Puerto Ricoโs public schools clamor for air conditioning to get relief from record-breaking heat
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) โ Public school teacher รngel Muรฑiz grabbed a thermometer and thrust it into the camera as someone recorded him inside his classroom this week.
โIt is about 99 degrees (37 C),โ he said in a video posted on social media as seven fans whirred noisily around him.
It wasnโt even noon yet, and an advisory that day warned of a heat index of up to 111 F (43.8 C).
Students and teachers are sweltering in public schools across Puerto Rico that lack air conditioning and are demanding government action as the U.S. Caribbean territory struggles to respond to climate change effects while it bakes under record heat this year.
Last month was the hottest August on the island since record-keeping began. Puerto Rico broke the record of the daily maximum temperature six times and the highest minimum eight times, according to the National Weather Service in San Juan.
It also was the hottest August worldwide, with 2023 the second hottest year on record so far.
Heat advisories for Puerto Rico became the norm this summer, with the island reporting a record 47 nights with temperatures above 80 F (26 C).
โRecords are being broken almost every day,โ said Odalys Martรญnez, National Weather Service forecaster.
Public schools with no air conditioning or whose cooling systems are inoperable due to power outages blamed on a hurricane-battered electric grid are seeking relief, but itโs unlikely theyโll find it soon.
Last month, Gov. Pedro Pierluisi quietly vetoed a bill that called for air conditioning systems for public schools. The move outraged many, with some calling the situation inhumane as students organized protests.
โItโs irresponsible, because this is an emergency. Itโs a matter of public health,โ said Yasim Sarkis, a social worker at an elementary school that often lacks electricity and whose son attends a public high school with no air conditioning.
Her school installed air conditioners in April for its 165 students and some 40 employees, but they have yet to be turned on.
โThereโs not enough current,โ Sarkis said.
In addition, a power outage last week that has yet to be fixed forced her school to start releasing students at 11:30 a.m. since it has no generator. The electrical problems began after Hurricane Maria pummeled the island in 2017 and razed the power grid that crews only recently started to rebuild.
Pierluisi didnโt provide a written explanation of why he vetoed the bill. His spokeswoman, Sheila Anglerรณ, told The Associated Press that any project with a โsignificant fiscal impactโ requires an analysis from the legislatureโs budget office, a requirement for an island emerging from the biggest U.S. municipal bankruptcy in history.
โThe projects can make all the sense, but without this, they cannot be signed,โ she said.
Air conditioning is considered a necessity by many on this tropical island of 3.2 million people, with government offices, businesses and homes running cooling systems round-the-clock, especially in the summer.
But air conditioning remains rare at public schools, which depend on fans and trade winds that blow through windows with metal shutters.
โOur classrooms have turned into saunas, and the Department of Education has dragged its feet in responding to the situation,โ said Edwin Morales, vice president of the islandโs Federation of Teachers.
Itโs unknown how many public schools lack air conditioning or have air conditioners that donโt work because of electrical problems. The islandโs education department, an oft-criticized bureaucratic behemoth that oversees one of the largest school districts in a U.S. jurisdiction with more than 259,000 students and more than 850 schools, said itโs trying to gather that data.
Meanwhile, Puerto Ricoโs Association of Teachers said that of 2,500 teachers surveyed so far, more than 83% said they donโt have air conditioning in their classroom. More than 50% of public schools also have reported a heat-related emergency.
โThis is alarming,โ said Raรบl Gonzรกlez, the associationโs vice president, adding that theyโve received reports of teachers and students fainting from the heat.
On Friday, the education department canceled classes island-wide in a rush to find solutions to the relentless heat after distributing 21,000 fans the day before. It also has proposed allowing students to wear Bermuda shorts, adding more fruits and liquids to the school menu and modifying schedules, among other things.
The proposals have angered many, including รngel Matos Garcรญa, majority spokesman for Puerto Ricoโs House of Representatives.
โIt is a shame that with a purchase order of $33 million for the replacement and installation of air conditioners, the department only thinks of installing water fountains, giving Friday off and buying fans,โ he said.
A spokesman for the department didnโt return a message seeking comment.
In the meantime, students are fanning themselves with notebooks, teachers are fundraising money for more classroom fans and courses such as cooking and cosmetology have been affected, because the intense heat prevents the use of certain equipment.
Sarkisโ son, 17, has taken to hiking up his school uniform pants and skipping swim training because the heat is intense and he feels too weak.
โHe comes home with big headaches,โ she said.
His school is closing two hours earlier than usual to avoid exposing students to excess heat, but Sarkis said she doesnโt mind the abbreviated courses as long as her sonโs health is protected.
She urged the governor to approve the bill that legislators first filed in October 2021 and vowed to amend and submit again.
โApprove it and then figure out where youโll get the money from. Because there is money,โ Sarkis said. โThis is not going to stop. Global warming is real.โ
Follow APโs coverage of the climate at https://apnews.com/climate-and-environment