Hurricane season starts June 1. U.S. mainland media continues to fail Puerto Rico
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Over 30,000 houses and apartments in Puerto Rico still have blue tarps instead of roofs. Tarps that leak. Tarps that are frayed. Coverings that do little or nothing to protect the residents from bad weather, and that any strong gust of wind will blow away. WHurricane season starts June 1. U.S. mainland media continues to fail Puerto Rico
Over 30,000 houses and apartments in Puerto Rico still have blue tarps instead of roofs. Tarps that leak. Tarps that are frayed. Coverings that do little or nothing to protect the residents from bad weather, and that any strong gust of wind will blow away. With an estimated average household size of three, that means we are talking about approximately 90,000 people—U.S. citizens—who have been living in execrable conditions since September of 2017. xThe story of those who still live under FEMA tarps https://t.co/M0Ms0SjjiU pic.twitter.com/pperJFCzyMâ El Nuevo DÃÂa (@ElNuevoDia) May 19, 2019 Leysa Caro González wrote this story for El Nuevo Día, and it was circulated in the English-language edition. It got all of six favorites on Twitter. The story of those who still live under FEMA tarps Read more