The Guardian (USA)

Trump delayed $20bn in aid to Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, report finds

- Coral Murphy Marcos in San Juan

The Trump administra­tion delayed more than $20bn in hurricane relief aid for Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, according to a report by the housing department’s office of the inspector General.

The efforts to deliver recovery funding to the island were “unnecessar­ily delayed by bureaucrat­ic obstacles”, according to the 46-page report. The hurricane, which hit the island in 2017, killed thousands of people and left thousands more without electricit­y or water for months.

One of the main hurdles was the requiremen­t imposed by the Office of Management and Budget, which establishe­d an interagenc­y review before grant approvals, according to a report from the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t (Hud). The process, which was never before required for allocating disaster funds, prevented Hud from publishing its draft notice of funding by the target date.

The investigat­ors were unable to determine why the extra layer of review was required due “denials of access and refusals to cooperate”, according to the report.

The inspector general’s office conducted 31 interviews of 20 current and former Hud officials and two now-former Puerto Rico department of housing senior officials to write the report. However, investigat­ors did not have access to the former Hud secretary Ben Carson and other political officials. The investigat­ors were also denied or delayed access to Hud informatio­n on several occasions.

The report found that Hud’s review and approval of their funding action plan for Puerto Rico was delayed due to the 2018-2019 government shutdown.

“Staffing shortages due to the shutdown and miscommuni­cations between HUD and the Puerto Rico Department of Housing pertaining to the grantee’s bank informatio­n delayed PRDOH’s ability to access grant funds until several days after the shutdown ended,” reads the document.

The office of the inspector general investigat­ion also said that both the former Hud secretary and former Hud assistant secretary Brian Montgomery expressed “mounting concerns and frustratio­ns” to the then OMB director, Russell Vought, about Hud’s “inability” to expedite the release of funds.

The report was conducted after a request from representa­tives Nydia Velázquez, Bennie Thompson, and Raúl Grijalva to investigat­e several allegation­s that had been reported in a January 2019 Washington Post article related to the Community Developmen­t Block Grant Disaster Recovery Program (CDBG-DR) funds appropriat­ed for Puerto Rico.

In February 2020, the office of the inspector general received a request from Senators Elizabeth Warren, Edward Markey, Richard Blumenthal, Bernie Sanders and Chris Van Hollen, and Representa­tives Joaquín Castro, Darren Soto, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, James P McGovern, Raúl Grijvala, and José Serrano, asking the office to conduct an inquiry into whether delays in Hud’s release of the disaster-recovery funds for Puerto Rico violated the Impoundmen­t Control Act of 1974.

On Monday, Hud removed restrictio­ns imposed by the Trump administra­tion on access to $8.2bn in Community Developmen­t Block Grant Mitigation. The agency stalled the release of the disaster relief aid in 2019 and imposed additional restrictio­ns on how the island could access the funds. The agency cited corruption and financial mismanagem­ent concerns for the blocks.

Hurricane Maria hit hundreds of thousands of homes on 20 September 2017, and many were still living under blue tarps three years later.

More than 5,000 people died in Puerto Rico in 2017 due to the hurricane, according to a study by the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. A George Washington University suggests more than 2,000 died due to the hurricane.

On Wednesday, a group of Puerto Rican scientists said they will begin to conduct verbal autopsies or surveys with relatives, friends and other acquaintan­ces of the fatal victims of the hurricane. The study aims to elaborate on the causes and factors that contribute­d to the deaths.

The study is a collaborat­ion between the University of Puerto Rico Graduate School of Public Health and George Washington University, which were hired by the National Institute of Standards and Technology and will conduct the report as part of an order by the US Congress.

“Some people might have died instantly due to drowning, landslides or collapses, but others might have died days, weeks or months later due to socio-environmen­tal and infrastruc­ture factors, such as the lack of water or electricit­y, oxygen or medicines,” Pablo Méndez Lázaro, associate professor of the department of environmen­tal health at the University of Puerto Rico Graduate School of Public Health, told a local news outlet.

 ??  ?? Buildings damaged by Hurricane Maria in Lares, Puerto Rico, in 2017. The hurricane killed thousands of people. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters
Buildings damaged by Hurricane Maria in Lares, Puerto Rico, in 2017. The hurricane killed thousands of people. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters

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