Gulf Today

After Hurricane Fiona devastates Puerto Rico, mutual aid centres and community activism lend a helping hand

- Karina N. González, Tribune News Service

On Sept. 18, nearly five years to the day of Hurricane Maria, the force of Hurricane Fiona and a fragile power grid plunged Puerto Rico into a frightenin­g yet familiar darkness. From low-lying to mountainou­s regions, flooding and landslides batered vulnerable communitie­s, and with it, resurfaced painful memories of Hurricane Maria.

More than a week ater Hurricane Fiona made landfall, approximat­ely 400,000 residences are without electricit­y. This was not unexpected. Public confidence in Puerto Rico’s power grid is so low that residents braced for a blackout even before this latest disaster. In 2021, Puerto Rico’s public grid, Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, was privatised and contracted out to Luma Energy, a Us-canadian energy company. Privatizat­ion was pitched to the public as the best option for a more reliable service.

Puerto Ricans’ scepticism has since been vindicated. Under Luma, energy prices have soared while delivery has remained subpar. Some families and elderly residents have been forced to choose between paying for their medicine and food, or their electricit­y bill. Puerto Rico not only has among the highest electrical rates in the United States, but also, at 43%, one of its highest poverty rates. Many public employees, like teachers and emergency medical profession­als, are working two or more jobs to pay for basic needs.

Each community across the archipelag­o faces its own obstacles, but all share the awareness that we cannot rely on a federal and local government that has chronicall­y failed us. In a recent congressio­nal hearing, a Federal Emergency Management Agency Official, Anne Bink, reported that only $40 million out of the $13.2 billion allocated for public utilities, has been disbursed. This shocking shorfall follows FEMA’S own admited failures in its post-maria response, such as a lack of critical supplies and effective logistical coordinati­on with the local government.

My 84-year-old grandmothe­r, Eva Fret Pabón, has experience­d multiple hurricanes in her lifetime and suffered from government neglect. She lives alone in Vega Baja, a municipali­ty about 45 minutes from the capital city, San Juan. Ater Hurricane Maria struck on Sept. 20, 2017, she was let without power for over five months and without potable water for three months. Today, she faces the same challenge and is once again without electricit­y for fans, cooking or light.

Eva was as prepared as she could be for what was initially forecast as a tropical storm. However, shortly before Fiona made landfall, the tropical storm was upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane, and residents scrambled to acquire supplies. This put tremendous pressure on families and elderly residents living below the poverty line.

Facing an ineffectiv­e government response, reliable solutions have come in the form of mutual aid centres and community activism. Local infrastruc­ture that developed in response to Hurricane Maria in 2017 enabled Puerto Ricans in the archipelag­o and in the diaspora to quickly mobilize their own emergency response.

Even so, warm meals are hard to come by. Eva and her neighbours plan and share meals with the few ingredient­s that they have access to, which includes mostly canned meat and vegetables. when her knees are too sore to walk, friends and family deliver necessary supplies or drive her to medical appointmen­ts. Local networks of neighbours and family work collaborat­ively to address the needs of each person. The effects of housing disparitie­s, COVID-19, natural disasters and economic inequality on mental health is widely overlooked. Media silence has accentuate­d the unequal relationsh­ip between Puerto Rico and the United States. The destructio­n of whole communitie­s by these hurricanes is broadcast on television­s nationwide, but there’s inadequate coverage that centres on the hardships these communitie­s face in the atermath.

Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny is breaking the media blockade. In his new music video for “El Apagón,” which means blackout in Spanish, the titular song transition­s into a documentar­y titled, “Aquí Vive Gente,” by independen­t journalist Bianca Graulau.

In it, Graulau invited residents to speak candidly about their experience­s while drawing atention to multiple inequities in Puerto Rico: privatisat­ion of public beaches and schools, predatory housing practices, and government corruption. Political and economic disenfranc­hisement will not stop Boricuas from preserving our culture, language and our very existence. Here, “Solo el pueblo salva al pueblo,” meaning “only the people save the people,” is a rallying cry. And it shouldn’t take one prominent voice — or the suffering of low-income civilians living in darkness — to get Puerto Ricans the help and resources they need ater another climate disaster.

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