The 36th Legislature of the United States Virgin Islands has launched its fiscal year 2026 budget cycle, with a series of committee hearings and mark-up sessions scheduled throughout May that will determine how territorial funds flow to schools, hospitals, infrastructure and social services across St. Thomas, St. John and St. Croix.
For St. Thomas residents, the coming weeks represent a crucial window to understand how lawmakers plan to spend public money and which priorities will receive funding in the new fiscal year. The budget process unfolds through structured committee reviews, public hearings and legislative deliberation before a final spending plan reaches the governor’s desk.
Committee Meetings Set the Budget Agenda
The Committee on Budget, Appropriations and Finance will hold a key meeting on May 19, while the Committee of the Whole is scheduled to convene on May 11. These sessions follow the typical budget cycle sequence in which the governor submits a proposed fiscal plan, the legislature conducts overview hearings and detailed budget reviews, and senators ultimately vote on appropriations.
The 16-member body, led by President Senator Milton E. Potter of St. Thomas, includes representatives from each of the three islands. Vice President Senator Kenneth L. Gittens of St. Croix and Majority Leader Senator Kurt A. Vialet of St. Croix hold significant power in shaping which items advance through committees and reach the full chamber floor.
Multiple Committees Shape Spending Priorities
The legislature operates through specialized committees that review spending proposals within their jurisdictions. The Committee on Education and Workforce Development meets May 6, positioning lawmakers to examine funding for territorial schools and job training initiatives. The Committee on Government Operations, Veterans Affairs and Consumer Protections gathers May 7 to assess spending that affects government employees, former military members and consumer protections.
Other committees addressing critical services include those focused on health, hospitals and human services; housing, transportation and telecommunications; disaster recovery and infrastructure; and economic development and agriculture. Each panel reviews proposed expenditures before recommendations move forward in the legislative process.
What Budget Debates Mean for Residents
The budget cycle directly influences services St. Thomas families depend on daily. Funding decisions made in these committee rooms determine teacher salaries and classroom resources, hospital staffing and medical equipment availability, road maintenance and public transportation capacity, and support for vulnerable populations including the elderly and disabled.
Rising costs for fuel, electricity and imported goods have strained territorial finances in recent years. Budget deliberations this May will reveal how lawmakers balance competing demands amid limited revenue streams. Residents who track these meetings gain insight into which services face cuts or growth, information that rarely reaches public attention until budgets take final form.
The Legislative Calendar and Public Engagement
Between formal committee sessions, legislators have scheduled constituent meetings and office work throughout May, reflecting their responsibility to hear from the people they represent. Community members interested in budget priorities are encouraged to contact their district senators—St. Thomas representatives include President Potter, Senators Marvin A. Blyden, Dwayne M. Degraff, Ray Fonseca, Alma Francis Heyliger and Carla J. Joseph.
The legislature maintains a public calendar and live-streams sessions, providing St. Thomas residents a transparent window into budget negotiations. Bills advance through multiple readings and committee reviews before final votes, allowing ample opportunity for public input and advocacy on spending priorities.
Timeline and Next Steps
The May calendar shows an intensive schedule designed to move the budget through review stages rapidly. After committees complete their work, the full Senate will conduct a budget session where all 16 legislators debate and vote on final appropriations. The approved budget then moves to the governor for consideration, completing the cycle.
St. Thomas residents who want to engage in the budget process can attend committee meetings, submit written input to their senators, or monitor legislative activity through the official Legislature website. The choices made in these May hearings will shape territorial spending priorities for the entire fiscal year, making this budget season a critical time for USVI governance and public services.










