Cancryn Wastewater Pump Failure
36th Legislature of the Virgin Islands Calendar

In the Matter of the Estate of Shirley Hart Berry, Deceased
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS DIVISION OF ST. CROIX
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF SHIRLEY HART BERRY, Deceased.PROBATE NO. SX-2024-PB-00098 NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Petition for settlement with administration has been filed on behalf of the ESTATE OF SHIRLEY HART BERRY at the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands for the settlement of the above Estate and that Kimberly Berry has been appointed administrator of the above estate. All persons having claims against the Estate are required to present all claims within six months from the date of this notice, verified by affidavit, and all persons indebted to the Estate shall make payment promptly to the undersigned.
Date: May 11, 2026 Kimberly D. Berry, Administrator PO Box 185, Christiansted, VI 00821 340-643-3306 kdberrylaw@gmail.com
St. Croix Track Club Earns 11 Medals in Puerto Rico

Op-Ed: The Lounge | A Column for Men: Before the Bridge: What Women Wish Men Would Hear
In his biweekly column, Langley Shazor speaks to issues important to men within the territory.
If men have quiet places they rarely express, women have emotional spaces they often feel are ignored. Much of the tension between men and women is not rooted in hatred or hostility, but in misalignment. Women are often speaking from a place of emotional awareness, while men are listening from a place of problem-solving. One feels unheard, the other feels unfairly criticized. Both leave the conversation frustrated, convinced the other simply does not get it.
What many women wish men would hear is not complicated, but it is layered. They want to feel seen beyond their functionality. They want their emotional world to be treated as valid, not excessive. When a woman expresses frustration, it is rarely because she enjoys conflict. More often, it is because something important feels overlooked. Emotion, for many women, is not drama. It is data. It is a signal that something within the relationship requires attention.
When women say, “You’re not listening,” they are not usually critiquing a man’s ability to hear words. They are speaking about emotional presence. Listening, in this context, means engaging without immediately correcting, fixing, or minimizing. It means resisting the urge to defend before understanding. Many women do not need a solution first. They need acknowledgment. They need to know their feelings register as significant.
For men who were trained to respond with action, this can be confusing. Fixing a problem feels productive. Offering advice feels helpful. But when a woman shares something emotional, and the response skips directly to correction or logic, she may feel dismissed. What she often desires is empathy before analysis. She wants to know that her experience matters before it is evaluated.
Another truth many women carry is exhaustion. Not simply physical exhaustion, but emotional labor. In many relationships, women often manage relational details that go unseen. They track birthdays, moods, tensions, family dynamics, and subtle shifts in atmosphere. They anticipate conflict before it surfaces. They interpret silence. They translate tone. When this effort goes unnoticed, it can create resentment. The frustration is not about superiority. It is about imbalance.
Women wish men would hear that emotional expression is not a threat to masculinity. When they ask for conversation, it is not an attack on competence. When they express disappointment, it is not a declaration of failure. It is a request for deeper connection. The desire is not to control, but to collaborate. However, when vulnerability is met with detachment, the message received is that emotional needs are inconvenient.
There is also the matter of consistency. Many women value reliability not only in action but in energy. They want to feel that the tone of the relationship is stable, that affection is not seasonal, and that communication does not disappear when stress increases. Emotional unpredictability can feel unsafe, even if it is unintentional. When a man withdraws under pressure without explanation, a woman may interpret that withdrawal as rejection rather than regulation.
What women often wish men would hear is that reassurance matters. Not constant validation, but intentional affirmation. Words of appreciation, simple acknowledgment, and consistent engagement build trust over time. Silence may feel neutral to a man, but it rarely feels neutral to a woman who is relationally attuned. Silence can feel like distance, and distance can create doubt.
At the same time, many women do not want perfection. They are not asking men to become endlessly expressive or emotionally theatrical. They are asking for effort. They want to see growth. They want to know that when something hurts, it will be taken seriously. They want partnership that includes emotional accountability.
It is also important to acknowledge that many women carry their own wounds. Past disappointments, broken trust, and societal pressures shape how they communicate. When they seem overly cautious or intensely expressive, it may be because they are protecting themselves from repeating old pain. Hearing them fully requires patience. It requires separating tone from intent and emotion from accusation.
What women wish men would hear is that their desire for communication is rooted in investment. Indifference does not argue. Disconnection does not protest. When a woman speaks passionately about a relationship, it is often because she values it deeply. The intensity is not always hostility. It is sometimes hope fighting to stay alive.
Men often ask for peace. Women often ask for engagement. These desires are not incompatible. Peace does not require silence, and engagement does not require chaos. When both sides understand that the underlying need is security, the conversation changes. Security for many women is built through emotional responsiveness. Security for many men is built through respect and trust. When these needs are acknowledged together, balance becomes possible.
Listening without defense is one of the most powerful gifts a man can offer. It communicates strength rather than submission. It signals that the relationship is more important than being right. When women feel heard, their tone softens. When they feel understood, their defenses lower. And when they feel safe, they reciprocate that safety.
This is not about surrendering identity. It is about expanding understanding. Just as men wish for appreciation and peace, women wish for presence and emotional attentiveness. Neither side is irrational. Both are responding to deeply human needs.
When men truly hear what women have been trying to say, the bridge strengthens. The conversation shifts from accusation to alignment. What once felt like criticism begins to feel like collaboration. Hearing does not mean agreeing with every emotion. It means respecting that the emotion exists.
And respect, when practiced consistently, transforms tension into trust.
Editor’s Note: Opinion articles do not represent the views of the Virgin Islands Source newsroom and are the sole expressed opinion of the writer. Submissions can be made to visource@gmail.com.
Related Links:
Op-Ed: The Lounge | A Column for Men: Before the Bridge: Why This Work Matters
Op-Ed: The Lounge | A Column for Men: Before the Bridge: What Men Wish Women Knew and Why We Never Said It
Army Corps Approves Permit for Summers End Marina in Coral Bay


- “The Standard Permit issued to the Summer’s End Group will allow construction of a marina within the Coral Harbor.
- “The 67,833 square-foot fixed-dock marina would consist of 115 slips to accommodate vessels of varying lengths estimated to range from 30 feet to over 160 feet in length.
- “There would be an additional 12 single moorings constructed southeast of the marina so that the marina could accommodate a total of 127 vessels.
- “The marina includes a boardwalk along the shoreline and associated upland amenities.
- “As mitigative measures, the applicant would relocate four Solenastrea bournoni corals near the dock, outplant 3,000 coral specimens, install seven informational buoys, install information signs at the marina, provide pump out or waste disposal facilities, plant 300 red mangrove seedlings along the shoreline, and maintain 50 stormwater features in the uplands.
- “The applicant would also implement actions that result in the avoidance of impacts to a historic shipwreck.”
- “The project would result in impacts to 2.39 acres of seagrasses.
- “The applicant will be required to provide compensatory mitigation to offset the unavoidable impacts of the marina by restoring, enhancing, and establishing 4.596 acres of a complex of mangrove islands and 0.975 acres of sea grass habitat, conducting annual cleanup events in Coral Harbor, and complying with monitoring requirements and ecologically based performance standards.
- “The central components of that compensatory mitigation project have already been verified under Nationwide Permit 27 as an aquatic ecosystem restoration, enhancement, and establishment project. That project will now be relied on by the Summer’s End Group to provide compensatory mitigation for the authorized marina.”


Baha’i Community Elects Delegates During Ridvan Observance

The local Baha’i community in the U.S. Virgin Islands recently selected delegates as part of its annual Ridvan observance. Chosen at the close of the 10-day festival, the delegates will help elect members of the National Spiritual Assembly, the faith’s governing body.
Local spokesperson Rodney Clarken and other followers say the Ridvan marks the time just before their leader — called Baha’u’llah — was exiled by the Persian government to Constantinople. The period from April 21 to May 2 is set aside for followers to fast from dawn to dusk, pray and gather in community.
Baha’i is considered one of the newest world religions, dating back to the mid-19th century; adherents follow the teachings of a Persian nobleman who renounced his affluent lifestyle and preached a doctrine of peace and brotherhood, Clarken said.
Followers in the faith number in the thousands in Jamaica and in Antigua/Barbuda; other communities exist in Trinidad and Tobago, and throughout the Lesser Antilles. The group’s spokesman said the count of Virgin Islanders active in the faith is uncertain; there were 85 active members involved in picking leaders in 2026. “It’s the most holy time for Baha’is; it’s also the time we annually reelect our local administrative bodies, which we call Spiritual Assemblies,” Clarken said.
Because the community functions without clergy, Baha’is count on assembly members to serve on one of three local boards of trustees for the year ahead. “Baha’is have a threefold purpose we’re all working on; to make ourselves better people and draw closer to God; to use God-given talents to make our communities a better place, (and) to make the world a better place,” said St. Croix Baha’i member Xawntoia Franklin. “We are all charged with the hard work to grow closer to God and make our communities a better place.”

“We do have some standard Baha’i activities that we engage in which are called the Core Activities,” Franklin said, “We also have study circles that allow us to have guided, meaningful conversations about things that are important — what does an individual stand for, what will they do; how can they help.”
She also described the group’s prayer circles and other activities. Her personal commitments led her to work with displaced residents from the JFK housing community and to help young people organize a bicycle repair clinic.
Those who join the effort are not required to follow Baha’i faith practices, but through their efforts with like-minded organizations, they help different nonprofits serve young and old, support after-school programs, tenant advocacy in public housing and educational support.
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