Keeping Maui Safe – There’s More To The HAZMAT Cleanup Than You Know

Secure your health by keeping your environment clean.

Environmental toxins affect your health. Cleaning your body of toxins is no different from cleaning toxic spills in the environment. As an Environmental Nutritionist (that’s a new term – LOL), I can show you how to protect your health by cleaning your environment.

I am following the Maui fires,  as I am sure you are doing too, but I am watching the clean-up from a HAZMAT Engineer’s point of view. I’ve cleaned up many toxic spills.

Toxins in the environment can penetrate into your body, and cleaning your body (detoxing) is no different than cleaning toxins in the environment.

Most people are not trained in the remediation protocols that take place when there is an environmental spill, like the train derailment in Ohio in 2023, or after a natural disaster, like a wildfire.

There’s more to this than you know.

What I Know About Maui

Mainstream media isn’t reliable these days to tell us the truth, so much of what we hear coming out of Maui isn’t all true. Everyday, I pick through multiple social media sites and various news streams to piece together an accurate story – you have to dig on your own these days to get to the truth like we are doing with COVID.

This is what I’ve found so far:

  1. the source of the fire appears to be involved with the power lines;
  2. accountability on how this disaster has been handled is definitely being questioned;
  3. many city officers and city engineers were not properly trained in HAZMAT Responses and were not competently organized to activate the Emergency System and Emergency Protocols (we also saw this in Ohio after the toxic train spill);
  4. 80 mph tropical winds blew the fire out of control and rapidly.

It appears that now, the HAZMAT engineers appear to be following better protocols, such as explaining to the people why they are not allowing the public into the affected zones.

A HAZMAT Rundown

a gas station with trees around it and cars filling up

Natural disasters destroy gas stations, releasing toxins.

When any toxic spill occurs, the site area is closed off ASAP to prevent more toxic exposure. Environmental engineers determine how far the toxins may have spread, and as in Maui, there is a toxic no-go area.

If people are allowed within this defined parameter, they are susceptible to being exposed to toxins and harm. Until all exposure potentials are identified,  public access is denied.

Why?

Here are two examples;

  1. the fires destroyed gas stations, so gas can be seeping into the ground and into the public water supply;
  2. this gas can be combustible, but undoubtably toxic;
  3. the public sewer system and private septic tanks may have been impacted, so exposure to human waste can cause illness;
  4. toxic chemicals in homes, such as pesticides, may have been released within the environment, and exposure to these chemicals  can be toxic.

Hang on before you pass judgment on why survival supplies and other aide are being rerouted within this exposure area in Maui. They ARE being distributed by the HAZMAT engineers, firefighters, police officers, and city officials.

I hope this helps you understand the complexity of addressing a disaster like this one. Understanding helps us better assist those in need to stay healthy.

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INFORMATION ON THIS WEB SITE IS PROVIDED FOR INFORMATIONAL AND EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. THE INFORMATION IS A RESULT OF YEARS OF PRACTICE EXPERIENCE BY THE AUTHOR.

Floods, Fires and 5.0 Quakes Today

There is a lot going on around the Earth today, August 10, 2013. There are floods, fires, and 5.0 earthquakes all over the world.

A picture of a bus and a car with flood waters halfway up their vehicles.

There are floods all over the world.

Floods

  1. West Africa
  2. Southwest Nicaragua
  3. Sudan
  4. Katsina, Nigeria
  5. Northern Region, Uganda
  6. Eastern China
  7. Marigot, Kenya
  8. Victoria, Australia
  9. Eastern Malaysia
  10. Central USA
  11. Amur Region, Russia
  12. Colorado, USA
A picture of a firefighter.

WIldfires are breaking out worldwide.

Wildfires

  1. Montenegro
  2. Slovenia
  3. Bosnia and Herzegovina
  4. Washington State, USA
  5. Montana, USA
  6. Idaho, USA
  7. California, USA

5.0 Earthquakes

  1. Iran
  2. Alaska
  3. Papua New Guinea
  4. Greece
  5. Indonesia
  6. Japan
  7. Tonga
A picutre of a beautiful meteor and the moon in the background.

The Perseids meteor shower on August 10, 2013.

And the Perseids Meteor shower is tonight. Go figure ….

Another Wildfire Spreading In Southern California

A picture of a firefighter.

Another dangerous wildfire in California. Courtesy of FireRescue.com

Over 1,600 firefighters, seven retardant tankers, and a dozen helicopters are attempting to control a wildfire burning 90 miles east of Los Angeles in the San Jacinto Mountains.

The fire started on Wednesday, August 7, 2013, and spread from 2,000 acres to 25 square miles overnight. It has already destroyed over 26 homes, and if it continues to burn at its current rate, it could impact more than 500 more residences, forcing more than 1,800 people to evacuate the area.

Evacuation orders covered the rural communities of Cabazon, Poppet Flats, Twin Pines, Edna Valley, Vista Grande, and several camping and hiking areas.

Second Time Around

A picture of a California wildfire burning close to wind towers in the San Jacinto Mountains.

California wildfire burning close to wind towers in the San Jacinto Mountains. Courtesy of California Fire News

This is the second major wildfire in the San Jacinto Mountains this summer. A blaze that erupted in mid-July spread over 43 square miles on peaks above Palm Springs, burning seven homes and forcing 6,000 people out of Idyllwild and neighboring towns to evacuate.

This fire, however, is burning in the footprint of the 2006 Esperanza Fire.

California Fires

Most of Southern California’s severe wildfires are caused by Santa Ana winds that spin a clockwise flow of air into the region.

This week’s fire, however, was caused by a counter-clockwise flow over northwest California. The National Weather Service expects that conditions could change next week, but hopefully, the fire will be well contained by then.