Home Blog Page 365

World Ocean School Announces 2025 Summer Marine Education Program

An ornate schooner with passengers aboard sails on calm waters. (Photo courtesy World Ocean School)

The World Ocean School invites students in the Virgin Islands to apply for their Summer Ambassador Programs, which offer a unique opportunity to engage in an immersive sailing program aboard a historic tall ship named the Denis Sullivan.

The Summer Ambassador Program, which targets children between ages 12-15 takes participants on a week-long voyage along the New England coastline, with opportunities to dock in Maine, Cape Cod, and Rhode Island. Scheduled from August 1-8, students will learn the fundamentals of sailing, participate in marine science workshops, study coastal ecology, and engage in team-building activities.

Nona Hunter, the World Ocean School program manager, believes this opportunity is special because it targets the growth of the whole child, inclusive of activities that not only build upon pedagogical knowledge but also social and emotional development. โ€œOne of the unique qualities of this summer sailing program is that no prior experience is required and the group size is capped at 18 children to ensure opportunities for personalized instruction from a Coast Guard licensed captain, marine educators, and professional crew, said Hunter.

Children clasp hands while jumping off a sailboat during the summer program. (Photo courtesy World Ocean School)

โ€œWe challenge students to push their boundaries and what they perceive to be possible. They will get to meet students from all over the world and travel to places they have never been before. We want children to leave our program more confident and more inspired to try new things,โ€ Hunter continued.

Older students ages 16-19 are encouraged to apply for the Advanced Ambassador Program, which offers an advanced curriculum focused on honing leadership skills and maritime expertise. This program, fundamentally based on hands-on learning experiences, will support students in learning advanced navigation techniques, environmental stewardship projects, and greater leadership roles in ship responsibilities.

In an effort to make these transformative programs accessible, the World Ocean School offers need-based scholarships that families are encouraged to inquire about when applying. Applications for both programs can be found on the schoolโ€™sย website, and interested applicants are encouraged to apply as soon as possible, due to space limitations.

Anyone who has any questions can contact Nona Hunter at info@worldoceanschool.org.

Sewer Line Collapse on Veterans Drive

0

The Virgin Islands Waste Management Authority informs the community of a collapsed 42-inch underground gravity sewer line on Veterans Drive, east of Banco Popular. This situation may contribute to sewer-related issues in the downtown St. Thomas area and could potentially result in a sanitary sewer overflow.

The affected infrastructure is part of an aging cast-iron pipe network scheduled for a full replacement.

This long-term upgrade will provide a more reliable system and help prevent similar incidents in the future.

Motorists and pedestrians are urged to exercise caution in the area, as exposure to wastewater runoff can pose serious health risks due to the presence of harmful contaminants. Residents are advised to avoid areas showing signs of possible sewage discharge, including discolored water, strong odors, and any runoff near manholes, gutters, or drainage paths.

VIWMA crews are actively working to restore operations as quickly and safely as possible. We appreciate the communityโ€™s patience and understanding during this necessary repair effort.

Prosperity Farm Distillery Farm to Bottle Tasting Tour

0
Prosperity Farm Distillery (submitted photo)

Prosperity Farm Distillery announces the official launch of its Farm to Bottle Tasting Tourโ€”a guided, immersive experience that is the first of its kind on St. Croix. Located on 180 lush acres just minutes from downtown Frederiksted and accessible via Hammโ€™s Bluff Road, the tour offers Guests a deeper look at sustainable sugarcane farming, hands-on craft distilling, and the cultural significance of the historic Estate Prosperity.

Tours are available Wednesday through Sunday, from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with departures every 30 minutes. No reservations are currently required. Admission is $35 per Guest.

Designed as a full-sensory journey, the tour invites Guests to walk through heirloom cane fields, witness the craft of distillation in real time, explore restored ruins, and conclude in the air-conditioned Farmhouse Tasting Room. The experience includes a premium craft cocktail and a flight of three of our six housemade spirits, offering a true taste of our small-batch approach to Virgin Islands distilling.

Opened in May 2025, Prosperity Farm Distillery is more than a working micro-distilleryโ€”it is a landmark of heritage and innovation. From its scenic grounds and sweeping ocean views to its commitment to local sourcing and community engagement, every element of the experience is curated to inspire, educate, and delight.

What to Expect on the Farm to Bottle Tasting Tour:

  • A guided walkthrough of the farmโ€™s cane fields, ruins, and production process
  • Ocean vistas and scenic landscaped grounds
  • A premium cocktail and tasting flight featuring housemade spirits
  • Access to the Farmhouse Boutique, featuring locally made goods and gifts
  • A relaxed and informative atmosphere in the Farmhouse Tasting Room

Visitors presenting a promotional tour card will receive a complimentary premium craft cocktail as part of their visitโ€”an added gesture that blends cultural appreciation with authentic Crucian hospitality.

With a strong commitment to sustainability and cultural preservation, Prosperity Farm Distillery stands as a symbol of St. Croixโ€™s agricultural revival and entrepreneurial spirit. Whether Guests are history buffs, craft spirit enthusiasts, or simply curious travelers, theyโ€™ll leave with a deeper appreciation for the land and the labor that goes into every bottle.

Located on Plantation Road and entered via Hammโ€™s Bluff Road, Prosperity Farm Distillery is easily accessible from the Frederiksted pier and offers convenient Guest parking behind and east of The Farmhouse.

Tour Schedule

Days: Wednesday โ€“ Sunday

Hours: 10:00 AM โ€“ 4:00 PM (Every 30 minutes)

Price: $35 per Guest

Reservations: Currently not required

Location: Plantation Road, Frederiksted, St. Croix

Entrance: Hammโ€™s Bluff Road

Phone: 304-204-3433

Website: www.ProsperityFarmDistillery.com

Security, Berthing, and Parking for St. John Celebration

0

The St. John Celebration 2025 Village opened on Sunday, June 29, in Cruz Bay. The Virgin Islands Port Authority encourages the community to remember these guidelines to make this Celebration season safe and enjoyable for everyone:

SECURITY: Safety measures will be increased at VIPAโ€™s seaports, specifically in Red Hook, St. Thomas, and Cruz Bay, St. John. Travelers should anticipate encountering Port Police and other law enforcement officers conducting security screenings and searches. The St. John Carnival Committee has requested these measures to ensure a safe festival experience for the community and visitors.

BERTHING: Please adhere to the posted signs prohibiting vessel berthing at the Victor Sewer Marine Facility (the Creek) in Cruz Bay. Berthing space at this location is reserved for law enforcement vessels. Any privately owned boats found in these reserved spaces will be removed.

PARKING: Travelers to St. John may park in the Urman V. Fredericks Marine Terminal if space is available. Users will be charged the normal parking rates to exit the facility. The parking rates are posted in the garage and on VIPAโ€™s website, www.viport.com/seaport-parking.

โ€œHow to Applyโ€ Grant-Funding Workshops

The Virgin Islands Council on the Arts is excited to announce a series of mandatory โ€œHow to Applyโ€ workshops for individuals and organizations interested in applying for grant funding in the upcoming cycle.

These workshops are a required step for all prospective applicants and will provide essential guidance on the application process, eligibility criteria, key deadlines, and strategies for crafting strong, competitive proposals. Attendees will also have the opportunity to engage directly with VICA staff and get answers to their questions.

Workshop Schedule:

โ€ข July 10, 2025 โ€“ Virtual Session

โ€ข July 24, 2025 โ€“ In-Person Session on St. Croix at Dorsch Center in Frederiksted

โ€ข August 7, 2025 โ€“ Virtual Session

โ€ข August 21, 2025 โ€“ In-Person Session on St. Thomas at the VICA Office

To be eligible for grant consideration, participants must attend at least one of the scheduled sessions.

These workshops are designed to ensure that all applicants are well-prepared and that their proposals align with VICAโ€™s mission to foster artistic and cultural development throughout the Virgin Islands.

Registration Information:

To register or learn more, please contact the Virgin Islands Council on the Arts at (340) 774-5984, (340) 773-3075, or email shhnaaz.alameen@dpnr.vi.gov.

Please note: Space is limited for in-person sessions, so early registration is strongly encouraged.

Photo Focus: St. John Celebration Village Day Two

On the second Village night, the Source dropped in on refreshment stands with varied menus for food and drink offerings, bound to please any palate.

Shuga Shack – Booth No. 12

Sisters Georgia and Valerie Parakis say they picked up the Village tradition from Valerie Parakisโ€™ mother-in-law. These two local ladies and their crew draw on their Greek heritage to produce gyro wraps, souvlaki, and falafel, but also pates and conch fritters. Crispy onion rings are fried up fresh, but the team is especially proud of their deep-fried Oreos.

Electric Lemonade is the popular drink to wash it all down with at Shuga Shack.

(Source photo by Judi Shimel)

Drinkerโ€™s Paradise – Booth No. 16

โ€œThe name of our booth is because weโ€™ve got specialty drinks for everyone; whatever you want, we prepare for you,โ€ said Drinkerโ€™s Paradise operator Raymond Athanese. The assortment on the serving shelf says it all.

Booth No. 16 also serves chowder — conch and seafood, along with pates, chicken and johnny cakes. The daily specials menu is posted in the booth.

(Source photo by Judi Shimel)

Athanese says he has been sharing the duties at Drinkerโ€™s Paradise since it first opened and continues the tradition in memory of his late partner Rehugh Hendricks Jr.

Local & Tasty – Booth No. 10

Leah Ridiere has been serving Village customers for 25 years. Commonly known as the roti booth, Local and Tasty had goat water and chicken soup on the menu. โ€œWe also have different food — curry chicken, stew chicken served with rice and beans, veggies, veggie noodles, provisions,โ€ Ridiere said.

Local fruit flavors go into the rum punch. Non-alcoholic native fruit drinks are also on sale.

(Source photo by Judi Shimel)

Steppinโ€™ Out with the Joneses – Booth No. 2

Jennifer Jones Williams has been serving red pea soup and johnny cakes to Village patrons for 14 years. A cucumber-ginger punch is made ready to refresh. An artistic display invites the public to come on by.

(Source photo by Judi Shimel)

Raises for Some, Perks for Others: Bryan Deflects Blame and Calls Special Session Amid Fiscal Blowback

Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. on Monday defended the controversial implementation of executive pay raises, insisted he did not personally authorize them, and announced a special legislative session within the next three weeks to address what he framed as long-overdue retirement reformsโ€”specifically targeting a provision in Virgin Islands law that allows senators to collect both a government pension and a legislative annuity simultaneously.

At the heart of the governorโ€™s remarks was a pointed rebuttal to public outcry over pay adjustments given to executive branch employees, including himself and Lieutenant Governor Tregenza Roach. The raises, Bryan said, were not his doingโ€”but rather the result of legislation enacted by the 34th Legislature and implemented under the law.

Bryan addressed the controversy around his own compensation head-on, saying he never requested or authorized a raise and would be returning the difference.

โ€œI took this job with a salary thatโ€™s been established for almost 20 years,โ€ he said. โ€œI didnโ€™t ask for a raise, didnโ€™t propose legislation to get a raise, didnโ€™t sign any legislation to implement a raise, and I certainly didnโ€™t give myself a raise.โ€ He said his administration simply followed the law enacted by the 34th Legislature, which implemented the recommendations of the 2022 Public Officials Compensation Commission.

But with legislatureโ€™s override of his veto on Bill No.โ€ฏ36โ€‘0085, which effectively rescinded the raises, Bryan acknowledged the political pressure and said he would take personal action.ย โ€œSo my salary is back to $150,000,โ€ he said, adding he would return the excess funds. โ€œIโ€™ll write a checkโ€”as soon as one of you calculate that,โ€ he said, adding that he wants to take himself out of the conversation. He emphasized that the other executive raises would remain in place, including retroactive payments. โ€œThe Legislatureโ€™s attack on me shouldnโ€™t affect other government employees,โ€ he said.

He also challenged critics who called for rescinding the raises, noting that โ€œjudges make $225k,โ€ and that instrumentalities like the University of the Virgin Islands and V.I. Water and Power Authority pay executives well above the new gubernatorial salary, revealed last week to be a little more than $201,000.

What Bryan did not shy away from was one particular inequity that he said deserves immediate legislative attention: a provision in Virgin Islands law that allows sitting or former senators to draw both their government pension and a legislative annuity for life, even while collecting a paycheck from the government.

โ€œIf I run for delegate or legislature, I have to forfeit my retirement until I leave office. But senators? They get to keep their pension and collect a full paycheck. Thatโ€™s a carve-out in the law just for them,โ€ Bryan said.

Under Title 3, Chapter 27, ยงโ€ฏ714 of the Virgin Islands Code, any senator who serves at least six years is entitled to a lifetime legislative service annuity, starting at age 50, regardless of other government income. The law specifically states: โ€œNotwithstanding any other provision of law, any member of the Legislature who becomes eligible for an annuity under this section may receive such annuity concurrently with any other annuity or salary to which such member is entitled.โ€

In plain terms: while other government employees must choose between their pension or a government paycheck during re-employment, senators get both.

Bryan said this long-standing double-dipping policy is part of the reason he is calling the Legislature into special sessionโ€”though he was quick to clarify that the goal isnโ€™t to target sitting senators, but rather to close loopholes, ensure fairness, and protect the long-term health of the GERS.

โ€œThis is not going to affect anyoneโ€™s access to government services or delay anyoneโ€™s paycheck,โ€ Bryan said. โ€œBut we have to fix this. We canโ€™t keep asking the public to sacrifice while these exceptions stay buried in the law.โ€

Bryan said the special session would also take up legislation to expand health insurance options for retireesโ€”particularly those under age 65 who lose employer-sponsored coverage but arenโ€™t yet eligible for Medicare.

One measure, he explained, would offer a government-sponsored insurance option to bridge that gap. โ€œWeโ€™re looking at at least $17 million in additional funding for insurance,โ€ he said. โ€œThis would allow us to support pre-65 retirees who currently have no viable coverage after leaving service.โ€

Bryan also wants lawmakers to revisit a policy that requires government employees to resign before seeking elected officeโ€”a rule that he said unfairly discourages public servants from participating in democracy.

โ€œWhen youโ€™re in the private sector, you can run and keep your job. But in government, you have to quit,โ€ he said. โ€œWe want to give people the opportunity to run for office without risking their livelihood.โ€

He added that this proposal is part of a broader effort to make elections more accessible, particularly for younger candidates and those without independent wealth. โ€œWe want teachers, firefighters, and line staff to be able to step up and lead, just like anyone else,โ€ Bryan said.

Base Salary Hike Tension and Legal Questions

Though not on the special session agenda, Bryan also pushed back on a separate lawโ€”Bill No. 36-0053, which he vetoed but senators overrode last weekโ€”that raises the base salary for government employees from $27,040 to $35,000. While Bryan said he supports higher wages, he criticized the measure for bypassing the negotiation process and lacking a funding source.

โ€œItโ€™s not that I donโ€™t want people to get the moneyโ€”they deserve it. But you have to do it responsibly,โ€ he said. โ€œWhen you place mandates like this during ongoing negotiations, it undercuts the process. We want everyone to get their step increases and fair raises, but we need to do it in partnership.โ€

He said his administration is already in active discussions with unions representing teachers, nurses, police officers, and other public workers, and that the FY 2026 executive budget includes appropriations to support wage increases and step raises across the board.

Bryan added that the government is now preparing to take the matter to courtโ€”arguing that lawmakers overstepped their authority by enacting compensation changes that traditionally fall under the executiveโ€™s jurisdiction.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t about opinion anymore,โ€ Bryan said. โ€œAll these issues will be decided by the court.โ€

He added that some of the legal questions involvedโ€”including whether senators can legally set their own salariesโ€”may need to be resolved in federal court, not local court.

โ€œWe may have to file in District Court,โ€ he said. โ€œSome of these issues are conflicts for local judgesโ€”like who decides their pay, and can they legally set their own salaries?โ€

At the same time, the Government Employeesโ€™ Retirement System is scheduled to implement a 3 percent increase in the employer contribution rate on Oct. 1, 2025. Together with the salary hikes, Bryan warned, these mounting obligations could overwhelm the governmentโ€™s financial capacity and undo the economic progress made during his tenure.

โ€œWe are taking on massive recurring costs without a clear plan for how to pay for them,โ€ Bryan said. โ€œThat is a recipe for fiscal instability.โ€

In what may have been the most sobering portion of Mondayโ€™s briefing, Bryan warned that the territory is at risk of slipping back into a cycle of reckless spending followed by forced austerity.

โ€œEvery time things start to look goodโ€”more employment, more revenueโ€”somebody pushes too far, and we end up with layoffs,โ€ he said, referencing previous periods of government expansion followed by cuts. โ€œI donโ€™t want to go back there.โ€

WAPA Board Extends 2025 Budget, Expects Continued Deficit in 2026

0
The V.I. Water and Power Authority governing board convened Monday to consider the utilityโ€™s 2026 budget. (Screenshot from Mondayโ€™s meeting)

The V.I. Water and Power Authorityโ€™s governing board failed to adopt an operating budget for the coming fiscal year Monday, opting instead to temporarily extend the current yearโ€™s budget plan amid board membersโ€™ concerns about the utilityโ€™s continued deficit.

The vote to extend this yearโ€™s budget came after a failed motion by member Maurice Muia to table the matter and the boardโ€™s subsequent failed attempt to adopt the 2026 budget. Members Cheryl Boynes-Jackson and Kyle Fleming voted in favor, and members Hubert Turnbull and Muia voted against. WAPAโ€™s chief executive, Karl Knight, noted in response that โ€œthereโ€™s not much for me to work on.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve presented a very realistic spending plan that captures what I believe is public knowledge: that the authority still has its fiscal challenges and does not collect sufficient revenues through its rates to cover full operating expenses โ€” as catalogued in our presentation today,โ€ he said, adding that the fiscal picture improves once federal reimbursements are taken into account. โ€œButโ€ฆ certainly, the management team remains at the whim of the board to reconvene to discuss this item at the boardโ€™s choosing.โ€

During Mondayโ€™s board meeting, which was rescheduled after a cancellation last Thursday, WAPA Chief Financial Officer Lorraine Kelly told board members that the 2026 budget anticipates $287.2 million in electric revenues at a cost of $313.9 million. Water revenues are expected to bring in $38 million against $34.1 million in outflow. Asked to describe other projected costs, Kelly listed: advertising and promotions; engineering services; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency expenses; legal fees; maintenance; materials and supplies; office supplies; and others.

โ€œAnd the total of that has a magnitude of approximately $26.1 million,โ€ she said, which currently amounts to seven percent of the utilityโ€™s budget.

After the board failed to adopt the 2026 budget and before it voted to extend the utilityโ€™s current one, Knight reported that WAPAโ€™s deficit is shrinking.

โ€œOur rates do not cover our full expenses as a utility,โ€ he said. โ€œThat has not changed with this budget proposal, although the budget deficit has shrunk by more than 50 percent since the beginning of the last fiscal year. So the budget deficit is closing, but thereโ€™s still some work to be done.โ€

After adjustments, he said, the deficit could be around $18.4 million.

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t change our revenue forecast,โ€ he said. โ€œWhat it does mean is that some of the funding gap can be filled with federal dollars, whereas when we began the process of drafting the budgetโ€ฆ those approvals had not yet been received, and so the budget โ€” conservatively โ€” was drafted without the anticipation of those budget approvals. Now that those are realized, that allows us to shrink what we had forecasted as a potential shortfall.โ€

During Mondayโ€™s meeting, the board also approved a largely federally-funded $864,550 trio of seawater intake screens to mitigate the impact of sargassum on St. Croix, an up to $16 million, two-year contract for debris removal and disposal with Hoagland VI, and a $225,000, six-month extension with West Peak Energy for work on the utilityโ€™s Wartsila generators.

Maxwell George, WAPAโ€™s director of project management, said the extension was needed as the utility is โ€œslowly getting to confident that weโ€™ll be getting the Wartsilas back next month.โ€

The board also voted to close out advertising a request for qualifications to provide liquid propane gas for the Randolph Harley and Richmond power plants on St. Thomas and St. Croix, respectively.

Knight said the utilityโ€™s evaluation committee โ€œis of the opinion that the solicitation process failed to meet the objectives of the RFP, and so that is their recommendation โ€” that we close out the process with no award being made.โ€

Puppies Help Recruit Volunteers

0

The large field at Leatherback Brewery was full of frolicking puppies Sunday while Ruff Start STX signed up people to volunteer to help the animal rescue save lives or to adopt one of the dogs.

Frankieโ€™s foster mom, Mary Pat Strasser, Ruff Start volunteer, will accompany the pup to her new home in Maryland soon. (Source photo by Susan Ellis)

โ€œWeโ€™re having a good turnout. A lot of our dogs are here. We have 80 dogs in our care almost all of the time. In and out. Theyโ€™re all in foster homes besides three dogs that live in our office in Frederiksted, and theyโ€™re moving along to their foster homes soon,โ€ Katie Nelson, founder and president of Ruff Start, told the Source.

Ruff Start volunteer Mary Pat Strasser talked to people interested in fostering dogs. She has fostered around 20-25 dogs annually for the last three years until they were adopted. Frankie is her current foster dog who she will accompany to Maryland, where a permanent home is waiting. People can pick the dog they want to foster and commit to a short period or a long period of time, she said.

โ€œThere have been a good amount of inquiries today,โ€ Strasser said about potential foster parents.

Other volunteers deliver supplies and accompany dogs scheduled to fly to the mainland. They also take them to veterinarian appointments, clinics, and cruise ship events.

Ruff Startโ€™s free monthly health clinic is manned by volunteers who register people and pups or dispense medication.

Volunteer Laurie Fideo talked to people about helping the pups on cruise ship day. From 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., volunteers mind puppies who play with visitors and talk to people about the organization.

โ€œItโ€™s kind of a public service. The cruise ship passengers are lonely for their own dogs,โ€ she said.

Ruff Start volunteer Ryan Flagel relaxes with his foster dog at Leatherback Brewery Sunday.
(Source photo by Susan Ellis)

Fideo also talked about Ruff Startโ€™s education program in St. Croix schools. Volunteers visit and talk to students in all grades about caring for their pets. She said the students seem to pay attention.

Around 300 puppies and grown dogs have been flown to the mainland during the first three months of 2025. Big dogs flew on Amerijet to agencies or individuals who have arranged for homes in advance.

A way to get small pets to the mainland to permanent homes is to have them travel with passengers who are already traveling to certain destinations. They meet at the airport, and Ruff Start delivers a clean kennel, with food, water, toys, and of course, the dog. Once they arrive at their destination, they pass the puppy to the adopter who meets the flight.

Volunteers usually keep big dogs in their homes for the last few days before they travel. They are given a carrier, leash, food and water, and whatever else is needed until the travel date. On that day, the volunteer delivers the dog to Flemings Transport next to the airport and keeps the canine company until the flight leaves.

Three dogs introduce themselves to each other Sunday at Leatherback Breweryโ€™s event for Ruff Start. (Source photo by Susan Ellis)

Volunteers are also needed to build out the new Ruff Start home in Frederiksted. Nelson said the 501c3 organization was awarded a grant to do the first building on the property. The deadline to use the grant is Oct.1. Volunteer Robyn Keely said they need plumbers, electricians, and anyone with construction knowledge to finish the project.ย  Nelson said they are waiting for a permit to put together the pre-fabricated building.

Ruff Startโ€™s mission is to search out dogs who need help. So, they travel to dump sites and remove abandoned, sick, and injured dogs. In some cases, they will remove dogs from bad living conditions with the permission of the owner. Then they gain the trust of frightened dogs, provide medical care, socialize them, and eventually find permanent homes.

French Heritage Week Returns with Music, Dancing, Fun

0
Scenic artwork depicting Frenchtown with the St. Anne’s Chapel sitting atop the hill in the center of the community. (Photo courtesy The French Heritage Museum)

This yearโ€™s French Heritage Week festivities officially kick off on July 9 with live music and dancing by Max and Compagnie, beginning at 5 p.m. at The Shack at the Hideaway.

The next event will occur at Sibs on the Mountain on July 11, beginning at 6 p.m. Music will be provided by Max and Compagnie, and followed up by Obsession Band featuring Th3rd.

On July 12, beginning at noon, Son Dโ€™ Aqui, a band from Vieques, will be sharing their musical stylings at The Shack at the Hideaway until 4 p.m.. Later that evening at 6 p.m., all roads lead to Sibs on the Mountain for a second evening filled with music and dance by Son D’ Aqui and When Band.

July 13 brings a jubilant Bastille brunch at Emerald Beach Resort beginning at 11 a.m. Live music will be provided by Max and Compagnie with Oleik.

Finally, French Heritage Week festivities culminate at the French Heritage Museum on July 14. Beginning at 10 a.m., museum tours will be available all day. Later that evening, at 6 p.m., live music, dancing, and drinks will be shared into the evening.

French Heritage Week, usually occurring around Bastille Day (July 14), honors the enduring legacy of the French community in the Virgin Islands. This celebration recognizes their profound contributions over hundreds of years, which have shaped the Virgin Islandsโ€™ culture, economy, and historical footprint.

Bastille Day commemorates the storming of the Bastille in 1789, a pivotal moment that sparked the French Revolution and reshaped Franceโ€™s political landscape. In the Virgin Islands, the occasion also serves as a tribute to the local French communityโ€™s impact. From politics and education to law enforcement and healthcare, their influence is woven into the fabric of island life.

The French have also played a vital role in key industries like fishing and farming, helping to sustain the territoryโ€™s economy and traditions. Their legacy is enshrined in landmarks across St. Thomas, with roads and buildings named after prominent figures of French descent, including Lorraine Berry, Joseph Aubain, Gustave Quetel, and Emile Berry.

For more information about this yearโ€™s French Heritage Week festivities, email Odile de Lyrot atย odiledelyrot@gmail.com.

Jobs - Click Here