VIPD Notifies Community to Sign Up for Mass Notification Alerts

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Everbridge and the Virgin Islands Police Department are partnering to give the citizens of the Virgin Islands the option to receive important safety notifications in real-time, the department announced.

Everbridge is the leader in Risk Event intelligence and Mass Notification alerting. Many of the largest companies worldwide choose Everbridge to keep their people safe and businesses running. Everbridge uses its Risk Intelligence Monitoring Center (RIMC) team to monitor events 24 hours a day with direct access to weather, police, fire, and AP data sources, according to the press release.

“In our unwavering efforts of safety and collaboration, Everbridge and the Virgin Islands Police Department joined forces to empower citizens with the choice to receive timely and crucial safety notifications in real-time. We, the Virgin Islands Police Department, prioritize the safety and security of all Virgin Islanders and visitors.”, expressed Assistant Commissioner Mario Brooks.

For citizens that choose to opt-in to notifications, citizens can be alerted for events such as missing persons, school lockdowns, Be On the Look Out (BOLOs), wanted suspects, serious threats to our community, etc. All to keep people alerted to new developments and save lives, the press release stated.

“The Virgin Islands Police Department is excited to further employ this technology to keep the members of this community informed. Knowledge is power and this system provides everyone with the opportunity to collectively promote safety, security and order,” said Assistant Commissioner Sidney Elskoe.

These alerts are optional, and notifications will only be sent to citizens who choose to submit their location and contact information, the release stated.

Citizens can click here to sign up for VIPD alerts.

To opt-in to alerts from VIPD, citizens will need to browse to:

  • Submit your address along with the delivery method you choose to be alerted by (email, SMS text, Phone).
  • You may choose to opt out of notifications at any time by removing your contact information.

For more information, contact the VIPD’s Communication & Public Relations Office at 340-201-7477 or 340-513-9321.

Juqan Arthurton Dies at 23

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Juqan Arthurton
Juqan Arthurton of Estate Rattan died on Jan. 9. He was 23 years old. He was preceded in death by his aunt, Cammalieta Arthurton; grandmother, Melsada Arthurton; and special friend; Joshua Lee. He is survived by his mother, Victoria Arthurton; father, Everad Lorenzo Huggins Sr.; sisters: Monisha Bannis and Denisha Guy; stepfather, Melvin Adams Sr.; companion, Tiana Harp; grandfather, Myron Arthurton Sr.; and uncles: Emerson, Myron Jr. Vaughn, and Avery and Garvin Arthurton. He is also survived by cousins: Jaynae Arthurton, Destiny Arthurton, Melisa Arthurton, Ashley Arthurton, Patrice Arthurton, Monique Arthurton, Tyrell Street, Emerson Arthurton Jr., Vitalis Mathurin Jr, Antonio Arthurton, Vaughn Arthurton Jr, Avery Arthurton Jr., Aaron Arthurton, Joshua Arthurton, Jeremy Zion Arthurton, K-mani Arthurton, Reginald Thomas Banks Jr., Michael Kmiec Jr., Elijah Josiah Phillips, Terrell, Davian and Karter. Other survivors include great aunt: Ammorelle Bailey, Beverly Bailey, Jacinth Bailey and Bernette Skeete; great uncle, Hugh “Lester” Bailey; godsister, Taleyah Maria Aliana Estrill; special friends: Kylanny Titre, Xavier Denis, Joshua Blake, Pellis Leonard, Jibri Martinez, S’quan Buffong, Jabali Hopkins and Leonex Williams; as well as other relatives and friends too numerous to mention. The viewing will take place at 10 a.m. followed by a funeral service at 11 a.m., Thursday, Feb. 8, at New Testament Church (Estate St. John). Interment will be at Kingshill Cemetery.

Shaquon Ahmani DeAndre McNeal Dies

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Shaquon Ahmani DeAndre McNeal
Shaquon Ahmani DeAndre McNeal of Harborview Apartments died on Dec. 24. He is survived by his mother, Sharon Bascombe; sisters: Chenai and Chenelle Brady, and Chevon Merchant; brother, Shamal Guadalupe; grandparents: Evelyn and Elroy Bascombe Sr.; aunts: Sharisse Bascombe and Shelima Bascombe-Howard; uncle, Elroy Bascombe Jr.; nieces: Miajah Benton and Hilaysia Williams; nephews: Darnelle Phillip Jr, Shamir, (triplets) Shamani, Shamar and Shamoi Guadalupe; great aunts: June Bascombe-Rawlins, Cheryl Bascombe-Freeman, Sharlene Bascombe-Turnbull; great uncles: Randall, Clyde, Meredith & Glenwood Bascombe; god-parents: Shadae’ Peters, Shonde Walker, Deichelle Berry, Trisha Crooke, Ramona Menders, Patrick Innis and Sunil John. He is also survived by special friends: David Slaven, Marco Cruz Jr., Asani Martinez, Shayne Celestine and Jahno Beazer; cousins: Njeria Williams-Johnson, Marcus Jr. and Jayvion Johnson, Tyrique Brooks, Deshawn Howard, Indira Liebert, Deichelle and Tamisha Berry, Julia and Michael Scatliffe, Desiree Maranda-Sewer, Jesmi Maranda-Cartier, J’nell and Janeen Maranda, Tyrone Barnes, Hubert Rosenberg, Yvonne, Lorraine and James Maranda, Evette Maranda-Clarke, Patricia Essanason, Gregory and David Galloway, Makini, Marshariki, Malika and Momar Bascombe, Narcisse Bascombe-Hairston, Malik Bascombe, Sheniqua,  Jherika and Jason Turnbull, Shonde Walker, Waynia Charles, Shonneth Gittens, Breah Brookes, De’John Hardy, Amante’ Todman, Shadae and Shadi Peters, Kahlaya Goodwin, Sheynara and Mario Castro Jr., Havia Fergus, Zii and Kyro Peters and Dean Camacho. Other survivors include family: the Maranda, Bascombe, McIntosh, Hosford, Barnes, James, Moorehead, Thomas, George, Balfour, Sealey, Simmonds, Williams, Nisbett, Crystal Rodriquez, Kenneth Gittens, Paula Venzen-Parris and Rassan Parris families; family friends: Ramona Menders, Brady’s, Alda Francis and family, Adelbert Bryan and family, Leroy Hatchett, Olaf Hendricks, Lyrhea Bryan-Heyliger, Andrea Bryan-McIntosh, Dr. Oneida Granger, Scott Liburd, Sherrill Brewster-Angoll and Gustave Simmonds; as well as many additional family and friends too numerous to mention. The family requests that those in attendance wear festive colors. A viewing will be held at 9 a.m. followed by a funeral service at 10 a.m., Tuesday, Jan. 30, at City of Refuge Worship Center. Interment will be at Kingshill Cemetery.

Magens Bay Authority Shares Mooring Plan, Hears Community Concerns at First Town Hall Since COVID

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Lounge chairs line the beach near the food concession at Magens Bay beach on Saturday, awaiting the day's cruise ship passengers. (Source photo by Sian Cobb)
Rows of lounge chairs line the beach near the food concession at Magens Bay beach on Saturday, awaiting the day’s cruise ship passengers. (Source photo by Sian Cobb)

Moorings, lounge chair rentals and planned future developments were among the topics Saturday at the first town hall meeting of the Magens Bay Authority since the COVID-19 pandemic interrupted the gatherings. More than 40 people crowded under Shed 2 on a rainy, windy morning to ask questions and voice their concerns about practices they fear are geared more to attracting tourists than serving Virgin Islanders.

As if to drive home that point, just feet from the shed five rows of mostly empty lounge chairs stretched along the beach to the end of the concession building, awaiting the day’s cruise ship passengers.

“We need to remember that Magens Bay is for the people of the Virgin Islands,” said Dalma Simon, taking in the scene.

Barbara Petersen, chair of the Magens Bay Authority board, said the sustainability of the park relies on both locals and tourists, and they also must consider the feedback and concerns of the cruise ship companies. The setup is intended to save tourists time, so they’re not spending half of their two-hour excursion situating chairs, she said.

Interim General Manager MemorieAnne Brown-Callender added that the rentals are open to all, and that there are no restrictions as to where anyone can place their own chair on the beach. Simon responded that there would be “hell to pay” if anyone tried to prevent him from doing so.

“How far down the beach do you intend to allow these lounge chairs to go?” asked former Sen. Ruby Simmonds Esannason, who was told that the rentals are restricted to the area in front of and just to the west of the concession, where chairs were stacked 10 or so high near a tree marking the limit of the boundary. Additionally, the chairs are removed each evening and set back up between 6 and 6:30 a.m. the next day, Brown-Callender said.

Barbara Petersen, chair of the Magens Bay Authority board, addresses the crowd Saturday at a town hall meeting held at Shed 2. (Source photo by Sian Cobb)
Barbara Petersen, chair of the Magens Bay Authority board, addresses the crowd Saturday at a town hall meeting held at Shed 2. (Source photo by Sian Cobb)

With a massive yacht floating among other smaller boats in the bay on Saturday, board members were also peppered with questions about the park’s mooring and anchoring policies.

“This is insulting to the people of the Virgin Islands, those big yachts out there,” said Simmonds Esannason, who recalled that traditionally, only generational fishers could moor or anchor in the bay. “This is a disgrace,” she said, nodding to the massive vessel anchored on the horizon.

Gene Brin Jr., who described himself as a “dying breed of fisherman,” said he has had issues with charter boats using his mooring, and at times damaging it, and wondered who is monitoring them. Others chimed in, voicing concerns about a repeat of the scene during COVID-19, when a record number of boaters flocked to the Virgin Islands, including Magens Bay, to ride out the pandemic in tropical splendor.

Debra Brown DeLone, a fourth-generation Virgin Islander who in retirement lives on the mainland but returns each January for a month, was a senior planner with the Division of Conservation and Cultural Affairs who in 1983 wrote the territory mooring plan that was passed by the Legislature in 1989 after numerous community meetings to gather input from traditional fishers, local boaters and charter operators.

When the legislation came before the Senate, the place “was filled with boaters and community-interested people. It was a banner day, because what that plan was stating was that the bays of St. Thomas, St. Croix and St. John would never be used for mooring, given the detriment to the bays, to the population, to the inability of DPNR’s enforcement team to manage those moorings in the bays,” said DeLone.

“I am saddened — saddened — every morning when I take my walk on Magens Bay and watch huge yachts — that one sitting there seven days — berthed or docked here in Magens Bay, and I really wonder if they are going out to dump, because when I come down the next morning, they are in the same spot they were the morning before,” she said.

Simmonds Esannason said the one concession legislators approved when she was a senator was that generational fishers could moor in the bay. “That was the only thing that we wanted on Magens Bay beach. The only kind of vessel would be those traditional fishing boats,” on the east corner of the beach, she said.

“There was never any consensus in the Legislature when I was there — I served two terms — that we would have this kind of insult to the people of these islands, having these big yachts sitting out here. We don’t know what they’re dumping, we don’t know what they are doing. I have been coming to this beach all of my life and I’m 75 years old. This is a disgrace. I want to find a way that we can rescind whatever law, whatever regulations, allow for anything to be moored in Magens Bay,” said Simmonds Esannason.

Brin also questioned who is allowed to use the channel entrance that DPNR recently marked — at first through the fishers’ mooring field, though that mistake has since been corrected after he alerted the Magens Bay Authority.

“As a dying breed of fisherman, it seems like more of the charter influence is coming in and they have bigger boats, four-engine boats, and they run in and out with lots of people drinking and carrying on. Are we just going to let small dinghies or yachts come into the bay?” Brin asked.

Security will keep a watch for any violations by boats picking up or dropping off passengers, or speeding through the channel, but board member Dayle Barry pointed out that the authority has jurisdiction only from the mean high tide line landward, and DPNR oversees submerged lands. The department was invited to send a representative to the meeting, but he received notice Saturday morning that nobody was available, said Barry.

Under current regulations, vessels may anchor in any given bay for 14 days in a six-month period, but the authority has submitted a proposal to DPNR and the Virgin Islands Professional Charter Association — which is installing 200 new Helix-type moorings in bays throughout the territory in a private-public partnership with the V.I. government — to limit that to three days in Magens Bay, said Barry. There is also talk of deputizing staff to be able to enforce the regulations, he added.

Under the VIPCA plan, Magens Bay will have a total of 12 moorings for both day and transient use, said Barry. They may be reserved online through DPNR, when park fees will also be collected, including for solid waste disposal at a cost of $5 per small bag of trash and $10 per large bag, to prevent mariners from sneaking ashore at night to dump their garbage in the authority’s waste bins, he said.

“In partnering with us they asked us for input and we provided some guidance with regard to what we would like to see. If you look out at the bay right now you can see there are boats that have dropped anchor, and that is one of the concerns we have in the bay. Boats sometimes drop anchor in inappropriate areas and disturb the bottom communities. So we approved the proposal with some conditions. One of those conditions is in regard to the length of time that transient moorings can be used,” said Barry.

“What we did is limit the use to three days because that is the capacity of a holding tank. We want to ensure that for the time frame that someone is in Magens Bay that they have the capacity to hold their sewage and then depart from Magens Bay before it’s time to get rid of that sewage. We have, I think it was 13 days if I remember correctly, that it takes for the bay to flush out. The study was done by the Department of Planning and Natural Resources. We don’t want to have sewage floating around in Magens Bay for a 13-day period before it finally moves out,” said Barry.

“That proposal has been approved tentatively,” he said, and will be finalized before the moorings are installed.

In other news:

— The board announced that it voted Wednesday to put an offer on land that the Nature Conservancy is selling, and that according to the deed, it may not be developed commercially.

— Brown-Callender outlined the rules for shed rentals — no confetti, balloons, plastic streamers, glass containers or generators — which are available to reserve online. Additionally, events must have prior approval by the board, which meets at 10 a.m. on the third Friday of most months at Shed 4. Email info@magensbayauthority.org and operations@magensbayauthority.org.

— The restaurant is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and the bar from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. under new concessionaire Elevated Hospitality LLC, with a major renovation planned in September and October to replacing aging equipment and infrastructure, after which it will consider resuming breakfast service.

— Working plans have been OK’d for the reconstruction of Bathhouse 1, which was rendered inoperable by Hurricane Irma, after a lengthy approval process that included the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is funding 90 percent of the project, the State Historic Preservation Office and Coastal Zone Management Committee. A request for proposal for the project is under review and then will go out to bid.

— As part of the approval process for the bathhouse, the Magens Bay Authority has developed a master plan that includes, far in the future, a new concession building that will be located west of the current structure, so it does not impede the view as visitors enter the park. — Other capital projects include a new Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant ramp at Bathhouse 3, repaving the road to the right of the entrance, electrical system upgrades, a new generator to power the sheds and other infrastructure during electrical outages, and, down the road, the purchase of a rescue boat. — Construction of a passive exercise trail — from the bridge to Shed 4 — in memory of late board member and former V.I. Solicitor General Elliott “Mac” Davis. A contractor has been selected and the contract is being finalized by the legal department. — Consideration of a no smoking policy. Currently, smoking is prohibited from the tree line to the water, but the majority at Saturday’s town hall seemed to support a total ban on lighting up within the park.

— Everybody, even indigenous Virgin Islanders, must pay the entrance fee, which covers services such as the bathhouses, lifeguards, maintenance and security, but park staff are instructed not to argue if someone refuses to pay, said Petersen. She also noted that yearly passes include one month free.

— Many attendees complained about the amount of garbage they find on the beach at the end of the day and suggested that tour operators and taxi drivers could help remind visitors to leave no trace behind. They also praised park staff, who they said are courteous, hard-working and responsive when they raise issues of concern.

V.I. GOP Announces Senate Candidate, Welcomes Texas Congressman for Trump

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Congressman Wesley Hunt, R-Texas, left, with among others Derrick Callwoodand former Sen. Adlah "Fonzie" Donastorg Jr. at the Republican Party's Commit to Caucus reception on Friday on St. Thomas. (Submitted photo)
Congressman Wesley Hunt, R-Texas, left, Derrick Callwood, second from left, and former Sen. Adlah “Foncie” Donastorg Jr., right, speak with a voter at the Republican Party’s “Commit to Caucus” reception on Friday on St. Thomas. (Submitted photo)

With its Feb. 8 caucus less than two weeks away, the Republican Party in the Virgin Islands hosted a Texas congressman stumping for former President Donald Trump at a private “Commit to the Caucus” reception Friday night on St. Thomas and announced that Derrick Callwood will run for V.I. Senate on the GOP ticket in November.

First-term Congressman Wesley Hunt, who flew in Friday to court V.I. Republicans at the soiree at the home of Dr. David Weisher on St. Thomas and then traveled to St. Croix on Saturday for a reception with party faithful at the Palms at Pelican Cove, declined to speak to issues specific to the Virgin Islands — including parity in federal programs and a 100-plus year legacy of racist Supreme Court rulings that to this day deny the territory’s residents the vote for president or full representation in Congress — telling the Source he didn’t want to put words in Trump’s mouth.

Instead, he focused on the issues of immigration, the “war on oil and gas” and the economy, which he characterized as the worst he’s ever seen, despite economic indicators that inflation is down, employment is up, and the GDP has grown exponentially under President Joe Biden compared to Trump.

Hunt, a West Point graduate, Army captain and Apache helicopter pilot with tours in Iraq and Saudi Arabia, serves on the House Natural Resources Committee, which has jurisdiction over the Virgin Islands and other U.S. territories.

“Joe Biden sucks!” he began his speech, to laughter from the crowd of about 30. “It’s been a rough four years in our country, and it’s time for us to get back to what it means to put our priorities first as a country. That’s what America first means. It means we and our territories are ‘numero uno,’ and right now we have a president that’s putting America, and Americans and our territories second. It’s unacceptable. That’s not what I fought for,” said Hunt, who said Trump is the de facto GOP nominee.

“For those of you who may not like President Trump, or he may not be your cup of tea, you’ve got to get over it. He is going to be the nominee,” said Hunt. “So get through your stages of grief, get to acceptance right now, cause the faster you do this, the faster we can work together to get our country back. That’s why I left my three kiddos in Houston, Texas, to be here to spread that message to you,” he said.

Regarding Trump’s legal troubles — four indictments and 91 felony charges — Hunt said the former president told him, “‘They’re not coming after me. They are coming after you, I’m just standing in the way.’ So, as the Republican Party, we cannot afford to spend another dime, or waste another vote, on anyone else. We have to ensure that we have the strong man that we need to preserve our country and our way of life on day one,” he said.

As for convincing people to join the Republican Party in the Virgin Islands — as of December there are 20,059 registered Democrats, 940 registered Republicans and 7,767 independents in the territory, according to active voter registration numbers — Hunt suggested focusing on issues that impact everyday Americans. “Talk about how inflation is bad for everybody, a porous border is bad for everyone, high taxes are bad for everyone, a bloated federal government is bad for everyone, overregulation is bad for everyone,” he said.

Hunt zeroed in on immigration during his speech and after his visit to the territory, posting on X, formerly known as Twitter, that what he learned on the ground here “is that the islanders are now being impacted by the same illegal immigration invasion that impacts the U.S. mainland.”

Weisher — a neurologist and former Democrat who said he “left the Democratic Party because Democratic Party values left me,” and now have become “so extreme” that he feels vindicated in his choice — said he sees evidence of undocumented immigrants every day at Schneider Regional Medical Center. There are so many patients with Social Security numbers of 999-99-9999 that “it’s getting to be a crisis” and very expensive for the hospital, he said.

“We cannot survive another four years. We have now, coming across the border, the equivalent population of Pittsburgh. This usurps every American citizen’s vote. We cannot afford to lose this election. That’s my number one concern,” he said.

Others noted that China is making inroads in the Caribbean, offering financial support to small island nations, in part to undermine Taiwan, which historically has invested heavily in the region. All of which makes the U.S. Virgin Islands an important strategic location for American border security, they said.

To attract more support, however, the Republican Party needs a “kinder, gentler” approach, said Weisher. “I see it moving in that direction and I have to say I’m very, very encouraged.” However, as a physician, the idea of a white politician coming between a young girl and her doctor over abortion just makes no sense, he said.

“It looks so extreme. It doesn’t make us look good; it doesn’t make us look intelligent. I would like to see a more compassionate Republican Party,” and a more logical, medical approach to abortion, he said.

“If we do that, I think the Republican Party will just soar tremendously. We cannot afford to lose. We’re losing our country. Four more years we will not survive, it’s over,” he said.

Callwood, 44, the St. Thomas businessman and veteran of the V.I. Police Department who on Friday announced he will run for the V.I. Senate as a Republican this fall, said he has always been interested in politics but decided to throw his hat in the ring after talking with former Sen. Adlah Alphonso “Foncie” Donastorg Jr. and national committeewoman candidate April Newland, who both attended Friday’s gathering.

A local taxi operator, boat captain and proprietor of the café at the ferry terminal in Red Hook, Callwood said he is focused on the economy, having “experienced the economic hardship” of the Bryan administration and questioned why more progress hasn’t been made on rebuilding the territory’s infrastructure, considering the federal money that has poured into the islands after the 2017 hurricanes and then again during the pandemic.

Before the November election, however, come the primaries and caucuses.

The local GOP is hoping to leverage its national political influence by holding its caucus on Feb. 8, after Iowa and New Hampshire but ahead of Super Tuesday on March 5, when the greatest number of states hold their primary elections and caucuses. It will also, for the first time, use ranked-choice voting to determine the winner. The candidate that gets 50 percent will get all the delegates.

The date change and voting method are against Republican National Committee rules, which has penalized the V.I. GOP by reducing its number of delegates to the presidential nominating convention in July in Milwaukee.

By how much depends on which faction of the party you talk to, with those who opposed the changes — and earlier sought to oust Gordon Ackley as party chair — saying the V.I. will now have as little as one delegate as a result. Dennis Lennox, executive director of the party, said on Sunday that the total is nine.

“The penalty if it’s applied is 50% of 6 which is 3 + 3 automatic or superdelegates for a total of 6,” Lennox said in a text message when asked about the discrepancy. “Many have incorrectly applied the penalty using bad math, basing it on 50% of 9, which is 4. As we’ve said, we’ll send nine delegates to the convention. We’re confident we’ll have a full delegation of nine.”

Voting locations and hours for the Feb. 8 caucus are 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the La Reine Chicken Shack in Christiansted on St. Croix; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Lovango Rum Bar in Cruz Bay on St. John; and 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Bluebeard’s Castle in Charlotte Amalie on St. Thomas. And election night results party will be held starting at 6:30 p.m. at the Morningstar Buoy Haus Beach Resort at Frenchman’s Reef on St. Thomas.

Visit the party website for more information.

Virtual Field Trips Introduce Students, Teachers to Artemis

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Close to 1,200 students and educators recently recevied an introduction to NASA’s Artemis Space Program. (Photo courtesy University of the Virgin Islands)

In the year when NASA plans to return astronauts to the moon, high-school students from the Virgin Islands took a “virtual field trip” designed to help them view their own horizons. The Global Outreach Program for V.I. and International Students invited a new generation to explore opportunities in space exploration.

Organizers from the University of the Virgin Islands College of Science and Mathematics worked with NASA to hold live and virtual sessions between Jan. 22-25. Close to 1,200 students and educators attended, including virtual participation from South Africa, the Philippines, Florida, and the D.C. International School.

Foremost in the videos, discussions and question-and-answer segments was talk of NASA’s Artemis program. NASA Education and Coordinator Meghan Epperly introduced viewers to the rocket propulsion system, the Orion Space Capsule which will serve as the vehicle allowing astronauts to orbit the moon and return to Earth.

That mission — scheduled for later in 2024 — follows the Artemis I test mission launched on Dec. 11, 2022. Participants also got an introduction to the crew leading the way back to the Moon — Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Mission Specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen. Together, they discussed the Artemis III mission planned for 2026 and Artemis IV, which involves construction of the Gateway Space Station, allowing astronauts to conduct longer exploration of the Moon’s surface.

Then came the long view. Within that view, she said, are career paths for those now attending high school. “We are trying to go to Mars, and that is much farther away than the Moon,” Epperly said. “ … the students watching the presentation today will be adults by the time opportunities at NASA present themselves.”

And there will be more career options than just serving as astronauts, she said. To illustrate the point, two Virgin Islanders were featured in the presentation. Rudolph King and Simmione Fullwood serve as NASA engineers with different specialties.

Students who want to explore their own possibilities were pointed toward an upcoming summer program. Samuel Garcia from NASA’s Office of STEM Engagement said the summer session “allows institutions to engage youth from underserved and underrepresented populations with hope that they will become role models and provide pathways of opportunities for other students.”

University officials also hope that exposure will encourage students to learn more about a new UVI degree program in physics. “The physics program is a new program at UVI. It’s bringing in a lot of students interested in astronomy and astrophysics,” said Dr. Stanley Latesky, chair of UVI’s Department of Physics and Chemical Sciences.

Liberty VI and DPW Seek Solutions for Fiber Optic Quagmire

Liberty workers install infrastructure for a fiber network. (Photo from Liberty VI webpage)
According to testimony at government hearings, the effort to bring faster and more secure Internet connections to the territory residents is stumbling. Depending on whom you are talking to, the stumbling block could be the slow permitting process or how the work is done. Liberty VI is being paid to implement the Federal Communications Commission’s Connect USVI initiative. The project’s design includes a fiber-to-the-home standard to increase speed. When completed, it should deliver a resilient network with improved performance. Some residents are linking this project’s slowness to various other complaints. Up to this week, most of the finger-pointing has been at the Public Works Department. Ricardo Portela, representing Liberty, asked the Public Services Commission in September to lobby the Public Works Department to develop a new process so Liberty could make its goals. Plans originally called for the fiber network to run past 10,000 homes in 2022 and past another 12,000 in 2023. However, according to Portela, no construction was completed in 2022, and only 4,000 homes were passed in 2023. He said some “umbrella” permitting process would work, not forcing Liberty to get a permit for every little region. Although DPW Commissioner Derek Gabriel could not make the Committee on Housing, Transportation, and Telecommunications meeting Wednesday, he sent the chairman of the committee, Sen. Marvin Blyden, a letter. Blyden read this section of the letter into the record. “Prior to the Liberty VI undergrounding efforts, DPW had no experience with micro trenching or a policy for such. Moreover, our policy for undergrounding efforts has required trenching to be done at least 24 inches or below the surface in the right of way. Micro trenching calls for lines to be buried within eight to twelve inches of the surface. In fact, many jurisdictions across the country limit micro trenching and have strict requirements. Most, if not all, states do not allow any micro trenching on highways. Caution must be exercised when permitting micro trenching to avoid future conflicts and costly relocations.” Blyden then asked the testifiers, “How will we fix this?” His question was met with several seconds of silence. Liberty and representatives from DPW have been holding weekly meetings to resolve the issues.

Friends of the V.I. National Park Face Accomplishments and Challenges

When the Friends of the Virgin Islands National Park met with the public at their annual meeting on Saturday, there was plenty of good news to go around. During the past year, the Friends VINP awarded seven college scholarships, presented 300 seminars, guided 835 students on trips into the park, planted hundreds of trees and more than a thousand mangroves, treated 2,838 corals for disease, and monitored 40 beaches for sea turtle nesting activity. The park has also reactivated its Learn to Swim program for children and adults.
Tara Murza is now directing a free Learn to Swim Program for children and adults on Saturdays. (Source photo by Amy H. Roberts)
It’s all part of the Friends VINP’s mission to assist the Virgin Islands National Park in preserving and protecting the natural and cultural resources of the park and making the park more accessible to community members, according to Tonia Lovejoy, executive director of the Friends.
Tonia Lovejoy, Friends VINP executive director, and her daughter Penelope Alterio with VINP Acting Superintendent Scott Simmons. (Source photo by Amy H. Roberts)
“What happens when you go into nature is you get a sense of wonder, of being a part of something more. That’s what outdoor education does for us,” Lovejoy said. Lovejoy said that given the importance of education, it was appropriate that, once again, David Hall, president of the University of the Virgin Islands, was the keynote speaker.
David Hall, UVI president, gives the keynote address at the Friends VINP’s annual meeting. (Source photo by Amy H. Roberts)
Hall began his speech by mentioning a special connection he had with the Virgin Islands National Park and with Cinnamon Bay Campground, where the annual meeting was held.  He said he and his wife, Marilyn Braithwaite Hall, spent their honeymoon at the campground 35 years ago, adding, “She’s as beautiful and vibrant as she was.” Hall said the university, the park, and the Friends are all in the same business of promoting education, preservation, and social justice. “You can’t preserve without educating,” he said. “We must save trees and people.” Hall spoke of the many research programs at UVI that were “ripe for partnership” with the park, but also of majors including agriculture, education, and business that offer opportunities for collaboration. Hall said that some Virgin Islanders tend to undervalue resources like UVI, which he described as “a gem that exists in our midst.” “Proximity can become a liability,” he continued, noting that local people may also undervalue the beauty of the Virgin Islands National Park. “People will pay thousands of dollars to fly and visit our park, yet some people [here] will not take a ferry ride to visit it.” Part of the reason for undervaluing the park may be a result of the islands’ troubling history of slavery, Hall said. “You might ask, ‘How can trees oppress and enslave us?’ But the social and economic injustices of the past deprive people of enjoying these magnificent views,” he said. “Some might argue that [Laurance] Rockefeller [who donated the land to create the park in 1956] ensured that it was available to all and not a few,” he continued. “But stories of oppression are passed down through the generations. If the people of the Virgin Islands don’t feel it’s their park, it won’t be preserved. They must see their story as central to the park as much as these trees.” “What permits some of us to feel they belong while others do not?” Hall asked. “This is a question we three [the university, the park, and the Friends] must embrace and explore.  People have to see that the park brings improvement to our daily lives, even if they never set foot in it. Our collective mission is to preserve culture and the people, that we empower the land as well as people.” Hall plans to retire as UVI’s president in July, and toward the end of the meeting, Lovejoy asked him about his future plans. Hall said he plans to spend more time at the beach with his wife, take a year to devote to research and writing, and then return to UVI as a faculty member. Before the meeting ended, Acting Superintendent Scott Simmons updated the audience on a number of ongoing projects. Construction of the new Resource Management and Science Complex at Lind Point should be completed by early April. New housing at the site will allow park employees who have been commuting from St. Thomas to reside on St. John. The reconstruction of the NPS pier and bulkhead in the Creek in Cruz Bay should be completed by the end of March.

A giant crane has been on site for months as construction of the NPS pier and bulkhead continues at the Creek. (Source photo by Amy H. Roberts)
Simmons said that the park hoped to partner with UVI to rebuild the Virgin Islands Environmental Research Station at Lameshur Bay, but that funding for that project and for rebuilding the road there were not yet available although some design work had been done.
Friends VINP board president congratulates outgoing board member Cid Hamling and incoming board member Lila Uzzell. (Source photo by Amy H. Roberts)
Audrey Penn, president of the board of the Friends VINP, presented flowers to Cid Hamling, who served on the Friends’ board for 25 years, and to Lila Uzzell, a new board member who recently graduated from UVI with a master’s degree in marine and environmental sciences.          

Expectant Parents Can Expect New Lamaze Classes Come February

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Real Birth Knowledge LLC, owned and operated by Jayda Bryan, is bringing much-needed Lamaze childbirth education classes to the Virgin Islands, offering expectant parents a well-rounded, compassionate, and empowering approach to the childbirth experience.
Jayda Bryan and family on Dorothea Beach, St. Thomas. From left, Kruz, Jayda Bryan, Shiloh, Keanu Bryan, and Stefon. (Photo by Ajaleina Peevy)
Lamaze, a worldwide recognized childbirth method introduced by Dr. Fernand Lamaze in 1951, aims to ensure that critical information centered around pregnancy, labor, and the postpartum experience is accessible and easily digestible for participants. This method of childbirth builds its foundation through empowering women to trust the instinctual wisdom that their bodies carry in order to promote natural childbirth in conjunction with the knowledge of modern medicine, according to Bryan’s website. Lamaze childbirth education classes advocate for evidence-based care that facilitates informed decision-making by expectant parents. “In my Lamaze childbirth education classes we focus on newborn procedures, lactation, skin-to-skin, delayed cord clamping and all of the evidence-based practices that encourage healthy bonding between mother and baby. We also discuss emerging research that offers insight into how specific medical interventions during labor may create long-term consequences,” said Bryan.
Jayda Bryan leads expectant parents in Lamaze classes at Breathe Yoga Studio on St. Thomas. From left are Kelsey Wyrick, Matt Willig, and Jayda Bryan. (Photo by Nour Suid)
Bryan, who is a registered nurse and Lamaze certified childbirth educator, is passionate about maternal healthcare in the Virgin Islands and wants to make information and resources more available for expectant parents. “A component of my business is creating a database of perinatal information, which we don’t already have in our community. It’s really hard if you are looking for an OBGYN, therapist, or pediatrician to get a comprehensive list of these practitioners in our area, unlike the states where a quick Google search can yield quick information such as the proximity, address, and phone number of the services you seek. I’ve created on my website a complete interactive perinatal directory, which includes approximate cost of visits, a list of compatible insurance plans, and information on each provider. I have also authored an e-book called Birthing Without Insurance, which is specific to the Virgin Islands and guides women on places they can go to receive affordable care,” she said. Bryan’s e-book will be available in February. It is a free download from her website. Another initiative Bryan is working on through her business, Real Birth Knowledge LLC, is a compilation of Virgin Islands birth stories in which mothers share birthing experiences in our community. “These stories are unique to us and much of the information that moves through our community is by word of mouth. Many women are unfamiliar with the services, resources, and groups that operate in our community intended to support a mother through her perinatal experience. One of the best ways to prepare for the experience of giving birth is by listening to other people’s positive stories and to bring forward stories that expectant and new mothers can relate to,” she said. Bryan believes that bridging the gap of information for expectant parents in our community will create more empowered families. “Birth is a physiological process. We wouldn’t be here today if we weren’t already giving birth in nature. Since the beginning of human history, women have been giving birth to babies naturally. We need doctors who have the skill set to provide medical interventions in case things go wrong, and we also need to build the trust within ourselves to know that our bodies are capable of giving birth. By giving women all the information, we build their confidence,” she said. Real Birth Knowledge LLC is set to begin its next installment of Lamaze childbirth education classes entitled “Giving Birth Confidently” in February. For more information, visit their website at realbirthknowledge.com, email info@realbirthknowledge.com, or call 340-643-1069.  

Photo Focus: Female Rowers Set New World Record While Flying V.I. Flag

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Rowers Lauren (Nini) Champion and Lisa Rowland of Team Ocean Grown completed a 45-day row across the Atlantic Ocean. Team Ocean Grown, sponsored by St. Thomas Island Rigging, proudly flew the V.I. flag over 3,000 miles from La Gomera, Spain, to Antigua.
Champion and Roland set new world record in rowing competition. (Photo courtesy V.I. Government House)
Champion and Rowland, the only female pairs team in the race, completed the competition in 45 days and set a new world record.
Lisa Roland and Lauren (Nini) Champion get ready for 3,000 mile row. (Photo courtesy V.I. Government House)