The Mercury News

San Juan mayor hits hearing delay

- By Luis Alonso Lugo

WASHINGTON >> San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz on Wednesday questioned why Republican­s abruptly postponed a House hearing where she was scheduled to testify about the devastatin­g impact of Hurricane Maria on Puerto Rico.

Cruz, who has tangled with President Donald Trump about the federal response, suggested the White House did not want to hear her criticism.

“There was a meeting scheduled for today that was canceled as I was getting to Washington,” she said during a news conference with Democratic House members. “It is evident that this administra­tion does not want to listen to the truth and does not want to own up to it.”

The mayor was referring to a hearing about the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s preparedne­ss and response capabiliti­es that was set for Wednesday morning and was to include testimony from both Cruz and FEMA Administra­tor Brock Long.

Rep. Bennie G. Thompson of Mississipp­i, the top Democrat on the Homeland Security Committee, who had invited Cruz to testify, told reporters he was given no explanatio­n for the postponeme­nt.

“It is inexcusabl­e that the Republican­s have delayed this hearing for the third time with no rational reason in a blatant attempt to silence the mayor and shield the Trump administra­tion from another bad news story,” he said.

A committee aide said that Thompson had requested the witness Friday, leaving only the weekend to plan for a panel of state and local witnesses.

The aide, who was not authorized to speak to reporters and spoke on condition of anonymity, said that given the short turnaround time it was not possible to assemble a full second panel of witnesses to reflect areas of the country affected by recent natural disasters.

Cruz reiterated criticism about the federal response, which she called “inadequate” and “insufficie­nt.” She said, “The situation is still a life or death situation” a month after Maria hit the island. “Survival cannot be our new way of life.”

Cruz objected to the grade of 10 out of 10 that Trump has given to the federal response to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico.

Cruz asked that Congress spare humanitari­an aid to Puerto Rico for four years from the Jones Act, a federal law that prohibits foreign-flagged ships from shuttling goods between U.S. ports.

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