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The Militant (logo)
Vol. 81/No. 47 December 18, 2017
(front page)
Million plus in Puerto Rico still left without electricity
US colonial rule at heart of social crisis
Protest in Carolinas, Puerto Rico, outside electric company Dec. 4. More
than 72 days after hurricane hit, half of island is without power,
light; tens of thousands of homes have no roofs.
BY SETH GALINSKY
More than two and a half months after Hurricane Maria battered Puerto
Rico, half of the U.S. colony’s inhabitants are still without
electricity. And tens of thousands of people in homes whose roofs were
blown off by the storm still haven’t received plastic tarps, much less
aid to repair their homes.
“We have running water, but it’s not drinkable, we still have to boil it
first,” retired hospital worker Luis Epardo told the Militant from
Aguadilla, on the northwest tip of the island, Dec. 4. “And the
mosquitos! It’s incredible, garbage and rubble from the damaged homes
hasn’t been picked up.” The city government has sprayed insecticide from
vehicles, he said, “but they say that only kills 5 percent.”
Nonetheless, Health Department officials insist there has been no
increase in mosquito-born diseases like Zika, dengue and chikungunya.
The government claims that only 58 people died from the storm, despite
figures showing that in September alone 472 more people died than the
year before. There was a similar jump in October. The gov’t figures
don’t include deaths from lack of adequate medical care, not enough
insulin or oxygen or being unable to get dialysis.
“The governor said that we would have electricity by Dec. 15, but we
haven’t seen anybody working,” Luis Aristud, an insurance adjuster in
Canóvanas, east of San Juan, said by phone.
“Many people in the U.S. who went through Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy
still haven’t gotten help,” Aristud said. “Imagine us! They’re like a
landlord. When you need something fixed, forget about it, but miss a
rent payment, they call the cops.”
“We’ve been a colony ever since the U.S. invaded,” Aristud said. “Even
though we’re U.S. citizens, we just have to take the dish they serve us,
good, bad or so-so.”
“And people didn’t realize that the only part of their house that is
insured, if they have insurance, is the part the bank owns,” he said,
“not their belongings inside.”
There is no electricity at all on the island of Vieques, off Puerto
Rico’s eastern shore, said Ismael Guadalupe, a retired school teacher
and veteran leader of the successful fight to oust the U.S. Navy bombing
range there. So many people have installed generators “that it just
sounds like one big car at night,” he said.
El Nuevo Día reported that 1,200 poles for power lines — out of a
promised 65,000 needed to get electricity back up — arrived at the San
Juan port Nov. 30.
Justo González, acting executive director of the Electric Energy
Authority, said Dec. 1 that 2,000 electrical workers from the U.S. will
arrive “in the coming weeks” to speed up restoring power.
On Nov. 29, Federal Emergency Management Agency reported it had canceled
a contract with Bronze Star company three weeks earlier, because they
didn’t deliver a half million light tarps for hurricane victims. In
addition, some 60,000 blue tarps are needed to put up on homes that lost
their roofs, but FEMA says it is only able to install 350 a day due to
lack of supplies.
It’s facts like these — little reported in the big-business press in the
U.S. — that show that the people in the U.S. colony of Puerto Rico are
suffering not from a “natural disaster,” but a man-made capitalist
catastrophe.
Eliminating the Christmas bonus
William Hernández, a mechanical engineer, told the Militant electricity
was restored three weeks ago at the pharmaceutical factory where he
works in Guayama, on the southeast part of the island. Puerto Rico is a
major center for medicine and medical supplies.
The Puerto Rican government exempted bosses at hundreds of private
companies from paying the legally mandated annual Christmas bonuses that
are a big part of workers’ yearly pay, because the storm cost them income.
“At the company where I work, they paid it,” Hernández said. “But where
my friends work, they’re not going to pay. The pharmaceutical companies
make big profits. They are using the tragedy of the hurricane to benefit
themselves and it can’t be justified.”
Working people in Puerto Rico have been hit hard over the last decade by
the worldwide capitalist economic crisis, exacerbated by the island’s
colonial oppression. Dozens of factories have been shuttered and gross
domestic product declined there every year since 2006. The government
took out new loans to pay off earlier ones, and now the colonial
government’s debt has soared to $74 billion. To keep paying the
bondholders, the government closed schools, laid off thousands of public
employees, reduced pensions, raised sales taxes and cut maintenance on
the electrical grid. The effects of the hurricane deepened the crisis.
According to the island’s Labor and Human Resources Department, in
October the number of people with a job or actively looking for one was
38.6 percent, the lowest level in 27 years. There were at least 54,000
fewer workers in October compared to last year.
In 2016 President Barack Obama appointed a Fiscal Responsibility and
Oversight Board to press the colonial regime to cut back more on jobs,
social services and other government expenses. The board has veto power
over all of the government’s financial decisions to ensure the maximum
payment possible on the debt.
Board members chastised Puerto Rican Gov. Ricardo Rosselló Nov. 27,
saying his decision to pay the annual Christmas bonus to public
employees this year “demonstrates a lack of fiscal discipline.” With the
typical arrogance of the imperialist rulers, the board told Rosselló
that they expect to be “consulted” on all such decisions in the future.
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