Puerto Ricans see link between poverty, hurricane deaths

Friday, Nov. 03, 2017
By Catholic News Service

LARES, Puerto Rico (CNS) — Hurricane-related deaths in Puerto Rico have been attributed to drowning and illness, but many Puerto Ricans, including local media professionals, see a link between such deaths and poverty. On a recent tour through Puerto Rico’s central-western mountains, CNS found several people voicing support for this opinion.

“One has a higher probability to die in a hurricane if one is poor,” said Ismael Perez Acosta, 71, who lives alone in a rural shanty in Lares.

His 87-year-old house, almost completely covered by vegetation and barely seen from the road below, is a dilapidated small wooden structure built by his grandfather. Perez has no income, surviving on donations and casual odd jobs. His water comes from a stream that flows next to the house, a structure that has no electric power connection.

“There are many people like me, who normally live (under conditions) like a hurricane went by every day,” said Perez, who has some college education from the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico in Arecibo. “But to many people we are invisible, even though maybe we are the majority (of the island’s population).”

Poverty in Puerto Rico is a largely unspoken legacy of colonial times, when agriculture was the island’s main source of wealth, and it goes as far back as slavery. Many of today’s poor are descendants of a working class whose status has morphed since the Spanish arrival in 1493.

Jose Perez also spoke of the relationship between poverty and deaths. “We, the poor people, do suffer more than others, because we have no money before hurricanes and after hurricanes,” he said. “We die more in hurricanes because we don’t have (the means) to protect ourselves.”

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