[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 724 Introduced in House (IH)]

<DOC>






119th CONGRESS
  1st Session
H. RES. 724

Recognizing the eighth anniversary of Hurricane Maria's destruction of 
           Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                           September 16, 2025

 Mr. Hernandez (for himself, Mr. Thompson of Mississippi, Mr. Huffman, 
Mr. Neal, Ms. Velazquez, Mr. Boyle of Pennsylvania, Mr. Espaillat, Mr. 
  Soto, Ms. Pou, Mr. Torres of New York, Mr. Goldman of New York, Mr. 
Carter of Louisiana, Mr. Larson of Connecticut, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, Mr. 
   Pallone, Ms. DeLauro, Mr. Larsen of Washington, and Mrs. Ramirez) 
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee 
                  on Transportation and Infrastructure

_______________________________________________________________________

                               RESOLUTION


 
Recognizing the eighth anniversary of Hurricane Maria's destruction of 
           Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands.

Whereas, on September 20, 2017, Hurricane Maria made landfall near Yabucoa, 
        Puerto Rico, as a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 
        155 miles per hour, when Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin 
        Islands were still recovering from Hurricane Irma's impact just 14 days 
        prior;
Whereas the official death toll in Puerto Rico from Hurricane Maria is above 
        4,000, making it the second deadliest storm in United States history;
Whereas Hurricane Maria caused a catastrophic failure of Puerto Rico's 
        electrical grid, producing the longest blackout in United States history 
        that required over 11 months to recuperate, and left millions of Puerto 
        Ricans without power or basic services;
Whereas communications were crippled as 95 to 96 percent of cell sites in Puerto 
        Rico were out of service, and 48 out of 78 municipalities had 100 
        percent of cell sites down, with outages persisting months later;
Whereas Hurricane Maria triggered more than 40,000 landslides, with the rural 
        communities at the mountainous interior of the island being hit the 
        hardest;
Whereas critical water infrastructure and dam safety was threatened, 
        particularly the Guajataca Dam that prompted evacuation warnings 
        affecting 70,000 residents;
Whereas the Puerto Rican agricultural sector suffered 80 percent losses, 
        totaling $780,000,000, with the destruction of thousands of plantain, 
        banana, and coffee farms;
Whereas Hurricane Maria has been one of the most expensive natural disasters in 
        United States history, with damage estimates as high as 
        $115,200,000,000;
Whereas Hurricane Maria caused massive displacement and migration, with an 
        estimated 4 percent of the population, or 130,000 people, leaving Puerto 
        Rico in the aftermath;
Whereas Hurricane Maria disproportionately devastated vulnerable groups, 
        including seniors, children, and individuals with chronic medical 
        conditions, limiting their access to medical care, emergency services, 
        medication, and dialysis machines, and all 47 of Puerto Rico's dialysis 
        centers lost power, causing critical disruptions in patient care;
Whereas Hurricane Maria ignited a severe mental health crisis across Puerto 
        Rico, as the island's suicide prevention hotline experienced a 246-
        percent increase in calls from individuals who had attempted suicide, 
        and the suicide death toll climbed by 29 percent from the previous year;
Whereas Federal support has been significant, but long-term efforts are still 
        needed: while the Federal Emergency Management Agency has allocated over 
        $23,400,000,000 in public assistance to Puerto Rico's recovery, 
        bureaucratic delays and bottlenecks in disbursement have slowed 
        reconstruction and prolonged hardship for affected communities;
Whereas the Department of Housing and Urban Development has allocated more than 
        $20,000,000,000 in Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery 
        funds, but oversight from an April 2024 report by the Office of the 
        Inspector General of Housing and Urban Development identified serious 
        bottlenecks and delays in the release and use of those funds;
Whereas, in the direct aftermath of Hurricane Maria, States and municipalities 
        of the United States mobilized to assist Puerto Rico in the form of 
        personnel, equipment, and relief centers; New York deployed more than 
        450 utility and relief workers; Florida established disaster relief 
        centers for arriving evacuees; and States across the Nation facilitated 
        aid through the Emergency Management Assistance Compact;
Whereas nongovernmental organizations provided essential humanitarian 
        assistance, including the Red Cross, which distributed more than 
        11,000,000 meals and 2,700 generators, and organizations such as Direct 
        Relief, which supplied over $70,000,000 in medical supplies to hospitals 
        and clinics on the island;
Whereas the Puerto Rican diaspora communities in the mainland United States were 
        instrumental in relief, advocacy, and long-term recovery efforts, 
        raising millions of dollars from personal donations, coordinating supply 
        shipments, and sheltering and employing displaced communities;
Whereas the people of Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands, both on 
        the islands and across the mainland, have demonstrated extraordinary 
        strength and resilience in the face of enormous hardship;
Whereas the underlying vulnerabilities that contributed to the humanitarian 
        crisis in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria continue to exist, including 
        an underresourced health care system and a scarcity of medical 
        specialists; and
Whereas Puerto Rico continues to suffer massive, islandwide power outages 
        frequently, especially after Hurricane Fiona in 2022 and Hurricane Erin 
        in 2025, underscoring the ongoing infrastructural fragility and the 
        urgency of more resilient reconstruction: Now, therefore, be it
    Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
            (1) commemorates the eighth anniversary of Hurricane Maria, 
        honors the memory of those whose lives were lost, and stands 
        with the survivors in Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin 
        Islands who continue to endure its lasting impacts;
            (2) urges the Federal Emergency Management Agency 
        Administrator to expedite the full disbursement of critical 
        recovery funds, recognizing that every day of delay prolongs 
        hardship and hinders Puerto Rico's and the United States Virgin 
        Islands' reconstruction; and
            (3) calls upon Congress and the Administration to 
        prioritize resilient infrastructure investments in Puerto Rico 
        and the United States Virgin Islands, including modernizing its 
        energy grid, strengthening health care capacity, and ensuring 
        equitable disaster recovery for future natural disasters.
                                 <all>