Lodi News-Sentinel

Puerto Rico death toll from hurricane is 21 times higher than previously stated

- By Kate Feldman

Almost 11 months after Hurricane Maria decimated Puerto Rico, officials have conceded that more than 1,400 people were likely killed by the storm, a dramatic rise from the official death toll of 64.

A report to Congress posted online Thursday said that, on June 13, the government of Puerto Rico admitted that 1,427 more people had died in the four months after Maria, which made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane on Sept. 20, than in the previous four years at the same time.

“Similarly, independen­t researcher­s analyzing vital statistics data found that about 1,000 more people died in September and October 2017 than normal, largely in the hurricane’s path or in mountainou­s rural areas,” the report read.

The government had previously acknowledg­ed the higher toll when a judge forced officials to release the death records after being sued by CNN and the Centro de Periodismo Investigat­ivo in Puerto Rico.

Thursday’s report, titled “Transforma­tion and Innovation in the Wake of Devastatio­n: An Economic and Disaster Recovery Plan for Puerto Rico,” examines why the country was so inadequate­ly prepared for Maria.

“Because the resources available for response were inadequate for the scale of the disaster, the failure of the lifeline systems meant that emergency services were severely compromise­d and residents lacked electricit­y, food and water for a prolonged period. And with roads impassable, residents had limited access to medical care,” the report read.

“After the hurricanes, peo- ple lost their jobs, schools were closed, government services and private enterprise could no longer operate effectivel­y, landslides caused flooding hazards, and wastewater polluted marine environmen­ts. Older adults, children, individual­s with disabiliti­es or chronic illnesses and women were all disproport­ionately affected by this disaster.”

President Donald Trump has long touted the low death toll as evidence of the effectiven­ess of federal aid sent to the island. Promised $23 billion, Omar Marrero, the director of Puerto Rico’s Central Recovery and Reconstruc­tion Office, said in March that the country had received just $1.27 billion for its federal assistance nutrition program and $430 million to help repair public infrastruc­ture.

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