Graduate student Jennifer Dominguez Vega decided to stay in Puerto Rico to take advantage of opportunities that weren’t available just two years ago
Jennifer Dominguez Vega grew up in Isabela, a small town on Puerto Rico’s west coast, far from the main ports. She thought she knew what was most important in life, but when Hurricane Maria struck in 2017, she spent six months of high school without electricity.Â
The storm did more than cut off power; it revealed just how fragile Puerto Rico’s infrastructure was. The real problem wasn’t bringing supplies to the island but getting them to communities like hers. Roads were blocked, communication was down, and the supply networks that delivered food, medicine, and other essentials from the ports to inland towns had broken down.Â
“Logistics is what brings everything here, even the things that are made here,” Dominguez Vega said. “It’s just so critical.”Â
Those six months and her new understanding of how important supply chain resilience is for life in Puerto Rico would shape her future.Â



Dominguez Vega is the kind of talent Puerto Rico needs to keep. She is finishing a five-and-a-half-year bachelor’s program with a perfect GPA, has been a teaching assistant for three years, and has the technical skills and work ethic that companies look for.