U.S. raises Puerto Rico concerns

FEMA planning to leave island with power not fully restored

Walter Higgins, Chief Executive Office, Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, center, speaks at the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 8, 2018.
Walter Higgins, Chief Executive Office, Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, center, speaks at the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 8, 2018.

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- Federal legislators grilled U.S. and Puerto Rico officials on Tuesday on why power has not been fully restored to the island nearly eight months after Hurricane Maria, and as a new storm season looms.

Lawmakers at a hearing of the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources also questioned why the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is pulling out of Puerto Rico next week.

"Tens of thousands of Americans there are still in the dark. The threat to their health and well being is real," said Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M. "If 20,000 Texans or Floridians were without power, I can't imagine FEMA saying 'Mission accomplished.'... It's reprehensible."

The concerns come as the Caribbean prepares for the start of hurricane season June 1, and the new chief executive officer of Puerto Rico's power company warned that restoring power to the more than 22,000 customers who remain in the dark has become increasingly difficult because of where they're located.

Several initiatives are underway to help strengthen the Electric Power Authority's system, said CEO Walter Higgins, but he noted that a grid nearly 80 percent destroyed by the Category 4 storm had not been properly maintained for decades.

"I don't doubt we'll have some growing pains," he said. "It has not been maintained the way it needed to be. You just don't build a transmission tower and walk away and hope that everything will be fine."

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which has been overseeing federal power restoration efforts, is leaving May 18 as determined by FEMA, and efforts to extend that deadline have not succeeded. So far, crews have repaired 69 percent of sub-transmission lines and 88 percent of transmission lines, said Charles Alexander Jr., the Corps' director of contingency operations and homeland security.

Carlos Monroig, a power company spokesman, said the agency is in the process of contracting three new companies to replace crews once the Corps leaves.

As the next hurricane season approaches, the U.S. Department of Energy recommended that Puerto Rico immediately ensure that mutual aid agreements with power crews in the U.S. mainland are in place, said Bruce Walker, an assistant secretary with the department.

He also said crews are working to establish micro grids that would be able to provide power to a small region during a broader blackout.

Higgins said drills will be held ahead of any storms.

"We will have practiced and practiced and practiced to be as ready as possible for the next season," he said.

Information for this article was contributed by Matthew Daly of The Associated Press.

A Section on 05/09/2018

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