

Punawai wikiwiki

Need help right now? These official resources can connect you with emergency alerts, shelters, and support in your area.

Kāhea i ka helu 911 for life-threatening emergencies. | Kaila 211 no ke kōkua pilikia ʻole a me nā kumuwaiwai kūloko.

Shelters & Evacuation

Know routes and shelter locations before an incident. Pack a 14-day kit (water, food, meds, documents, power/lighting, hygiene, pet supplies)

What to bring to shelters: face coverings, hygiene items, medications, IDs/insurance, snacks, change of clothes, comfort items for keiki and kūpuna.

Disaster Status & Updates

Find active alerts, incident maps, and official updates. During events, verify information via trusted sources.

Official Sources: