Can you imagine the suffering these poor people have been through already? Now 2 months later Fema is offering to send people to the mainland for free. Why didn't they do this 2 months ago?
begin quote from:
Two months after storm, FEMA offers to airlift Hurricane Maria victims in Puerto Rico to US mainland
Nearly two months after Hurricane Maria pummeled Puerto Rico, approximately …
Two months after storm, FEMA offers to airlift Hurricane Maria victims in Puerto Rico to US mainland
Nearly two months after Hurricane Maria pummeled Puerto Rico,
approximately 3,000 people are still in shelters on the island. Now,
FEMA is offering to airlift these Hurricane Maria victims from Puerto
Rico to the United States to reach temporary housing.
Interested in Hurricanes?
Add Hurricanes as an interest to stay up to date on the latest Hurricanes news, video, and analysis from ABC News.
Add Interest
Under this plan, Puerto Rican residents who were displaced by the
hurricane and staying in shelters can choose to relocate to the U.S.
mainland.
According to FEMA’s website, the Transitional Shelter Assistance (TSA)
program "provides short-term lodging assistance for evacuees who are
not able to return home for an extended or indeterminate period of time
following a disaster."
In a statement to ABC News, a FEMA spokesperson said, "FEMA is working
to establish host-state agreements with both Florida and New York to
accept those identified survivors."
There are people in the U.S. who are currently taking advantage of the
TSA program, but this is FEMA’s first attempt at creating an "air
bridge," where they would airlift families from Puerto Rico to host
states like Florida and New York.
While priority is being given to the approximately 3,000 survivors who
are still residing in shelters, interest in the TSA program has been
low.
In an interview with CBS News,
Mike Byrne, a federal coordinating officer for FEMA, said that out of
about 300 families FEMA agents interviewed only 30 expressed an interest
in being airlifted to the mainland. Those 30 families wouldn’t even
fully commit to the plan yet.
Byrne did not give an exact date for when families would start to be
airlifted, saying FEMA is still working out the logistics of the program
and gauging people’s interest.
FEMA hopes to provide a full-service operation, including transportation
to and from the airport, once families arrive on the mainland.
The agreement with Florida and New York would have FEMA fly survivors to
New York and put them up in a hotel for two months. Those already in
New York can get two months too if they qualify.
Maria came ashore in Puerto Rico on Sept. 20 as a Category 4 storm with
sustained maximum winds of 155 mph. Over 20 inches of rain fell in many
areas and power was knocked out to the entire island. The governor's
office reported just 30.5 percent of the island had power as of Oct. 30.
The official death toll for those killed on the island in the storm is 51 people.
ABC News' Mark Osborne and David Kerley contributed to this report.
No comments:
Post a Comment