Puerto Rico coronavirus statistics for October 18

According to the Puerto Rico Health Department, 320,676 people are believed to have been infected with COVID-19, an increase of 738 since October 11. This points to a continuing decrease in the rate of new cases, as the increase between October 4 and October 11 was 940. The death toll is currently 3,207, with 15 of those registered since October 11. Comparatively, 27 people died from the virus between during the previous week.

Currently, there are an estimated 2,848,293 people in Puerto Rico who are eligible for the vaccine; 88.3% of that amount has been partially vaccinated, while 80.3% has been fully vaccinated. Despite the success in lowering COVID cases and deaths—although still not to the lows seen in June this year—the Puerto Rican government has continued enforcing most of the anti-COVID measures outlined in Executive Order 2021-065; only the rule forcing establishments serving the public to close between midnight and 5:00 a.m., and forbidding, during those hours, both the sale and public consumption of alcohol, has been nullified

2020 Census reflects changing Puerto Rican attitudes toward racial identity

Puerto Rico’s national narrative has historically emphasized the concept of Puerto Ricans as a mixture of three different peoples—the Native Taínos who originally inhabited the Island, the Spanish colonizers who occupied the Island for 400 years, and the Africans forcibly brought in by colonizers as part of the slave trade. According to the 2020 Census, ideas regarding race may be changing. Whereas 2,825,100 Puerto Ricans identified as solely white in the 2010 Census, that amount plummeted by 80% in 2020.   

“Puerto Ricans themselves are understanding their whiteness comes with an asterisk,” Yarimar Bonilla, a political anthropologist and director of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College in New York, told the Associated Press. Changes in the way the census is worded may have also contributed to the shift.  

Continuing Puerto Rico blackouts lead to new protests, investigations

Puerto Rico’s increasingly unreliable power grid has been making life harder for weeks now, with almost daily hours-long blackouts resulting in worse health outcomes, greater anxiety, and lost income. This week, the crisis led thousands to take to the streets in San Juan, calling for an end to the contract that privatized management of the grid and assigned it to LUMA Energy. Among those in attendance were government officials including Comerío mayor Joséan Santiago; electrical workers who had previously warned of the consequences of the contract with LUMA; and Puerto Ricans who have seen their livelihoods threatened by the lack of reliable power.

Meanwhile, the House Natural Resources Committee continued its attempts to exert some oversight after LUMA CEO Wayne Stensby failed to fully answer the committee’s questions about LUMA’s performance. Two days after a congressional hearing on the matter, the committee sent Stensby a letter requesting access to key information, including,according to an NBC.com article on the matter, “the number of experienced workers Luma Energy employs to fix damaged power lines, as well as compensation packages and titles of employees who earn more than $200,000 a year.”

The other privatization battle: Puerto Rico’s beaches

As developers and millionaires have worked to close off parts of the coasts to the public, in places like Vieques, Santa Isabel on the south, Dorado on the north, and Rincón on the west, some local residents are fighting back. In Rincón, more than 500 police officers were mobilized in response to the community outcry against the construction of a new private pool built into Los Almendros public beach, which cost at least $630,803 in overtime pay, not counting associated costs.

These battles are not just about recreation or economics: there is a vital environmental element at play.As described in The Huffington Post, Puerto Rico’s coastal areas are not only extremely susceptible to the effects of climate change, they are also home to several already-endangered fauna and flora, which the new construction has further jeopardized.

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