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		San Juan mayor calls hurricane disaster 
		'a people-are-dying' story 
		
		 
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		 [September 30, 2017] 
		By Robin Respaut and Dave Graham 
		 
		SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (Reuters) - The mayor 
		of Puerto Rico's hurricane-battered capital spoke on Friday of thirsty 
		children drinking from creeks. A woman with diabetes said a lack of 
		refrigeration had spoiled her insulin. An insurance adjuster said roads 
		have virtually vanished on parts of the island. 
		 
		In enumerable ways large and small, many of the 3.4 million inhabitants 
		of Puerto Rico struggled through a 10th day with little or no access to 
		basic necessities - from electricity and clean, running water to 
		communications, food and medicine. 
		 
		Carmen Yulin Cruz, mayor of Puerto Rico's capital, San Juan, gave voice 
		to rising anger on the U.S. island territory as she delivered a sharp 
		retort on Friday to comments from a top Trump administration official 
		who said the federal relief effort was a "a good news story." 
		 
		"Damn it, this is not a good news story," Cruz told CNN. "This is a 
		people-are-dying story. This is a life-or-death story." 
		 
		Acting U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Elaine Duke, head of the parent 
		department for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), said on 
		Thursday she was satisfied with the disaster response so far. 
		
		
		  
		
		"I know it is really a good news story in terms of our ability to reach 
		people and the limited number of deaths that have taken place in such a 
		devastating hurricane," Duke said. 
		 
		Paying a visit to Puerto Rico on Friday for an aerial tour of the island 
		with Governor Ricardo Rossello, Duke moderated her message, telling 
		reporters she was proud of the recovery work but adding that she and 
		President Donald Trump would not be satisfied until the territory was 
		fully functional. 
		 
		Maria, the most powerful storm to strike Puerto Rico in nearly 90 years, 
		has killed at least 16 people on the island, according to the official 
		death toll. More than 30 deaths have been attributed to the storm across 
		the Caribbean. 
		 
		Rossello has called the widespread heavy damage to Puerto Rico's homes, 
		roads and infrastructure unprecedented, though he has praised the U.S. 
		government's relief efforts. 
		 
		Cruz, appearing in a later interview, bristled at suggestions that the 
		relief effort had been well-coordinated. 
		 
		"There is a disconnect between what the FEMA people are saying is 
		happening and what the mayors and the people in the towns know that is 
		happening," Cruz, who has been living in a shelter since her own home 
		was flooded, said on CNN. 
		 
		Wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words: "Help us. We are dying," 
		Cruz said she was hopeful the situation would improve, but added, 
		"People can't fathom what it is to have children drinking from creeks, 
		to have people in nursing homes without oxygen." 
		 
		'WE ARE ALONE' 
		 
		The mayor of San Germán, a town of about 35,000 in the southwestern 
		corner of the island, echoed Cruz's harsh words. 
		 
		"The governor is giving a message that everything is resolved, and it is 
		not true," Mayor Isidro Negron Irizarry said in Spanish on Twitter. 
		"There is no functional operations structure. We are alone." 
		
		
		  
		
		Trump, who was scheduled to visit next week, addressed the situation 
		before a speech in Washington about his new tax plan. 
		 
		"The electrical grid and other infrastructure were already in very, very 
		poor shape," he said. "And now virtually everything has been wiped out, 
		and we will have to really start all over again. We're literally 
		starting from scratch." 
		 
		Colonel James DeLapp, the Army Corps of Engineers commander for Puerto 
		Rico, told CNN that rebuilding the island's crippled power grid was a 
		massive undertaking. 
		 
		"The closest thing we've had is when the Army Corps led the effort to 
		restore Iraq's electricity in the early stages of the Iraq war in 2003 
		and 2004," he said. 
		 
		Further complicating recovery is a financial crisis marked by Puerto 
		Rico's record bankruptcy filing in May and the weight of $72 billion in 
		outstanding debt. 
		 
		
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			An aerial photo shows damage caused by Hurricane Maria in San Juan, 
			Puerto Rico. REUTERS/DroneBase 
            
			  
			"Ultimately the government of Puerto Rico will have to work with us 
			to determine how this massive rebuilding effort, which will end up 
			being one of the biggest ever, will be funded and organized, and 
			what we will do with the tremendous amount of existing debt already 
			on the island," Trump said. 
			
			'ONE OF THE LUCKY ONES' 
			 
			In Old San Juan, the capital's historic colonial section, customers 
			lined up on the sidewalk outside Casa Cortes ChocoBar cafe for 
			sandwiches and coffee, being handed out from a small window between 
			plywood planks clinging to the exterior wall. 
			 
			"We're one of the few restaurants that have a generator," said 
			Daniela Santini, 19, who works there. "Most businesses don't have 
			electricity, only some have water. We're one of the lucky ones." 
			 
			Nancy Rivera, 59, a San Juan resident who suffers from diabetes, was 
			forced to go without her medication by a lack of electricity. "I 
			stopped using the insulin in my refrigerator. It's too warm," she 
			said. 
			 
			Ground transportation, hampered by fuel shortages and streets 
			blocked with fallen vegetation and utility wires, remained a major 
			challenge. 
			 
			"You can't see the roads," said Alvaro Trueba, a regional 
			catastrophe coordinator for property insurer Chubb Ltd, who told 
			Reuters that adjusters face difficulties driving about the island. 
			 
			More troops, medical supplies and vehicles were on the way to the 
			island, but it will be some time before the U.S. territory is back 
			on its feet, the senior U.S. general appointed to lead military 
			relief operations said on Friday. 
			 
			"We're certainly bringing in more," Lieutenant General Jeffrey 
			Buchanan told CNN on Friday, a day after he was appointed by the 
			Pentagon. 
			 
			The hardships on Puerto Rico have largely overshadowed similar 
			struggles faced by the neighboring U.S. Virgin Islands, slammed by 
			two major hurricanes - Irma and Maria - in the span of a month. 
			
			
			  
			
			Most of St. Croix, the largest of the three major islands in that 
			territory, remained without electricity and cellular communications 
			nine days after Maria struck. Shelters were still packed and long 
			lines stretched around emergency supply centers. 
			 
			At one such facility, anguished residents pleaded for more than the 
			single sheets of plastic tarp that National Guard troops were 
			handing out. 
			 
			Meanwhile, the insurance industry was tallying the mounting costs of 
			Maria, with one modeling firm estimating that claims could total as 
			much as $85 billion. 
			 
			Rossello told CNN on Friday the federal government has responded to 
			his requests and that he was in regular contact with FEMA's 
			director, though more needed to be done. 
			 
			"We do have severe logistical limitations. It has been enhancing, 
			but it's still nowhere near where it needs to be," Rossello said. 
			 
			Asked how long it would take for Puerto Rico to recover, Buchanan, 
			the general leading the military effort, gave a slight sigh and 
			said: "This is a very, very long duration." 
			 
			(Reporting by Robin Respaut and Dave Graham in SAN JUAN, Doina 
			Chiacu, Roberta Rampton, Justin Mitchell and Makini Brice in 
			WASHINGTON, and Lisa Maria Garza in DALLAS and Suzanne Barlyn in NEW 
			YORK; Writing by Bill Rigby and Steve Gorman; Editing by Lisa 
			Shumaker and Mary Milliken) 
			
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