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HomeNewsLocal newsMapp a Lightning Rod for Criticism at St. Croix Forum

Mapp a Lightning Rod for Criticism at St. Croix Forum

Gov. Kenneth E. Mapp (File photo)
Gov. Kenneth E. Mapp (File photo)

The gubernatorial challengers took aim Saturday at incumbent Gov. Kenneth Mapp Saturday at the AARP candidate forum in University of the Virgin Islands Great Hall on St. Croix.

Soraya Diase Coffelt charged the Mapp administration with corruption. When Mapp asked her to be specific, she pointed to a recent report from the Inspector General saying a Department of Motor Vehicles manager was stamping registration documents without inspections.

She also referred to an audit last September of the Public Finance Authority by the U. S. Department of Interior’s Inspector General. She said the audit found financial reporting discrepancies resulting in the loss of $159 million. She said the report went back to 2002 when Mapp was the head of the PFA.

Albert Bryan
Albert Bryan

Candidate Albert Bryan, who was commissioner of Labor in the former administration, in his closing statement also went on the offensive against Mapp. He said Mapp “had failed” to keep the promises he made last election and he “is the same man he was back then.”

Candidate Warren Mosler took offense to a comment Mapp made when Mosler was speaking. Mosler was saying the administration always taxes the poor guy – “a guy who wants to sit down and have a beer.” (A reference to a sin tax passed during Mapp’s administration.) Mosler said nobody came after him to pay taxes.

At that point Mapp interjected, “You don’t pay taxes.”

Mosler called the comment a “serious infraction.” He said Mapp, who had access to people’s confidential information, should not be releasing it in a public forum. Although Mosler admitted to paying no income taxes in recent years because of losses, he added that he had recently gotten a property tax bill of $160,000.

Mapp also fell under the criticism for how he handled the recovery from the two hurricanes. Candidate Adlah “Foncie” Donastorg said, “We should have learned from Marilyn.” He questioned why there was no communication system available immediately after the hurricanes hit last year. He also questioned, “How could you evacuate medical evacuees without a tracking system?”

Donastorg added,”Under my administration, our recovery would have been at a faster pace.”

Candidate Janette Millin Young said her problem with the recovery was there was not enough “immediacy” during the initial aftermath.

Soraya Diase-Coffelt (File photo)

Diase-Coffelt said people on St. John told her “they would have starved to death if it wasn’t for outsiders coming in.”

“When you hear people say that, it seems the government has failed them,” she said.

Mapp defended himself from most of the criticism by citing his administration’s record. He said schools were open 54 days after the hurricanes struck and power was restored to 95 per cent of the islands within 100 days. He also said he was out on the street assessing the situation immediately after the hurricanes and has developed a good working relationship with federal officials assuring the territory would get the necessary funds to effect recovery.

The question about recovery was the third of four questions put to the candidates by forum moderator Holland Redfield. The first question was how to stabilize the Government Employees Retirement System and keep it solvent.

Moleto Smith Jr. (File photo)
Moleto Smith Jr. (File photo)

Candidate Moleto Smith said the long term solution is to move from a defined benefits program to a 401 plan.

Mosler said the GERS unfunded liability is overstated and one way the GERS could help solve the problem would be to buy the property with delinquent taxes from the government.

Several of the candidates said a big problem was the government not being up to date on its payments to GERS. Donastorg said that was the first step. Millin Young said, “Our GERS board, trustees and attorneys are doing a good job. The problem is the plan sponsor does not pay its bills on time.”

Diase Coffelt said she had talked to actuaries and was told GERS should go to Interior Department and U.S. Treasury and borrow more than $2 billion to pay the unfunded liability. This was also the point where she said the government would help by “stopping the cancer of corruption.”

Bryan said there were possible funding source to stop the GERS from bleeding to death. They were the rum cover-over, sports gaming, and gas excise taxes.

Mapp said the unfunded liability is up to $2.5 billion and it takes $100 million to buy one year of life for the pension system. He offered as solutions raising the cap on taxation of salaries and increasing government contributions by three percent per year for the next three years. He has also submitted a plan to the Senate to use money from the recent refinery deal to prolong the life of GERS.

(GERS officials last week threatened to quit processing checks for new retirees unless the government became current on its regular payroll payments. A check was delivered to the GERS on Thursday afternoon bringing the government up to date on those payments.)

The second question concerned the governments dire financial situation.

Diase Coffelt said the government needs to “stop spending as if there’s no tomorrow.”

Mapp said the territory’s economic prosperity will depend on the rebuilding the infrastructure and reducing energy costs. He mentioned solar projects on which his administration was working.

Smith said the government needs to reduce levels of redundancy and needs to align tax revenues to the amount of services it provides. Medical tourism is an area to explore, he added, and the territory’s hospitals need to be moved from under the political boards to be under the University of the Virgin islands.

The other issue candidates were asked to address was the state of health care in the territory.

Although much of the discussion centered on the state of the territories two hospitals, some candidates emphasized personal health care.

The health care model needs to move to prevention, according to Smith. He added health care needs to incorporate all areas of person’s opportunities – walkability, access to exercise and proper nutrition. Mapp said, because his administration had focused on wellness for government employees, cost for insurance premiums had dropped.

Mapp said the territory was going to get new hospitals, but they would be smaller.

“They have always been too big,” he said, usually 50 percent empty, and that made them more expensive.

Millin Young said, “Hospitals do not need to become smaller. If we’re looking to rebuild the territory, we need to right-size the hospitals.”

Mosler and Bryan both cautioned Mapp to build a hospital “before you knock the old one down.”

The room where the forum was held was filled with supporters for the candidates and their running mates. The tickers are as follows: Mapp/Osbert Potter; Donastorg/Alicia “Chucky” Hansen; Diase Coffelt/Dwight Nicholson; Millin Young/Edgar Bengoa; Bryan/Tregenza Roach; Smith/Hubert Frederick; and Mosler/Ray Fonseca. Some 200 people watched live streaming of the forum, co-sponsored by VIYA TV2 , on Facebook and Vimeo.

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4 COMMENTS

  1. This article shows the Source’s extreme bias in favor of Albert Bryan.
    When it discussed the GERS proposals it didn’t mention that Albert’s proposal to bring in the 3 rum companies that the current administration turned down was soundly dismissed by the Governor, stating that Puerto Rico is currently offering 48% rebates and that the concessions necessary to bring in new companies are prohibitive. Albert did not rebut.

    And note that the Source failed to report any of my three main proposals to save the GERS without increasing contributions or cutting benefits- contributing the $600 million of authorized rum cover over bonds directly to the GERS fund, allowing employees to get their money back on demand, and ceasing the current practice of (through our tax structure) shifting approximately $70 million per year from the GERS fund to the government’s general fund to be used for other purposes, there was no dispute and in fact I mentioned that I had spoken on the air with Mr. Nibbs about it and that he liked the ideas and was looking into it all.

    Furthermore, the Source’s reporting of my exchange with the Governor over taxes was highly biased against me. I stated that I am permitted to disclose my taxes, which I then volunteered, stating that I paid $126,000 in property taxes but that the governor was probably referring to income taxes, which I didn’t owe because recent losses had been higher than my income, and when anyone loses more than the make there are no taxes due. But the important point is that the governor is not permitted to disclose anyone’s confidential tax information and certainly not to then attempt to use it for political purposes against a candidate, in this case in public debate, and that even thought he might feel secure because he has his own attorney general, there are nonetheless consequences for his actions.

    Please watch the entire debate and you will then see the magnitude of the Source’s biased reporting thanks.
    And review my platform and qualifications at http://www.mosler4governor.com
    Warren Mosler
    #7 on the ballot

  2. Million Young said retirement is doing a good job???! Really? When you don’t get in as governor and you have to wait 6 month’s + for your retirement check then you won’t say that. Oh , I forgot you won’t have to wait because you’ll have connections. Everyone else waits but not top government officials. Connections!! Please give a break!

  3. Mr. Mosler, you haven’t seen anything yet. They want to use their powers to control you because they don’t like what you represent. Unless you are willing to swim in the sea of corruption, lies, bribery, and manipulation , they will do anything in their power to prevent you from succeeding . Because if you get to be governor, how will they continue their suppression of the local people? How will they steal and manipulate and use us so they can live high on the hog. Every single department in this government is corrupted. God help us! God help you for you know not what you are getting into.

  4. The problem I have with Mapp is that so many huge amounts of money are being thrown around and promised ad nauseam, for an endless amount of pie-the-sky projects, and we can’t even have full working stop lights on St Thomas waterfront. Not to mention regular road signage and road markings that are visible and appropriately placed. How much does it cost to replace a stop sign? Stripe a road? Evidently the life of an 85 year-old woman, killed while trying to cross the street, isn’t reason enough to get Mapp’s attention that the ‘little’ things ARE necessary for our quality of life. And this is only one example. Why did it take so long, post-hurricane, to clear roads and roadsides of dangerous debris? If we had seen effort by the government to take care of things that directly affected us on a daily basis, it would have shown us that they cared and were in charge. But that didn’t happen, and the senators were incommunicado for a long time too. It has all left a bitter taste in my mouth, and I have NO confidence in Mapp or any of the clowns running this place.

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