On Thursday, the V.I. Water and Power Authority Governing Board approved a series of capital project adjustments and facility consolidations designed to optimize infrastructure deployment and reduce long-term operational expenditures. The authorizations address the acceleration of a new metering system installation, the resolution of unforeseen geological challenges in underground electrical projects, and the centralization of corporate offices.
The board approved a $2.8 million cost increase for the Itron Advanced Metering Infrastructure contract, bringing the total contract value to approximately $23.15 million. The increase is intended to reduce the project’s installation timeline by six months. Management noted that the revised schedule shifts from a sequential rollout to a concurrent model, where crews will operate on St. Thomas and St. Croix simultaneously.
The dual operation requires doubling labor forces and establishing additional warehousing and networking infrastructure on each island. WAPA CEO Karl Knight justified the expedited schedule as a strategic hedge against external risks. "The conversations that are taking place about the [U.S. Dept. Homeland Security] shutdown and its impacts on FEMA could potentially delay the project, which, to me, only emphasizes why we ought to try and truncate the schedule," he told board members. Meter deployment is projected to commence in August or September of this year, following performance testing on St. John.
The board also authorized a $234,155.50 cost increase for the Feeder 5A underground electrical project on St. Thomas, raising the final contract amount to $4.96 million. Mechanical Engineer Star Matthew reported that the adjustment was primarily driven by the excavation of 758 cubic yards of rock, exceeding the original 500-yard allowance. “This is Rock City, so you should expect a lot of rock,” board chair Maurice Muia quipped.