Even before the hurricane, Puerto Rico had fallen on hard times. The U.S. territory practically went bankrupt in the spring of 2017, and about half a million people had moved away over the past decade, seeking economic opportunities elsewhere.
Then Hurricane Maria made the situation even worse. More than 1,400 deaths occurred in the aftermath of the storm, according to the Puerto Rican government. A separate report by researchers from Harvard University this summer found that as many as 8,500 people may have died in Maria’s wake, many of them because of delayed medical care—they were unable to get medicines, for example, or unable to get to hospitals because of poor road conditions.
The revelation that so many people may have died because of a lack of
access to health care and other basic necessities has angered many Puerto Ricans who think the federal government didn’t provide adequate aid to the island. They point out that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which handles relief efforts after natural disasters, was slow to get supplies to Puerto Rico after Maria. For example, FEMA delivered 5,000 blue tarps, which are used as temporary roofs, to Puerto Rico in the nine days after the storm hit. That’s just a quarter of what FEMA provided to Houston in the nine days after it was ravaged by Hurricane Harvey last August. Many also complain that inexperienced contractors were hired to rebuild the island’s infrastructure.
In July, FEMA acknowledged that it had underestimated the devastation Maria would cause. In a report, FEMA noted that it hadn’t anticipated how much food and water Puerto Ricans would need and how long it would take to ship supplies to the island. FEMA also said it had failed to grasp Puerto Rico’s “insufficiently maintained infrastructure.”