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Residents Voice Opposition to Proposed Communications Tower at CZM Hearing, Underwater Cable Approved

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Attorney Kevin Rames describes the plot of land where Blue Sky Towers proposes to
install a 150 foot communications tower. (Screenshot from CZM Zoom meeting)

Around 40 residents attended a virtual Coastal Zone Management public hearing Tuesday to learn about and comment on a proposed 150-foot monopole communications tower that Blue Sky Towers III, LLC plans to build uphill from Smugglersโ€™ Cove on St. Croixโ€™s East End. Most landowners expressed concerns and opposition to the project.

Liberty Mobile and the V.I. government initiated the project as part of the First Responder Network (FirstNet). Funding comes from a combination of public and private sources, including the federal government, FirstNet, and the Virgin Islands government.

Attorney Kevin Rames presented the project to the CZM board and staff, noting that 11 sites were initially considered, but 10 were eliminated. The remaining location, Plot 3, Estate Long Point and Cotton Garden, was the only parcel not restricted or owned by the V.I. government, he said. The build-out includes a 30-kilowatt generator, road easements, and a chain-link fence.

Residents raised concerns about potential stormwater runoff from the site. One person noted that water would flow freely down from the tower to North Shore Road, while another said his property, 200 feet from the road, would be affected by runoff. Another property owner questioned the noise impact. Rames responded that the generator would only operate during power outages and would produce noise similar to other generators in the area. He also cited the American Cancer Society in stating there are โ€œno health issuesโ€ associated with the tower. Additionally, he noted that the Department of Planning and Natural Resources had compiled an 800-page report, available to the public, that addresses environmental considerations.

Other comments from the public included concerns that โ€œtree towers look out of place everywhere,โ€ the structure would โ€œdeface a pristine area,โ€ and โ€œthe tower is too tall and will disrupt a tranquil neighborhood.โ€

After hearing public comments, board members agreed that a site visit was necessary. Board member May Adams Cornwall suggested exploring alternative locations, while Chair Masserae Webster recommended discussions with the owners of the restricted land. Webster and Kai Nielsen, board member, also questioned why a higher ridge had not been considered. The board agreed that no decision would be made until those recommendations were addressed.

Closing the public hearing, Webster said the board would inspect the site and would have additional questions for Rames in the coming week.

During the four-hour session, the CZM board also discussed and approved a request from Trans America Fiber US LLC to install a communications fiber cable connecting Vero Beach, Florida, to Butler Bay, St. Thomas, Tortola, Puerto Rico, and South America.

Trans America has an agreement with AT&T to take over its abandoned North Shore facility, using the existing underwater manholes and conduit. Company spokesperson Ben Keulart said there would be no offshore drilling and that the project is privately funded.

Julio Bran, CEO of Trans America, said the company had not yet calculated the financial return for the Virgin Islands but noted that residents should see lower cell service costs.

โ€œWe are working at market prices, but you can expect changes in prices โ€” down,โ€ Bran said.

CZM board members expressed disappointment that there was no apparent financial benefit for the V.I. government. They noted that AT&T had previously paid an annual fee to the government under a 20-year contract with a review every five years. Since Trans America has not yet finalized its permit agreement with the government, the CZM board will withhold its final approval until both parties reach a deal.

The CZM staff recommended approval of the project, citing consistency with CZM codes and policy. Two board members voted in favor, while two abstained. Since there were no votes against the measure, the permit was approved, Webster said.

Updated: Federal Safety Probe Cites Major Injuries From June Scaffold Accident

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The Preserve at Botany Bay entrance. (Botany Bay Facebook page)
Local officials say they knew about a federal safety probe into a June 2024 scaffold collapse on a St. Thomas construction site. (Photo from Botany Bay Facebook page)

Editor’s Note: This story has been updated. Initial information from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration indicated the accident at Botany Bay resulted in a fatality. However, the incident code that was referenced is also used to indicate a “catastrophe,” which the agency said in a follow-up email was the case with this accident, and that there was not a fatality.ย 

Officials from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration say a St. Thomas contractor has paid more than $26,000 after being cited for damage caused by a construction accident in June 2024.

According to a report recently made public, three construction workers suffered severe injuries when a scaffold they were working on collapsed at the proposed Botany Bay Hotel site on St. Thomas.

They were among 10 people rushed to the emergency room at Roy Schneider Hospital June 13, 2024. Previous reporting listed the date of the incident as June 14, 2024.

According to a summary of an OSHA inspection report in this case, โ€œ(A) Fatality/Catastrophe Report is an unprogrammed activity (UPA) intake form that must be completed for all fatalities or catastrophes unless knowledge of the event occurs during the course of an inspection at the establishment involved.โ€

The inspection summary identified the contractor as Immaculate Builders Council, LLC., based in Frenchmanโ€™s Bay. According to details contained in a government report, an executive of the company met with and spoke to local investigators on the day of the accident.

Safety violations resulting in two serious injuries and one circumstance listed as โ€œOtherโ€ led to informal settlement payouts of $10,223 and $6,688, respectively. OSHA inspectors describe the payouts at the latest development in the case.

Although the initial inspection leading to an assessment of safety violations concluded by mid-August 2024, the federal case is ongoing.

Officials at the V.I. Labor Department and Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. โ€” a former Labor commissioner โ€” said they were aware of the accident and knew that OSHA was looking into the matter. Since then, however, local officials have been silent. Attempts by the Source to reach Labor Commissioner Gary Molloy were unsuccessful.

Government House Communications Director Richard Motta did not return calls seeking comment.

While it is not possible to gauge the magnitude of the harm caused by the Botany Bay accident yet, a 2015 article appearing online suggests the incident meets the standard for declaring it a catastrophe. โ€œThe major change to the Fat-Cat rule that OSHA has just implemented is how OSHA redefines catastrophe,โ€ said an article published by the Washington Legal Foundation.

Under the change, any accident resulting in the hospitalization of three or more accident victims sets the measure that could make this one of the worst construction accidents in Virgin Islands history.

The current investigation comes at a time when the family of a construction supervisor won a $7.6 million jury verdict stemming from a fatal accident on the site of the Frenchmanโ€™s Reef Resort reconstruction project in 2021.

Cedella Marley Champions Empowerment Through Football and Music in USVI

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Cedella Marley (pictured with black hat) poses with representatives from the Lady Rovers Soccer Club, the USVI Soccer Federation, trainers, and coaches from the territory and abroad. (Source photo by Shanell Petersen)

Cedella Marley, eldest daughter of reggae icons Bob and Rita Marley, recently visited St. Thomas for the Football is Freedomโ€™s Meet and Greet hosted at Marley Natural. The event aimed to foster youth development through football (soccer), particularly empowering young women both on and off the field.

During her interview with the Source, Cedella reflected on the influence of her parents, emphasizing their belief in using talent to uplift and empower others. “Any gift, passion, or talent we have is most powerful when we use it for the benefit of more than ourselves,” she shared.

Reflecting on the journey of the โ€œReggae Girlz,” Cedella described the Jamaica women’s national football team as โ€œthe echelon of echelonsโ€ for their determination and success. Through the Bob Marley Foundation, in 2014, Cedella spearheaded fundraising efforts to resurrect the team, securing resources for training, travel, and essential needs. Motivated by her father’s passion for football and determination to uplift women’s sports, she took decisive action.

In honor of her father’s 80th birthday, Cedella highlighted in the interview the global celebration featuring a livestreamed choir of children singing Bob Marleyโ€™s songs.ย Theย Marley Natural store, which recently expanded to St. Thomas last year, hosted a local viewing party, bringing together people of all ages to celebrate the legendary musicianโ€™s enduring legacy. “My Daddy used to say, โ€˜My music will go on forever,โ€™ and being here, weโ€™re living and fulfilling those words,” Cedella noted.

The Football is Freedom initiative, which began in Jamaica, is dedicated to creating opportunities for young female football players across the Caribbean and diaspora. Cedella collaborated with the Lady Rovers Soccer Club and the USVI Football Federation to organize the clinic, which included training sessions for players in age groups 10-13 and 14-18. The event also featured a coachesโ€™ seminar and a female empowerment workshop. “We have to empower our young ladies on and off the pitch,” Cedella emphasized.

College coaches from Colorado and Louisiana, along with Jamaicaโ€™s Shashana Campbell, led the training sessions, showcasing potential pathways to college education and careers in football. Cedella stressed the importance of developing a comprehensive ecosystem of qualified female professionals in football, including coaches, managers, trainers, doctors, and analysts. “Through Football is Freedom, they see themselves represented in all areas of football,” she stated.

Looking ahead, Cedella expressed pride in the growth of Football is Freedom, which has expanded beyond Jamaica to the U.S. Virgin Islands, with plans to reach other parts of the Caribbean and around the world. “This little idea I had in my head, using Daddyโ€™s words as inspiration, has blossomed into something life-changing for a lot of girls,” she said.

Encouraging the young participants, Cedella urged them to fully embrace the opportunity: “Show up and show out. Keep your ears open, your hearts open, and just take it all in. Weโ€™re here for you.”

Football is Freedom not only nurtures athletic skills but also empowers young women to pursue their dreams, continuing the Marley familyโ€™s legacy of using talent as a force for positive change.

Folklife Festival Kicks Off Saturday on St. Croix With Culture, Cuisine and Celebration

Moko jumbies at the 2023 Folklife Festival. (Source photo by Diana Dias)

The 2025 Folklife Festival is poised to put Virgin Islands culture, art and cuisine front and center beginning Saturday with a kickoff day at the Whim Museum on St. Croix. The festival is being presented by legendary quelbe band the Ten Sleepless Knights and coincides with the groupโ€™s 55th anniversary.

โ€œThis festival is not just about showing and telling, but about knowing and telling,โ€ said TSK member and festival organizer Kendell โ€œKCโ€ Henry in a press release. โ€œWe are honored to host performers, chefs, and storytellers who not only entertain but actively engage with festival guests, sharing their crafts and knowledge to ensure these traditions live on with the next generation of Virgin Islanders.โ€

Henry told the Source Wednesday that the St. Croix community can expect a host of cultural activities during Saturdayโ€™s festival kickoff, including masquerade and moko jumbie mask making, learning how to plant the maypole and quadrille dancing courtesy of the Ay-Ay Cultural Dance Company. Attendees can also look forward to Virgin Islands storytellers, woodworkers and chefs. Admission will be free.

โ€œThis has definitely been an event in the making,โ€ he said, adding that the Ten Sleepless Knights participated in the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington D.C. more than three decades ago. Since then, he said, there have been several local variations put on by the University of the Virgin Islands Reichhold Center for the Arts, the St. John National Park and others.

โ€œItโ€™s definitely an honor and a privilege to bring all of these culture bearers under one roof, under one day, to showcase the Virgin Islands culture,โ€ he said.

Those who arenโ€™t able to make it over to St. Croix donโ€™t have to worry about missing out, because the last weekend in March will feature moko jumbies, dancing and workshops on St. Thomas.

St. Croix events:ย 

  • Folklife Festival Kickoff from 10 a.m. – 9 p.m. Saturday at the Whim Museum

  • Cultural school tours at Alfredo Andrews, Eulalie Rivera, Juanita Gardine, John H. Woodson, Lew Muckle and Ricardo Richards schools from March 3-7
  • Night of Bomba, Bamboula, and African Dance starting at 7 p.m. on March 14 at the Island Center

  • A Crucian Taste, starting at 7 p.m. on March 15 at Fort Frederik

  • Rock Your Style/The Splendor of USVI Madras starting at 7 p.m. on March 22 at Fort Frederik

St. Thomas events:

  • The Evolution of the Moko Jumbie at 7 p.m. on March 28 at Fort Christian

  • Night of Bomba, Bamboula, and African Dance at 7 p.m. on March 29 at Fort Christian

  • Folklore Festival Workshops from 12 – 6 p.m. on March 30 at Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial Park

St. John events: to be announced.

Who Was Nibbling on Our Passion Fruit?

Some of the passion fruits we harvested were partially skinned. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

We were delighted to have a bountiful passion fruit harvest this year. However, we got frustrated when they kept hanging on the vines high up in the trees until long after our holiday guests were gone.

Passion fruits usually stay on the vine until they start to turn yellow. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

My husband went out every morning to check if any fruit had fallen, and finally one day came in triumphantly with a perfect yellow one. He cut it in half and shared it with me. It smelled heavenly and we just slurped out the seeds and pulp. Then there were no more for maybe a couple of weeks.

When more started dropping, he realized they were rolling and not just lying right under the trees. Some of them went back pretty far into the bush and maybe eluded him for a day or so.

 

Most of them were fine, though they werenโ€™t all yellow yet. As they ripen their skins get crumply and messy looking on the outside. Then they are the sweetest.

Our freshly harvested passion fruits ranged from green to yellow. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

But there were quite a few that turned out to have been nibbled. And nibbled in a very particular way โ€“ just an area of the skin was taken off. The pulp and seeds were still intact behind the membrane that contains them.

We thought this was very strange. Who would bite a passion fruit and not eat the juicy pulp? We thought about possible fruit bandits. So many possibilities.

Birds?

I saw some pearly-eyed thrashers up on the vines. I didnโ€™t think they would be content with just the skin, though. They have sharp beaks and can hollow out our papayas entirely, just leaving part of the skin hanging there. However, passion fruits have much thicker skin, and I didnโ€™t see any hanging ones that seemed partially eaten. So maybe not thrashers.

Pearly-eyed thrashers like to eat fruit but are not just nibblers. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

I have seen bananaquits pecking at our sugar apples, especially when the fruits are super soft. Again, though, they tend to go after fruit on the tree and anyway might not have been able to puncture the passion fruit skin.

Bananaquits like to peck at softer fruits. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Deer?

There are plenty of deer foraging around our house. Mostly they eat leaves and young shoots. Probably they would eat passion fruit lying on the ground, though I think they would chomp down the whole thing, not just nibble.

White-tailed deer are voracious eaters so probably would consume the whole fruit. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Iguanas?

These days we donโ€™t have many iguanas near the house. When I do see them, they are lounging around on the trees down by the pond. They are vegetarians and can climb trees or grab fruit on the ground. But they are more gobblers than nibblers

Green iguanas do eat fruits but probably donโ€™t nibble. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Bats

I thought of the local fruit bats – they are small and might be nibblers. I asked my friend Kevel Lindsay, who has done bat research on St. John, but he was doubtful since I wasnโ€™t seeing any damage to the fruits hanging on the vines. Kevel thought it could be either a hermit crab or a land crab doing the nibbling. And he also mentioned various insects that might also be attracted to a fruit lying on the ground.

Crabs?

We did see an enormous hermit crab roaming around out back during the passion fruit dropping period. It sometimes eats kibbles out of the catsโ€™ bowl and sleeps in the storage area. I put a partially eaten passion fruit in the bowl to tempt the hermit crab, and it crawled in to investigate but left without touching it. Maybe just not hungry.

The big hermit crab rejected my offering of a partially eaten passion fruit. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Since we live next to the wetlands, there are large land crabs that often come by to scavenge along the ground at night. They eat fruits and leaves as well as insects and worms, and also check out spilled cat food. They are likely nibblers since their mouths might not be able to bite deep into the interior of the passion fruit.

Large land crabs could have been nibbling the passion fruits. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

All thatโ€™s left of the passion fruits now are the seeds sprouting in various pots and a jar of frozen pulp I extracted for flavoring drinks. Meanwhile besides having fun gathering and savoring the tasty fruits we also enjoyed the backyard investigations of our creature neighbors.

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Gail Karlsson is the author of a new photo book Looking for Birds on St. John, as well as two other books about nature in the Virgin Islands โ€“ The Wild Life in an Island House, and a guide book Learning About Trees and Plants โ€“ A Project of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of St. John. Follow her on Instagram @gailkarlsson and atย gvkarlsson.blogspot.com.

St. Croix Abattoir to Resume Operations March 18

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The St. Croix Abattoir is continuing to undergo essential maintenance by Abattoir staff members and will resume operations on Tuesday, March 18.ย 

The Abattoir team, after being temporarily reassigned to support the 2025 Virgin Islands Agriculture and Food Fair, will continue to ensure the safety of the Abattoir for our staff members and the integrity of our product.

For more information on the resuming of the Abattoirโ€™s operations, please contact Director of the Abattoir Curleen Rogers at curleen.rogers@doa.vi.gov, or our Public Information Officer Veronique Joseph at veronique.joseph@doa.vi.gov.

VIDEย Athletesย ofย theย Week

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Theย VIDEย Athletesย ofย theย Week are:

St. Thomas-St. John District Varsity

Alahya Jackson, a junior playing basketball at Charlotte Amalie High School

St. Croix District Varsity

Zamuoy Swanston, a senior playing basketball at St. Croix Central High School

Congratulations to our stellar Student-Athletes!

Zamouy Swanston
Alahya Jackson

Aubrey Pickering, Jr.ย Dies

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Aubrey Pickering, Jr. has died and is survived by

Aubrey Pickering, Jr.

Mother: Phyllis Pickering

Daughter: Audena Pickering

Sons: Delano Lindley, Andrew Daniel and Adryan Xavier

Grand Children: Jayceon Hunter and Essy Richardson

Sisters: Lynell Pickering-Blucher, Lori Pickering, and Lorita Pickering-Hamilton

Brother-In-Laws: Henirol Blucher, Sr. and Curtis Hamilton

Niece: Aleta Hamilton

Nephews: Lionel Blucher, Henirol Blucher, Jr., Adjon Thomas and Aiden Liburdย 

Aunts: Sonia Stephens-Malone, Laverne Reed-Clarke, Daisy and Elia Pickering

Uncles: Basil Blyden, James Stephens and Roy Pickeringย 

The First viewing will be held Monday, March 17, 2025 from 5 to 7 p.m. at Omar Brown Sr. Fire Station.ย 

The Second Viewing will be held Tuesday, March 18, 2025 from 9 to 10 a.m. at Blyden Memorial Chapel with service to follow 10 a.m.

Interment: Veterans Crypt Smith Bay Eastern Cemeteryย 

Pictures and tributes can be submitted to tributesforbooke104@yahoo.com by Friday, March 7, 2025. The Family is requesting to wear festive colors.ย 

Funeral Arrangement by Turnbullโ€™s Funeral Home and Crematory Services

Federal Funding Freeze Upends Caribbean Projects

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Pausing federal funding puts humanitarian and economic programs across the Caribbean in limbo. The exact impact was hard to judge as the White House has pulled much of the data offline. (Screenshot of a White House webpage where former Vice President Kamala Harris announced funding for Caribbean projects.)

A year ago Wednesday, the White House announced $43 million in funding for humanitarian efforts, biodiversity initiatives, and disaster preparedness projects in the Caribbean. The routine allotment of 0.00006 percent of the $6.9 trillion federal budget did not garner much fanfare in February 2024. Halting the promised funding, however, highlights its importance.

President Donald Trumpโ€™s rapacious axing of long-held federal priorities โ€” including the U.S. Agency for International Development, established by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 โ€” dried up funds meant to encourage private investment in projects that strengthened island economies and living conditions.

Announced Feb. 26, 2024, one endeavor now on indefinite hold was to create disaster-resilient clean water programs that would benefit an estimated one million people in Haiti, according to the U.S. State Department. Another program helped the Caribbean community combat HIV/AIDS and COVID-19 in Jamaica.

With $1.75 million in funding, USAID also supported the development ofย CARICOM Development Fundโ€™s Resilience Fundย and advisory services to support fundraising and investment. The State Department estimated the Resilience Fund would raise $100 million to expand investment in adaptation and climate change efforts in the Eastern and Southern Caribbean.

Preparing small businesses for investment involves strengthening financial transparency, governance, and other internal structures, said an industry expert who asked not to be identified. These efforts reduce investor risk while ensuring sustainable growth. A well-prepared business can secure better investment terms, deploy capital effectively, and accelerate expansion, the industry expert said.

Small businesses and nonprofits that receive federal funds soon learn the rigors of accepting those funds, which includes in-depth reports on how they are used. Government money isnโ€™t cheap, one Virgin Islands nonprofit organizer said shortly after the funding freeze was announced in late January. They spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal by the White House.

Precisely which programs were on hold, which were ending altogether, and what those programs did, was difficult to ascertain because the White House shut down the USAID website and many associated webpages.

CARICOM officials also did not immediately reply to questions about which programs depended on U.S. government funding and the importance of those funds. In Central America, WOLA, the nonprofit Washington Office on Latin America, polled organizations that worked with migrants, asylum-seekers, and refugees; defending human rights; promoting good governance and transparency; strengthening civil society; womenโ€™s rights; and counter-narcotics efforts. It found a pause of U.S. government assistance would cut funding at least 77 percent of these efforts, causing at least 70 percent to cut staff.

In the Eastern and Southern Caribbean, many USAID and State Department projects were administered through the Bridgetown-based U.S. Embassy to Barbados, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Embassy officials deferred questions about the promised funding to the U.S. State Department in Washington D.C. The State Department Press Office responded to the Source that all U.S. foreign assistance funded by or through the State Department and USAID paused for a comprehensive review.

โ€œPrograms that align with U.S. national interests will continue, while those that do not will be discontinued,โ€ a State Department spokesperson wrote without providing a name.

Last February, USAIDโ€™s $20 million Caribbean Climate Investment Program pledged $3.6 million for two climate-related Caribbean investment projects. Partnering with two private advisory firms, the money was set to strengthen and prepare small and medium-sized companies for investment.

USAIDย Administrator Power recently announced $6.1 million in fundingย for the new Caribbean Resilient Economies and Sectors program. This program isย meant to reduce barriers to public and private finance to build climate and disaster resilience and support the adoption of climate-smart practices in critical sectors.

Another $5.8 million was pledged to reduce threats to coastal-marine biodiversity and build more climate-change resilient Caribbean communities, according to a 2023 White House announcement that hasย now been taken offline.

The programs were to protect endangered ecosystems and species, such as mangroves and coral reefs, as well as communities of sharks, rays, marine turtles, and more. The work was also to enhance climate resilience and the well-being of local communities, including women, youth, people with disabilities, LGBTQ+, and Indigenous people. Trump has been particularly zealous about undoing federal protections for these groups, ending all programs to ensure diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility.

Several State Department webpages that have so far survived the federal purge are for the U.S.-Caribbean Partnership to Address the Climate Crisis 2030ย and the U.S. Strategy forย Engagement in the Caribbean.

The U.S.-Caribbean Partnership to Address the Climate Crisis 2030 aims to bring the region in line with the Paris Climate Accord and other environmental initiatives: regulatory road maps and electrical sector reforms in the Dominican Republic and St. Lucia, renewable energy in Antigua, geothermal energy development in Dominica, and clean energy programs in Barbados, Jamaica, St. Kitts and Nevis, and Suriname.

The four-pillar program also encourages outside investment in the Caribbean, food security, and building regional partnerships.

The U.S. Strategy for Engagement in the Caribbean seeks to increase security, combat violent crime and drug smuggling, head off health threats, and encourage investment and education opportunities in the Caribbean.

VIPA Board Approves JetBlue Incentive Funding Plus Three Action Items

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Boschulte tells VIPA Board why he thinks JetBlue deserves a larger incentive to expand service to V.I. (Source file photo)

A top V.I. Tourism Department official told the Port Authority Board of Governors the incentive they are offering a major air carrier doesnโ€™t go far enough. Tourism Commissioner Joseph Boschulte expressed his concerns at a scheduled board meeting held Tuesday.

The commissioner โ€“ who is also a Port Authority board member โ€” spoke just before a vote to approve a one-year incentive package for JetBlue Airways. An agency spokesperson explained after the meeting that the customary incentive offer is two years, but other pending agreements kept the board from offering more at this time.

Boschulte said Tourism had held talks with JetBlue about expanding its service to the Virgin Islands; most recently, the airline added flights between St. Croix and San Juan โ€” the board ratified a vote Tuesday, signaling its favor for that move.

โ€œItโ€™s a step in the right direction, but one yearโ€™s worth of incentives is not enough,โ€ Boschulte said. If JetBlue executives were left feeling like they had been shortchanged, they could change their minds about increasing flights to the territory.

Fellow board member Celestino White took the opportunity to encourage a new view of where Tourism finds value in the travel market. โ€œWho can talk to these airlines about connecting our Caribbean people?โ€ White said. He told the board about his recent experience on a trip to Antigua and the extra time and expense involved.

White added he had heard from several Eastern Caribbean travelers who shared similar experiences. โ€œWe are tourists too, and we spend a lot,โ€ White said.

Boschulte acknowledged the comments made at Tuesday’s meeting. โ€œWe are aggressively pursuing that same narrative,โ€ he told the board.

Before adjourning the session, board Chair Willard John encouraged White to submit his concerns as a formal agenda item so the board could fully consider it.

The two-and-a-half-hour meeting included three action items requiring board members to vote: replacing the perimeter fence at the Cyril E. King Airport and upgrading VIPAโ€™s computer system by implementing an enterprise server hardware solution.

Agency spokeswoman Monifa Marrero Brathwaite explained that the enterprise server is the component that drives the computer system’s administrative functions.

Board members also voted to adopt the Port Authorityโ€™s Title 6 Implementation Plan and procedures, which allow the agency to implement programs and policies that serve the disabled.

That approval vote allows the agency to conform to guidelines set by the federal Americans with Disabilities Act, the spokeswoman said.

Julianโ€™s Welding was awarded a contract to replace the St. Thomas’ Cyril E. King Airport perimeter fence for $159,901.48. Evertech Group, LLC won the contract to install the enterprise server hardware at a cost not to exceed $150,000.

Board members in attendance Tuesday included Willard John, Joseph Boschulte, Kevin Rodriguez, Leona Smith, Celestino White, and Gordon Rhea.

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