Trump issues disaster declaration for storm-battered Puerto Rico

Trump's go-ahead releases federal funding to residents of the Caribbean island hit by monster storm


Afp September 21, 2017
A car is viewed stuck in a flooded street in Santurce, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on September 21, 2017. Puerto Rico braced for potentially calamitous flash flooding on Thursday after being pummeled by Hurricane Maria which devastated the island and knocked out the entire electricity grid. The hurricane, which Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rossello called "the most devastating storm in a century," had battered the island of 3.4 million people after roaring ashore early Wednesday with deadly winds and heavy rain.PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has approved a disaster declaration for Puerto Rico, the White House said Thursday, one day after Hurricane Maria cut a devastating path across the US territory.

Trump's approval releases federal funding to residents of the Caribbean island impacted by the monster storm, which knocked out Puerto Rico's entire electricity grid after roaring ashore as a major Category Four hurricane.

"Yesterday, President Donald Trump declared that a major disaster exists in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and ordered Federal assistance to supplement Commonwealth and local recovery efforts," the White House said in a statement.

Federal aid includes grants for home repairs and temporary shelter as well as low-coast loans to pay for uninsured property losses.

Eerie calm hangs over Puerto Rican capital before storm

Maria has thus far been blamed for 10 deaths in the Caribbean, and though the storm has swirled back out to sea, Puerto Rico is now girding for potentially catastrophic flash flooding.

"If possible, move to higher ground NOW!" the National Weather Service station in San Juan warned in a tweet.

Now a Category Three storm packing 115 mile per hour winds, Maria is forecast to pass north of the Dominican Republic Thursday as it moves toward the Turks and Caicos Islands, according to the US National Hurricane Center.

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