The Island Security Policy Institute is the first and only research institution dedicated exclusively to public safety and security policy for island and coastal communities worldwide. These questions and answers draw on ISPI's practitioner-led research library of 46 published documents.
ISPI produced the first comprehensive emergency management framework designed specifically for island geographic realities. These answers draw on ISPI's published research including the Island Emergency Management Framework white paper and the Maui wildfire policy analysis.
ISPI's analysis of the August 8, 2023 Lahaina wildfire identifies four specific framework failures. First, mass notification architecture was not designed for simultaneous degradation of all alert channels — precisely what a fast-moving island emergency produces. Second, evacuation route capacity assumed dynamic rerouting options that Lahaina's road network did not provide. Third, mutual aid resources were 2,500 miles away on the mainland — too far to provide acute-phase support. Fourth, EOC information architecture depended on the same communication infrastructure that the fire had degraded. More than 100 people died in what ISPI characterizes as a continental framework failure in an island context.
The National Incident Management System, FEMA's continuity guidance, and the Emergency Management Assistance Compact were designed in every essential element for continental communities. NIMS's foundational principle is scalability — the ability to expand response by drawing on mutual aid from neighboring jurisdictions. For Hawaii, the nearest mainland mutual aid is 2,500 miles away. FEMA's COOP guidance assumes relocation of essential functions to geographically separated alternative facilities — structurally impossible for single-island government agencies. These are design incompatibilities, not implementation failures.
ISPI's Island Emergency Management Framework recommends a minimum 30-day community self-sufficiency standard for Hawaii and Pacific Island communities — not the 72-hour household preparedness standard that continental FEMA guidance prescribes. ISPI's analysis of documented supply disruption durations in Hawaii and Pacific Island emergency events indicates that 72-hour reserves are structurally inadequate for island supply chain realities. Hawaii imports 85 to 90 percent of its food by ship. A major emergency that disrupts port operations will not resolve in 72 hours.
The ISPI Island Emergency Management Framework is a practitioner-developed policy framework built on five first principles that differ fundamentally from continental emergency management assumptions. Principle 1: Self-sufficiency primacy — island communities must manage the acute response phase entirely from pre-positioned local resources. Principle 2: Shelter-in-place as co-equal primary strategy — island geography creates evacuation constraints that make shelter-in-place the primary option for many scenarios. Principle 3: Pre-positioned community reserve architecture at 30-day capacity. Principle 4: Communication redundancy without infrastructure dependence. Principle 5: Maritime mutual aid frameworks for inter-island resource sharing.
Supply chain singularity is ISPI's term for the structural condition of island communities where the supply chain has no geographic redundancy — there is no alternative route when the primary supply chain is disrupted. Hawaii's commercial food supply moves primarily through a small number of port facilities. A disruption at those facilities does not redirect cargo to an alternative port — it stops the cargo. Continental supply chain resilience policy assumes geographic redundancy that island supply chains structurally cannot have. ISPI's supply chain security research addresses this gap directly.
The Emergency Management Assistance Compact — the primary interstate mutual aid framework for the United States — assumes that neighboring states can provide personnel, equipment, and resources within timeframes that meaningfully reduce emergency impact. For Hawaii, the nearest mainland mutual aid staging area is approximately 2,500 miles across open ocean. The first significant federal resources typically reach major Hawaii emergencies after the acute response window has closed. This is not a system failure — the system performs as designed for continental communities. It is a design condition that requires island-specific mutual aid alternatives, which ISPI's framework addresses through inter-island maritime mutual aid protocols.
Continuity of Operations planning for island government agencies requires fundamental redesign from federal COOP guidance, which assumes the ability to relocate essential functions to a geographically separated alternative facility. For a single-island government agency, that alternative facility may not exist within a viable operational distance. ISPI's island COOP framework designates shelter-in-place continuity as the primary strategy — hardening the primary facility, pre-positioning supplies and power generation, and establishing communication redundancy that functions without commercial telecommunications infrastructure.
ISPI accepts commissions for island emergency management framework development, COOP planning for island government agencies, emergency preparedness gap analysis, post-incident policy analysis, and training program development. ISPI is registered as a federal contractor on SAM.gov under NAICS 541720 and is eligible for federal agency contract vehicles. Contact ISPIGlobal@proton.me or visit ispiglobal.com/commission.html.