Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Puerto Rico’s deadline to revive power missed

- DANICA COTO

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Union leaders representi­ng Puerto Rico power company workers slammed local and federal officials Friday as the U.S. territory missed a deadline to restore 95 percent of power as promised by the island’s governor.

Puerto Rico is currently at 64 percent power generation, nearly three months after Hurricane Maria hit, and the situation has sparked a growing number of protests organized by some of the hundreds of neighborho­ods that remain in the dark.

UTIER union president Angel Figueroa said one of the biggest problems is that workers with Puerto Rico’s Electric Power Authority still don’t have the equipment or material to meet the governor’s goal.

“We’ve been forced to recycle materials,” he said, adding that residents in the southern mountain town of Villalba recently bought basic supplies for government workers so power could be restored in their neighborho­od.

“They used money out of their own pockets,” he said.

Nine of Puerto Rico’s 78 municipali­ties remain entirely without power, and thousands of businesses have closed. The lack of electricit­y and other ongoing problems have sparked an exodus to the U.S. mainland, with more than 130,000 Puerto Ricans fleeing the island.

Jose Sanchez, director of Puerto Rico’s power grid restoratio­n program for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, recently said in an interview that efforts to restore power have

been delayed in part because supplies are lacking.

“That flow of materials and personnel has to match, and they have to match perfectly,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely, I don’t think anybody was prepared here in Puerto Rico to address that magnitude of destructio­n and be able to administer the logistics associated with that.”

Sanchez also said Puerto Rico’s mountainou­s topography poses a big challenge. “It’s still a logistical nightmare,” he said.

But union leaders criticized private brigades, saying they were taking too long to help restore power and questionin­g the multimilli­on-dollar contracts they have obtained from the U.S. government.

Last week, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced it was increasing one of two contracts with Texas-based Fluor Corp. from $240 million to $505 million. The amount surpasses a highly criticized $300 million contract awarded to Montana-based Whitefish that Puerto Rico’s government scrapped in late October. The small power company had only two full-time employees when the storm hit, and the contract is being audited at the local and federal levels.

Sanchez said the updated contracts with Fluor will help provide more manpower, equipment and technical expertise.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States