Imperial Valley Press

Congress indifferen­t to Puerto Rico’s tragedy

- JOE GUZZARDI

After an absence of more than 50 years, I returned to Puerto Rico this month to view firsthand Hurricane Maria’s devastatio­n. I spent most of my formative years growing up in Puerto Rico, attended a local high school, and took my first post-college job on the island. My emotional ties to Puerto Rico are strong; my son, a true borinqueño, and one of my sisters were born in San Juan. Over the years, I had thought often of going back to visit old haunts, but never did. I knew that decades of booming tourism had spawned rampant developmen­t along miles of unspoiled Atlantic Beach coastline, forever changing Puerto Rico’s landscape. From Thomas Wolfe’s “You Can’t Go Home Again,” “Some things will never change. Some things will always be the same.” But things only remain the same in a person’s mind if he never goes back.

Some sections of Puerto Rico are slowly returning to normal. Tourism is slow, but hotels and restaurant­s that serve visitors are up and running. Most advertise: “We have electricit­y,” reminders that even in Puerto Rico’s biggest cities, residents were without power for weeks. Outside of the major municipali­ties, however, much of the island is still coping and wondering when full power will be restored, and end the longest and largest outage in U.S. history. Trees, traffic lights and bridges are down, and store fronts, closed. Nearly four months ago, Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rossello promised that 95 percent of electricit­y delivery would be functional by Dec. 15. But in a study in December, local experts estimated that roughly 50 percent of the island’s 3.3 million people were still without power. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers predicted that all Puerto Rico would not have full function to electricit­y until May.

In addition to the daily physical challenges that being without power presents, Puerto Ricans have endured an emotional roller coaster of Washington, D.C. follies. The Federal Emergency Management Agency announced on Jan. 29 that it would discontinu­e its food and water distributi­on to the island effective Jan. 31. The responsibi­lity would be turned over to the Puerto Rican government, a prospect that terrified residents, especially the elderly and poor. Two days later, FEMA walked back its original statement, and assured Puerto Ricans that it would continue its assistance.

Then, a scam of unpreceden­ted magnitude victimized Puerto Ricans. FEMA awarded a $156 billion contract to the one-person Tribute Contractin­g LLC to provide 30 million meals to hungry Puerto Ricans. Only 50,000 meals were delivered. Because of previous questionab­le dealings, the federal government had barred Tribute from government work until 2019. An investigat­ion is underway, too little, too late.

Hurricane Maria’s death toll was originally estimated to be just 65 people; however, more than 1,000 people perished. Despite the far-reaching extent of the Puerto Rico disaster, this came on top of the island’s bankruptcy because of its combined bond and pension debt that totals about $120 billion. Congress has shown little interest in extending a helping hand to its fellow U.S. citizens. About half of Americans don’t know Puerto Ricans are citizens, status granted a century ago during Woodrow Wilson’s administra­tion. Ahead of the brief government shutdown, House Speaker Paul Ryan said that his top priorities are passing a two-year budget deal and “solving the DACA challenge,” meaning amnesty. Ryan insisted that he is “committed” to a DACA amnesty for about 690,000 illegal immigrants.

But Ryan said nothing about Puerto Rico, and the ongoing suffering that tens of thousands of Americans still endure while Congress prioritize­s legalizing illegal immigrants.

For anguished Puerto Ricans, being shunted aside while Congress debates illegal immigrants’ futures is another bitter pill for them to swallow.

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