Current:Home > reviewsMexico’s hurricane reconstruction plans prioritize military barracks, owners left to rebuild hotels -Core Financial Strategies
Mexico’s hurricane reconstruction plans prioritize military barracks, owners left to rebuild hotels
View
Date:2025-04-19 13:01:36
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s government laid out hurricane reconstruction plans Tuesday for the resort of Acapulco that seem to give as much priority to building military barracks as re-opening hotels.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said he hoped owners would be able to reopen as many as 35 of the resort’s 377 hotels by March or April, following the destruction of Hurricane Otis, the Category 5 storm that smashed into the city Oct. 25.
But his administration plans to build 38 new barracks in the resort for the quasi-military National Guard, in addition to five that already exist there. Each barracks will house 250 Guard troopers, who are recruited from or trained by the army.
That would mean between 9,500 and 10,000 Guard troops would be stationed permanently in the resort, about the same number sent there following the hurricane, which caused at least 48 deaths.
In the days following the storm’s Oct. 25 landfall, Guard troops proved incapable of stopping days of ransacking that stripped every large- and medium-sized store in Acapulco to the walls.
López Obrador has promised a barracks in every neighborhood of the resort, which has also been hit by nearly 20 years of drug cartel violence. The president has given the armed forces almost exclusive control of the fight against the cartels and has proposed placing the National Guard under army command.
López Obrador has refused to consider government loans or grants to the hotels, most of which had windows or walls blown out. Many were reduced to their skeletal concrete or steel frames.
Instead, he said the government would pay half the interest on reconstruction loans from private banks. But with no cash flow, many hotel owners doubt they can qualify for big private bank loans.
López Obrador has also refused to earmark specific funds in the 2024 budget for reconstruction efforts, a move that has led to demonstrations by a protest caravan of Acapulco residents who drove to Mexico City this week.
Evodio Velázquez, an opposition party member and former mayor of Acapulco, said the demonstrators were demanding a rebuilding program roughly four times the size of the $3.4 billion plan the president announced last week.
“We want dignified treatment for Acapulco in the federal budget,” Velázquez said Monday.
The protesters camped out Tuesday in tents outside Mexico City’s National Palace, where López Obrador lives and works.
Much of the $3.4 billion aid program will go to making payments of $2,000-$3,000 per damaged home, setting up temporary job programs and providing free electricity for residents for several months. The government is also handing out 250,000 appliances like refrigerators and fans and providing weekly food packages for each family.
Some stores in Acapulco began tentatively re-opening this week, but they reportedly stocked only basic goods and let in only 20 customers at a time.
The federal civil defense agency tallied 220,000 homes that were damaged by the hurricane, which ripped the tin roofs off thousands of homes.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- 20 years ago, the iPod was born
- Emily in Paris' Lucien Laviscount Teases Alfie's Season 4 Fate
- The hidden costs of holiday consumerism
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Heidi Klum Wows in Yellow Dress at Elton John AIDS Foundation Oscars 2023 Party
- Building the Jaw-Dropping World of The Last of Us: How the Video Game Came to Life on HBO
- Dozens dead as heavy fighting continues for second day in Sudan
- Average rate on 30
- Amazon warehouse workers on Staten Island push for union vote
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Mindy Kaling Turns Heads With White-Hot Dress on Oscars 2023 Red Carpet
- Apple will soon sell you parts and tools to fix your own iPhone or Mac at home
- Facebook will examine whether it treats Black users differently
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Russia says Putin visited occupied Ukraine region as G7 condemns irresponsible nuclear rhetoric
- Hugh Grant Compares Himself to a Scrotum During Wild 2023 Oscars Reunion With Andie MacDowell
- Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick Do Date Night in Matching Suits at 2023 Vanity Fair Oscars Party
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
The U.N. Warns That AI Can Pose A Threat To Human Rights
All the Ways Everything Everywhere All at Once Made Oscars History
Oscars 2023: Anne Heche, Charlbi Dean and More Left Out of In Memoriam Segment
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Oscars 2023: Everything You Didn't See on TV
Facebook will examine whether it treats Black users differently
Patients say telehealth is OK, but most prefer to see their doctor in person