Hawaii State Sen. Angus McKelvey started hearing explosions in Lahaina as he was running errands Tuesday afternoon. Hours later, he said he could see burning embers “raining down from the sky” and several homes on fire as he drove to his brother’s house to check on the family pets. A nearby apartment building stood engulfed by large balls of fire and by the time he returned home, flames were lighting up his condo.

As the destruction spread, McKelvey never heard emergency sirens or alarms. He didn’t see police overseeing evacuations. Like other residents trying to flee the area, he said, he was uncertain about what to do next.

For the rest of the night, McKelvey saw Lahaina, the historic tourist town he was born and raised in, erupt in flames “like a war zone.”

McKelvey is part of a growing chorus of voices questioning what, if anything, went wrong in Maui in fires that have claimed 67 lives and destroyed about 1,700 structures. Locals are questioning whether residents were given enough notice to evacuate via sirens or other notifications as the wildfire moved through the area. There are also questions about whether the area had the proper resources to help people, including adequate firefighters.

Roughly 1,000 people remain missing, according to Maui County Police Chief John Pelletier.

“There probably should have been a more aggressive activation at the onset, more preparation,” McKelvey told USA TODAY. “We heard about the red flag warning as brush fires were definitely a concern initially, not this cataclysmic totality that overwhelmed the community.”

Fire weather watch was issued Sunday

The warning signs came early, McKelvey said. On Sunday, the National Weather Service in Honolulu issued a “fire weather watch” for the state after fears about Hurricane Dora soaking the area subsided. “Strong and gusty winds, combined with low humidities…may lead to critical fire conditions across leeward areas over the coming days,” the watch said.