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In a Oct. 17, 2017 photo, Norma Navarro Ortiz, center rear, of Salinas, Puerto Rico, stands at a kitchen table across from her sister Arianette Fuentes, right, as Ortiz's two grandchildren play with her sister's young children, in Hackensack, N.J. Residents of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands have wound up in New Jersey, the state with the third largest Puerto Rican population in the country after Florida and New York, as part of a continuing exodus from territories devastated by consecutive hurricanes. Ortiz has been gathering and sending supplies that were unavailable in Puerto Rico, including batteries, generators, insect repellent, nutrition drinks, solar-powered lamps and other necessities. (Amy Newman/The Record via AP)

In a Oct. 17, 2017 photo, Norma Navarro Ortiz, center rear, of Salinas, Puerto Rico, stands at a kitchen table across from her sister Arianette Fuentes, right, as Ortiz's two grandchildren play with her sister's young children, in Hackensack, N.J. Residents of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands have wound up in New Jersey, the state with the third largest Puerto Rican population in the country after Florida and New York, as part of a continuing exodus from territories devastated by consecutive hurricanes. Ortiz has been gathering and sending supplies that were unavailable in Puerto Rico, including batteries, generators, insect repellent, nutrition drinks, solar-powered lamps and other necessities. (Amy Newman/The Record via AP)

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