• How Will VCU Pay for Student Athletes?

    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    by James A. Bacon

    Opting into an NCAA settlement that professionalizes college athletics, Virginia Commonwealth University has decided it will pay its student athletes a total of between $4 million and $5 million a year, reports the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

    โ€œAmateurism as we know it is dead,โ€ย Athletic Director Ed McLaughlinย told the schoolโ€™s Board of Visitors. โ€œThere is a new collegiate model.โ€

    How to divvy up those funds between different men and women’s track, soccer, tennis and basketball teams is one big question. Another is where the money will come from. The VCU athletics budget was roughly $45 million in fiscal 2023, according to the RTD. A big chunk of that sum comes from students who pay a $1,400 athletic fee.

    VCU will ask donors to make gifts, and the athletic department will review its revenue and costs, McLaughlin said. VCU is not planning to add a surcharge to ticket prices like the University of Tennessee’s 10% โ€œtalent fee.โ€ It won’t be easy, McLaughlin conceded. โ€œWe have to make the financial jigsaw puzzle fit together.”

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  • At Least They’re Culturally Competent!

    by James A. Bacon

    A couple of days ago I skewered New Jersey for enacting a law, effective Jan. 1, that removes a requirement for teachers to pass a reading, writing and mathematics test for licensure. Noting that Virginia teachers seeking initial licensure must pass the Virginia Communication and Literacy Assessment (VCLA), I expressed the hope that the General Assembly “progressives,” who have done everything in their power to make Virginia more like New Jersey, didn’t get any ideas.

    Too late.

    It turns out that Virginia beat New Jersey to being New Jersey. In April the General Assembly passed — and Governor Glenn Youngkin signed — a similar bill, HB 731, introduced by Del. Briana Sewell, D-Prince William.

    That bill requires the Board of Education to eliminate the requirement “for any individual to take and receive a passing score on the Virginia Communication and Literacy Assessment as a condition of the initial award or renewal of a renewable license as a teacher in the Commonwealth.”

    You can’t make this up.

    Update: Read the comments. Readers make the case that the VCLA test was duplicative and unnecessary.

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  • Does a Hedge Fund Want to Buy This House?

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    State Sen. Glenn Sturtevant (R-Chesterfield) plans to reintroduce his bill to prohibit investment firms worth more than $50 million from purchasing homes in Virginia, reports the Virginia Mercury.

    The bill is a reaction to the perception that investment firms are buying a disproportionate share of houses on the market, particularly houses that have traditionally be seen as โ€œstarterโ€ homes. Many feel that the presence of these large financial firms in the market has been a major factor in pushing real estate prices beyond the reach of many first-time home buyers. โ€œItโ€™s ultimately not fair for them to be competing with regular people,โ€ Sturtevant explained.

    It is not clear how big this โ€œproblemโ€ is. Sturtevant cites research that shows that โ€œaround 4,300 single-family homes in the Richmond area are owned by investors.โ€ A study of real estate sales in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield during 2018-2021 showed that the three areas in which investor activity was the highest also experienced the highest increase in the median price of a house. However, in neither of these instances is โ€œinvestorโ€ defined. It could be a large hedge fund or it could be an individual buying a house with the intention of flipping it or a couple buying a house as a long-term rental investment. Sturtevant says that the two latter types of investors are not the target of his bill.

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  • Color Us Unsurprised: Something In The Water Festival Missed Another Deadline.

    Something nasty in the water… Image created by ChatGPT

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Happy New Year, fellow suckers.

    Iโ€™m speaking only to residents of Virginia Beach where Pharrell Williams apparently has the city by the short hairs.

    After staging a hugely successful music festival on the beach in 2019 – one I supported and attended – itโ€™s been one disaster and delay after another as the Beach native pronounced the city โ€œtoxicโ€ then reversed his opinion once city officials traveled to New York City and kissed his ring – or something else – in a secret meeting.

    Still, no festival in 2024 and 2025 is looking iffy.

    Who will ever forget when Pharrell cancelled Octoberโ€™s Something In The Water festival in September after tickets went on sale?

    The excuse? Blah, blah, blah, something about the concert not being ready.

    Iโ€™ll say.

    Instead of saying goodbye to the cityโ€™s favorite son and wishing him well after that fiasco, the Beach politicians with spines of jellyfish signaled that despite their stern warnings they were willing to put up with endless shenanigans to toss hundreds of thousands of tax dollars at a billionaire.

    All to keep a rap festival in the city. Continue reading.


  • The Sordid Reality of “Great and Good”

    by James A. Bacon

    The University of Virginia’s 2030 Plan for creating “a great and good university” lists ten key initiatives, one of which is its “good neighbor program.” The description reads in its entirety:

    In partnership with our neighbors in Charlottesville and surrounding counties, we will work toward being a just and sustainable community. We will work collaboratively, and with all due humility, with our community partners to address key challenges, including housing, living wages, local educational opportunities, and access to health care. We will set ambitious sustainability goals and develop a realistic plan to meet them, including an improved transportation system. We will launch the Center for the Redress of Inequity, which will support community-engaged scholarship to model how public
    research universities can help reduce racial and socioeconomic inequities in our local communities. To make it easier for our neighbors to interact with the University, we will create a community engagement office in an easily accessible location in town.

    Charlottesville city leaders would settle for $10 million a year in lieu of property taxes.

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  • TSA Harrisonburg

    by Joe Fitzgerald

    Deb and I, encouraged by someone whoโ€™d lost a spouse to Covid and assisted by those who wanted to help share information, created TSAHarrisonburg on Facebook a few years ago to report on infection and mortality statistics in the Shenandoah Valley. Weโ€™re pivoting the site to respond to another community crisis, just as dangerous in a different way: the disappearance of media resources and resulting drop in coverage of local news.

    In order to effectively own and operate your local government, you have to know what itโ€™s doing.

    To that end, weโ€™ll be reporting on Harrisonburg government discussions and decisions, specifically City Council, School Board, and Planning Commission meetings, to be published simultaneously on Substack and Facebook, as soon as feasible after the meetings conclude.

    We view this work as a complement to local sources such as The Citizen, WHSV, WSVA , WMRA and the DNR โ€“ not a substitute. They provide breakfast, lunch and dinner; weโ€™re the vitamin supplement to make sure you get all your trace nutritional requirements.

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  • Bacon Bits: The “What Is Reality?” Edition

    Lunacy down on the farm… The FBI has arrested Brad Kenneth Spafford following a raid at his 20-acre Isle of Wight County farm and charged him with possessing an unregistered short-barrel rifle. Law enforcement overreach? Well, FBI agents discovered more than 150 pipe bombs and other explosive devices, reports The Virginian-Pilot. They also found a backpack upon which Spafford, who is White, had printed the hashtag #NOLIVESMATTER. A neighbor said he used Joe Biden’s picture for target practice and, after a failed assassination attempt on Donald Trump, told the neighbor he hoped the shooter “doesn’t miss Kamala.” Spafford also espoused the bizarre conspiracy theory that “missing children in the news had been taken by the federal government to be trained as school shooters.”

    And in a desperate attempt to salvage reality… I disagree with Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, about many things, but I think I’m with him on his latest concern. The use is spreading of AI-generated voices and images in campaign ads to create fake celebrity endorsements and other deceptive content. According to WUSA, Surovell wouldn’t ban the use of AI, but he would make campaign ads run conspicuous disclaimers. “AI generated material is extremely dangerous in a political environment and by the time anybody realizes it’s AI, it’s too late,” he told the broadcaster. Humans are predisposed to conspiratorial thinking as it is — the feds are kidnaping our children (see above), the moon landing was faked, Obama was born in Kenya, 9/11 was an inside job, Trump colluded with Putin to steal the election. AI will pour jet fuel on fake news and conspiracy mongering. We need to give serious thought on how to rein it in while protecting free speech.

    Teach kids to read by hiring teachers who can’t read. AI disclaimers can’t save us from pure stupid, however. A law has gone into effect in New Jersey that purports to address the Garden State’s teacher shortage by removing a requirement for teachers to pass a reading, writing and mathematics test for certification. Here in Virginia teachers seeking initial licensure must pass the Virginia Communication and Literacy Assessment (VCLA), which creates a barrier to the hiring of a historically marginalized group commonly known as incompetents. (How long until the i word is banned?) Here’s hoping that the General Assembly’s so-called “progressives,” who have done everything in their power to make Virginia more like New Jersey, don’t get any ideas.


  • Happy New Year

    Image credit: ChatGPT

    It’s going to be a wild ride, baby!


  • Crunching the Numbers on Elite Overproduction

    by James A. Bacon

    Wonder why young Americans are souring on the higher-ed value proposition? The Old Dominion University Strome College of Business’s “2024 State of the Commonwealth Report” supplies data that provides the answer.

    Ten years after leaving high school, one in five bachelor’s degree recipients earned less than the median income of high school graduates here in Virginia.

    The aggregate numbers hide a lot of variability between institutions, degree programs, and students’ socioeconomic background, the report cautions. But the bottom line is clear.

    “Substantial proportions of college graduates end up earning less than the members of their high school graduating classes who did not attend college,” states the report in its chapter entitled, “Does It Still Pay to Attend College in Virginia?”

    Even at the University of Virginia, the state’s flagship university with arguably the most selective admissions standards, nearly one in twelve graduates earned less than the median income for Virginia high school grads.

    Worse yet at the opposite end of the spectrum, at the Virginia University of Lynchburg only 47.9% of graduates earned the high school average. By that measure, a majority of VUL grads were worse off than if they’d just entered the workforce after graduating high school! (The report did not examine for-profit colleges where the comparative earnings numbers for most institutions are even worse.)

    Correction: In the paragraph above, I had mistakenly referred to the University of Lynchburg, a different institution than the Virginia University of Lynchburg.

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  • Another Reason to Avoid the Virginia Lottery

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    One of the top selling points made for approval of the establishment of the Virginia Lottery was that lottery profits would be dedicated to public education in Virginia.

    That is still the message that the Virginia Lottery peddles. Scroll to the bottom of its website home page, past all the current offerings, and you will see, in large font, the โ€œtotal Virginia Lottery profits generated for Virginia’s K-12 public schools since 1999.โ€ The message: โ€œBuy a lottery ticket. If you donโ€™t win, your money goes to Virginia schools.โ€

    Anyone familiar with the Virginia budget knows this is specious. The lottery profits are used to supplant general fund support for K-12. If there were not the lottery profits, the amount of state money for K-12 would likely be the same but would come entirely from the general fund. The explanatory bullets in Governor Youngkinโ€™s budget document provides clear proof of that relationship. The estimate of lottery profits increases by $73.3 million for the biennium. However, that does not mean that the amount of state funding for K-12 increases by that amount. Instead, the existing general fund appropriation for K-12 is reduced, almost dollar for dollar, by the amount of the increase in lottery profits. The result is a $3.00 net increase in funding for K-12 due to the increase in lottery profits.


  • Waiting for NAEP

    Photo credit: Governor Youngkin’s Facebook account

    by Charles B. Pyle

    On December 18, the governing board of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NEAP) -โ€“ the battery of fourth- and eighth-grade exams in reading and math known as the Nationโ€™s Report Card -โ€“ announced that the results of the 2024 tests will be released January 29, 2025.

    State-by-state NAEP results are typically published in the fall, but during presidential election years the governing board delays reporting to keep the assessment program from becoming ensnared in national politics.

    But state politics donโ€™t factor into the NAEP governing boardโ€™s timetable. And in Virginia, the results of the national tests students took at the beginning of 2024 will land in the middle of a contentious General Assembly session and in what promises to be a bruising election year as Republicans seek to retain the top three statewide offices and Democrats battle to hold their narrow majority in the House of Delegates.

    The 2024 NAEP results will be as much of a report card on the educational policies and initiatives of Governor Glenn Youngkin as a measure of the reading and math skills of Virginia elementary and middle school students.

    As discussed in an earlier column on this site, Youngkin seized on the disastrous performance of Virginia students on the 2019 NAEP during his 2021 campaign for governor. The former Carlyle Group executive tied the sharp declines in the performance of Virginia students on the national reading and math tests with the low bars set for corresponding state Standards of Learning tests during the Northam administration.

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  • Covid Actors Are Back: Now It’s Bird Flu

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Question of the day: Will you fall for it again?

    This is directed only at those who dutifully wore face diapers, who cancelled family get togethers or who left sick children alone in their rooms as ordered by public health authorities during the covid pandemic. Oh, and those who took vaccine after vaccine, thanking Pfizer that they didnโ€™t die every time they caught the virus.

    Will you stay home if ordered? Cover your face in public? Let them close your kidsโ€™ schools? Roll up your sleeves for another experimental shot?

    It appears the CDC – with just 22 days left to inflict hysteria on the American people – has begun ginning up the panic about bird flu.

    And guess who reappeared just in time to fan the flames: Deborah Birx, the scarf-wearing vampiress who admitted that 14 days to slow the spread was a lie intended to shutdown the country indefinitely.

    She ought to be under indictment, not making appearances on cable news.

    According to hysterics in the media, a strain of the bird flu virus – detected in a single patient in Louisiana –  shows signs of โ€œconcerningโ€ mutations. An outbreak in chickens and cows has caused California (of course) to declare a state of emergency.

    Could other blue states be far behind? Continue reading.


  • Save Us from Well-Meaning Meddlers

    by James A. Bacon

    When credit card companies, hospitals and other debt collectors try to collect the money they’re owed, they often target the bank accounts “of people who are already in crisis,” Radio IQ informs us.

    “When a creditor garnishes a bank account, it can really be devastating,” Jay Speer at the Virginia Poverty Law Center tells public radio. “The account holder is notified that their funds are frozen, and then you can’t pay your rent and you can’t pay your utilities. And so for some people it becomes a downward spiral.”

    Del. Phil Hernandez, D-Norfolk

    That’s why Delegate Phil Hernandez, D-Norfolk, is introducing a bill that would preserve the last $5,000 in a bank account.

    Why does Hernandez hate poor people?

    Forgive my hyperbole. Hernandez doesn’t really hate poor people. He just seems ignorant of economics and heedless of unintended consequences. The predictable result of his bill, should it pass: Lenders will curtail credit to the lower-income people he wants to help.

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  • A Warning to the Rest of the State

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney

    The editorial page of the Richmond Times-Dispatch today has a blistering critique of outgoing Mayor Levar Stoney. Stoney has spent the last few weeks in office in a โ€œFaring Wellโ€ tour touting โ€œthe remarkable strides Richmond has made over the past 8 yearsโ€ under his leadership. There is little doubt that this idea will occupy a prominent place in his campaign for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor. At this point, according to the Virginia Public Access Project, Stoney has a significant lead in fundraising over his opponents in the Democratic primary election.

    The headline of the editorial neatly summarizes its thesis: โ€œYes, Richmond is faring well. But not because of Stoney.โ€ Since 2016, when Stoney took office, real estate tax revenues have doubled, from $230 million to $460 million. That is thanks to an influx of new residents, mostly young professionals, all of whom have led โ€œto a stronger retail base and overall economy, fueled RVAโ€™s growing rep as foodie town, an arts and cultural destination on the East Coast.โ€

    Like his predecessors, instead of trying to deal with the โ€œdysfunction and incompetenceโ€ that Richmond city government has come to be known for, he got distracted by the โ€œshiny object.โ€ First, he โ€œcarried water for the business communityโ€ for the proposed $1.4 billion Navy Hill project that would have diverted city tax revenues. As the RTD put it, before the city council killed the project, โ€œNavy Hill angered just about everyone who didnโ€™t stand to profit from it.โ€ Then it was a casino. Unwilling to let it go after being narrowly defeated in a referendum, Stoney succeeded in getting a โ€œdo-over.โ€ It was defeated by a larger margin in a second referendum.

    In the meantime, Stoneyโ€™s finance department was screwing restaurants, one of the bright points in the recent economic recovery of the city, over the collection of meals tax revenue. (That is a long, complicated story that Jon Baliles has documented on this blog. See, here, for example.) His staff was running up large, questionable credit card charges. Hiring in the top echelons of the city administration reeked of cronyism.

    So, Richmond is a significantly different city than it was eight years ago. From July 1, 2016 to July 1, 2023, its population increased by almost 12 percent. There is a lot of construction underway. Whole commercial areas, such as Scottโ€™s Addition, have undergone a significant transformation. In Manchester, south of the river, high-rise apartment buildings and condominiums have taken the place of warehouses. There are lots of high-end restaurants that are busy. But, most of this is in spite of Stoney and his administration, not because of it.

    The editorial is another example of the value of local journalism. Despite its shortcomings, the Richmond Times Dispatch has been diligent in covering city hall. It provided extensive coverage of the Navy Hill proposal. See here for example. The newspaper and its reporters have been so persistent that Stoney was reduced to complaining about their coverage.


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From The Bull Elephant