Getting supplies flowing again to stores and shops around Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria has been a major issue. 

Spectrum News Anchor Veronica Cintron, born in Puerto Rico, is on the island visiting family and taking stock of the territory's recovery. Photojournalist Tony Rojek is accompanying her. 

Two weeks after Hurricane Maria roared across the island, disrupting power, along with a supply of basic, everyday goods, the availability of food in supermarkets is not yet 100 percent in most areas. 

In Carolina, Cintron visited a market that was struggling to keep basic items on its shelves. And the water the store does get shipped in does not last very long, according to store employees. 

There is a problem of logistics.

Communication is obviously another factor to us is affecting because it is difficult to communicate among colleagues who work in the industry to make the inventory with the same suppliers to make contacts and to bring the products. Between communication and fuel has been critical. 

"Right now, the biggest problem is fuel supply because (we are not getting) arriving trucks with the approaches to stock our shelves and our refrigerators," said Econo General Manager Luis Barros. "I understand that (when trucks) immediately begin to flow inventories and coming in, it will better be able to refill the supermarket to be able to continue to serve to the public."

Here are some images of what Veronica found: 

Residents line up outside a market in Carolina, Puerto Rico to buy what goods they can find. 

A shopper makes her way past empty store shelves. Stores remain mostly empty of goods two weeks after Hurricane Maria.

In the wake of power issues remaining across the island, what little cash there is remains king.

Rosa, 74, tells Veronica that she has food for the present but must cook it all at once. She can't save anything because she still has no power for her refrigerator.