Houston Chronicle

FEMA storm aid to Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands stalled

- By Mark Walker and Zolan Kanno-Youngs

ST. CROIX, U.S. Virgin Islands — More than two years after back-to-back hurricanes ravaged this tropical island, medical workers are still treating gunshot wounds in hallways and kidney failure in a trailer. They ignore their own inflamed rashes that they say are caused by the mold that has shut down an entire hospital floor below a still-porous roof.

At least they have a hospital. The lone medical center on Vieques, an idyllic island that is part of Puerto Rico, was severely damaged by hurricanes Maria and Irma, then abandoned to wandering roosters and grazing horses. Ailing people wait at the ferry dock to catch a boat to the mainland.

Two years on, “we are in the same situation as we were in the days after the hurricane,” said Rafael Surillo Ruiz, the mayor of Yabucoa, on Puerto Rico’s hard-hit eastern edge.

An examinatio­n of Federal Emergency Management Agency data and records demonstrat­es the degree to which the recovery from hurricanes Maria and Irma on America’s Caribbean islands has been stalled compared with some of the most disaster-prone states on the mainland, leaving the islands’ critical infrastruc­ture in squalor and limbo. FEMA officials say 190 long-term recovery projects have been funded in Puerto Rico — out of more than 9,000 requests. On the U.S. Virgin Islands, about 218 projects had funding — out of more than 1,500 requests and still counting.

In contrast, about 3,700 large and small permanent work projects had obligated funding in Texas, two years after Hurricane Harvey hit the Gulf Coast in August 2017. More than 3,700 such projects had been funded over that time in Florida.

That disparity underscore­d how a federal government in Washington has treated citizens on the mainland, with voting representa­tives in Congress and a say in presidenti­al contests, compared with citizens on the islands. Further complicati­ng the recovery are issues of corruption, often amplified by President Donald Trump and, islanders say, questions of race.

“At the end of the day, we’re talking about the life and the well-being of human beings,” said Dyma

Williams, acting chief executive at the Gov. Juan F. Luis Hospital on St. Croix. “I hate to make the distinctio­n about American versus not American, but at the end of the day, we’re not being treated the same way as other Americans are being treated.”

Jeffrey Byard, the associate administra­tor for the Office of Response and Recovery at FEMA, said the agency had never seen recovery efforts like those from the natural disasters of 2017, which included hurricanes Harvey, Maria and Irma, as well as wildfires in California.

“Comparing disasters misleads the American people,” he said. “Each event has a unique set of circumstan­ces, and numbers alone cannot and do not provide a complete picture of what is needed to help communitie­s recover.”

FEMA, through its public assistance program, helps communitie­s recover from major disasters by assisting with debris removal, lifesaving emergency protective measures and public infrastruc­ture reconstruc­tion. Debris removal and protective measures are classified as emergency work. The “permanent work” of public infrastruc­ture repair is what guarantees long-term recovery.

And that permanent work is in little evidence on St. Croix and in Puerto Rico.

“When you’re living on an island and you don’t have a voice on decisions that are made, that tends to happen to you,” said Yves Abraham, principal of St. Croix’s hard-hit Central High School. “Who do you gripe to? All we can do is sit and wait.”

FEMA officials say much of the problem lies with the system that Washington uses to pay for recovery assistance. Local government­s or charities usually front the money to at least begin constructi­on and then are reimbursed by FEMA. But the islands have seen a sluggish economic recovery after the hurricanes.

“Because of the fiscal challenges and their situation financiall­y, they don’t have the funding or access to loans,” said Chris Currie, director of the Government Accountabi­lity Office team that studies disaster relief.

“So they are completely reliant on FEMA.”

Hopes were raised recently at the Juan F. Luis Hospital with the appearance of a row of trailers where the community could be treated until a replacemen­t hospital is built. But Adrienne Williams-Octalien, director of the local disaster recovery office on St. Croix, said the island did not have the upfront funds to start retrofitti­ng the trailers, and help from FEMA had been delayed by a tussle over how much of the costs the federal agency would cover. That has pushed the completion date of even the temporary structure to the spring of 2020 — near the start of the next hurricane season.

“Most municipali­ties and agencies, which is what we are focusing on right now, don’t have the money to start the work,” said Ottmar J. Chavez, executive director of Puerto Rico’s Central Office for Recovery, Reconstruc­tion and Resiliency.

Almost from the beginning, relief funds have been caught in Trump-era politics, with freighted charges coming from Democrats and the White House.

“From day one, right after Maria hit Puerto Rico, there has been a different standard for how the administra­tion responded to Harvey and Irma,” said Rep. Nydia M. Velázquez, D-N.Y., the first Puerto Rican woman elected to the House. She grew emotional as she described her trip to Vieques this month; her own sister had no power for 13 months.

The mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico, Carmen Yulín Cruz, who personally clashed with the president, said she had searched for the answer for why the recovery effort in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands had been so slow and could come up with only one: Those places were treated with no sense of urgency because the victims were people of color.

“You can kill people with a gun or you can kill them with neglect,” Cruz said.

Some officials on the islands conceded that they bore some responsibi­lity; they have struggled to retain local staff and have had difficulty with the paperwork needed to assess hurricane damage.

Byard referred to what he called Puerto Rico’s “history of fiscal mismanagem­ent of U.S. taxpayer dollars.”

Trump has complained often about waste and fraud, especially in Puerto Rico, where the governor, Ricardo A. Rosselló, resigned in July amid a popular uprising driven by decades of mismanagem­ent.

In truth, misuse of FEMA disaster relief is as old as the agency itself. After Hurricane Katrina, a Texas hotel owner was charged with submitting $232,000 in bills for phantom victims. Officials ordered mobile homes worth nearly half a billion dollars that were never used, and renovation­s for a shelter at a former Alabama Army base cost $416,000 per evacuee.

In their criticism of Puerto Rico, White House aides pointed to 375 public corruption conviction­s between 2008 and 2017, but that figure was driven largely by a federal investigat­ion into its police force in 2011. During the same time frame, Texas had almost 1,000 public corruption conviction­s.

“I hate to make the distinctio­n about American versus not American, but at the end of the day, we’re not being treated the same way as other Americans are being treated.” Dyma Williams, acting chief executive at the Gov. Juan F. Luis Hospital on St. Croix

 ?? Photos by Christophe­r Gregory / New York Times ?? The gymnasium at a high school in St. Croix remains damaged. Two years after Hurricanes Maria and Irma, records show the agency’s work on long-term recovery on the islands is crawling compared with the mainland.
Photos by Christophe­r Gregory / New York Times The gymnasium at a high school in St. Croix remains damaged. Two years after Hurricanes Maria and Irma, records show the agency’s work on long-term recovery on the islands is crawling compared with the mainland.
 ??  ?? The third floor of Juan F. Luis Hospital in St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, has been condemned.
The third floor of Juan F. Luis Hospital in St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, has been condemned.

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