https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/family-owns-whakaari-got-slapped-184900418.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAABtuU24dD7UYq7_7KHM2TGc62zB7pI0IQxseNn37GlitNPOVDiUCUpWatNa5MlUknuuotAQfPaFNnEmK1gIPrNu6wmeBSxMMKTGMt7vWJ-wt9VYZeuPvhJulnAeIvS55gMR3cdUOVQmet8FVP8ALQsBT8mUTbWhnbzaY34Ehjjwp |
My takeaway was that the island was more than an hour away by boat, and the fumes from the volcano made the airspace dangerous. It was heroic of the men who flew there to power through and take the risk with their helicopter and plane, but it’s not like the authorities were completely indifferent to the tragedy that was unfolding. I’m open to a different perspective, but that’s the picture that was painted for me in the doc. |
+1 They chose not to act. |
They chose not to act. Obviously, there were things that could have been done. That were done - by others. |
They explained it as 1-2-3 on the documentary. Seems like they need to differentiate risk more for level 2. Something like 2A, 2B, 2C, etc. |
The survivors shared the language that was provided to them by the tour companies. The level of risk was not well communicated. |
Seems like they are due for another eruption soon if it’s every ~3 years. Good thing there aren’t any tourists on it. |
| It was interesting and a good cautionary note that just because an excursion is offered doesn’t mean it’s safe. A lot of the people were on a cruise excursion from a RC cruise. I think it’s easy to get a false sense of security about these kinds of activities. |
| Did any of the victims transported by the helicopter crew survive? I definitely admire their bravery. |
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For those that have WaPo, I thought this editorial published in the wake of the eruption was interesting.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/how-tourists-take-their-lives-into-their-own-hands/2019/12/22/668a30d8-2342-11ea-bed5-880264cc91a9_story.html The author, a professor at NYU, writes about how proximity to danger is marketed as attractive, but there is little discussion of the risk the tourists will be taking, just a blanket assumption of “everyone’s been fine before.” On a family trip, his 8 year old son Owen died while whitewater rafting. (after reading this op-ed, I got the author’s book from the library. it’s an excellent account of the trip, including the dynamic of attractive-danger/hidden-risks, and his and his surviving family’s reaction to his son’s death. The book is called Disaster Falls, the name of the stretch of river where his son died. this is a free-to-access article from the author’s college alumni magazine covering some of the same ground: https://www.haverford.edu/college-communications/news/disaster-falls) |
Yes. Jesse, the young man. Maybe others but at least him. |
+1. They said that 1 was dormant and 3 was erupting. So, a pretty useless system as is. |
I love that they just flew straight to the hospital. |
I’m just going off what I saw in the documentary but the officials just seemed completely unprepared and uncoordinated. It was shocking to me that they lived in sight of a recently active volcano and had no basic response procedures for how they would communicate and act in the event of a disaster. I kept wanting to yell at the screen - didn’t you all know this could happen?! |
Yes, and the tour operators didn’t seem to have any training or prep for this scenario. The woman on her honeymoon asked what happens if there’s an eruption, and they had no answer for her. How were they allowed to operate without any kind of plan in place? |