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Puerto Rico accepts higher hurricane toll
Shoes have turned into a makeshift memorial in San Juan, Puerto Rico, to victims of Hurricane Maria. (Erika P. Rodriguez/New York Times)
By Frances Robles
(EDS: REPEATING to add art note.); (ART ADV: With photo.) and New York Times

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The government of Puerto Rico has quietly acknowledged in a report posted online that in all likelihood more than 1,400 people died in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria — a figure that is more than 20 times the official death toll.

Hurricane Maria cut through the island on Sept. 20, 2017, knocking out power and initially killing about a dozen people. The government’s official count eventually swelled to 64, as more people died from suicide, lack of access to health care, and other factors.

The number has not changed despite several academic assessments that official death certificates did not come close to tallying the storm’s fatal toll.

But in a draft of a report to Congress requesting $139 billion in recovery funds, the Puerto Rican government admits that 1,427 more people died in the last four months of 2017 compared with the same time frame in the previous year. The figures came from death registry statistics that were released in June but never publicly acknowledged by officials on the island.

“Although the official death count from the Puerto Rico Department of Public Safety was initially 64, the toll appears to be much higher,’’ said the report, titled “Transformation and Innovation in the Wake of Devastation.’’

The government was widely criticized for undercounting the number of people who died on the island as the power outage stretched for months, causing deaths from diabetes and sepsis to soar. Many people died from lack of access to hospitals, or because there was no power to run the machines they used to breathe.

new york times