Money
for Roads, Utilities and Other Basics Is Still Not Getting to the Island
By
Sarah Okeson
Florida, Georgia, Texas and the U.S. Virgin Islands are getting help from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to rebuild their hurricane-damaged roads, bridges, schools, government buildings and other critical infrastructure.
Trump said Puerto Rico federal disaster relief scored a 10. This would be true if it is 10 out of 100. |
“Puerto Rico is on the brink of a massive liquidity crisis,” Rosselló
wrote Trump. The unofficial death toll in the U.S. colony is now
estimated at 450.
The aid Puerto Rico
needs is known in bureaucratic terms as C-G public assistance. C is roads and
bridges. D is water control facilities. E is public buildings and contents. F
is public utilities, and G is parks, recreational and other. Puerto Rico is
already getting help with debris removal and emergency measures to protect
public health and safety and prevent property damage.
A FEMA spokesman said
the request for C-G public assistance is pending.
“There is not a direct
correlation between when a request is submitted and when a determination is
made,” he said.
Damage estimates for
the island are about $95 billion, about 1.5 times Puerto
Rico’s gross national product. About 18% of Puerto Rico’s electric utility
customers had power from the grid Tuesday, and water and sewer outages are also
widespread.
The island’s treasury secretary, Raul Maldonado, said the government can’t get the revenue it needs because of damage to Puerto Rico’s infrastructure.
Trump, who could fast-track FEMA’s help for Puerto Rico, has
been dismissive of the island’s crisis. Trump said some Puerto Ricans are “ingrates” and that its officials “want
everything to be done for them.”
The median household
income in Puerto Rico in 2015 was $19,350 or less than half the national average of
$53,889. Florida’s median household income was $47,507. Texas was $53,207, and
Georgia was $49,620.
After Hurricane
Katrina in 2005, FEMA spent $13.4 billion to rebuild parts of Louisiana.
Almost $10 billion came from the C-G assistance
program.
Seven Democratic
senators including Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) asked FEMA administrator Brock
Long to authorize full reconstruction aid to Puerto Rico.
“There should be absolutely no ambiguity that the federal
government intends to provide this crucial assistance,” the senators wrote.
Local governments
typically pay for one-fourth of the work, but the senators are asking that the
federal government pay for all the work because of Puerto Rico’s finances.
The House approved
a $36.5 billion bill to fund disaster relief last
week, and the Senate could vote on the bill this week.
ACTION BOX/What You
Can Do About It
Call FEMA
administrator Brock Long at 202-646-2500 or write him at Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street SW, Washington, D.C. 20472. Tell him to see
that Puerto Rico gets all the help it needs.