Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria: The Public’s Knowledge and Views of Its Impact and the Response

On September 20th, Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico as a category 4 hurricane causing significant damage to much of the island’s basic infrastructure and severely limiting access to electricity, water, and basic necessities. To better understand the public’s awareness of the damage to Puerto Rico and their assessment of the federal government’s response, the Kaiser Family Foundation polled the public on these issues and found a large majority are aware of the severity of the hurricane’s impact on

Poll finds more Americans blame federal government than Puerto Rico for problems restoring electricity, food, etc.

Puerto Rico and most (62 percent) say the people there are not yet getting the help they need. In terms of the federal government’s response, about half feel the federal government is not doing enough to restore electricity and access to food and water (52 percent) and that the response has been too slow (52 percent). The largest share place the blame for problems restoring basic services on a slow response by the federal government (44 percent), followed by 32 percent who place blame on disorganization at the local level and 10 percent who blame lack of coverage by the news media. Given that Hurricane Maria was the third hurricane to hit U.S. ground in one month, the survey also assessed the public’s views of how the response to Maria in Puerto Rico compared to the government’s response to earlier hurricanes and found that 44 percent of the public feel that President Trump and his administration have done less to respond to the damage in Puerto Rico than they did to respond to hurricane damage in parts of Florida and Texas. And, nearly half (46 percent) say that the federal government’s response would be moving faster if Puerto Rico had been a wealthier place with fewer Hispanic people, while a similar share (44 percent) say ethnicity and poverty have not affected the recovery effort. Views of the response vary significantly across Democrats, Republicans and independents.

Knowledge and Awareness of Hurricane Maria’s Impact on Puerto Rico

Large majorities of the public, including Democrats, independents and Republicans, say they have heard ‘a lot’ about the damage Hurricane Maria caused the U.S. Territory of Puerto Rico (73 percent) and say they know the damage to the island was ‘very’ severe (88 percent). The poll was conducted just after President Trump visited Puerto Rico on October 3.

Figure 1: Large Majorities of the Public Have Heard A Lot About Damage in Puerto Rico and Know It Was Very Severe

Since the hurricane, there has been some discussion of whether the U.S. public is aware that Puerto Rico is part of the United States. The public largely knows that most residents of Puerto Rico are U.S. citizens (76 percent), including at least seven in ten across parties. This is higher than a recent online poll conducted immediately after the hurricane, which found just over half of the public was aware that people born in Puerto Rico are U.S. citizens.1 This difference may be due, at least in part, to the differences in question wording, poll methodology, and/or timing of the poll.

Figure 2: Three-quarters of the Public Is Aware Most Residents of Puerto Rico Are U.S. Citizens

Most of the public (62 percent) says that most people in Puerto Rico affected by Hurricane Maria are not yet getting the help they need, while about a third say they are (32 percent). However, views vary by party with majorities of Democrats (80 percent) and independents (61 percent) saying people are not yet getting the help they need, compared to 56 percent of Republicans who feel they are getting the help they need.

Figure 3: Majority of the Public Says Most Puerto Ricans Affected by Hurricane Maria Are Not Yet Getting The Help They Need

The Public’s Views of the Federal Government’s Response to Damage in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria

In the wake of the hurricane and the devastation it caused, some have questioned whether the federal government is doing enough to respond. About half (52 percent) of the public says the federal government is not doing enough to restore electricity and access to food and water in Puerto Rico, while four in ten say the federal government is doing enough. This varies greatly by party. Three-quarters of Democrats (74 percent) say the federal government is not doing enough while the same share of Republicans feel it is (74 percent). A majority of independents say the government is not doing enough (54 percent), compared to 38 percent who say it is. People who feel that most people in Puerto Rico are getting the help they need are much more likely to say that the federal government is doing enough (78 percent), whereas those who feel like most Puerto Ricans are not yet getting what they need are most likely to say the federal government is not doing enough (75 percent).

Figure 4: Half of the Public Says Federal Government Is Not Doing Enough to Restore Basic Services in Puerto Rico

The speed at which the federal government is responding has also been a concern for some, and half of the public (52 percent) feel the federal government’s response to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico has been too slow, while 41 percent say it has been about right, and just 3 percent say it has been too fast. Again, responses vary by party with Republicans most likely to say the speed of the government’s response has been about right (75 percent) whereas Democrats, and to a lesser extent independents, say it’s been too slow (72 percent and 55 percent, respectively). In addition, most who say they have heard ‘a lot’ about the damage Puerto Rico say the federal government’s response has been too slow (56 percent), compared to 40 percent of those who say they haven’t heard as much about it.

Figure 5: Half of the Public Says Federal Government’s Response in Puerto Rico has been Too Slow

When asked to select who they blame most for the problems restoring basic services in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, more than four in ten (44 percent) say it’s the slow response by the federal government, a third (32 percent) say it’s disorganization in the local Puerto Rican government, and 10 percent say it’s the lack of attention from the news media. Democrats are more likely to say the blame falls to the federal government (64 percent) while the same share of Republicans (64 percent) say disorganization in the local Puerto Rican government is most to blame.

Figure 6: Much of the Public Places Blame For Problems Restoring Basic Services in Puerto Rico on the Federal Government

More than four in ten (44 percent) of the public feels that President Trump and his administration have done less to respond to the damage in Puerto Rico than they did to respond to hurricanes that damaged parts of Florida and Texas. An additional 36 percent say President Trump and his administration’s response has been about the same as in Texas and Florida and 16 percent say they have done more to respond in Puerto Rico. Here too attitudes vary by party with most Democrats feeling the response in Puerto Rico has been less than in Florida and Texas (67 percent) and most Republicans feeling it’s been about the same (65 percent).

Figure 7: Views Vary By Party On How the Federal Government’s Response in Puerto Rico Compares to its Response Elsewhere

Some have suggested the fact that Puerto Rico has a largely Hispanic population and a high poverty rate has influenced the federal government’s response. The public is divided on whether ethnicity and poverty have played a role: 46 percent say that the federal government’s response would be moving faster if Puerto Rico had been a wealthier place with fewer Hispanic people and a similar share (44 percent) say ethnicity and poverty have not affected the recovery effort. Most Democrats say ethnicity and poverty have affected the recovery effort (69 percent), while Republicans say it haven’t (80 percent) and independents are divided (48 percent say it has and 44 percent say it hasn’t).

Figure 8: Public is Divided on Role Ethnicity and Poverty in Puerto Rico Has Played in Federal Government’s Response

Methodology

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