Home Blog Page 71

DJ Parson Hits the Road with Yo-Yo Ma and Interlochen

0
DJ Parson performs on trumpet during the Interlochen Arts Academyโ€™s Imagine U.S. national tour, which included stops in Detroit, Philadelphia, and Boston alongside Yo-Yo Ma. (Submitted photo)

For DJ Parson, the past few weeks have meant moving quickly โ€” rehearsals, travel, and performances across multiple cities โ€” culminating in the kind of moment most young musicians donโ€™t often get early on: sharing a stage with Yo-Yo Ma.

The St. Thomas native, now a 16-year-old jazz trumpet major at the Interlochen Arts Academy, recently completed his first national tour, performing in Detroit, Philadelphia, and Boston as part of “Imagine U.S.: Celebrating America at 250,” a multi-disciplinary production bringing together young artists from across the country. Selected through a competitive process as the tourโ€™s only jazz horn player, Parson contributed to both performance and original work, including music scored for a student-produced film.

For Parson, the experience marked a first. It was his first time touring across multiple citiesโ€” moving from late-night rehearsals into early travel days and back onto the stage, often with little downtime in between. At the same time, the work extended beyond performance. He contributed to an original piece developed alongside fellow students, later paired with a short film and performed live as part of the program โ€” an example of the kind of cross-disciplinary collaboration that defined the tour.

โ€œThe experience was very fun,โ€ he said. โ€œBeing with everyone and being able to express the music we createdโ€ฆ to so many peopleโ€”that was the best part.โ€

The program itself brought together music, film, and other disciplines, with students performing works ranging from a newly commissioned cello concerto by Wynton Marsalis to a reimagined version of Charles Ivesโ€™ “Symphony No. 4.” The pace was demanding, but it also offered something harder to replicate in a classroom setting โ€” learning in real time, alongside other artists working at a high level.

Back home, that kind of environment wasnโ€™t unfamiliar โ€” it just looked different. While on St. Thomas, Parson attended Antilles School, where he credits the band program as a key part of building his foundation as a musician. The son of United Jazz Foundation founder Nicole Parson and Emmy award-winning Virgin Islands musician Dion Parson, he also grew up around rehearsals, performances, and working musicians, absorbing the process as much as the sound.

โ€œIโ€™ve always been around jazz,โ€ he said, including figures like Wynton Marsalis, who was involved in shaping parts of the tour and has long worked alongside his father. From there, the learning became more direct, with musicians offering guidance not just on technique, but on how to approach the instrument and the work.

โ€œAll the members of my dadโ€™s band have been very supportive,โ€ he said, pointing to players like trumpeter Melvin Jones and others who helped shape his development over time.

Even while studying at Interlochen, Parson has continued to return home and perform locally, building on that foundation while staying connected to the community that helped shape his early growth.

โ€œSurround yourself with people that are better than you,โ€ he said. โ€œYou learn more hearing them play โ€ฆ it helps you become better musically and personally.โ€

Now finishing his second year, Parson is focused on what comes next โ€” more performances, more opportunities, and more time putting in the work.

โ€œIโ€™m just trying to put in as much time as possible,โ€ he said, โ€œand take advantage of every opportunity.โ€

Three FAPA Dancers Make History With Acceptance to Joffrey School Summer Intensives

0

The French Academy of Performing Arts has announced that three dancers, ages 8, 9, and 10, have been accepted into multiple summer intensive programs at the world-renowned Joffrey Ballet School, marking a historic achievement for the Virgin Islands.

Dior James, Nubia Richards, and Azalea Pearsall celebrate a milestone after earning acceptance into multiple summer intensive programs at the Joffrey Ballet School. (Photo courtesy Lea Scott)

The accepted students are Dior James, Nubia Richards, and Azalea Pearsall. Each successfully completed a competitive audition process and has been invited to attend a range of prestigious programs, including the NYC Ballet Intensive, JoffreyRED Program, Joffrey Italy, and the NYC Musical Theater Intensive, among others.

With more than 60 years of global impact, the Joffrey Ballet School is recognized as one of the most prestigious dance institutions in the world, known for its rigorous preprofessional training and its pioneering role in shaping American dance through both classical and contemporary techniques.

All three students are full-time FAPA dancers committed to a comprehensive training schedule that runs Monday through Saturday. At the heart of their training is classical ballet, which shapes strength, technique, posture, and artistry. In addition to ballet, the dancers train across multiple genres, including modern and contemporary, jazz and theater, gymnastics and acrobatics, and fusion-based performance training.

FAPAโ€™s success is built through intentional audition training and professional preparation. Students underwent a focused three-week training process designed not only to secure acceptance but to prepare them to thrive in prestigious programs. Beyond the studio, these dancers are also members of the FAPA Dance Team, an elite group that travels annually to regional and national competitions, representing the Virgin Islands on major stages. Through competition experiences, they gain advanced performance confidence, real-world stage exposure, competitive discipline and resilience, and national recognition and scholarship opportunities.

FAPA students practice technical skills one evening in class. (Photo courtesy Lea Scott)

Lea Scott, director of FAPA USVI, believes that dancers should be taught using a well-rounded approach, which focuses on the whole child. โ€œEven our youngest dancers are taught the importance of proper ballet technique, body placement, flexibility, strength, stage presence, and most importantly, respect for the art form. Students train in multiple dance styles and we also focus on character development, leadership, teamwork, and helping children to believe in themselves,โ€ Scott said.

Scott noted that FAPA dancers work very hard, with students ranging from part-time (one to three days per week) to full-time (daily). Many train each week and participate in workshops, performances, community events, competitions, and auditions. โ€œWe believe in preparing students to not only succeed at home within FAPA, but to feel confident walking into prestigious opportunities anywhere in the world. Through structured training, students learn discipline, professionalism, and conduct expected in major dance institutions and programs,โ€ Scott said.

The French Academy of Performing Arts also provides after-school programs, summer and winter programs, and guest teacher workshops throughout the year. These programs are designed to give children and teens additional opportunities to grow through dance, performing arts, creative learning, and leadership development in a safe and positive environment. Students are able to continue building their skills beyond regular classes through special intensives, holiday camps, community performances, and visiting artist experiences.

In addition, FAPA is committed to strengthening the local arts community by opening its doors to local teachers, artists, and entrepreneurs who would like to join in its mission of serving the youth of the Virgin Islands. The studio welcomes partnerships, workshops, and collaborative programs that help expand opportunities for children and families. FAPA has become a hub for local talent, bringing together educators, performers, small businesses, and creative leaders who share a passion for inspiring the next generation.

Higher educational and professional learning opportunities in the arts can be expensive due to travel, hotel accommodations, preparation costs, uniforms, costumes, and program fees. According to Scott, the cost for one student to participate in an educational trip, competition, or intensive can range from approximately $1,500 to $5,000. FAPA students travel not only in the United States, but also internationally for opportunities in places such as France, the United Kingdom, and Italy.

The community can support FAPA by attending performances, sponsoring students or special events, and volunteering. Through FAPAโ€™s nonprofit partner, The French Ballet Theatre Inc., community members and businesses can directly support higher educational opportunities in the arts for children in the Virgin Islands.

To learn more or support a student, community members may contact 340-626-1545.

โ€œOur children are capable of amazing things when they are given the opportunity, the proper guidance, positive attention, and support to grow. FAPA is proud to help open doors for young people and show them that their dreams are possible; that they can take more steps forward to greatness,โ€ Scott said.

From STX to the World Stage: Replastic Heads to Global Summit

0

What started as a small effort to turn discarded plastic into useful products on St. Croix is now heading to the global stage.

RePlastic Recycle LLC, owned byย Steve Chmura,ย Amy Bowlerย andย Lacy Geddie, has been selected to present at the 2026 Global Sustainable Islands Summit in Gran Canaria, Canary Islands โ€” an opportunity that will place the companyโ€™s island-built model for tackling plastic waste before world leaders and environmental experts.

RePlastic Recycle LLC, owned by Steve Chmura, Amy Bowler and Lacy Geddie. (Photo courtesy RePlastic Recycle LLC)

The recognition comes as the company continues to expand its work at home, supported in part by a $1.5 million grant investment facilitated by the Bryan-Roach administration and managed by Chemonics International through the University of the Virgin Islands Research and Technology Park.

Albert Bryan Jr.ย described the milestone in a Government House press release as โ€œa proud moment for the Virgin Islands,โ€ pointing to RePlastic as an example of local innovation gaining global attention.

โ€œWhen a company born on St. Croix earns the opportunity to stand before the world and offer a real solution to a problem that affects island communities everywhere, that is something the Virgin Islands should take pride in,โ€ Bryan said in the release.

For the founders, the journey to that moment began long before the invitation.

Chmura and Bowler first came to St. Croix as traveling nurses, planning only a temporary stay. Instead, they found a home โ€” and a problem that was impossible to ignore.

โ€œWe fell in love with the island and made it home,โ€ Bowler said. โ€œWe wanted to do something that not only helps the environment but gives back to the community.โ€

Like many island communities, the territory faces persistent challenges with plastic waste, much of which ends up in landfills, guts and coastal waters. For RePlasticโ€™s founders, the issue wasnโ€™t just environmental โ€” it was an opportunity to rethink how waste is valued.

โ€œPlastic waste is seen as something to get rid of,โ€ Chmura said. โ€œWe see it as something that can be turned into something useful for the community.โ€

In its early days, the company focused on transforming discarded plastics into art, furniture and everyday items, demonstrating that waste could be repurposed rather than discarded. That concept has since grown into a more advanced and scalable operation.

Today, RePlastic is working to convert plastic waste into construction materials such as interlocking blocks, dimensional lumber, pavers and custom tiles โ€” products that can be used locally, reducing both waste and reliance on imported materials.

โ€œWe are presenting our business model and system design because weโ€™ll be putting systems on other islands, and our global headquarters will be here in St. Croix,โ€ Chmura said.

That model โ€” designed specifically for island environments โ€” is what drew the attention ofย Island Innovation, which invited the company to present at the summit. The event brings together government leaders and private-sector innovators from small island developing states to collaborate on climate and sustainability solutions.

Back home, the company is already expanding its reach.

Through a partnership with the Virgin Islands Waste Management Authority, RePlastic will launch a new plastic collection initiative on St. Croix beginning April 27. Residents will be able to drop off clean plastics labeled #1, #2 and #5 at the Peterโ€™s Rest Convenience Center, Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The emphasis on clean materials is critical, Geddie said, both for worker safety and for maintaining the quality of the final products.

All materials collected will be processed locally, part of a broader effort to build a circular economy within the territory โ€” one where waste is reused rather than exported.

The company is also preparing to scale its operations with plans for a 10,000-square-foot facility at the William D. Roebuck Industrial Park. There, plastics will be sorted using an AI-powered robotic system and manufactured into building materials at a larger scale.

Beyond production, RePlastic is investing in people.

Plans are underway to develop a makerspace and technology hub in partnership with the Research and Technology Park, creating opportunities for students and residents to gain hands-on experience with advanced manufacturing systems.

The goal, the founders say, is to ensure that innovation doesnโ€™t just happen in the Virgin Islands โ€” but stays there.

โ€œThis is not recycling for recyclingโ€™s sake,โ€ Bryan said in the release. โ€œThis is about taking a burden on our environment and turning it into something useful, marketable, and capable of helping build a stronger Virgin Islands.โ€

As RePlastic prepares to present its work on an international stage, its founders say the mission remains rooted in the same idea that started it all: solving local problems in ways that benefit the community.

New Exhibition Showcases Evolution of Virgin Islands Contemporary Art

A new group exhibition challenging traditional ideas of Virgin Islands art will open Friday at Salt of the Earth Tattoo in Royal Dane Mall on St. Thomas.

The show, organized by artist and curator Lucien Downes under the banner of Virgin Islands Contemporary, features 10 artists working across a range of visual mediums.

The opening reception is scheduled for Friday, from 5 to 9 p.m. Regular viewing hours will continue Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

A multicolored Moko Jumbie dances across the canvas in a textured piece created by Lucien Downes. (Photo courtesy Lucien Downes)

Featured artists include Brenda L. Cotto, Amy Gibbs, Lucien Downes, Jon Euwema, Elroy Simmons, Kristin Forbes-Mullane, Chunikwa George, Eliana Schuster Brown, Eric Paxton, Tamara Michael, and Meagan Lyn. Their work highlights themes of cultural evolution, identity, and contemporary Caribbean perspectives, moving beyond familiar iconography, such as seascapes, Moko Jumbies, and strictly historical narratives.

Downes, who previously managed an art supply store, describes his own practice as one rooted in experimentation with materials and technique. That sentiment, he says, extends to the group as a whole. โ€œMy artwork has always been different, whether itโ€™s the material I used or the way I used said materials. I always wanted to push the boundaries of what Virgin Islands art is supposed to look like, not just regular Moko Jumbie, seascape or historical themes the way they were usually portrayed, but in a more modern take on them. I created Virgin Islands Contemporary to find like-minded artists to add to the conversation,” Downes said.

When asked to define the common thread linking the participants, Downes emphasized ideology over aesthetics. โ€œI would say more of an ideology of what each of us views as contemporary art, and the way we choose to express these concepts. I am always exploring new ideas and materials. Having been, in my previous life, an art store manager, I learned a lot about art materials and what they did,” he said.

The exhibition also carries a pointed message for local audiences. Downes hopes the event will challenge perceptions about the viability of an artistic career in the territory. โ€œItโ€™s important for locals to show up so they can see that being a working artist is a viable occupation and also for them to open their minds to other ways of viewing common themes,โ€ Downes said.

Admission is free and open to the public. For more information, contact Lucien Downes directly atย luciendownes@hotmail.com.

Kenneth Rohan Changa Dies

0

Kenneth Rohan Changa, affectionately known as โ€œChanga,โ€ was born on February 9, 1969, on the island of Trinidad to his loving parents, Sylvia and the late Cecil Changa. He was the first son and a cherished member of his family.

Kenneth Rohan Changa

On January 9, 1991, Kenneth married the love of his life and devoted partner, Avian Changa, with whom he shared a beautiful and enduring union. Together, they were blessed with two loving children, Arianne and Kyle Changa, who were the pride and joy of his life.

Beyond his professional life; he had a deep love for cars and speed, reflecting his vibrant and spirited personality. Kennethโ€™s greatest passions were his family, especially his beloved grandson, Karson Changa, who brought him immense joy. He is also survived by his daughter-in-law Jessica Changa.

He will also be remembered by his special friends; Ludy, Burkle, Rolston, Ms. Franka, Stevie from Trinidad, Bryan “Changa”, Shakeem, and a host of other special friends and relatives too numerous to mention.

A funeral service will be held on Saturday, April 18, at the Apostolic Faith Mission, 487 Strawberry Hill, Kingshill, St. Croix, VI 00850. Viewing will begin at 10 a.m., followed by the service at 11 a.m.

Following the service, a motorcade will proceed in honor of Kennethโ€™s life, making stops at Angel Bar, Luddyโ€™s Bar and concluding at Diageo USVI to commemorate his legacy.

Though we have lost a beautiful soul, Kenneth Rohan Changa will always be cherished in our hearts.

May he rest in eternal peace.

10-Day Countdown to $12 Per Hour Minimum Wage Increase

Commissioner Dr. Gary Molloy of the Virgin Islands Department of Labor is pleased to announce the launch of a comprehensive 10-Day Countdown Campaign leading up to the implementation of the territoryโ€™s new minimum wage of $12 per hour, effective April 24, pursuant to Act No. 9069.

Source file photo.

This campaign, themed โ€œ$12 by April 24: Prepare. Comply. Empower.โ€, is strategically aligned with the Administrationโ€™s guiding framework: One Vision. One Strategy. One U.S. Virgin Islands.

CAMPAIGN OBJECTIVES

The 10-day initiative is designed to:

โ€ข Ensure 100% employer awareness across the Territory

โ€ข Drive timely and full compliance with the law

โ€ข Educate employers and employees on legal obligations and enforcement provisions

โ€ข Reinforce VIDOLโ€™s role as both a supportive partner and regulatory authority

Day 10 โ€“ Announcement & Awareness

This initiative is part of VIDOLโ€™s campaign, โ€œ$12 by April 24: Prepare. Comply. Empower.,โ€ aimed at ensuring employers are fully informed and prepared.

All employers are strongly encouraged to review their payroll systems immediately to ensure timely compliance with the new wage requirement.

Commissioner Dr. Gary Molloy emphasized that early preparation is critical to ensuring a smooth transition.

For more information, including access to the official Minimum Wage Poster, please contact the Division of Labor Relations, please contact VIDOL at St. Croix: (340) 773-1994 or St. Thomas: (340) 776-3700 or St. John: (340) 693-4367. You can also visit www.vidol.gov/ or follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/USVIDOL for updates.

Fort Frederik Museum Seeks Artists

The Division of Libraries, Archives and Museums, the State Historic Preservation Office, and the Historic Preservation Commission, in partnership with The Virgin Islands Architecture Center for Built Heritage and Crafts, announces a Call for Artists for When the Walls Answer, a juried exhibition at Fort Frederik Museum.

Fort Frederik (Fort Frederik Museum photo)

The exhibition honors the life and legacy of renowned Virgin Islands artist, scholar, and cultural preservation advocate Gerville Renรฉ Larsen, and celebrates legendary Crucian artist Elโ€™Roy Simmonds for his lifelong contributions to the arts in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The exhibition will be presented at Fort Frederik Museum, a National Historic Landmark and site of profound historical significance where freedom was demanded and secured by Virgin Islands ancestors.

Conceived and curated by DLAM Chief Curator and VIAC Advisory Member Monica Marin, When the Walls Answer brings together works by established and emerging Virgin Islands artists, including students whose work engages architecture as a living archive of identity, memory, and cultural knowledge.ย 

Presented during May, Cultural Preservation Month, the exhibition explores how the built environment bears the imprint of the people who created it, and how those stories continue to shape Virgin Islandsโ€™ identity today.

Gerville Renรฉ Larsenโ€™s discourse-shifting artwork and advocacy encouraged a deeper, more humanized reading of architecture, illuminating the African-Caribbean legacies embedded in place.ย 

Architectural elements such as gingerbread fretwork, wrought-iron lattice screens, steep-pitched hip roofs, row houses, verandahs, courtyards, and climate-responsive design form a creolized visual language rooted in West African knowledge systems and reshaped through local materials, environmental adaptation, and cultural continuity.

Artists are invited to explore architecture not only as a synthesis of form and function, but as cultural inheritance and an expression of national identity. How does architecture reveal the cultural memory embedded in place? In what ways do buildings speak to histories of resilience, multiculturalism, and creative invention? How are contemporary forcesโ€”such as climate change, development pressure, gentrification, and generational land lossโ€”reshaping these spaces and the communities connected to them?

The exhibition seeks works that engage the architectural and cultural landscape of the Virgin Islands through research, storytelling, and material exploration. Submissions may interpret historically or architecturally significant sites, examine vernacular building traditions, or reflect on the evolving identity of our built environment. Artists are encouraged to consider how their work can reclaim narrative, challenge colonial frameworks, and imagine pathways toward preservation, equity, and self-determination.

All media are welcome, including painting, drawing, photography, mixed media, sculpture, installation, and woodworking.

โ€ข Call for Artists Opens: Monday, April 13

โ€ข Proposal Submission Deadline: Monday, May 11

โ€ข Artwork Drop-off: Monday, May 25

โ€ข Exhibition Opening: Saturday, May 30

Fort Frederik Museum

Submission Requirements

โ€ข Artist bio (maximum 250 words)

โ€ข Project statement (250โ€“500 words) describing engagement with exhibition themes

โ€ข Images of proposed or completed work (include title, medium, and dimensions)

Submit materials to:

Monica Marin, Chief Curator, DLAM

monica.marin@dpnr.vi.gov

Dowe Pleads Not Guilty in Bank Fraud Case

0
Former V.I. Port Authority Executive Director Carlton Dowe waived his right to appear at an arraignment in Puerto Rico and pleaded not guilty to federal bank fraud charges. (Source file photo)

Former V.I. Port Authority Executive Director Carlton Dowe pleaded not guilty to federal bank fraud and other charges Tuesday after waiving his appearance at an arraignment in a Puerto Rico federal court.

Dowe was arrested last month on St. Thomas and charged with multiple counts of bank fraud, making false statements on a loan application and aggravated identity theft. On the same day, he notified the VIPA governing board of his intent to resign effective April 10. He surrendered his passport and was released from custody ahead of his trial, which is taking place in the U.S. District Court of Puerto Rico.

Dowe is being represented by Joseph DiRuzzo III, a Florida-based attorney who has handled multiple federal cases in the U.S. Virgin Islands. DiRuzzo asked Judge Pedro Delgado-Hernandez to allow him to practice in Puerto Rico, which Delgado-Hernandez granted.

According to his grand jury indictment, the charges against Dowe stem from false information he allegedly included in loan application documents submitted to Banco Popular between March 2021 and November 2023. The false statements included inflated income and manufactured lease agreements. Dowe was also accused of forging a personโ€™s name and signature on a loan document, leading to the charge of aggravated identity theft.

Dowe is the fifth high-ranking member of the Virgin Islands government to be indicted in the past two years. Former V.I. Housing Finance Authority executive Darin Richardson was convicted of criminal conflict of interest and other charges last year. Former V.I. Police Commissioner Ray Martinez and former Management and Budget Director Jenifer Oโ€™Neal were both found guilty of charges including wire fraud, bribery and money laundering in December. Former Sports, Parks and Recreation Commissioner Calvert White was found guilty of wire fraud and bribery charges last summer.

New Report: U.S. Still Has a ‘Taxation Without Representation’ Problem

0
A new report by Right to Democracy takes a close look at the history of taxation leading up to the 1776 American Revolution and misconceptions around taxation in U.S. territories today to ask what โ€œconsent of the governedโ€ means in 2026 for residents of Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands. (Shutterstock image)
A new report by Right to Democracy takes a close look at the history of taxation leading up to the 1776 American Revolution and misconceptions around taxation in U.S. territories today to ask what โ€œconsent of the governedโ€ means in 2026 for residents of Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands. (Shutterstock image)

The United States was founded on the rallying cry of โ€œno taxation without representation. Yet, 250 years later 3.6 million people in U.S. territories pay over $5 billion in federal taxes each year, all without any say in what federal taxes โ€” or other federal laws โ€” they are required to follow, according to a new report from Right to Democracy.

Neil Weare (Photo courtesy Right to Democracy)

โ€œTaxation Without Representationโ€: Colonial Narratives Then and Now takes a close look at the history of taxation leading up to the 1776 American Revolution and misconceptions around taxation in U.S. territories today to ask what โ€œconsent of the governedโ€ means in 2026 for residents of Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands, a press release announcing the report states.

โ€œOn Tax Day, it is important to think about the slogan โ€˜taxation without representationโ€™ and what it means for people in U.S. territories today,โ€ said Neil Weare, co-director of Right to Democracy, a nonprofit organization working to advance democracy, equity, and self-determination in U.S. territories.ย โ€œIt is eye-opening to see just how many similarities exist in the relationship between the 13 colonies and Great Britain and the relationship between U.S. territories and the federal government, whether it is taxes or broader questions of democratic accountability and self-determination.โ€

โ€œMisconceptions about federal taxes in U.S. territories serve to normalize or even justify the undemocratic colonial rule of these communities,โ€ added Adi Martรญnez-Romรกn, co-director of Right to Democracy. โ€œThey erase the lived reality of people who are expected to follow federal law while lacking meaningful power over what those laws require. โ€˜Consent of the governedโ€™ as a fundamental principle of democracy and self-determination is as important in 2026 as it was in 1776.โ€

The report challenges the claims that people in the territories do not pay federal taxes or are an exceptional burden on the federal treasury, showing that this narrative is both misleading and routinely used to rationalize unequal treatment, the release states. By linking todayโ€™s debate to the colonial arguments Americans already recognize from the 1760s and 1770s, the report invites a broader public to see territorial policy not as a niche issue, but as an unfinished democratic question that challenges the most basic principles the United States claims to be founded on.

โ€œToo often, the conversation stops at a lazy myth that the territories โ€˜donโ€™t pay taxes,โ€™ or โ€˜are an inordinate drain on the U.S.โ€™,” said Edoardo Ortiz, advocacy director at Right to Democracy. โ€œThis report gives journalists, policymakers, educators, and the public a clear answer to that falsehood โ€” and a clearer lens for seeing the bigger question underneath it: why the United States still accepts a colonial double standard in U.S. territories that it expressly rejected at its founding.โ€

The report is the latest addition to Right to Democracy’s โ€œ250/125โ€ campaign โ€” which places the undemocratic colonial framework in U.S. territories under the historical lens of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the 125th anniversary of the Insular Cases, a series of racist opinions by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1901 pertaining to the status of U.S. territories acquired in the Spanish-American War.

The campaign will hold events across the territories and states, publish resources, and advance projects that take advantage of these unique anniversaries to denormalize undemocratic rule in the U.S. territories, according to the release.

The report is available at: https://www.righttodemocracy.us/new_report_the_u_s_still_has_a_taxation_without_representation_problem

U20 Dashing Eagles Mourn Teammate Killed in Florida Car Crash

Virgin Islanders were mourning the death of 17-year-old Elijah Battiste Tuesday, killed in a multi-car collision outside Tampa Bay.

Elijah Battiste was killed in a multi-car collision east of Tampa Bay Saturday night. (Photo courtesy USVI Soccer Federation)
Elijah Battiste was killed in a multi-car collision east of Tampa Bay Saturday night. (Photo courtesy USVI Soccer Federation)

Battiste, a student at Armwood High School in Mango, Florida, and member of the Virgin Islandsโ€™ U20 Dashing Eagles national soccer team, was driving west around 11 p.m. Saturday when a car going the other direction veered into oncoming traffic, the Florida Highway Patrol told local news Monday.

The head-on collision spun both cars around. A Ford F150 driving behind Battiste then slammed into his Volkswagenโ€™s driver side door. Police were searching for the driver of the Ford, who fled on foot, according to local news reports.

Battiste and the 40-year-old driver of the other vehicle were treated at a local hospital, where Battiste later died.

The U.S. Virgin Islands Soccer Federation released a statement saying the organization was โ€œgrieving the devastating loss of one of our own.โ€

โ€œHis passing this past weekend has left our entire soccer family heartbroken,โ€ the team wrote. โ€œElijah was more than a player, he was a teammate, a friend, and a bright spirit who brought passion and pride to the game. His presence on and off the field will be deeply missed by all who had the privilege of knowing him.โ€

The Soccer Federation asked the community support of Elijahโ€™s family with to help ease the burden. A crowd-funding site had raised more than $20,000 by Tuesday morning.

Battiste, affectionately known as Papo, also played midfield for the Tampa Bay United soccer team.

Jobs - Click Here