Hurricane churns up debate: should Puerto
Rico be a U.S. state?
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[October 03, 2017]
By Laila Kearney and Robin Respaut
NEW YORK/SALINAS, Puerto Rico (Reuters) -
The hurricane that leveled Puerto Rico last month has given fresh
impetus to a decades-old argument on the island: that the U.S. territory
would fare better financially as a U.S. state.
For Fermin Seda, 68, a retiree in the southern city of Salinas, there is
no doubt.
"I want statehood," Seda said. "I think it would be better than what we
are now."
Puerto Rico's status as a U.S. commonwealth means its 3.5 million
American citizens do not pay federal taxes, vote in presidential
elections or receive proportionate federal funding on programs like the
Medicaid health insurance system for the poor.
For Jose Fuentes, chairman of Puerto Rico Statehood Council, a
pro-statehood organization in Washington, Puerto Rico would have been in
a better position to handle the blow from Hurricane Maria if it had the
income and political power of a state.
Becoming a state would strengthen the political standing of the island,
which currently has only a single non-voting member of Congress, and
increase its eligibility for federal aid, Fuentes said.
Maria was the strongest storm to hit Puerto Rico in 90 years and her
devastation "really bolsters the case for equal treatment for Puerto
Rico,” said Jake Johnston, an international research associate at the
Washington think tank Center for Economic and Policy Research.
Puerto Rico's stagnant economy and mounting debt have left the island
with old, vulnerable infrastructure and buildings and a limited capacity
to rebuild, Johnston said.
The creaky infrastructure was no match for Maria's fierce winds and
water and likely hampered the emergency response, as officials struggled
with a near-total power outage, and a lack of water, fuel and
communications, he said.
VOTE IN FAVOR
Changing the statehood question has been a hotly debated topic. Puerto
Ricans voted overwhelmingly in favor of statehood in June, with 97
percent support, although the turnout was less than a quarter of
eligible voters.
"How can we still have a colonial territory with more than 3.5 million
U.S. citizens without access to equal rights or have the same political
power?" Governor Ricardo Rossello said on Monday. Rossello, who
campaigned on a push for statehood, had said in June that Congress
should act on the vote.
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U.S. and Puerto Rico flags hang on a damaged church after the area
was hit by Hurricane Maria in Carolina, Puerto Rico September 26,
2017. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
Making the non-binding vote reality requires action from Congress,
but the Republican-controlled House of Representatives and Senate is
not likely to act for a territory that leans Democratic.
The amount of federal funds flowing in and out of the island would
change dramatically if it were a state: it would receive as much as
76 percent more federal funds for the four biggest U.S. programs
impacted under statehood, including Medicaid and Supplemental
Security Income, according to a 2014 analysis by the United States
Government Accountability Office (GAO). However, in turn, Puerto
Ricans would have to pay federal income tax.
One thing that would not change with statehood is Puerto Rico's
standing with the Federal Emergency Management Agency: FEMA's
obligations to Puerto Rico are the same as to a state.
Democratic leaders in Congress and some residents in Puerto Rico
have accused the Republican administration of being more sluggish in
its response than it would to a disaster on the U.S. mainland. But
FEMA has defended its aid effort for the island.
"I go to bed every night knowing that I have done the best I can to
marshal all of these federal resources" to the island, FEMA
administrator Brock Long told CNN last week.
With our without statehood, FEMA said in a statement it "will be
here for years to come, helping Puerto Rico not only in its
response, but also its recovery."
(Additional reporting by Lesley Wroughton, Doina Chiacu, Makini
Brice, Stephanie Kelly, Nick Brown, Megan Davies, Jonathan Allen;
writing by Megan Davies; Editing by Mary Milliken)
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