A shrinking roster of approved vendors is forcing the Virgin Islands government to operate with fewer choices in everything from office supplies to construction services, creating conditions that could drive up costs and delay critical projects affecting residents across the territory.
The Department of Property and Procurement, which oversees all government purchasing, is struggling to maintain adequate competition among suppliers willing to do business with the territory. Fewer competing vendors means the government has less bargaining power to negotiate prices, potentially inflating the cost of goods and services ultimately paid for by taxpayers.
Procurement systems depend on healthy competition. When only one or two vendors can fulfill a contract, the government pays what those vendors ask rather than benefiting from competitive bidding. For a territory already facing fiscal challenges, a dwindling vendor pool adds another layer of expense.
The department operates five divisions: Procurement, Property, Transportation, Printing, and Asset Management, along with Central Stores and Warehousing. Together, these divisions manage the purchasing pipeline for agencies across the executive branch, school system, and other government entities.
Officials at the department’s offices on St. Thomas and St. Croix have not publicly disclosed specific numbers showing how many vendors have left the approved list in recent years or what categories face the steepest shortages. The lack of transparency makes it difficult for residents and lawmakers to gauge the scope of the problem.
Industry observers point to several reasons why vendors exit the territory’s marketplace. The process of becoming an approved government vendor requires navigating federal and local regulations. Payment delays are another common complaint. Vendors who experience extended waits for reimbursement often decide competing for government contracts elsewhere is worth their time and resources.
The territory’s economic volatility also deters some suppliers. Companies uncertain about population trends, tourism recovery, or government revenue stability may choose markets they view as more predictable. The U.S. Virgin Islands has seen population decline over the past decade, which affects the overall size of the market.
Government operations across the territory feel the ripple effects daily. An agency needing renovation work, vehicle repairs, or equipment purchases faces a smaller menu of options. Projects that should be completed in months sometimes stretch longer because fewer contractors are competing for the work.
Schools, hospitals, and social service agencies dependent on government procurement are particularly vulnerable. When the Procurement Department has limited vendors in categories like medical supplies, food services, or maintenance, delays can compromise public health and education outcomes.
The Department of Property and Procurement maintains an online vendor registration system and publishes procurement opportunities through its website. Yet attracting new vendors to the territory requires more than a digital portal. It requires addressing the underlying issues that drive existing vendors away.
Some territories have addressed this challenge by streamlining vendor approval processes, improving payment timelines, and creating targeted outreach programs to recruit suppliers in high-need categories. The Virgin Islands could explore similar strategies to reverse the trend.
Expanding the vendor pool would lower costs for taxpayers and accelerate project timelines across government. Without intervention, residents will continue bearing the cost of a procurement system constrained by insufficient competition and limited choices.









