In the Aftermath of Hurricane Fiona, the Jones Act Is Screwing Over Puerto Rico Again
The island is begging the Biden administration to allow foreign ships to bring fuel to help restore power. But entrenched maritime interests balk at competition.

The absurd consequences of America's terrible trade protectionism are on full display just off the coast of Puerto Rico today, as a foreign ship full of barrels of diesel fuel is waiting to see if it will be allowed to deliver them to the hurricane-stricken island.
We are, once again, speaking of the Jones Act, technically called the Merchant Marine Act of 1920. The Jones Act requires that ships delivering goods between U.S. ports be made in America, owned by American companies, and crewed by Americans. The act is openly and plainly a protectionist law designed to shield the domestic maritime industry from foreign competition.
The impact is felt most keenly on the outer edges of America's territory, places like Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico that are most dependent on ocean shipping to receive goods. The law by its very nature drives up the costs. And in the case of an emergency or disaster, it is difficult to respond quickly because there aren't all that many Jones Act-compliant ships. (There are less than 100 of them.) Whenever a crisis comes around that involves shipping, this law that supposedly helps America has to be temporarily suspended or bypassed in order to handle it.
Today, President Joe Biden's administration is trying to figure out what to do about a BP ship loaded with fuel idling off the coast of Puerto Rico. Because of the Jones Act, the ship cannot legally deliver fuel to the island, where thousands remain without any power at all in the wake of Hurricane Fiona, without some sort of exemption.
In 2017, President Donald Trump allowed for a 10-day waiver of the Jones Act to allow for foreign-flagged ships to transport goods between domestic ports after Hurricane Maria. Ten foreign ships used the waiver to transport goods like drinking water, canned food, heating oil, and fuel from other U.S. ports to Puerto Rico.
Granting waivers "for the purposes of national security" was, thankfully, a relatively quick process for the Department of Homeland Security that year. But in 2020, the National Defense Authorization Act was amended to change the waiver process, requiring that the purpose of these waivers is to prevent "an immediate adverse effect on military operations" and, thus, making it much harder for the federal government to provide them.
So, for the nonmilitary citizens of Puerto Rico, the Biden administration has to evaluate whether any U.S. vessels can perform the job before granting waivers to other ships. If there isn't, it must consider what proper legal justification it can provide to allow the BP ship to dock on the island.
The governor of Puerto Rico, Pedro Pierluisi, on Monday asked the administration to let the vessel dock. Several Puerto Rican officials are begging the administration to provide Jones Act waivers. Eight Democratic members of Congress*, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, sent a letter asking the administration to waive the law for this crisis.
But thanks to the 2020 amendment, it's unfortunately not that simple. And as The Washington Post notes, the American shipping industry is resisting any waivers for Puerto Rico, crisis be damned:
The American Maritime Partnership—a coalition that represents operators of U.S.-flagged vessels and unions covered by the Jones Act—wrote a letter to [DHS Secretary Alejandro] Mayorkas on Friday explaining why the Jones Act should not be waived in the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona.
The group said that domestic vessels were ready and available to support the recovery effort in Puerto Rico, with more than 2,000 containers positioned in the port of San Juan to provide supplies before the storm. The group's president, Ku'uhaku Park, said that U.S.-flagged ships are providing Puerto Rico with essential goods for its recovery, adding that waiving the Jones Act would benefit foreign shippers rather than Puerto Ricans.
"There is no indication that American shipping capacity is insufficient to meet demand, and, therefore, no justification for a waiver of the Jones Act," he said.
Essentially, Park is telling the administration to just ignore everybody in Puerto Rico screaming at them for help. They, apparently, should wait to see if the domestic ships fail to provide what they need before letting foreign ships respond. Imagine this mindset in any other industry—demanding that failure must happen before competition could be permitted.
Colin Grabow has been documenting the many negative impacts on American consumers and competitive enterprise caused by the Jones Act as a research fellow at the Cato Institute's Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies. He noted in July that America's protectionist shipping laws have long been a disaster for Puerto Rico. Lawmakers have generally just refused to deal with it in favor of catering to the maritime industry and its unions.
"Puerto Rico has a 43 percent poverty rate," he tells Reason in response to the industry's insistence that the law be maintained. "So why are we subjecting them to some of the world's most expensive shipping? In the discussion about how to help Puerto Rico, how about we begin by ending policies like the Jones Act that actively hurt the island?"
The industry has long-defended the law by insisting that Americans would lose their jobs if we allowed foreign vessels to engage in shipping between domestic ports. Grabow thinks this is a short-sighted position.
"U.S. policy shouldn't be dictated by whether someone, somewhere loses a job," Grabow says. "By that logic we should oppose all technological progress and free trade. While some would lose jobs, many other Americans would gain employment and see their standards of living raised. The Jones Act is properly understood as a tax on domestic commerce that drives up the cost of Americans trading with one another. That's not exactly pro-jobs or pro-prosperity."
Biden is a stalwart supporter of the Jones Act and defended it both before and during his administration. This morning he nevertheless tweeted his alleged appreciation for capitalism and competition:
Fair competition is what made America the wealthiest, most innovative nation in history.
And I'm committed to bringing competition back to our economy.
— President Biden (@POTUS) September 27, 2022
But as long as he supports the Jones Act, which deliberately shields the American shipping industry from competition at the expense of hundreds of thousands of U.S. citizens, this is just hot air.
This post has been updated to correct the number of members of Congress who signed a letter to the Biden administration to waive the Jones Act.
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During the Bush years the Jones Act was always waived in the aftermath of hurricanes. The reason for that was because the media would have raked Bush over the coals had he not done so. And Bush was more afraid of that than anything the domestic shipping industry could do to him.
Biden in contrast has a sycophantic media that will never call him out much less really go after him over this. So Biden, like Obama before him, doesn’t give a shit. The Jones Act only gets waived during emergencies when there is a Republican President. Such are the wages of having a one sided hack media.
That's factually incorrect. Google "Jones Act waivers" and you'll find that every president during the last forty years, including the current one, has issued them.
Not all Jones Act waivers are the same. Democrats don’t waive them for hurricanes and never waive them early
“The last time a waiver order was executed was in 2017, when President Trump temporarily waived the Jones Act to allow for disaster relief efforts to be shipped to Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane Maria.”https://case.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=780
Well, maybe Biden issued one after that?
“Of note, not a single Jones Act waiver has even been requested this calendar year.” – Ku’uhaku Park, President of the American Maritime Partnership, June 16, 2022.
Hmm…
I can’t find any evidence of a Jones Act waiver since then either.
Also, I can’t find a comprehensive list of Jones Act Waivers by googling your term or even better focused terms.
Verdict: Lie. That the current president has issued one appears to be false, and there’s no convenient list of waivers that comes up to verify that every (other) president has issued one in the last 40 years.
I can verify Obama issued one in response to Sandy, and that Bush II issued several. But the Bush II waiver in response to Hurricane Katrina (2005) appears to be the first Jones Act waiver in response to a hurricane. (Papavizas and Shapiro, 2018, p340. Link in following comment). So it does not appear to be the case that every president in the last 40 years, even ignoring Biden, has issued one.
(There were Strategic Petroleum Reserve distribution waivers under Bush I, but that had nothing to do with natural disasters. Neither Reagan nor Clinton appear to have had any Jones Act Waivers issued during their presidency).
https://www.winston.com/images/content/1/5/v2/156258/Jones-Act-Waivers-Article.pdf
The island is begging….
That is all PR does.
The official motto of PR is:
La Isla del Encanto = Isle of Enchantment
When I lived there 10 years ago Puerto Ricans called their own island:
La Isla del Espanto = the Isle of Terror
I imagine the island is a giant version of a small remote town. Anyone with any ambition or initiative has long left for the United States. Everyone who is still there is only there because they are either in on the local graft or are just too lazy or stupid to leave
A lot or Puerto Ricans who were in the US retired to the island.
Everyone who is still there is only there because they are either in on the local graft or are just too lazy or stupid to leave.
That leaves out a lot of sociopathy. The island is about the size of Cook, Lake, and Will County in IL, has around 75% of the population, and something north of 3-4X the murder rate. IDK that I'd call killing someone and taking their money grifting. The fact that you continue to live on the island relatively free is a grift, but not the murder/robbery.
I bet their exoneration rate is much lower and more equitable though.
I assumed they meant grift as in government employees.
Everything I know about Puerto Rico comes from the song America in west side Story. I don't think it's far off
Puerto Rico is free to become independent any time they want if they don't like US laws.
Sorta. If I've got a 'bitey' pitbull, it's free to leave my property where it will likely get put down by more law-and-order folks or torn apart by less law-and-order folks, but you are correct, if it doesn't like my treatment of it, it is free to leave.
What we have is a 100-year-old law that protects an outdated industry with enough political muscle to keep the law in place. Sounds pretty standard for the US. Puerto Rico has enough people to get attention but not enough to get changes. While a waiver is critical now, if this island is to make progress it need to be able to get resource without paying a premium. That likely depends on getting some political power. Another thing likely to remain unchanged.
See NOYB2’s comments above.
Puerto Rico has a population of 3.3 million American Citizens. North Dakota has less than a million. Why not make Puerto Rico a state and merge North and South Dakota. That would give Puerto Rico some political power to improve their situation.
Because they keep voting no whenever they have the opportunity to be a state?
Because they no-shit shot up the Capital in a no-shit nationalist insurrection?
Puerto Rico has a population of 3.5 million Puerto Rican citizens that happen to have dual citizenship with the US. When Puerto Rico becomes independent, we should force them to choose between US and Puerto Rican citizenship.
You said the quiet part out loud: you want to give Puerto Ricans extra political power so that they can enrich themselves at the expense of US tax payers.
Puerto Rico is not part of the US. We don't owe the country or its residents anything. To the contrary, Americans have been extremely generous towards that island nation.
It's a US territory. That's part of the US by definition.
The 50 states are not all of the US.
You are engaging in meaningless semantic games. The fact remains that Puerto Rico is an unincorporated US territory.
US states have obligations towards each other, and we could not simply kick a state out of the union; the US has no such obligations towards Puerto Rico: the US can give independence to Puerto Rico any time we want.
Puerto Ricans would not get extra political power; they would get same political power enjoyed by other citizens. Making people equal does not equate with giving them extra.
Puerto Ricans already have the same political power as any other US citizen: when they live in the 50 states or abroad, they can vote like any other US citizen. On the other hand, any US citizen living in Puerto Rico is subject to the same rules as any Puerto Rican citizen.
The idea that Puerto Ricans as American citizens are "unequal" is bullshit. Puerto Rico as a territory is treated differently from states, because it is not a state.
North Dakota is in the thrall of a girl-bullying Trumpanzee Anschluss. If merged, and South Dakotans ever find your address, you'll be on display from a lamppost.
How about we just kick them out of the US altogether? Then they have complete political power in their own country and can get resources on the world market without paying a premium?
The sooner the better as far as I'm concerned.
The 1929 Jones Five & Ten law didn't last much longer than four years. And no Republican was elected President for another two decades. The Gee-Oh-Pee tried, but couldn't even get Positive Christian Hitler the teetotaler to support them. Maybe the DOD is worried about foreign ships smuggling H-bombs into LA or Seattle.
Kick Puerto Rico out.
Set them free. Watch the excellence emerge.
If we had a Republican president PR would be getting all kinds of media attention. Not because they care, but they could use the 24/7 propaganda to attack the president. Lessee what happens with the one about to hit FL. No matter well they handle it, look for non-stop accusations. 'course, if N'orleans was to just happen to get another Katrina... crickets.
I would like to know who required that the NDAA make the use of the waiver more constrained.
Jeez Scott, I know she'd insufferable about immigration, but there's no need to call Fiona a....oh, you meant an actual hurricane.
Perhaps the Jones Act should screw itself for a change.
"In the Aftermath of Hurricane Fiona, the Jones Act Is Screwing Over Puerto Rico Again"
Again? Does the Jones Act somehow stop screwing over Puerto Rico between hurricanes?
There are many industries that the U.S. has almost no presence, including TVs, radios, stereos, calculators, cameras, shoes, clothes, toys, and sports equipment.
In my mind, the Jones Act needs to be revised to allow foreign-built ships to flagged in the U.S., and to allow foreign nationals can work as crew, but not officers.
Ah. So hang them from one shackled wrist instead of two. Sounds lenient...
These are the same arguments that Liberatarians and Republicans used to move most of America's manufacturing base to China.
My goodness Americans are pathetic and stupid.
Libertarians have no political power in the US. Conservatives tend to be protectionist in the US. Moving most of America's manufacturing base to China has been a joint project between progressives, neo-liberals, moderate Republicans, and Democrats, largely in response to the demands of their sponsors.
And what shithole do you call home? Canada? Europe? China? Bad as it is in the US, those other places are worse.
Puerto Rico's corruption is screwing PR harder than the Jones Act could ever dream of.
PR gets its mystical looter ideology from Marco Rubio and AOC. Any day now the Baby Jesus will walk on water and make the huracán go away. To doubt thees ees a mortal seen.
Wesley Livsey Jones backed two Jones Laws. The first wrecked our shipping in an effort to exclude smuggled beer. The second increased Volstead Act penalties to make beer a felony. This latter law was signed just before Bert Hoover was sworn in, and he wrecked the entire U.S. economy and helped Hitler gain power by the time we got rid of his and Joneses beer bans.