Puerto Rico Public Corporations: Roles and Governance

Puerto Rico's public corporations form a distinct layer of government infrastructure, operating outside the standard executive department model while remaining subject to legislative oversight and, in many cases, federal regulatory authority. These entities manage essential services across energy, water, transportation, and finance, making them central to the island's economic and operational continuity. Their governance structure, fiscal independence, and relationship to the Puerto Rico government's broader organizational framework define how critical infrastructure is administered under the Commonwealth's constitutional order.


Definition and scope

A public corporation in Puerto Rico is a government-owned entity created by specific enabling legislation and granted a degree of operational and financial autonomy not afforded to standard executive agencies. Unlike departments such as the Puerto Rico Department of Treasury or the Puerto Rico Department of Health, public corporations are authorized to issue bonds, enter contracts, set rates, and manage revenue streams independently — subject to statutory limits and board oversight.

Puerto Rico's Legislative Assembly has created over 60 distinct public corporations across its history (Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act, PROMESA, 48 U.S.C. § 2101 et seq., identifies a number of these entities as instrumentalities subject to its restructuring provisions). Their scope spans:

  1. Utility services — Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA), Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (PRASA)
  2. Transportation infrastructure — Puerto Rico Highways and Transportation Authority (PRHTA)
  3. Financial intermediation — Government Development Bank for Puerto Rico (GDB, now in wind-down), Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corporation (COFINA)
  4. Housing and community development — Puerto Rico Housing Finance Authority (PRHFA)
  5. Communications — Puerto Rico Telephone Authority (historical predecessor to Claro Puerto Rico privatization)

The enabling statute for each entity defines its mission, governance board composition, rate-setting authority, bonding capacity, and relationship to the central government budget.


How it works

Governance authority within Puerto Rico's public corporations follows a board-director model. A governing board — whose members are typically appointed by the Governor with advice and consent of the Puerto Rico Senate — sets policy and approves major financial decisions. An executive director manages day-to-day operations and reports to the board.

Key operational features distinguish public corporations from standard agencies:

The Puerto Rico fiscal oversight structure under PROMESA has materially constrained the autonomy public corporations exercised before 2016, requiring FOMB approval for expenditures, contracts, and restructuring plans.


Common scenarios

Debt restructuring: COFINA's restructuring, confirmed in February 2019, redirected a portion of Puerto Rico sales and use tax revenue to retire approximately $17.6 billion in legacy bond debt (FOMB COFINA Plan of Adjustment). This restructuring model — negotiated under Title VI or litigated under Title III of PROMESA — has become the primary mechanism for resolving insolvency within public corporations.

Rate disputes: PREPA's electricity rates are subject to challenge by ratepayer groups before the Puerto Rico Energy Bureau (PREB), the island's energy sector regulator established under Act 57-2014. PREB holds authority to approve or reject rate adjustment petitions filed by PREPA.

Federal disaster funding administration: Following hurricanes Irma and María in 2017, public corporations including PREPA and PRASA became primary recipients of federal Public Assistance grants administered through FEMA. The government's disaster recovery coordination role runs substantially through these entities, as infrastructure owners of record.

Privatization transitions: The 2021 transfer of PREPA's generation and transmission-distribution assets to private operators (Luma Energy for transmission/distribution) created a hybrid model in which the public corporation retains asset ownership and bond obligations while a private contractor manages operations under a contract approved by PREB and the Legislature.


Decision boundaries

Distinguishing between a public corporation's authority and the central government's authority requires reference to the enabling statute in each case. The following contrasts apply across the sector:

Dimension Public Corporation Executive Department
Budget source Own revenues + bond proceeds General Fund appropriations
Governance Appointed board + executive director Secretary appointed by Governor
PROMESA coverage Covered instrumentalities subject to FOMB Central government budget, also under FOMB
Rate-setting Authorized by enabling statute Not applicable
Litigation capacity Sues and is sued in own name Typically represents Commonwealth

Operational decisions — contracting, procurement, rate filings — reside with the corporation's board and executive director. Policy decisions that affect enabling legislation, rate authority, or bonding caps require action by the Puerto Rico Legislative Assembly. Federal compliance timelines, particularly for EPA consent decrees (PRASA has operated under a federal consent decree governing wastewater compliance), are negotiated between the corporation and federal regulators without requiring central government intermediation.

The Puerto Rico government agencies list provides a broader catalog of entities that sit alongside public corporations in the island's administrative structure, including standard departments and independent regulatory bodies whose authority boundaries intersect with corporate operations.


References