Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Harris touts federal aid in visit to Puerto Rico

- DÁNICA COTO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Alejandro Granadillo­s of The Associated Press.

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris visited Puerto Rico on Friday as part of a whirlwind trip to tout the federal aid the U.S. territory has received following deadly hurricanes and attend a Democratic fundraiser.

Her visit comes days after U.S. President Joe Biden launched a campaign targeting Latino voters ahead of the November general elections. While those in Puerto Rico cannot vote in U.S. presidenti­al elections despite being U.S. citizens, more than 5 million Puerto Ricans live on the U.S. mainland.

Accompanyi­ng Harris for the roughly five-hour visit to the island were U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm and Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t Deputy Secretary Adrianne Todman. Welcoming them was Gov. Pedro Pierluisi, a Democrat whose New Progressiv­e Party has long pushed for statehood.

Harris’ first stop was to visit a new home in the northern municipali­ty of Canovanas, located near the capital. It had been destroyed after Hurricane Maria hit the island in September 2017 as a powerful Category 4 storm, killing an estimated 2,975 people in its aftermath.

En route, the motorcade passed people holding their phones up as it went by. Some onlookers leaned out of their cars to take photos as they waited for the motorcade to pass, while others stood outside businesses and homes as the motorcade continued. One girl held a sign imploring help to fix their home.

“I see we are making a difference. There is still more work to do,” Harris said as she stood on the lawn of the new home draped with a large Puerto Rican flag. “We are ambitious. Yes, we are impatient.”

Harris said one of the ongoing challenges Puerto Rico faces is intermitte­nt energy sources, with outages still occurring daily since Maria razed the power grid. She noted that the federal government has provided some $3 billion in reliable energy sources, including rooftop solar panels. It also shipped mega generators last year to minimize outages.

“[This] is about an upgrade on quality of life and just the well-being and dignity of each family to be able to satisfy their basic needs,” she said, adding that hurricane resistance technology is being used. “Puerto Rico taught us some lessons.”

Meanwhile, Todman said that more than 6,000 homes have been repaired and more than 3,500 new units built since the devastatin­g storm.

“It’s undeniable that more work remains to be done,” she said.

Reconstruc­tion in the years following Maria was slow, in part given the spending restrictio­ns that the Trump administra­tion implemente­d at the time.

During Harris’ visit on Friday, Pierluisi thanked her and Biden for their help: “They’re with us in connection with this reconstruc­tion.”

Hours before Harris’ arrival, a couple dozen protesters gathered in Puerto Rico’s capital to decry the island’s territoria­l status and demand a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war.

After visiting the home in Canovanas, Harris stopped by a community center in San Juan where a handful of protesters gathered, yelling, “Yankee, go home!” as supporters chanted, “USA! USA!”

Harris later spoke at a campaign reception before flying back to the U.S. mainland Friday evening.

She addressed about a couple dozen attendees gathered at an upscale apartment complex owned by developer Nicholas Prouty, who hosted the event. Harris thanked him and Pierluisi, noting that the governor “does not pass up the opportunit­y” to have a list of what Puerto Rico needs. “Mad respect,” she said.

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