DONALD TRUMP REFUSES TO SEND MORE AID TO PUERTO RICO, CITING BUSINESS INTERESTS
27
September, 2017
President
Donald Trump has made it clear his administration isn't planning to
allow any additional outside aid to get into Puerto Rico in the wake
of Hurricane Maria.
Speaking
with reporters on Wednesday afternoon, the president cited business
interests as the reason for refusing calls from lawmakers and
activists to allow international organizations and governments to
ship aid to the island
Trump
said he was initially considering whether to implement a temporary
waiver of the Jones Act to allow it, but decided against doing so as
"a lot of people that work in the shipping industry…don’t
want the Jones Act lifted."
Trump administration denies Puerto Rico's request to waive the Jones Act, which it did for Harvey and Irma. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-storm-maria-puertorico-shipping/u-s-denies-request-for-puerto-rico-shipping-waiver-idUSKCN1C12UI …
Also
called the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, the Jones Act requires all
goods shipped between American ports to be on ships built, owned and
operated in the United States.
The
refusal to work with intergovernmental networks eager to supply aid
to the devastated island was then echoed by Trump’s Department of
Homeland Security. "Based on consultation with other federal
agencies," spokesman David Lapan said Wednesday, "DHS's
current assessment is that there is sufficient numbers of
U.S.-flagged vessels to move commodities to Puerto Rico."
The
department did waive the Jones Act to aid Houston and parts of
Florida that were ravaged by hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Senator John
McCain, who has repeatedly fought to repeal the act, slammed the
Department of Homeland Security for failing to extend the same relief
efforts to Puerto Rico that it provided to parts of the mainland
United States.
"It
is unacceptable to force the people of Puerto Rico to pay at least
twice as much for food, clean drinking water, supplies and
infrastructure due to Jones Act requirements as they work to recover
from this disaster," the Republican McCain wrote in a letter to
the department on Tuesday. "Now, more than ever, it is time to
realize the devastating effect of this policy and implement a full
repeal of this archaic and burdensome Act."
Proponents
of the Jones Act say that without it, the country would be forced to
rely on cheaper international ships operated by foreign workers and
put American vessels in a more crowded and less efficient shipping
environment.
Temporarily
waiving the Jones Act for Puerto Rico "would take American first
responders out of the loop and replace them with Filipino or Russian
or Chinese crews," Michael Roberts, senior vice president and
general counsel at Crowley Maritime Corporation, told The Wall Street
Journal Wednesday. "Doing that at a time when many U.S. mariners
in this region have had their homes damaged, their lives uprooted and
now they need to work, to take that away is not something you want to
do."
Meanwhile,
Puerto Rico is facing disastrous conditions in the wake of Hurricane
Maria, including flooding and rising temperatures. The U.S. military
reports nearly 44 percent of the island (1.5 million people), are
without clean drinking water, while 97 percent of Puerto Rico remains
without power.
BREAKING US military says some 1.5 million people (44% of the 3.4m population) are without drinking water on hurricane-stricken Puerto Rico.
"We
are getting help from the federal government, but this is an
unprecedented set of circumstances," Puerto Rico’s governor,
Ricardo Rosselló, said Wednesday.
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