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Back Street Closed 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday – Saturday

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As work continues on the Charlotte Amalie Downtown Drainage Project, the Virgin Islands Department of Public Works advises the public of a road closure on a segment of Wimmelskafts Gade, also known as Back Street.

Starting on Monday, Nov. 10 DPW contractor โ€” Island Roads Corp. โ€” will close a segment of the roadway from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. to begin sidewalk and drainage system repairs in the vicinity. Motorists will be permitted to turn right off of Wimmelskafts Gade onto Raadetโ€™s Gade to access Dronningens Gade (Main Street).

This closure is scheduled to be completed by Saturday, Nov. 15.

All parked and abandoned vehicles must be removed to allow the contractor to complete the work as scheduled.

The Department of Public Works appreciates the community’s patience as it works to improve road conditions throughout the territory.

Fall Fling Splash ‘n Dash Race Coming Sunday

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The Junior Tri VI committee is excited to host the Fall Fling Splash ‘n Dash this coming Sunday, Nov. 16, at 8 a.m. at Bungalows on the Bay (formerly Chenay Bay). This swim/run event is open to kids of all abilities, ages 5 to 15.

The event will open with a point-to-point 25-meter swim for the 5-6 yr old category, a 50-meter swim for the 7-8 group, a 100-meter swim for the 9-11 group and a 200-meter swim for the senior group (ages 12-15). Flotation devices will be available for beginner swimmers.

After the swim, the racers will transition to the run, which will take place completely within the Bungalows property. The 5-6 group will run 1/4 mile, the 7-8 group will run a 1/2 mile, the 9-11 group will also run a 1/2 mile, and the oldest group – 12 to15 – will run a full mile. Sneakers must be worn for the run portion of the event.

Race-day registration will open at 7am and close at 7:45am. For more information, please contact 340-513-2707.

Lady Buccaneers Outlast Jarvis Christian at Tiffany Jackson HBCU Classic

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The University of the Virgin Islands womenโ€™s basketball team defeated Jarvis Christian University 53-46 in its first matchup of the Tiffany Jackson HBCU Classic on Friday night, held at the Mary E. Branch Gymnasium in Austin, Texas. This event, hosted by Huston-Tillotson, features the host school alongside UVI, Jarvis Christian, and Stillman College.

Junior guard Khaelii Robertson-Mack (Submitted photo)

UVI (2-2) opened the game sluggishly as its offense struggled initially. In a low-scoring first half, the Lady Buccaneers found themselves trailing by five points at the end of the period. A spirited second quarter surge allowed the Lady Buccaneers to take their first lead of the game at 17-16 on a made layup by senior forward Kashay Bass. UVI took a narrow 20-18 lead into the locker room at halftime.

In the second half, the two teams would trade baskets early on. During a pivotal stretch, UVI would extend its lead, highlighted by true freshman guard Ashlynn Lemos, with a flurry of baskets, scoring nine of her team’s next 10 points, establishing a 34-28 lead. However, a 14-2 run by Jarvis Christian enabled them to reclaim the lead. The resilient Lady Buccaneers would respond with a run of their own, tying the score at 42-all with another two-point basket by Bass. A crucial three-pointer by junior guard Atalia Thomas later secured the lead for UVI, ultimately sealing the 53-46 victory.

Bass emerged as the leading scorer for the Buccaneers, amassing 21 points, with 13 scored in the second half. The six-foot forward also contributed eight rebounds, three steals, and two blocks.

Junior forward Keshara Romain was dominant in the painted area for the Lady Buccaneers with another double-digit rebounding game, securing 18 rebounds. The current Historically Black Colleges and Universities Athletic Conference (HBCUAC) Defensive Player of the Week and Newcomer of the Week also recorded a season-high with seven blocks.

For the Lady Bulldogs, Jacy Reese led the team with 14 points.

Next, the Lady Buccaneers will face the Stillman College Lady Tigers on the second day of the Tiffany Jackson HBCU Classic. In their last matchup with this HBCUAC conference rival, the Lady Tigers emerged victorious. The Lady Buccaneers will be seeking revenge in the game scheduled to tip off at 1 p.m. Central Time at the Branch Gymnasium.

About UVI Athletics

The University of the Virgin Islands (UVI) is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and a member of the HBCU Athletic Conference (HBCUAC), formerly the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference (GCAC). Entering the 2025-26 season, the Buccaneers will begin their 19thย season of athletic competition. As the only Historically Black College or University (HBCU) in the Caribbean, UVI currently sponsors six sports, including menโ€™s and womenโ€™s cross country, menโ€™s and womenโ€™s basketball, and menโ€™s and womenโ€™s outdoor track and field. For more information on UVI Athletics, visit UVIAthletics.com.

Lady Buccaneers Surge in Texas But Fall Short to Stillman College

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The University of the Virgin Islands womenโ€™s basketball team fell to the Stillman College Lady Tigers 60-44 despite a second-half surge on the second day of the Tiffany Jackson HBCU Classic at the Mary E. Branch Gymnasium in Austin, Texas.

Freshman guard Ashlynn Lemos (Submitted photo)

UVI (2-3) found itself playing from behind from the opening tip as Stillman established an early lead. A turnover-plagued first half sent the Lady Buccaneers into halftime, facing a 14-point deficit of 31-17.

An inspired Lady Buccaneers team emerged from the locker room as they mounted a second-half comeback to bring themselves within striking distance. Senior forward Kashay Bass narrowed the gap to five points with two consecutive free throws, leaving 1:31 on the clock in the third quarter. UVI outscored Stillman 20-12 in the period, setting the stage for a potential comeback in the final quarter.

The comeback attempt continued in the fourth quarter as the Lady Buccaneers responded to Stillman’s scoring with offense of their own as the teams traded baskets early in the period. Despite bringing the lead down to just a two-possession game at 46-41, the comeback attempt faltered as the Lady Tigers maintained their lead and secured the victory.

Bass finished the game with her second double-double of the season, recording 16 rebounds and a career-high 23 points, 16 of which were scored in the second half, as she led her team in their second-half surge.

Senior forward Keshara Romain contributed 12 rebounds, while junior guard Arianna Renault added four assists.

The Lady Buccaneers will now set their sights on a matchup with Philander Smith University at Mims Gymnasium in Little Rock, Arkansas, on November 15. They will then travel to Hot Springs, Arkansas, to face Champion Christian College before returning to the Virgin Islands. Both games can be seen on www.UrbanEdgeNetwork.com.

Consider the Source with Adisha Penn

Stay informed with Consider the Source โ€” your weekly breakdown of the biggest stories across the U.S. Virgin Islands. This episode covers developments in the Calvert White bribery case, new historic housing in downtown Charlotte Amalie, a community-led donation to Cancer Support VI, the ongoing refinery deposition dispute on St. Croix, and updates on SNAP assistance during the federal shutdown. We also look at the latest from the Legislature, progress on the regulated cannabis rollout, questions surrounding WAPAโ€™s fuel contract, and standout performances from our young athletes representing the territory abroad. There’s always something new on Consider the Source!

Nana Baby Children’s Home Hosts Fourth Annual Tunes and Tacos Throwdown

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On Saturday, the fourth annual Tunesโ€ฏandโ€ฏTacosโ€ฏThrowdown fundraiser brought the St. Thomas community together at Magens Bay to support Nana Baby Childrenโ€™s Home.

The event, which featured 22 taco booths and 10 local vendors, was the largest throwdown yet. Live music was provided by several local acts, including the DubLab Reggae Band and the St. Thomas All Stars Steel Orchestra.

The St. Thomas All Stars Steel Orchestra performs at the Tunes and Tacos Throwdown event on Nov. 8, 2025. (Source Photo by Finn Sharpless)

Volunteer Terry Seabrook praised the eventโ€™s mission and the dedication of Nana Baby Children’s Home leaders. โ€œThis is my third year volunteering,โ€ Seabrook said. โ€œIโ€™m a retired person from the mainland, but I make sure Iโ€™m here to help because it means so much. Youโ€™ve got kids that donโ€™t have a place to sleep, and they take them in no matter the time of day or night. They really make a difference.โ€

Terry Seabrook brings smiles and island pride to the Tunes and Tacos Throwdown. (Source Photo by Finn Sharpless)

Several local organizations joined the effort to support Nana Baby Childrenโ€™s Home, ranging from health and wellness providers to longtime community fixtures and independent artists.

The Virgin Islands Childrenโ€™s Museum was among the supporters, with CEO Amber McCammon and Education and Outreach Coordinator Zenaide Rogers volunteering to run a booth with games and activities for children.

โ€œWeโ€™re a nonprofit ourselves, and we just want to support other nonprofits in the territory that are doing good work,โ€ McCammon said.

As the museum expands its outreach, including a โ€œTeen Timeโ€ program planned for December, Rogers said the organization โ€œsupports any cause that involves children. Nana Baby Home has been doing great community service for so many years. Itโ€™s wonderful that theyโ€™re getting recognized, and we want to continue to help with their mission.โ€ McCammon added that โ€œitโ€™s so important that local children and families have a safe place to go in times of trouble.โ€

Representatives from the Virgin Islands Childrenโ€™s Museum share interactive activities and information about upcoming programs at their community booth. (Source Photo by Finn Sharpless)

Wellness professionals were also on hand to highlight local services. Dr. Keisha Hamilton of the Chiropractic Health Center said, โ€œItโ€™s always a great event. We love the cause. The tacos are amazing, so it’s a win-win.โ€

Dr. Angelina J. Prince, a licensed clinical psychologist with Insight Psychological Services, emphasized the importance of mental health care in the community. โ€œWe look at any agency that’s providing critical care services to children, especially in our community, especially the underserved,โ€ Prince said. She added her support for the event. โ€œYouโ€™ve got amazing food. Youโ€™ve got the entire community coming together for a worthwhile cause. Itโ€™s a great way for us to unite and support each other.โ€

Insight Psychological Services team members showed up in full force to promote mental wellness and connect with the community. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

Antilles School alumni and staff joined the fundraiser to celebrate the schoolโ€™s 75th anniversary and highlight its commitment to community service. โ€œWe just want to make community outreach one of the pillars of our 75th year,โ€ said Amy Gurlea, alumni campaign chair and former faculty member.

Hugh Arnold, administrator of admission and advancement, added, โ€œToday, itโ€™s all about supporting Nana Baby and having fun.โ€ Gurlea described Nana Baby Home as โ€œan amazing cause โ€ฆ They create a family and community for kids.โ€

Antilles School alumni and staff serve up good food and community spirit at the Tunes and Tacos Throwdown, celebrating the schoolโ€™s 75th anniversary while supporting Nana Baby Home. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

At the fundraiser, local food vendors and chefs brought creativity and community spirit to the competition. A representative from An Hour Late said, โ€œWeโ€™ve been supporting since day one,โ€ noting that this year they were competing in the dessert taco category with cannoli tacos. โ€œLast year, we made ice cream tacos. It was a lot of fun.โ€

Chef Pepe, representing St. Thomas Restaurant Group, made his debut in the competition. โ€œItโ€™s my first time competing, itโ€™s really nice,โ€ he said.

A taco entry by St. Thomas Restaurant Group at the Tunes and Tacos Throwdown highlights the creativity and flavor local chefs brought to the friendly competition in support of Nana Baby Children’s Home. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

Chef Ashley, representing his team, emphasized the eventโ€™s mission. โ€œEveryone needs to support Nana Baby,โ€ he said. โ€œI love the competition and canโ€™t wait for next year.โ€

Chef Ashley and his team bring flavor and heart to the Tunes and Tacos Throwdown. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)
Taco prepared by Chef Ashley (Source Photo by Finn Sharpless)

Tricia Homer, host for the event, praised the fundraiser and its organizers. โ€œI donโ€™t know of any other organization that does what they do here on the island,โ€ she said. โ€œI saw the way the community comes out and supports them. That inspired me to reach out.โ€

Event host Tricia Homer energizes the crowd at the Tunes and Tacos Throwdown, praising the fundraiserโ€™s community impact and spirit of giving. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

After the judges cast their votes, the results were: In the Taco Competition, the Vegetarian Taco category was won by Sun & Sea Bar and Grill, followed by Dive Bar in second place and Chef Ashley in third. Sun & Sea Bar and Grill also claimed first place in the Meat Taco category, with Caribbean Fish Market in second and Movinโ€™ Too Spicy in third. Alphonso Betty won the Fish Taco category, followed by Agave Red Hook in second and VI Pizza Pop Up in third. In the Dessert Taco category, An Hour Late earned first place, VI Pizza Pop Up was second, and Agave Havensight placed third.

Representatives from An Hour Late celebrate their first-place win in the dessert taco category with Nana Baby Children’s Home Executive Director Darian Torrice-Hairston. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

In the Margarita Competition, La Marina Bar & Restaurantโ€™s Sauvignon Blanc Margarita took first place, followed by Tillet Garden Productionsโ€™ Watermelon Margarita in second and Agave Red Hook in third. The Peopleโ€™s Choice Awards went to Rock City Tacos for tacos and La Marina Bar & Restaurantโ€™s Sauvignon Blanc Margarita for margaritas.

Rock City celebrates its win for the Peopleโ€™s Choice Taco with Nana Baby Children’s Home Executive Director Darian Torrice-Hairston. (Source Photo by Finn Sharpless)

Darian Torrice-Hairston, executive director of Nana Baby Children’s Home and organizer of the event, called this yearโ€™s fundraiser โ€œsuper successful,โ€ noting it was the largest yet, with 22 taco booths and 10 local vendors. โ€œIf you’re doing a good thing, it grows,โ€ she said, crediting sponsors and competitors for making the expanded event possible.

Funds raised this year will support the creation of aย teen program at Nana Baby Children’s Home. โ€œWe see a more pressing need for the teenage population,โ€ Torrice-Hairston said, noting there are no homes for teenagers on St. Thomas. She added that the fundraiser โ€œis basically going to help us become two organizations, so we can support kids of all ages, in all of their different walks of life.โ€

She expressed gratitude to the community for all the support and expressed optimism that next year’s Tunes and Tacos Throwdown will be even bigger.

A crowd celebrates during the fourth annual Tunes and Tacos fundraiser for the Nana Baby Childrenโ€™s Home. (Source photo by Finn Sharpless)

BVI Lit Fest Childrenโ€™s Program Centers Local Creatives and Cultural Tradition

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For the third year, the Childrenโ€™s Program at the BVI Lit Fest put the focus on local creatives, giving a younger generation the chance to connect with the seasoned musicians, writers, and visual storytellers who shape the culture around them.

Saturday on Tortola, Kamyce Penn-Oโ€™Neal, who helps to organize the experience under the guidance of Rochelle Smith, director of the H. Lavity Stoutt Community College Virgin Islands Studies Institute, said the structure of the day is intentional.

BVI photographer Shaun Black showed his group how to work a professional shoot (Source photo by Ananta Pancham)

โ€œThis part of the festival is strictly about our local authors and creatives,โ€ she said. โ€œEvery year we continue to get more creative, to expand. The parents enjoy it as much as the children, and we want to keep building so the numbers can double and triple in the years ahead.โ€

This yearโ€™s presenters included childrenโ€™s author Rick S.S. Grant, photographer Shaun Black, multimedia visual artist Via Donovan-Hodge, and musician Kayron Todman of the Razor Blades fungi band, each leading sessions aimed at sparking curiosity, creativity, and cultural grounding. The progression of the day moved with the age groups, from reading circles for younger children to hands-on art and music demonstrations for older elementary students.

Culture bearer Kayron Todman leads his group in a game of musical chairs set to fungi music (Source photo by Ananta Pancham)

Todman, who serves as a School Improvement Officer for the BVIโ€™s Ministry of Education, led a workshop on fungi music โ€” known in the U.S. Virgin Islands as quelbe. He spoke to students about the history of the music, its roots, and its role as a form of storytelling that has carried the experiences of Virgin Islanders across generations. He explained the instruments used in fungi bands and how they each contribute to the sound, demonstrating the link between musical rhythm and narrative memory.

He said the music is personal to him, formed through time spent with older tradition-bearers. โ€œI grew up hanging out with the older guys, like my grandfather, going out during Christmas and New Yearโ€™s serenading from house to house,โ€ Todman said. โ€œIt became ingrained in me. So now itโ€™s about passing it on to the younger generation.โ€ Seeing studentsโ€™ excitement, he added, was the highlight. โ€œSeeing the smiles on their faces and getting them involved โ€” thatโ€™s the part that matters.โ€

Saturday gave children’s book author Rick Grant the chance to engage young readers in a storytelling session featuring his books (Source photo by Ananta Pancham)

In the next room, Grant concluded a reading session with children ages four to seven, sharing all four of his books before transitioning into a collaborative painting activity with Donovan-Hodge, who explained how pictures can also tell a story. He guided students through conversations about what stories can do โ€” how they can express emotion, record memory, and offer new ways to see familiar surroundings.

โ€œReading is fundamental โ€” itโ€™s the crux of life,โ€ Grant said. โ€œBeing able to impart knowledge and read with children and just engage is really important to me.โ€ He emphasized that storytelling is not something reserved for adults. โ€œYou get to tell your stories as a writer, and when you put pen to paper, the world gets to see it. I wanted to inspire imagination, to get them thinking about the feelings in the stories and how they might tell their own.โ€

Penn-Oโ€™Neal said that having presenters who are not only artists but also community stewards and educators is key. Many of them were teachers to todayโ€™s parents โ€“ and in some cases, to Penn-Oโ€™Neal herself, who spoke about her experiences with Todman as her music teacher.

โ€œItโ€™s important for the children to see that the people who taught us are still here, still contributing,โ€ she said. โ€œTheyโ€™re not just performing; theyโ€™re explaining the culture, the origins, and the stories behind what they do.โ€

She stressed that the intention is not nostalgia, but continuity. โ€œWe as adults keep culture close to us, but it has to start with the children,โ€ she said. โ€œWhen they meet the people who hold these traditions, they understand that culture isnโ€™t something in the past โ€“ itโ€™s something living, and theyโ€™re part of it.โ€

As the festival looks toward next year, Penn-Oโ€™Neal said the goal is steady growth โ€” not just in attendance, but in depth of connection. โ€œWe want more children, more families, more conversations,โ€ she said. โ€œThis is where storytelling begins.โ€

Op-Ed: The Lounge | A Column for Men: Why We Need to Crack the Myths

In his biweekly column, Langley Shazor speaks to issues important to men within the territory.

For generations, manhood has been passed down like an old toolset. Some of what we inherited was sturdy and worth keeping. Things like responsibility, protection, and sacrifice had value. They gave shape to our sense of duty and helped us build lives around stability and provision. But mixed in with the good were ideas that no longer fit the times or the truth. Some were never true to begin with. They were just repeated long enough to sound sacred.

We were told what a man should be, how he should sound, and what he should never show. We learned early that tears were a liability, that pain was something to swallow, and that silence somehow meant strength. We learned that respect was earned through control and that success was proven through how much we could carry without complaint. We grew up measuring our worth by how little we needed, how long we could endure, and how well we could pretend.

Those lessons made sense in the world our fathers and grandfathers knewโ€”a world that rewarded endurance over expression. But somewhere along the way, those lessons stopped protecting us and started imprisoning us.

The result is a generation of men who are proud, capable, and exhausted. Men who love deeply but struggle to say it out loud. Men who work tirelessly but feel unseen. Men who lead but rarely feel led. We have become experts at holding everything together while quietly falling apart.

This series, The Myth Cracker, is not an attack on manhood. It is an invitation to recover it.

It is about separating strength from suffering, discipline from detachment, and confidence from arrogance. It is about reimagining what it means to be a man in a time when the world no longer needs us to be unbreakable, it needs us to be real.

We live in a time when old ideas are colliding with new realities. The image of manhood we grew up with does not fit the life most of us are living now. We are raising children who are emotionally aware. We are loving women who are bold, independent, and honest. We are leading in spaces that require empathy, creativity, and emotional intelligence. The silent, stoic model of manhood no longer works. It does not build homes, heal relationships, or sustain peace.

Yet many of us still carry that image like armor. We think it protects us when, in truth, it only keeps us separate from others and from ourselves.

Every myth we unpack in this series will touch something real because it lives in all of us. These ideas shaped how we worked, loved, and led. They shaped how we hid. But the truth is, manhood was never meant to be a performance. It was meant to be a process.

A man becomes by evolving, not by pretending.

There is nothing weak about change. The willingness to unlearn is not rebellionโ€”it is wisdom. We do not dishonor our fathers by growing beyond them. We honor them by carrying forward the parts that still serve us and leaving behind what does not.

That is the spirit of The Myth Cracker Series.

This series will challenge what we have accepted as truth about men. It will dismantle the illusions that keep us from living freely and loving fully. We will talk about the myth that real men do not need help and how that mindset has turned too many brothers into silent prisoners. We will confront the belief that a manโ€™s worth is tied to his wallet and how it robs us of peace and purpose. We will look at the notion that manhood is earned through dominance and why that kind of control is just disguised insecurity. We will take apart the pressure to always have the answers and show why humility is not weakness but strength. And we will end with a reflection on fatherhood, why being present means more than paying bills and how legacy is about connection, not control.

This series will not lecture. It will not preach. It will speak plainly, as one man to another, as one voice to a culture that has forgotten how to be honest about the weight of being a man.

The world does not need perfect men. It needs whole ones. Men who can listen, admit, forgive, and grow. Men who can lead with both courage and care. Men who understand that strength without tenderness becomes tyranny and that silence without purpose becomes suffering.

We were not created to be shells of strength. We were meant to be sources of life.

It is time for a new definition of manhood, one built on truth, integrity, and accountability. The myths have lasted long enough. They have divided fathers from sons, husbands from wives, and brothers from brothers. They have left too many of us hiding behind hard exteriors while craving the permission to breathe.

The only way forward is through honesty.

That is the work of a myth cracker. Not to destroy what was, but to reveal what is real. To take the pieces we inherited and rebuild something that can stand the test of time. Something rooted in truth, grounded in compassion, and shaped by purpose.

If we are brave enough to tell the truth about what we have believed, then we are brave enough to build what comes next.

So, letโ€™s begin.

Editorโ€™s Note: Opinion articles do not represent the views of the Virgin Islands Source newsroom and are the sole expressed opinion of the writer. Submissions can be made toย visource@gmail.com.ย 

Student Arrested After Loaded Firearm Found at St. Croix Central High School

A 17-year-old student was arrested Friday morning after officers recovered a fully loaded firearm at St. Croix Central High School, the Virgin Islands Police Department reported.

At about 8:08 a.m. Friday, officers from the School Security Bureau assigned to the campus were alerted by school officials that a student had made threats to shoot anyone who approached, police said. Officers and school staff immediately took precautionary safety measures and searched the studentโ€™s backpack, where they found a black-colored, fully loaded firearm.

The student was arrested for carrying a firearm openly or concealed and transported to the Youth Rehabilitation Center pending an advice of rights hearing.

Police said they are continuing to work in coordination with the Virgin Islands Education Department to maintain safety on school grounds.

The department urged anyone with information about weapons or threats on school campuses to contact law enforcement or school administrators.

Weekly Weather Forecast With Jesse Daley

Check out our weekly weather forecast with Jesse Daley, covering Sunday, Nov. 9, through Saturday, Nov. 15. Our YouTube playlist is updated every week, AND check out Jesseโ€™s daily weather updates here.

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