ponderingturtle
Orthogonal Vector
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2006
- Messages
- 54,545
Yes, because they'd have seats in Congress and the Senate, and Electoral College votes.
Being 85% white also is a major benefit.
Yes, because they'd have seats in Congress and the Senate, and Electoral College votes.
My understanding is that the 50% has nothing to do with customers, it is generating capacity that is back on line.
That's my understanding too....
My understanding is that the 50% has nothing to do with customers, it is generating capacity that is back on line.
The Status.pr page states that power generation was up to 46.6 percent of capacity as of Monday. But generation is one thing; distribution is another.
Nothing in the US media, either. They have the attention span of a gnat.
Yes that, but I was under the impression that Whitefish was not working on the power grid in PR anymore since the contract was cancelled. Was surprised to hear that they are still working in PR on the power grid.Yeah, more people seem interested in the whiff of political scandal than in U.S. citizens in month three without power and water.
Yes that, but I was under the impression that Whitefish was not working on the power grid in PR anymore since the contract was cancelled. Was surprised to hear that they are still working in PR on the power grid.
We can only hope that better preparations are put in place to deal with a catastrophic hurricane once PR recovers from this.
Perhaps put the power grid underground, or at least put critical parts of it underground, and have more backup gens on critical infrastructure. Maybe have underground emergency fuel and water storage.
FEMA should have some supplies and equipment in place for PR when hurricane season starts, since PR has a 1,000 mile handicap of distance over water.
We have all the power lines above ground where I live, and the power is knocked out so easily. We always wonder why they don't put it underground. It would be difficult to change our grid, of course, but PR has a chance to make some big changes since the grid was largely destroyed anyway and needs to be rebuilt.
It's almost as if an unprecedented disaster occurred where every single electrical wire was ripped out of every single home, business, and building. Why haven't thousands of power company trucks descended on the island and run and hooked up thousands of miles of power cables? Why wasn't this tiny feat accomplished within hours after the last raindrop fell?
Puerto Rico's leaders don't know who has power. We tried to find out.
San Juan, Puerto Rico (CNN)Towns and communities across Puerto Rico are entirely without power, more than six weeks after Hurricane Maria.
The island's leadership is touting restoration figures that show nearly 40% of electricity generation has resumed -- but it doesn't say how much of that power is actually reaching homes, schools and hospitals.
Officials from the government and the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA) don't even know how many people have power for lights, air conditioners, refrigerators and other basic necessities.So, while some power plants can generate power, the ability to transmit it to homes may not be possible in some areas.
One of the union leaders for PREPA employees, Evans Castro Aponte, was hearing things were so bad he estimated just 5% of customers have electricity. That would leave 95% of the 3.4 million Americans on the island without any power unless they can run costly and loud generators that have become difficult to find on the island.
With no reliable government information, CNN tried to contact each of the 78 municipalities in Puerto Rico, which are coordinating their own recoveries.
Most calls simply did not go through. Along with so much here, communication is intermittent at best.
Some 42 of the municipalities could not be contacted.
Of the 36 towns we did reach, 10 said they had 0% power restoration. Others estimated 1, 2, 10, perhaps 20% of homes, businesses and amenities had electricity. Just four regions reported that they were more than half back on line -- Ponce and Guayanilla with 60% of residents with power; San Germán, where 75% of buildings have electricity; and Culebra -- an island off Puerto Rico that's home to just fewer than 2,000 people, where the mayor said 90% had power.
Humacao, an area where almost 54,000 live, has no power. Las Piedras, home to nearly 40,000, has no power. The same story for Loiza, where 30,000 live. And the list goes on and on, six weeks after the blackout.
It's almost as if an unprecedented disaster occurred where every single electrical wire was ripped out of every single home, business, and building. Why haven't thousands of power company trucks descended on the island and run and hooked up thousands of miles of power cables? Why wasn't this tiny feat accomplished within hours after the last raindrop fell?
http://www.elp.com/articles/powergr...-entergy-battled-back-to-back-hurricanes.htmlThe company’s deployment of their emergency response plan and recovery strategy reconnected critical portions of the nation’s energy infrastructure and 1.9 million customers by Oct. 15, a first step in saving much of the Gulf Coast region from an economic death spiral.
El Nuevo Día has since added an editorial note to the top of the article that apologizes to the island’s Jewish community, adding, “we do not promote content that can be interpreted as anti-Semitic.”Read more: https://forward.com/fast-forward/391...se-of-the-jew/
Then consider the 1980 clarification: “[G]reater benefits could disrupt the Puerto Rican economy.” The Supreme Court of the United States accepted a racist generalization about the propensity of Puerto Ricans to work and provide for their families as a rational basis for denying them the same federal benefits as stateside Americans.
The Trump administration—specifically, Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar—is now attempting to use that same reasoning to defend against a new version of this challenge to a status quo that never should have been established. Filed April 13, the complaint—brought by Sixta Glays Peña Martínez—challenges Puerto Rico’s exclusion from SSI and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits as well as Medicare Part D Low-Income Subsidies under the Equal Protection Clause.
On Thursday, FEMA released its official after-action report about the agency’s response to Hurricane Maria. Surprisingly, they publicly admitted to what Puerto Ricans know all too well—that the agency failed to properly respond to the humanitarian crisis caused by the Category 4 hurricane on the island almost ten months ago.
It’s great that FEMA is owning up to its mistakes. But the transparency is too little, too late and doesn’t actually do anything to help Puerto Rico continue to rebuild. The agency is still trying to throw displaced hurricane victims out of the hotels they are temporarily housed in. And the island is right in the middle of hurricane season, with possible hurricanes on the way—which no one is ready or prepared for. Moreover, Donald Trump has not once admitted that he lied about the response in Puerto Rico, previously playing down the extent of the damage, praising FEMA for its response and saying that the disaster was not “a real catastrophe like Katrina.” And, of course, Puerto Ricans and the rest of us won’t forget that he blamed Puerto Ricans for being lazy, wanting a handout and for “throwing the budget out of whack.”