Maui wildfires updates: President Biden, first lady get firsthand look at damage

The fires burned thousands of homes and commercial buildings to the ground.

The deadly wildfires that erupted on the Hawaiian island of Maui on Aug. 8 have become the deadliest natural disaster in state history, officials said.

The blazes spread rapidly due to very dry conditions stemming from a drought combined with powerful winds. Much of the historic town of Lahaina has been "destroyed," officials said, and the inferno has burned thousands of residential and commercial buildings to the ground.


Maui Strong: Charities to directly support wildfire relief efforts

On Thursday, "Good Morning America" and ABC News organized efforts to help viewers get involved in relief efforts for survivors of the Maui fires.

How to help:

-- Maui Strong Fund

-- Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement

-- University of Hawai'i Foundation

-- Kokua Restaurant & Hospitality Fund for Maui

-- American Red Cross/ABC

-ABC News’ Kelly McCarthy


What we know about the victims

Over 100 people have died from the devastating wildfires on Maui. Officials have warned that the death toll is expected to rise as they work to contain the active blazes and assess the damage.

Click here to read what we know about some of the victims.


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Hawaii AG to use third party company to conduct independent review of fire response

Hawaii Attorney General Anne Lopez announced Thursday that she is engaging with a third party "with experience in emergency management" to conduct an investigation into last week's deadly wildfires.

"We intend to look at this critical incident to facilitate any necessary corrective action and to advance future emergency preparedness," Lopez said in a statement.

The attorney general said the independent review will likely be a "months-long effort," and the information collected by the third party will be "used to assess the performance in emergency preparedness as we are constantly looking for ways to improve."


40% of area searched, with death toll remaining at 111

Forty-percent of the impacted area on Maui has been searched, with the death toll remaining at 111, Maui County officials said Thursday.

The Olinda fire, Kula fire and Lahaina fire are 85%, 80% and 89% contained, respectively, officials said, adding that there are no active threats.

Electricity has been restored to more than 80% of the customers who lost power, officials said.

Emergency shelters housed 166 people overnight Wednesday, officials said. Another 279 people were relocated from shelters to hotels.

Residents heading to Lahaina to check on their homes are urged to be careful of the debris, as well as ash which could "contain toxic and cancer-causing chemicals including asbestos, arsenic and lead," officials warned.


Biden: 'We'll be with you for as long as it takes'

In a pretaped message for ABC News' "Maui Strong" special on "Good Morning America," President Joe Biden promised the people of Hawaii that "the entire nation is with you as you recover, rebuild and grieve."

"We'll be with you for as long as it takes," he said.

"Already from the darkness and the smoke and the ash, we’ve seen the light of hope and strength," Biden said. "First responders working around the clock, many of those first responders in fact -- impacted by the fires themselves, losing their own homes. Volunteers delivering aid by fishing boat, ferry, on jet skis. Chefs whose restaurants were destroyed, cooking food for displaced families."

Biden said that when he and the first lady visit on Monday they will "convey in person our grief and solidarity and commitment to the people of Maui."

-ABC News' Justin Gomez


FEMA administrator: 'So much more worse once you see it in person'

FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell, who has toured the devastation on Maui, told ABC News' "GMA3" that "it really just seems so much more worse once you see it in person."

She called it a "really complicated search and recovery mission," adding, "It's going to be a complicated debris removal mission once we account for everybody that's missing."

Criswell said FEMA is working closely with state partners and the American Red Cross to find shelter for displaced residents.

"We're already working on what the long-term housing is going to look like," she said Thursday. "We convened yesterday at the White House with all of the deputy secretaries from the Cabinet-level agencies to talk about resources that we can bring in."

"We're putting every resource available and creative solutions to come up with ways that we can help Maui and help the government of Hawaii," Criswell continued. "When I talked to the governor, he already had started a housing assessment based on the limited housing that they have. This is going to be a really great starting off point for us to help implement some of the vision he had and use that planning to help with the long-term recovery housing issues."


'Our beautiful island has been ravaged by fires'

Maui Chamber of Commerce President Pamela Tumpap detailed the level of devastation in a phone interview with ABC News Live.

"Our beautiful island has been ravaged by fires from the mountain to the ocean," Tumpap said.

Tumpap said some areas look like they have been "completely leveled."

"We've lost a lot of homes and we've lost a lot of business places and we've lost cultural and historic resources that were in the Chinatown that have burned to the ground," Tumpap said. "We are seeing fires unlike what we've ever seen before."

Tumpap cautioned travelers against coming to the island, saying it is "not going to be the Maui vacation that you planned" and visitors will have a hard time finding resources.