Kenneth Rohan Changa, affectionately known as “Changa,” 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. Kenneth’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 Kenneth’s life, making stops at Angel Bar, Luddy’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.
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 territory’s new minimum wage of $12 per hour, effective April 24, pursuant to Act No. 9069.
Source file photo.
This campaign, themed “$12 by April 24: Prepare. Comply. Empower.”, is strategically aligned with the Administration’s guiding framework: One Vision. One Strategy. One U.S. Virgin Islands.
CAMPAIGN OBJECTIVES
The 10-day initiative is designed to:
• Ensure 100% employer awareness across the Territory
• Drive timely and full compliance with the law
• Educate employers and employees on legal obligations and enforcement provisions
• Reinforce VIDOL’s role as both a supportive partner and regulatory authority
Day 10 – Announcement & Awareness
This initiative is part of VIDOL’s campaign, “$12 by April 24: Prepare. Comply. Empower.,” 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.
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 René Larsen, and celebrates legendary Crucian artist El’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.
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 Islands’ identity today.
Gerville René Larsen’s discourse-shifting artwork and advocacy encouraged a deeper, more humanized reading of architecture, illuminating the African-Caribbean legacies embedded in place.
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 forces—such as climate change, development pressure, gentrification, and generational land loss—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.
• Call for Artists Opens: Monday, April 13
• Proposal Submission Deadline: Monday, May 11
• Artwork Drop-off: Monday, May 25
• Exhibition Opening: Saturday, May 30
Fort Frederik Museum
Submission Requirements
• Artist bio (maximum 250 words)
• Project statement (250–500 words) describing engagement with exhibition themes
• Images of proposed or completed work (include title, medium, and dimensions)
Submit materials to:
Monica Marin, Chief Curator, DLAM
monica.marin@dpnr.vi.gov
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 person’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 O’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.
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 “consent of the governed” 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 “no 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 — or other federal laws — they are required to follow, according to a new report from Right to Democracy.
Neil Weare (Photo courtesy Right to Democracy)
“Taxation Without Representation”: 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 “consent of the governed” 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.
“On Tax Day, it is important to think about the slogan ‘taxation without representation’ and what it means for people in U.S. territories today,” said Neil Weare, co-director of Right to Democracy, a nonprofit organization working to advance democracy, equity, and self-determination in U.S. territories. “It 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.”
“Misconceptions about federal taxes in U.S. territories serve to normalize or even justify the undemocratic colonial rule of these communities,” added Adi Martínez-Román, co-director of Right to Democracy. “They erase the lived reality of people who are expected to follow federal law while lacking meaningful power over what those laws require. ‘Consent of the governed’ as a fundamental principle of democracy and self-determination is as important in 2026 as it was in 1776.”
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 today’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.
“Too often, the conversation stops at a lazy myth that the territories ‘don’t pay taxes,’ or ‘are an inordinate drain on the U.S.’,” said Edoardo Ortiz, advocacy director at Right to Democracy. “This report gives journalists, policymakers, educators, and the public a clear answer to that falsehood — 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.”
The report is the latest addition to Right to Democracy’s “250/125” campaign — 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.
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)
Battiste, a student at Armwood High School in Mango, Florida, and member of the Virgin Islands’ 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 Volkswagen’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 “grieving the devastating loss of one of our own.”
“His passing this past weekend has left our entire soccer family heartbroken,” the team wrote. “Elijah 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.”
The Soccer Federation asked the community support of Elijah’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.
Afro-Caribbean Steel & Brass Orchestra, directed by Dion Parson, brings its newly premiered 14-piece ensemble to Prior-Jollek Hall on April 18. (Submitted photo)
A newly formed Afro-Caribbean Steel & Brass Orchestra is set to make its Virgin Islands debut on April 18 at Prior-Jollek Hall, following its international premiere earlier this month at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York.
Presented by The Forum and directed by St. Thomas-born musician Dion Parson, the 14-piece ensemble – featuring Ron Blake, Sherwin Williams, Eljhaie Brathwaite, Ronald Lee, Le’ Roi Simmonds, and Uriel Rogers, among others – brings its 14-piece ensemble to Prior-Jollek Hall at Antilles School on April 18. The concert brings together steel pan, brass and woodwinds, and African-Caribbean percussion in a format that moves beyond a traditional concert setting.
The project is designed as a large-ensemble experience rooted in the musical traditions of the African diaspora, blending influences from across the Caribbean, West Africa, and New Orleans into a single performance. Organizers say the goal is to create something that reflects both the history and evolution of those sounds, while offering a more connected, contemporary way to experience them.
The April 18 performance follows a three-night debut run at Dizzy’s Club in New York, marking the orchestra’s first appearance on an international stage before returning home to the Virgin Islands.
Unlike a traditional symphony, the ensemble is built around a mix of composed pieces and improvisation, combining the structure of a jazz ensemble with the harmonic range of steel pan and the rhythmic foundation of African and Caribbean percussion.
The performance is part of The Forum’s 2025–2026 season, which continues to bring a mix of local and internationally connected programming to the territory.
The event begins at 6 p.m. with a courtyard opening, followed by the 7 p.m. concert at Prior-Jollek Hall on the Antilles School campus. Tickets are $30 for adults, with reduced pricing for teachers and students, and free admission for children under 10 with a reserved seat.
Location of the groundwater treatment plant at the U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Education Curriculum Center on St. Thomas (Photo courtesy EPA)
Federal and local officials will host a public meeting Thursday to update residents on ongoing cleanup efforts at the Tutu Wellfield Superfund Site, a long-standing groundwater contamination area in Anna’s Retreat and Estate Tutu.
The session will take place from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Virgin Islands Department of Planning and Natural Resources office at Tutu Park Mall. Representatives from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Northeast and Caribbean Region will be available to provide updates and speak directly with residents.
The meeting comes as construction work continues on an upgraded groundwater treatment system designed to reduce contamination in the Turpentine Run aquifer.
The Tutu Wellfield site has been under federal oversight for decades after contamination was discovered in both public and private wells. The pollution, linked to past industrial activity including dry-cleaning operations, affected groundwater across roughly 108 acres in the Anna’s Retreat area.
Michael Grossman, project manager for the site, said the issue was first identified in 1987 when a resident reported unusual odors in a private well.
“Testing revealed industrial solvents commonly used in dry cleaning, as well as petroleum contamination in multiple public and private wells,” Grossman said.
To protect residents, officials closed 18 contaminated wells and began providing safe drinking water while long-term monitoring efforts were put in place.
“Investigations traced much of the contamination to past industrial activity at the Curriculum Center property, where dry-cleaning operations used a solvent called PCE,” he said. “That contamination seeped into the groundwater and continues to move slowly underground, which is why long-term cleanup is necessary.”
He added that the site was added to the federal Superfund program in 1995, and cleanup efforts have continued since. Grossman said the original groundwater treatment system, installed in 2004, has been effective in containing the spread of contamination but has not reduced pollution levels as quickly as expected.
“Monitoring over time showed that pollution levels were not declining as quickly as anticipated, indicating that a significant source of the groundwater contamination remained,” he said.
To address that, the EPA finalized an updated cleanup plan in 2021 focused on the Curriculum Center area, identified as the main source of contamination.
“This next phase is designed to more aggressively remove contamination, prevent it from spreading, and move the site toward achieving federal drinking water standards,” Grossman said.
The agency is now expanding and upgrading the existing treatment system, including the addition of new extraction and monitoring wells to increase capacity.
“Construction began in November 2025 and is expected to be completed by early 2027,” he said.
Despite the upgrades, Grossman said groundwater cleanup will take time.
“While the upgraded system is expected to accelerate progress, it will likely take decades to fully restore the aquifer,” he said. “Groundwater use in the affected area remains prohibited to prevent exposure to contamination.”
Grossman said construction work is actively underway, “EPA has notified residents and local officials and will continue sharing updates as work progresses. Construction is actively underway, including installation of new wells and upgrades to the existing treatment system. “
Grossman said the April 16 session is intended to give residents a chance to hear directly from officials and ask questions about the ongoing cleanup.
“EPA, in coordination with the Virgin Islands Department of Planning and Natural Resources, is hosting a public session to give residents an opportunity to speak directly with project staff and get updates on the status of the cleanup,” he said.
A student art exhibition featuring works from young artists across the Virgin Islands will open Saturday evening at Prosperity Farm Distillery on St. Croix, 81C Arts announced in a press release.
Student Art Show 2026 opening on STT in January drew hundreds of visitors, including families, students, and the general arts community. The show now opens on STX Saturday night. (Photo courtesy 81C Arts)
The “Student Art Show 2026,” presented by 81C Arts, will debut on St. Croix from 5 to 10 p.m. Saturday. The opening event is free and open to the public, with gallery hours continuing daily at no cost, according to the press release.
The exhibition previously ran from January through March at 81C’s St. Thomas location and now continues as a traveling showcase of student work developed through Virgin Islands art programs, the press release stated.
A student and his mother reflecting on artwork he created during Expression Through The Arts, 81C Arts’ summer arts program, which is in its third year of programming. (Photo courtesy 81C Arts)
The show includes pieces from students in 81C Arts’ Expression Through the Arts summer program, digital animations from the DigiLocal after-school program, and selected works from students across the community, the release stated.
Artwork spans multiple forms, including painting, poetry, and digital media. Many pieces are paired with poetry created through an ekphrastic process, where students responded to each other’s work. Other works feature blackout poetry created from pages of “The Great Gatsby,” allowing students to reinterpret text through visual expression, the release stated.
81C Arts’ Dyonna Potter at a students and families night celebrating student achievement. (Photo courtesy 81C Arts)
A portion of the exhibition focuses on self-portraiture, using color, symbolism, and language to explore identity and self-perception, the release stated.
In advance of the opening, 81C will host a live figure sketching session, “The Study by Art House,” on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the distillery. Tickets are $25 and include art supplies, the release stated.
“Our focus is creating meaningful, accessible experiences across exhibitions, education, and public programming,” said Zack Zook of 81C. “Our collaborations with Art House and Prosperity Farm Distillery reflect how we expand and sustain that access through thoughtful, community-driven partnerships.”
Schneider Regional Medical Center, in partnership with the Virgin Islands Division of Festivals, is proud to host its Annual Carnival at the Hospital on Monday, April 20, at 6 p.m. on the grounds of the Roy L. Schneider Hospital, aligned with this year’s theme, “Where Culture, Rhythm and Good Times Mix — St. Thomas Carnival 2026.”
Schneider Regional Medical Center. (Submitted photo)
The public is invited to enjoy this free, family-friendly event designed to uplift patients, seniors, families, staff, and the broader community—particularly those who may be unable to attend traditional festivities. The energy and vibrancy of Carnival will come directly to the hospital campus, bringing the energy and spirit of Carnival directly to the community—giving everyone the opportunity to be part of the celebration.
Guests can enjoy live music and cultural performances, carnival-style games and activities for all ages, a variety of local food and refreshments, and community vendors, artisans, and cultural showcase booths.
Vendor Opportunities Available: SRMC invites local businesses, artisans, and food vendors to participate and showcase their products and services. Vendor booths are $150 per space, with early set-up available. For vendor registration and details, please contact Camellia Williams at (340) 776-8311 ext. 2367 or 2213, or via email at cwilliams@srmedicalcenter.org.
Media & Press Opportunity: Members of the media are invited to attend and capture this unique community-centered event, with opportunities for on-site coverage and interviews with SRMC leadership, Division of Festivals representatives, Carnival royalty, and community partners.
SRMC looks forward to welcoming the community for an evening of culture, connection, and celebration.