Lodi News-Sentinel

Frail, elderly in Puerto Rico face end of hurricane relief programs

- By Sarah Varney

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Straddled across Ausberto Maldonado’s backyard in Bayamon, a suburb of San Juan, is a nagging reminder of Hurricane Maria’s destructiv­e power.

“See, that tree broke off that branch, which is as thick as a tree — and now it’s in my yard,” said Maldonado, a 65-year-old retiree.

The downed tree — and the rats attracted to it — prevent Maldonado from hanging his laundry. To get the tree removed, he must show up at a local government office. But the diabetic ulcers on his feet make it painful for him to walk.

After a lifetime of work on the U.S. mainland, picking corn and asparagus and processing chickens in poultry plants, Maldonado returned to Puerto Rico a decade ago to help care for his ailing mother, who has since died. Today the retiree finds himself living day to day on the island. He receives $280 a month in Social Security and $89 a month in food stamps — which alone covers about $3 a day for food.

Six months after Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico and its economy — and killing by some estimates at least 1,052 people — the daily indignitie­s are piling up, especially for people who are frail or elderly. Many are finding their current economic straits nearly as threatenin­g as the storm.

The storm also crippled the island’s power grid, and as of Sunday 86,000 utility customers still had no electricit­y in their homes and businesses, affecting hundreds of thousands of people.

In the island’s central mountain region, entire towns and neighborho­ods continue to rely on finicky and expensive gas-fueled generators, putting the elderly and chronicall­y ill who depend on ventilator­s and sleep apnea machines at risk. Many homes along the island’s mountainou­s roads remain entirely in the dark and do not have clean water.

The emergency government support that helped pay for some health care services and medically related transporta­tion needs of Puerto Ricans after Hurricane Maria is running out. Private donations of water and food have slowed. And it’s not clear who, if anyone, will carry on with that work.

Maldonado opened the cupboards in his tidy kitchen. There are a few cans of corned beef, SpaghettiO­s and beans. He sounds wistful about what he likes to cook.

“When I have enough food, when I do my groceries,” he said, “I have eggs and bread and coffee and juice for breakfast. I would make spaghetti or some sort of salad and maybe a little dessert” for dinner.

But the oven is unplugged, and there is no juice or eggs or lettuce. It has been months, Maldonado said, since he has had fresh vegetables in the house.

“When there’s very little, then I kinda go on a diet,” he said.

It was hard enough for the retiree to fill his cupboards before the storm, but now, as many aid groups are winding down their donations, Maldonado needs to find money to buy clean, bottled water and to replace his refrigerat­or, which was ruined during the hurricane.

To buy groceries, he must wait two weeks for his next Social Security check.

“I’m waiting until the 10th so I can go do my grocery shopping again — if I can find a way to get there,” Maldonado said. “That’s when I would have food again, enough to make three meals — lunch, breakfast and dinner.”

Maintainin­g a decent diet isn’t simply about staving off hunger; diabetes is consuming Maldonado’s foot, and unless he eats healthy food and takes his insulin, doctors have warned him, his foot will need to be amputated.

A visiting nurse, Leslie Robles, who checks on Maldonado monthly, examined the 3-inchlong, gaping wound on his foot.

Robles told him that the free medical transporta­tion service the government made available to large numbers of people after the storm is expiring soon, and he’ll no longer qualify for free rides.

But she doesn’t tell him the visiting nurse program she works for, operated by VarMed, a health care management company whose services had been paid for by the government, is shutting down, too.

VarMed has been helping coordinate medical care, social services and housing for thousands of Puerto Ricans for four years. The company, in recent weeks, laid off more than 100 nurses and social workers across the island, as the local government seeks to overhaul its Medicaid contract with insurance companies.

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