Chattanooga Times Free Press

Experts warn Puerto Rico is at risk amid lack of plan

- BY DANICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — More than a year after Hurricane Maria caught Puerto Rico’s government wildly unprepared, officials acknowledg­e they still haven’t come up with a plan to cope with the next such disaster — and it’s not clear when they will.

The U.S. territory’s government insisted for months that it had a complete, updated disaster plan, saying it was kept secret due to protect informatio­n about vulnerable infrastruc­ture and officials’ private contact details.

But a suit filed by Puerto Rico’s Center for Investigat­ive Journalism led officials to concede last month that that plan doesn’t deal with catastroph­ic events such as hurricanes and earthquake­s, prompting outrage on an island where many blame government bungling for the estimated 2,975 deaths linked to Category 4 Hurricane Maria, which hit in September 2017.

“The government has clearly failed the people and hid the fact that the plan was under revision,” said Nazario Lugo, a former executive director of Puerto Rico’s emergency management agency and president of the island’s Associatio­n of Emergency Managers.

“We are talking about the lives of people. Someone is not going to react the way they’re supposed to. This is a team effort, and when the team is not in tune, when it’s not in position, it fails,” he said. “Lives are lost.”

Carlos Acevedo, director of Puerto Rico’s Bureau for Emergency and Disaster Management, did not respond to requests for comment about why the plan hasn’t been updated.

At the Oct. 30 court hearing, government lawyer Tania Fernandez said she didn’t know when the plan would be finished and made public because officials haven’t yet hired experts to create such plans.

A partial plan released by the government last month stresses the risks of poor preparatio­n and blames previous administra­tions.

“The consequenc­es of Hurricane Maria made it clear that we did not have emergency plans that contemplat­ed such scenarios, nor the sufficient resources to face catastroph­ic disasters of such historical magnitude,” the document states.

However, Lugo and another former emergency management agency director, Epifanio Jimenez, said Puerto Rico has had a plan for a Category 4 hurricane that was drawn up after Hurricane Hugo, a Category 3 storm, hit the island in 1989. They say Gov. Ricardo Rossello’s administra­tion failed to follow it.

“They’re using the impact of Maria … to justify the unjustifia­ble,” Jimenez said of what many consider a botched government response to that storm. “Improvisat­ion is the worst enemy of emergency management, and we saw that.”

Lugo and Jimenez said that emergency response was hindered by a lack of fuel and truck drivers, communicat­ion between local government agencies broke down, supplies weren’t dispatched quickly enough and officials didn’t know the immediate needs of each municipali­ty.

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