Nicolas Sarkozy declared his innocence and held hands with his wife before entering prison to begin his five-year sentence.
World News – Breaking international news and headlines | Sky News
Nicolas Sarkozy declared his innocence and held hands with his wife before entering prison to begin his five-year sentence.
World News – Breaking international news and headlines | Sky News
The ninth annual Bush Cook Chef Cook event, held from Oct. 13–19, proved to be an overwhelming success, highlighting the Virgin Islands’s growing commitment to food security, agricultural resilience, and community collaboration.
Organized by Sejah Farm of the Virgin Islands, the weeklong event featured a new three-day conference and a series of long-standing community activities that addressed critical issues such as food access, disaster resilience, and systemic political and economic challenges affecting the local food system.
The new conference component, held Oct. 13–15, was added this year to make professional agricultural development more accessible to local farmers. Recognizing the cost and difficulty of sending participants off-island, organizers decided it would be more effective to bring speakers and experts to the territory. Themed “Da Culcha Table,” the conference aimed to “bring more people to the table” by engaging farmers and community members in discussions on cooperative development and agricultural policy in the Virgin Islands.
“We have been traveling to conferences for the past 10 years and we learned about the significance of networking, but it has always been a hardship to be able to take all the individuals that we think would learn because of the overall expense in getting them there. We figure that we have built this link through networking, and it is cheaper and easier to bring them to our table so more people would get to the table,” said Yvette Browne, co-owner of Sejah Farm.
Organizers said the presenters and panelists successfully met their goals, offering sessions on seed and soil strategies, resilience and entrepreneurship, and agricultural taxation. Local experts also led demonstrations on tree production and managing heat stress. Attendees responded positively, expressing appreciation for the opportunity to explore new ideas and practical applications relevant to the Virgin Islands’s agricultural landscape.
A major feature of the week was the Thursday farm and island tour. Participants, sponsors, visitors, and community members toured farms across St. Croix, beginning at the Art Farm on the East End, led by Luca Gasperi, and continuing west to farms owned by Roniel “Honey Man” Allembert, Trevor Warner, and Roy Rodgers. At Rodgers’s farm, discussions focused on heirs’ property and the challenges of retaining family land when only one descendant continues farming. The tour also included a stop at Point Udall, the easternmost point of the United States, before concluding with a local lunch at the Chicken Shack.
On Oct. 17, the youth and community day brought together food and nutrition partners, farmers, families, and educators. Students from various schools participated in youth chef competitions, cooking with locally grown ingredients to create nutritious meals. The Virgin Islands Good Food Coalition and RT Park representatives provided educational engagement opportunities, while the Frederiksted Health Center offered health screenings and vendors hosted educational tables. The competition winners included Good Hope Country Day, Lew Muckle Elementary, St. Croix Montessori, and Freewill Baptist School.
A highlight for many attendees was witnessing the excitement of the children during the event. Yvette Brown recalled one memorable moment when a young participant became emotional upon learning his team had won.
“In all the years of doing the event this is the first time I’ve seen a child cry when he won. He was fully engulfed. I don’t know if his tears were overpowering him or whatever, but he just ran to his father,” said Browne.
The festivities continued on Oct. 18 with one of the event’s signature attractions — the Bush Cook Chef Cook competition. More than 25 chefs participated, preparing dishes using traditional cooking methods and more than 90 percent locally sourced ingredients selected that morning from the farmers’ market. DJ General provided music throughout the day as community members, judges, and visitors sampled dishes before the evening’s award ceremony. Live entertainment was provided by the Reggae Bubblers and How About Now bands.
In the plant-based meal category, Common Sense and Living Life Health Food Restaurant tied for first place, followed by Living Life and The Indigenous Bushman, Raymond “Bigstuff” Armstrong. In the animal-based category, Ama at Cane Bay took first place, with Efrén David Robles and Berle Flavor tying for second and Sean Skerrette earning third. Ama also received the Bragging Rights award for animal protein meals, while Common Sense and Living Life shared the plant-based Bragging Rights award.
The week concluded on Oct. 19 with a six-course Farm-to-Table dinner served under a newly constructed pavilion at Sejah Farm. Approximately 125 guests enjoyed dishes prepared by multiple chefs using meats, produce, and herbs harvested locally. Throughout the evening, chefs, servers, sponsors, and supporters were recognized between performances by Richie Buntin and Baz N Dem.
The event’s conclusion left organizers and attendees deeply satisfied. “Obstacles were conquered, and the final result was even greater than expected,” said co-owner Dale Browne. He added that seeing the community’s enthusiasm and eagerness to participate again was especially rewarding.
The Browne family remains committed to strengthening local agriculture and education year-round. They plan to expand preparation efforts for next year’s Bush Cook Chef Cook event to ensure even greater participation and impact.
To stay connected with Sejah Farm’s ongoing efforts to advance agriculture and food sustainability in the Virgin Islands, community members can follow Sejah Farm of the Virgin Islands on Facebook for updates, educational opportunities, and announcements about the 2026 Bush Cook Chef Cook event.
The Virgin Islands Research and Technology Park board of directors held a hybrid meeting Tuesday to highlight major expansions in science, technology, engineering and mathematics education and partnerships across the territory.
The RTPark’s after-school STEM enrichment program now serves more than 350 students across nearly all K-8 public schools in the territory. “We’re in every K-through-8 public school in the Virgin Islands except John H. Woodson,” said Executive Director Eric Sonnier, noting that St. Croix’s John H. Woodson Junior High School is expected to join in the spring.
Sonnier said the after-school STEM initiatives have been well-received. “We’re getting lots of positive feedback from parents, students, and teachers.”
He noted that interest from private school families suggests continued growth ahead. “We’re definitely getting a lot of interest from parents who have children in private schools, so we’ll have to figure out how to address that, not this semester but soon,”
Partnerships with the V.i. Education Department are expanding, with new STEM innovation centers planned for Julius E Sprauve School on St. John and Eulalie Rivera School on St. Croix. A ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Sprauve center is being organized, although an exact date has not yet been set.
Upcoming STEM events will engage students as part of the Education Department’s STEM Week. “There’ll be about 900 students from the district participating in STEM activities,” Sonnier said, referring to the projected outcome for the St. Thomas-St. John district. The events are scheduled for Nov. 4 at the University of the Virgin Islands Elridge Blake Sports and Fitness Center on St. Thomas, with a follow-up session at St. Croix Central High School on Nov. 6.
The board also marked a major milestone in its sustainability efforts with the completion of RT Park’s 423-kilowatt solar farm at the University of the Virgin Islands campus on St. Croix.
“Construction is 100 percent complete, and we’re fully commissioned for our 423-kilowatt solar farm here,” Sonnier said.
He noted the project is nearly closed out financially, with only $123,000 in reimbursements remaining on the $1.1 million project. A formal ribbon-cutting ceremony is set for Nov. 13, with board members and the public invited to attend. A client-led Critical Resilience Forum on energy, connectivity, and security is also scheduled for that day.
Staff from RTPark and the Caribbean Green Technology Center will receive hands-on operations and maintenance training for the solar farm from Volt, the company that built the system. “The Volt team will be providing RTPark and Caribbean Green Technology Center staff with a walk-through of the operations and maintenance for the solar farm on November 11,” Sonnier said.
Final steps include awaiting approval from the Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority. “We have to wait for WAPA to come out and do their final inspection and approve us,” Sonnier said.
Entrepreneurial activity is surging at RTPark, with a record 62 applicants competing in this year’s Idea Incubator, a 15-week program aimed at helping Virgin Islanders launch new mobile and web applications. Interviews and final selections are now underway, with Sonnier attributing the rise to the team’s public engagement efforts and “work … to build a brand, to be out in the public, to connect with the community,” adding, “I think we’re seeing the fruits of that labor.”
The RTPark and UVI will launch the Epic Sargassum Solutions Innovation Studio with a planning meeting on Oct. 22, focusing efforts on the pressing regional threat of sargassum. A larger, community-driven Innovation Studio kickoff is scheduled for Nov. 21, targeting “problem discovery, partnership creation and systems level change at UVI … our focus is going to be on sargassum,” Sonnier said.
To inform future agricultural innovation, RTPark board members and staff toured agribusiness incubators during the Innovation in Agriculture and Energy Opportunity Zone Summit in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Sonnier said, “We wanted to actually see and feel and touch examples from other people who have built agribusinesses or incubators … and see firsthand what that looks like to be able to bring knowledge back to our team.”
With guidance from VI Good Food, RTPark plans to conduct listening sessions and direct outreach with the farming community, “so that as we build on our land … it’s guided by what farmers and the agriculture community actually want to see,” Sonnier explained.
Community engagement continues to grow, with October’s Tech Tuesday drawing roughly 50 attendees, including representatives from 13 RTPark clients, “a record for us,” Sonnier reported.
Outreach will continue through a Chamber of Commerce after-hours event on Oct. 23, offering small businesses the chance to network and tour the park’s conference space, and the Tech Together Workshop on Oct. 28, where attorney Chris Halliday will present an “intellectual property 101 session.”
RTPark is also preparing to welcome a new chief operating officer at its next board meeting in November and recently launched a jobs page to connect local talent with career and internship opportunities.
The board unanimously elected William DeLon as vice chair during open session after returning from executive session.
“I look forward to working … to move the park forward. We’ve seen great progress this year and I look forward to seeing a continuation of that progress,” DeLon said.