
Anyone with a birdโs eye view of Frederiksted Saturday morning may have seen a call to action in the form of 50 or so people spelling out โS.O.S.โ on the beach.
These werenโt shipwrecked sailors, but like Robinson Crusoe, some were recently cast away. The group of scientists, public employees and concerned residents who attended the โStand Up for Scienceโ art intervention included several former federal employees who lost their jobs amid the Trump administrationโs blitzkrieg of firings and funding cuts. On Saturday, โS.O.S.โ stood for โSave Our Sciences.โ
The event was one of dozens held across the country this week to protest the cuts to the federal workforce and public scientific programs and research spearheaded by Elon Muskโs Department of Government Efficiency.
A month ago, trained archaeologist Pardis Zahedi worked in the National Park Serviceโs Historic Preservation Training Center. She said that changed on Feb. 14, when she and two of her colleagues โ both young Virgin Islanders โ were โillegally terminated.โ Zahedi told the Source Saturday that proposed budget cuts threaten an array of public programs including SNAP, Section 8 housing assistance and continued support from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Critically needed federal grants are also in limbo.

โThe National Heritage Area, of course, is a big one. Thatโs $2 million in annual funding into our territory that would be supporting all kinds of things, from public programs, interpretation training, exhibits โ and a lot of local government positions are federally funded,โ she said. Within her own field, Zahedi said archaeologists hired by the State Historic Preservation Office are federally-funded. โAnd so we are also losing capacity in our territory by losing access to this funding.โ
Ryan Flegal, who owns and operates the Feather Leaf Inn out of the historic Estate Butler Bay great house, said federal support goes beyond the billions of dollars in disaster recovery funds for infrastructure repairs and replacements.
โThere are lots of nonprofit organizations, thereโs lots of research, thereโs lots of key things that happen with fisheries, with safeguarding the place that we all love so dearly that comes from the federal government and that is spent either privately, through grants or incentive programs or spent through nonprofit organizations,โ he said.
Flegal said his organization โย a โtriple bottom line companyโ which is โjust as concerned about health and environmental issues as we are about the business of running a hotelโ โย is one of the organizations scheduled to receive a $2.3 million coral restoration grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration as well as solar grants through the U.S. Agriculture Departmentโs Rural Energy for America Program. The latter has been put โon pause.โ
โSo the result of all of this is far fewer services and a big economic dip for the U.S. Virgin Islands,โ he said. โSo the Trump administration has been all about โeconomy, economy, economy,โ but the actions heโs taking are likely to crash our economyโฆ or certainly have a big impact on it.โ

Jordan Schneider, founder of Ceiba Strategies, said the NOAA grant โthankfully is not frozen right now,โ but the Trump administrationโs stop-and-go funding announcements have still had a chilling effect on people who are uncertain about working under federally-funded programs.
โAnd itโs certainly not efficient, becauseโฆ you spend all this time and effort to ramp the program up, and then itโs frozen. Thenโฆ it takes time and effort to ramp it down,โ she said. โAnd then to recover that lost ground โ itโs just so much more effort, and youโre trying to convince people to work with you.โ
Schneider said the lack of confidence in the future of federally-funded projects has been โthe most detrimental thing.โ
While that NOAA grant is, for the moment, on track, the agency has seen drastic staffing cuts.
Leslie Henderson was hired several months ago to manage grants for coral and coastal zone initiatives, managing โa couple million dollarsโ between the federal and local governments. She was among the reported hundreds of employees who were recently let go. Henderson said the cuts have affected all of the countryโs island jurisdictions and that the territory faces a huge loss because funding decisions are going to be made by people who donโt live here.
โSo when these proposals and grants come in, they wonโt have a local voice to say, โoh, hereโs some context around this projectโ โ and argue for it [and] say, we really want this funding,โ she said. โItโs people sitting in headquarters that are going to say, โoh, we want to fund this, we want to fund that,โ without the local context.โ
Later, Henderson noted that the cuts have also impacted the agencyโs weather reporting.
โWe rely on hurricane predictions here,โ she said. โAnd so they are scrambling, right now, to figure out how they can even do that.โ
Besides hindering the territoryโs hurricane warning infrastructure, Zahedi said the cuts and funding uncertainty lower the U.S. Virgin Islandsโs resiliency to storms.
โOf course, no agency is perfect. Is there waste in the government? Iโm sure there is, but ultimately, these cuts arenโt being done in an intentional way,โ she said, likening the Trump administrationโs approach to pulling components out of a car to make it go faster. โYou donโt just start pulling stuff out of the car without thinking about whatโs important.โ



The stage is set, the vibes are high, and the rhythm is calling! Jazz in the Park returns with an electrifying lineup. Kicking off the night will be the UVI Jazz Combo, setting the tone for an unforgettable evening featuring Dion Parson & Friends with the incredible Lorna Freeman, alongside powerhouse Artists in Residence: Melvin Jones, Mikael Darmaine, and Henry Cole. Come for the music, stay for the energy!




