Daily Times (Primos, PA)

After Maria, humanitari­an crisis grows in Puerto Rico

- By Danica Coto

SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO » A humanitari­an crisis grew Saturday in Puerto Rico as towns were left without fresh water, fuel, power or phone service following Hurricane Maria’s devastatin­g passage across the island.

A group of anxious mayors arrived in the capital to meet with Gov. Ricardo Rossello to present a long list of items they urgently need. The north coastal town of Manati had run out of fuel and fresh water, Mayor Jose Sanchez Gonzalez said.

“Hysteria is starting to spread. The hospital is about to collapse. It’s at capacity,” he said, crying. “We need someone to help us immediatel­y.”

The death toll from Maria in Puerto Rico stood at seven after a body found in a river was reported Saturday, and the toll was likely to rise.

Authoritie­s in the town of Vega Alta on the north coast said they had been unable to reach an entire neighborho­od called Fatima, and were particular­ly worried about residents of a nursing home.

“I need to get there today,” Mayor Oscar Santiago told The Associated Press. “Not tomorrow, today.”

Federal officials said a dam upstream of the towns of Quebradill­as and Isabela in northwest Puerto Rico was cracked but had not burst by Saturday afternoon. Video from a helicopter flight showed water pouring from the Guajataca dam. Federal officials said Friday that 70,000 people were being evacuated, but Javier Jimenez, mayor of the town of San Sebastian, said he believed the number was far smaller.

He said only several hundred families were told to leave the banks of the Guajataca River. San Sebastian is to the west of the dam and outside the worst flood zone.

The discrepanc­y could not immediatel­y be explained.

The 345-yard (316-meter) dam, which was built around 1928, holds back a man-made lake covering about 2 square miles (5 square kilometers). More than 15 inches (nearly 40 centimeter­s) of rain from Maria fell on the surroundin­g mountains, swelling the reservoir.

An engineer inspecting the dam reported a “contained breach” that officials quickly realized was a crack that could be the first sign of total failure of the dam, U.S. National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Anthony Reynes said.

“There’s no clue as to how long or how this can evolve. That is why the authoritie­s are moving so fast because they also have the challenges of all the debris. It is a really, really dire situation,” Reynes said.

Officials said 1,360 of the island’s 1,600 cellphone towers were downed, and 85 percent of above-ground and undergroun­d phone and internet cables were knocked out. With roads blocked and phones dead, officials said, the situation may worsen.

“We haven’t seen the extent of the damage,” Rossello told reporters in the capital. Rossello couldn’t say when power might be restored.

Maj. Gen. Derek P. Rydholm, deputy to the chief of the Air Force Reserve, said mobile communicat­ions systems were being flown in, but acknowledg­ed “it’s going to take a while” before people in Puerto Rico will be able to communicat­e with their families outside the island.

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 ?? CARLOS GIUSTI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dead horses lie on the side of the road after the passing of Hurricane Maria, in Toa Baja, Puerto Rico, Friday. Because of the heavy rains brought by Maria, thousands of people were evacuated from Toa Baja after the municipal government opened the...
CARLOS GIUSTI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dead horses lie on the side of the road after the passing of Hurricane Maria, in Toa Baja, Puerto Rico, Friday. Because of the heavy rains brought by Maria, thousands of people were evacuated from Toa Baja after the municipal government opened the...

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