GERS Celebrates 65 Years of Serving Government Pensioners

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GERS Administrator and CEO Angel Dawson welcomes wellwishers to the system’s 65th birthday celebration on St. Thomas. (Source photo by Judi Shimel)

Dozens of government retirees filled the courtyard of the Government Employees Retirement System building on St. Thomas Friday to celebrate 65 years of existence. The system’s top administrators used the occasion to declare the GERS was in better fiscal health than it has been in recent years.

A similar ceremony took place Thursday on St. Croix.

However, they said, achieving greater stability was not easy, and the fiscal future was not guaranteed. Nonetheless, officials told the gathering it was time to celebrate.

The V.I. government’s pension system was established on Oct. 1, 1959, as part of the Division of Personnel. System administrator and Chief Executive Officer Angel Dawson compared this year’s anniversary as an achievement many in the audience could relate to.

“We’re 65 years of age … how did you feel when you turned 65, if you turned 65? (sic) Did you feel good? Did you feel grateful that you achieved that milestone? Did you possibly retire? And did you feel that you got a second life after you retired so you could do whatever you want?” Dawson asked.

” … the reason I ask that and the reason that I say that is the GERS has now joined you in that club of 65 years and older. Except we’re 65,” Dawson said, “so we feel as if we have received the gift of a second wind, a second birth, okay? Because turning 65 was not guaranteed.”

He thanked Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. and lawmakers for working out a special purpose financial scheme and funding note that helped the system recover from a crippling deficit. “We have actually in the last year been able to achieve well over 20 percent return on our investments. … We have increased our assets to over $500 million,” the administrator said.

GERS Board of Trustees Chairman Dwane Callwood joined the administrator in praising those elected officials who worked together to see the system through a financial crisis. “ … whether you agree with them or don’t agree with them politically, the fact is what they accomplished was humongous. It was huge, it was large, it was historic. And it is a testament to the unlimited potential we have as a Virgin Islands territory when everybody checked their egos and agendas at the door and come together and collaborate.”

The board chairman also praised the GERS staff, who he said performed well on behalf of the system’s leaders and the retirees they serve.

“We have over 8,700 retirees,” said Chief Operations Officer Asiah Clendinen-Gumbs as she worked on lobby decorations with a team of volunteers. “This retiree system represents 25 percent of our (gross domestic product),” she said.

Senate Vice President Marvin Blyden, joined by Sens. Carla Joseph, Ray Fonseca, Milton Potter, and Dwayne DeGraff, joined the Friday event. Blyden offered congratulations on behalf of the Legislature.

“The GERS … has been a cornerstone of Virgin Islands society since its inception. In the 65 years since it began operations, it has not only been a lifeline that provides for our retirees, but it has powered the entire community,” Blyden said. “As such, the continued struggle to keep the GERS afloat and financial health remains one of our most important tasks in the years to come.”

Those who joined the celebration were treated to a catered lunch, GERS T-shirts and gifts, including a green plastic piggy bank embossed with the pension system logo. Dawson told the retirees their continued support is needed to ensure the system’s longevity.

Rhea Sworn in as New Attorney General of the Virgin Islands

Gordon Rhea was nominated by Gov. Albert Bryan, Jr. to be the next V.I. attorney general, Monday. (Photo courtesy Government House of the VI Facebook)
Gordon C. Rhea was sworn in Friday at Government House on St. Croix as new attorney general of the Virgin Islands. (Photo courtesy Government House of the VI Facebook)
Gordon C. Rhea, Esq. was sworn in as attorney general of the Virgin Islands Justice Department on St. Croix Friday by Virgin Islands Supreme Court Justice Harold W.L. Willocks, Government House announced. Rhea has served in various legal roles, including as a federal prosecutor, a local prosecutor in the Virgin Islands, a defense attorney, a major civil practitioner, and an appellate lawyer. He has been a member of the Virgin Islands Bar Association for over 40 years. In 2023, the Virgin Islands Bar Association awarded him its highest honor, the Winston Hodge Award, according to the press release. Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. and Lt. Gov. Tregenza A. Roach, Esq. praised Rhea’s experience as a prosecutor and defense attorney: “I value having the blessing of having a person that had the experience on both the prosecution side and the defense side that has the balance of mind in order to run a fair Attorney General’s Office and the intelligence that will add to our Department of Justice for years to come,” Bryan said. After Rhea took the oath of office and had the Golden Emblem pin affixed to his lapel by Bryan, he thanked the governor, the lieutenant governor, and everyone in attendance, including members of the governor’s executive staff, the cabinet, the Virgin Islands Legislature, and the Justice Department, the press release stated. Calling the Justice Department “highly underrated,” Rhea has pledged to help improve the office itself. “I’d like to get the Department of Justice up to full strength,” he said. “We’re missing a lot of people that we need, and I’d like to bring more in. I’d like to recruit more attorneys, and I’d like to bring in more local attorneys, attorneys from the Virgin Islands who know these islands. That’s a big part of my agenda. I’m also interested in modernizing the office, bringing in a modern case management system.” Rhea grew up in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and attended Indiana University, where he received a bachelor’s degree with honors in history. He then entered graduate school at Harvard University as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow and earned a master’s degree. Afterward, he received Peace Corps training on St. Croix in the summer of 1968 and joined the Peace Corps Africa program, the release stated. Returning to the United States in early 1970, he worked for a year as a carpenter, then attended Stanford University Law School, where he received his law degree in 1974. He began his legal career in Los Angeles, defending complex criminal cases, and then moved to Washington, D.C., where he served as Special Assistant to the Chief Counsel of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Activities. Rhea became the Assistant United States Attorney in Washington, where he worked for more than five years and served as the office’s deputy director of Supreme Court Operations, overseeing all felony prosecutions in the District of Columbia, and as Executive Assistant United States Attorney, it said. In 1981, he was appointed as the United States Attorney in the Virgin Islands. In 1982, Rhea and Attorney Thomas Alkin founded “Alkin and Rhea,” a prominent plaintiff’s firm on St. Croix, it said. “The Virgin Islands has been a big part of my life,” Rhea said. “As a matter of fact, it’s been a big part of my life for more than half of my life.” Rhea said he is committed to helping people and lifting them up. “One of the worst things I can imagine is to be a young person and have a felony conviction that you carry for life that prevents you from ever getting a good job. I’m not saying some people don’t deserve that, and the ones that do, I’m going to do everything I can do to see that they get it. But there’s a lot that are correctable, that are corrigible. And there I think we need to really work on and develop our various programs for drug treatment, alcohol treatment, anger management, counseling – all of those things,” Rhea said. Rhea and his wife Catherine were married on St. Croix in 1968. They have two sons, Campbell and Carter, the release stated.

Student Accused in Bus Driver Assault Gets March Trial Date

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Caleave Nigel Mascall Jr. was arrested and charged for attacking a school bus driver. (Shutterstock image)

A St. Croix student accused of attacking his school bus driver along with two others earlier this month will stand trial in March, according to a scheduling order filed Wednesday in the case.

Caleave Nigel Mascall Jr., 18, was arrested Oct. 2 and charged with third-degree assault, damaging or tampering with a vehicle and disturbance of the peace. He was remanded to the John A. Bell Adult Correctional Facility but was released to a third-party custodian Oct. 16 after posting 10 percent of the $25,000 bail, according to court records.

Two minors who were arrested along with Mascall were released to their parents pending juvenile court proceedings. All three are students at St. Croix Central High School.

The attack occurred after a verbal altercation between the driver and the students as they were getting off the bus, the VIPD reported. Video of the incident showed the driver on the floor of the vehicle as he was punched and kicked, suffering injuries that required his hospitalization. Mascall allegedly then left the bus but returned to smash the glass in the door, according to the police.

The incident led to the suspension of all school bus services in the St. Croix district as drivers staged a two-day job action in support of their colleague, and was strongly condemned by the V.I. Education Department.

According to the scheduling order issued Wednesday following Mascall’s arraignment in V.I. Superior Court, a discovery conference will be held on Jan. 29, the final pre-trial conference on March 14, and jury selection and the trial on March 24 at 9 a.m.

Should there be a plea offer, it is due 10 days before the discovery conference in January, according to the order, though the court “strongly encourages” such offers be extended at the earliest possible stage of the proceedings.

Federal Officials Assure USVI Election Security

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Election security expert Kate Conley and Jen Easterly, director of the United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said elections systems across the United States and its territories were more secure than ever. (Screenshot from Zoom meeting)
The federal agency tasked with helping elections officials run safe, fair polling places said Friday the Virgin Islands was no different from mainland states. Jen Easterly, director of the United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), told The Source federal elections experts hired over the last year had been in the U.S. territories meeting and training local elections officials. “100 percent,” Easterly said. “These experts were former elections officials, administrators, technology specialists who have been doing elections for a long time. We hired in Region 2, which includes the territories, New York, New Jersey.” CISA experts have been in the territories “to ensure they take advantage of all our resources, whether that’s physical security assessments, cybersecurity assessments, and all the training that we provide to ensure elections officials have the support, information, and resources that they need to deliver safe and secure elections,” she said. Easterly warned of a “literal fire hose” of disinformation regarding the upcoming election, some of which came from hostile foreign nations seeking to disrupt faith in American elections. These bad actors hoped to “stoke partisan discord and pit Americans against each other.” Elections officials and poll workers aren’t nameless, faceless entities who suddenly appear every other year. They’re your friends and neighbors, she said. The upcoming election would be as safe and fair as possible, and Easterly invited anyone who disbelieved that to come see it in person. “Sign up to be a poll worker. Be a pole observer. And if you have any questions, talk to your state or local election official. They are the best source for accurate information, and they are the ones who can help you have confidence that your vote is protected and that your vote will be counted as cast,” Easterly said. “Our election infrastructure has never been more secure.” Virgin Islands Elections Supervisor Caroline Fawkes had also pointed to misinformation or overt disinformation as factors driving suspicion in elections, leading to increased voter apathy and lower turnout. Kate Conley, CISA’s senior adviser for elections security, said the agency had also worked with elections partners, like law enforcement, to discuss appropriate responses to any disruption in voting. The Virgin Islands got an early example of this police response on the first day of early voting when a Board of Elections member was said to have created a commotion so severe that it frightened people at a St. Thomas polling place. Eventually, police were called to calm the situation, board members said at an emergency meeting Oct. 15. The board ordered Republican member Harriet Mercer to apologize in writing but did not further describe the allegedly offensive behavior. The CISA officials warned Friday that, while the elections would be safe and fair, they may be messy. With each state and territory having their own systems of voting, as well as their own unique physical, cyber, and legal challenges, there was sure to be some degree of confusion in each election, they said. “On election day, things will go wrong. They always do. We’re talking about an event that has hundreds of thousands of election workers, tens of thousands of polling places, and likely some 150 million voters. There will always be hiccups that happen in such a complex process,” Easterly said. Again, the Virgin Islands is no outlier. Fawkes filed a lawsuit Oct. 17 in the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands seeking a temporary restraining order and an injunction blocking Congressional Delegate Candidate Ia Smith from appearing on the ballot. Fawkes alleges Smith was disqualified in June for failing to meet residency requirements, including not submitting a tax return transcript by the June 10 deadline. Fawkes cited 18 V.I.C. §411, which grants the supervisor of Elections sole authority to determine a candidate’s qualifications. She argued that Smith’s failure to provide the necessary documentation was sufficient to remove her from the race. Despite this, the Board of Elections, led by members Raymond J. Williams and Epiphane Joseph, voted on Sept. 4 to reinstate Smith, reversing Fawkes’ earlier decision to bar Smith. In her lawsuit, Fawkes contends that this move was beyond the board’s legal authority. Determining whether a candidate meets the legal requirements falls solely under the supervisor of Elections’ jurisdiction. Fawkes asked the court to declare the board’s actions illegal and reaffirm the power of her office in deciding candidate eligibility.

Brief: Bridge Construction Continues Across St. Croix

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Progress on Altona Lagoon, Midland Road, East Airport, and Route 669 Bridges continues as part of the St. Croix bridge projects, the Virgin Islands Public Works Department announced.

At Altona Lagoon, the bridge approaches have been paved and the road was unofficially opened to traffic last week. Striping of the roadway and signage will follow. This project is not considered complete without a completely striped bridge. The contractor, VI Paving Inc., will also finish repairs to the parapet walls along the bridge and some cosmetic work on the approaches to the sidewalks, according to the press release.

Altona Bridge (Photo courtesy DPW)

VI Paving is currently working on the bridge at East Airport Road, which is awaiting repairs to a wastewater line at the site. Once those repairs are completed, backfilling will begin. Both bridges are expected to be finished this year. the press release stated.

Work has commenced on the Agriculture Bridge on Route 669. Custom Builders, the contractor, has cleared the site and is preparing to lay the foundations for the bridge abutments on both the northern and southern sides. At the Midland Road Bridge, the contractor previously coordinated with the Water and Power Authority to relocate their lines. They are currently waiting for Viya to respond so they can locate and adjust their underground lines before work can proceed, the release stated.

Agriculture Bridge (Route 669) (Photo courtesy DPW)

Eastern Federal Lands, a division of the Federal Highway Administration within the U.S. Department of Transportation, is managing the major bridge projects. DPW acts as a liaison between FHWA, local contractors, and the community, it said.

Plaskett Addresses Recent Issue Regarding Delays in USPS Package Deliveries

United States Postal Service (USPS) logo
The office of Congresswoman Stacey E. Plaskett recently received information and complaints from numerous Virgin Islands residents regarding delays in packages mailed through the United States Postal Service (USPS). Plaskett’s office has learned that the delays are a result of the mislabeling of addresses in Jacksonville causing packages that should be routed to the Virgin Islands mistakenly sent from the Jacksonville processing center to Puerto Rico for processing. Congresswoman Plaskett said, “My office is aware of a postal issue related to packages presently affecting the USPS customers in the Virgin Islands. After a conversation with USPS management, we have learned that there is a robotic issue with labeling at the Jacksonville Processing and Distribution Center which causes packages to be shipped to incorrect zip codes outside of the Virgin Islands. “We have elevated these issues with USPS regional and headquarters leadership, as delays in receiving mail and packages cannot continue and viable options must be provided to rectify the matter. My office has suggested alternative routing between Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands until the mislabeling at the Jacksonville Center is rectified. I am putting as much pressure as possible and will work with USPS officials until this issue with our mail service is resolved as quickly as possible. “I want to thank the individuals who called and emailed our office to share these delays with us. Sharing tracking information with my office supports our ability to make stronger arguments.” To report a USPS complaint for our office’s records, please contact our offices at 778-5900 or 774-4408.

Anguilla Landfill on STX Closed Friday Due to Flare-Up

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The Anguilla Landfill on St. Croix will be closed Friday due to a flare-up of a fire from last weekend, the Waste Management Authority announced. The Virgin Islands Fire and Emergency Medical Service, VIWMA, and the landfill contractor are working diligently to extinguish the fire, the agency said. The public is advised to avoid any smoke that may be coming from that area, and to stay tuned to social media for further updates. For more information, contact the Division of Education and Communications Management at 340-474-2811 or email communications@viwma.org.

District Court to Shut Down Case Management/ Electronic Case Files System for Maintenance

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The District Court advise the pubic that its CM/ECF system will be taken offline to conduct regular maintenance at 5 p.m., Friday, Nov. 8, through 6 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 10. If there are any questions or concerns, please contact the Clerk’s Office in the Division of St. Thomas and St. John at 774-0640 or the Division of St. Croix at 718-1130.

Here Is What to Do if General Election Absentee Ballot Has Not Been Received

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Virgin Islands Supervisor of Elections Caroline Fawkes (file photo)
Supervisor Caroline Fawkes reminds all voters that if any elector who requested an Absentee Mailed Ballot by the Oct. 14th deadline and has not received the ballot by Friday, Oct. 25, that person should please contact his/her respective Elections System Office at 774-3107 on St. Thomas or 773-1021 on St. Croix. Fawkes reminds the public that Absentee ballots are available as an alternate for anyone who is unable to Early Vote or participate on General Election Day. Absentee Ballot applications are available at the Elections System website www.vivote.gov. Absentee ballots are available in either district if the voter is working or out of the district until Nov. 5. Voters can request an emailed absentee ballot and in-person absentee ballot by 5 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 5. Early Voting is scheduled to run until Monday, Oct. 28, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily on St. Thomas and St. Croix. St. John’s scheduled hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday, Oct. 28. Voting Centers are open on Saturdays and Sundays. The Early Voting locations are:
  • St. Croix Elections Office, Sunny Isles Shopping Center Unit 26
  • St. Thomas Elections Office, Lockhart Gardens (Upstairs Banco Popular)
  • St. John Elections Office, Market Place Suite II, 3rd Floor
For additional information, contact the Office of the Supervisor of Elections at 773-1021.

Marcellinus Andrew Dies at 85

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Marcellinus Andrew
Marcellinus Andrew, also known as “Frére,” died peacefully on Sept. 22, in Tallahassee, Fla., at the age of 85. He was born on Feb. 9, 1939, in Choiseul, St. Lucia to Andrew Felix and Jane Felix. He later moved to St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands in 1968 where he made his home for 56 years. He is preceded in death by his mother, Jane Felix; father, Andrew Felix; daughters, Morina Andrew and Loretta Ruth Andrew; brother, Francis Felix; sisters: Frances Butcher and Christina Johnny; sister-in-law, Letisha Elovique. He is survived by his loving wife of 54 years, Agnes Andrew; sons: Marcellinus Andrew Jr., Daniel Andrew, Erick Andrew, Dennis Andrew and Cyril Andrew; daughters: Carol Andrew and Julietta Mitchel (aka Barbie); brothers: Phillip Felix and family, Robert Felix and family, and Lazarus Felix and family; and brothers-in-law: Linus Johnny, Hugh Crick and family, Kenny Edward and family, and Thomas Edward and family. He is also survived by sisters-in-law, Ann Marie Felix, Edrice Felix, Vernita James and family, Virginia Edward and family, Catherine Crick and family and Letisha Elovique’s family; daughters-in-law: Mandy Putt-Andrew, Charlene Andrew and Mia Marley Andrew; and grandchildren: Alexis, Ciara, Anthony, Chyann, Colleen, Daniel Jr, (aka DJ), Denise, Deniah, Cailey and Kenzie. He is also survived by 17 nieces including special nieces: Rufina Johnny, Rudelphia Johnny, Tracy Felix, Daniella (Elsa) Patterson, Marvelin Felix, Leah Felix, Shirley Ann Patterson, and Cornelia Felix; and14 nephews including special nephews: Danny Felix and Terry Felix. He is also survived by the Felix family of Mongouge, Ravineau, BoisDen, Uncle Stephen and family, the Crick family, Brittani and the Stanley family. Other survivors include special friends: Martin Faviore (aka Sonny), Joseph Isidore (aka Mr. Doo), Son Son Prospere, Fan Fan Eugene, Alphonsous Stanislaus, Theresa Joseph, Veronica Roseman, Dorothy president/family; and many other friends and family too numerous to mention. The first viewing will be held from 3-5 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 7, at the Divine Chapel. The second viewing will be held at 9 a.m. followed by a funeral service at 10 a.m., Friday, Nov. 8, at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, 1 Mount Pleasant, Frederiksted, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands. Interment will be at Kingshill Cemetery. Funeral arrangements are entrusted to Divine Funeral Home.