Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Gov. Scott planning Puerto Rico visit

He will lead delegation of utility companies

- By Gray Rohrer Staff writer

TALLAHASSE­E — Gov. Rick Scott will head to Puerto Rico on Friday to help restore power to the beleaguere­d island struggling to recover from Hurricane Maria.

Scott’s visit, his second since the storm hit last month, comes at the request of Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosello. The trip was announced a day after Puerto Rico canceled a controvers­ial $300 million contract to repair the electric grid.

“Given your experience in managing natural disasters, your guidance on restoring energy would be greatly appreciate­d,” Rosello wrote in a letter to Scott.

More than a month after Maria hit the island as a Category 4 hurricane, only about 30 percent of Puerto Rico has electricit­y.

A release from Scott’s office said he will lead a delegation of utility companies to Puerto Rico, but his office did not return calls for more informatio­n. More details about the trip will be released later in the week, a Scott spokeswoma­n said.

Rosello called for the contract with Montana-based Whitefish to be nixed after a Washington Post story raised questions about it, noting it was a small firm with few employees and had ties to U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke. The contract also stated Whitefish would be exempt from government audits. Zinke has said he had nothing to do with the deal.

But Rosello also has been criticized for not reaching out to states for help in the aftermath of the storm. Puerto Rico was reeling from a financial crisis before Maria, leaving questions about whether it could pay back states for aid it received.

“Restoring electricit­y to our citizens has become a daunting task, mainly because of the lack of liquidity of the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority and the need for additional assistance from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,” Rosello wrote in his letter.

Scott went to Puerto Rico last month to help recovery efforts and dispatched National Guard, state law enforcemen­t and disaster relief personnel.

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