Two-Day Puerto Rican Summit Aims for Change

While a two-day summit addressing issues of importance to Puerto Ricans might sound like a niche event, UConn’s Charles “Rob” Venator-Santiago stressed during opening remarks Friday the ideas generated from the 300 attendees are things that can benefit everyone in Connecticut, not just its Puerto Rican community.

Take, for instance, a proposal he has that would shift the way electricity is purchased in the state, potentially reducing the cost by 45% – for everybody. It would require radical change, Venator-Santiago admitted, and might not go anywhere right now, but it’s something that has the backing of the legislature’s Puerto Rican caucus and gets the conversation started.

After all, that’s among his explicit goals of the second annual summit, Puerto Rico: Puerto Ricans in Connecticut, sponsored by UConn’s Puerto Rican Studies Initiative for Community Engagement and Public Policy (UConnPRSI) and held at the state Capitol and Legislative Office Building complex.

First, he said he wanted to bring together key state leaders to get them thinking creatively about ways they could help bolster the Puerto Rican economy.

“We want to figure out how the small business owner can participate in this conversation and engage in trade and use this as a way to launch other similar meetings,” he said, adding, “We think that we can create a strong economy that integrates people.”

Second, he said he wanted to shine a light on the actual debates happening in Puerto Rican communities around the state, even before policies are conceived so those debates can influence at the outset.

“The idea is to give exposure to some folks and say, ‘Hey, there are all these things happening, and you should pay attention to them,” he said.

To that end, Venator-Santiago — director of UConnPRSI, director of El Instituto, and associate professor in the Department of Political Science, all in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences— structured the two-day event with distinct flavors.

Friday’s session was dedicated to discussions about trade between Connecticut and Puerto Rico, with panelists from the U.S. Census Bureau and Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis, along with Connecticut state legislators and the Puerto Rico Study Trade Commission.

Saturday’s session looked inward at key issues for Connecticut Puerto Ricans and included six roundtable discussions on subjects ranging from school closures to rent control. Numerous state legislators served as panelists, along with local nonprofit leaders, media members, and municipal elected officials.

“There are a lot of Puerto Ricans who have a lot of influence in the state,” Venator-Santiago said. “I think that after Hurricane Maria and with Bad Bunny, there’s something going on that’s energized people about Puerto Rico.”

Read the full article from the UConn Today