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MAPP: Everyone In My Cabinet Reports That They Are ‘Surviving The Hurricane Well On $90K+ Per Year’ And More … Thank You Very Much For Asking

CHRISTIANSTED – Gov. Kenneth Mapp said that he met with all of his Cabinet members on St. Croix and that all of them are happy to report that none of them are hurting after Hurricanes Irma and Maria.

“I thought the public ought to know this,” Mapp said, “because it is not that easy to scrape by on $90,000 per year after two category 5 storms strike you — especially if you don’t have electricity — you have to buy more things. We take care of our own — unless I fire you — and then you’re on your own.”

Repairing hurricane damaged facilities, accessing federal assistance, filling critical job vacancies and fully restoring government services were among the topics addressed when more than 40 members of the Mapp/Potter Administration’s Cabinet met on St. Croix Thursday.

Commissioners, directors and other agency heads each reported on the latest status of their infrastructure, work force and ability to carry out their duties.

Mapp also said it was important that each agency move forward in assuring that damage assessments were finalized and that requests were made for modular buildings, critical staffing and other needs.

“We need to submit paperwork to the federal government so we can start drawing on those recovery dollars,” the Governor said. “Each of you has to focus on your lane, focus on your responsibilities. You have to look at a wider view to ensure you can provide the services that each department and agency is required to deliver to the community. FEMA (the Federal Emergency Management Agency) has a critical role to play in the support system of this Government now, but we must clearly outline our needs.”

The federal government will assist in funding new government jobs required as a result of the storm, the Governor explained. For example, since more people are now eligible for unemployment benefits, FEMA will help pay the salaries of the additional personnel required by the Department of Labor to process these new claims.

Mapp asked Cabinet members to work with the Division of Personnel to ensure that available positions, especially those critical vacancies, are advertised and filled.

Agency heads reported that the repair of phone service to government offices has lagged behind the restoration of power.

“We must reestablish communication to government agencies,” Governor Mapp said. “We cannot remain disconnected from the community.”

The governor has requested that all offices without landlines be set up to utilize Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) phone service.

The Bureau of Information Technology (BIT) and the Virgin Islands Next Generation Network have already laid the groundwork for internet phone service implementation and BIT Director Angelo Riddick reported at the meeting that the Government could eventually save as much as 40 percent on the cost of phone service if all agencies converted to VoIP technology.

Retiring member of the Administration’s financial team, Office of Management & Budget Director Nellon Bowry encouraged agency heads to remember the people behind the numbers as they make assessments and work towards the territory’s recovery.

“I tell my staff to always remember that what we do affects real people in real ways – we are not just crunching numbers,” Bowry said.

Cabinet members also received a brief presentation from the disaster response consultants working with the local government.

Witt O’Brien’s, AECOM and Ernst & Young are assisting agencies in completing detailed assessments of the Government’s losses, working with insurance adjusters and organizing joint site visits with FEMA to finalize damage and rebuild reports.

Mapp urged Cabinet members to think of government facilities as their personal property and to push for maximum assistance from FEMA and the territory’s insurance companies.

“I want every agency head to understand the importance of this process,” the governor said. “These are folks that know the Stafford Act backwards and forwards and will help us ensure we are not leaving any money on the table.”

Mapp and Lt. Gov. Osbert Potter thanked the Commissioners, Directors and senior staff members present, many of whom worked tirelessly during and in the immediate aftermath of Hurricanes Irma and Maria.

“We also must thank those government employees who really went the extra mile after the storms,” the governor said. “We really appreciate you laying in bed all day and waiting two weeks to collect your government paycheck. You stayed off the roads at a critical time for the territory — aiding in the flow of traffic. And your absence in the community led to a reduction in crime — Police Commissioner Delroy Richards was happy to report. So it was a two-pronged approach we took — and in the end, it worked for all of us — even if you didn’t.”

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