Commissioner Jennifer Matarangas-King, Deputy Commissioner RoseAnne Farrington, Gov. Albert Bryan Jr., and Joseph Boschulte, president and Chief Executive Officer of The West Indian Company Limited, meet with cruise industry partners during Seatrade Cruise Global 2026 in Miami Beach, Fla. (Photo courtesy Tourism Department)
The U.S. Virgin Islands Tourism Department met with major cruise line partners at Seatrade Cruise Global 2026 to discuss itineraries, port operations, and the cruise experience across the territory, the department announced in a press release.
Officials held meetings with senior leadership from Norwegian Cruise Line, Royal Caribbean International, Silversea Cruises, Virgin Voyages, Disney Cruise Line, and Carnival Cruise Line. Discussions focused on planning and operations for St. Thomas, St. Croix, and St. John, according to the press release.
Targeted media meetings were also conducted with travel, lifestyle, and trade outlets to support ongoing coverage and maintain visibility across consumer and industry audiences. Conversations focused on the Territoryโs cruise product, multi-island offering, and on-island experience, the press release stated.
U.S. Virgin Islands leadership in a meeting with cruise line partners during Seatrade Cruise Global 2026. (Photo courtesy Tourism Department)
โSeatrade is where we engage directly with our cruise partners on the decisions that shape itineraries and the overall cruise experience,โ said Jennifer Matarangas-King, commissioner of the U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Tourism. โThis week, we had focused conversations with our partners and reinforced the role the U.S. Virgin Islands continues to play within their planning.โ
The territoryโs presence highlighted its multi-island cruise product. St. Thomas serves as the primary gateway, offering access to Charlotte Amalie, retail, and excursions. St. John offers a nature-driven experience through Virgin Islands National Park. St. Croix offers a cultural and historical experience centered on Frederiksted and Christiansted, the release stated.
Gov. Albert Bryan Jr., Commissioner Jennifer Matarangas-King, and Joseph Boschulte, president and Chief Executive Officer of The West Indian Company Limited, alongside a delegation of U.S. Virgin Islands tourism and cruise leadership, meet with cruise line executives during Seatrade Cruise Global 2026 in Miami Beach, Fla. (Photo courtesy Tourism Department)
The week began with a partnership event with the Florida-Caribbean Cruise Association, highlighting ongoing collaboration between the territory and regional cruise stakeholders, according to the Tourism Department. On-site activations at the U.S. Virgin Islands booth included a curated cocktail program and a โFarm to Glassโ experience featuring St. Croix-based mixologist KJ Richards. The booth also featured giveaways from the Tourism Department, the Virgin Islands Port Authority, and the Virgin Islands Lottery, the release stated.
Ivan Felix Frazer, the beloved last-born son of Felix and Victoria Frazer, passed away on March 25, 2026, at the age of 49. Born on Sept. 20, 1976, in St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, Ivan was the cherished partner of Martha Lopez and a treasured member of The Lopez Family.
Ivan Felix Frazer
A good friend to all, Ivan was always quick with a smile, friendly, and selflessly there for those who knew him. In his career, he found deep meaning in the work he did and the people he helped, treating everyone with dignity and respectโhis colleagues cherished working alongside him. He was happy and full of life, and remained a big kid at heart, building remote control race cars, playing video games, and cheering on his favorite basketball teams. He also had an eclectic taste in music that reflected his playful spirit. He learned the construction trade from his dad and was affectionately known as “Builder Bob” by a special few. Exceptionally smart and knowledgeable about random factsโa true “Jeopardy!” fanโhe brought his quick wit and signature sarcastic humor to every conversation. An avid runner, he returned excitedly to his place of birth after nearly 30 years away, only to pass away a few days after arrival. One of a kind, Ivan was loved by everyone whose lives he touched.
Ivan will be deeply missed. He is also survived by his siblings: Paula Ettienne, Sybil Roberts, Ira Frazer, Irvin Frazer, and Judy Frazer; his nieces and nephewsโNatisha, Randy Jr., Shamika, Elijah, Tori, and Rozira; as well as his aunts and unclesโJosephine Christopher, Marcella Joseph, Noelina Ryner, Dorianna Williams, Williamson, and Albert Maronie; numerous grand-nieces, grand-nephews, cousins, and the extended family around the world.
A Celebration of Life service will be held on Friday, April 24, at 10:30 a.m. at Bethel Seventh-Day Adventist Church in Williams Delight.
All are welcome to attend and honor Ivan’s memory.
“I am innocent,” Brett “Mac” McClafferty said before entering Magistrate Court on St. Thomas for a hearing and arraignment on bank fraud charges in March. (Source file photo by Siรขn Cobb)
A confirmation hearing is set for Monday in Brett โMacโ McClaffertyโs Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding in Delaware that the trustee says should be dismissed or converted to Chapter 7 because McClafferty has debts of $3.6 million that โsignificantly exceedโ the statutory thresholds, he has โfailed to provide a full and candid disclosure of his financial condition,โ and may be shielding his assets and income from the trustees and creditors.
Meanwhile, the trustee in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition for McClaffertyโs defunct Mac Private Equity company in the same Delaware court filed a status report last month claiming McClafferty โwas not able to adequately answer questions of the Trustee, counsel or creditorsโ at a creditorsโ meeting in October or in subsequent meetings. Trustee George L. Miller reported that as far as he can tell, โNone of the records obtained to date demonstrate anything other than Mr. McClafferty using corporate funds for personal expenses.โ
Additionally, 17 of his alleged victims โ investors in Mac Private Equity who say their money vanished, including two who were awarded judgments in Virgin Islands court โ have joined the call to have the Chapter 13 case converted to Chapter 7.
Common to all three filings are details of profligate spending they allege belie McClaffertyโs claims of bankruptcy.
In a motion for an order to convert the Chapter 13 case to Chapter 7, attorney Michael Sheesley, representing the Mac Private Equity investors, cited as examples bar tabs exceeding $2,000 in Miami, subscriptions to OnlyFans totaling hundreds of dollars, multiple transactions at cigar lounges in Miami and St. Thomas, and Venmo transfers for โvacationsโ and ATM withdrawals.
โThe Debtorโs expenditures, totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars spent in the year pre-petition, occurred while the Debtor testified under oath in related litigation [in the Virgin Islands] that he had โno money, no assets, no income,โ and lived modestly (asking if he could โbuy a cheeseburgerโ),โ the motion states.
In reality, McClafferty was spending on his personal lifestyle, as summarized in Wells Fargo account statements that show he had deposits totaling $414,459.15 from November 2024 through September 2025, and expenditures of $410,822.40, according to the motion.
William F. Jaworski Jr., the Chapter 13 trustee, said in his motion to dismiss or convert the case to Chapter 7 that under the โโtotality of the circumstancesโ test, the Debtorโs conduct, characterized by the failure to list all assets, concealment of income, the maintenance of a lavish lifestyle, and the funding of personal political ambitions while in bankruptcy falls far short of the โhonest debtorโ standard. Such conduct warrants immediate dismissal.โ
Sheesley alleges that the timing of McClaffertyโs petition โ the Chapter 7 petition was filed in March 2025 and the Chapter 13 in November โ โshows that he filed this Case merely to avoid further collections processes in the Virgin Islands.โ
McClafferty, 38, who is facing criminal bank fraud charges in the Virgin Islands, has a criminal history in Ohio, and recently launched a campaign for Virgin Islands senator, has denied wrongdoing and, as he is wont to do, took to social media Thursday to dispute news reports about his bankruptcy cases.
โWe had no obligation to โinvestโ anything lol. Thatโs the part youโre missing,โ he posted on Whatโs Going on St. Thomas, referring to the Mac Private Equity case. โNot a single one of our lending agreements obligated us to โinvestโ anything. MPE was a startup PE [Private Equity] firm operating on a burn rate. It collapsed before it could take off. Itโs a shame โ but thatโs life on the Serengeti; you win some, ya lose some,โ he said, concluding the post with a shrug emoji.
In an objection to the investorsโ motion to convert the Chapter 13 case that he filed April 10, McClafferty said they โattempt to transform a disputed business relationship with a corporate entity into personal liability of the Debtor and, in doing so, rely on unproven allegations of fraud, selective characterizations of prior litigation, and assumptions regarding intent that are unsupported by a developed evidentiary record.โ
While Sheesley refers to those investors as โthe McClafferty Victims,โ McClafferty prefers the term โVoluntary Lenders,โ saying in his motion that he โdid not personally guarantee MPEโs obligations, nor did he execute the relevant promissory notes in his individual capacity. No court has entered an order piercing the corporate veil of MPE or otherwise imposing personal liability on the Debtor for MPEโs debts.โ
Due to “the combined effects of inflation, a struggling economy, and the costs associated with ongoing litigation, Mac Private Equity never achieved success and instead became insolvent,” according to McClaffertyโs filing. In fact, he claims he is owed $460,000 by Mac Private Equity and $70,000 by Social Hospitality Group, the parent company of St. Thomas Social, the restaurant in Yacht Haven Grande he co-owns with business partner Sunil Sharma, according to court filings.
The Mac Private Equity investors, whose civil cases against McClafferty in the Virgin Islands are stayed during the bankruptcy proceedings, disagree with that assessment.
โThe Debtorโs debts to his largest block of creditors (the McClafferty Victims) are for monies obtained by fraud or, in one case, intentional torts. The Debtorโs scheme was simple: give me money now, Iโll invest it and give you back more money later. There is no evidence anywhere that the Debtor or MacPE ever made a single investment with the McClafferty Victims funds,โ the motion states.
โThe Debtor has treated the McClafferty Victims and his other creditors atrociously before and during this Case. He has lied under oath, used the territorial and federal courts of the Virgin Islands โ and now the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware โ to play games, delay and hinder the McClafferty Victimsโ recoveries. His outright disregard for his duties as a bankruptcy debtor can only be seen as willful and malicious,โ it says.
“There is still much to do in this Case. Conversion to chapter 7 will enable the Debtorโs creditors, including the McClafferty Victims a single forum to achieve a global resolution,” it concludes.
A 1973 story in Martin Mariettaโs company magazine Today featured a photo of what appears to be bauxite stored in a large, open-air pile. Former employees claim they were regularly exposed to the respiratory irritant. (Photo courtesy Today)
In July 2021, former St. Croix alumina refining plant employee Milton Burt sued his former employers, claiming Martin Marietta and associated companies failed to protect โ or even warn โ him of on-the-job exposure to dangerous lung irritants. A trial was set for July 2022. Half a decade of legal wrangling later, a jury may hear 80-year-old Burtโs case in 11 days.
A Virgin Islands Superior Court judge signed an order Thursday denying a bid by aerospace giant Lockheed Martin Corporation to yet again delay the trial. After several previous delays, attorneys for Lockheed, modern owners of the St. Croix companies Burt worked for 26 years, had argued their expert witnesses were unavailable on the date they themselves had chosen for the trial.
Judge Alphonso Andrews Jr. denied their motion and broke down the chain of events in his explanation.
The case was filed July 15, 2021, with an initial trial date of July 13, 2022, which was then pushed back to Nov. 14 of that year, and then Dec. 21. Both attorneys for Burt and Lockheed had been preparing for the late December trial until Dec. 6, when Lockheed succeeded in a motion to dismiss the case. But that was partially overturned on appeal in November 2024. Lockheed asked for another summary judgment in October 2025, which was denied. In November 2025, the court denied their appeal of the decision.
Lockheed attorneys asked in February that the trial be moved to April 13, then asked that it be pushed back from April 27 to resolve technical legal issues like pending motions. After receiving permission to move the trial date, Lockheed’s attorney told the court March 4 that their expert witnesses would not be available April 27 and asked the judge to move the two-or three-week trial to an unspecified later date โ maybe in October.
Attorneys for Burt cried foul, claiming Lockheed had failed to justify the delay.
Referring to Lockheed Martin Corporation as LMC, Judge Andrews sided with Burt.
โThe court acknowledges that LMC is under no obligation to divulge specifics of its witnessesโ โprofessional commitments.โ However, simply asserting that such commitments conflict with the April 27th trial, and proclaiming their unavailability is insufficient for this court to adequately assess the existence of good cause,โ he wrote. โThus, one resolution to LMCโs witness unavailability issue is to have them testify between April 27th and May 4th.โ
Andrews also suggested the witnesses could appear remotely or by some other arrangement.
Attorneys for Lockheed and Burt filed their proposed jury instructions with the court Wednesday
Burt worked maintenance at the St. Croix alumina refining plant for 26 years with little or no protection from bauxite dust, asbestos, and other lung irritants, according to his 2021 lawsuit. In 2019, his chronic breathing trouble was diagnosed as pneumoconiosis, sometimes called black lung, usually caused by exposure to intense dust.
Similar suits against Lockheed Martin โ a company recently valued at more than $20 billion with stock selling as high as $692 a share โ go back to at least 2007, alleging aluminum refining companies now under Lockheed ownership were negligent in protecting their employees. Many of the original claimants died awaiting trial.
Hundreds, possibly thousands, of civil suits remain open against former St. Croix refinery owners and related companies dating back to 1991, according to court records.
Even people who didnโt work with bauxite have complained or filed suit against the alumina plant that closed in January 2001. Before the company closed and long after,ย a mountain of red dustย near the plant โ a byproduct of theย chemical processingย of bauxite โย plagued residents, blowing into their homes and infiltrating their drinking water.
The Economic Development Commission, Enterprise Zone Commission and Economic Development Bank held public hearings and decision meetings Thursday over the videoconferencing platform Zoom. (Screenshot from Zoom meeting)
The Economic Development Commission considered a request from a St. Croix hotel developer Thursday to alter its plans to build a hotel in Christiansted, which have been stymied by power and shipping delays and other issues.
The EDC granted Historic Heritage Holdings full tax benefits last summer to construct a boutique hotel with at least 66 rooms in Christiansted. Camila Devlin, the companyโs chief financial officer, and majority owner Peter Zielke told Economic Development commissioners that the projectโs timelines have shifted because of costly delays related to power, construction and permitting. On Thursday, they asked the commission to approve a phased approach to allow them to start with 25 hotel rooms and 10 full-time employees.
โUltimately, this request is about feasibility and long-term success,โ Devlin said. โThe facts have changed, the timeline has shifted and the originally approved structure no longer aligns with the current realities of our project.โ
Devlin said the phased approach would keep the company in compliance while it pays employee benefits and invests in the St. Croix community. Asked to more fully explain the delays, Zielke said he could think of few challenges they havenโt faced.
โPower is โ some of the delays are incredibly long, like WAPA can take five or six months to hook up,โ he said. โWeโve had some weather-related delays. Weโve had a great deal of shipping delays, where youโre missing a single part and then sometimes it could be a month or two until that part arrives.โ
By way of example, Zielke said one part of the project was delayed for six weeks because a part for a diamond polisher got held up in shipping and at customs.
โSo the truth is, there are very few things that we havenโt had significant delays on,โ he said. โSometimes we have people that need health care where, stateside, perhaps they could ordinarily just go to the doctor. And here, they end up having to take a couple weeks off and leave town and come back again.โ
EDC board member Philip Payne lauded the companyโs work so far and empathized with their struggles.
โWe boast about how much better we are with permitting and services, and yet we get here and we hear โfour months to turn on the powerโ or five months,โ he said. โItโs unrealistic, and itโs not right that we put up with this, and we continue to.โ
Board members heard from another hotel developer during a subsequent public hearing of the Enterprise Zone Commission. Global Solutions VI discussed a long-sought 130-room, five-story hotel to be built on 10 acres directly across from the Henry E. Rohlsen Airport on St. Croix. The companyโs founder and chair, Steven Boughner, said the project would include a rooftop restaurant โ along with another on the ground floor โ meeting areas and an event space.
โThe concept of our development is not only a hotel to service the tourism business, but also to become a local event space,โ he said. โThere is no space comparable to what weโre proposing anywhere on the island, and we firmly believe that the concept of local involvement into the facility will generate the type of business that this development is designed to do.โ
The company has a 40-year land lease with the V.I. Port Authority with a 10-year renewal option. Board members discussed a South Shore Trade Zone application from the company in executive session and later narrowly approved granting full benefits for 20 years.
The EZC also approved full tax incentives for Jabari Carrington for rehabilitation and construction at 7B Commandant Gade โ part of the Garden Street-Upstreet Enterprise Zone โ and modifications to a project at 12 Crystal Gade and 2E Bjerge Gade. Conn J. Davis II initially applied for incentives to operate a luxury event space and boutique bed-and-breakfast at the property. The approved modification changed the use to serve as a primary residence.
The Economic Development Bank approved Small State Business Credit Initiative guarantee requests for Antilles Consulting Group and SOS St. Croix.
An example of the National Hurricane Centerโs updated operational forecast cone for the 2026 hurricane season, which will now show tropical storm and hurricane watches and warnings for inland as well as coastal areas, including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. (Photo courtesy NOAA)
NOAAโs National Hurricane Center recently shared updated forecast cone graphics for the 2026 hurricane season. The changes could help individuals better understand wind warnings, while reminding the public that hazards often extend well beyond the cone, including inland areas.
โIn 2026, the forecast cone will now include tropical storm and hurricane watches and warnings for inland areas. The additional information follows a successful experimental phase last year, which demonstrated that the improved forecast cone enabled inland communities to better understand and prepare for the danger posed by tropical cyclone winds,โ according to NOAA.
The report from NOAA explains that the new operational cone will now include all land-based tropical storm and hurricane watches and warnings in effect for the continental United States, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The updated graphic will also use one shade for the full five-day cone and include a legend symbol for places where a hurricane watch and tropical storm warning are both in effect.
Hurricane Specialistโs Perspective
The Source contacted Daniel Brown, branch chief of the Hurricane Specialist Unit at the NHC in Miami, Florida, who explained the forecast product updates in further detail. For individuals in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, one of the practical changes may simply be having more clarity. People will be able to see the entirety of the islands covered in a watch or warning, not only the coastal regions.
NOAAโs updated operational forecast cone for 2026 is designed to give the public a clearer picture of where tropical storm and hurricane watches and warnings are in effect, while reminding users that hazards can still occur outside the cone. (Photo courtesy NOAA)
โAlthough in the past it appeared that the island of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands were completely covered when it was under a watch or warning, the original cone graphics only depicted the coastal areas under the tropical storm or hurricane watch or warning,โ Brown said.
โThe new operational cone graphic will completely shade all of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and coastal and inland areas in the United States when a watch or warning is in effect,โ Brown continued.
โThis should help residents who live in areas away from the coast to better understand that they are under a tropical storm or hurricane watch or warning and will enable inland communities to prepare for the danger posed by tropical cyclone winds,โ he added.
The change to the cone this year follows an experimental phase in 2024 and 2025. In its 2026 products update, the NHC said feedback strongly supported adding inland watches and warnings, and social science research suggested the added information helps communicate wind risk without overcomplicating the graphic.
Brown said the improvements are also meant to correct one of the publicโs most common misunderstandings about the cone.
โUsers have often misinterpreted the cone as the area of potential impacts,โ he acknowledged. โHowever, the cone does not provide any information on potential impacts from storm surge, wind, flooding, rainfall, or tornadoes. Instead, it depicts where the center of a tropical storm or hurricane could track. Adding inland watches and warnings takes the focus off the cone and forecast track and provides the public with risk-based information about the potential for tropical storm and hurricane-force winds through the watches and warnings.โ
That message remains especially important in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, where dangerous weather can affect the islands even when a stormโs center does not pass directly overhead. NOAAโs materials continue to emphasize that the cone shows the probable path of the storm center, not the size of the storm, and that hazardous conditions can occur outside the cone.
The NOAA update also said that the size of the cone will be a little smaller in 2026, about 4% to 8% smaller than in 2025, based on the latest five years of forecast errors.
A Separate Experimental Cone
In addition to the operational cone, which will be released this season, NOAA is also introducing a separate experimental cone graphic for 2026. Unlike the traditional cone, which is built around circles at each forecast point, the experimental version of the cone will use ellipses. NOAA said the new approach is meant to better capture uncertainty in both the speed and direction of a stormโs forecast path, and the experimental cone will include 90% of forecast track possibilities instead of the traditional 67% forecast error.
A new experimental forecast cone uses ellipses instead of circles to better reflect uncertainty in both the speed and direction of a stormโs projected path. NOAA says the new design is meant to show a broader range of likely track possibilities. (Photo courtesy NOAA)
โThe experimental cone will use ellipses anchored at each NHC forecast point, allowing for the experimental cone to capture a range of possibilities for both the speed and direction of the tropical cycloneโs forecast path,โ Brown stated. โSince the new experimental cone will include 90% of forecast track possibilities, the cone can now be described as the likely path of the storm, because the center is unlikely to move out of the cone.โ
โThe ellipses used to draw the experimental cone look at NHCโs historical track errors as how far left or right the forecast was from the verifying positions of the storm and how fast or slow the forecast of the storm was,โ Brown explained.
Brown also reminded readers that both the operational cone and the experimental cone are not an all-in-one hazard map.
โThe experimental cone should provide the public with a better understanding of the likely path of the storm, but they should also understand that neither the operational cone nor the experimental cone provides information about all possible hazards,โ he cautioned.
Other Product Updates
While the cone changes may be one of the most helpful updates for Caribbean residents, NOAAโs 2026 package includes other updates as well. The NOAA press release announced new storm surge watches and warnings, a peak storm surge graphic, and a potential storm surge flooding map for Hawaii, expanding services already used for Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Gulf, and the U.S. East Coast.
A new gray โXโ on the Graphical Tropical Weather Outlook will indicate systems with near-zero chances of tropical development. (Photo courtesy NOAA)
The NHCโs update also highlights an Experimental Graphical Marine Wind Warning product that covers the Caribbean Sea and other tropical ocean basins. The update includes a rip current risk map introduced in 2025 that includes Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands when at least one tropical system is active. A change to the Graphical Tropical Weather Outlook will now show systems with near-zero development chances as a gray โXโ instead of a yellow one.
Remain Prepared
Brown encouraged residents and visitors to heed the advice of the National Weather Service in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in addition to monitoring NHC cone updates. While the cone is being updated to communicate wind warnings more clearly, it is still only one part of the forecast. People in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands will still need to pay close attention to other official graphics, watches, warnings, and forecasts for hazards.
โThe most common misconception is that the cone itself does not indicate potential impacts, although the cone graphic does communicate wind risk via watches and warnings,โ stated Brown. โNHC and the local NWS office in San Juan provide other text and graphical products that provide information on other hazards associated with a tropical cyclone, such as storm surge, rainfall, and rip currents.โ
โThe best advice is to pay attention to watches and warnings for storm surge, wind, and rainfall hazards. Understand the risk posed by each of those hazards and have a hurricane plan to keep you and your family safe. Individuals can always find the latest forecast on the NHCโs official website,โ Brown concluded.
Local Weather Information
The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30, but severe weather preparedness is a year-round practice in the Virgin Islands. Residents can see the local weather forecast for the U.S. Virgin Islands which is regularly updated on theย Source Weather Page. Individuals can also find helpful weather information, emergency preparedness, and alerts from the Virgin Islands Territorial Emergency Management Agency.
With a new voting season, new thoughts on the relevance of political parties are in the minds of voters. (Shutterstock image)
With election season fast approaching in 2026, the League of Women Voters of the Virgin Islands is inviting the public to consider the role of political parties in an election cycle. Organizers of the leagueโs annual meeting say the topic โ “Are Political Parties Still Relevant in the USVI?” โ will be examined from several perspectives, all designed to give voters food for thought as they make their way to the polls.
The annual meeting is scheduled to take place Saturday at 1 p.m. at the University of the Virgin Islands 13-D Innovation Center on the Orville E. Kean Campus on St. Thomas. Those who would like to join the discussion but cannot attend in person are encouraged to request a Zoom link at lwvusvi@gmail.com.
League President Gwen-Marie Moolenaar said the public portion of this yearโs meeting was inspired by comments heard on a radio show. โThe question is: If candidates think that parties arenโt relevant, does the public think so as well, and really what is the relevance of political parties?โ Moolenaar said.
The question is posed during a four-year local election cycle where voters will choose a governor/lieutenant governor, delegate to Congress, lawmakers and members of the Boards of Elections and Education. Speakers chosen to help explore the topic include former Elections Supervisor John Abramson, representatives of the Democratic, Republican and Independent Citizens’ Movement parties; UVI Assistant Economics Professor Mark Wenner, and voters.
An unaffiliated candidate who ran and won a public office had been invited as well, the league president said. Their remarks will be followed by a question-and-answer session where meeting participants can weigh in.
โWhat does that mean for the way politics are run? What does it mean for the Legislature? Are we losing things by not having parties? Are we gaining things by not having parties?โ Moolenaar said.
Organizers hope those who speak, listen and consider different views will leave the meeting ready to sort out the candidates and make the best choices.
Saturdayโs session online and in person at UVI-St.ย Thomas comes at a time when the Pew Research Center โ a prominent fact-finding group โ points to national trends suggesting U.S. voters have split into three roughly equal voting blocks: Democratic, Republican, and Independent (although in the U.S.,ย there is no recognized Independent political party).ย
The League of Women Voters has about 800 chapters nationwide. It was formed in the 1920s after U.S. women won the right to vote.
Grab your dancing shoes and come on out to Sing St. Johnโs annual spring โAll Ah Weโ concerts held in Coral Bay on Friday and Cruz Bay on Saturday.
The first event is a dance party at Our Place in Coral Bay, featuring Quelbe Resurrection Band and the St. John Recovery Choir on Friday, April 17, from 5 to 8:30 p.m.; food and drinks will be on sale starting at 4 p.m.
Members of Sign St. Johnโs Ocama and Recovery Choir rehearse before a performance. (Photo by William Stelzer)
The Cruz Bay concert event will be held on Saturday, April 18, from 5 to 9:30 p.m. in Frank Powell Sr. Park; local vendors will offer food, drinks and refreshments for sale starting at 2 p.m. (There is something for everyone: Roti, conch, goat, fried fish, barbecue chicken and ribs with sides, hearty sandwiches, and fresh salads. Local juices, sangria, cocktails, soft drinks, and fracos will also be for sale.)
Quelbe Resurrection Band has teamed up with Sing St. Johnโs choirs for the last two years to present concerts that appeal to a wide range of audience members.
โThe selection of songs, local as well as from abroad, is the really powerful thing about this program,โ said Quelbe Resurrection Band cofounder Tommy โUlyssesโ Pilgrim. โFor instance, โDonโt Stop the Carnivalโ is on the program with โAquarius,โ (from the musical โHair,โ) and there are soul and reggae songs as well.โ
The Quelbe Resurrection Band will perform in Coral Bay on April 17 and in Cruz Bay on April 18. (Submitted photo)
โAnyone would enjoy coming to sit and watch โ or dance โ at one or both of these programs,โ agreed singer and guitarist Sidney Bell.
Both events include performances by Addis Smith of The Addis Revolution (whose album โParadiseโ was on this yearโs official Grammy ballot for Best Reggae Album), Quelbe Resurrection Band, St. John Recovery Choir, and The Echo People. Saturdayโs event also features The Senior Singalong, Ocama Youth Choir, VI for Life Quadrille Dancers, and Bamboula dancer Raven Phillips.
Bamboula dancer Raven Phillips twirls at a Sing St. John performance. (Submitted photo)
For audience members who want to step into the mix, there will be audience mini-tutorials in quadrille and bamboula dancing from 5 โ 6 p.m.
The last hour will be devoted to Quelbe Resurrectionโs dance music, so do bring a chair if you need to sit out a song or two.
โThe โAll Ah Weโ events are truly celebrations of community,โ said Kristen Carmichael-Bowers, director of Sing St. John. โSt. John is such a diverse place, and there are so many ways to express ourselves. Shared community experiences bring opportunities to develop and deepen connections.โ
โIt is a time of great uncertainty on the world stage,โ she added, โbut on our stage there is good will and a willingness to experience one another organically, in the moment.โ
Both the Coral Bay and Cruz Bay events are free and open to the community and visitors.
To help fund concerts like these, Sing St. John is holding a โBIG 50/50 Raffleโ with tickets sold in advance by Recovery Choir singers as well as during the events. The drawing will be done at the conclusion of the Saturday evening show, and the winner will be notified if not present.
Sing St. John is jointly supported by a grant from VI Council on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts in Washington, DC, a federal agency. Support also comes from First Bank, VI Lottery, Love City Strong, the Kenny Chesney Foundation, community donors, and Martha and Dana Robes.
To learn more or to see samples of previous concerts, use this link: http://singstjohn.org.
The Virgin Islands Track & Field Federation proudly congratulates VI Sports Ambassador Michelle Smith, a sophomore at the University of Georgia, on her outstanding victory in the 400m hurdles at theย 2026 Spec Town Invitational, held April 10โ11 in Athens, Georgia.
Michelle Smith (Submitted photo)
Smith delivered a commanding performance in her signature event, racing to a blazing 55.47โa new seasonโs best and a meet record.
Michelle returned to the track for the second leg of the 4ร400m relay and delivered a powerful 51.00 split, helping her team secure the victory in 3:24.29. Michelleโs achievements continue to highlight her exceptional talent and dedication as she represents both the University of Georgia and the U.S. Virgin Islands on the track.
The Federation extends its congratulations to Michelle on this remarkable accomplishment.
She will next compete at the Tom Jones Memorial in Gainesville, Florida, on April 17โ18.
Congratulations to Virgin Islands Track & Field standout Mikaela Smith on an impressive showing at the South Florida Invitational in Tampa, Florida on April 11, 2026.
Mikaela powered to victory in her 800m heat, clocking a seasonโbest 2:11.27.
Mikaela Smith (Submitted photo)
She now turns her focus to the EmbryโRiddle Blue and Gold Invite on April 19 in Daytona Beach, Florida.
University of the Virgin Islands menโs basketball standout Brandon Rasmussen has been selected to participate in the 2026 HBCU Live Xperience All-Star game, scheduled for April 18 in San Antonio, Texas.
UVI Forward Brandon Rasmussen (Submitted photo)
This inaugural event, hosted by the Austin Area Urban League at the Alamo Convocation Center, will showcase elite athletes from Historically Black Colleges and Universities within the NAIA.
Rasmussen will now suit up in his final game representing UVI, on a stage that features student-athletes from more than 20 black colleges across the country, including participants from UVIโs conference, the Historically Black Colleges and Universities Athletic Conference. The St. Croix native will compete as a member of Team Nirenberg, under the guidance of Coach Jon Warren from Langston University.
The graduate forward played a pivotal role for the Buccaneers, starting in all 17 games this season, delivering averages of 11.3 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 2.3 assists per game, while leading the team in scoring. Rasmussen consistently demonstrated his scoring ability, achieving double-digit points in nine games. Defensively, he excelled with an average of 1.6 steals per game, including notable performances with four steals each against Florida National, Keiser University, and Dillard. His most remarkable game was against the #9-ranked Keiser University, where he recorded 21 points, 7 rebounds, and 4 steals. Rasmussen’s outstanding contributions earned him the title of HBCUAC Newcomer of the Week for November 23-30, and he was also a recipient of the HBCUAC Association of Student Athletes Champion of Character Award, recognizing his exemplary leadership, integrity, and impact both on and off the court.
The All-Star game will be part of a weekend packed with activities, including an HBCU College and Career Fair and community service outreach initiatives. These events follow a well-known format that emphasizes larger NCAA Black colleges and universities, while the HBCU Live Xperience now provides a similar platform for smaller institutions.
Tip-off is scheduled at 3 p.m. with the women taking the floor first, followed by the men’s All-Star game featuring Rasmussen at 5:30 p.m. Both games will be streamed live on the Antler Sports Network.
About UVI Athletics
The University of the Virgin Islands is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and a member of the HBCU Athletic Conference, formerly the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference. Entering the 2025-26 season, the Buccaneers will begin their 19th season of athletic competition. As the only Historically Black College or University in the Caribbean, UVI currently sponsors six sports, including menโs and womenโs cross country, menโs and womenโs basketball, and menโs and womenโs outdoor track and field. For more information on UVI Athletics, visit UVIAthletics.com.