
The Hon. Ernest E. Morris Jr. Confirmed as Superior Court Judge for St. Croix District

Uncle Accused in Knife Attack

VIFEMS Swiftly Extinguishes Structural Fire at Iguana Point

At approximately 7:08 p.m., the Zulu Company of the Virgin Islands Fire and Emergency Medical Services received a call to go to Sussman’s residence in the Great Cruz Bay area. The initial response involved two units – a pumper and a tanker, with a team of six firefighters who quickly started to put out the fire, according to the press release.
Given the intensity of the fire, Romeo Company requested additional support. This led to the arrival of an extra pumper unit, a tanker, and an ambulance unit at the scene, along with six more firefighters to assist in the firefighting efforts, the press release stated.
Recognizing the need for a more substantial water supply, Water Hauler B&C Transport was called to the scene to provide additional resources, the release stated.
This swift coordination allowed firefighters to manage and extinguish the fire effectively, it said.
Under the leadership of Lt. Doug Walters, who served as the Incident Commander, the fire was brought under control within 14 minutes. All hot spots were completely extinguished within 35 minutes. The firefighting efforts involved two tanker units, two pumper units, one water hauler, 12 on-duty firefighters, and one off-duty firefighter, according to the release.
The Arson and Investigation Team arrived shortly after the fire was contained, and an investigation into its cause is currently underway, it said.
Leayle R. McFarlane Sr. Dies

D’Amour Set to Compete Thursday at Archery Ranking Round in Paris

Nicholas D’Amour, 22, of St. Thomas, is the first Virgin Islands athlete to compete at the 2024 Olympic Games as the men’s archery individual ranking round gets underway Thursday in Paris.
The competition starts at 8:15 a.m. Atlantic time at the storied Esplanade des Invalides. D’Amour, who also competed in the 2020 Games in Tokyo and is currently ranked 11th in the world, qualified for his second Olympic berth at the Americas Continental Qualifiers in Medellin, Colombia, in April.
Also competing for the USVI are Eduardo Garcia in the marathon; Kruz Schembri in fencing; and Natalia Kuipers and Maximillian “Max” Wilson in swimming. Kuipers and Schembri will be the flag-bearers for opening ceremony on Friday, which, in a break from tradition, will be held on the Seine River in the heart of the city, with boats for each delegation. The event will start at 2 p.m. Atlantic time.Viewers here at home can follow the athletes on the committee website, on NBC, and at the official site of the Paris Games.
WAPA Announces Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) Installation Completed With Remobilization of Wärtsilä Phase 2 Project at RHPP

Bryan/Roach Administration Celebrates Success of Recent ADA Expo


Emergency Management Measures in Place As Schneider Regional Wrangles with Ransomware Attack

The recent cyberattack on Schneider Regional Medical Center has brought local and federal law enforcement into the picture, according to the medical center’s chief executive officer. Some details about Sunday’s ransomware attack were shared with lawmakers during Wednesday’s hearing before the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Budget and Finance.
Schneider Regional CEO Tina Comissiong and Information Technology Officer Brandon Richardson told the committee that efforts to restore the system were still in the works, and perpetrators are demanding an undisclosed sum to remove impediments placed on the system. But both medical center officials say systems at the Roy L. Schneider Hospital are up and running, thanks to an emergency operations plan developed well in advance.
“The systems were shut down to allow the ITT team, the federal and mobile authorities to investigate the attack. We instituted a disaster recovery plan that we have in place, and we are currently on downtime procedures while the system is being investigated and brought back up in a safe way,” Comissiong said.
Committee Chairwoman Donna Frett-Gregory asked about the extent of the attack. “ … As far as you know, that’s both hospitals or just the hospital you’re managing?”
The medical center chief said she and her staff have been in touch with officials at the Gov. Juan Luis Hospital on St. Croix, “and they are not affected at this time. We’re the only hospital to our knowledge that’s affected,” Comissiong said.
Committee member and Senate President Novelle Francis said he understood the medical center team could not fully disclose the nature of their talks with investigators and that the probe into the ransomware attack was ongoing.
“Can you briefly discuss what’s happening with the cybersecurity issue?” Francis said.
“We did not get affected by CrowdStrike — that thing that happened to Delta (Airlines),” Comissiong said, referring to the global outage Friday that was tied to a software update for Windows hosts by the firm CrowdStrike, based in Austin, Texas, which provides cloud services for companies worldwide, including airlines.
“Relative to the situation at Schneider, as Miss Comissiong made reference to, we did enact our disaster recovery plan; we are currently still doing that. We are working with our local partners as well as our federal partners about the best course of actions. We’re looking pretty good but I don’t want to say anything more until we are fully back up, but right now it seems we’re in a good direction,” Richardson said.
Comissiong added that the day-to-day operation of providing patient care continues; surgeries are still taking place at the Roy L. Schneider Hospital and access to medicines and other items needed daily remains in place.
“We have downtime procedures where we are fully comfortable with paper charting — we’re still operating as normal in terms of surgeries and day-to-day patient care on the floor. Our emergency room is still open treating patients. We’re still able to access our medications and other things we need to do day-to-day patient care. So that continues, uninterrupted,” she said.
“And that’s why we prepare for these types of situations. It’s really unfortunate that we’ve had this kind of attack,” the medical center chief said.
PFA Updated on WAPA Situation

- Pay employees with ease and accuracy and minimize manual processes
- Enhance the employee experience with access to the HR and payroll information
- Keep the agency’s taxes in top form
- Track key business metrics and easily create detailed performance reports
Healthcare Concerns Aired at Wednesday Senate Hearing

When administrators from the Schneider Regional Medical Center sat down before the 35th Legislature’s Committee on Appropriations, Budgets, and Finance, lawmakers listened carefully to a long list of concerns. The medical center team came to justify their request for $46.3 million for the spending year that begins Oct. 1.
Wednesday’s budget hearing agenda focused on healthcare in the St. Thomas-St. John district. The Schneider Regional presentation, along with questions-and-answer rounds, began by mid-morning and wrapped up after 1 p.m. Officials from the St. Thomas East End Medical Center defended their budget request on Wednesday afternoon.
Both entities had one major concern in common: the expected loss of Medicaid coverage for thousands of V.I. patients using hospital and East End Medical Center services. The end of a policy barring U.S. states and territories from trimming their Medicaid rolls during the COVID-19 pandemic took effect in spring 2023.
And even as administrators spoke about scant Medicaid reimbursements hurting their bottom lines, the loss of funds they could rely on further dimmed their financial pictures.
“The main threat to STEEMCC remains financial instability,” said Interim Executive Director Tess Richards. Shortfalls in government allotments and Medicaid reimbursements have left East End Medical with a $1.2 million deficit.
The clinic, located at Tutu Park Mall, is seeking $7.7 million in fiscal year 2025.
Schneider Regional Chief Executive Officer Tina Commissiong identified uncompensated healthcare costs and aging infrastructure as her two most pressing challenges. Topping the list of unreliables are the emergency generators at the Roy L. Schneider Hospital.
The hospital’s backup system has been working overtime during the district’s recent rounds of WAPA power failures, Commissiong said. “We are also in need of a third generator to serve as a backup for the two we presently have since they are both 20 years old,” she said. “The total cost to bring our backup power system to our current functioning status is $1.5 million.”
Then came the list of needs for St. John’s Myrah Keating Smith Clinic at an estimated $400,000.
However, the medical center teams also brought encouraging news to the Legislature. Increased hiring for the nursing staff had produced cost savings; efforts to do the same for hospital physicians are planned to start in the new fiscal year, Commissiong said.
Richards told lawmakers about the acquisition of a dermatologist for the East End Medical Center. The specialist sees clients at the center three days a week, working on a per diem basis, the director said and is the only dermatologist in the district.
“And that was a deliberate decision to affect the payer mix, so we are not as heavily reliant on the government,” she said. Since the dermatologist opened their practice, several undiagnosed cases of skin cancer had been detected, Richards said.
Committee Chair Donna Frett-Gregory questioned the idea, but Sen. Ray Fonseca — head of the Finance Committee on Health, Hospitals and Human Services — expressed his support.
So did non-committee member Sen. Milton Potter, who called adding a dermatologist to the staff a good idea. “I believe we have to work together collectively to ensure the survival, the growth of STEEMCC,” Potter said.
Frett-Gregory said the services provided by the medical centers — especially Schneider Regional — are essential for the people they serve. She added that her appreciation for the work done at Schneider Regional had grown in recent days since her 91-year-old mother was admitted after suffering a medical emergency.
After one committee member mentioned one agency’s request for $1 million to cut back growth along the roadsides, the finance committee chair sighed and said the territory’s leaders needed to rethink their priorities.




