Where Did Puerto Rico's Disaster Relief Go?
After a Category 1 hurricane made landfall Sunday, a million Puerto Rican households are still without power.

Almost five years ago to the day, Hurricane Maria wrought catastrophic damage on Puerto Rico. Now another hurricane has caused an island-wide power outage, provoking new questions about the use of billions in federally-allocated disaster relief funds.
One million households are without power in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Fiona, then a Category 1 storm, made landfall on the island's southwestern coast Sunday afternoon. These outages began even before the storm came ashore, with power lines coming down as the storm's gusts reached the island. Puerto Rico's governor, Pedro Pierluisi, has described the damage as "catastrophic" and many remain impacted by mudslides and widespread flooding after parts of the island received nearly 3 feet of rain.
While officials have voiced confidence that electricity would be restored quickly, the blackout comes amid a wave of scrutiny: Billions of dollars were allocated by the federal government to rebuild Puerto Rico following Hurricane Maria and recovery efforts are projected to cost U.S. taxpayers another $50 billion, according to Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) estimates. But corruption by FEMA officials in Puerto Rico has slowed down progress dramatically. Back in 2019, FEMA's deputy regional administrator in charge of Maria recovery was indicted as part of a $1.8 billion bribery scheme involving an Oklahoma-based electric company. Officials on the island were also indicted for allegedly steering $15 million in federal rebuilding contracts to preferred contractors. And the Jones Act shares some of the blame since its restrictions on shipping to U.S. territories like Puerto Rico drive up costs for imported products significantly and delay the arrival of necessary supplies during emergency situations.
Congress has begun to ask questions about how exactly that money has been spent over the last five years. At a subcommittee hearing last Thursday of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, officials from the Government Accountability Office told lawmakers that 80 percent of the territorial government's disaster relief spending has gone to emergency relief, such as removing debris, dwarfing investments in the island's infrastructure. These experts also confirmed to lawmakers that only 19 percent of relief money allocated has been spent, forcing some lawmakers to ask when Puerto Rican officials plan on spending the remaining funds and moving forward on infrastructure improvements.
The blackouts have also returned attention to Puerto Rico's embattled electric company, LUMA Energy, a Canadian-owned firm that took over the administration and maintenance of the island's electric grid after Puerto Rico's state-owned electric company declared bankruptcy in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria. Since taking over in 2018, LUMA has faced criticism for its slow response to blackouts, which have become more frequent and dramatic since they assumed control of the grid. Under LUMA management, work to weatherize and maintain the electric grid has also stalled as energy prices have spiked dramatically.
These criticisms came to a head in August, when another wave of blackouts prompted the island's non-voting member of the U.S. House of Representatives, Jenniffer González, to call for an end to LUMA's contract with the Puerto Rican government. Pierluisi, who up until then had defended the government's contract with LUMA, also denounced the company's practices and called on LUMA to make significant changes to its practices and pace of improvements.
The power grid's failure also takes on an additional significance given officials' previous public statements attesting to the grid's strength. Back in 2020, officials had assured members of Congress that Puerto Rico's electric grid could withstand hurricane conditions. "The answer is yes," José Ortiz, the executive director of the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, testified when pressed about the grid's readiness. "We have five times the inventory we had before Maria."
With a Congressional hearing on the LUMA energy contract now scheduled for later this week, Puerto Rican officials will have to answer why that increased inventory did little to stop the blackouts.
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After a Category 1 hurricane made landfall Sunday, a million Puerto Rican households are still without power.
So they can't charge their electric cars.
I LOLed. Would LOL again.
Power being out for two days after a hurricane hits doesn't seem like such a huge failure. Isn't that kind of normal, even in the US? I was without power for almost 2 weeks after an ice storm some years ago.
I'm sure PR has some infrastructure problems, but 2 days after a natural disaster, it's not such a shock that some stuff is still broken.
But I'm sure more government committee hearings will make everything better.
Yeah, in the 1990s there were tens of thousands without power in my area for two weeks after a major record-setting windstorm.
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Exactly this.
PR has massive infrastructure issues, and also was almost bankrupt before Maria. Regardless of that, however, we all remember flooding in Houston when a storm parked in Galveston bay, power being out for days in Florida, the whole eastern seaboard being dark after Sandy...
Corruption is bad and should be investigated. Money sent after Maria that was grafted is important to know. But this blackout is hardly the Canadian energy company saying "Fuck 'em, let them sweat in the dark" or anything. It's just a perfectly normal need for systematic inspection and repair so you don't flip on the power to a grid when there are lines dangling in the river or whatever.
The power of Congressional Committee hearings should never be underestimated, they are one of the most powerful tools we have for making sure something is done when it important to be seen doing something.
I've gone a week without power in the USA a few times for ice and rain storms growing up.
Always fill up your tubs before a big storm.
Or have a well and a generator.
Or become a powerful ascetic who no longer needs food or water to survive, but rather lives off application of Will.
Ah yes, "Triumph des Willens" ought to be making a comeback now that The Man In The High Castle has fired up Positive Christian nostalgia among Trump's Grabbers of Pussy.
what is your problem??
There should not be a single above ground power line in Puerto Rico. It's not a mystery that storms will knock them down. You don't have to be Nostradamus to see that in the future, FFS. Maybe there should be some actual civil enginnering done to harden the place against storms, since you can predict with 100% certainty that more will come.
The whole place is going to be underwater in four years anyway (someday that statement might be true).
Because the military base on it will flip it over, right?
Almost 27% of Puerto Ricans work for some level of government, with the same sort of incentives one finds in Argentina. They are inefficient and many are corrupt.
Eh, maybe. Puerto Rico also sits at the boundary between the Caribbean and North American tectonic plates, meaning lots of earthquakes and underground shifts that can break below-ground power lines. Those above-ground lines are more susceptible to wind damage but it's a whole lot easier to find and repair those breaks.
I agree that they need to harden the entire island against easily-anticipated risks like storms. I'm just not sure that burying power lines is necessarily the answer.
We need to decolonize them and leave Puerto Rico to the Puerto Ricans.
Amen. Get rid of their US citizenships, too. Worthless corrupt democrats.
I'd bet the incident rate for significant earthquake activity that would interrupt power is lower than the incidence of hurricanes, but yeah, buried lines aren't a perfect solution. Replacing the power poles with the same thing is sure to have the same result tho. I'm not trying to engineer the power grid for PR in a comment thread. Just pointing out an obvious weakness...
Burying power lines became suddenly fashionable in the summer of 1962, after the Starfish Prime fusion bomb test in space demonstrated disruptive EMP effects.
Jima,
You have a valid point, as Puerto Rico is in the hurricane zone and there was a 100% possibility that within 10 years a hurricane will hit Puerto Rico.
You have to realize that Puerto Rico has been covered by Democrats at least the past 10 years.
As long as I’ve been going there, and maybe many years before that.
Corruption, waste and mismanagement there actually epic.
The waste was so epidemic that the federal government took over oversight of their finances and there is an unelected board that has to approve all government spending decisions.
Imagine an entire island run by democrats.
To imagine an entire Island run by the republican DEA, look to Haiti
There are probably more Rastafarians in any typical fed department than there are republicans at this point.
tl;dr: Population 4M. $50B is $12,500 per resident. Something is corrupt.
The FEMA Deputy Regional Administrator who was charged with corruption in September, 2019 still hasn't gone to trial three years later. https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/18537113/united-states-v-tribble/
They're backed up with Jan 6 defendants. The wheels of justice turn slowly, but they do turn.
“Where Did Puerto Rico's Disaster Relief Go?”
Pockets. Various pockets.
I am beginning to think PR is run by a Nigerian prince.
pockets of (the) resistance
And this, ladies and gentlemen, is why Puerto Rico never votes for statehood.
It's way easier to avoid accountability if the feds are picking up the tab. Spin them off.
Where Did Puerto Rico's Disaster Relief Go?
Try looking here https://tinyurl.com/auxkr6e8
Obviously it didn't go into GOPockets - otherwise we'd never hear the end of it. Classic take by a libertarian - when you have a very good idea where the money went, don't bother trying to find out - just ask the question.
Where Did Puerto Rico's Disaster Relief Go?
AOC's abuela.
Did she ever get her new roof or is she still living with a blue tarp?
PR is in the thrall of a prohibitionist looter Kleptocracy like the one ruling China from 1937 to 1911 to today. I would bet that altruist loot found its way to Colombia--the one country in Latin America that did not go in hock when the Biden-Bush asset-forfeiture Depression of 1991-22 impoverished the entire continent. Laws outlawing trade and production had already brought depressions in 1980 and 1982. Fed charts of recession and unemployment highlight prohibition jihads. Antinuclear propaganda did the rest.
To the Clinton foundation? Same as all the hatti reliefe
It's back
https://tinyurl.com/auxkr6e8
Wont you help a needy elderly couple?
Do you supposed this disaster will be blamed on Biden the way Maria was blamed on Trump?
I don't know, do think President Biden will go down there and throw paper towels to the masses?
"Where Did Puerto Rico's Disaster Relief Go?"
Jamaica?
Looters gonna loot, and disaster relief money in government hands has always been ripe for plunder.
If you want to help Puerto Rico the next time this happens, try the red cross.
-jcr
Ever wonder how our elected public officials manager to amass fortunes while serving in office on their salaries? Answer this question and you will find the root of the problem.
Experience is showing its worth. Nowadays 95% of everyone in Puerto Rico is eager to see nuclear power plants installed. Houston and Florida are in the paths of these hurricanes and the reactors work perfectly until human meddling intervenes.
On June 6, 1889 the Great Seattle Fire burn down almost the entire city. Within day the city leaders began to rebuild the city. The driving force was capitalism because Seattle was city making money. The city had vast forest resources and was a stopping point for miners heading to the Klondike gold rush.
Helping Puerto Rico brings no return on investment. It gets a lot of money but not enough to bring it back and there is no incentive to give more. The lack of incentive means some people will pocket the money rather than helping. It has no real political power to get resources that are needed.
First islands offer limited real business opportunity. We are repeatedly reminded that Puerto Rico is kneecapped by the Jones act. A commenter mentioned 25% of the population is employed by the government, this suggested there not enough jobs in the public sector.
Why would anybody expect federal aid of any sort to go to where we're told it's going?
The Clintons are cleaning up on this one too.
The Jones Act needs to end.
And why is a canadian owned company in charge of the electricity on an American island?
People commenting that it is not a big deal and that you expect power outages after a hurricane. I live on the Gulf Coast and a Category 1 Hurricane should not be that destructive if the grid is hardened and maintained, even if it is above ground.
In regards to the Jones Act, it needs to go.