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DLCA Fuel Price Report

SOL PETROLEUM WHOLESALE RACK RATES

Regular Fuel – $2.58 / Premium Fuel – $2.73 / Diesel Fuel – $2.91

ST. CROIX SELF-SERVICE

Average Prices

  • Regular Fuel:ย $3.996 per gallon
  • Premium Fuel:ย $4.397 per gallon
  • Diesel Fuel:ย $4.629 per gallon

Lowest Prices

  • Regular Fuel: $3.949 per gallon at Fill & Chill Service Station.
  • Premium Fuel:ย $4.199 per gallon at Titan Service Station, Five Corners Service Station, G-Max Service Station, One Love Golden Rock, Budget Service Station, Island Petroleum, and Pit Stop Service Station.
  • Diesel Fuel:ย $3.999 per gallon at Titan Service Station, Falcon Service Station, and G-Max Service Station.

ST. THOMAS SELF-SERVICE

Average Prices

  • Regular Fuel:ย $4.794 per gallon
  • Premium Fuel:ย $5.352 per gallon
  • Diesel Fuel:ย $5.894 per gallon

Lowest Prices

  • Regular Fuel:ย $4.699 per gallon at 1stย Stop, Giant Gas, Home Town, Ali Baba Service Station, Petrus Polyberg, Petrus Smith Bay, and RaceTrack.
  • Premium Fuel:ย $5.199 per gallon at 1stย Stop, 1stย Stop Frydenhoj, Giant Gas Station, Home Town Service Station, Ali Baba Service Station, RaceTrack and RaceTrack East.
  • Diesel Fuel:ย $5.799 per gallon at 1stย Stop, 1stย Stop Frydenhoj, Giant Gas, and RaceTrack East.

ST. JOHN SELF-SERVICE

Average Prices

  • Regular Fuel:ย $4.779 per gallon
  • Premium Fuel:ย $5.009 per gallon
  • Diesel Fuel:ย $5.499 per gallon

Lowest Prices

  • Regular Fuel:ย $4.769 per gallon at Race Track Gas Station.
  • Premium Fuel:ย $4.989 per gallon at Race Track Gas Station.
  • Diesel Fuel:ย $5.439 per gallon at Race Track Gas Station.

Fuel station owners are reminded that it shall be unlawful for any person to offer to sell at retail and dispense or to sell at retail and dispense motor fuel into fuel supply tanks of motor vehicles unless there is continuously and publicly posted and displayed on or near each pump or other dispensing device the minimum octane rating, the retail price per gallon and, separately stated, the tax per gallon, on each blend of motor fuel dispensed therefrom. 12A V.I.C.ยง 202.

Gasoline station/fuel retailers should also be reminded that in accordance with 12A V.I.C. ยง207, all gas stations are required to provide a functioning air hose for public use during normal business hours, failure to comply with this code could result in fine not to exceed $100 for each offense.

Clifton Hill Connector Road Closure

The Clifton Hill Connector Road from Home Depot Intersection to Diageo Intersectionย  will be closed Feb. 26 to March 8 daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The Department of Public Works advises the community of an upcoming road closure at the Clifton Hill Intersection on Route 66 on St. Croix. On Monday February 26, 2025 to Wednesday March 8, 2025 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., PW contractor-Grace Civil Inc.- will be milling and paving the highway from the Home Depot Intersection to the Diageo Intersection. The roadway will be closed to all traffic while asphalt pavement work is in progress.

The traveling public is urged to avoid this area while asphalt work is in progress. All traffic traveling eastbound will be detoured onto Route 663 (Diageo Intersection) to Route 70 (Kingshill Intersection). All westbound traffic should detour at the Sunny Isle Intersection and access Route 70 (Queen Mary Highway).

Any motorists who fail to detour at the Sunny Isles Intersection (Route 66/Route 70) will be detoured at the Home Depot Intersection to access Route 709 through Estate Sunny Acres.

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

St. Croix Great Mangrove Cleanup Returns

UVI and DPNR will be hosting another annualย Great Mangrove Cleanup event on St. Croix Saturday, Feb. 22 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. at Altona Lagoon.

Since 2018, these events have removed more than 16 tons of marine debris from mangrove forests across the territory. Last year, 29 volunteers helped to remove 1,154 lbs of garbage from this site. But there is still more work to do! If you are free, please consider joining this cleanup to help preserve our mangrove forests.ย This is also a wonderful opportunity to earn community service hours for your participation in this effort, if you or someone you know is looking for hours!ย Please register using thisย link.

There will beย two additional mangrove cleanups coming up in March and April for St. John and St. Thomas,ย respectively. Please check out the attached flyer for more information!

Virgin Islands Public Finance Authority Board of Directors Annual Meeting

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Governor Albert Bryan, Jr. convened the annual meeting of the Virgin Islands Public Finance Authority’s Board of Directors on February 12, 2025. Finance Commissioner Kevin McCurdy, Office of Management and Budget Director Julio Rhymer, Secretary Keith Oโ€™Neale, and Attorney Dorothy Isaacs attended the meeting. The Board received annual reports from its investment advisors, legal and government relations consultants, its subsidiaries, the West Indian Company (WICO), the Virgin Islands Next Generation Network (viNGN), the management of the Virgin Islands Public Finance Authority (VIPFA) and the Office of Disaster Recoveryย (ODR).

During its 2024 market review, Causey Public Finance, LLC representatives provided relevant information on theย adjustments in the U. S. Federal Reserveโ€™s monetary policy and their impact on the fixed-income market. Three rateย cuts in 2024 totaled 75 basis points, contributing to a rising yield and an unfavorable market. The investment advisors stressed that the maturing securities place the VIPFA in a strong position to reinvest. In 2024, theย  approximate dollar value earnings of the aggregate portfolio (debt service reserve fund, debt service fund, project, and construction fund accounts) for the VIPFA are $6,401,212.

The Annual reports from Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP and Winston and Strawn LLP carefully laid out the relationships established within their respective firms to Congress and the White House. It was apparent that both entities valued the close collaboration between them and others to achieve and deliver policy outcomes for the Virgin Islands. Squire Patton Boggs highlighted its work on the Rum Cover Over and a working group effort to secure a permanent extension.

Other budgetary matters regarding federal programs include extending funds for the USVI State Historical Office toย  complete historical projects and lobbying various federal departments and agencies for relief on the Virgin Islandsโ€™ energy costs and advocating for the Virgin Islands’ removal from the European Unionโ€™s blacklist. Winston andย  Strawn presented to the board that it assisted in preparing earmarks (FY 2025 – $2, 426,000), and presentation of theย  congressional Community. They provided legislative and administrative assistance on โ€œexpanded Communityย  Disaster Loan borrowing; Water and Power Authority (WAPA) related matters; limitations on Medicaid payments to the Territory; rum cover-over; and the federal bond guarantee initiative.โ€

The Board of Directors also received an updated Annual report from Stephan Adams, President and Chief Executive Officer of Virgin Islands Next Generation Network (viNGN), regarding the finances and operations of viNGN. Adams shared that viNGN was awarded an NTIA Digital Equity (Opportunity) Capacity grant for $2.1M and applied for an NTIA Digital Equity Competitive grant for $2.5M. Recovered over $702,000 in FEMA reimbursements from October 2023 to January 2025 for several projects.

The West Indian Company, Ltd. (WICO) annual report was presented by Anthony Ottley, Interim President and CEO, who shared that the company’s financial outlook is promising due to its FY 2024 accomplishments. โ€œWICO continues toโ€ bounce back in 2024, which turned out to be a good year for WICO. As we continued to bounce back following the COVID-19 global pandemic, the company saw an 8 percent increase in cruise ship arrivals and 20 percent more passengers than in FY 2023. We just met our projections from last year.โ€

Nathan Simmonds, PFA Director of Finance and Administration, led the Authorityโ€™s presentation on itsย  accomplishments for FY 2024. The Rum Cover-over funds received for FY 2025 were $181,068,638 at $10.50 per proof gallon. PFA continues to work with the Delegate and our Washington Team to get the cover-over extension to $13.25 per proof gallon passed through Congress. Completed the FY 2022 Audits for Subsidiary Units, and the FYย 2022 PFA Audit is currently under final review.

Audits are posted on the Authorityโ€™s website and can be seen at this link: https://usvipfa.com/wpcontent/uploads/2024/02/2021-PFA-Audited-Financials.pdf.ย 

The Office of Disaster Recovery was represented by Executive Director Adrienne Williams-Octalien, who delineated key accomplishments, including the Biden-Harris Administration increase in the Federal Cost Share, FEMA FCO Projects approved by the September 30, 2024 deadline, Multi-Program Funded Full Completion of the Walter IM Hodge Communityโ€”248 Units, and achieving 2024 milestones to establish the Super PMO and issue schedule solicitations.

Jury Hears Opening Arguments, First Witnesses in St. Croix Woodpile Trial

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judge's gavel, scales of justice, court, crime, cops
Attorneys for the federal government and former V.I. Housing Finance Authority executive Darin Richardson presented opening arguments to a jury Thursday at the federal courthouse on St. Croix.ย (Shutterstock image)

A jury of Virgin Islanders heard opening arguments Thursday in the trial of Darin Richardson, the former V.I. Housing Finance Authority executive who, over the last year, has been charged with making a material false statement to a federal investigator, criminal conflict of interest, bank fraud, money laundering and making false statements on a loan application.

โ€œGreed and misconduct,โ€ Assistant U.S. Attorney Cherrisse Woods said, are two words that come to mind when people think about high-ranking government employees who use their positions to enrich themselves.

โ€œThe defendant in this case, Darin Richardson, is no different,โ€ she told jurors.

Richardsonโ€™s attorney, Darren John-Baptiste, naturally took a different view. If what the government argued was completely true, he said, his client would have to be the โ€œstupidestโ€ criminal who ever lived. Thatโ€™s because the first two charges against Richardson stemmed from a voluntary interview he gave to a special agent from the U.S. Housing and Urban Development Departmentโ€™s Inspector Generalโ€™s Office in February 2023. John-Baptiste said the opposite was true.

The evidence โ€œwill show that the charging document is replete with falsehoods and replete with misleading statements,โ€ he said.

Richardson was indicted on the first two chargesย in Juneย alongside D&S Trucking owners Davidson Charlemagne, who is also the former maintenance director for the V.I. Education Department, and Sasha Charlemagne. Prosecutors initially accused the trio of engaging in a scheme to reap millions in federal dollars while mismanaging lumber earmarked for disaster recovery projects.

U.S. District Judge Wilma Lewis agreed to sever Richardsonโ€™s case from that of the Charlemagnesย in September, andย in Decemberย prosecutors added the bank fraud, money laundering and fraudulent loan application charges against Richardson in a superseding indictment.

The timeline of alleged criminal activity Woods presented Thursday morning hewed closely to the charging document. According to prosecutors, Richardson used his position on a VIHFA bid evaluation committee to improperly award a $2.9 million warehouse management contract to Island Services Group โ€” or ISG โ€” who subcontracted the work to D&S Trucking. That contract was amended at least four times and increased to more than $4.3 million in less than a year, even though little actual work was being done.

At some point, Woods told the jury, Richardson approached ISG managing partner Morris Anselmi about entering into a business relationship. Richardson received a $107,000 wire transfer from Island Services Group Florida โ€” which Woods said is an affiliate of ISG โ€” in February 2022. On Feb. 14 of that year, he notified then-VIHFA Executive Director Daryl Griffith of a conflict of interest and recused himself from all matters related to ISG.

โ€œBut what the evidence in this case will show,โ€ Woods said, is that Richardson did not.

Over the course of the day, prosecutors began laying out their case in a trial that Lewis estimated will take 9-10 days. During that time, prosecutors intend to present 95 pieces of evidence, and their list of proposed witnesses has 24 names. Four of them took the stand Thursday.

After calling VIHFA Chief Financial Officer Valdez Shelford to the stand, Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Huston asked her to verify more than a dozen checks the agency cut to Island Services Group over the course of its contract to manage the woodpiles.

Four of those checks, totaling more than $350,000, were cosigned by Richardson after he had formally recused himself from matters related to the company.

John-Baptiste noted that at least one of the checks was signed shortly after Griffith left the agency, leaving behind only a small number of people โ€“ including Richardson โ€” with the authority to sign the payments. He also questioned whether there was a policy at VIHFA against mailing checks between islands to secure the requisite number of signatures.

A large portion of the testimony Thursday focused on the composition and operation of the bid evaluation committee that awarded the contract to ISG and, by extension, D&S Trucking.

John-Baptiste sought to poke holes in the governmentโ€™s argument that Richardson influenced the committee, and he made much of the fact that two other members of the five-person committee gave ISG higher ratings than did Richardson. Further, he said, the delta between the scores Richardson gave ISG and the other bidder, Infrastructure Disaster and Recovery Group, was the most narrow.

John-Baptiste also referenced a memo prepared by the evaluation committee which listed member Yvette Jackson, then a compliance and monitoring specialist at the agency, as the committeeโ€™s chairperson.

On the stand that afternoon, Jackson acknowledged that she prepared the memo at the request of her colleagues and said she was the chairperson โ€œwhen the memo was drafted.โ€

The first witness the government called Thursday was VIHFA Chief Human Resources Officer Jacquiel Fredericks. At the same time, prosecutors introduced sworn statements made by four out of the five members in June 2020 โ€” when the evaluation committee was formed โ€” certifying that they had no conflicts of interest.

Huston asked Fredericks if she had been able to find one for Richardson.

โ€œNo,โ€ she said.

Did you look?

โ€œI did.โ€

More than once?

โ€œYes.โ€

Outside of opening arguments, there was little mention Thursday of the second set of charges filed against Richardson.

According to Woods, Richardson prepared a $185,000 cost estimate for completion of a single-family home in Estate Bordeaux and presented it to Banco Popular on letterhead from a legitimate construction company. Richardson then used that estimate to secure a $200,000 loan, which was delivered in three installments.

Richardson, Woods alleged, used part of the loan for its stated purpose. She told jurors that he also bought a car and used more than $50,000 โ€” combined with the $107,000 he received from Anselmi โ€” to buy property from the U.S. Marshals Service in Estate Fortuna.

โ€œAnd ladies and gentlemen, that is how the pieces of this puzzle fit together,โ€ she said.

John-Baptiste also addressed those charges during his opening argument and claimed that the bank โ€” which presumably has its own internal processes for rooting out fraud โ€” hadnโ€™t taken any action against Richardson.

โ€œBecause guess what, the house was completed โ€” 100 percent,โ€ he said. Later, John-Baptiste reiterated that the bank would have cried foul if the numbers hadnโ€™t matched up.

โ€œBut here comes the federal government to the rescue,โ€ he said sarcastically.

The arguments and testimony jurors heard Thursday came immediately after Lewis denied a pretrial motion filed by Richardsonโ€™s attorney last week seeking to exclude certain evidence from being shown to jurors.

In that motion, John-Baptiste raised concerns about violations of his clientโ€™s Sixth Amendment right to face his accuser, noting that Anselmi was awaiting a heart transplant in the United States and is unable to appear at trial. In fact, Anselmiโ€™s health has prevented him from even being advised of his rights in a separate criminal matter. Anselmi and ISG co-owner Kimberly McCollum were indicted in early 2023 on charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, mail fraud, making false statements to the U.S. Small Business Association and making false statements to a financial institution.

Lewis said Thursday morning that the point was moot because the government doesnโ€™t intend to introduce statements by Anselmi as evidence. John-Baptisteโ€™s attempts to distinguish ISG Florida from ISG Virgin Islands, his arguments against including summary exhibits and his suggestion that some evidence constituted โ€œhearsayโ€ were similarly unsuccessful.

After jury selection concluded Wednesday afternoon and the jurors were dismissed, attorneys went back and forth over whether the governmentโ€™s failure to produce the original, handwritten notes taken by the special agent from HUD constituted a violation of the so-called โ€œBrady rule,โ€ which requires prosecutors to share evidence that would exculpate the defendant.

Lewis concluded Thursday that the government hadnโ€™t violated the rule set by Brady v. Maryland, and neither had it engaged in spoliation โ€” the intentional destruction of evidence. John-Baptisteโ€™s motions were dismissed without prejudice, meaning they can be refiled if circumstances change during the trial.

VIDE Announces Top Winners of 2025 District Spelling Bee Competition, Set for Territorial

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(Photo courtesy VIDE)

The Virgin Islands Education Department congratulates all students who participated in the 2025 District Spelling Bee Competitions, held Thursday across the St. Thomas-St. John and St. Croix districts. The top-performing students will advance to represent their respective districts in the Territorial Spelling Bee, scheduled for March 20.

In the St. Thomas-St. John district, the winners are:

  • 1st Place: Evan Fahie โ€“ Lockhart K-8 School
  • 2nd Place: Harika Jhanawar – All Saints Cathedral School
  • 3rd Place: Oliver Fitch – Homeschool
  • 4th Place: Cameron Daley – Yvonne Milliner-Bowsky Elementary School
  • 5th Place: Amera Paul – Calvary Christian Academy
  • 6th Place: Juelz Michael – New Testament Academy

In the St. Croix district, the winners are:

  • 1st Place: Jahmir Greaux – Eulalie Rivera PreK-8 School
  • 2nd Place: Rayan Felix – Free Will Baptist School
  • 3rd Place: Aah’Jahnique Morris – Good Hope Country Day School
  • 4th Place: Chasidy Pickering – B. Larsen PreK-8 School
  • 5th Place: Layla Jacobs – St. Patrick Catholic School
  • 6th Place: Andrew Trotman – Ricardo Richards PreK-6 School

The VIDE expressed appreciation for the support provided by coaches, parents, school administrators, and the wider Virgin Islands community, noting that their involvement plays an important role in fostering academic success among students, according to the press release.

“We are so proud of all the students who competed in this yearโ€™s District Spelling Bee. Their hard work, discipline, and determination are truly commendable,” said VIDE Commissioner Dionne Wells-Hedrington. “As they prepare for the Territorial Bee, we encourage them to continue striving for excellence. They are already champions in our eyes.”

The VIDE looks forward to an exciting Territorial Spelling Bee competition and wishes the students the best of luck as they prepare for the final event, the press release stated.

Senators Ask, Can Territory Lose Billions?

Testifiers speak at Thursday’s Committee on Disaster Recovery, Infrastructure, and Planning hearing, voicing concerns over potential federal funding cuts.ย (Photo courtesy V.I. Legislature)

Could the federal government cut funding for a half-built hospital? This concern was raised at Thursday’s Committee on Disaster Recovery, Infrastructure, and Planning hearing, as recent executive orders from President Donald Trump seek to slash federal spending. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is currently obligated to spend over $23 billion on disaster relief in the territory.

Adrienne Williams-Octalien, director of the Office of Disaster Recovery, told senators her biggest concern is that the territory would not show enough progress in projects that include rebuilding schools, hospitals, and utility infrastructure, and funding would be deobligated. Another concern Williams-Octalien had about Trumpโ€™s executive orders was the cutting of staff at federal agencies. She said that federal agencies often took a long time to approve payments because those agencies did not have enough staff to process the approvals quickly.

The Virgin Islands government has already felt some effect from Trumpโ€™s actions. When he froze all spending, the territory could not draw down promised funds.

Sen. Marvin Blyden said he was โ€œvery alarmedโ€ when he read published reports that the Housing and Urban Development Department Secretary Scott Turner would lay off 50 percent of the agencyโ€™s employees.

Hospital projects in the territory have already suffered delays. Solicitations for proposals for the reconstruction of Juan F. Luis Hospital on St. Croix went out twice in 2024. The first effort only received one bid, while the second solicitation received no bids. Revisions to the solicitation package are in progress, and the recommendations from a market study are being incorporated to garner interest. It is scheduled for release by the end of March. The solicitation of the Roy L. Schneider Hospital is scheduled for April, and Herbert Grigg for the Aged will follow in June.

Williams-Octalien mentioned other challenges in completing critical projects, including a lack of workforce, rising costs, and supply chain constraints.

โ€œAnd if this is not enough, the risk of de-obligation of recovery dollars due to the federal administration shift in policy undermines the confidence of stakeholders that funding will remain available to carry out recovery efforts,โ€ she added.

โ€œSt. Croix really needs a hospital,โ€ Sen. Clifford Joseph said.

โ€œThe ball game has changedโ€ since Trump was elected, and Virgin Islands officials need to โ€œpush extremely hard to get things done,โ€ Sen. Kurt Vialet said.

Williams-Octalien said the territory was only able to spend about $500 million a year of disaster relief funds since the funds started arriving after the 2017 hurricanes. She said to spend the obligated $24 billion by the 2035 deadline, the territory needed to spend $2 billion each year.

โ€œIn February 2024, the Biden-Harris Administration granted a reduction in the local match requirement from 10 percent to as low as two percent, which made the monumental task of executing these projects more attainable,โ€ she said. She added that though the territory had $250 million set aside to pay its share, more local money had to be found.

Sen. Carla Joseph asked whether Williams-Octalien had any communication from the federal government saying some funds would be โ€œdeobligated.โ€ She answered no to that question and Josephโ€™s follow-up question about whether a delayed audit was putting funds in โ€œjeopardy.โ€

Eugene Jones Jr., executiveย director of the Housing Finance Authority, also testified at the hearing.

Jones testified that the authority had spent $315 million of the $1.1 billion in a disaster relief community block grant allocated to it. This includes reimbursement to the Office of Disaster Recovery totaling $542,000 for 19 EnVision homeowner applicants for mobilization costs.

Vialet questioned why HFA let that program go to ODR when housing was HFAโ€™s mission.

Jones added that the authority has spent $34 million from a mitigation grant for three properties: Lovenlund 1, Bellevue Village, and Calabash Boom Apartments. These properties are intended to be converted into homeownership opportunities for qualified residents.

Sens. Hubert Frederick, Clifford Joseph, Avery Lewis, Marvin Blyden, Angel Bolques, Dwayne DeGraff, Novelle Francis, Marise James, and Carla Joseph attended the hearing.

Charter Industry Fears Looming BVI-USVI Tax War

In November 2022, BVI Premier Natalio Wheatley and USVI Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. were navigating their tourism-dependent islands out of the pandemic. In February 2025, they appear on the verge of a tax war. (Source file photo)

Representatives of the regionโ€™s boat charter industry said Thursday they worried fee hikes on foreign vessels entering the British Virgin Islands and retaliatory tariffs proposed by U.S. Virgin Islands officials could scuttle small, independent pleasure cruising businesses.

BVI lawmakers wereย nearing ratificationย of changes to fees charged to commercial charter vessels in the British overseas territory scheduled to take effect June 1. An overnight operatorโ€™s annual fee would increase 5,900 percent โ€” from roughly $400 to $24,000 if the Commercial Recreational Vessels Licensing Act of 1992 were amended as proposed. A day sail charter operatorโ€™s annual fee would go up 6,150 percent, from $200 to $12,500.

Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. shot back Wednesday, asking the 36th Legislature for an emergency meeting to consider imposing stiff taxes on goods imported from the BVI and a new entry and exit fee for non-Virgin Islanders traveling between the two territories. The tariffs could be over 25 percent, Bryan suggested.

โ€œFor too long, we have experienced economic leakage and inconsistencies in our trade relationship with the BVI. It is time we take decisive action to protect our local industries, generate revenue for essential services, and create a more balanced regulatory framework,โ€ the governor said in a written statement.

Staci Smith, executive director of the Virgin Islands Professional Charter Association, called together a meeting of 80 or more U.S. Virgin Islandsย charter boat operators Tuesday. The idea was to collect feedback on what the new BVI entry fees might mean to the industry. It could be devastating, she said, with ancillary industries from hotels to repair yards to housekeeping services and grocery stores feeling the pinch.

Sen. Angel Bolques Jr. was at the meeting, Smith said, and listened carefully to industry insidersโ€™ concerns.

Bolques released a statement Thursday stressing the need for talks between the two territories, hoping for โ€œpolicies that promote fair and equitable economic opportunities for U.S. Virgin Islanders.โ€

โ€œIt is essential that we address these disparities to ensure that our economy remains competitive, sustainable, and beneficial to the people we serve,โ€ Bolques said in the statement. โ€œWe must take a proactive approach in addressing these issues to ensure that Virgin Islands businesses can compete on a level playing field with the British Virgin Islands.โ€

Even before the meeting, some in the USVI were calling for retaliatory tariffs and entry fees on the BVI. A vocal contingent on social media seemed split between worried vacationers and angered locals.

โ€œWe didnโ€™t want it to become a tax war,โ€ she said. โ€œThatโ€™s not what the community was looking for.โ€

Smith was clear Thursday that a trade dispute was not in the industryโ€™s best interest. Large companies might be able to absorb the fee but most small, privately-owned, mom-and-pop operations would be sunk. And passing the cost along to customers would only drive business away.

The Marine Association of the BVI, a Road Town-based nonprofit composed of 50 charter companies and adjacent partners, wrote to BVI Premier Natalio Wheatley and other elected officials saying the 1992 act needed to be modernized but not in the way suggested.

Andrew Ball, the associationโ€™s chairperson, expressed dismay that the BVI government had not consulted industry stakeholders before drafting the rule changes.

BVI waters were already overpopulated with charters and environmental degradation could be soon to come, Ball wrote. Encouraging USVI operators to move their businesses to the BVI or moving the bulk of the industry to large-scale operations would not help.

โ€œThe current legislative amendments appear to be primarily aimed at regulating USVI vessels out of BVI waters rather than improving the regulatory environment for our own businesses. This approach adds additional weight to an already burdensome and outdated regulatory structure, which is directly contrary to the success of the BVIโ€™s marine industry. It does this while increasing fees exponentially,โ€ wrote Andrew Ball, the associationโ€™s chairperson. โ€œRather than enabling business, these amendments hinder it.โ€

High Schoolers Learn About Advertising With St. Croix This Week Editor

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From left, Delilah Cruz, 12th grade; Yanisa Wilfred, 12th grade; Talyzandra Garcia, 11th grade; Jemmisha Javois, 11th grade, share excitement about the National Academy Foundation of Hospitality and Tourism advertising class with the Source. (Source photo by Susan Ellis)

Four students in the NAF advertising class at St. Croix Career and Technical Education Center recently learned about advertising after spending a day with St. Croix This Weekโ€™s managing editor, Susan Wall.

St. Croix This Week is one of three bi-monthly island magazines that contain local articles, photos, information on tours and events, dining and accommodations, real estate, attractions, water sports and recreation and a lot of advertising.

The students told the Source what they found most useful about advertising. Eleventh grader Talyzandra Garcia said the cover and second page are the most important since businesses compete for those spots and are the first pages people see.

Another student said she learned how ad size affects the overall look of a page. Someone else noted that a salesperson should know the community well to better understand what buyers might want. They added that the map and phone numbers made St. Croix This Week especially useful for readers.

The students discussed the differences between a newspaper and a magazine. While a newspaper changes daily, a magazine can reserve the same ad space for an advertiser in every issue.

The students said Wall emphasized the importance of always crediting photographers and photo owners. They also noted that the cover image of a woman standing on a beach conveyed a message about the island and what readers might find inside the magazine.

Regarding the magazine’s content, Wall told them to write about what they know. Senior Yanisa Wilfred said it is important to include nature and the culture of the island while providing content that relates them to the reader.

โ€œDonโ€™t only target people from the outside but get inside the community,โ€ Wilfred said.

The class agreed that feedback on the publication is important. One student suggested asking organizations they work with for recommendations, while another said readers should have a way to share their comments.

The students talked about how Wallโ€™s class will help them in the future.

โ€œAdvertising would definitely help you network yourself,โ€ Delilah Cruz, a senior, said. They agreed advertising can help find an internship or a job.

Jemmisha Javois said communicating with Wall was easy. She learned that when starting out, few people want to support a new publication. She added that having confidence in the product, rather than begging, is the key to selling ads.

By the end of the year, the students are tasked with creating their own magazine. Although they think about it often, they admitted they havenโ€™t started the project yet. So far, theyโ€™ve agreed to feature topics they know well, such as the schoolโ€™s clubs, and to connect the content with events happening in the community.

Faces of Gemini Modeling Institute Brings โ€˜Fashion Wonderlandโ€™ to Coral World

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DaShaun Prince, Samantha Nieboer, Karen Lee, Kyla Bailey, Jโ€™Liyah Febres, Aminisha Bailey, and Chalaine โ€œGeminiโ€ Barry attend the IMTA convention in 2024. (Photo courtesy Chalaine Barry)

In less than two weeks, Faces of Gemini Modeling Institute will razzle and dazzle attendees during their first Fashion Wonderland, Fashion and Food Festival, which will be held at Coral World Ocean Park on March 1.

Business owner Chalaine Barry conceptualized the event because she said, there are โ€œtwo things that I like, fashion and food.โ€ She is using the event as a fundraiser to assist her models in participating in the International Model Talent Association (IMTA) convention in New York this summer.

โ€œThis event is a fundraiser, and Iโ€™m just trying to create a family event,โ€ said Barry.

Barry said this is the first time she has put on a fashion show at a food festival. Before, she held two fashion shows at the Virgin Islands Montessori School and Peter Gruber International Academy. But this year, food and fashion are the focus.

Attendees at the event can also look forward to face painting, toy, candle, crochet, skincare, and clothing vendors. Food enthusiasts can look forward to items such as pates, soup, oxtail, and chicken dishes. A DJ will also be there to keep attendees entertained. And for all the vendors, Barry said they are providing a marketing gift for those who participate.

โ€œWeโ€™re helping each small business because we’re going to help each of them create a 30-second video that Iโ€™m going to provide for them to help their businesses grow and use for social media. So thatโ€™s our give back to the vendors,โ€ said Barry.

Faces of Gemini Modeling Institute models show off their awards. (Photo courtesy Chalaine Barry)

Interested persons can purchase tickets from Sole to Soul and Anoush 242 Gallery. Tickets are $40 for adults and $10 for children under 18.

This year, Barryโ€™s models range from 16 to 30 years of age.

When asked what inspired her to start her business, Barry, who also owns Gemini Photography VI, said she got the idea to start her businesses from friends.

โ€œI got my marine biology degree and I wasnโ€™t finding a job and I didn’t want to go back to Coral World because I didnโ€™t meet some of the qualifications for like, lifting stuff up,โ€ she said.

She added that her friends sat her down to get her business license. She went back to school for photography, and after graduating in 2014, she opened Gemini Photography VI.

Barry said she was inspired to open Faces of Gemini Modeling Institute after photographing models at events.

โ€œAnd then taking pictures at different modeling shows, and [seeing] the girls being ill-prepared, and seeing that nobody was training them, thatโ€™s where my modeling company came from,โ€ Barry said.

Faces of Gemini Modeling Institute models during an IMTA competition in 2024. (Photo courtesy Chalaine Barry)

Barry added that she wasnโ€™t โ€œa big person on modeling at the timeโ€; however, she โ€œwanted girls and guys to represent themselves better. So I just worked on public speaking and all kinds of stuff like that.โ€

Barry says the models she worked with further encouraged her to look into the IMTA, an organization that hosts conventions for models, actors, dancers, singers, and songwriters.

โ€œBecause modeling is not such an important industry here in the Virgin Islands, theyโ€™re going to the army, theyโ€™re going to college, and they never follow through,โ€ she said, highlighting that persons in the territory usually seek careers other than modeling.

Barry says Faces of Gemini Modeling Institute is the only accredited school in the Caribbean right now. She hopes her models will travel to Paris and Anguilla this year. She added that they have participated in Summer Sizzle on Tortola and St. Croix for Jason Gardenerโ€™s VI Model of the Year, and last year, they competed on Anguilla.

Of the upcoming event, Barry said she is โ€œexcited for everyone to come out and have a good time.โ€

For more information, Barry can be contacted via WhatsApp at 340-998-4030 or by Facebook Messenger atย https://www.facebook.com/FacesofGeminiModelingInstitute/.

Barry also noted that her organization is open for boys and girls to register. Donations are accepted through PayPal via her contact phone number. A portion of the proceeds will go to the Virgin Islands Children’s Museum.

โ€œItโ€™s not just a fundraiser for us, but weโ€™re also giving back a little bit to the community,โ€ Barry said.

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