The Denver Post

State, city rushing aid to ravaged Puerto Rico

- By Jennifer Peltz and David Klepper

NEW YORK» New York state, home to more than 1 million people of Puerto Rican background, is sending a lot more than thoughts and prayers to the hurricane-ravaged island.

Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo has organized an aid package that reads like the grocery list for a small army: 34,000 bottles of water, more than 10,000 field rations, 1,400 cots, pillows and blankets, 10 generators and four Black Hawk helicopter­s.

Also, more than 100 New York City firefighte­rs, police officers and other workers are in Puerto Rico to help, and Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio says he is preparing the city to handle an expected influx of thousands of Puerto Ricans fleeing the storm’s damage.

On Wednesday, Democratic City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito’s voice broke with emotion as she described traveling with a city team to an island that was home to several members’ parents, including her own mother.

“She tells me every day not to worry about her, though the level of desperatio­n is getting there,” MarkViveri­to said, noting that her mother had left her damaged home to stay with friends in a high-rise with no power and had stood in a five-hour line to get gasoline.

While New York is 1,600 miles from Puerto Rico, connection­s often feel much closer in the state with the nation’s biggest Puerto Rican community off the island.

New York City, with an overall population of 8.5 million, has about 700,000 people of Puerto Rican descent — roughly twice the population of the Puerto Rican capital of San Juan.

And those ties have been pulling at politician­s and everyday New Yorkers since Hurricane Maria tore through Puerto Rico last week, killing at least 16 people and leaving nearly all 3.4 million residents of the U.S. territory without power and most without water.

“It’s being felt deeply here,” Edwin Melendez, director of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at city-run Hunter College, said Wednesday between making phone calls to try to arrange help for people in need. The center’s website has crashed repeatedly since it posted a list of ways to donate, he said.

New York’s Puerto Rican population began growing significan­tly in the 1950s and ‘60s as people left the island in search of economic opportunit­y. While many families have now been in New York for generation­s, many identify strongly with their heritage. The city’s annual Puerto Rican Day is one of New York’s biggest parades of the year.

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