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After Hurricane Maria : predisaster conditions, hurricane damage, and recovery needs in Puerto Rico / Jordan R. Fischbach, Linnea Warren May, Katie Whipkey, Shoshana R. Shelton, Christine Anne Vaughan, Devin Tierney, Kristin J. Leuschner, Lisa S. Meredith, Hilary J. Peterson, HSOAC Puerto Rico Recovery Team.

RAND Reports Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Fischbach, Jordan R., author.
Warren May, Linnea, author.
Whipkey, Katie, author.
Shelton, Shoshana R., author.
Vaughan, Christine Anne, author.
Tierney, Devin, author.
Leuschner, Kristin, author.
Meredith, Lisa S., 1959- author.
Peterson, Hilary J., author.
Contributor:
Rand Corporation. Homeland Security Operational Analysis Center.
Rand Corporation.
United States. Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Hurricane damage--Puerto Rico.
Hurricane damage.
Hurricane Irma, 2017.
Hurricane Maria, 2017.
Puerto Rico.
Other Title:
After Hurricane Maria
Place of Publication:
Santa Monica, Calif. RAND Corporation 2020
Summary:
To establish an evidence-based foundation for the congressionally required short- and long-term recovery and resilience plan for Puerto Rico following the 2017 hurricanes, the Homeland Security Operational Analysis Center assessed the damage from the 2017 hurricane season and remaining needs across the commonwealth in collaboration with federal agencies, the government of Puerto Rico, and other stakeholders. The experts examined what happened during and after Hurricanes Irma and Maria but also how the effects of the hurricanes exacerbated and were exacerbated by predisaster challenges and stressors. This report provides a comprehensive summary of the commonwealth's challenges and status before and after the storms hit, including their effects on Puerto Rico's people and communities; economy; built and natural environments; and education, health, and social services. Before the hurricanes, Puerto Rico faced an economic crisis, a shrinking, aging population, substandard public education, poverty, poor housing stock, governance challenges, neglect of infrastructure and resources, and environmental degradation. Hurricane Maria's direct and devastating landfall on Puerto Rico in September 2017 only exacerbated these challenges. The research team identified short- and longer-term needs for Puerto Rico's recovery and resilience. In the short term, Puerto Rico needs to repair damaged critical infrastructure; improve governance and fiscal accountability; update emergency-preparedness plans; clearly delineate responsibility for infrastructure, assets, and services; and repair damaged and destroyed homes. In the longer term, Puerto Rico will need to systematically address its economic challenges; scale its social services and infrastructure systems for current and future populations; reinforce its infrastructure against natural hazards and build it to modern standards; reduce building-permit and code-enforcement breaches; report timely and accurate data on its economic and fiscal status; and gather further knowledge to inform long-term resilience decisions.
Contents:
Introduction
Puerto Rico Before the Storms
An Overview of Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria
Methods Used for the Damage and Needs Assessment
Puerto Rico's Economy
Puerto Rico's People and Communities
Puerto Rico's Energy Systems
Puerto Rico's Communications and Information Technology
Puerto Rico's Water
Puerto Rico's Transportation
Puerto Rico's Housing
Puerto Rico's Public Buildings
Puerto Rico's Cultural Resources
Puerto Rico's Natural Resources
Puerto Rico's Education, Health, and Social Services
Puerto Rico's Recovery and Resilience Needs
Appendix: Summary Tables.
Notes:
See also RAND/RR-2597-DHS, RAND/RR-2598-DHS, RAND/RR-2599-DHS, RAND/RR-2600-DHS, RAND/RR-2602-DHS, RAND/RR-2603-DHS, RAND/RR-2604-DHS, RAND/RR-2605, RAND/RR-2606-DHS, RAND/RR-2607-DHS, RAND/RR-2608-DHS, RAND/RR-2856-DHS, RAND/RR-2858-DHS, RAND/RR-2859-DHS, RAND/RR-2861-DHS, RAND/RR-3040-DHS, RAND/RR-3041-DHS, RAND/RR-3042-DHS.

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