EPA Took Six Years to Regulate Toxic Emission in Puerto Rico That Could Cause Cancer

Since 2016, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) began to demand that seven companies that use ethylene oxide to sterilize medical equipment in Puerto Rico take measures to mitigate impacts on communities, such as the danger of cancer from long-term exposure. But it will not be until 2023 that there will be a regulation in place that requires a 99.99% reduction in emissions of this chemical, said Carmen Guerrero Pérez, director of the Caribbean Environmental Protection Division at EPA. Current regulations only require these companies to reduce EtO emissions by 99%, even though it has been known since 2016 that exposure to the chemical can cause cancer. Of the seven sterilization companies established in Puerto Rico, EPA identified four as the riskiest for the communities: Edwards Lifesciences Technology Sarl, in Añasco; Steri-Tech, in Salinas; Customed, in Fajardo; and Medtronic Puerto Rico, in Villalba. The remaining three are Medtronic, in Juncos; Guidant Puerto Rico (now Boston Scientific), in Dorado; and St.

Puerto Rico Was Promised Billions for Safe Water. Taps Are Still Running Dry.

An analysis by CPI and The Post found that despite ample federal funding, less than 1 percent of the FEMA and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) money slated for the island’s public water utility corporation since 2018 has been set aside to buy generators for water pumps. Local officials instead relied on a patchwork supply of emergency units but failed to get many in place ahead of the storm and supply them with enough diesel.

Falsa la esperanza de tener agua después de los desastres

Tras Fiona, el 75% de las 917 estaciones de bombas de agua y 227 pozos que maneja la Autoridad de Acueductos y Alcantarillados carecían de un generador como sistema de respaldo, según datos entregados al Centro de Periodismo Investigativo y The Washington Post. Un análisis de ambos medios encontró que, a pesar de la disponibilidad de miles de millones en fondos de FEMA y del Departamento de Vivienda Federal desde el 2018, se ha designado menos del 1% para la compra de generadores de emergencia en la AAA.

Pierde acreditación la Oficina del Comisionado de Instituciones Financieras

La desacreditación ocurre en momentos en que en el Tribunal Federal está pendiente el juicio contra la exgobernadora Wanda Vázquez Garced, a quien se le imputa haber destituido en el 2020 al excomisionado de la OCIF George Joyner para nombrar a Víctor Rodríguez Bonilla, quien presuntamente había sido escogido para ese puesto por el presidente de uno de los bancos que regulaba la OCIF. A cambio de esa alegada interferencia en el nombramiento del funcionario, Vázquez Garced recibiría un beneficio económico para su campaña política, según la acusación. 

Ponen trabas al desarrollo del fútbol femenino en Puerto Rico

La falta de continuidad en las estructuras que rigen el fútbol femenino, la mínima representación de las jugadoras en la Federación Puertorriqueña de Fútbol (FPF), la ausencia de un entrenador fijo y las recientes enmiendas a los estatutos de la Federación han estancado el progreso de este deporte lo que amenaza la participación de la Selección Nacional a los Juegos Centroamericanos y del Caribe.

Reports Filed By Act 22 Beneficiaries Are Public Records, PR Supreme Court Says

A panel of four Supreme Court justices unanimously rejected last Thursday a petition filed by the Puerto Rico Privacy Association (PRPA), which sought to block the lower court’s decision ordering the disclosure to the Center for Investigative Journalism (CPI, in Spanish) of the annual reports submitted by beneficiaries of the “Act to Promote the Relocation of Investors to Puerto Rico,” or Act 22, a statute that has been part of the Act 60 Incentives Code since 2019. The panel was composed by Associate Justice Rafael Martínez Torres, who presided  it, and Associate Justices Erick Kolthoff Caraballo, Roberto Feliberti Cintrón, and Angel Colón Pérez. The CPI requested the reports, which “resident investors” must submit to the Department of Economic Development and Commerce (DDEC, in Spanish) every year as required by Act 22, since April 2021. These reports break down each beneficiary’s personal and financial circumstances, such as the number of jobs created, the properties acquired, the time spent in Puerto Rico, among other data. The complaint asked for all information not considered personal.