Hawaii's Emergency Management Agency (HEMA) is taking some heat after an employee accidentally sent out a warning that a ballistic missile was barreling toward the state on Saturday, scaring the shit out of islanders and giving at least one poor guy a literal heart attack. But a closer look at the people tasked with responding to impending disasters shows that they treat their password protection the same way your forgetful parent might.

As Business Insider points out, a few press photos from the HEMA headquarters reveal that the agency has been keeping some of its passwords scrawled out on Post-it notes, pasted to various computer monitors. Some savvy Twitter users were even able to zoom in on one photo enough to make out the word: "warningpoint2."

You'd sort of hope the agency tasked with keeping Hawaiians safe in the event of a nuclear holocaust would be a little more careful about keeping its passwords a secret, as innocuous as the slipup may be. At least the guys at HEMA weren't using the old go-to "password."