The Mercury News

‘This is personal’: NY rushes to aid Puerto Rico

- By Jennifer Peltz and David Klepper

New York state, home to the U.S. mainland’s biggest Puerto Rican community, is sending a lot more than thoughts and prayers to the hurricaner­avaged island.

Between them, New York state and city have committed hundreds of workers and organized aid ranging from rescue helicopter­s to field rations. Gov. Andrew Cuomo took the first flight allowed to land after Hurricane Maria slammed Puerto Rico last week, and City Council Speaker Melissa MarkViveri­to joined city workers this weekend to aid relief on the island where her own mother lives.

“She tells me every day not to worry about her, though the level of desperatio­n is getting there,” Mark-Viverito said Wednesday, her voice breaking. 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 for gasoline.

State Assemblyma­n Marcos Crespo is waiting to hear from his own mother and relatives even as he fields unceasing phone calls from constituen­ts trying to reach theirs.

“The one thing that keeps me going is knowing how many people are willing to help,” said Crespo, a Democrat like Cuomo and MarkViveri­to.

For politician­s and everyday New Yorkers, the storm is pulling at the ties between their state and Puerto Rico. The island is 1,600 miles (2,575 kilometers) away, but connection­s often feel much closer in a state with over 1 million people of Puerto Rican descent.

“This is personal,” Cuomo said Wednesday. “Anything this state can do, we will do.”

That includes committing hundreds of state troopers and other workers, plus organizing an aid package that reads like the shopping list for a small army: 34,000 bottles of water, 10,000 field rations, 1,400 cots, 500 flashlight­s, 10 electrical generators and four Black Hawk helicopter­s. One of New York’s biggest homegrown pop stars, Jennifer Lopez, donated $1 million to relief efforts at a press conference with Cuomo on Sunday.

New York City has about 700,000 people of Puerto Rican descent — making up about 1 in every 12 city residents, and roughly twice the population of the Puerto Rican capital of San Juan. More than 140 New York City firefighte­rs, police officers and other workers are in Puerto Rico to help, and Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio is preparing for an expected influx of thousands of Puerto Ricans fleeing the storm’s damage.

The federal government has sent thousands of employees to help the U.S. territory with needs from fueling hospital generators to trying to avert a dam collapse. Republican President Donald Trump plans to visit next week.

Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello and Resident Commission­er Jennifer Gonzalez, the island’s non-voting representa­tive in Congress, have praised Trump’s response. But the administra­tion also has faced complaints that its efforts lagged responses to hurricanes that hit the mainland.

Maria tore through Puerto Rico last week, killing at least 16 people and leaving nearly all 3.4 million residents without power and most without water.

“It’s being felt deeply here” in New York, says Edwin Melendez, director of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at city-run Hunter College.

On Wednesday, Maria regained strength and became a hurricane again, pushing water over both sides of North Carolina’s Outer Banks and taking its time to slowly turn away from the U.S. Atlantic coast.

No injuries had been reported, but the surge of water washed over eroded beaches, flooding properties and state Highway 12, the only road through the narrow barrier islands of Hatteras and Ocracoke.

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Juan Rojas, right, of Queens hugs his 4-year-old grandson Elias Rojas, as his daughter-in-law Cori Rojas, left, carries her daughter Lilly, 3, in the terminal at Kennedy Airport in New York after Cori Rojas arrived Tuesday from San Juan, Puerto Rico....
JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Juan Rojas, right, of Queens hugs his 4-year-old grandson Elias Rojas, as his daughter-in-law Cori Rojas, left, carries her daughter Lilly, 3, in the terminal at Kennedy Airport in New York after Cori Rojas arrived Tuesday from San Juan, Puerto Rico....

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