In hard-hit Puerto Rico neighbourhood, no sign of federal aid | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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In hard-hit Puerto Rico neighbourhood, no sign of federal aid

Trans activist Kery John Santiago holds up a sign denouncing United States President Donald Trump's visit to Puerto Rico, Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017. A very small protest took place outside the San Juan Convention Center against the US President. (AP Photo/ Katja Torres)
Original Publication Date October 03, 2017 - 1:06 PM

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - A few miles from the air base where President Donald Trump was touting his administration's response to Hurricane Maria, Puerto Ricans were stacking fallen tree branches, pieces of zinc roofing and sewage-soaked clothes in shopping carts and dumping them on street corners alongside piles of wet mattresses.

There is still no power in the neighbourhood known as Playita, and water only came back Sunday. No trucks have come to clear debris in the heart of the capital of Puerto Rico and the few hundred residents of this neighbourhood of wood and cinderblock houses are still cleaning sewer water from their homes and businesses.

They say they have not seen any federal officials since Maria struck the island Sept. 20, nor have any city or Puerto Rico officials come, although their representative in the legislature dropped off ice over the weekend

"The need is everywhere," Jacke Cordero, 51, said as he used a pressure-washer to spray reeking floodwater out of his small cafe, the Corner of Faith. "Water, food, the supermarkets are closed."

Ray Negron rested nearby in the shade of a church after a morning spent collecting debris.

"What more do they want us to do?" said Negron, who is 38 and unemployed. "We've already cleaned everything up."

He said the residents of Playita were waiting for officials to take away the huge piles of trash that residents had collected.

"Nobody's come," Negron said. Addressing a distant Trump, he said: "Please, stop marginalizing us."

Playita has long been one of San Juan's least-favouredneighbourhoods, cut off by a highway but close to a housing project that has been receiving a relatively high degree of attention in the recovery effort.

Soon after the storm, residents went to a highway overpass to hang sheets emblazoned with messages pleading for help from the local and federal governments: "Playita needs food and water. SOS."

Janelys Melendez, a 39-year-old evangelical minister, said no one should mistake Playita's pleas for help with an unwillingness to do things for themselves.

"You can see Puerto Rico lifting itself up here. No one's lying back," she said. "They're doing what they can. It's everyone's responsibility, not just the government's."

As she spoke, convenience store-owner Raymond Ortiz walked through Playita handing out Styrofoam containers of rice and beans he and his wife had cooked for people who didn't have enough to eat.

He said the Salvation Army had distributed aid in Playita in recent days, but he had seen no relief effort by government at any level.

"We're doing what we can," he said. "We really need help. Trump should come help us."

As he spoke, Trump was visiting Guaynabo, one of San Juan's wealthiest neighbourhoods and one that has recovered fastest from the storm.

Trump highlighted Puerto Rico's relatively low death toll compared with "a real catastrophe like Katrina" as he opened a tour of the island's devastation Tuesday, focusing on the best of the reviews he and his administration are getting rather than criticism of the federal response to Hurricane Maria.

Trump pledged an all-out effort to help the island but added: "Now I hate to tell you, Puerto Rico, but you've thrown our budget a little out of whack because we've spent a lot of money on Puerto Rico. And that's fine. We've saved a lot of lives."

A couple of demonstrations called to protest Trump's visit drew only handfuls of people to the gatherings outside the city's convention centre and near the air base where the president spoke.

Other Puerto Ricans said they appreciated the president's visit, and there was praise for Trump even in Playita.

"We have to appreciate this trip," said Lucy Falero, 70, a retired government human resources manager.

"We've never had a president who's visited after a disaster like this," she said. "One has to congratulate the president for his motivation."

News from © The Associated Press, 2017
The Associated Press

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