There is reason to feel optimistic after the V.I. Water and Power Authority signed five purchase agreements with St. Croix Wind and Bovoni Wind at the end of March. However, if history repeats itself, it will be months and maybe years before Virgin Islanders see any renewable energy and therefore wi
James Jones, 66, wants to build his “dream” retirement home in Eagle Harbor. He has the blueprint ready, but his land is constantly wet, making it difficult to build a foundation. Storms have eroded so much shoreline over the last few years that it has made it difficult to build a dock for his boats.
James Jones lined his shoreline with rocks and wooden slates to curtail further erosion. (Elizabeth Shwe/Maryland Matters)
This content was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.
When James Jones drives up to his one-acre property in Eagle Harbor, a small historically Black waterfront community on the southern tip of Prince George’s County, he is taken aback by the shimmering view of the Patuxent River, the longest river entirely within Maryland.