Monday, April 20, 2015

New lung cancer rates lower in Puerto Rico than in US

Puerto Rico has the lowest incidence rate of new lung cancer compared with all other races and ethnic groups in the United States, according to a study published last week in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.  The report also shows that Puerto Rico has a lower incidence rate of female breast cancer compared with U.S. non-Hispanic white and black women.

Puerto Rico/CIA

Puerto Rico/CIA
The report presents for the first time invasive cancer incidence rates for 2007–2011 among Puerto Rican residents by sex, age, cancer site, and region using U.S. Cancer Statistics data. Puerto Rico has similar incidence rates to U.S. populations for cancer of the colon and rectum. Cancers of the prostate (152 cases per 100,000 men), female breast (84 cases per 100,000 women), and colon and rectum (43 cases per 100,000 persons) are the most common cancer sites among Puerto Rico residents.

“These data underscore the importance of Puerto Ricans getting proper screening for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer to identify them early when they are most treatable,” said Guillermo Tortolero-Luna, M.D., Ph.D., director of Cancer Control and Populations Sciences at the University of Puerto Rico and a co-author of the paper.

The differences in reported cancer incidence rates between U.S. and Puerto Rican residents may be partly explained by differences in health behaviors and risk factors associated with cancers. For example, Puerto Rico has lower smoking rates than all American states (with the exception of Utah), which could explain the lower rates of lung cancer.

“We are encouraged to see lower lung cancer incidence rates in Puerto Rico than the rest of the U.S.  However, we must remain diligent in our cancer control efforts to continue progress,” said Blythe Ryerson, Ph.D., M.P.H., a lead epidemiologist in CDC’s Division of Cancer Prevention and Control and an author of the paper. “We recommend all smokers quit for good.”

New lung cancer rates lower in Puerto Rico than in US

Friday, April 17, 2015

U.S. GAO - Duplication & Cost Savings: Improving Efficiency and Effectiveness#t=1&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=duplication2015

Improving Efficiency and Effectiveness

GAO’s 2015 Annual Report identified 12 new areas of fragmentation, overlap, or duplication in federal programs and activities. GAO also identified 12 other opportunities for cost savings or revenue enhancement. The annual report, GAO’s Action Tracker—a tool that tracks progress on GAO’s specific suggestions for improvement—and a new guide on evaluating and managing opportunities to improve efficiency and effectiveness are available here.
The federal government faces an unsustainable fiscal path. Changing the path will likely require difficult fiscal policy decisions to alter both long-term federal spending and revenue. Yet, in the near-term, executive branch agencies and Congress can act to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of government programs and activities.

Opportunities to take action exist in areas where federal programs or activities are fragmented, overlapping, or duplicative. To highlight these opportunities, GAO is statutorily mandated to identify and report annually to Congress on federal programs, agencies, offices, and initiatives—either within departments or government-wide—that have duplicative goals or activities. In addition, GAO identifies additional opportunities to achieve greater efficiency and effectiveness by means of cost savings or enhanced revenue collection.

In the first four annual reports issued from 2011 through 2014, GAO presented 24 areas where opportunities existed for executive branch agencies or Congress to reduce, eliminate, or better manage fragmentation, overlap, or duplication; achieve cost savings; or enhance revenue. Figure 1 outlines the definitions GAO used for fragmentation, overlap, and duplication for this work. In these first four reports, GAO identified approximately 440 actions that executive branch agencies and Congress could take to address the opportunities for greater efficiency and effectiveness that GAO identified.



Figure 1: Definitions of Fragmentation, Overlap, and Duplication

Duplication Definitions                    
 
U.S. GAO - Duplication & Cost Savings: Improving Efficiency and Effectiveness

Puerto Ricans Less Likely To Get Cancer Compared With Americans Even After Vieques Scandal

People in Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory, are much less likely to get certain kinds of cancer than those living in the rest of the United States. A study published Thursday found that Puerto Ricans have signifcantly lower incidences of lung and breast cancer.

Puerto Rico has the lowest incidence rate of new lung cancer, compared with the rest of the United States, said the study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Puerto Rican women also saw significantly lower rates of breast cancer than U.S. non-Hispanic white and black women. The reasons for the low lung cancer rate might be explained by differences in lifestyle and exposure risk factors associated with cancers. Also, the Carribbean island has lower smoking rates than all U.S. states except Utah.

"We are encouraged to see lower lung cancer incidence rates in Puerto Rico than the rest of the U.S. However, we must remain diligent in our cancer control efforts to continue progress," said Blythe Ryerson, the lead author of the paper. "We recommend all smokers quit for good."

The report outlined for the first time Puerto Rican residents' invasive cancer rates for 2007-2011, broken down into subsets of sex, age, cancer site and region. The most common cancers in Puerto Rico are prostate (152 cases per 100,000 men), female breast (84 cases per 100,000 women), and colon and rectum (43 cases per 100,000 people). For the same time period, the U.S. population as a whole had incidence rates of 142.5 cases per 100,000 men for prostate cancer, 122.8 cases per 100,000 women for breast cancer and 43.3 cases per 100,000 people for colon and rectum.

Puerto Rico has a troubled history concerning cancer and the rest of the United States. The island of Vieques in Puerto Rico was used for Navy weapons drills for 60 years until the practice was ended May 1, 2003. The people who lived on the island had a 30 percent higher rate of cancer than the rest of Puerto Rico, which the residents attributed to the weapons testing. Studies by Puerto Rican scientists found that 69 percent of Vieques residents were contaminated with arsenic, 55 percent with led and 34 percent with Mercury, the New York Daily News reported in 2013.

"Here there is every type of cancer -- bone cancer, tumors. Skin cancer. Everything. We have had friends who are diagnosed and two or three months later, they die. These are very aggressive cancers," Carmen Valencia, of the Vieques Women's Alliance, told Al Jazeera in 2013.

The residents claimed that birth defects and other conditions resulted from the weapons testing there, but the U.S refused to acknowledge a link.



RTRLD9R

An unidentified man waves a Puerto Rican flag in Esperanza Bay, where fishing boats depart to the range zone in Vieques, to protest a U.S. Navy drill in 2001. The region cited health problems -- including cancer -- and other lasting effects from Navy bombing drills conducted in the area for more than 60 years. Reuters
 
By  

Puerto Ricans Less Likely To Get Cancer Compared With Americans Even After Vieques Scandal

Thursday, April 16, 2015

​What young adults do right and wrong with money

NEW YORK -- Renee Powers graduated college as the recession began. Now 28 she and her husband keep strict control over their money.

"We've always talked about money, we've grown up talking about money, the economy has always been an issue," said Powers.

Coming of age during the The Great Recession, and watching their parents struggle financially, turned Millennials into savers. More than half of those between 18 and 34 are putting away at least five percent of their income -- more than any other age group, according to America Saves.

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CBS News


"We do have a retirement fund that we have been putting money into the last five or six years, and watching it grow which is wonderful," said Powers.

A whopping 70 percent of Millennials are already saving for retirement, and they started sooner than previous generations. Boomers began at a median age of 35; Generation Xers at 27; and Millennials at 22.

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Renee Powers
CBS News
"My friends and I we're very explicit about our budget. If something's not in our monthly budget, sorry, it's not going to happen," said Powers.



And while this age group has a reputation as slackers who live at home, mooching off their parents, Powers says that's a bad rap.

"They're learning that staying home with their families is going to save them money and they're going to pay back loans while they're staying home before getting out on their own two feet," said Powers. "I think that's a smart financial decision."

Millennials, however, aren't so good at investing. Witnessing the burst of the tech bubble and the collapse of the housing market has left them very risk averse. They don't share the same willingness to invest as their parents do. Only a quarter of Millennials are investing in stocks, compared to 50 percent of people age 50 to 64.

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CBSf News
ByJill Schlesinger

What young adults do right and wrong with money

Monday, April 13, 2015

NDHS raises over $6,000 in dinner fundraiser for mission trip

ELMIRA, N.Y. - Notre Dame High School's Team Puerto Rico International Dinner Fundraiser exceeded success. In an effort to raise money for the school's first ever mission trip to Puerto Rico, NDHS's Team Puerto Rico hosted an International Dinner on Friday in the Notre Dame Cafeteria. The dinner offered a variety of meals that featured recipes inspired by six different countries: Puerto Rico, Italy, Mexico, Mali, India and Poland. Included in this event was a kid's corner, a raffle drawing and a Chinese Auction. In just three hours, Team Puerto Rico served over 200 people and raised over $6,000.

Team Puerto Rico consists of a group of students, faculty and staff and parents who are committed to serving others and to provide those in need with the things they lack the most. This is the work that they will be doing in Puerto Rico during their mission trip, but it is also the work they are doing now. All remaining food from the event was donated to the Samaritan House in Elmira (Catholic Charities) in an effort to feed those in need of a hot meal.

"We are extremely gratefully for the amount of support received during this event and thank all of those who helped make it successful. We are blessed to have this support and we hope that we have inspired others to join us in helping those in need," stated Team Puerto Rico member and Notre Dame's Director of Public Relations and Marketing, Jessica Kneaskern.

Team Puerto Rico will be hosting a Mother's Day brunch on May 10 in the Notre Dame Cafeteria from 10-1. Come enjoy your favorite breakfast foods, lunch items, activities and raffles! The cost for the event is $10 per person and $5 for those 8 and under.

NDHS raises over $6,000 in dinner fundraiser for mission trip

Wednesday, April 08, 2015

La vigne est à l’origine une liane qui a tendance à croitre à l’infini en négligeant ses fruits sur un sol riche. Pour qu’elle donne de beaux fruits, il faut donc plutôt cultiver la vigne sur des sols pauvres qui n’offriront pas à la vigne des réserves illimitées en eau. Cette semaine, les équipes de la box vin My VitiBox, partenaire du Figaro Vin, vous propose de vous faire découvrir les 8 principaux types de sols qui sont adaptés à la viticulture :Comprendre l’impact du sol en viticulture (1/2) - Le Figaro Vin

La vigne est à l’origine une liane qui a tendance à croitre à l’infini en négligeant ses fruits sur un sol riche. Pour qu’elle donne de beaux fruits, il faut donc plutôt cultiver la vigne sur des sols pauvres qui n’offriront pas à la vigne des réserves illimitées en eau. Cette semaine, les équipes de la box vin My VitiBox, partenaire du Figaro Vin, vous propose de vous faire découvrir les 8 principaux types de sols qui sont adaptés à la viticulture :

1. Les sols d’argile : L’argile offre l’avantage de restituer l’eau petit à petit avec régularité à la vigne mais présente l’inconvénient d’être froid ce qui ralentit le murissement du raisin. C’est donc un sol compliqué pour le cabernet-sauvignon qui a besoin de chaleur pour mûrir mais c’est idéal pour le merlot et c’est pour ça qu’il est assez présent sur la rive droite de la Dordogne à Bordeaux, notamment dans les Côtes de Castillon ou à Pomerol. Cela donne des vins fins avec un fruit éclatant et une belle puissance.

2. Les sols calcaires : Ils permettent aux racines de la vigne d’aller puiser de l’eau mais ne retiennent pas cette eau dans la durée, ce qui créé des conditions équilibrées de stress hydrique pour la vigne. Cela donne des vins fins, d’une grande subtilité et qui montrent souvent une belle minéralité. On retrouve des grands terroirs calcaires dans le vignoble de Chablis au nord de la Bourgogne.

3. Les sols crayeux : Ils laissent l’eau descendre avant de l’absorber comme une éponge en profondeur. La craie est en fait du calcaire poreux qui restitue l’eau avec parcimonie à la vigne via ses racines profondes sans noyer le raisin dans des torrents d’eau, ce qui nuirait à la concentration des baies. C’est un sol bon pour la fraîcheur, donc particulièrement adapté aux vins blancs et notamment au chardonnay en Champagne et au chenin en Loire.

4. Les sols marneux : Les marnes sont un mélange en proportions à peu près équivalentes de calcaire et d’argile qui, combinés, donnent des sols légers. L’argile donne du corps au vin, et le calcaire de la finesse en ne gardant que le meilleur. C’est le sol qu’on retrouve en Bourgogne ou pinot noir et chardonnay s’y épanouissent pour donner des vins alliant puissance et finesse.

Pour en savoir plus, n’hésitez pas à suivre le cours d’oenologie sur les cépages et terroirs ou bien à souscrire un abonnement vin My VitiBox afin d’en apprendre chaque mois un peu plus sur le vin et la viticulture.

Comprendre l’impact du sol en viticulture (1/2) - Le Figaro Vin

US probes pesticide poisoning that sickened family in USVI

U.S. authorities have determined that the highly toxic pesticide methyl bromide caused a Delaware family to become seriously ill at a U.S. Virgin Islands resort, and that the chemical was used at the resort several times in the past year, officials said Tuesday.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said it is contacting people including employees at Sirenusa resort in St. John to determine how many others might have been exposed to the pesticide. It was banned for indoor residential use in 1984.

"Methyl bromide is a potent neurotoxin, so it really affects your central nervous system," EPA Regional Administrator Judith Enck said in a telephone interview.

The Esmond family had rented a second-floor condominium at Sirenusa, a resort of 22 villas, late last month. The family began having seizures and was airlifted to hospitals in the U.S., ABC news reported Monday, quoting a written statement by family attorney James Maron that said the two parents are recovering but their two sons are in critical condition. Maron did not return calls seeking independent confirmation.

The U.S. Justice Department has opened a criminal investigation.

Enck said the pesticide was used March 28 on the condominium's first floor, and agents are trying to determine how much was employed. She said the EPA found that methyl bromide was used at other Sirenusa units in the past year, but declined to say how many, citing the investigation.

Sea Glass Vacations LLC, which rents units at Sirenusa, said in a statement it has terminated its contract with Terminix and the townhome under investigation is unoccupied.

"We are sending our thoughts and prayers to the family impacted by this tragic incident," the company said. "We remain committed to full cooperation with all local and federal authorities."

Terminix spokesman Pete Tosches said in a statement that the company is conducting its own investigation and is cooperating with authorities.

"We're committed to performing all work we undertake in a way that is safe for our employees, customers and the public," he said.

Enck said the EPA is awaiting results of air and wipe samples taken from the condominium.







Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2015/04/07/4228381_us-probes-pesticide-poisoning.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy
By DANICA COTO

US probes pesticide poisoning that sickened family in USVI

Tuesday, April 07, 2015

Why Are So Many Young Puerto Ricans Leaving Home?

Everywhere you go in Puerto Rico, people want to leave. "Why would I stay?" Jannette Sanchez, a 30-year-old law student at San Juan's Interamerican University, asked VICE News during a recent trip to take stock of the increasingly dismal life in the United States' most populous overseas territory. Sanchez, whose father once had a high-paying job at the now nearly insolvent government electrical company, ticked off the times she had been a victim of violence. With friends in Dallas — along with half a dozen other American cities — Sanchez plans to move to Texas immediately after graduating. "There are people here with master's degrees and PhDs who work at Walmart part-time," she said. "It's a joke."

Emigration has long been a pressure-release valve in Puerto Rico, ushering the discontented and unwanted off the island and avoiding a reckoning that might otherwise result if there weren't an open border to the mainland US. Today it's hard to see when it might stop. Pushed out by a stagnant economy and lack of opportunity — along with the drugs, crime, and endemic corruption that surround them — people are now leaving at a rate that rivals even the well-known migrations in the 1950s. Between 2000 and 2013, Puerto Rico's population fell by some 144,000 — nearly 4 percent. For the first time in history, stateside Puerto Ricans — 4.9 million — outnumber the 3.5 million who remain on the island. 

The decision to leave is painful, but given the US passports carried by locals, it is often a natural one—especially for young people. "I can make three times as much and have basically the same obligations," said Sanchez. San Juan is awash in students, and, like Sanchez, many are leaving. Sitting in a bar, she scrolled through Facebook on her phone, stopping every few seconds to show a news story. One told of witnesses in a multiple homicide who refused to testify out of fear. Elsewhere, in a small town, cops had pulled people over to pray with them. She threw her hands up, laughing at the juxtaposition — amid a total breakdown in the territory's finances, citizens have stopped taking authority figures seriously. "People don't really care anymore," she said. "They know they have no power."

For many years, Puerto Rico was a bright spot in the Caribbean, enjoying preferential access to US markets — trade was and still is largely no different from commerce between the states — and transcending its pre-World War II label as the "poorhouse" among the islands.



A mural in San Juan's Santurce neighborhood. All photos by the author. 


American garment companies and small-scale manufacturers moved to Puerto Rico after the war, even as hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans left, at the urging of local politicians who saw it as overpopulated.

But as Washington began to sign free-trade agreements with countries in Latin America, Puerto Rico lost its special status bit by bit, and growth slowed. Textile and factory work moved to Asia, and jobs in service and professional industries failed to fill the void. Still, by the turn of the century, Puerto Rico's public debt load was a manageable $25 billion. In the past decade and a half, however, that total has exploded to $73 billion — almost 100 percent of Puerto Rico's gross national income. For many years, bond-rating agencies, assured by its status inside the US, were hesitant to sound alarm bells. Investors poured in money, chasing returns that are exempted from federal taxes. Loans went to infrastructure projects and services like Mi Salud, Puerto Rico's free health-care initiative. But an untold amount was also pilfered away, through shady dealings, privatization schemes, and cozy consultancies for members of the elite.

Cynical and corrupt governors — from both the Popular Democratic Party, now in power, and the pro-statehood New Progressive Party — were eager to score political points with Puerto Ricans accustomed to a welfare state and continued spending lavishly. Emigration of ambitious Puerto Ricans like Sanchez softened the tax base, and soon the entire fiscal structure began to unravel.

Now, Puerto Rico's official unemployment rate hovers around 15 percent — more than double the rate on the mainland. Because many have given up looking for employment, only 40 percent of working-age adults have jobs. Nearly half of all Puerto Ricans live below US poverty lines, and two in five receive food stamps — twice the US average.

"What is happening is not the effect of a single event. This is a problem of a political class that basically lives off taxes and bribes," Emilio Pantojas, a professor at the University of Puerto Rico's Center for Social Research, told VICE News. "Most local businesses depend on the government for their well-being, so it creates a codependency between corrupt officials and corrupt businessman. First it's the cronies of one party; then the cronies of the next."

The Popular Democratic Party's solution to an impossible fiscal situation is to introduce a 16 percent value-added tax, modeled on those in European countries like Spain. The governor, Alejandro García Padilla, plans to couple the proposal with tax cuts for low-and middle-income earners, but a VAT is a tax on consumption, and regressive. Though the tax is partly an effort to capture transactions between companies who otherwise would cook their books, it comes at the expense of people buying food and school supplies, and the government's own consultants say it will cause economic growth to shrink. Because of its unique status as a commonwealth, Puerto Rico can't actually file for bankruptcy as cities like Detroit have, so it has few options. But when I visited Puerto Rico, shortly after Padilla floated the idea, many said they saw it as a death knell for the island, a sort of fuck-you to those who have made the foolish choice to stay.

Gil Lopez, who waits tables in the touristy Condado neighborhood of San Juan, said word of the VAT cemented his decision to leave Puerto Rico for Seattle, where he wants to start a tire-recycling business.

"It's like the string on the guillotine," said Lopez, who at 28 is at the mean age of emigrants. "There will be no more middle class."

Much of the coverage of Puerto Rico's crisis focuses on the so-called brain drain of its educated class, but statistics show that a broad section of the population is leaving, not just PhDs. On my trip it was clear that cascading fiscal ruin hits Puerto Rico's most vulnerable the hardest. In response to the fiscal crisis, the government has raised taxes and tried to cut the pensions of teachers and police. Because international shipments of goods, food, and fuel must first dock in stateside ports before being brought to Puerto Rico, almost everything imported costs more than it would via more direct routes. That disparity will only worsen with yet another last-ditch tax hike, raising the excise tax on crude oil by 68 percent to finance more bonds.

These measures already disproportionally impact low-wage earners and the unemployed. But to compound their misery, groups that provide services to neglected communities have seen their share of government aid slashed. Even when it's paid, it often arrives late. José Vargas-Vidot, a doctor who in 1990 started a community health-care nonprofit, Iniciativa Comunitaria, in response to the HIV/AIDS crisis, says the current fiscal impasse cuts deep and wounds an already reeling society. "All this leads to health problems, but also people living in the streets," he said. "There are more people using drugs, and there's a rise in suicides. These are all symptoms of a society that didn't take account of the psyche and heart of the people."



Jairo Castro, 32, is a recovering drug user who receives Suboxone therapy at a rehab center in Bayamón.
Iniciativa's drug-treatment program, known as Pitirre, had its government funding, already a fifth of what it initially requested, diminished by a further 20 percent last year. The program had to fire one of its two outreach staff members and jettison workers who escorted recovering addicts—some of whom travel five hours round-trip to the offices in Bayamón, a municipality adjacent to San Juan.




Since founding Iniciativa Comunitaria in 1990, José Vargas-Vidot says he's seen Puerto Rico fall apart before his eyes.
Still, in the past fiscal year, Pitirre was able to treat more than 700 patients, according to Miguel Vázquez, the psychologist who runs the pro- gram. He introduced VICE News to Jairo Castro, whose drug of choice, like that of many patients, vacillated between heroin and cocaine. A scar from a bullet hole near his collarbone testified to the 32-year-old's past on the street. He was receiving the opioid-replacement therapy buprenorphine—known by its trade name Suboxone—at the center in Bayomón. "I'm enjoying things again," he told me, though added he still couldn't find any work on the island.

Vázquez explained that it's a common problem among recovering and former drug abusers. "Since there are not that many jobs to choose from, most of the employers don't want them," he said. Their patients include other medics and even doctors and lawyers, some of whom have lost work due to addiction.

On a rainy Monday night in February, I accompanied a group of students, part of a volunteer organization called Recinto Pa' La Calle, as they made rounds near University of Puerto Rico's medical campus in Rio Piedras, handing out hot coffee and food and administering medical care to the homeless and addicts who live on the street. In many neighborhoods, San Juan looks no different from Miami. But the gleaming bank buildings and debt-financed highways can be misleading. At a bus stop close to the university we encountered a group of homeless drug users. Each night they camp there, waiting for their daily dose of methadone at a nearby clinic. At another stop, outside one of San Juan's few train stations, three volunteers approached Sabrina, a diabetic heroin user confined to a wheelchair after her heavily infected left leg had to be amputated.

The medical students crouched around her, and one peeled off a dressing they had applied to her remaining leg the week before. Below it were two large ulcers, the bigger one the size of a paperback and rotting shades of green and yellow. "Instead of injecting into their vein, they'll inject into the soft tissue, and some of the chemicals in the heroin mixture can end up damaging the soft tissue," explained Alan Rodriguez, a fourth-year medical student who acted as the de facto volunteer leader that night. "The lesion starts spreading more, and because of the climate, these ulcers can just keep on growing": an inadvertent metaphor for the island's unique blend of political problems associated with both the US and Latin America. Receiving that treatment is by no means easy, despite Puerto Rico's free health-care programs for the poor. Rodriguez, who also plans to work in the States after graduating, predicted that without proper care Sabrina could soon have no legs at all.

Crime in Puerto Rico is often tied to the drug trade, which — as the territory has evolved into a waystation for Andean cocaine bound for the eastern US — has become a large contributor to the island's already endemic corruption. The murder rate is officially at its lowest rate in 15 years, down last year to 680 from 1,164 in 2011. But as with many government figures, Puerto Ricans often don't trust these are accurate and accuse officials of manipulation. In December, 12 former police officers were convicted of, among other things, running a drug ring out of the island-wide Puerto Rico Police Department. Between 2005 and 2010, about 10 percent of Puerto Rico's police officers were arrested for various crimes, according to the Justice Department, which found incidents of "rape, drug trafficking, and murder" as well as domestic violence, suggesting that "PRPD is an agency in profound disrepair." Whatever the true murder rate, the perception of the government as fundamentally unreliable can be just as insidious, driving emigration and fueling a distrust of authority. The problem is becoming a generational one—dividing families between those too rooted to leave and their children, who see no other option.

Willin Rodriguez, whom I met through his son, Antonio, is a well-known sports photojournalist who got his start at a pro-independence daily. He worked for three decades for various papers, during which time he met his wife, Francesca Von Rabenau, also a photojournalist. She worked for more than a decade and a half at the San Juan Star, Puerto Rico's Pulitzer Prize-winning English-language paper, made famous in Hunter S. Thompson's The Rum Diary. In 2008, Von Rabenau lost her job. Five years later, Rodriguez lost his, and for several months they "were left with practically nothing," he said. For the couple, so deeply tied to the island, there was no question of leaving. But in 2012, six years after being nearly beaten to death in a group assault that was never prosecuted, Antonio moved to New York to find work with his camera.

"I went through a shock and stopped studying. I said this system failed me," Antonio said, describing the aftermath of his attack. "That's when I started understanding there was something fucked up."

His father has since found work at a photojournalism center, but chances for people like him are fleeting. He said he understands why Antonio left. They both showed VICE News photographs they'd taken over the years, of the island's boxers, children outdoors, bodies lying in the street, and the island of Vieques, which the US military used for target practice for decades.

"When he left, it obviously hurt me," Rodriguez said. "But I think there are more opportunities there."

This article originally appeared in VICE Magazine.

By  Samuel Oakford

Why Are So Many Young Puerto Ricans Leaving Home?

Wednesday, April 01, 2015

Recession, tight credit choke Puerto Rico's housing market

Puerto Rico's housing market is not gaining traction and is not expected to improve this year as it continues to deal with the headwinds from a prolonged recession and tight credit.

Forecasting the housing market is difficult and sales are unlikely to exceed the 2014 level of roughly 2,000 units by much, Puerto Rico Home Builders Association, or ACH, president Roberto Trapaga told Efe.

Before the housing bubble burst, according to ACH figures, annual home sales on the island ranged between 8,000 units and 10,000 units.

"Developers face a difficult situation. Construction costs have soared and people do not have money," Trapaga said, referring to the complex housing outlook in Puerto Rico, where lack of housing is a severe problem.

Trapaga, a partner in Starlight Development Group, said the island's market was far from returning to the 13,419 units sold in 2006, the last year of robust growth in the market prior to the collapse.

Current estimates call for sales this year to be barely 15 percent of the level a decade ago.

"When the time comes to buy a house, people don't have the money," Trapaga said, adding that banks were not helping ease the situation since they have tightened the requirements to obtain a mortgage loan.

"Banks have also been hit hard by the crisis" and that has created a market slump affecting thousands of Puerto Ricans who cannot get a house, the ACH president said.

The Puerto Rico Planning Board estimates there are 1.4 million housing units on the island, of which 861,000 have occupants, with the average price of a unit nearly $121,000.

This means that thousands of new housing units are ready for sale and many people need one, but most potential buyers cannot meet the requirements to qualify for a loan.

A solution might be the construction of housing units priced at around $75,000, the best price point to match Puerto Ricans' economic means, Trapaga said.

Prices, however, are not coming down because construction companies face challenges in trying to cut costs, with 20 percent of a housing unit's final price going for taxes, the ACH president said.

As a result of the obstacles to acquiring housing through traditional means, many people are resorting to building informal dwellings, skipping municipal permits and certifications from architects and engineers.

"Almost 50 percent of the houses in Puerto Rico do not meet code," Trapaga said, adding that about 40 percent of dwellings lacked sewer hook-ups, leading to sanitation problems.

Another worrisome fact is that some 100,000 housing units in Puerto Rico are occupied by multiple families. EFE

Recession, tight credit choke Puerto Rico's housing market