Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump silent on Puerto Rico

The president Wednesday showcased plans for the 2018 hurricane season.

- By Jackie Calmes jackie.calmes@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Wednesday staged a briefing on federal preparedne­ss for the hurricane season now underway, repeatedly lauding his administra­tion’s “incredible job” last year while remaining silent on Puerto Rico’s lingering problems and new estimates of the massive death toll from last season’s storm.

The president, who last fall said Puerto Rico had averted a “real catastroph­e” because only 16 islanders had died after Hurricane Maria hit Sept. 20, has not addressed independen­t reports of a much higher toll — including one last week conducted by Harvard researcher­s and published in the New England Journal of Medicine estimating that 4,645 or more people may have died in the aftermath.

“We really appreciate the job you’ve done,” the president said Wednesday to officials and members of his Cabinet, according to CNN. “I want to thank you very much.”

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders, asked on Tuesday whether Trump would still give his administra­tion a score of 10 on a scale of 1 to 10 for its response in Puerto Rico, did not give a direct answer.

“The federal response, once again, was at a historic proportion,” Sanders said, declining as before to say whether the White House accepts the new estimate.

“I can’t speak to how this White House operates,” said Michael Brown, who as head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency was much criticized, along with President George W. Bush, for the government’s response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “But I would have gotten a call from President Bush or his chief of staff asking, ‘What the hell is this study? Read it, tell us what it says and see what we can do.’

“Irrespecti­ve of what this White House might say, tweet or do — and I don’t want to get the people in FEMA in trouble here — but I can tell you that they’re desperatel­y looking to that study to see, ‘What can we learn from this?’ ” he added.

The sense that Bush botched the response to Katrina, especially in the hardest hit mostly African-American areas of New Orleans, damaged his standing for the remainder of his second term. “Katrina” came to be synonymous with incompeten­ce more broadly, prompting Republican­s and some pundits to ask throughout President Barack Obama’s tenure whether some problem might become his Katrina.

Trump, by contrast, has seemed to escape such judgment when it comes to the federal response in Puerto Rico, which still suffers widespread power outages that cripple schools, hospitals and commerce.

Observers in both parties see a couple of forces at work: other controvers­ies surroundin­g the president, and that much of the public does not think of the more than 3 million Puerto Ricans as fully Americans.

“Historical­ly, when thousands of American lives are lost in large part due to government negligence, there would be some public backlash, congressio­nal hearings, inspector general reports, and just some basic accountabi­lity so that it wouldn’t happen again,” said Stephanie Cutter, a longtime Democratic strategist who worked in the Clinton and Obama White House.

The answer to why that hasn’t happened regarding Puerto Rico’s devastatio­n “is complex,” Cutter added, “but basically the majority of Americans are outraged about so many of his actions that it’s difficult for specific things to break through. And this Congress has proven incapable of acting like an independen­t branch of government.”

Puerto Rico’s official death count in the wake of Maria, based on actual bodies identified, is 64, although the island’s government has commission­ed a more thorough effort to count the dead. Even the official estimate is still four times more than what Trump acknowledg­ed in his last public comment on the impact — when he visited the island in early October.

On that visit, he told officials, “Now, I hate to tell you, Puerto Rico, but you’ve thrown our budget a little out of whack because we’ve spent a lot of money on Puerto Rico. And that’s fine — we’ve saved a lot of lives.”

He continued: “If you look at a real catastroph­e like Katrina, and you look at the tremendous hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people that died, and you look at what happened here with, really, a storm that was just totally overpoweri­ng — nobody has ever seen anything like this.”

“Sixteen people versus in the thousands,” he said. “You can be very proud of all of your people, all of our people working together.”

The death toll from Katrina was 1,833 people.

In addition to the most recent study, by Harvard University’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, other surveys have estimated that more than 1,000 Puerto Ricans died in the weeks after Maria as either direct or indirect results of the storm. The Harvard study concluded that “the number of excess deaths related to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico is more than 70 times the official estimate” of 64 deaths.

The authors said, however, “this number is likely to be an underestim­ate,” with the actual toll exceeding 5,000.

The estimate covers the months from Sept. 20 through the end of 2017. One-third of the deaths, the study said, were the result of “delayed or interrupte­d healthcare,” just as in the aftermath of other storms including Katrina, Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, which struck before Maria last year, and Superstorm Sandy on the East Coast in 2012.

 ?? RAMON ESPINOSA/AP ?? A woman last week writes on a shoe as part of a memorial in San Juan, Puerto Rico, for those killed by Hurricane Maria.
RAMON ESPINOSA/AP A woman last week writes on a shoe as part of a memorial in San Juan, Puerto Rico, for those killed by Hurricane Maria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States