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Thousands Of Puerto Ricans Are Still In Shelters. Now What?

Yamyria Morales and her two children moved into an emergency shelter a few days after Hurricane Maria hit. Morales says she's grateful to have a safe place to sleep, but the noise and lack of privacy at the shelter are taking a toll. She's sitting on the cot she shares with her 2-year-old son Jonael.
Greg Allen
/
NPR
Yamyria Morales and her two children moved into an emergency shelter a few days after Hurricane Maria hit. Morales says she's grateful to have a safe place to sleep, but the noise and lack of privacy at the shelter are taking a toll. She's sitting on the cot she shares with her 2-year-old son Jonael.

For Yamyria Morales, her baby daughter and 2 year old son Jonael, home for now is a couple of cots in an elementary school gymnasium in Vega Alta, an hour west of San Juan.

"I've lost track of when I arrived here," Morales says. "It's been really hard."

Morales, a 25-year-old single mom, came to the shelter with her kids and her father just days after Hurricane Maria destroyed her wooden home in Sabana Hoyos, about 20 miles away.

"Whatever little I had, I lost," she says.

Now, nearly two months after Maria, Morales's father is hospitalized with a severe fungal infection, and she and her children are among more than 2,000 people across the island still living in shelters.

As the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Puerto Rico's government try to transition from emergency response to long-term recovery, emptying shelters like this one is a priority - especially since many of them are located in schools that need to re-open. The trouble is, the people staying in the shelters don't have anywhere else to go.

Mike Byrne is in charge of the FEMA response in Puerto Rico. He says the agency routinely provides temporary housing in hotels after mainland disasters. But Puerto Rico poses special challenges. Many hotels are still closed. Others are filled with emergency responders and power crews working to restore the island's badly damaged electric grid.

So, Byrne says, FEMA is considering something new: chartering planes to fly people to New York or Florida, where hotel rooms are more abundant.

"It's better than leaving them in the condition they're in," Byrne says. He argues that if people are still in shelters, it's because they don't have another option.

"We want them to have another option," he says.

But Byrne says many Puerto Ricans aren't enthusiastic about leaving the island.

"They want to work on rebuilding their homes" says Byrne, "they want to focus on coming back to some sense of normalcy, and yanking your family a thousand or two thousand miles away is not going to help with that."

Yamyria Morales is one of those who doesn't want to leave. She says FEMA has offered to fly her and the children to Florida or New York, where they would be put up for a few months in a hotel, but she's not interested.

"Not right now," Morales says. "My dad is sick, and I need to be here."

She still hopes FEMA will find her family an apartment nearby.

Thirty-nine families are still living at the shelter in Vega Alta, including Morales and her kids. Luis Vasquez is with FEMA, and has been interviewing the families with an eye toward getting them out of the school gymnasium and into temporary housing elsewhere.

But, Vasquez says, there aren't a lot of apartments or houses available on the island.

"A lot of them were damaged. A lot of them are still not being repaired or made habitable" says Vazquez, "and some have already been taken."

FEMA offers grants of up to $33,000 to help homeowners repair their houses. But Vasquez says many people inherited their homes from a parent or family member and can't prove the houses are theirs. The agency only accepts official government documentation such as deeds, titles, or property tax receipts, as proof of ownership.

54-year-old Roberto Fret's house is just across the street from the Vega Alta shelter. He came to the shelter with his wife and two teenage children on Tuesday September 19, the day before Maria hit.

They still haven't been able to move back home. The hurricane blew the zinc roof off of Fret's house, scattering twisted pieces of it across his back yard. Some landed on his car, breaking windows and crushing the roof.

A FEMA team put a tarp and temporary roof frame up, but Fret says the work wasn't done properly. Climbing a ladder, he points at pooling water and visible holes in the tarp. "Water still comes in whenever it rains," he says.

Fret just heard about FEMA's offer to fly him and his family to New York or Florida. He has family in both places, though he has a job on the island managing a book warehouse for the Department of Education. But he likes the offer.

"It's the best option," he says. "I'll take it."

It won't take him long to fix his house, he says - once he gets his check from FEMA. But in the meantime, he says he and his family have to get out of the shelter.

"We are affected," he says pointing to his head, "our mental health will improve if we leave.

"All of us are affected emotionally and mentally because help hasn't arrived yet. We're just waiting."

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

As NPR's Miami correspondent, Greg Allen reports on the diverse issues and developments tied to the Southeast. He covers everything from breaking news to economic and political stories to arts and environmental stories. He moved into this role in 2006, after four years as NPR's Midwest correspondent.
Marisa Peñaloza is a senior producer on NPR's National Desk. Peñaloza's productions are among the signature pieces heard on NPR's award-winning newsmagazines Morning Edition and All Things Considered, as well as weekend shows. Her work has covered a wide array of topics — from breaking news to feature stories, as well as investigative reports.
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