Wanted St. Croix Woman Arrested at Cyril E. King Airport
Hector Olivieri Torres Dies

Charles E. Daniel Jr. Dies

VI Health Commissioner Urges Parents to Vaccinate Children Against Measles

Editorial: Innovation Needed to Fix WAPA

U.S. Virgin Islands Power Crisis Prompts Protests


Solar Initiative Brings Affordable Energy Solutions to St. Thomas-St. John

Virgin Islanders Learn to Graft Julie Mango Trees

Elridge Thomas, instructor of the “Julie Mango in Every Yard Program,” which is offered by the Virgin Islands Department of Agriculture, met with 15 students Saturday to teach them how to graft mango trees.
Thomas developed the program because “97 percent of food has to be imported to St. Thomas.” He called this an injustice, saying that with its ideal climate, this island should be growing year-round. Thomas has been a farmer on St. Thomas for over twenty years while working thirteen years for the Agriculture Department. In his opinion, in order to be free from the dependency on imported food, this community needs the politicians to understand the importance of agriculture. Snapping his finger on his green thumb, he said, “You can pass a bill, but if you don’t fund it — poof — nothing happens.”
One of the requirements for the program is to be a landowner and have the space to plant at least one mango tree. The students actively participated in the grafting process as he instructed them not to touch the grafting area. Your hands can contaminate the exposed area of the tree. “Cut so it’s not too deep and not too shallow. Wrap the branches with tape, overlapping so that no water gets in. Hold it tight and line it up,” Thomas said.
Grafted fruit trees are more expensive than seedlings, but it’s not about the money. “Genetically, a seedling can go anywhere,” Thomas explained the true value of grafted trees is knowing the fruit you will get. “It produces faster and you can select the variety: its type, size, and cycle.”

Laura Martin, a student in the program, said she is happy to have the opportunity to learn about grafting. She has a garden and borders it with vetiver grass. “Vetiver grass reduces erosion of the soil,” Martin said. This program is a perfect example of farmers sharing their knowledge and supporting each other, she added.
Two more students in the program, Monnickia Martin and Philinne Smith, who teach at Yvonne E. Milliner-Bowsky Elementary School on St. Thomas, have a gardening club in which their students participate. They said all schools should make agriculture part of their curriculum. “The United States and Puerto Rico offer agriculture in the classroom, we should make this available for Virgin Island students,” Smith said.
“This information has to be passed on to the next generation,” Smith said.
Docket Watch: Family Disharmony

Police were summoned to a home in Estate Contant, St. John, where a woman reported an intruder who allegedly assaulted her and her male roommate. The complainant said she was sleeping when the incident occurred.
The accused assailant appeared in Superior Court on Monday, where a magistrate found probable cause for a list of offenses greater than the initial charge of burglary. Magistrate Simone Van Holten-Turnbull set a $40,000 bail after prosecutors told the court it was not the first incident between the defendant and his alleged victim.
“Same defendant, same victim, and in this case there was another individual present, and he too fell victim to an assault,” said Assistant Attorney General Brenda Scales.
The arresting officer told the court that defendant Gregory Benson Louis and the sleeping woman have a child together, and he was at the house earlier in the day on June 6 having a discussion. As the conversation ended, Louis left, said Officer Charles Gumbs.
The victim told police her child’s father did not have keys to their home and did not have permission to be there. But later that night, she said she woke up to find someone trying to strangle her. The male roommate, who was sleeping in a separate area of the home at the time, told police he, too, woke up to find someone trying to strangle him.
Gumbs said signs of a forced entry were found at a window; Scales added that a knife was found outside the home nearby. The female victim also told police that when she tried to use her phone to call the police emergency number, the phone was taken away.
The magistrate expressed concern that the relationship between the two parents was becoming dangerous. “It’s not just domestic violence where the child’s mother was involved, but now there’s a separate victim that was not part of the domestic violence situation,” Van Holten said.
He was charged with first-degree burglary with a domestic violence enhancement, two counts of aggravated assault, disturbance of the peace, possession of a weapon while committing a violent crime, and malicious interference with emergency communications.
Van Holten replaced the no-bail provision set at the time of arrest with $40,000 and said Louis could win pretrial release upon paying a 16 percent cash bond. The court also ordered appointment of a third-party custodian to appear at scheduled hearings with the defendant.
An arraignment hearing was scheduled for June 28.






