

“I guess my question is: Is there any real protection you have if there’s a nuclear ?” “To tell you the truth, I hadn’t really given it a lot of thought,” Brogan said. But Brogan, who remembers duck-and-cover drills from her youth, said she did not know of any district plan to deal with a missile warning or nuclear attack.

In Ridgewood, Sheila Brogan, a longtime school board trustee, said the district has lockdown drills to deal with active shooters. They were probably more prepared in the ’50s than we are today - 70 years later.” “Where would you go? No one knows where to go. “New York City would be pure chaos,” Blank said. That lack of preparedness is the biggest problem, said Stuart Blank, Mahwah’s deputy director of emergency management and a longtime township police captain. “Where we would run, I don’t know, because I don’t know if New York has any bomb shelters or anything.” “The only thing I can think is: I would run,” said Sabrina Shephard, 45, of Manhattan. The error - and the public’s severe reaction to it - has left some cringing over the thought of how residents of New Jersey and New York would react if a similar warning flashed across their cellphone screens. The alert flung the islands into a 38-minute panic that left fearful Hawaiians and tourists sheltered in tunnels, buildings and bathtubs until its cancellation at about 8:45 a.m. Blazing yellow-and-black signs screwed to the library walls claim it still is, though government plans relying on such havens wilted long ago.īut nuclear disaster planning has been thrust back into public view after an employee of the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency mistakenly sent a cellphone alert to residents last week warning of an impending ballistic missile attack. The government sent these things in the mid-20th century, when the 115-year-old building on Third Street was an active fallout shelter.
