In a region that waged a decades-long struggle for the kind of independence that citizens in another Spanish region hope to vote on this Sunday, autonomy has proved to be a workable compromise.
On Thursday, my colleague Yvonne Zipp laid out some ways to help the residents of Puerto Rico.
Besides facing food and water shortages 鈥 which could be alleviated by the White House鈥檚 move to waive a law limiting shipping to US ports by foreign vessels 鈥 some 3.4 million Puerto Ricans remain without electricity.
The island鈥檚 power grid was notoriously fragile even before Maria took it out. Some experts are already calling for the burying of power lines in advance of next season鈥檚 storms. Some recommend heavy investment in聽.
How hard is it to 鈥渂uild back better鈥?
In 2014, after a typhoon raked the Philippines, the Monitor鈥檚 Peter Ford went to Tacloban to size up the prospects of doing that there. I asked him last night for a quick follow-up.
鈥淚 talked to Prof. Pauline Eadie of Nottingham University, who has studied Tacloban since the Haiyan typhoon,鈥 Peter said. 鈥淪he says they have 鈥榥ot built back better, they have built back the same鈥 and, in some cases, worse.鈥
Utility hookups have been slow because of political squabbling. Water, for example, is controlled by a neighboring municipality under the control of a rival political party. There have been gross inefficiencies. 鈥淣GOs did not coordinate,鈥 Peter鈥檚 source told him, 鈥渟o there is a surplus of fishing boats now. They all handed them out whether needed or not.鈥
In Puerto Rico, success might be less about grand infrastructure projects 鈥 Google 鈥溾 for one that some suggest helped the island go bankrupt 鈥 than about an approach that is equitable, one that includes local input and vision.
Now to our five stories for your Friday, ones that show compromise, understanding, and respect in action.