The 36th Legislature’s Committee of the Whole gathered at the Capitol Building to confront persistent electrical service failures affecting thousands of residents across the St. Thomas-St. John District, bringing WAPA officials before lawmakers to answer for the ongoing disruptions.
The hearing represents a significant escalation in legislative oversight of the Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority, the government-owned utility responsible for supplying electricity to residents and businesses. As outages continue to plague the islands, lawmakers are moving beyond complaints to demand accountability and concrete answers about why the interruptions persist despite millions invested in infrastructure improvements.
Senate President Milton E. Potter convened the Committee of the Whole specifically to examine WAPA’s service failures. The scope of the problem affects daily life across two of the territory’s most populated islands—from households unable to power basic appliances to small businesses losing revenue during unexpected outages.
WAPA officials provided testimony during the session, offering explanations and justifications that lawmakers will now evaluate. The utility has long cited aging infrastructure, hurricane damage recovery, and maintenance challenges as contributing factors to service interruptions. The decision to convene a full committee hearing signals serious concern among elected officials about whether these explanations adequately address the scale of the crisis.
The Public Services Commission, which regulates utilities in the territory, maintains filings and docket records related to WAPA’s operations and rate adjustments. Recent filings include petitions related to fuel and labor adjustment clauses, which determine how much the utility charges customers. These regulatory documents suggest ongoing financial and operational pressures on the agency.
For residents, the practical impact is immediate. Power outages disrupt work-from-home arrangements, damage appliances, spoil food, and create safety concerns—particularly for elderly residents and those dependent on electrical medical equipment. Businesses face lost productivity and customer dissatisfaction.
The timing of the legislative action suggests growing impatience with the status quo. St. Thomas and St. John residents have endured repeated outages over months, with some areas experiencing multiple interruptions weekly. Community frustration has mounted as WAPA has failed to provide clear timelines for resolution or transparency about root causes.
WAPA’s strategic planning documents outline long-term infrastructure goals, but the gap between planning and execution appears wide. Residents want to know not just what WAPA intends to do, but when those improvements will actually reach their neighborhoods and whether service reliability will meaningfully improve.
The legislature’s investigation marks a turning point in how territorial leadership addresses the crisis. Rather than accepting explanations from a utility struggling with its basic mission, lawmakers are taking direct action to oversee operations and demand performance improvements.
The outcome of this legislative pressure—whether it translates into faster repairs, better communication, or systemic improvements to WAPA’s infrastructure—will largely depend on the utility’s willingness to cooperate. St. Thomas and St. John residents are watching to see if their elected officials can force real change at the utility that serves them.








