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CCT Extends Cabaret Six More Shows

Caribbean Community Theatre continues its 41st season with the award-winning musical Cabaret; Book by Joe Masteroff, based on the Play by John Van Druten, and Stories by Christopher Isherwood; Music by John Kander; Lyrics by Fred Ebb

There are six more performances over the next two weekends of CABARET at CCT: Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Feb. 13-14 and 20-21, and two Sunday matinees at 4 p.m. on February 15 and 22.

Cabaret is set in 1929 Berlin as the Nazis are rising to power. This popular musical focuses on nightlife at the racy Kit Kat Klub, and on the relationship between performer Sally Bowles and American writer Cliff Bradshaw. The Emcee, a narrator of sorts, infuses energy and dark humor into the illicit dealings of the club employees and patrons. In addition to the title tune, Cabaret features memorable songs such as โ€œTwo Ladies,โ€ โ€œI Donโ€™t Care Much,โ€ โ€œTomorrow Belongs to Me,โ€ โ€œMaybe This Time,โ€ and more.

Malerie Gleason and Heather McRae direct the Cabaret cast of Sean Bailey, Serena Bishop, Denise Blanchette, Tyler Donohoo, Stephanie Felix, Allegra Ferreras, Claire Goodman, Clara Killy, Paul Knipler, Christine McIntosh, Eduardo Prentice, Avory Resca, Will Smith, Ethan Washburn, Maddy Wilson, and Carson Youman.

-Christopher Tirado is the Music Director, Claire Goodman is the Choreographer, and Tyler Donohoo is the Assistant Music Director and Vocal Coach.ย 

-Musicians are Padraic Coursey (guitar), Yoav Hayut (violin), Brian Hodge Jr. (saxophone), Stan Joines (trumpet), Howard Peters (percussion), Mario Thomas (bass guitar) and Christopher Tirado (piano).

General admission tickets may be purchased in advance online at Eventbrite:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cabaret-a-musical-tickets-1981258336017?aff=oddtdtcreator

Also, limited number of โ€œKit Kat Tableโ€ seating for two is available on Eventbrite (until sold out).

-For reservations, discounted tickets, more information, or for handicap assistance, email: eileencct@gmail.com.

-Tickets are $30 for adults; $28 for seniors (age 65+), and $25 for college students and CCT members; and $20 for students under age 18 and may be purchased at the CCT box office prior to each show, which opens 45 minutes before curtain. This production is not recommended for children under age 15.

Performances are held at the Caribbean Community Theatre at #18 Estate Orange Grove in Christiansted, St. Croix.ย 

CCT productions are jointly supported by a grant from the Virgin Islands Council on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.ย 

This show is co-sponsored by Susan & Crystal Atkins-Weathers, J. Benton Construction, LLC, Cheeseburger in Paradise, Clinical Laboratory Inc., Ed & Stephanie Fletcher, The Gleason Family, GS Law Offices P.C., David Hayes Trust/CML Inc., Marshall + Sterling Insurance / Baker Magras & Associates, Dr. Carolyn Merritt, PLLC, Neighborhood Pharmacy, Team Consultants, The VIVOT Group.ย 

Cabaret is also co-sponsored by Armrey Industries, Cheese & Bread, Crucian Gold, and Caledonia Communication Corporation (WSTX AM 970)

CCT โ€” bringing live theater to St. Croix for 41 seasons!

Caribbean Community Theatre // PO Box 25793, Christiansted, VI 00824 // Website: www.cct.vi

MBW Hosts โ€œMystery Under the Seaโ€ Fundraiser Feb. 21

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MBW invites all to plunge into a night of feasting, intrigue, and fundraising for our 9th Annual Mystery Event – Under the Sea! Join us on Saturday, Feb. 21, from 6โ€“10 p.m. at MBWโ€™s Stephenson Family Welcome Center for a voyage into the deep.

My Brother’s Workshop hosts โ€œMystery Under the Seaโ€ Feb. 21 (Submitted photo)

What awaits under the sea? See below for details.

  • Tickets are now available for adventurers 18+ and grants access to a delicious dinner prepared by MBWโ€™s Cafรฉ & Bakery, plus the chance to win treasures for best-dressed, whodunnit, and more! Drinks will be available for purchase. Tickets are priced at $75 in advance or $100 at the door.
  • Silent Auction The tide is already rising! Bid on treasures from local merchants and fine experiences. There is no need to be present to join the fun. New items to bid on will surface daily, so whether you sail into the event or stay ashore, you can still dive into the bidding adventure!
  • Volunteer and gain free entry to the event.

As the tide rolls in, let the rhythms of renowned DJ Kash sweep you through the currents and try your luck at our blackjack tables. All the fun of an oceanic mystery awaits! Dress in costume if you’d like – dazzling mermaids, daring pirates, regal sea kings, playful dolphins, are eligible to enter our individual and group costume contest. Or, simply come as you are to join the adventure.

The event is made possible by our generous sponsors Anne and Andy Hemmert, Perfected Claims, Keswick Insurance, Calypso Realty, Take It Easy, Bellows International, Lovango, Caribbean Risk Group, Jess Rosenberg, Vibe Jewelry, Dr. Peter and Christiane Corr, and Malorie Winnie Diaz, Local Legend Charters

My Brotherโ€™s Workshop is a non-profit Virgin Islands charitable corporation. It has been organized to provide hope, faith, and purpose to at-risk and high-risk USVI youth by offering mentoring, mental health counseling, paid job training, education, and job placement.

Bajo el Sol Gallery Presentsย Nature as Refuge Saturday

Bajo el Sol Gallery opens the exhibition season withย Nature as Refuge, a group exhibition featuring three women artists whose work is deeply inspired by the natural world and the islands they call home.

Opening on Feb. 14 from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m., the exhibition brings together mixed media, oil painting, ceramics, and glass to explore nature as sanctuary and emotional refuge.ย 

Artists Aimee Trayser, Elisa Bryan, and Jessica Rosenberg approach the landscape through distinct materials and perspectives while sharing a common reverence for the Caribbean environment. The works presented inย Nature as Refuge do not simply use nature as a backdrop; they offer viewers a space for connection, grounding, and renewal.

About the artists:

Aimee Trayser’s Totem, Turtule 26, mixed media. (Submitted photo)

Aimee Trayser, co-founder of Bajo el Sol Gallery, presents richly layered mixed media works that emerge from a contemplative, intuitive process. Drawing inspiration from dreams, the unconscious, and the rhythms of the natural world, her collages are built from accumulated layers of handmade and collected papers, dense with fibers, texture, and luminous pigments. Celestial bodies, waves, fish, birds, and enigmatic figures drift through her compositions, evoking both the mystery and sensuality of island life. Working from her studio on St. John since 1982, Trayserโ€™s art captures the spirit of the Caribbean, taking familiar land and seascapes just beyond reality into something quietly otherworldly.

Elisa Bryan, a Native Virgin Islander from St. Thomas, brings a deeply personal connection to her paintings. Raised in a French fishing community and immersed from childhood in the sea, her work reflects a lifelong relationship with the ocean and island life. Bryan focuses on light, form, and motion, increasingly drawn to classical still life as a way of capturing intimate moments of the Caribbean experience. Her paintings feel both grounded and luminous, elegant yet practical, balancing refined composition with an honest sense of everyday island life.

Jessica Rosenberg’s Claws, infused glass. (Submitted photo)

Jessica Rosenberg, a multidisciplinary artist based on St. Thomas, works with stoneware, porcelain, and glass, embracing materials that are transformed through fire. Her ceramic vessels, often slab-built, are gently pushed into expressive, organic shapes that invite surface pattern and painterly exploration. Her glass works, made through casting glass from nature using coral, fish, shells, fruits and vegetables, respond directly to her surrounding environment.ย 

Together, the artists inย Nature as Refugeย invite viewers to experience nature not only as scenery, but as a vital source of refuge, resilience, and renewal.

Located at Mongoose Junction on St. John, Bajo El Sol Gallery & Art Bar is a hybrid art gallery, bookstore, cafรฉ, rum and cocktail bar. As a gallery and events space, Bajo El Sol is dedicated to offering the best in Virgin Islands fine art and cultural expression.ย 

Ernel Delroy Blake Dies

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The family of Ernel Delroy Blake (Savage) announces with deep sorrow his passing on Jan. 6, 2026.

Ernel Delroy Blake

Ernel was born on July 7, 1967, and throughout his life, he was known for his strong spirit, warm heart, and the meaningful connections he shared with family and friends. He will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him.

Ernel was preceded in death by his mother, Violet Conner, his grandparents, and other loved ones who have gone before him.

He is survived by his father, Eardley Blake; his brothers, Lesroy Conner, Wayne Conner, Ellis Conner, and Zacchaeus Blake; and his sisters, Vanora Noel, Vanill Cornelius, Paula Conner, Carmen Ferdinand, Karen Blake, and Julianne Blake.

He is also survived by his aunts, Alberta Conner and Peola Jones; his uncle, Urban Jones; and his nieces, Deyonna, Denisa Ferdinand, Tireena, Teresa Noel, Taliah, Tahijah, Lesauna, Leanne, Leanna Conner, Alexa-Kiara, Chyanne Matthew, Karez Tuitien, Nyrah, Zoriah, Shanyrah, Nazaliah, Shaziya, and Sharefa.His nephews include Ozanie, Olanie, Oshanie, Okeyno, Osejah Cornelius, KareemFerdinand, Gregory Noel, Everette Conner, Lemari, and Lionell Woodley.Ernel also leaves to mourn his in-laws, Dennis Ferdinand and Vinette Conner; his special friends, Kendall, Chefton, Chesley, Rambo, and Ras Battmore; along with many additionalrelatives and friends too numerous to mention.

A funeral service will be held on Thursday, Feb. 12, at Divine Chapel, #129 Peterโ€™s Rest, Christiansted, VIย  00820. Viewing will begin at 9 a.m., followed by the service at 10 a.m. Interment will take place at Kingshill Cemetery.

Ralph A. de Chabert Dies at 95

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Dr. Ralph A. de Chabert of Estate La Grande Princesse transitioned into eternal peace on Jan. 23, 2026. He was 95 years old.

Dr. Ralph A. de Chabert

His is survived by his children: Danielle de Chabert and Gisele de Chabert; sister: Shirley de Chabert Highfield, sister-inโ€“law: Saturnina deChabert; nieces and nephews: Leslie Highfield- Carter, Kimberly Highfield and family, Christopher Highfield and family, Greg and Magaly Schuster and family, Janine Schuster and family, Kenneth Schuster and family,Troy Schuster, Jacqueline- de Chabert and family, Nicolas and Patreece de Chabert and family, Michael de Chabert and family, Regina Petersen and family Austin de Chabert, Jr. and family Judy de Chabert, Rosita de Chabert-Swanson and family; aunt: Julia Gaton (Herbert Gaton-husband); cousins: Michele Gaton and family, Lisa Repena and Angela Wiltshire and family, Lynn Clarke and family, Sheryl Lawinski and family, Mable Brady and family; relatives: the Macedon family, De Lugo family, Jackson family, Ebbeson family, Simmonds family, Hansen family, Walcott family, Stanley Jacobs and family, Bough family, James family, Molloy family, Hodge family, Mable Brady and family, Santos family, Sidney Elskoe and family, Randolph de Chabert and family, Weeks family, Alfred heath and family, Muckle, and Farrelly family.

And numerous friends, Colleagues, former co-workers, former employees, and former patients who enriched his life.

In lieu of flowers and wreaths please donate to The St. Croix animal Shelter or the St. Croix Chapter of the Cancer Society.

Funeral service will be held on Friday, Feb. 20 at Holy Cross Catholic Church. Viewing and tributes at 9 a.m. with service beginning at 10 a.m. Private interment will follow.

VIHFA Director Announces Resignation; Lawmakers Press on Unspent Housing Funds

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Eugene Jones Jr. testifies Wednesday before the Legislatureโ€™s Committee on Housing, Transportation and Telecommunications. (Photo courtesy VI Legislature)
V.I. Housing Finance Authority Director Eugene Jones Jr. testifies Wednesday before the Legislatureโ€™s Committee on Housing, Transportation and Telecommunications, where he announced his resignation, effective in April. (Photo courtesy VI Legislature)

Eugene Jones Jr., executive director of the Virgin Islands Housing Finance Authority, announced Wednesday that he has submitted his resignation, effective April, while testifying before the Legislatureโ€™s Committee on Housing, Transportation and Telecommunications.

Jones’s resignation notice comes less than two years after he was appointed to the position, coming to the U.S. Virgin Islands in April 2024 after five years as executive director of the Atlanta Housing Authority. โ€œThroughout my career, I have witnessed firsthand the transformative power of safe and accessible housing,” he said at the time. “Itโ€™s not just about providing shelter; itโ€™s about building communities where people can truly call home, where they can thrive, and create lasting connections.โ€

Soon after his resignation announcement Wednesday, lawmakers turned to a pressing fiscal deadline: roughly $4.2 million remaining from an $8.5 million federal Homeowner Assistance Fund allocation that VIHFA must use by September.

Senators, including Sen. Kurt Vialet, also pressed Jones on a separate pool of local funding: the Legislatureโ€™s $4 million First-Time Homebuyers Act appropriation. โ€œThe money is just sitting there,โ€ Vialet said, asking why the local first-time homebuyer funds remained unused. โ€œThe Housing Finance Authority had the authorization to develop the requirements. So if you develop requirements that nobody could meet, thatโ€™s on the Housing Finance Authority. This body gave moneys outside of federal funds to help local first-time home buyers, and all we needed the Finance Authority to do was to develop those guidelines and utilize the monies.โ€

โ€œYou have not used this money,โ€ Vialet added. โ€œYouโ€™re just sitting there with a smug look after you got $4 million five, six years ago. โ€ฆ The Housing Finance Authority is not building. You canโ€™t be upset at senators being frustrated.โ€

Jones acknowledged that none of the $4 million had reached buyers and said the programโ€™s design had been a barrier. โ€œNone of that money has been spent yet,โ€ he told the committee, explaining that VIHFA had considered reallocating the funds โ€œbecause of the stringent requirement to reach out to those individuals from our regulation.โ€

Vialet said that if such plans were to be made, they would have to be approved by the Legislature. โ€œYou canโ€™t reallocate the money. The First Time Homebuyers Act, only the Legislature could do that,” he said.

Jones also addressed the $4.2 million remaining in the federal Homeowner Assistance Fund and pledged a spending blueprint. โ€œI will submit a plan for the remaining $4.2 million,โ€ Jones said. When Committee Chairman Sen. Marvin A. Blyden asked whether that plan already existed or was still a working document, Jones replied, โ€œYes, we do have a plan. Iโ€™ll just send it to you, and it has a budget for the $4.2 million thatโ€™s left.โ€

Blyden tied the request directly to Jonesโ€™ pending departure, asking for the plan โ€œbefore you leave, so we can actually look at a plan, and because we might have recommendations also and suggestions.โ€ Multiple senators asked Jones for concrete deliverables before his resignation takes effect.

Sen. Novelle E. Francis Jr. framed the clash over unspent housing dollars as a moral test for the government, saying elected officials would be judged by how they treat residents who are suffering. โ€œAs leaders, we are ultimately evaluated by how well we are able to care for the most vulnerable among us,โ€ Francis said. โ€œThose individuals that continue to leave our shores and go abroad because they canโ€™t get a house, canโ€™t buy a house, canโ€™t pay for a house โ€ฆ those functional homeless that we have, where individuals are sleeping in their car โ€ฆ those are the ones that should be frustrated here this morning.โ€

โ€œWe hear that $4 million appropriated in 2021 โ€ฆ not a dime has been spent from that,โ€ Francis said. โ€œWe hear that thereโ€™s $3.3 million for Home ARP, not a dime has been spent from that.โ€

Francis urged colleagues and agency heads to turn that frustration into coordinated action. โ€œLetโ€™s do everything possible for us to be able to collaborate, communicate and compromise on those things that are necessary to be able to move the needle,โ€ he said. โ€œNumbers are trending in the wrong direction. โ€ฆ Theyโ€™re our brothers and sisters. Theyโ€™re family members.โ€

Vialet said his anger over unspent housing and social service funds is rooted in what he sees on the streets every day. He described passing former students and other residents living outdoors while the system fails to create a serious long-term plan. โ€œWe have a number of homeless Virgin Islanders that are on the street, former students that I see on the street every single day,โ€ Vialet said. โ€œWeโ€™re to the point where weโ€™re just driving and itโ€™s normal. โ€ฆ These are our children, these are our family members, and they donโ€™t deserve to live that way.โ€

Vialet blamed a cycle in which people are picked up, taken briefly to hospitals, then sent back out with no long-term plan, and argued that leaving millions unspent year after year while that continues is unacceptable. โ€œEvery year we have the same conversation.โ€

When asked about his biggest achievement as director, Jones highlighted staff development and internal capacity. โ€œThe biggest thing is probably my staff capacity,โ€ he said. โ€œTheyโ€™ve achieved some things that no one thought they could do. Weโ€™ve come together as a team. We built morale, and weโ€™re working to support the territory as housing providers.โ€

Jones closed by emphasizing his staffโ€™s work and promising that the authority would continue to treat housing and homelessness as urgent issues. โ€œI just want to say thank you for this opportunity to present our issues and our concerns and our recommendations,โ€ Jones said. โ€œI have a great staff โ€ฆ [who] continue to make this a matter of urgency to help and assistโ€ฆ to find resources, to find opportunities to eradicate homelessness in the territory.โ€

Officials, Nonprofits Warn Lawmakers of Rising Homelessness, Strained Shelters

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Human Services Commissioner Averil George testifies before the Senate Housing, Transportation and Telecommunications Committee Wednesday, reporting that the latest estimate of people experiencing homelessness across the territory is 306. (Screenshot from V.I. Legislature livestream)

Homelessness in the U.S. Virgin Islands has reached what officials called an urgent level, with most unhoused residents sleeping outdoors, shelters at or near capacity and key housing funds still struggling to translate into beds and services.

Human Services Commissioner Averil George told the Senate Housing, Transportation and Telecommunications Committee on Wednesday that the latest point-in-time count identified about 306 people experiencing homelessness across the territory, up from 252 counted in 2023. Roughly 241 were unsheltered, while only about 65 were in emergency or transitional shelters.

Officials and service providers said those figures likely undercount โ€œhiddenโ€ homelessness, including people sleeping in cars, doubling up with relatives, or cycling between jail, hospitals and temporary living situations.

โ€œHomelessness is not a choice,โ€ George said, citing โ€œthe severe shortage of affordable housing, rising living costs, limited wages โ€ฆ untreated mental illness, substance use disorders and longโ€‘standing system gaps.โ€ She noted that her department does not run shelters or housing, but instead handles intake, emergency aid and public benefits such as Medicaid and SNAP, and coordinates referrals to housing agencies and nonprofit providers.

Most emergency and transitional shelters are operated by nonprofit and faithโ€‘based groups, including Catholic Charities, Bethlehem House and Lutheran Social Services. Sandra Thomas Mason of Catholic Charities said facilities are consistently full and increasingly serve as de facto longโ€‘term placement for older residents.

โ€œThey end up in our facility for a very, very, very long time,โ€ Mason said, adding that some seniors โ€œcouch surfโ€ with relatives or friends and never appear in official counts. She said demand is growing even as nonprofits struggle with delayed government funding and rising costs.

Representatives of the Continuum of Care and the territoryโ€™s Interagency Council on Homelessness said emergency beds, transitional housing slots and permanent supportive housing units are almost always full, and that limited affordable stock and landlord reluctance to accept very lowโ€‘income tenants have blunted the impact of federal vouchers.

They described the Interagency Council as the intended hub for longโ€‘term planning and system coordination but said it needs stable funding and staffing to move beyond crisisโ€‘driven responses. Dan Derima, Continuum of Care chair and vice chair of the council, urged lawmakers to formalize and fund the body so it can coordinate planning, manage data and better position the territory for additional U.S. Housing and Urban Development Department grants.

Justice and public safety officials described homelessness as deeply intertwined with incarceration and public safety. Wynnie Testamark, director of the Virgin Islands Bureau of Corrections, said some people arrive at jail without housing and leave the same way, increasing the risk of recidivism.

โ€œEvery release is a public safety decision,โ€ Testamark said. โ€œWhen individuals leave our custody without housing, without treatment, without employment pathways and without coordinated support, the risks do not remain within correctional walls. They shift to our neighborhoods, our health care systems, our law enforcement officers, and ultimately to the taxpayers of this territory.โ€

Testamark linked homelessness to recidivism and strain on public systems. โ€œRepeated incarceration is often driven not solely by criminal behavior, but by unmet housing and behavioral needs,โ€ she said.

She asked lawmakers to create and fund a formal reentry services unit, expand transitional and supportive housing dedicated to people leaving custody, authorize preโ€‘release enrollment in Medicaid and SNAP, and formalize dataโ€‘sharing agreements among corrections, health, human services, labor and housing agencies.

St. Thomas-St. John Police Chief Deborah Hodge said officers regularly respond to welfare checks, disturbances and mentalโ€‘health calls involving unhoused residents. โ€œMany calls are not criminal in nature, but instead are rooted in unmet social and health needs,โ€ Hodge said. She said officers receive crisisโ€‘intervention and traumaโ€‘informed policing training and are instructed to de-escalate and connect people to Human Services and nonprofit providers wherever possible.

Committee Chair Sen. Marvin Blyden said nonprofits โ€œfill the gapโ€ in places where government agencies cannot reach and warned that late disbursement of funds to those organizations undermines the territoryโ€™s overall response. He and other senators pressed agencies to share data and move more quickly from plans and grant awards to actual units, beds and services.

โ€œData drives policies, and we are missing data,โ€ Blyden said. โ€œI will implore all agencies and not-for-profit organizations, please โ€ฆ Because if we had the data, [there would be] many questions we would not be asking. We would have already put the policies together, and we would have already moved forward in terms of coming up with solutions.โ€

Across testimony, officials agreed that the current system is strained: need is rising, shelters have little room, landlord participation in voucher programs remains limited and several housingโ€‘related funding streams have been slow to become bricksโ€‘andโ€‘mortar solutions.

Officials said that long-term fixes will require more affordable and supportive housing, stronger interagency planning, timely funding for nonprofits, and expanded behavioralโ€‘health and reentry services to move the territory beyond crisisโ€‘driven responses.

Territoryโ€™s Lobbyists Offer Updates From Washington

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The Capitol building in Washington, D.C. (Shutterstock image)
Representatives from Callwood and Associates, Squire Patton Boggs, Ballard Partners and Winston and Strawn provided the V.I. Public Finance Authority with updates on the territoryโ€™s lobbying efforts in Washington D.C., Wednesday during a meeting held on the videoconferencing platform Zoom. (Shutterstock image)

In their first public reports since securing aย quasi-victoryย in the form of aย permanent extension to the rum cover-over rate, four lobbying firms offered updates on their overlapping efforts to advance the Virgin Islands governmentโ€™s federal agenda amid a mercurial White House administration, upcoming midterm elections and the shadow cast by officialsโ€™ dealings with Jeffrey Epstein.

Kevin Callwood, whose lobbying work for the territory spans decades, told the V.I. Public Finance Authority board that the conditions in Washington are โ€œconsiderably differentโ€ than in recent years.

โ€œWe are dealing with a completely different set of facts, and we have a turbulent political environment,โ€ he said. โ€œWe have coming elections at home, and also here at the national, federal level. Weโ€™re now receiving unsavory media attention related to Jeffrey Epstein that continuously sullies our reputation. Our objective sees us moving past all this, maintaining our steady ship in Washington and growing where we can.โ€

The reports covered everything from tariffs and the territoryโ€™s inclusion on the European Unionโ€™s so-called โ€œblacklistโ€ย โ€” aย controversial listย ofย 11 jurisdictionsย which fall short of the EUโ€™s anti-money laundering and financial crime deterrence standards โ€” to lawsuits and efforts to revive the St. Croix refinery. Adrian Lukis from Ballard Partners, a firm with close ties to President Donald Trumpโ€™s administration and which used to employ current U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and Trumpโ€™s chief of staff, Susie Wiles, said the firm hadnโ€™t โ€œengaged onโ€ the refinery issue for several months following an unsuccessful attempt to secure financial support from the U.S. Energy Department.

โ€œThat was not, I think, a viable opportunity,โ€ he said. โ€œBut I do think that the EPA and White House have expressed a desire to try to fast-track approvals.โ€

Dave Schnittger of Squire Patton Boggs elaborated later and noted that his team facilitated a meeting last year between Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. and Aaron Szabo, the EPAโ€™s assistant administrator for its Office of Air and Radiation.

โ€œWe began laying the groundwork for that meeting at the very beginning of the second Trump administration,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd you know now, with some of the changes and dynamics taking place with respect to Venezuela, our hope is that there is an opportunity now to do what we wanted to do for a long time, to position the refinery for the role that itโ€™s uniquely suited to play โ€” not just empowering growth in the territory, but also strengthening the energy supply for the entire nation.โ€

Schnittger said Squire Patton Boggs is working with the White House, the newly minted National Energy Dominance Council, and the U.S. Energy Department to make that happen.ย Bryant Gardner, a partner at Winston and Strawn, offered a more cautious assessment.

โ€œItโ€™s not open,โ€ he said of the refinery. โ€œHopefully the political environment will help it, but, you know, according to experts, the longer it sits, the harder it is to restart it. And so โ€ฆ the clock is ticking. Weโ€™ve looked at issues with their potential deconstruction activity, or scrapping โ€” to make sure that the governmentโ€™s interests are protected there underneath the refinery operating agreement โ€” and there are environmental issues as well. Thereโ€™s ongoing, open litigation with the EPA.โ€

While Bryan has long touted a safe refinery restart as one of the goals of his administration, the facility was only mentioned briefly during his most recent and final State of the Territory Address. Days later, a delegation of Ghanaian officials and representatives from international energy companies toured the refinery and the adjacent terminal after meeting with leadership from both operations. On a call with the Source Friday, Bryan said an upcoming visit to D.C. will be โ€œparticularly interestingโ€ because conversations about U.S. territories usually focus on those in the South Pacific.

โ€œNow, with whatโ€™s going on in Venezuela, theyโ€™re going to want to talk to us more about the military activity in the Caribbean again,โ€ he said. โ€œIt is real key that weโ€™re going to get that attention โ€” because I was jealous that Guam got all that military attention โ€” but theyโ€™re most definitely going to be curious about what kind of resources we need to support them in their defense of the Caribbean. So the refineryโ€™s gonna be a topic, I know. Iโ€™m really excited to have those conversations.โ€

Regarding the blacklist, Gardner said its inclusion of U.S. territories seems โ€œpolitically motivated.โ€ The U.S. Virgin Islandsโ€™ owes its inclusion to the fact that it: doesnโ€™t apply any automatic exchange of financial information; has not signed an international cooperation agreement to counter tax evasion; has โ€œharmful preferential tax regimesโ€ through the V.I. Economic Development Authority and exemptions under the International Banking Center Regulatory Act; and โ€œhas not committed to addressing these issues,โ€ according to the Council of the European Union.

โ€œSo what the EU has said is that thereโ€™s a number of different sort-of planks that they have in resistance to getting us off the blacklist. One of those is transparency,โ€ Gardner explained. โ€œWe donโ€™t provide them information about our taxes and tax programs and taxpayers, and weโ€™ve said to them: we simply canโ€™t do that. We cannot enter into an agreement with the EU, and so weโ€™ve worked through [the U.S. Treasury Department] to amend the existing tax implementation agreement so that we can exchange that information through Treasury, just like any other state.โ€

Gardner said the next challenge will be around the Economic Development Authority and Economic Development Commission.

โ€œThey want to understand them better,โ€ he said.

PFA Board Moves on Recovery Contracts

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The V.I. Public Finance Authority board convened over the videoconferencing platform Zoom Wednesday to receive reports from its subsidiary agencies and review a slate of disaster-recovery related contracts. (Screenshot from Zoom meeting)

Editorโ€™s Note: Tysam Tech disputes the accuracy of the Sourceโ€™s reporting below on the lawsuit between Ohio-based Gandee and Associates and the V.I. Housing Finance Authority, particularly as it relates to VIHFAโ€™s awarding of contracts to Tysam, which is not named as a party in the suit. The Source is working with Tysam to clarify these issues and will update the article once a resolution is reached.

The V.I. Public Finance Authority board breezed through more than $14 million in disaster recovery-related contracts Wednesday, authorizing V.I. Disaster Recovery Director Adrienne Williams-Octalien to execute a trio of environmental consulting contracts collectively worth nearly $11.6 million.

Williams-Octalien presented all three of the recommended environmental technical consultant services contracts simultaneously, explaining that D&B Engineers and Architects, Rittenhouse Consulting and Tysam Tech were the only three responsive bidders who submitted proposals following a solicitation last year.

โ€œSo based on the experience, qualifications and resources and overall ability to provide the work, the committee deemed that we should enter into contracts with all three to be able to provide the services โ€” and for the territory to have the necessary capacity to process all of the environmental requirements for each of these projects simultaneously,โ€ she said. โ€œWe were concerned that one contractor would not be able to provide all of these services in a timely manner.โ€

The contract awarded to D&B came in at $8.44 million. The company, based in Woodbury, New York, describes itself as a โ€œteam of 225 men and womenโ€ who โ€œhail from engineering, scientific and environmental disciplines, are active in industry associations and have received awardsโ€ from numerous industry associations.

The contract with Rittenhouse Consulting, which was founded by former Sen. Alicia Barnes, was valued at nearly $1.98 million. The companyโ€™s websiteย boasts Coastal Zone Management compliance work for the Hibiscus Beach Hotel, Green Cay Marina and Clinton E. Phipps Race Track, development of the territoryโ€™s Integrated Solid Waste Management Plan and work on a use variance for aย controversial block manufacturing facilityย owned byย Just Right Trucking.

The 35th Legislature approvedย the variance in April 2023 over guidance from the V.I. Department of Planning and Natural Resources, which noted that the Estate Orange Grove site did not allow for industrial activity. An online petition against the development that month garneredย more than 900 signatures. The Rittenhouse Consulting website states that the company provided โ€œtechnical expertise in support of a public awareness campaign to address public misinformation regarding the proposed block manufacturing activity.โ€

The third company, Tysam Tech, was tapped for a nearly $1.18 million environmental consulting contract. The company figured prominently in a lawsuit filed last yearย by another environmental consultant, Ohio-based Gandee and Associates, which alleged that the V.I. Housing Finance Authority improperly rescinded contracts and awarded others at โ€œgrossly inflatedโ€ prices to a competitor โ€” Tysam โ€” despite an apparent conflict of interest.

In a civil complaint, Gandee alleged that VIHFA awarded at least five contracts to Tysam even though the company missed a mandated proposal deadline and that the authorityโ€™s โ€œpreferential treatment of Tysam Tech appears even more suspectโ€ because the authorityโ€™s former senior environmental manager, Kyora Veira, began working for Tysam three days after leaving her post at VIHFA. Gandee further alleged that it lost a Sejah Farm contract to Tysam because it was not โ€œthe lowest responsive bidder.โ€ Gandee bid $11,000 and Tysam bid $35,255, according to the complaint.

In September, a federal judge enjoined VIHFA from awarding seven of the disputed contracts and wrote that there โ€œis reason to believe that public funds may be saved by a reevaluation of the awards,โ€ adding that in โ€œmore than one instance, VIHFA failed to adhere to its own rules.โ€ The record, U.S. District Court Chief Judge Robert Molloy wrote at the time, โ€œstrongly suggests a violation of duty has occurred, and it unfolded like the โ€˜Emperorโ€™s New Clothesโ€™ โ€” the bare truth was laid out but no one at VIHFA spoke up.โ€

VIHFA Executive Director Eugene Jones abruptly announced his resignationย during a Senate Housing, Transportation and Telecommunications Committee meeting Wednesday.

During Wednesdayโ€™s PFA board meeting, members also authorized execution of a four-year, $2,555,740 contract with Kahua Inc. for use of its project management information system. Before moving into executive session, the board approved amendments to the V.I. Disaster Recovery Officeโ€™s procurement policy to give Williams-Octalien more leeway to execute contracting documents and to expand the number of people authorized to make purchases up to $5,000.

โ€œYou know, this is a classic example of what Iโ€™m talking about,โ€ Gov. Albert Bryan Jr., who chairs the PFA board, said Wednesday. โ€œItโ€™s like, thereโ€™s so much work in the territory. Even if you bid, everybody get a job. If you canโ€™t find work in construction โ€ฆ something must be wrong.โ€

Audit: WAPA Delayed Nearly $450K in Employee Loan Payments While Prioritizing Fuel Costs

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An audit released Monday by the Office of the Virgin Islands Inspector General found that the Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority delayed nearly $450,000 in employee loan deductions โ€” in some cases for almost a year โ€” after management chose to prioritize fuel payments over other financial obligations during the utilityโ€™s cash flow crisis.

The report examined whether WAPA properly transmitted employee payroll deductions to financial institutions between 2021 and 2023. Those deductions include payments employees authorize to be withheld from their paychecks for personal loans, mortgages, retirement loans through the Government Employeesโ€™ Retirement System, and credit union accounts. Under WAPAโ€™s own general business practices, those deductions are supposed to be wired electronically the same day payroll is processed or delivered by check the next business day.

Instead, auditors found that during calendar years 2021 and 2022, โ€œWAPA was, at times, up to eleven months late in remitting employeesโ€™ loan deductions to GERS.โ€ Between April 2021 and April 2022, the authority delayed 29 consecutive pay periods of GERS loan remittances. In total, $447,950 in employee loan deductions was transmitted late. Monthly deductions ranged between roughly $25,000 and $55,000, according to the audit.

The delays were not attributed to clerical error. According to the audit, the utilityโ€™s financial crisis led management to make a conscious decision that โ€œother financial obligations, such as fuel costs, took priority over other expenses.โ€ In other words, the authority chose to direct limited cash toward purchasing fuel to keep generators operating rather than immediately forwarding certain payroll deductions to GERS.

For employees, the impact was not immediately visible. GERS does not report its secured loans to credit bureaus, meaning late remittances did not automatically harm workersโ€™ credit scores. Credit unions also worked with WAPA and employees to prevent late charges or negative reporting when delays occurred. But the consequences surfaced at a critical moment โ€” retirement, the audit stated.

Because GERS requires that employer retirement contributions be fully posted before loan balances are processed and retirees are placed on the retirement payroll, delayed remittances meant some employees could not begin receiving retirement benefits on schedule. As the audit states plainly, โ€œRetiring employees could not receive their retirement income until all outstanding funds were paid to GERS.โ€ In effect, money had been deducted from workersโ€™ paychecks, but the delay in transmitting it created a barrier when they attempted to transition out of active employment.

WAPA officials told auditors the decision was framed internally as a delay in GERS contributions generally and did not initially distinguish between retirement contributions and employee loan deductions. Officials said they became aware of the loan-related complications only after employees attempting to retire reported difficulties. The audit notes that management believed individual issues were rectified as they were brought to the agencyโ€™s attention.

The report also reviewed deductions transmitted to commercial banks and two local credit unions. Because many of those payments were issued by paper check rather than electronic transfer, auditors could not determine precisely when funds were delivered. Both credit unions reported that remittances were โ€œoften late,โ€ sometimes by up to a week and occasionally as long as three weeks. While those institutions collaborated with WAPA to prevent adverse consequences for borrowers, the audit found that the authority lacked a documented audit trail to verify when manual checks were actually delivered.

Auditors concluded that the delays stemmed from managementโ€™s handling of the utilityโ€™s cash flow crisis. While WAPAโ€™s governing board was informed that the authority faced financial strain, the report indicates that details about delaying GERS contributions were not formally presented for approval. Discussions with the Boardโ€™s Finance Committee were characterized as informational rather than requests for authorization.

The audit does reflect corrective action. WAPA began remitting outstanding loan deductions in May 2022, and by April 2023 had cleared all arrears owed to GERS. From May 2022 through December 2023, the utility made 43 consecutive on-time remittances. According to GERS records cited in the report, of 97 employees with loans reviewed, 89 have since paid their loans in full. The remaining seven current employeesโ€™ loans were up to date as of September 2025.

The Inspector General issued two recommendations: that WAPA strictly adhere to its policy requiring prompt transmission of employee-elected deductions and that it establish procedures to create a clear audit trail for manual checks delivered to financial institutions. WAPA agreed with both recommendations. One is considered resolved and implemented; the second is resolved but not yet fully implemented pending additional verification, the audit stated.

In its written response included in the audit, WAPAโ€™s governing board stated that retirees and active employees โ€œshould never bear the burdenโ€ of fiscal challenges and committed to strengthening internal controls and reporting compliance to its Finance and Audit Committee.

The audit was initiated in May 2023 after a senator of the 35th Legislature requested a review following concerns raised by WAPA personnel about whether payroll deductions were being forwarded as required. The Inspector General found no indication that WAPAโ€™s handling of employee loan remittances had previously been audited.

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