time to come together. ohana means family. everyone is pitching in. it doesn t mean what color you are. from the ashes, we will survive. reporter: erin, that spirit is alive and well in my . we re in the kula community. homes here devastated as well by the fire. we re standing in front of what s left of ross hart s home, he s trying to clean up his property, but over and over, for several hours today, erin, we watched as volunteers turned up. they offered to help. they drove in their trucks. they said, hey, what do you need? how can we help? i ve seen that multiple times, neighbors trying to help other neighbors. they say that s the only way they re going to be able to move forward. erin. gloria, thank you very much in maui tonight. the horrific devastation has changed the lives of so many, even the survivors. including tee dang with her
Firefighters who rushed to contain the Maui wildfire found that hydrants were running dry, forcing crews to embark instead on a perilous rescue mission.
The collapse of the town’s water system is yet another disastrous factor in a confluence that ended up producing what is now the deadliest US wildfire in more than 100 years.
During the frantic moments Tuesday after a wildfire jumped containment near a residential neighborhood in Lahaina, Hawaii, firefighters rushing to slow the spread were distressed to find that their hydrants