The Hamilton Spectator

We wait hours for groceries. We’re lucky ones

Rural residents have no basic goods to buy, and no way to buy them. They need help

- ARMANDO VALDÉS PRIETO Armando Valdés Prieto is a lawyer and political consultant and a former director of the Commonweal­th of Puerto Rico’s Office of Management and Budget. In that capacity, he was also the governor’s authorized representa­tive to the Fed

SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO — My pregnant wife and I stood in line for two hours outside our neighbourh­ood grocery store over the weekend. Once inside, we found that most essential products were scarce, and we were limited in the number we could buy of each item.

But we’re in Puerto Rico’s capital city, and we’re middle class, and that makes us pretty lucky. Millions of poor Puerto Ricans are worse off since hurricane Maria hit, and if the government and aid organizati­ons can’t figure out the best way to deploy life-saving supplies to the rest of the island, it will only get bleaker.

In San Juan, folks have to choose between different lines: at the supermarke­t for food, at the gas station for a fill-up or at the bank to access cash — the only form of payment accepted at most stores, since ongoing telecommun­ications outages make it difficult to accept credit cards or other electronic payment methods. Even the commonweal­th’s Nutritiona­l Assistance Program, which feeds 1.3 million people out of Puerto Rico’s population of nearly 3.4 million, operates mostly electronic­ally, which means it’s also not accepted at many retail outlets, so poorer residents can’t buy food without cash.

Thankfully, many low-lying areas in San Juan do have potable water service. El Nuevo Día, the island’s largest and most influentia­l newspaper, reported on Friday that about 50 per cent of the Aqueduct and Sewer Authority’s customers now have service. But that number has barely budged since the first wave of repairs began days after the disaster.

Still, outside the San Juan metro area, reports paint starker choices. In many rural towns there are no lines; stores haven’t been able to open, tanker trucks can’t reach distant gas stations to resupply and many bank branches are still closed. Water service has not been reestablis­hed in many areas, and people I’ve spoken with tell me of hour-long slogs just to get drinking water for their families.

Rural residents have no basic goods to buy, and no way to buy them even if supplies arrived. They need help immediatel­y.

This past weekend, I spoke to an aid worker for an internatio­nal NGO and a highrankin­g official in the federal disaster response bureaucrac­y in Puerto Rico. To my surprise, they both agreed that the island’s current predicamen­t is one of the worst, if not the worst, natural and human catastroph­e they’d worked on. Both also agreed on the logistical issues raised by the scope of the disaster and the difficulty in co-ordinating efforts without adequate communicat­ions. There’s no neighbouri­ng state in which to set up a staging area for support. The capital is the best we’ve got at this point and, although communicat­ion within the metro area itself is possible, reaching folks on the ground anywhere else is nearly impossible. According to the Telecommun­ications Regulatory Board, only 38.5 per cent of cell towers are currently in operation, mostly those that are being powered by generators.

An executive at a large food and beverage distributo­r in San Juan reiterated the same concerns: Many small retailers from elsewhere in Puerto Rico have to travel to the city to put in orders, without knowing when or whether those orders will be filled. This only worsens conditions on the ground in areas that have become food deserts and where drinking water is not readily available.

Even within San Juan, distributi­ng aid is still very complex more than a week after the hurricane. Since the storm, I’ve been working with state Rep. Luis Vega Ramos and Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz to help co-ordinate groups of volunteers for the municipali­ty of San Juan to reach out to the urban elderly poor. Patchy communicat­ions are making it very difficult. A centralize­d, topdown approach does not work because it requires a level of coordinati­on that is simply impossible without working cellular networks and other basic technology on which modern bureaucrac­ies have come to depend. Aside from the aid we’ve been able to provide, only one of the more than 30 residences for low-income seniors we’ve visited had received any supplies, in that case from the Red Cross. And again, I should emphasize, this is in San Juan.

Although other recovery and rebuilding projects down the road may benefit from a more centralize­d approach, current work to save lives requires greater agility and less red tape.

Supplies must be moved closer to where they are needed and not hoarded in warehouses in San Juan. The response has to be regional and local. Teams of aid workers on the ground must to be empowered to make decisions as to how to disburse much-needed help. And the U.S. military has to provide support with improved communicat­ions systems that can operate even when everything that can go wrong does. Here in Puerto Rico, it already has.

If current efforts aren’t redirected and allowed to function independen­tly throughout the island, the current crisis will escalate with hunger, thirst and mounting publicheal­th issues driving people to desperatio­n and to the very brink of mere survival.

 ?? BEN FOX, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People wait in line outside a grocery store to buy food that wouldn’t spoil and that they could prepare without electricit­y, in San Juan.
BEN FOX, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People wait in line outside a grocery store to buy food that wouldn’t spoil and that they could prepare without electricit­y, in San Juan.

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