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Eagerly Awaiting Word From Family, New Englanders Prepare To Help Puerto Rico

An image of Hurricane Maria on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2017.
National Hurricane Center
An image of Hurricane Maria on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2017.

Carmen Ocasio has a lot of family on Puerto Rico. She said Wednesday that she is not watching television or going on social media. She can't handle it. 

Her mother lives nearby, and has been the point the family point-person. 

"Every chance they get to call and to let us know that they're OK, they'll call my mother, because -- my mother -- she worries a lot," Ocasio said.

Ocasio lives in Holyoke, Massachusetts. Per capita, the city is home to the largest population of Puerto Ricans in the continental United States.

Ocasio said she thinks more members of her family will leave the island after Hurricane Maria.

"My aunt only has a little inky-dinky house, and every time there's a hurricane, that house is gone," she said.

The aunt's grandchildren live in Florida, so Ocasio said she thinks that's where she'll go.

Getting Help To Loved Ones

Nelson Roman is among those shocked to be coordinating relief efforts for the second time in two weeks.

"We just put out another all-call to our community," Roman, said. What we can focus on, he told them "is not clothes but water, toiletries, cleaning supplies, rakes and brooms, todas esas cosas," he said, which means all of those things.

Roman is a Holyoke city councilor and director of the community group Nueva Esparanza. He said he last spoke to his cousins in Puerto Rico very early Wednesday morning.

Even before Maria hit, he said, tens of thousands of people on the island were still without power from Hurricane Irma.

"The infrastructure of Puerto Rico's electrical grid is terrible," Roman said. "This is just going to be another hit, upon a hit."

And Roman added, hurricane season is not even over.

Copyright 2017 New England Public Media

Jill has been reporting, producing features and commentaries, and hosting shows at NEPR since 2005. Before that she spent almost 10 years at WBUR in Boston, five of them producing PRI’s “The Connection” with Christopher Lydon. In the months leading up to the 2000 primary in New Hampshire, Jill hosted NHPR’s daily talk show, and subsequently hosted NPR’s All Things Considered during the South Carolina Primary weekend. Right before coming to NEPR, Jill was an editor at PRI's The World, working with station based reporters on the international stories in their own domestic backyards. Getting people to tell her their stories, she says, never gets old.

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Federal funding is gone.

Congress has eliminated all funding for public media.

That means $2.1 million per year that Connecticut Public relied on to deliver you news, information, and entertainment programs you enjoyed is gone.

The future of public media is in your hands.

All donations are appreciated, but we ask in this moment you consider starting a monthly gift as a Sustainer to help replace what’s been lost.

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