Monica Villamizar:

Well, Jeff, mobility has certainly improved in San Juan, the capital.

But there are still many things that need to be fixed. So, there are snapped power lines. Eight out of 10 traffic lights are not working, so you can imagine what that does to traffic. It is pretty chaotic at times. And as soon as you leave the capital, then things are much worse and there is a lot of devastation still.

There is debris near the roads. There's collapsed trees, collapsed buildings that have not been repaired and a lot of crops that will simply not grow back. So, for instance, in supermarkets and restaurants, there's no fruit. There is no plantains. There is a scarcity of goods still here in the island.

And, you know, Puerto Ricans are trying to rebuild. They have been very resilient and dignified, but, frankly, they are a traumatized population at this point. Many times, we are interviewing people and they teared up, because it is kind of a secondary phase that they are living now, which is when things are starting to sink in.

Many of them lost everything they had, everything they had worked for. And there is no clear, you know, horizon or future ahead of them.