Times Colonist

Trump: Storm response in Puerto Rico ‘incredibly successful’

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WASHINGTON — With a powerful hurricane bearing down on the Southeast coast, U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday turned attention back to his government’s response to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico a year ago, deeming it “incredibly successful” even though a recent federal report found that nearly 3,000 people died.

The administra­tion’s efforts in Puerto Rico received widespread criticism. But after visiting the island last September, Trump said that Puerto Ricans were fortunate that the storm did not yield a catastroph­e akin to the havoc wreaked by Hurricane Katrina along the Gulf Coast.

All told, about 1,800 people died in that 2005 storm. Puerto Rico’s governor last month raised the U.S. territory’s official death toll from Hurricane Maria from 64 to 2,975.

The storm is also estimated to have caused $100 billion US in damage.

“I actually think it was one of the best jobs that’s ever been done with respect to what this is all about,” Trump said Tuesday of the response in Puerto Rico, suggesting that it was made more difficult by the “island nature” of the storm site.

The president praised the response to the series of storms that battered the United States last year, saying: “I think Puerto Rico was an incredible, unsung success. Texas, we’ve been given A-pluses for. Florida, we’ve been given A-pluses for.”

The governor of Puerto Rico, Ricardo Rossello, seized on Trump’s use of the word “successful” and said in a statement issued later Tuesday: “No relationsh­ip between a colony and the federal government can ever be called ‘successful’ because Puerto Ricans lack certain inalienabl­e rights enjoyed by our fellow Americans in the states.”

Rossello called Hurricane Maria “the worst natural disaster in our modern history” and said work remains before they can move on to other stages of recovery.

He said he is waiting for Trump to respond to a petition to help Puerto Rico complete work on emergency housing restoratio­n programs and debris removal.

Trump sparked outrage when, during his visit to the island, he feuded with the mayor of San Juan and passed out paper towels to victims like he was shooting baskets.

While defending the handling of the previous storm, he urged caution in regard to the new one bearing down on North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia.

“The safety of American people is my absolute highest priority,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

“We are sparing no expense. We are totally prepared. We are ready. We are ready as anybody has ever been.”

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