The Prague Post - 'Class war': outsiders moving to Puerto Rico trigger displacement

EUR -
AED 4.233602
AFN 76.073668
ALL 96.532846
AMD 439.694121
ANG 2.063273
AOA 1056.963315
ARS 1621.703322
AUD 1.78248
AWG 2.076178
AZN 1.92594
BAM 1.945809
BBD 2.321679
BDT 140.974905
BGN 1.955445
BHD 0.434589
BIF 3418.705068
BMD 1.152632
BND 1.50313
BOB 7.964826
BRL 6.145486
BSD 1.152681
BTN 102.013204
BWP 16.376343
BYN 3.935953
BYR 22591.577656
BZD 2.318306
CAD 1.620554
CDF 2564.605082
CHF 0.929269
CLF 0.027401
CLP 1074.920804
CNY 8.192891
CNH 8.204881
COP 4277.991861
CRC 576.517214
CUC 1.152632
CUP 30.544735
CVE 110.709994
CZK 24.175871
DJF 204.845736
DKK 7.468516
DOP 73.048038
DZD 150.59252
EGP 54.620207
ERN 17.289473
ETB 177.734584
FJD 2.640661
FKP 0.876584
GBP 0.883388
GEL 3.114505
GGP 0.876584
GHS 12.707753
GIP 0.876584
GMD 84.713497
GNF 10016.368175
GTQ 8.829662
GYD 241.063829
HKD 8.979132
HNL 30.256516
HRK 7.534697
HTG 150.895189
HUF 381.596527
IDR 19270.846267
ILS 3.777081
IMP 0.876584
INR 101.993309
IQD 1509.947282
IRR 48554.602082
ISK 146.799291
JEP 0.876584
JMD 185.191854
JOD 0.817236
JPY 180.980407
KES 149.841819
KGS 100.797808
KHR 4626.662613
KMF 492.173364
KPW 1037.388322
KRW 1691.95901
KWD 0.354376
KYD 0.960535
KZT 597.826962
LAK 24989.050757
LBP 103218.152321
LKR 355.325489
LRD 207.185718
LSL 19.836746
LTL 3.403422
LVL 0.697216
LYD 6.281278
MAD 10.699296
MDL 19.606644
MGA 5175.315485
MKD 61.205723
MMK 2419.715499
MNT 4115.650007
MOP 9.244909
MRU 45.897643
MUR 52.986523
MVR 17.761695
MWK 2001.543999
MXN 21.164847
MYR 4.783311
MZN 73.650554
NAD 19.836725
NGN 1672.629804
NIO 42.359192
NOK 11.75494
NPR 163.221524
NZD 2.059499
OMR 0.443188
PAB 1.152636
PEN 3.896467
PGK 4.873614
PHP 67.970104
PKR 323.497757
PLN 4.229316
PYG 8117.319507
QAR 4.196558
RON 5.087604
RSD 117.272215
RUB 92.842447
RWF 1671.315694
SAR 4.322547
SBD 9.48684
SCR 15.344621
SDG 693.305516
SEK 11.018927
SGD 1.506691
SHP 0.864772
SLE 26.942748
SLL 24170.104368
SOS 658.728442
SRD 44.464485
STD 23857.145166
STN 24.781578
SVC 10.085818
SYP 12744.673373
SZL 19.871447
THB 37.41457
TJS 10.644971
TMT 4.03421
TND 3.395077
TOP 2.77526
TRY 48.816365
TTD 7.817554
TWD 35.996523
TZS 2789.368458
UAH 48.523549
UGX 4213.365377
USD 1.152632
UYU 45.90251
UZS 13773.946654
VES 273.696168
VND 30402.961419
VUV 140.806969
WST 3.246911
XAF 652.583493
XAG 0.022532
XAU 0.000283
XCD 3.115044
XCG 2.077452
XDR 0.812249
XOF 651.81559
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.899399
ZAR 19.854014
ZMK 10375.068992
ZMW 26.194475
ZWL 371.146877
  • CMSD

    -0.1170

    23.753

    -0.49%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    13.96

    -1%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.25

    -0.15%

  • RBGPF

    -0.1300

    77.09

    -0.17%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    23.67

    +0.34%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    22.79

    -1.01%

  • BCC

    1.1500

    67.22

    +1.71%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    15.73

    +0.45%

  • NGG

    -1.4400

    76.09

    -1.89%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    69.43

    -0.45%

  • VOD

    -0.2400

    12.01

    -2%

  • RELX

    -0.4700

    39.8

    -1.18%

  • GSK

    -1.0300

    46.34

    -2.22%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    54.74

    -0.22%

  • AZN

    -0.5600

    88.99

    -0.63%

  • BP

    -0.7400

    35.95

    -2.06%

'Class war': outsiders moving to Puerto Rico trigger displacement
'Class war': outsiders moving to Puerto Rico trigger displacement / Photo: Ricardo ARDUENGO - AFP

'Class war': outsiders moving to Puerto Rico trigger displacement

Gloria Cuevas thought she would live forever in her pink, century-old house on Puerto Rico's west coast -- but then her landlord decided to transform the home into an Airbnb.

Text size:

Cuevas left her home -- now purple and split in two -- and her beloved city for another further south, forced out by the rising cost of living and an explosion of short-term rentals on the US Caribbean island territory.

Puerto Rico -- long a draw for sun-worshipping tourists -- is also a hotspot for foreign investment and offers tax incentives to attract outsiders.

"At first, I couldn't come back here," Cuevas, 68, told AFP, gazing at the home she once made her own. "It made me feel sad and angry at the same time."

Cuevas's experience is becoming an all too familiar tale across the island, where signs promote mansions for sale, and the Airbnb logo is plastered on homes where locals once lived.

Intensifying Puerto Rico's gentrification are laws that encourage primarily wealthy mainland Americans to move there in exchange for preferential tax treatment.

The program originally enacted in 2012 was meant to spur economic growth and attract investment on the island, an unincorporated territory under US control since 1898.

Those relocating must acquire residency and buy property to keep the significant incentives -- but many Puerto Ricans as well as some US lawmakers say this is driving up housing prices and encouraging tax evasion.

"Colonialism kills us, it suffocates us," Cuevas said. "It's a global theme. It's a class war."

- 'Unfair' -

Ricki Rebeiro, 30, moved to San Juan more than a year ago, bringing his packaging and marketing business that services cannabis companies with him.

He told AFP that basing his work in Puerto Rico saves his company millions of dollars annually, and that he pays zero personal income tax -- what amounts to the equivalent of "a whole second income" that he says he tries to reinvest locally.

"I believe that the locals are probably upset that they're not reaping the same benefits of somebody like me," said the entrepreneur, whose family is based in Pennsylvania and Oklahoma.

The system is "unfair," Rebeiro said, "but I also don't believe that I should be the one to blame for that. I didn't structure the program."

Puerto Ricans in recent years have slammed their government for what they say is a hyperfocus on outsiders at the expense of locals, as the rich -- including people like the famous content creator-turned-boxer Jake Paul -- move in.

- 'This is ours' -

In Cabo Rojo, a seaside city about an hour's drive south of Rincon on the island's western coast, some residents are taking the matter into their own hands.

During a recent canvassing effort, a group of activists urged their neighbors to protest a massive development project called Esencia, which would transform more than 2,000 acres (810 hectares) of recreational land and more than three miles of beaches into a $2 billion luxury resort and residential development.

Dafne Javier's family goes back generations in this area -- her great-grandfather was the last mayor in the municipality under Spanish occupation, and the first under US rule.

The 77-year-old said the Esencia project would "totally change the landscape," creating a gated town within a town.

Protesters say it would destroy the natural habitat of some endangered species, while exacerbating problems with potable water, electricity supply and trash pick-up.

Project investors have called Puerto Rico "one of the most promising growth markets in the world" and vowed Esencia would create "thousands of jobs."

But those jobs will be minimum wage, Javier predicted, and the wealthy newcomers "won't mix with us."

Christopher Powers is married to a Puerto Rican with whom he has children, and has lived in Cabo Rojo for 20 years.

"They have no idea what they're destroying, and if they do have an idea what they're destroying, then they should be ashamed," he told AFP of the developers.

"Not only is it ecologically destructive, not only will it be an economic disaster for those of us who live here, but it's also against the sort of spirit or values of the Caborojinos."

Cuevas is hopeful her story and others like it will crystallize for her fellow Puerto Ricans what they stand to lose.

"We have to keep fighting. We have to educate our youth. Have you heard of Bad Bunny?" she said, referring to the Puerto Rican global superstar whose music and current residency in San Juan has amplified discussion of gentrification and cultural dilution, on the island and beyond.

"This is ours," Cuevas said. "We're not going to leave."

V.Nemec--TPP