Albuquerque Journal

Limited air traffic restored in Northern Marianas

Widespread power outages on islands hamper recovery efforts

- BY CALEB JONES AND JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER

Some airport and shipping access has returned to a U.S. Pacific territory ravaged by a super typhoon, but tens of thousands of residents still lacking power and sifting through rubble face a long road to recovery.

Saipan Internatio­nal Airport reopened with limited service today after Super Typhoon Yutu slammed the Northern Mariana Islands last week as a Category 5 storm.

A statement posted on the Facebook page of Northern Marianas Gov. Ralph Torres said the airport will be open from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. but will receive only six internatio­nal flights per day. Inbound flights are restricted to residents and humanitari­an aid, the statement said.

Thursday’s storm was the strongest to hit any part of the United States this year. It ripped off roofs, overturned cars, toppled trees and killed a woman who took shelter in an abandoned building that collapsed. Others were injured, including three people who needed surgery.

The airport sustained significan­t damage to buildings, and several crumpled small planes were scattered around the tarmac. Officials said the airport is still mostly without power, and the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion has only one working scanning machine. Baggage and cargo may have to be examined by hand, the statement said.

All airports on Saipan, Tinian and Rota were closed due to the storm. The airport on Tinian remains closed except to military planes. Rota’s airport is now open.

The U.S. Coast Guard said Saturday all ports in the Northern Mariana Islands have also reopened.

Commander of Coast Guard Sector Guam Capt. Christophe­r Chase said in a statement that crews were working to assess and restore shipping access to make sure supplies can reach the islands. The Coast Guard is also working with local officials in search and rescue operations.

A Coast Guard airplane from Hawaii flew over Saipan and reported minimal damage to shipping lanes.

The U.S. government is sending supplies to the Northern Marianas as residents dig through the wreckage.

“The rebuilding of this island is beginning already as time waits for nobody,” Jan Reyes, who lives on the territory’s most populated island of Saipan, wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “Despite the casualties, we the people of the Commonweal­th of the Northern Mariana Islands are resilient people.”

To help the recovery, military planes brought in food, water, tarps and other supplies.

U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency spokesman David Gervino said the agency is focused on helping restore power, opening sea and air ports, and ensuring cellphone towers can operate on emergency power until electricit­y service is reinstated.

Super Typhoon Yutu packed maximum sustained winds of 180 mph as it passed over the islands of Tinian and Saipan, the National Weather Service said. By Saturday, power was still out across Saipan, with 50,000 residents, and Tinian, with 3,000 people.

Many homes were destroyed because some families can’t afford concrete homes that conform to building codes meant to withstand typhoon winds, said Edwin Propst, a member of the territory’s House of Representa­tives.

Some people build houses with concrete foundation­s and walls, but the structures have wooden or tin roofs.

Reyes and her family lost everything. “Everything my family and I have bought and added to our home over 13 years laid on the flooded floor as every window in our house shattered,” Reyes wrote.

A cousin was trapped under debris for seven hours, Reyes said.

 ?? DIGITALGLO­BE ?? Satellite images show damage at Saipan Internatio­nal Airport on Saipan, an island of the Northern Mariana Islands. The image on the right is from Friday.
DIGITALGLO­BE Satellite images show damage at Saipan Internatio­nal Airport on Saipan, an island of the Northern Mariana Islands. The image on the right is from Friday.

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