The Standard (St. Catharines)

Puerto Rico hit with islandwide blackout after fire erupts

- DANICA COTO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A big fire erupted at an electricit­y plant that powers most of Puerto Rico on Wednesday, causing a blackout that swept across the U.S. territory of 3.5 million people.

The Electric Power Authority said two transmissi­on lines of 230,000 volts each failed. Executive Director Javier Quintana told reporters that he expected most power to be restored by Thursday morning, adding that airports, hospitals, police stations and water plants would get priority.

“The entire island is without power,” said Angel Crespo, director of Puerto Rico’s fire department.

“I assume complete responsibi­lity,” Garcia said of the outage. “Everyone knows that the company’s maintenanc­e problems began decades ago.”

The power company is struggling with a $9 billion debt that it hopes to restructur­e as it faces numerous corruption allegation­s. Company officials have said they are seeking more revenue to update what they say is outdated equipment.

Garcia, however, said that no amount of money or maintenanc­e would have prevented the fire.

Authoritie­s said the outage caused 15 fires across Puerto Rico as a result of malfunctio­ning generators, including at the upscale Vanderbilt hotel in the popular tourist area of Condado and at the mayor’s office in the northern coastal town of Catano. All those fires were put out and no one was injured, officials said.

The outage also affected water service across the island, with officials urging customers to be prudent in their usage.

The blackout snarled road traffic and the government had to cancel train service in the capital of San Juan and close a busy traffic tunnel in the south. Businesses, universiti­es and government offices shuttered early, creating even more chaos on roads. A police officer directing traffic was hit and taken to the hospital.

“I call on people to co-operate and respect drivers and government officials ... to avoid any regrettabl­e incidents,” Transporta­tion Secretary Miguel Torres said.

The outage angered many Puerto Ricans who are struggling with power bills that are on average twice that of the U.S. mainland. People took to social media to demand where exactly their money is going.

Puerto Rico is mired in a decade-long economic slump, and a newly created federal control board is working to restructur­e nearly $70 billion in public debt that the governor has said is unpayable.

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