Biden administration releases $8 billion in disaster funding for Puerto Rico.

gemini104104

Verified User
The Biden administration on Monday freed up roughly $8 billion in disaster relief funding for Puerto Rico and lifted restrictions that curtailed how it could spend such funds in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in 2017.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced the obligation of $8.2 billion in Community Development Block Grant Mitigation funds for the island. The move is the latest step from the Biden administration to accelerate the allocation of money for Puerto Rico and ease restrictions on the aid put in place during the Trump administration."

Bravo to the President Biden legitimate Administration at undoing a terrible wrong committed by the lawlessly hacked in sewer tRump insurgency that was beholding to foreign enemies only, and that humiliated and trashed a U.S. territory such as Puerto Rico. President Biden not only came to the aid of Puerto Rico but also for the U.S. to be there to uphold its standing when it comes to defending and protecting its territorial interests.

https://thehill.com/latino/549074-b...xy0PXirypvlHSUXGgL-hEq4gV8tbme85sq-CAnf7VmoWA
 
Oh yeah, Peurto-Rican leeches needed $8 billion dollars.

Motherfucker, not to degrade any real Boris, but damn!
Real Boris are a fading phenomenon.

I've known more than a few in my lifetime, and God bless them!
 
What Puerto Rico really needs is better building codes. While I've harped some on the overkill of these in the US, Puerto Rico's are really almost Third World and most of the structures damaged or destroyed were so substandard that it was inevitable.

171009-puerto-rico-aerial-view-08.jpg


This is a good example. The rafters are undersized for the span, too far apart, and there is no sheathing on the roof, just corrugated metal with too few screws anchoring it due to the lack of rafters and cross ties. I doubt that any hurricane ties were used.

simpson-strong-tie-h2-5a-hurricane-tie-new-style-8.jpg


Those run less than $1 each so they'd add $50 to $100 to a house's cost but they keep the roof on in high winds.

There are other examples that show that the walls are not structurally sound with too widely spaced 2 x 4 construction, a single top plate, a complete lack of sheer wall sheathing, etc. All that makes the houses built like that flimsy structures that are going to get destroyed in a hurricane.

Florida has made great strides with what's called Dade County building code to make homes as hurricane proof as they can. It could be done in Puerto Rico but hasn't been.

So, shoveling money at Puerto Rico to do the same crappy construction is a waste of time and money. The next hurricane like Maria will undo all the repairs and rebuilding because the island didn't to use Joke's vernacular, didn't Build back better.
 
Those who refuse to try to save themselves are a horrible investment.

We need to do better than that.

The stupid die.
 
What Puerto Rico really needs is better building codes. While I've harped some on the overkill of these in the US, Puerto Rico's are really almost Third World and most of the structures damaged or destroyed were so substandard that it was inevitable.

171009-puerto-rico-aerial-view-08.jpg


This is a good example. The rafters are undersized for the span, too far apart, and there is no sheathing on the roof, just corrugated metal with too few screws anchoring it due to the lack of rafters and cross ties. I doubt that any hurricane ties were used.

simpson-strong-tie-h2-5a-hurricane-tie-new-style-8.jpg


Those run less than $1 each so they'd add $50 to $100 to a house's cost but they keep the roof on in high winds.

There are other examples that show that the walls are not structurally sound with too widely spaced 2 x 4 construction, a single top plate, a complete lack of sheer wall sheathing, etc. All that makes the houses built like that flimsy structures that are going to get destroyed in a hurricane.

Florida has made great strides with what's called Dade County building code to make homes as hurricane proof as they can. It could be done in Puerto Rico but hasn't been.

So, shoveling money at Puerto Rico to do the same crappy construction is a waste of time and money. The next hurricane like Maria will undo all the repairs and rebuilding because the island didn't to use Joke's vernacular, didn't Build back better.

Really?

The same thing was found out after hurricane Andrew in 1992.

Contractors weren't securing roofs, with truss straps, no steel or not enough rebar, in columns or tie beams in a lot of homes.

Florida enacted tougher building codes after that, PR is did the same, adopting the International Building Code in 2018 .

Hopefully both revisions, help.
 
I checked out a world map of population growth. Puerto rico was purple. Suspicious, i checked out a world map of heroin trafficking rates. It was the same world map! Same fking MAP.
 
Building code? You need a whole different building strategy. Buildings today are just tomorrows insurrence claims. California tinder. Whats wrong with cement? Why use wood at all? It's ridiculous.
 
Also with example given yere you're also making buildings more expensive. You're always going to have the problem that you need to sell what people can buy.
 
It is builders and the wealthy who fight for lower building codes. Not the people. The problem exists in Florida and coastal regions in the US too. The residents do not make those decisions.
 
Really?

The same thing was found out after hurricane Andrew in 1992.

Contractors weren't securing roofs, with truss straps, no steel or not enough rebar, in columns or tie beams in a lot of homes.

Florida enacted tougher building codes after that, PR is did the same, adopting the International Building Code in 2018 .

Hopefully both revisions, help.

Hindsight is 20/20...
 
It is builders and the wealthy who fight for lower building codes. Not the people. The problem exists in Florida and coastal regions in the US too. The residents do not make those decisions.

Actually larger builders, developers, and contractors fight for stricter code. The reason is they have the means and people in their organization to deal with it while smaller outfits will struggle to. It also means they can charge more for anything they do. Regulation and government favor larger companies.
 
weren't the funds put on hold when it was uncovered that the lib'ruls in control of the government were stealing money from the relief fund?........did Biden bother to put a stop to that before releasing the money?......
 
Back
Top