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10:28 pm, May 30, 2025
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Governor Laments ‘Woeful’ Housing Situation

Virgin Islands News

V.I. Housing Authority Executive Director Dwayne Alexander presented a report to the Public Finance Authority on redevelopment projects costing $2.4 billion, which include the rehabilitation or construction of 2,300 units. Some of the projects are not destined to be completed in this decade.

Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. told Alexander that the plan was “woefully lacking” and that a “short-term solution” had to be found for the present housing situation.

He said rent on St. Thomas had become “untenable,” and residents don’t know where to go for housing. He said the situation was going to get worse as more construction projects brought in more workers. Ultimately, he said the territory would lose population.

VIHA Board Member Dorothy Isaacs questioned whether something could be done to rehabilitate houses in areas such as Bunker Hill, where many homes were now uninhabitable.

Bryan stated that the Senate has not taken action on the housing situation. Instead, it has “wasted time on mundane issues.”

A couple of projects mentioned by Alexander have moved along. Construction began in March on the David Hamilton Jackson Terrace rehabilitation project (106 units), and the Walter I. M. Hodge Pavilion rehabilitation project (248 units, including a senior center) has been completed.

Alexander said that the Estate Donoe redevelopment, with 84 units, would be completed in 2027.

The Alphonso Gerald rehabilitation (18 units) and Tutu North Senior housing (60 units) are in the early stages of project development.

Bryan said he was concerned not only about the fact that some projects were 12 years out, but most of them were just rehabilitation projects. He said, “The net gain in housing is zero.”

A resolution before the board on behalf of the Office of Disaster Recovery, to pay Springline Architects $25 million more than agreed upon in the original contract, which covers works on several public buildings, was discussed at length. Board members Keith O’Neal and Isaacs questioned how the cost could have ballooned so much.

Adrienne Williams-Octalien, Office of Disaster Recovery director, defended the request, which also included an eighteen-month extension of the contract. She said the scope of the agreement had expanded.

The authority also passed a measure to allow an increase of $8 million in a contract with DLR Group for architectural and engineering services related to the Julius Sprauve school project.

The members also unanimously approved the PFA’s proposed budget of $26 million.

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Court Blocks Contentious Chess Moves

A Superior Court judge has temporarily stopped a breakaway group of chess players from calling themself the U.S. Virgin Islands Chess Federation, collecting membership dues under that name, or undermining business of the preexisting U.S. Virgin Islands Chess Federation, Inc. The order also froze the organization’s bank account.

The May 23 ruling by Judge Douglas A. Brady was the latest salvo in a decades-long feud that has ensnared passionate world chess enthusiasts from St. Croix to Switzerland.

The federation sued six other players in 2024 who had objected to the leadership of longtime President Margaret Murphy. Claiming Murphy was a bully who would never relinquish power over the territory’s official chess group, a splinter group held a special election in December 2023 and voted in new leadership.

Murphy dismissed allegations from the group and said she didn’t realize the impact of the off-brand election until she was informed by Bank of St. Croix that the names on the Chess Federation’s account — containing roughly $8,000 — had been changed.

Brady’s order said Murphy and the Chess Federation had a compelling case. Rather than declaring one group or the other the victor, however, Brady said the public interest was best served by pausing for a special election.

Brady gave the chess players 90 days to organize an election. Murphy was ordered to present defendants Gail Widmer, Anne Kershaw, Sinclair Wilkinson, Brandon Rhymer, Okemo Hodge, and William Van Renselaer with an election plan. They, then, had 10 days to file any concerns with the plan. Brady urged both parties to work together to present the court with their special election proposal.

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