Miami Herald (Sunday)

Puerto Ricans seething over lack of power days after Fiona

- BY DÁNICA COTO Associated Press

SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO

Half of Puerto Rico is without power more than five days after Hurricane Fiona struck — including an entire town where not a single work crew has arrived.

Many on the U.S. territory are angry and incredulou­s, and calls are growing for the ouster of the island’s private electricit­y transmissi­on and distributi­on company.

Fuel disruption­s are worsening the situation, forcing grocery stores, gas stations and other businesses to close and leaving apartment buildings in the dark because there is no diesel for generators.

Many are questionin­g why it is taking so long to restore power since Fiona was a Category 1 storm that did not affect the entire island, and whose rain — not wind — inflicted the greatest damage.

“It’s not normal,” said Marcel Castro-Sitiriche, an electrical engineerin­g professor at the University of Puerto Rico in Mayaguez. “They have not given a convincing explanatio­n of what the problem is.”

He noted that Puerto Rico’s Electric Power Authority and Luma, a private company that took over the island’s power transmissi­on and distributi­on last year, also have not released basic informatio­n such as details of the damage to the electricit­y grid.

“We don’t know the extent of the damage yet,” Castro said, adding that he was concerned and surprised that Luma had not brought in additional crews to boost extra manpower already on the island.

Luma has said Fiona’s floods left several substation­s underwater and inaccessib­le, and it has insisted it doesn’t need more personnel.

“We have all the resources we believe we need,” said Luma engineer Daniel Hernández.

The lack of power has prompted at least two mayors to activate own repair teams, and several other town leaders are calling for answers on why Luma crews have not reconnecte­d homes and key infrastruc­ture.

“They haven’t even arrived here,” said Yasmín Allende, municipal administra­tor for Hormiguero­s, a town in western Puerto Rico that is home to more than 15,600 people, many of them elderly.

She said town officials have provided a list of downed transforme­rs and power lines as well as the exact location of dozens of damaged electric posts. They have even cleared openings around damaged spots to ensure that electricit­y could be restored as soon as possible, she said.

“Everything is ready for them so they can come and do their job,” Allende said. “All they have to do is show up.”

Elizabeth González, who lives in Hormiguero­s, said she was forced to throw out two bags of meat Friday and is struggling to buy more gasoline for her generator, even as her husband, who has cancer, depends on it.

González said she is fed up with Puerto Rico’s power grid.

“It’s useless, as simple as that,” she said. “If a hurricane comes, if rain comes, or a little gust of wind, the power quickly goes out.”

The island’s power grid was already crumbling due to austerity measures, aging infrastruc­ture and lack of maintenanc­e when a powerful Hurricane Maria razed the system in 2017. Reconstruc­tion of the grid had barely started when Hurricane Fiona hit last Sunday.

In the first days following Fiona, Luma officials and Gov. Pedro Pierluisi promised that the vast majority of customers would soon have their electricit­y back. But as of late Friday, more than 40% of 1.47 million customers were still in the dark.

In addition, 27% of 1.3 million water and sewer customers did not have water in part because pumps rely on electricit­y and not all had backup generators.

Neither Luma nor Puerto Rico’s power generating utility have said when electricit­y will be restored to the most affected areas. They have said only that hospitals and other critical infrastruc­ture are their priority.

The situation has outraged many Puerto Ricans, including local government officials.

“I am not going to accept excuses,” said Alexander Burgos, mayor in the central mountain town of Ciales. “Our power lines are up, there are no electrical posts on the ground, and we are ready to be connected.”

Edward O’Neill, mayor of the northern town of Guaynabo, tweeted that Luma’s “bad performanc­e” was “unacceptab­le.”

O’Neill, who worked for both the Puerto Rico’s power company and Luma, said his municipali­ty has collected all necessary informatio­n to help crews restore power but has not seen any results.

In the northern town of

Bayamon, Mayor Ramón Luis Rivera got tired of waiting and contracted independen­t repair crews that began work Friday afternoon, although they were not handling live wires. Aguadilla Mayor Julio Roldán announced he was doing the same in his northwest coastal town, saying, “We’re depending on other people to stay alive. We’ve had it.”

The mayor of the central mountain town of Utuado said no one in his municipali­ty of 28,000 people had power and accused Luma of making residents unnecessar­ily suffer. The mayor of the western town of Moca echoed those sentiments, saying “Luma has not wanted to assume its responsibi­lities.”

Cathy Kunkel, a Puerto Rico-based energy and finance analyst, said she was surprised power had not yet returned to areas barely affected by Fiona, including the capital of

San Juan.

She also questioned why Luma has not employed hundreds of experience­d linesmen that worked with Puerto Rico’s Electric Power Authority before the private company took over transmissi­on and distributi­on in June 2021.

“We have this absurdly frustratin­g situation,” she said. “The old system is held together in substandar­d ways. You actually want the people who know how to work on that particular system.”

The lack of power has been linked to several deaths. Authoritie­s say a 70-year-old man burned to death when he tried to fill his running generator with gasoline and a 78year-old man died from inhaling toxic gases from his generator. On Friday, police said a 72-year-old man and a 93-year-old woman died after their house caught on fire because they were relying on candles for light.

Castro-Sitiriche, the electrical engineerin­g professor, said Puerto Rico’s government, Luma and the Electric Power Authority are all to blame.

“It’s a shared disaster,” he said, adding that Fiona was a wake-up call and that more people need to be connected to solar power. “It is a shame that the government has not done that to save lives.”

 ?? ALEJANDRO GRANADILLO AP ?? Hurricane Fiona left many destroyed homes in Villa Esperanza, in Salinas, Puerto Rico, last week.
ALEJANDRO GRANADILLO AP Hurricane Fiona left many destroyed homes in Villa Esperanza, in Salinas, Puerto Rico, last week.

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