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Quakes rattle Hawaiian Islands
eTN/AP
 Two strong earthquakes shook Hawaii residents, tourists and our eTN staff
out of bed this morning and triggered a power outage in three counties.
Gov. Linda Lingle was staying at the Mauna Lani Bay Hotel and Bungalows, only
a few miles from the epicenter, when the quake struck. “The jolt we felt was intense,” Lingle said at a news conference
this afternoon in the state Civil Defense conference room in a former military
bunker in Diamond Head Crater. “It threw everything around the room.”
Lingle, who has experienced earthquakes in California , said she knew what to
do when the earthquake struck.
“I went under the door frame,” the governor said.
Just after they straightened the room out, the aftershock struck, Lingle said,
sending the television in the room crashing to the ground a second time.
After leaving the hotel, Lingle went to the Kona police station to get briefed
on the damage and then took to a National Guard helicopter to see the damage
from the air before returning to Honolulu .
Lingle said at Kealakekua Bay a rockslide into the ocean was continuing hours
after the initial quake. She said she saw boulders falling into a brownish sea.
She also witnessed patients being evacuated from Kona Community Hospital and
loaded into yellow buses, although she said there was no evidence of damage
to the outside of the structure.
At the state civil defense headquarters, Lt. Gov. James “Duke”
Aiona, acting on Lingle’s behalf, signed an executive order declaring
a state-wide disaster and authorizing the use of the National Guard.
Later Gov. Linda Lingle issued a disaster declaration for the state, saying
there had been damage to buildings and roads. There were no reports of fatalities,
but the state Civil Defense had several reports of minor injuries.
The quake hit at 7:07 a.m. local time, 10 miles north-northwest of Kailua Kona,
a town on the west coast of Hawaii Island, also known as the Big Island, said
Don Blakeman, a geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information Center,
part of the U.S. Geological Survey.
The quake prompted fears of a tsunami, but forecasters quickly put those fears
to rest, predicting only choppier-than-normal waves.
The Pacific Tsunami Center reported a preliminary magnitude of 6.5, while the
U.S. Geological Survey gave a preliminary magnitude of 6.6. The earthquake was
followed by several strong aftershocks, including one measuring a magnitude
of 5.8, the Geological Survey said. Experts said aftershocks could continue
for weeks.
"We were rocking and rolling," said Anne LaVasseur, who was on the
second floor of a two-story, wood-framed house on the east side of the Big Island
when the temblor struck. "I was pretty scared. We were swaying back and
forth, like King Kong's pushing your house back and forth."
Mayor Harry Kim estimated that as many as 3,000 people were evacuated from
three hotels on the Big Island. Brad Kurokawa, Hawaii County deputy planning
director, confirmed the hotels were damaged, but could not say how many people
had left. They were being taken to a gymnasium until alternate accommodations
could be found, he said.
The earthquake caused water pipes to explode at Aston Kona By The Sea, a condominium
resort, creating a dramatic waterfall down the front of the hotel from the fourth
floor, said Kenneth Piper, who runs the front desk.
"You could almost see the cars bouncing up and down in the parking garage,"
Piper said.
The quake caused statewide power outages, and phone communication was possible,
but difficult. The outages were caused because power plants turned off automatically
when built-in seismic monitors were triggered by the earthquake, Lingle said.
Some power had been restored late Sunday in Maui, parts of Honolulu and other
places, but many remained in the dark. All electricity systems needed to be
rebooted, which was expected to take several hours in more populated areas like
Honolulu.
A FEMA computer simulation of the quake estimated that as many as 170 bridges
on the Big Island could have suffered damage in the temblor, said Bob Fenton,
FEMA director of response for the region. More than 50 federal officials were
en route to the Big Island to assess damage and begin recovery work, he said.
Lingle told radio station KSSK that she toured the Kona area by helicopter
to view the damage, including earth falling into Kealakekua Bay.
"You could see the water was turning brown," said Lingle.
On Hawaii Island, there was some damage in Kailua-Kona and a landslide along
a major highway, said Gerard Fryer, a geophysicist at the Pacific Tsunami Center.
Officials also said there were reports of people trapped in elevators in Oahu.
In Waikiki, one of the state's primary tourism areas on Oahu, worried visitors
began lining up outside convenience stores to purchase food, water and other
supplies. Managers were letting tourists into the darkened stores one at a time.
Karie and Bryan Croes waited an hour to buy bottles of water, chips and bread.
"It's quite a honeymoon story," said Karie, as she and her husband
sat in lounge chairs surrounded by grocery bags beside a pool at ResortQuest
Waikiki Beach Hotel.
Kona Community Hospital on the western side of Big Island was evacuated after
ceilings collapsed and power was cut off, according to a hospital spokeswoman.
At least 10 acute care patients were being evacuated across the island to a
medical center in Hilo, said Terry Lewis, spokeswoman for the hospital. About
30 nursing care patients were being moved temporarily to a nearby conference
center, she said.
"We were very lucky that no one got hurt," said Lewis.
The quake affected travel plans for many visitors, though the state was in
its low period of the tourism season. Airports were functioning despite the
power outages, though travel was difficult and some flights were being canceled,
officials said.
Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Les Dorr said planes were arriving
at Honolulu International Airport, but there were few departures. Dorr said
the Transportation Security Administration security checkpoints were without
power, so screeners were screening passengers and baggage manually.
Resorts in Kona were asked to keep people close to hotels, Kim told television
station KITV. Cruise ships were told to keep tourists on board, and ships that
were due to dock were asked to move on to their next location, he said.
"We are dealing with a lot of scared people," he said.
The quake hit roughly 150 miles southwest of Honolulu's Oahu Island, near a
much less populated area. The Big Island has about 167,000 people, according
to a 2005 Census estimate, and many of them live in and around Hilo, on the
opposite site from where the quake was centered.
Earthquakes in the 6.0 magnitude range are rare in the region, though they
have happened before. The region more commonly sees temblors in the 3- and 4-magnitude
range caused by volcanic activity.
"We think this is a buildup from many volcanic earthquakes that they've
had on the island," Waverly Person, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological
Survey's National Earthquake Information Center.
The last Hawaiian earthquake this strong struck more than 20 years ago. The
magnitude 6.7 caused heavy property damage on Hawaii Island and collapsed trails
into a volcano in Hawaiian Volcanoes National Park on Nov. 16, 1983. A 6.1-magnitude
quake also hit in 1989, according to the Earthquake Information Center.
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