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What it’s like delivering aid to a remote town in Puerto Rico

BARRANQUITAS, Puerto Rico — Past miles of torn-down telephone poles, uprooted trees, and crumpled landslides, the town of Barranquitas hides in the mountains of central Puerto Rico. Many of the sprawling municipality’s 30,000 or so residents said they hadn’t received any aid since Hurricane Maria tore through the Caribbean island over a month ago.

More than a two-hour ride across narrow and rough roads from the metropolitan area of San Juan, Barranquitas still doesn’t have power or access to clean water. Roofs hang off houses, and septic tanks have burst. The roads are impassable, and schools remain closed.

Videos by VICE

As part of relief efforts, branches of the U.S. military have been delivering aid to towns in Puerto Rico since September. But Barranquitas is so remote, residents said relief efforts hadn’t reached them until Thursday, although FEMA told VICE News the town has been receiving aid since Sept. 27, including by air when roads have been blocked. A unit from the U.S. Coast Guard, in coordination with the U.S. Army and several federal law enforcement agencies, lead a convoy of aid to two neighborhoods there.

Though President Trump has threatened to pull emergency relief services out of Puerto Rico, the military is the only lifeline for residents of many secluded towns, like Barranquitas.

Many roads in Puerto Rico remain blocked by fallen trees and other debris. Oct. 26, 2017. Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.
The A unit unloads aid supplies in Helechal Barrio, in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico on Oct. 26, 2017.Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.
Stephanie Lugo of the U.S. Army asks residents of Helechal Barrio, in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico who needs supplies, including tarps and water on Oct. 26, 2017.Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.
Residents of Helechal Barrio, in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico, wait in line for relief supplies on Oct. 26, 2017. Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.

One family of four, standing in line with an umbrella, hadn’t received aid yet. The children weren’t going to school, and the parents weren’t working. While they said their lives had been destroyed, they guessed they were most likely faring better than others in the town.

A one-month old baby waits with her aunt and grandmother for diapers and baby wipes in Palo Hincado Barrio in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico. Oct. 26, 2017.Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.

The grandmother of two months-old babies in Palo Hincado Barrio, a neighborhood in Barranquitas, said she received a check of $500 from FEMA, but that didn’t even begin to cover the damage of her flooded home. She also needed clean water.

Guillaume, 17, waits for aid with his pregnant girlfriend in Helechal Barrio, in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico, on Oct. 26, 2017. He said he’d been kicked out of his house by his parents.Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.
A resident of Helechal Barrio, in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico, waits in line for relief supplies on Oct. 26, 2017. Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.

Elsie Peroni, above explained through tears that not only did she no longer have a roof, but thieves had stolen all of her belongings, leaving her with only the clothes on her back. She hasn’t had running water since the hurricane hit and can’t bathe.

While there hasn’t been any violence in Barranquitas, the Coast Guard still stood guard as aid was handed out. Officers said there had been trouble in other areas while distributing supplies.

A Coast Guard Investigative Service special agent stands guard in Helechal Barrio, in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico on Oct. 26, 2017. Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.
Javier Diaz, a U.S. Coast Guard Investigative Service special agent, eats a cup of Ramen noodles at the U.S. Coast Guard base in Old San Juan on Oct. 26, 2017.Alexa Liautaud / VICE News.

As the convoy rode away from Barranquitas, many of the servicemen and women talked about the life-changing experience of delivering aid to Puerto Rico. “We’ll tell each other, ‘I’m taking off tomorrow,’ and we’ll all be like, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah,’” said Javier Diaz, a U.S. Coast Guard Investigative Service special agent. “And we’ll all show up in the office dressed up.”