Puerto Ricans grab machetes, shovels to help restore power

In this Jan. 31, 2018 photo, Public Works Sub-Director Ramon Mendez, wearing hard hat, directs locals who are municipal workers, Eliezer Nazario, holding rope, Tomas Martinez, right, and Angel Diaz, left, as they install a power pole in an effort to return electricity to Felipe Rodriguez’s home, four months after Hurricane Maria in Coamo, Puerto Rico. As the number of mayors complaining about the slow power restoration has grown, the territory’s administration allowed municipalities to sign an agreement with the island’s power company to take over power restoration efforts if interested and relieve the agency of any responsibility. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti)

In this Jan. 31, 2018 photo, retired carpenter Felipe Rodriguez, far right, uses his pickup truck to help municipal workers, who are also locals, Eliezer Nazario, left, and Tomas Martinez move an electric post so they can install it near his home, four months after Hurricane Maria hit the El Ortiz sector of Coamo, Puerto Rico. Rodriguez also has no water and yet receives bills for services he’s not getting. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti)

COAMO, Puerto Rico — It took only minutes for Hurricane Maria to kill power to the Puerto Rican town of Coamo, cracking wooden poles, snapping power lines and hurling transformers to the ground.