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Road Detours Need Better Planning

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There is no Virgin Islands resident who is not happy to see improvements in infrastructures. Most of the current projects underway are long overdue and it is encouraging each time we see efforts being made on roads, bridges, and utilities. Unfortunately, many of these projects disrupt and deface our roadways in seemingly avoidable ways. Several utility upgrades come to mind where newly paved roads were torn open to facilitate work, only to be repaved and repaired in a substandard manner. Road upkeep and repair are clearly at an all-time crisis in the Territory. Poor drainage and runoff of rainwater, too many unpaved roads emptying out gravel and rock onto main arteries, heavy equipment, and overall age have taken a toll on our island roadways. Repairing and repaving are astronomically costly and often take extended time to occur. Damage and disruption to vehicular traffic becomes unavoidable and potentially expensive.ย 

The current utility upgrade taking place on Queen Mary Highway just west of the Territorial Court is a good example. Ideally this work should have been planned to be done during the recent time period when the road was already closed to traffic for over a year to rebuild the bridge. Even if such coordination of timing was completely unavoidable, the use once again of Beulah Way as a detour should not have occurred without first preparing that road for the increased load of traffic. Specifically, the section of road between the National Guard headquarters and Alfredo Andrews School in certain spots is nearly unnavigable to driving. The roadway itself, especially as it crosses the bridge just east of the National Guard resembles that of one which had received air bombardment in a war zone. It is unimaginable that this roadway could have been deemed ready to be used as a viable alternative for traffic. While we can understand that road repair costs money, some sense of priority must be made to roads designated for increased use. Eventually vehicles navigating the craters in the road will create unsafe driving hazards.ย 

While there are certainly other stretches of island roads in an equal state of disrepair, due to its current designation as a detour for a significant amount of vehicular use, that road must be repaved before it causes accidents. Tax day has just passed, usually filling government coffers with an increase in funding. Certainly, now is an appropriate time to give such a project the consideration of priority that it deserves.

David M. Capriola, St. Croix

Cleone Lousie Hector Dies at 85

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Cleone Lousie Hector, passed away on April 10. She was 85 years old.

Cleone Lousie Hector

She was preceded in death by her mother, Everna Richards Hector; father, Ghirton Hector, Sr.

She is survived by her sisters; Dorene Hector James, Everne Hector Rhymer; nieces, Leila Hector Benjamin, Lezlie Hector Phillip, Janine Hector, Linnea Hector, Cherise Hector Morgan, Marsha Hector Hente, Jacqui Rhymer George, Jeriann Rhymer; nephews, James L. Rhymer II, Elroy S. Hector Jr.; sisters- in- law, Josephine B. Hector, Sylvia F. Hector, Ineta B. Hector; other relatives and friends too numerous to mention.

Funeral service will be held on April 29 at Friedenstahl Moravian Church. Viewing will begin at 9am with service at 10ย a.m. Interment will follow at Christiansted Cemetery.

Denise Regina Thomas Dies

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It is with sincere sadness we announce the passing of Denise Regina Thomas of Coral Bay, St. John.

Denise passed away peacefully on St. Thomas on April 1, 2025.

Her home going will be at the Bethany Moravian Church, St. John May 10, viewing is from 9 am to 10 am and service is 10 a.m. โ€“11.a.m., burial will be at Calabash Boom Cemetery, St. John at 12 p.m. Family and friends are kindly asked to wear festive colors in the memory of Deniseโ€™s loving personality!

Denise Regina Thomas

Denise R.Thomas Survivors:

Significant Other: Ira Christian

Children: Avery and Irah Christian

Extended Children: Lee and Joseph Christian

Grand children: Janiqua Christian and Rโ€™Jay Chetram

Extended grandchildren: Lee Jr, Leโ€™Kayla , Leeron, Leena, Leigh, Kaylan Christian and Kwanyeโ€™ Jarvisย 

Sisters: Donna Parsons, Sheriel, Stephanie, Jeanne, Sandra, and Deila Thomas, Eleanor Thomas Hibbert, Florencia Thomas Thorpe, and Daphne Thomas Sanders

Brothers: Darrell Thomas and Alton Thomas Jr.

Aunt: Anna Smith

Uncle: Roy Smith

Special Nephews: Kibwe George, Akenty Frazer, Kwanza Jones, Akim Hodge, Alston Thomas

Special Nieces: NaShira Liburd, Shaquerah Hodge, Onika and Sasha Williams

Many nieces and nephews’ way too numerous to mention all loved!

God Sisters: Gloria Joseph, Lucia R.Francis, Donna and Shiree Ann Roberts, Gaye R. Moses, Joyce Graham

God Brothers: Alveno Hermon, Allen Roberts Sr., Edwin โ€œRayโ€ Roberts Jr., Vincent Francis, Birchron Smith and Keith Frazier

Special Friends: Uris Dalmida, Anselmo Cummings, James Paul, Merv Powell

Relatives and friends’ way too numerous to mention!

Made In VI Shop Open

The Virgin Islands Economic Development Authorityโ€™s Enterprise Zone Commission, in partnership with the Virgin Islands Council on the Arts, announces that the Made in the USVI Pop-Up Shop has returned. Open from Wednesday, April 23 through Wednesday, April 30, on Main Street in downtown Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, the pop-up shop coincides with the 2025 Carnival season and offers a curated selection of locally made products that highlight the creativity and craftsmanship of Virgin Islands artisans. Items available for purchase include food products, handmade bags, clothing, artwork, wellness items, agricultural goods, and more.

This edition of the pop-up shop places a special focus on agricultural products, encouraging residents and visitors to explore local offerings and support sustainable living through home gardening and community agriculture.

WHO:

  • Virgin Islands Economic Development Authority, Enterprise Zone Commission
  • Department of Planning and Natural Resources, Virgin Islands Council on the Arts

WHAT:

  • Made in the USVI Pop-Up Shop

WHEN:

  • April 23-30
  • Monday through Friday: 9 a.m. โ€“ 6 p.m.
  • Saturday: 9 a.m. โ€“ 4 p.m.
  • Food Fair Day: 9 a.m.- 1 p.m.

WHERE:

  • Main Street, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas
  • Note: Located in the blue building that houses Lucky Jewelers on the right side of Main Street when traveling west from the eastern side of the island.

BACKGROUND:

Since its launch in 2018, the Made in the USVI Pop-Up Shop has served as a platform to increase visibility and create market opportunities for licensed local small manufacturers and artists across the Territory.

$10M Allocated to V.I. Hospitals as SRMC Plans Cuts and Territory-Wide Construction Advances

Schneider Regional Medical Center CEO Tina Comissiong and Daryl Smalls, executive director of the Territorial Hospital Redevelopment Team, gave updates on the hospitals at Wednesday’s board meeting. (Submitted photo)

The Schneider Regional Medical Center and Juan F. Luis Hospital each received $10 million in government funding to address critical operational expenses, hospital officials announced during Wednesday eveningโ€™s Territorial Hospital Board meeting. The financial support comes as SRMC prepares to submit a new austerity plan within 30 days.

โ€œOur plans include staffing realignment, limiting hiring to only critical clinical positions, renegotiating contracts and continuing to reduce overtime expenses for cost savings,โ€ said Tina Comissiong, chief executive officer of SRMC. She emphasized that the hospitalโ€™s top priorities remain meeting payroll and maintaining a supply of essential resources.

Comissiong reported that upgrades to the hospitalโ€™s outdated Meditech operating system are underway, with the administration awaiting a timeline from the vendor. Efforts to expand access to online patient records are also in progress. She noted that staffing shortages in anesthesiology, pediatrics, the emergency room, and interventional cardiology remain a concern for consistent patient care and safety.

Two new hires have joined the accounting department, and staffing in the laboratory has increased. Following a recent survey by The Joint Commission, SRMCโ€™s lab received no critical or life-threatening findings. A corrective plan is being developed, and a full hospital survey is expected by the end of September.

The hospital has resumed its search for a contractor to complete its X-ray room. Although a Request for Proposal was submitted last month, no bids were received. Comissiong said they are now pursuing direct solicitations.

In a separate update, Daryl Smalls, executive director of the Territorial Hospital Redevelopment Team, provided construction timelines for major projects. The five-acre parking area and administrative building at Juan F. Luis Hospital are expected to be completed and operational by December.

Smalls said that nonclinical operations, including medical records, may move from JFL North to the Cassava Gardens storage facility by June. He added that contractors will visit both hospitals in the next two weeks in preparation for bidding on the reconstruction of facilities on St. Thomas and St. Croix. Bidders are now required to notify Smalls of their intent to submit proposals.

The Charlotte Kimmelman Cancer Institute on St. Thomas is nearing completion, with window installation underway and the roof 90 percent finished.

Also at the meeting, the board approved several staffing matters: certification of three physicians, approval of 10 tele-radiology medical personnel for St. Croix for two years, three physicians for SRMC for one year, and re-approval of five physicians for three-year terms.

The Finance Committee presented the 2026 budget and a three-year financial plan for review in executive session, where two procurement requests and a resolution were also scheduled for discussion.

The next Territorial Hospital Board meeting is set for May 21 at 5 p.m.

WAPA Board Receives Wartsila Generator Update, Authorizes Insurance Renewal, Extensions to FEMA-Funded Contracts

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The WAPA governing board convened a regular meeting held over Microsoft Teams Thursday to renew the authorityโ€™s property insurance coverage and consider extensions to several contracts. (Screenshot from WAPA governing board Teams meeting)

V.I. Water and Power Authority head Karl Knight told the authorityโ€™s governing board Thursday that all four of the authorityโ€™s recently-commissioned Wartsila generators are online, despite earlier growing pains.

The caveat, Knight said, is that WAPA has been operating them with light fuel oil.

โ€œThey have been stable โ€ฆ in the LFO operation,โ€ he said. โ€œThat has allowed us to sort of really focus in on what are the operational impacts when we switch to the liquefied petroleum gas โ€” LPG โ€” operation? And so we are suspecting that the issues that weโ€™ve had since their commissioning are more related to their operations on the LPG.โ€

Knight said Wartsila personnel are on the ground to troubleshoot issues with the generators, and a subject matter expert from the manufacturer of the authorityโ€™s fuel pump has also been called in. Knight said he also met with Wartsilaโ€™s corporate arm.

โ€œI left that meeting convinced that they understand whatโ€™s at stake and that they were making their best efforts to not only resolve and make the units operational, but also to identify what has created the problems and what are the permanent resolutions to those issues moving forward,โ€ he said.

Knightโ€™s report came after a presentation from insurance brokerage company Willis Towers Watson. The board ultimately authorized a one-year renewal of the utilityโ€™s $10 million property insurance coverage at a cost of $2.5 million.

Thursdayโ€™s meeting began with members rising into executive session to discuss legal and personnel issues. No actions were taken.

The board then approved a no-cost, three-month extension to its contract with Kami Metals for oil cleanup work on St. Thomas. The authority entered into a contract with the company last March, several months after the company performed oil remediation following a release at the Randolph Harley Power Plant and the Lindbergh Bay area. WAPA Environmental Affairs Manager Maxwell George told the board Thursday that the extension is meant to keep Kami Metals on hand in case the U.S. Coast Guard, which oversaw the response to the spill, has any further concerns that need to be addressed.

โ€œWeโ€™re not anticipating anything else to be done,โ€ he said. โ€œBut they do have the final say, and it also allows us to โ€” if they have us do anything else โ€” to submit that to the insurance to be covered by that, should need be.โ€

The board also approved a no-cost extension to a contract with Maryland-based accounting firm BDO for auditing services and considered a cost increase to the authorityโ€™s existing contract with consultants Ernst and Young, from $195,000 to $250,000 per month. Chief Financial Officer Lorraine Kelly noted that the firmโ€™s services can be reimbursed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The board opted to table the matter pending receipt and review of a redlined contract.

Viya Rebrands as One Communications, Marking New Phase for USVI Telecom Provider

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Viya unveiled a new identity Thursday night at a launch event on St. Thomas, rebranding itself as One Communications and signaling what executives described as a bold new era for the company in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The rebrand aligns Viya with its parent company ATN Internationalโ€™s broader strategy to unify operations across the Caribbean, bringing the USVI into step with markets in Bermuda, Guyana, and the Cayman Islands already operating under the One Communications banner.

The name change follows a pivotal leadership transition. Geraldine Pitt, who led Viya through hurricanes, fiber expansions, and a pandemic, officially retired on March 31 after serving more than six years as CEO. In her final months, Pitt found herself under heightened scrutiny โ€” not only from the Public Services Commission, but also from members of the Legislature, who expressed deep concern about Viyaโ€™s restructuring and the outsourcing of local customer service jobs to Guyana. At a legislative hearing in March, Pitt defended the move, pushing back against senators who accused the company of โ€œdismantlingโ€ its local workforce. โ€œThatโ€™s not the case,โ€ she said. โ€œWe are evolving.โ€

Pitt also addressed lingering frustration over service disruptions, particularly in late 2024. โ€œWe had a difficult fourth quarter,โ€ she told PSC members in a separate meeting. โ€œBut from January and February, we are way above the expectation.โ€ She attributed earlier outages to a mix of maintenance work and unreliable power from the Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority, but said new infrastructure investments were beginning to show results.

Now under the leadership of Siobhan James-Alexander, One Communications is promising customers faster speeds, a more reliable network, and a renewed focus on service. โ€œThe name โ€˜One Communicationsโ€™ embodies the essence of our transformation,โ€ James- Alexander said. โ€œItโ€™s about being one with our customers, one with our community, and number one in our mission to challenge the status quo.โ€ Company officials say recent upgrades to their fiber and mobile networks are already reducing service interruptions and improving video streaming, online gaming, and home connectivity.

The company is also investing in resilience. New undersea cables, wireless redundancies, and upgraded backup power systems are designed to ensure customers stay connected even during emergencies. Meanwhile, branding across customer apps, storefronts, and devices is being updated to reflect the new name, though longtime customers may still associate the service with Viya for some time to come.

The rebrand comes at a time of heightened oversight, as the Public Services Commission continues to monitor Viyaโ€™s landline service performance and legislators remain vocal about concerns over transparency and local impact. Company officials maintain that the changes are substantive, not just cosmetic. โ€œThis isnโ€™t just about a name,โ€ said Damian Blackburn, President of One Communications Group. โ€œItโ€™s about putting the customer at the heart of everything we do.โ€

Environment Difficult, But GERS Investment Report Good

Leandro Festino gave Meketaโ€™s presentation to the GERS board. (Screenshot from GERS Zoom meeting)

Angel Dawson, administrator of the Government Employeesโ€™ Retirement System, noted on Thursday that community members and retirees were concerned about how GERS investments were performing amid the volatility in the stock market.

In response, Leandro Festino, of Meketa Investment Group, which manages GERS investments, presented a mostly positive report to the GERS board of trustees. Festino said that โ€œdespite a difficult environment,โ€ GERS investments were โ€œworking wellโ€ and not moved by the โ€œday-to-day activity of the stock market.โ€ Trustee Tahmin Clarke questioned the presenter whether โ€œclarityโ€ on whether tariffs would stick or be rescinded would affect investments. Festino said clarity would affect the market but not be a โ€œdeterminantโ€ concerning GERS investments.

Shawn Bowen, also with Meketa, said the board’s investment moves last year were profitable.

Festino said the investment plan was based on the GERS rescue plan, which involved infusing $158 million into the system each of the first three years and then dropping the annual infusion to $80 million.

Meketa manages $438 million in investments. This year’s fees are .03 percent, or $116,000.

Festino said investments earned 24 percent overall in fiscal year 2024, up from 8 percent in 2023 and much better than in 2022, when investments lost 10 percent.

Glennville Henderson, an investment analyst with GERS, said GERS’ assets now total $505 million, including the Havensight Mall, valued at $59 million.

Festino said GERS suffered losses, but the overall portfolio looked strong.

After the meeting, GERS issued a press release in which Dawson said he acknowledged general anxiety in the domestic and international financial markets but emphasized that โ€œGERS is currently well diversified across eight asset classes.โ€ He continued, โ€œAt a high level, the GERS targets investing 55 percent of its securities portfolio in public equity and 45 percent in public fixed income/bonds. This strategy helps mitigate against the large equity market swings we currently see to start calendar year 2025.โ€

Dawson noted something at the meeting that is not volatile. He said that the number of retirees added to the system is often close to the number deleted.

The number of retirees added to payroll from Oct. 1 to April 15 is 164, while the number of retirees deleted from payroll for the same period was 159.

In the last payroll, the gross retiree payroll was $11,331,513.27.

According to Dawson, the GERS loan program, available to active employees, will soon be expanded to include retirees. He said the 8 percent loan guarantee was a good strategy with volatile markets.

Trustees Dwane Callwood, Leona Smith, Vincent Liger, and Andre Dorsey attended the meeting. Ronald Russell was absent

Seven V.I. Students Earn Full Ride to NASA Space Camp 2025

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Seven outstanding high school students from across the U.S. Virgin Islands have been awarded full scholarships to attend Space Camp 2025 at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, the Community Foundation of the Virgin Islands announced.

The scholarships, made possible through the Kymโ€™s Kids Caribbean Agency Fund at CFVI in partnership with RapierMed, LLC, cover all costs, including travel, accommodations, and custom flight suits for each recipient, the press release stated.

The 2025 Space Camp scholarship recipients are:

  • Naitik Jhanwar (All Saints Cathedral School)

  • Tiera J’Nai Polanco (St. Croix Educational Complex High School)

  • Sumyah Mark (Charlotte Amalie High School)

  • Colum Morgan (St. Croix Educational Complex High School)

  • Seamus Henry O’Donnell (Gifft Hill School)

  • Kali Calhoun (Ivanna Eudora Kean High School)

  • Anais Craig (Gifft Hill School)

โ€œDr. George Rapier, our team, and I are proud to support seven of the brightest young minds from St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John with full scholarships to attend NASA Space Camp,โ€ said Trey Goldsmith, member and general counsel of RapierMed, LLC. โ€œThis program fuels curiosity and inspires future innovators.โ€

Space Camp offers immersive training in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, including astronaut training, mission simulations, and team-building experiences. Since 1982, more than 700,000 students from across the United States and over 150 countries have participated, the release stated.

โ€œWe are launching more than just dreams โ€” weโ€™re launching futures,โ€ said CFVI President Dee Baecher-Brown. โ€œWeโ€™re grateful to Kym Rapier and RapierMed for making this possible.โ€

For more information about creating a scholarship fund or supporting students in the U.S. Virgin Islands, visit cfvi.net/Scholarships or email general.info@cfvi.net.

Driver Caught With Pound of Marijuana During Traffic Stop on Veterans Drive

A man was arrested Wednesday afternoon after Virgin Islands Police Department officers discovered approximately one pound of marijuana in his vehicle during a traffic stop for window tint violations, according to the department.

At around 3:42 p.m., members of the VIPD Special Operations Bureau conducted a stop on Veterans Drive after noticing a vehicle with excessive tint on its front windshield. Officers reported detecting a strong smell of marijuana coming from the car as the driver, identified as 32-year-old Kenney Linton, rolled down his window, according to the police report.

A container observed inside the vehicle led officers to perform a search, which revealed a pound of marijuana. Linton admitted the marijuana belonged to him and was taken into custody for possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, the police report stated.

In addition to the arrest, Linton was cited for the tint violations. He was transported to the Richard N. Callwood Command, booked, and remanded to the Bureau of Corrections. His advice of rights hearing is scheduled for Thursday, the report stated.

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