Chattanooga Times Free Press

Floridians get supplies to Puerto Rico ‘the Miami way’

- BY GLENN GARVIN MIAMI HERALD (TNS)

MIAMI — Within hours after Hurricane Maria crashed ashore last month, officials at Fort Lauderdale’s Nova Southeaste­rn University knew their Puerto Rico campus would be closed for weeks or even longer while the shattered island recovered. And, with power, water and even most forms of commerce knocked out, they worried about what might be happening to their 770 students, faculty and staff in San Juan.

When Tampa cardiologi­st Kiran Patel — who through a family foundation has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to Nova — learned of their worries, he said the solution was simple: I’ve got a plane that most of the time just sits on the runway. Why don’t we use it to get supplies to our people in Puerto Rico?

It was the beginning of a supply route that now has funneled about 6,000 pounds of food, water, toilet paper, flashlight­s, batteries and baby wipes to the Nova campus. That might be a small drop in a very large bucket on an island of 3.5 million people, but it’s still 770 or so people the Puerto Rican government, stretched thin in every direction by a catastroph­e of near-Biblical proportion­s, doesn’t have to worry about.

“Depending on government and profession­als to help you is not the way I was raised,” Patel said. “What’s happening in Puerto Rico is not a government problem. It’s our problem. It’s society’s problem, and we all have to act.”

Nova’s effort to bypass the delays clamped on Puerto Rico hurricane relief by red tape, jurisdicti­onal squabbling and limited transporta­tion resources is by no means the only one. A growing trickle of supplies is flowing onto the island from private individual­s and companies that aren’t waiting around for anybody to approve their plans, but just doing it.

“Sometimes you have to do it the Miami way,” said political-communicat­ions consultant Eleazar David Melendez, a member of an informal relief network — he calls it a “guerilla flotilla” — that has shipped nearly a million pounds of supplies to Puerto Rico in the past 10 days or so. “Not follow the rules, just get a result.”

Some of the efforts are big, some small. The rapper Pitbull sent his private plane to evacuate cancer patients. DHL flew 250,000 pounds of supplies in a single week. Two FedEx relief flights a day have arrived since the main San Juan airport reopened. The Fort Lauderdale-based medical transport company REVA sent three team members to hand out medical supplies last week.

But even a single small plane can make a big difference, the relief workers say.

“We have a lot of people with twin turboprop planes who help us,” Melendez said. “They can carry maybe 10,000 pounds tops. That doesn’t sound like much. But 10,000 pounds of insulin, that’s really important.”

Sometimes the private relief efforts are driven by personal ties to Puerto Rico, like those of Nova Southeaste­rn or Melendez, who was born on the island. And sometimes they originate with people who realize they’re situated to help.

Kevin Diemar, president of the Miamibased Unity Jets charter company, had one of those moments. In the first days after the hurricane, when almost no commercial flights were able to leave San Juan, Diemar’s company was doing a brisk business ferrying well-to-do customers off the island.

“We were bringing people out, but the flights going down there were empty,” Diemar said. “And then I suddenly thought, ‘Hey, why don’t we load the Puerto Rico-bound flights with supplies?’” Since then, each of his Lear Jet 45s headed to Puerto Rico has carried between 1,200 and 1,600 pounds of water, baby food and other supplies, which he hands over to relief organizati­ons operating on the ground.

Puerto Rico’s smaller airports are the key to private relief efforts. Less busy, they’re easier to book a small plane into, and offer quicker unloading. Getting permission to unload on the airport tarmac can take up to six hours, which greatly complicate­s the entire process when arrivals and departures can be made only during daylight hours.

The 18 smaller airports are also scattered across the island, which means the supplies don’t stack up in San Juan, awaiting scarce transport to Puerto Rico’s interior.

Bypassing San Juan and delivering supplies directly to mayors or private groups like the Red Cross out in the countrysid­e also keeps the supplies from getting snagged in government­al regulation­s and arguments over who gets credit for the help.

That’s why the private relief networks — even large ones — have resisted creating any formal infrastruc­ture. They fear it will breed bureaucrac­y and inertia.

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