WAPA–SOUTHERN DEAL TO GO TO SENATE AUG. 11

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The fate of the proposed sale of the Water and Power Authority to Southern Energy Inc. is to be put to a vote in a full session of the Senate starting at 10 a.m. Friday, Aug. 11, immediately following three days of public hearings on the three main islands.
The proposed purchase by Southern of 80 percent of WAPA has been the subject of endless debate on countless talk shows, in public forums and at demonstrations throughout the territory for months.
Gov. Charles W. Turnbull has approved the sale and forwarded the legislation requesting the mandatory Senate approval.
Lt. Gov. Gerard Luz James II has veered sharply in the other direction, publicly condemning the sale, as have many unionized WAPA employees and some senators.
The Senate is awaiting an analysis of Southern's proposal by the consulting firm Arthur D. Little that is expected "shortly," according to Sandra Brunet, office manager for Senate president Vargrave Richards. She said it is hoped that the study will be available to the Senate and to the public before the hearings next week — set for Tuesday, Aug. 8, on St. Thomas; Wednesday, Aug. 9, on St. Croix; and Thursday, Aug. 10, on St. John.
For further information on the public hearings, all set to begin at 10 a.m., go to the Local Government section of the Source.

PBA AGREES NOT TO PROTEST ON WICO PROPERTY

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The management of the West Indian Co. and the Police Benevolent Association have reached agreement that the union members will no longer protest on or around Havensight Mall and the WICO dock.
The agreement reached Monday averted a court hearing on WICO's request for a permanent injunction against the PBA and its St. Croix chapter president, Naomi Joseph. The settlement, while barring the union and any of its members from protesting on the WICO property, represents "only a change in venue," according to Joseph.
"WICO had a stronger case than we did," she said. "It's now up to the union to move its march and rallies to Main Street." A march on July 19 by the PBA led WICO to close its front gates and escort arriving cruise ship passengers through an inner gate alongside the dock, away from the protesting police officers.
WICO president Edward E. Thomas sought the court's intervention when Joseph threatened to hold a protest at the dock with what she termed "a boatload of officers from St. Croix." Territorial Court Judge Ishmael Meyers, who accepted the terms of the out-of-court settlement, had issued a temporary restraining order stating that the WICO cruise ship facilities were not a "public forum" for such a protest.
For about a month, a coalition of workers in several public safety agencies, led by the PBA chapters of St. Thomas-St. John and St. Croix, has been protesting on St. Thomas and St. Croix over low wages, poor working conditions and the lack of information from the administration as to when it will implement already negotiated salary increases for its members.

WOMEN'S SOCCER TAKES A BREAK

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St. Thomas Women's Soccer Association will take a brief summer break from practice during the month of August.
Recruiting of new members, practices, preparations for the annual general meeting and the fall women's leagues will begin in September.
For more details contact public relations officer Tanya Ward Benjamin at 776-2105.

ISLAND ART & SOUL: THE FOUNDATION FOR A MUSEUM

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Two stunning 2001 calendars containing "frame-able" art by Caribbean artists are now available. This is the seventh year the Island Art & Soul calendar has been published by the Caribbean Museum Center (CMC) – a "museum on wheels."
CMC is a dream that St. Croix resident Candia Atwater-Shields is determined will some day be a bricks-and-mortar building full of Caribbean art and culture. Meanwhile, it is an extensive collection of island art hanging in her home; boxes of calendars, prints and note cards in her car; and dreams of "living history" in her head.
Atwater-Shields, an attorney, moved to the Virgin Islands from New York State in 1989. She immediately fell in love with the local art and traditions and saw the need to provide a museum where they could be preserved and displayed.
The Caribbean Museum Center is her vision of a place where art and history, artists, students and educators will interact.
Concerned that the fascinating heritage of island elders will die with them, she is especially interested in providing a living-history component, with elders "walking through" their past on videos made by school children.
While the museum center awaits an "angel" or two to finance the dream, the Island Art & Soul calendar, originally a fund-raiser for the museum, has taken on a life of its own. The calendars are unique in that the art works are printed on archival paper that is suitable for framing so that the purchaser acquires a collection of 12 to 14 pieces of art as well as a monthly reference.
CMC also prints individual prints and note cards, and this year, for the first time, 2 sizes of calendars – – 9" x 12" and/or 4’ x 6".
Atwater-Shields and Kate Garner, a partner who joined the project last year, along with Karen Rike, who just came on board, are seeking sponsors for the 2002 calendars. Each sponsor supports one or more months and is recognized in print. For more information click on www.islandartandsoul.com.

V.I. SAXOPHONIST BLAKE BLOWS AWAY NEW YORK

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V.I. Saxophonist Ron Blake and his Quartet performed recently to a sold-out house in New York City at the world famous Blue Note Jazz Club.
Blake celebrated the New York release of his new CD on the TAHMUN label, Up Front & Personal. The event was webcast live on www.BlueNote.Net.
The Ron Blake Quartet with Special Guest Johnny Griffin CD, Up Front & Personal, is available in St. Thomas at: International Records & Tapes, Modern Music, Parrot Fish, and Sam Goody. In St. Croix, visit Parrot Fish and Sam Goody.

MEN CAGERS WIN IN PUERTO RICO, WOMEN LOSE

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SAN GERMAN, Puerto Rico — The Virgin Islands men's basketball team, rebounding from an opening-game disappointment, came back on the second day of the Central America and Caribbean University Sports Games to beat Barbados 91-45 with an impressive performance.
Kevin Sheppard ignited a balanced scoring attack Monday with 10 points, including the first four of the game as the Virgin Islands started a run for its first University Games medal.
"We played every possession," said Sheppard, one of seven Virgin Islands players to score in double figures.
The Virgin Islands was coming off a disappointing 83-57 loss against host Puerto Rico on Sunday's opening day. In that loss, the Virgin Islands led by 12 points in the first half. The score was tied 27-27 at the half but Puerto Rico outscored the V.I. 56-30 in the second half.
"In our first game, we came out playing too," said Sheppard, an Educational Complex alumnus. "I guess we figured after getting a lead we could blow them out and everybody started playing one-on-one basketball and forgot about the team. This time, we came back with good teamwork."
Against Barbados, Sheppard, a Jacksonville State guard, set the pace with two straight layups to start the game and the Virgin Islands built at 12-4 advantage after five minutes of play and took a 43-22 advantage into halftime.
The Virgin Islands played a tenacious defense that forced numerous fast-break layup opportunities.
Alphonse Niles and Carlos Hawkins scored 12 points apiece to lead the Virgin Islands. Johnson Isidore and Steve Hodge each scored 11 points. Sheppard, Leroy Gore and Cuthbert Victor all added 10 for the Virgin Islands, which will face Mexico at 2 p.m. Tuesday.
The top two teams in the preliminary round will earn a spot in Saturday's final. The third and fourth-place teams in the preliminary will compete for the bronze on Saturday. Monday was a busy day for the Virgin Islands University Federation squad. The women's basketball team lost 114-48 to Mexico, which led 57-31 at the half. Natasha Lettsome paced the Virgin Islands with 24 points. The women's team will take on Colombia at noon Tuesday.
Stephen Jones, the Virgin Islands' lone track runner, finished seventh in the 100-meter final. Jones ran the sprint in 10.97 seconds, 5/10th of a second off his personal best. Jones will run the 200 meters on Wednesday.

SOUTHERN ENERGY'S PARENT COMPANY SUED

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A class-action lawsuit claiming racial discrimination was filed against Southern Energy’s parent company and sister companies last Friday in Georgia.
Three African-American employees of Georgia Power claim that the company and its owner, Southern Company along with Southern Company Services discriminated against black employees by fostering a hostile workplace and "moving the goalposts" when considering promotions.
Southern Company is the parent company of Southern Energy, the firm seeking to purchase 80 percent of the V.I. Water and Power Authority for approximately $400 million. Southern Energy is not named in the suit, said the Atlanta-based attorney representing the employees, Michael Terry. He did say it is possible that Southern Energy could be added to the suit in the future, but couldn’t say if that would occur.
"I can’t add anything," Terry said. "Our clients are from and are focusing on Southern Company and Georgia Power."
Southern Energy is a subsidiary of Southern Company and holds the assets of the parent company that are outside the South Eastern section of the U.S., said Southern Energy spokesman Chuck Griffin. Whatever the relationship, Griffin said neither Southern Energy or Southern Company condone discrimination.
"Southern Company in general will not tolerate harassment or discrimination in any case," he said, adding that the company has "launched a full-scale investigation" into the allegations.
The lawsuit, however, paints a different picture of how Southern Company’s Georgia Power operates. The plaintiffs claim that they were harmed by the company’s "reckless indifference to a workplace environment that breeds racial animus and subjects African-American employees to insults, hostility and harassment."
Examples alleged by the plaintiffs include management permitting a hangman’s noose to be hung in Georgia Power’s operating headquarters and the use of derogatory terms aimed at African-Americans.
The suit also claims that despite African-Americans making up 19 percent of Georgia Power’s workforce, only 22 of the company’s top 408 employees were black and that 83 of the 1,602 African-American employees held managerial or supervisory jobs.
The dearth of blacks in upper management and supervisory positions is due to a "glass ceiling" that has been in place for the last seven years. Additionally, the plaintiffs allege that African-American employees are also kept from promotions when management moves the "goalposts" by changing job requirements.

FIVE REEF MANAGERS IN LIMBO

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Marriott Frenchman's Reef's administration has set the ball in motion to get rid of several top management personnel left over from the 20-plus years that Nick Pourzal managed the hotel.
Five top executives who collectively have more than 60 years at the Reef are having their "contracts returned to Prime," according to several sources who declined to speak for attribution due to the sensitivity of ongoing negotiations.
The contracts in question were drawn up when Prime Hospitality Corp. still owned the Reef. They have become a bone of contention between Prime and Marriott International Inc., which purchased the hotel earlier this year. Prime fired Pourzal last summer while the sale was being negotiated.
The five executives are:
— Carole Oriol, who has been head of human resources for nine years and before that was executive assistant to Pourzal; she has worked at the Reef for 20 years.
— Michael Akin, director of engineering, who has been with the hotel for 22 years.
— Andrew HeLal, who served as interim general manager when Pourzal left the Reef and has been with the hotel for five years.
— Mehdi Magvi, the comptroller since 1997.
— Doyle I. Bolton, head of maintenance, who has worked for Frenchman's Reef for 27 years.
According to one source, the Pourzal managers were told when Marriott took over that they had six months to "prove themselves." The six months is up Sept. 15.
However, last week the five managers got a short letter saying, "Lawyers of Prime and Marriott have determined that as of Aug. 1 your contract will be reassigned back to Prime Hospitality."
Some of them reportedly aren’t sure what the letter meant, but one said, "We're being let go – no matter what the verbiage is."
When also remains in question. Though the letter indicated the contracts were being returned to Prime as of Aug. 1, one person said it would likely be Sept. 15 before their work at the Reef would end.
Reef General Manager Jayne Hillner, who declined to comment on the move to get rid of the five executives, reportedly has told several people that the decision was not performance-based.
In a staff meeting Thursday, Hillner said the layoffs were a "business decision," according to several sources.
The five executives were also told they were free to reapply to the Reef, the Renaissance Grand Beach Resort or the Ritz-Carlton – all of which are owned or managed by Marriott.
"Prime has the responsibility to settle" the amounts remaining on the three-year contracts, according to one source.
The sale of the hotel has been acrimonious — at least one lawsuit is pending — and the existing management contracts have become part of the friction.
Some insiders at the Reef have speculated that the contracts have come up now because the hotel is about to be sold again, though Marriott would continue to manage the property.
Of 3,247 hotel rooms on St. Thomas, Marriott holds 30 percent of them with a combined 946 rooms.
Hillner could not be reached for comment Monday, but an assistant said, when asked about the dismissals, "Miss Hillner will not comment on that today."
Two public relations directors at Prime also did not return phone calls Monday.
Meanwhile, some of the managers reportedly intend to report to work Tuesday, thus testing the Aug. 1 deadline referred to in last week’s letter.

THANKS, ST. JOHN

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To the wonderful people of St. John,
Now that the crates and boxes are unpacked and we know how to get where we need to be using the fastest route, I have the time to relax my mind and reflect on the incredible place we once lived and loved. Now is the time to thank all those who made this transition a blessed experience.
Words cannot express the abundance of gratitude we have for the people of the Virgin Islands, St. John in particular. You gave your prayers, time, support, money and, most important, your love.
You enabled us to move to Atlanta to seek a life-saving kidney — a move that was stress free and uneventful. There were so many people involved with our wedding and fund raiser. If we left out your name, know that we thank you from the bottom of our very full hearts.
To my beloved sister Pat for being my beloved sister; Phil McAndrews talking it up and being a great fund raiser and compadre; Betty and Rick Worrell and Tiffany, for the very beneficial raffle drive; Barbara and Paul of Sputnik restaurant for the great food; Pat and Denis Rizzo of Shipwreck Landing — five years of thanks for so much but mostly for letting us cement our vows in your magical space.
To Uris of Sputnik Bar for being a good friend and for the use of the bar; Rich Greengold for organizing the music; Elmo Rabsatt for so much help I can't mention.
To Rev. Neil Scantlebury for the spiritual guidance and for allowing me to be a flake and still signing those paychecks; to our families for being there and keeping us full of hope, love and good food.
To Dave and Martha Matthias for the pictures; Shelia Powell from Shelia's Pot; Douglas and Merle Matthias for the video.
To the parishioners of Emmaus Moravian, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel and Calvary Baptist churches for the prayer network; to the crew at JJ's for the daily hugs during the worst of it; Caneel Bay Resort; the shipyard and captains' associations for their donations.
To Terry Provost and staff of At Your Service Travel for the airline tickets; Mary from Prime Foods; Sid Hamlin and the Connections staff; Rich and Nelda Ringwald; Carl and Veronica Powell; Leola Copenny; Nina and Ralph Fette; Charleen Hammer; Beva and Jim Phillips; Cindy Jurgen; Laura and Paul Samms; Lorna and Nate Nichols; Steve and Joanna Paris; the Mulraine family; the Magras family; the Roberts family; Evie and Ianthe Hendricks; Hilda Anthony and family; the Samuel and Applewhite family.
To Almeade Mitchell; Lisa, Seaha and Kami Robinson; Rev. Doug, Teka and Adrian; Mo and Wally and Lucy Coburn; Ron, Sue and Zeke Gant-Yackel; JJ and Larry; Marleen Walker and family; Jane Johanes; Joe and Lea Hippolyte; the Wade family; Jeanne and Andy (JW's "A" team).
To the east end Anthony family; June and Kendal Anthony; Sally Smith; Cynthia Saunders; Dr. Sheila, Ruth, Debbie and Antonio Dalmida; Cheri and Scott; Sharon Browne and family; Eugenie Dalmida; Ray and Sharelle Francis; the Challenger family; Austin Dalmida and family; Ina and Everett Lee; Ina George and family; Guy Benjamin; George and Earleene January; Hugo and Josephine Roller; Denise Kinslow; the Reddiger family; Coral Bay Marine; Christine Barbich; Cathleen Smith and Robert Hart; Yvonne Tharpes; Andrew and Joy Stillman.
You all are angels on earth. Gratefully, the warmth we feel from all your love has done more healing than you can ever realize.
Until we meet again — love, hugs and blessings to you all.
Justin and Margo Dalmida

BORDEAUX OUTHOUSES OWNER DENIES PARK CLAIMS

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Wilma Marsh-Monsanto told lawmakers Monday that her Bordeaux Mountain restrooms didn't discharge sewage, as National Park Service authorities contend.
Her testimony Monday before the Senate Planning and Environmental Protection Committee in a special session on St. John was collaborated by environmental enforcement agent Leonard Reed. As assistant director of the Planning and Natural Resources Department's Environmental Protection Division, he told the committee, he inspected the controversial Bordeaux outhouses twice.
The first time was in May, he said, and the second was "Friday, the 28th of July." He added, "Our findings are that there were no discharges of waste, and particularly sewage, to the environment."
Monday's hearing was arranged by committee chair Adlah "Foncie" Donastorg after National Park Service officials first blocked the path to the two enclosed toilets with dirt and later removed them altogether.
Marsh-Montanto read from a letter sent to her by park officials stating that sewage had been flowing freely from the facilities.
The Bordeaux overlook property owner said she had operated restrooms for the convenience of visitors for 19 years, almost problem-free until Hurricane Marilyn in 1995. When ventilation and a slippery walkway became problems then, she said, she asked for assistance from the Schneider administration and a contractor was dispatched.
Recently, she said, the owner of Chateau-Bordeaux Restaurant and adjacent shops asked now-retired park Superintendent Russell Berry Jr. if he could help her acquire some of the environmentally friendly restrooms like those at Annaberg Plantation. And that, she said, is when her current problems began.
When Berry asked on whose property the restrooms sat, Marsh-Monsanto said they were on her family's land. Several years ago she won a 12-year court battle against the park service to retrieve almost 100 acres of Bordeaux Mountain.
"Going to court is a huge task, monetary wise and everything, but with the help of God I was able to move into the court and retrieve those lands, even without a hearing." she told senators Monday.
She said she also told Berry that the V.I. National Park has 300 more acres within its holdings that don't belong to it. "I said I intend to come back and retrieve this land," she testified. "So, apparently he got very irate."
Marsh-Monsanto said an Environmental Protection Agency official "came up to the site and said that she had gotten a complaint that there was sewage seeping on the land by Reef Bay." But she said the EPA official made her investigation and said the only problem she could see was "that you need a 4-inch cover to put on a part of the unit" there at the time.
When committee members asked how the complaint of raw sewage came to his attention, Reed said he did not know and that, as far as he was concerned, the report was unfounded.
Representing the park at the hearing was Chief Ranger Schuyler Brown, who indicated in advance that he would not testify on advice of legal counsel. Neither acting Superintendent Judy Shafer nor Friends of the V.I. National Park president John Garrison was present. St. John Administrator Julien Harley, a Friends board member, was present but did not testify.
Sen. Donald "Ducks" Cole called the lack of comment from park officials disrespectful.
Donastorg said relief for the situation might be found in legislation he sponsored to create scenic overlook spaces on St. Thomas, St. Croix and St. John. So far, he said, only St. Thomas has gone forward – with construction of the nearly completed town overlook parking area on Valdemar Hill Sr. Drive, also known as Skyline Drive.
"On the island of St. John, I know we have the Capital Improvement Fund . . . that has money in it and it is specifically freed for St. John," Donastorg said. "We have to take the initiative, take some money out of there."
But he also urged Marsh-Monsanto to try to resolve the situation with the next park superintendent. She said she was willing but urged lawmakers to take action because negotiations could take months. On Wednesday, with cruise ships in the harbor, she said, 500 tourists will be on Bordeaux Mountain and many will need to use "the facilities" that are no longer there.