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St. Thomas, USVI
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St Thomas Community News

Tuesday, April 1, 2026
Independent Local News
Vol. 1, Issue 1

  • Public Works Pledges Road Repair Push as USVI Infrastructure Concerns Mount

    Public Works Pledges Road Repair Push as USVI Infrastructure Concerns Mount

    The U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Public Works is ramping up road repair efforts across St. Thomas, responding to years of complaints from residents and visitors about deteriorating roadways that have become a hazard to daily life. The announcement brings renewed attention to an issue that has frustrated Virgin Islanders for over a decade — potholes, crumbling shoulders and neglected…

“Unplug. Unwind. Go outside.”

Discover the Forest — Ad Council & U.S. Forest Service

  • Planned Power Outages Monday Threaten Business Operations Across St. Thomas

    Planned Power Outages Monday Threaten Business Operations Across St. Thomas

    The Water and Power Authority has announced a scheduled electrical rotation outage for Monday, April 6, raising concerns that St. Thomas businesses face potential closures, lost revenue and spoiled inventory. Economic Disruption Looms For businesses that depend on reliable power — from restaurants handling perishable goods to offices running essential technology — the interruption is expected to cause more than…

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Hurricane Season
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Make a plan. Build a kit. Know your zone.
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Disaster Recovery Funds Fuel St. Croix School Project, Raising Territorial Hopes

Construction has officially begun on a new St. Croix Central High School building, marking a significant milestone in how the U.S. Virgin Islands is channeling federal disaster recovery funds into long-term infrastructure improvements across the territory.

The groundbreaking ceremony, held April 21, brought together the Virgin Islands Department of Education, the construction firm Consigli/Benton Joint Venture, territorial government officials and the Office of Disaster Recovery to mark the start of what many hope will become a model for rebuilding aging school facilities damaged during recent hurricanes.

The project represents a turning point for island residents who have watched recovery efforts unfold at varying speeds across St. Croix, St. Thomas and Water Island. For nearly a decade, questions have lingered about whether federal disaster recovery money—originally allocated following hurricanes in 2017—would address the territory’s most pressing needs or fade into bureaucratic delays.

School buildings across the territory had deteriorated even before hurricane damage, with crumbling infrastructure and outdated systems becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. The new St. Croix Central High School facility aims to replace those shortcomings with a modern learning environment designed to meet 21st-century educational standards.

A Test Case for Territorial Recovery

The St. Croix school project now serves as a tangible example of disaster recovery funds translating into rebuilt infrastructure. For residents of St. Thomas, where multiple schools remain in need of similar renovations, the St. Croix effort offers a glimpse of what coordinated federal funding and local execution can achieve.

The Office of Disaster Recovery has overseen the allocation of these federal dollars, working alongside territorial agencies to prioritize projects that address both immediate hurricane damage and underlying deficiencies in the territory’s public facilities.

Construction timelines for the new school remain an important variable. Residents and education officials will be watching whether the project stays on schedule, as delays in recovery work have frustrated communities across the islands.

Broader Questions About Recovery Spending

The groundbreaking raises broader questions about how remaining disaster recovery funds will be distributed. With multiple schools, hospitals, government buildings and infrastructure across three islands competing for limited resources, territorial leadership faces ongoing decisions about spending priorities.

Education officials have emphasized that modernizing school facilities directly impacts student outcomes and workforce readiness. A new building at St. Croix Central High could serve as evidence that such investments pay dividends in academic performance and student engagement.

The partnership between VIDE, the construction joint venture, government agencies and disaster recovery officials also demonstrates the coordination required to move large projects from planning into execution. That model could inform how the territory approaches other stalled or delayed recovery initiatives.

What Comes Next

The success of the St. Croix Central High School construction will likely influence how federal dollars are allocated for future school improvements on St. Thomas and Water Island. Parents and educators in those communities have pointed to aging facilities as a constraint on educational quality.

As crews break ground on the new building, territorial residents will track progress as a measure of whether disaster recovery mechanisms—created years ago—can finally deliver the full-scale rebuilding many have long anticipated.

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