Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hurricane death toll actually 1,427, not 64

- BY FRANCES ROBLES

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The government of Puerto Rico has quietly acknowledg­ed in a report posted online that in all likelihood more than 1,400 people died in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria — a figure that is more than 20 times the official death toll.

Hurricane Maria cut through the island on Sept. 20, knocking out power and initially killing about a dozen people. The government’s official count eventually swelled to 64, as more people died from suicide, lack of access to health care and other factors. The number has not changed despite several academic assessment­s that official death certificat­es did not come close to tallying the storm’s fatal toll.

But in a draft of a report to Congress requesting $139 billion in recovery funds, scheduled for official release this month, the Puerto Rican government admits that 1,427 more people died in the last four months of 2017 compared with the same time frame in the previous year. The figures came from death registry statistics released in June, but which were never publicly acknowledg­ed by officials on the island.

“Although the official death count from the Puerto Rico Department of Public Safety was initially 64, the toll appears to be much higher,” said the report, titled “Transforma­tion and Innovation in the Wake of Devastatio­n.”

In another section, it said: “According to initial reports, 64 lives were lost. That estimate was later revised to 1,427.”

The government was widely criticized for

undercount­ing the number of people who died on the island as the power outage stretched for months, causing deaths from diabetes and sepsis to soar. Many people died from lack of access to hospitals, or because there was no power to run the machines they used to breathe.

After a New York Times analysis in December showed that even the preliminar­y data from the Demographi­c Registry of Puerto Rico indicated that hurricane-related deaths may have risen to 1,052, Gov. Ricardo Rosselló commission­ed a study from George Washington University’s school of public health. The report is expected to be released this month.

“We definitely acknowledg­e this is a realistic estimate,” Pedro Cerame, a spokesman for the Puerto Rican government’s Federal Affairs Administra­tion, said of the numbers in the upcoming report to Congress. “We don’t want to say it out loud or publicize it as an official number. The official number will come, and it could be close. But until we see the study, and have the accuracy, we won’t be able to recognize the number as official.”

Cerame acknowledg­ed that the final version of the report hedges the language to say that the additional deaths “may or may not be attributab­le” to the storm; the 1,427 figure was also deleted from a chart.

“I want to emphasize, though, that we have always expected the number to be higher,” he said in an email. “The estimate provided was done using data from the Demographi­c Registry, which was made available to the members of the media.”

The official death toll has not been updated, he said, because officials are awaiting the outcome of the George Washington University study to provide certainty: “Once GW’s study is out, the number will be updated.”

Researcher­s at Penn State University had reached an estimate very similar to The Times’ assessment. A muchpublic­ized study from Harvard University showed the deaths could have ranged from 800 to 8,500.

The final version of the recovery plan being submitted to Congress outlines ambitious projects for Puerto Rico that include major highway renovation­s, $15 billion for the Department of Education and $26 billion for the energy grid. The government has asked for $6 billion for repair and replacemen­t of public buildings and $3.9 billion for environmen­tal use, according to an announceme­nt from the governor’s office.

“Puerto Rico has a unique opportunit­y to innovate and rebuild the Puerto Rico that we all want,” Rosselló said in a statement.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY RAMON ESPINOSA ?? A woman places one of the hundreds of shoes in memory of those killed by Hurricane Maria in front of the Puerto Rico Capitol, in San Juan in June.
AP FILE PHOTO BY RAMON ESPINOSA A woman places one of the hundreds of shoes in memory of those killed by Hurricane Maria in front of the Puerto Rico Capitol, in San Juan in June.
 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY RAMON ESPINOSA ?? Honor guards carry the coffin of policeman Luis Angel Gonzalez Lorenzo during his funeral at the cemetery in Aguada, Puerto Rico, Sept. 29, 2017. Lorenzo was killed during the passage of Hurricane Maria when he tried to cross a river by car.
AP FILE PHOTO BY RAMON ESPINOSA Honor guards carry the coffin of policeman Luis Angel Gonzalez Lorenzo during his funeral at the cemetery in Aguada, Puerto Rico, Sept. 29, 2017. Lorenzo was killed during the passage of Hurricane Maria when he tried to cross a river by car.

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