The Virgin Islands Department of Education and construction firm Consigli/Benton Joint Venture officially broke ground Monday on the rebuilding of Charlotte Amalie High School, marking the first major physical progress on the project since Hurricanes Irma and Maria devastated the territory in 2017.
The project launch ceremony, held April 20, represents a potential turning point for one of St. Thomas’s most critical pieces of educational infrastructure. The high school serves as the primary secondary institution for students across the island and has operated under severe constraints since hurricane damage forced operational changes nearly a decade ago.
Years of Delays
The Charlotte Amalie High School reconstruction has endured repeated setbacks since the 2017 hurricanes. Despite initial recovery plans, construction had not commenced until this week, leaving educators and families frustrated by the prolonged timeline.
The Office of Disaster Recovery, the Government of the Virgin Islands, and VIDE partnered to finally move the project forward. The involvement of the federal disaster recovery apparatus highlights just how much reconstruction is needed across the territory’s public school system.
What This Means for St. Thomas Students
A fully reconstructed high school would provide Charlotte Amalie High students with modern facilities, updated educational resources, and improved learning environments. Currently, students have worked around damaged infrastructure and temporary solutions implemented in the immediate aftermath of the hurricanes.
The project signals that major capital investments in the territory’s hurricane recovery are finally translating into visible construction. However, residents should monitor progress closely, as delays and cost overruns have plagued other territorial infrastructure projects in recent years.
Ongoing Scrutiny
The Legislature’s committees have been tracking the status of major capital projects across government, receiving regular updates from the administration’s financial team. The Charlotte Amalie High School rebuild is among the most visible and important initiatives under recovery oversight.
The construction partnership between Consigli/Benton was selected through the government’s procurement process. Residents can monitor contract details and project milestones through the Department of Property and Procurement’s public contract listings.
While the ceremonial launch provides optimism that the school will finally be restored to full working order, the long gap between disaster and construction reveals the challenges the territory has faced in mobilizing resources and navigating bureaucratic processes tied to federal disaster recovery funding.
The success of this project will set the tone for how quickly other essential infrastructure can be rebuilt across the U.S. Virgin Islands.










