marilyn luciano has lived here for 25 years.s trapped here, too scared to make the climb down the ladder. it's a nightmare. it is. waking up the next day not having a bridge, it's horrible, because this is our only entrance and exit. there's nowhere in and nowhere out. when hurricane maria hit, a 47-foot surge wiped out the bridge. the water level was up to here? yeah. it took almost a week for the first rescue workers to arrive. federal response across the island has been criticized as too little, too late. they say that probably for july i will get lights. july? for july. that's seven months from now. that's seven months from now, so imagine how we're going to keep living. the storm may have taken her bridge, but it gave marilyn a new purpose. she volunteered to manage all the relief supplies for her neighbors. how many people live in this area? in this area we have 100 and -- that you're responsible for. 125 people. and are you the major now? that's what they say. but i'm not the mayor. [ speaking spanish ] bye. maybe not the