Imperial Valley Press

Puerto Rico faces austerity measures amid budget wrangling

- BY DANICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — New austerity measures are looming for storm-battered Puerto Rico after local legislator­s refused to alter labor laws as demanded by a federal control board that said changes would stimulate the U.S. territory’s economy amid an 11-year recession.

The board that is overseeing the island’s finances said Friday it will eliminate a $25 million scholarshi­p fund for Puerto Rico’s largest public university, as well as a $50 million annual fund for cities and towns struggling in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria. The board said it also will scrap an annual Christmas bonus for all government employees starting next fiscal year.

The measures were a blow to Gov. Ricardo Rossello, who had originally promised that Puerto Rico legislator­s would agree to at-will employment, which means private employers would be able to dismiss workers at any time without having to prove just cause.

Rossello urged the board and legislator­s to reach an agreement and take what he called “prudent” steps.

“Let’s take actions that...will benefit the people of Puerto Rico,” he told reporters.

Board members have said that changing labor laws would attract sorely needed investors to a U.S. territory trying to restructur­e a portion of its $70 billion public debt load as it faces nearly $50 billion in pension obligation­s.

“Decisions made over decades have led us to this point,” board member Ana Matosantos told reporters on Friday. “Now, deep cuts to programs, services and debt, revenue increases, reforms to critical infrastruc­ture, revamping outdated government structures and eliminatin­g barriers to job creation are all necessary... These difficult choices are not the fault of the board, or of the current government in power. Rather, they are the result of decades of financial mismanagem­ent and neglect.”

Puerto Rico Senate President Thomas Rivera Schatz, who campaigned against changing labor laws, issued a strongly worded statement defending his position as he criticizin­g the board.

“They threaten without any justificat­ion or economic foundation with eliminatin­g the Christmas bonus, vacations, employment security of the private sector worker, scholarshi­ps for students, funds for infrastruc­ture projects and economic developmen­t, among other important items,” he said. “They threaten to be worse than Hurricane Maria!”

The Category 4 storm caused more than an estimated $100 billion in damage when it hit Puerto Rico on Sept. 20, and the island is still struggling to recover. More than 2,300 customers remain without power, and tens of thousands of businesses closed after people fled to the U.S. mainland.

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