As
much of the recent media focus has been on the aftermath of the
devastation in Puerto Rico and the estimated more than 4,600 people
who died there in the wake of Hurricane Maria, little is said of the
U.S. Virgin Islands. Also a territory of the United States, and very
much a colony like its Caribbean counterpart, the U.S. Virgin Islands
have endured much damage from the dual Category 5 hurricanes Irma
and Maria
that landed only two weeks apart in September 2017.
As
opposed to the relatively quick post-hurricane recovery efforts on
the mainland, the Virgin Islands have experienced a slowed recovery
due to a shortage of cash in the territory. As the Washington Post
reported, contractors
who are repairing and rebuilding the storm-damaged homes have not
been paid in months. This in a territory that faced financial woes
even before the successive hurricanes, with the storms crippling
tourism and eroding the tax base. Approximately 18,500 homes were
destroyed on the three major islands of St. Thomas, St. Croix and St.
John, on which fewer than 100,000 people live.
The
federal government has allocated $186 million for the Sheltering and
Temporary Essential Power (STEP) program to repair 10,000 damaged
homes. While the U.S.V.I. government wants the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) to release the money because it cannot
afford to pay the upfront costs to the contractors, FEMA has declined
on the grounds that the agency reimburses for costs that state and
territorial governments pay upfront under such assistance programs.
AECOM, which is the primary contractor repairing homes in the
islands, says it has not been paid and therefore is not paying its
subcontractors.
The
recovery is coming along slower than anticipated, with residents
saying they are not ready as the new hurricane season approaches.
According to U.S.V.I. Gov. Ken
Mapp,
recovery will take five to seven years, and the territory is eligible
for a little over $8 billion in federal assistance.
According
to Genevieve Whitaker — president and cofounder of the Virgin
Islands Youth Advocacy Coalition, a civic organization dedicated to
civic literacy and decolonization in the Virgin Islands —
national news media are paying no attention to the U.S. Virgin
Islands. “What’s really going on is … our power
issues are resolved. There are times when the power is going in and
out and there are outages, St. Johns and St. Thomas more than St.
Croix,” Whitaker, a St. Croix native and U.S.V.I. Senate
candidate, told Atlanta Black Star. “You fly over the Virgin
Islands, you see blue roofs. People were underinsured, people are
struggling to have their roofs repaired. A company had a contract to
replace roofs and make houses livable. People still have blue roofs,”
she said of the temporary roofs placed on residents’ homes.
“There is an effort for stronger structures. We have a lot of
wood [utility] poles and there is a move for steel poles,” she
added of the efforts to fortify the infrastructure.
Whitaker
took note of the difficulties people have had dealing with FEMA and
the slow process of filing their damage claims and seeking assistance
from the federal government. “I didn’t have any
insurance; I rented a house,” Whitaker said. In addition,
people must prove ownership of their property, sometimes in the
family for generations, in terms of title and deed documents. “There
are reports of people having deeds that go back to their
great-great-grandparents. There are no clear guidelines,” she
said, also noting that people were forced into federal disaster
loans.
“There
are concerns about the governor being too ambitious,” Whitaker
added of the financial crisis in the territory, including $2 billion
in debt owed to Wall Street bondholders and creditors, which was
taken out to fund essential services. Further, the crisis has
resulted in $3.4 billion in unfunded public pensions and retiree
health care, and a pension fund that is nearly 20 percent unfunded
and will run out of money in five years. “Before the storm we
were in a severe deficit, and we have an annuity system on the brink
of collapse.”
For
Whitaker, who has served as a delegate before the United Nations
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in Geneva,
and a fellow for the International Decade for People of African
Descent (IDPAD), the economic and political situation in which the
U.S. Virgin Islands finds itself steeped in a history of colonialism
and racism against people of color. Like Puerto Rico, the
predominantly Black territory was acquired by the U.S. during the
height of racial segregation and was subjected to second-class
citizenship status. “The issue is colonial,” she said.
“Any progress we made, we are stymied by the federal
government,” Whitaker said, while also acknowledging “we
have to give them credit for the help they do give.”
Nevertheless, she points to the “lack of a fundamental right to
vote,” including a 1901 Supreme Court decision “that
calls us savages” and an “alien race.” “Any
possessions and lands acquired are uncivilized,” she said,
maintaining this unequal treatment persists.
The
1901 Supreme Court decisions in question are the so-called Insular
Cases —
racist decisions from Justice
Henry Brown,
the author of the Plessy v. Ferguson racial segregation case —
which laid the groundwork for America’s treatment of nonwhite
territories. For example, in Downes
v. Bidwell,
the court wrote that “If the conquered are a fierce, savage,
and restless people, he may, according to the degree of their
indocility, govern them with a tighter rein so as to curb their
‘impetuosity, and to keep them under subjection.’
Moreover, the rights of conquest may, in certain cases, justify him
in imposing a tribute or other burthen, either a compensation for the
expenses of the war or as a punishment for the injustice he has
suffered from them.” The court also wrote:
“We are
also of opinion that the power to acquire territory by treaty implies
not only the power to govern such territory, but to prescribe upon
what terms the United States will receive its inhabitants, and what
their status shall be in what Chief Justice Marshall termed the
‘American empire.’ There seems to be no middle ground
between this position and the doctrine that, if their inhabitants do
not become, immediately upon annexation, citizens of the United
States, their children thereafter born, whether savages or civilized,
are such, and entitled to all the rights, privileges and immunities
of citizens. If such be their status, the consequences will be
extremely serious. Indeed, it is doubtful if Congress would ever
assent to the annexation of territory upon the condition that its
inhabitants, however foreign they may be to our habits, traditions,
and modes of life, shall become at once citizens of the United
States.”
The
U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico face the same circumstances as
people of color, Whitaker insists, with racial overtones in their
relationship with the federal government, even in the tone of the
insurance adjusters who came to prove ownership of the damaged
property. “It’s the same mentality, we’re both
colonial subjects. We’re treated the same,” she said.
“This is a racial justice issue.”
What
Whitaker wants to see for the U.S.V.I. is what was fought for in the
civil rights movement, which is recognizing all people as equal. “We
have a 1901 decision that calls us savages, and I would like this
overturned. In terms of self-determination, here we are unable to
vote for president, we are unable to take part in the elections. We
have tried to become a part of CARICOM [The Caribbean Community group
of nations], [but] it was denied by the U.S. State Department,”
she said of various local efforts that were undermined. “Congress
has come after us [in term of] monies to be allocated. It’s
just this treatment where they have these programs and they pull the
rug,” she said of federal aid to the territory. Further, the
U.S.V.I. must collect a 6
percent tariff
on all goods imported into the territory, which is remitted to the
federal government, demonstrating the colonial nature of the
relationship between the U.S. Virgin Islands and the mainland.
Not
unlike the process of overcoming a legacy of colonial oppression in
which Black people were regarded as savages, the process of recovery
in the U.S. Virgin Islands is slow.
This
commentary was originally published by AtlantaBlackStar.com
|