Puerto Rico’s Water System Stutters Back To Normal
UTUADO, Puerto Rico — Carmen Rodríguez Santiago counts herself lucky to have any water service at home.
Flow is often intermittent and the water quality is uncertain.
Throughout Puerto Rico, electrical outages and faulty generators mean pumps don’t consistently deliver water to residents’ homes and operations are disrupted at water treatment plants.
Hurricane Maria’s destruction knocked out water service to over half of the residents using the island’s utility provider, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
The authority provides water to more than 97 percent of the island.
More than a third of sewage treatment plants were unable to function after the hurricane, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, resulting in raw sewage flowing into waterways residents used for drinking and bathing.
The results of that testing have not been released, according to the water authority.
Most of the infractions — based on 2015 data collected by the EPA — involved failing to test the water’s safety.
Nearly 7 in 10 residents received water from a source that violated federal health standards, according to the report.
For the past eight months, she has walked a half-hour with her two children to a local water station maintained by the military to fill up plastic milk jugs for the family’s showers.