Times Colonist

Half of Puerto Rico still in dark

More than three months after Maria, outage rankles

- DANICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico authoritie­s said Friday that nearly half of power customers in the U.S. territory still lack electricit­y more than three months after Hurricane Maria, sparking outrage among islanders who accuse the government of mismanagin­g its response to the Category 4 storm.

Officials said 55 per cent of the nearly 1.5 million customers have power, marking the first time the government has provided that statistic since Maria hit on Sept. 20 with winds of up to 250 kilometres an hour. Officials had previously reported only power generation, which stands at nearly 70 per cent of pre-storm levels.

“It’s just extraordin­ary that it is still so far away from being 100 per cent recovered,” said Susan Tierney, a senior adviser for Denver-based consulting company Analysis Group who testified before a U.S. Senate committee on efforts to restore power in Puerto Rico.

“I’m not aware of any time in recent decades since the U.S. has electrifie­d the entire economy that there has been an outage of this magnitude.”

One of Puerto Rico’s 78 municipali­ties remains entirely without power, and it’s unclear when some electricit­y will be restored to the central mountain town of Ciales.

Crews this week restored power for the first time to parts of the southeast coastal town of Yabucoa, which received the first hit from Maria.

Among those still in the dark is Christian Pagan, 58, who lives near the capital of San Juan and said it was the government’s fault that a large number of people still don’t have power.

“Everybody saw that the devastatio­n was great, but I don’t understand why they’re trying to sell people something that’s not real,” he said of the explanatio­ns the government has provided as to why power has not been fully restored.

“The first month was lost to bureaucrac­y and an uncoordina­ted reaction.”

He especially criticized the power company’s former director, Ricardo Ramos, who resigned in late October after signing a $300-million US contract for a Montana-based company that had only two full-time employees when the storm hit. Ramos also had said that he did not activate mutual-aid agreements with power companies in the U.S. mainland in part because there was no way to communicat­e with them.

It is not yet known what percentage of businesses and homes now have electricit­y. Power company spokesman Geraldo Quinones told the Associated Press that officials are still working to obtain that data.

Gov. Ricardo Rossello had pledged 95 per cent power generation by Dec. 15, while the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has said the entire island will have power by May.

Fredyson Martinez, vicepresid­ent of a union that represents workers with Puerto Rico’s power company, told the AP on Friday that a recent study by local engineers found that 90 per cent of industries and 75 per cent of businesses already have power, meaning residentia­l areas are disproport­ionately in the dark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada