• Virginia Tech Goes Multi-Culti

    As part of an ongoing effort “to build a more inclusive and welcoming campus climate,” Virginia Tech will spend $337,000 to renovate and expand its Multicultural Center this summer. Next year, the Office of Multicultural Programs and Services will host โ€œDialogues Around Difference,โ€ a series of workshops focusing on “student success strategies, cultural consciousness, and community collaboration.”

    Said Zenobia Hikes, vice president for student affairs: “This project will strengthen and enhance the cultural competencies of the Virginia Tech community while creating an inclusive and welcoming environment for all students. It will support a rich campus climate that contributes to a civil and just community for all Virginia Tech members.” (See press release.)

    Does it occur to anyone that the more people talk about their differences, the more they will end up accentuating those differences? Does anyone else worry that Virginia Tech is drifting towards a University of Virginia-style system in which minority students self-segregate by race under the guise of multiculturalism? Is there anyone else out there who thinks that the best way for people to overcome racial and ethnic stereotyping is to interact with one another as individuals in everyday circumstances, not guided in groups by ideologically driven facilitators?


  • Straight Talk about Gasoline Prices and Transportation Policy

    Well, gasoline in Richmond has has hit $3.00 a gallon, or just shy of it, and I spent $48 filling up the gas tank of my Jeep — the most I’ve ever paid for in my life. I’m not happy about it, but I don’t see high gas prices as a reason to start foaming at the mouth and chewing on the carpet. Others feel less constrained.

    The hysteria over rising gas prices has reached a fever pitch. The economic ignorance of the sound bites and commentary I’ve seen on national television knows no bounds. Demagogues are calling for self-destructive taxes on oil company profits, oblivious to the reality that, in a capitalist society, profits are a critical signal that guide the flow of capital. (1) If you confiscate Exxon Mobil’s profits, you reduce the capital available to the world’s largest oil company to invest in more exploratory drilling, new oil wells, new pipelines, new refineries, etc. (2) If you tax oil industry profits, you also reduce the incentive for owners of outside capital to invest in new capacity. Why bother if the profits will be taxed away?

    Here in Virginia, a semblance of sanity still reigns. Gov. Timothy M. Kaine has not yet proposed anything as breath-takingly stupid as the proposals emanating from Washington, D.C. The Governor has said he will investigate reports of “price gouging,” which, given the fact that the the concept of “price gouging” is meaningless and impossible to define, means he will, for all practical purposes, do nothing…. Which is exactly what he should do. Nothing. Virginians and Americans will adapt to higher gas prices if government does not interfere.

    (The Governor also is considering applying for a waiver of federal regulations requiring cleaner gasoline be sold in Virginia’s major metro areas, but has not yet made a determination. See the Times-Dispatch report. Unfortunately, he’s sticking to his guns on trying to raise $1 billion for transportation projects without raising gasoline taxes — a topic for another post.)

    As I have been hammering away relentlessly on this blog (See “A World with One Billion Cars“), the world economy is moving from a 20-year era of cheap petroleum to a plateau of more expensive petroleum. This shift is driven by the combination of (a) escalating world consumption of petroleum, especially in rapidly developing economies like China and India, and (b) the peaking of global oil production capacity, the increasing expense of exploiting the remote and isolated oil reserves that remain, and terrorist/political instability in oil-producing countries. This is not the oil companies’ fault. This is not Dick Cheney’s fault. This is not the auto industries’ fault. It is not the environmentalists’ fault. It’s the reality of geology and geopolitics.

    The American public can adapt to the new global realities by changing their energy-intensive lifestyles, and politicians can help them by speaking honestly and forthrightly about why the price of gasoline is increasing, instead of demagoguing the issue for short-term political gain.

    Here in Virginia, the General Assembly has been examining what Virginia can do to increase energy production. That is OK, as far as it goes. But there is nothing that Virginia can do to increase the global supply of oil, and probably little it can do to increase the petroleum refining capacity needed to convert oil to gasoline. What the political and business leadership of Virginia has so far failed utterly to do is admit that Virginia is acutely vulnerable to oil price shocks. Virginians consume more gasoline per capita than the national average, in part because our transportation policy is geared toward matching every increase in automobile travel with an increase in transportation capacity with no thought of modulating travel demand.

    But reality is a stubborn thing. With each increase in the price of gasoline, the bankruptcy of the old order becomes increasingly evident. Let us hope that Gov. Kaine, who prides himself on straight talk, begins leveling with the people of Virginia.


  • ITS Speeds Travel Times in Hoo-Ville

    John Yellig with the Charlottesville Daily Progress describes the Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) center in Hoo-ville, which times the traffic lights on three major corridors: West Main Street, Emmet Street and Preston Avenue.

    Motorists can now drive from Jefferson Park Avenue to Ridge Street on West Main without stopping for a light, and maximum travel times on that stretch have been cut from 15 minutes to 3 minutes, 18 seconds, he said.

    โ€œSo often we get stuck thinking what road weโ€™re going to build next or what $20 million project weโ€™re going to build,โ€ said City Councilor Kevin Lynch, a supporter of the project. โ€œItโ€™s something that I think is positive news โ€ฆ that things are going to get better.โ€

    The project has cost about $850,000 so far. The estimated
    build-out cost stands at around $2 million, Randall said.

    If Virginia rated transportation projects on a Return on Investment basis — travel times improved per dollar spent — I suspect that traffic light synchronization projects like Charlottesville’s would out-perform most road construction projects by a wide margin. Why doesn’t the General Assembly insist upon putting ITS on an equal footing with expensive road and transit projects? Beats the heck out of me.


  • Xtreme Commuting

    Alec MacGillis with the Washington Post describes the daily trek of Shenandoah Valley residents to jobs in Fairfax County: gathering in the park-and-ride at 3:50 a.m. and piling into vans for a 77-mile trip. Writes MacGillis:

    It has come to this in the Washington region, where an imbalance of housing and jobs produces commutes that stagger the imagination and confound the biological clock: Every weekday, seven vans set off from Luray and six other far-flung locations with 55 passengers bound for a single workplace: the physical plant shop at George Mason University in Fairfax. The college looks so far afield for carpenters and electricians that it has started letting workers use campus vans for the commute. …

    George Mason’s predawn van pools may seem like just another example of the extreme commutes in a region where roads are illuminated with brake lights well before sunbeams, but they challenge the assumptions behind the trend. The conventional explanation is that people are moving farther out for tranquility and more affordable homes and paying for them with a long commute.

    The Luray riders serve as a reminder that there is another dynamic. They are not exurban wanderers but people with lives deeply rooted in towns far away who would have nothing to do with the Washington area if not for this: It’s the only place they can find work.


  • Hey, It’s Still Cheaper than Harvard

    The Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia has approved a 9.3 percent increase in tuition and fees for the 2006-2007 academic year to $7,845. That’s an increase of $665. If it’s any consolation, the Board is sticking it even harder to out-of-state students, raising tuition and fees by $1,845 to $25,945.

    Chief among the priorities to be funded are competitive salaries for faculty and staff, deferred maintenance on Grounds, core investments in academic activities, and Access UVa, the University’s financial aid program. More.


  • Jihadists in Our Midst

    I’ve been following the War on Terror pretty closely ever since 9/11, and it is only by perusing the Counter Terrorism Blog that I realized that a gang of jihadists operated in Virginia. Articles have been written in national media about the “Virginia Jihad Gang”, though never given much prominence. Virginia media have either buried the stories or ignored them altogether. This dates from an April 9, 2004, Associated Press article:

    ALEXANDRIA, Va. โ€” Two American Muslims were sentenced Friday to 20 and 15 years in prison, respectively, for their roles in support of a Virginia-based conspiracy to engage in holy war against nations deemed hostile to Islam, including the United States.

    The two men, Randall Todd Royer, 31, and Ibrahim al-Hamdi, 26, were among nine men who either pleaded guilty or were convicted of charges related to their participation in what prosecutors called a “Virginia jihad network.” Two others who faced charges were acquitted on all counts.

    The group used paintball games played in the woods near Fredericksburg in 2000 and 2001 as military training in preparation for holy war around the globe. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, some of the members turned their focus against the United States, traveling to Pakistan in the days after the attacks with the goal of joining the Taliban and fighting U.S. troops.

    And this from the Sept. 14, 2005, Washington Post, buried on page B-4:

    Federal prosecutors in Alexandria unveiled terrorism charges against a Maryland man yesterday, alleging that Ali Asad Chandia helped a foreign terrorist group acquire an electronic autopilot system and video equipment for use on model airplanes.

    Chandia, 28, of College Park, is also accused of shipping 50,000 paint balls to the group, Lashkar-i-Taiba, which the U.S. government has designated as a terrorist organization. The group runs terrorist camps in Pakistan and claims to have trained thousands of Islamic “holy warrior” mujahideen to fight in Afghanistan, Kashmir, Bosnia, Chechnya, Kosovo and the Philippines.

    The charges against Chandia, a legal permanent resident who emigrated from Pakistan in 1994, are an outgrowth of the “Virginia jihad network” case, in which nine Muslim men have been convicted over the past two years of training overseas for holy war against the United States.

    Let’s see, Virginia and Maryland have a home-grown network supporting jihadist training camps abroad… Members of this network have conducted paramilitary training in the woods around Fredericksburg in preparation for holy war… and no one is friggin’ curious? HOLY, FRIGGIN’ MOLY! Is there not a really, really big story here?

    Some might say, get over it, Bacon, this is yesterday’s news. But I would like to know: Who were these jihadists? How did they get here? What is the reaction of Virginia’s Muslim community? Were they isolated individuals, or were they embedded in a larger culture — like the subway bombers in London — that is hostile to the West? Did they attend mosques? Do Virginia mosques have radical imams spewing anti-Western invective? Surely it is a sign of utter complacency in our society that this story has not attracted more attention.


  • 400,000 ACRE FOOLISHNESS

    In a 21 April 2006 posting, Jim Bacon reports on Gov. Kaineโ€™s commitment to “conserve” 400,000 additional acres of land in the Commonwealth by 2010. He added a note on the topic today as well. Both were right on. There is however a larger issue:

    Let us be clear:

    If citizens could be assured that:

    The 400,000 acres of land will be used in the future only for agriculture & forestry / air & water recharge / hunting &gathering / passive recreation and other extensive land uses; and,

    It was certain that those 400,000 acres will be not be developed for intensive urban land uses; then,

    The conservation of 400,000 acres could be an economic, social and physical benefit to the land owners and to the public in general; but only if,

    All 400,000 acres of conserved land are IN THE RIGHT LOCATIONS.

    Just as clear that if the 400,000 acres are IN THE WRONG LOCATIONS they will have the opposite result:.

    Preserved / conserved acres can raise the speculative value of adjacent land for urban use (“no one can build next to your five acre lot”), cause urban development to leapfrog to unprotected land in even more dysfunctional locations, waste the public investment that has already been made to serve urban land uses on the newly “conserved” land. The list goes on.

    Underlying the “location” problem is the fact that there are no region-wide โ€“ much less a Commonwealth-wide โ€“ strategies or plans to provide a context for conservation actions of 40,000, 400,000 or 4,000,000 acres.

    A survey of past actions document that many of the “conservation” efforts โ€“ especially high-profile “rescues” by municipal and state action โ€“ are IN THE WRONG LOCATIONS.

    A compounding problem is that just the announcement of a 400,000 acre goal generates a false impression that something really meaningful is being done to rationalize human settlement patterns.

    An even greater problem is that 400,000 acres is an inconsequential percentage (1.6% of 25,000,000 acres) of the land area of the Commonwealth. The maximum land area needed (minimum functional urban intensity at the Alpha Community scale) for the daily activities of 95% of the citizens (the urban residents) of the commonwealth is around 700,000 acres.

    Between twice and three times that amount of land is already committed to urban activities.

    Worse, vastly more land is speculatively held for future urban land uses by those that advocate scattering urban land uses outside Clear Edges. For a discussion of Clear Edges see: “Beyond the Clear Edge,”26 May 2003 at https://www.baconsrebellion.com/ and the three part special report starting with “Wild Abandonment, 8 September 2003 at the same site. (Just enter the title in the search window on the home page.)

    If someone has documented a different minimum density for functional settlement patterns at the Alpha Community scale, let us know. The formulas to determine minimum functional human settlement patterns are summarized in Chapter 4 Box 5 in The Shape of the Future. They are based on the human settlement patterns generated by the market over the past 50 years. The desired patterns and densities of land use for private-vehicle and shared-vehicle access are the ones for which citizens are willing to pay a premium on the basis of both acreage and square foot of built space.

    An optimistic estimate is that there may be 10,000,000 acres of land already “conserved” or completely unsuitable for urban land uses. (Total unsuitability for urban land uses is not slowing down the pace of land subdivision for second home / retirement home / the hobby farm / “off the grid” and other forms of urban development.

    Even if 10,000,000 acres are now conserved, that means the Commonwealth needs to “conserve” 1,000,000 acres of land a year, every year, for the next 14 years for functional human settlement patterns to emerge over the next two decades. That is just 10 times the pace of the Governorโ€™s 400,000 acres in four years.

    Spending the next 20 years to evolve functional settlement patterns may not be rapid enough given the rising cost of settlement pattern dysfunction. The impact of location-variable costs of goods and services is sapping individual, family, enterprise and agency resources. Settlement pattern dysfunction is best illustrated in the lack of access and mobility and the lack of affordable and accessible housing.

    The 400,000 Acre Foolishness illustrates the systemic problem with land conservation efforts, as well intended as such efforts may be. They have not yet addressed:

    1) The scale of the problem

    2) The reality that there is already far more land committed to urban land use than will be needed in the foreseeable future

    3) Fair and equitable ways to transition to functional human settlement patterns

    We will be examine these issues in a forthcoming report on the Use and Management of Land.

    These issues will also be a focus of PROPERTY DYNAMICS, coming to an Alpha Neighborhood near you soon.

    EMR


  • Confederate History Month Proclamation

    If Gov. Kaine chooses to flip flop on his promise NOT to do a Confederate History Proclamation, here is some grist for his speech writers.

    The quotes below come from my current read, โ€œHistory of the English-Speaking Peoplesโ€ by Sir Winston Churchill โ€“ one of the greatest men of the recently past century.

    The North, it was said, was enriching itself at the expense of the South. The Yankees were jealous of a style and distinction to which vulgar commercialism could never attain. They had no right to use the Federal Constitution which the great Virginians Washington and Madison had largely founded, in order to bind the most famous states to their dictates. They maligned and insulted a civilization more elevated in manners, if not worldly wealth, than their own. They sought to impose the tyranny of their ideas upon states which had freely joined the Union for common purposes, and might as freely depart when those purposes had been fulfilled.

    Upon Lincolnโ€™s call to arms to coerce the seceding states Virginia made without hesitation the choice which she was so heroically to sustain. She would not fight on the issue of slavery, but stood firm on the constitutional ground that every state in the Union enjoyed sovereign rights. On this principle Virginians denied the claim of the Federal Government to exercise coercion.

    This decided the conduct of one of the noblest Americans who ever lived, and one of the greatest captains known to the annals of war. Robert E. Lee

    Most of slaves, who might have been expected to prove an embarrassment to the South, on the contrary provided a solid help, tending the plantations in the absence of their masters, raising the crops which fed the armies, working on roads, building fortifications, thus releasing a large number of whites for service in the field.

    The Army of Northern Virginia โ€œcarried the Confederacy on its bayonetsโ€ and made a struggle unsurpassed in history.

    On the death of Virginian Thomas โ€˜Stonewallโ€™ Jackson: His loss was a mortal blow to Lee and the cause of the South.

    On the charge of Pickettโ€™s Virginians at Gettysburg: General L.A. Armistead with a few hundred men actually entered the Union centre, and the spot where he died with his hand on captured cannon is today revered by the manhood of the United States.

    Lincoln had entered Richmond with Grant, and on his return to Washington learned of Leeโ€™s surrender. Conqueror and master, he towered above all others, and four years of assured power seemed to lie before him. By his consistency under many varied strains and amid problems to which his training gave him no key he had saved the Union with steel and flame. His thoughts were bent on healing his countryโ€™s wounds. For this he possessed all the qualities of spirit and wisdom, and wielded besides incomparable authority. To those who spoke of hanging Jefferson Davis he replied, โ€œJudge not that ye be not judged.โ€ On April 11 he proclaimed the need of a broad and generous temper and urged the conciliation of the vanquished.


  • You Can’t Buy My Vote — No Matter How Many Pork Rinds You Give Me!

    Democracy in action isn’t always pretty, folks. The Associated Press has this article about how the mayor of the Town of Appalachia, a town councilman and 12 others were indicted in an investigation of voter fraud. Said the AP:

    The 269-count indictment by a Wise County grand jury alleges a conspiracy to rig the 2004 election and elect a slate of three candidates to the five-member council. Once in office, the indictment alleges, they helped appoint a head of the police department that engaged in drug trafficking and took money and personal possessions from residents.

    The currency of corruption? Alcohol, cigarettes and, yes, even pork rinds.


  • Conservation Easements: Worthwhile but a Partial Solution at Best

    In an editorial today, a Roanoke Times writer likes Gov. Timothy M. Kaine’s goal to protect 400,000 acres of Virginia land from development by the end of his four-year term in 2010, and endorses the practice of providing tax credits for conservation easements. However, the Times sensibly supports a proposal to put a cap on the conservation tax credit that would limit abuses, such as inflated land appraisals and gigantic tax windfalls for land developers.

    I agree that conservation easements are a valuable growth-management tool — they can protect land containing unique environmental, aesthetic and historical assets. However, no one should deceive themselves that conservation easements will do much to address the underlying problem they’re designed to protect against: the extraordinarily land-intensive pattern of development that is consuming ever larger chunks of Virginia’s countryside.

    The underlying problem is zoning codes enacted by counties in the major population centers of the Washington, Richmond and Hampton Roads New Urban Regions that restrict the ability of developers to respond to market conditions and build, or redevelop, at higher densities. Virginia’s major metro areas could accommodate decades of population growth simply by allowing a market-driven evolution toward denser settlement patterns. When they restrict density, these jurisdictions don’t halt growth — they displace it. Developers seek land elsewhere, usually on the metropolitan periphery.

    Conservation easements don’t halt growth either — they, too, displace it. If developers can’t build on land protected by easements, they’ll just sniff around for land nearby to build upon.

    Whether you conserve land through outright purchases or tax credits, there’s not enough money in Virginia’s budget to purchase or protect all the land potentially threatened by development. If Virginians want to save their Countryside, they must come to grips with the policies in the major population centers that prevent developers from building “up” and force them to build “out.”


  • Koelemay Appointed to the Commonwealth Transportation Board

    How embarassing! Will Vehrs at Commonwealth Conservative has scooped me on the appointment of Doug Koelemay, a Northern Virginia lobbyist and long-time contributor to the Bacon’s Rebellion e-zine, to the Commonwealth Transportation Board. Here is Will’s take.

    I would add only that Doug will make an excellent appointee. He is one of the most fascinating conversationalists and has one of the widest-ranging intellects of anyone I’ve ever met. That’s why, when I decided to launch Bacon’s Rebellion nearly four years ago, he was the first person I asked to contribute to the fledgling publication. He also was the first person to accept, adding immeasurably to the publication’s credibility at at time when the e-zine format was almost unknown.

    Doug will bring a balanced perspective to the CBT. On the one hand, he shares the view, widespread in the business community, that Virginia desperately needs to invest in its transportation infrastructure. On the other hand, as a devotee of technology policy, Doug is very open to doing things in new and different ways. I can’t imagine Doug becoming a proponent of the status quo.


  • Now It’s Official… Senate Most Likely to Cave in Budget Impasse

    I look to Jeff Schapiro, arguably the most loquacious and best-connected journalist covering Virginia state politics, as a barometer of the latest conventional wisdom in the Capitol. Here’s what he writes in his weekly column about the budget impasse:

    The betting is that the centrist Republicans who lord over the Senate ultimately will cave on $1 billion a year in new taxes for transportation to spare the state from going without a budget after July 1, the start of the spending cycle.

    There you have it. The assessment of Richmond’s political insiders, as digested by Schapiro, is that the Senate will capitulate. Schapiro then proceeds to examine the implications of the House of Delegates’ “huge, albeit temporary, victory.”

    The House budget, Schapiro writes, will give transportation only a “temporary fix … just enough extra jack for roads and transit to get through ’07.” Between an expanding maintenance budget and escalating costs for new construction, he concludes, Virginia soon will run out of money for road-building altogether.

    I will defer to Schapiro’s reading of the immediate political situation, but I think he is overlooking a number of factors impacting public reaction to the defeat of the $1 billion-a-year tax proposal.

    First, tax hike or no tax hike, the Kaine administration is moving aggressively to finance major road construction projects through public-private partnerships. Secretary of Transportation Pierce Homer has laid out a vision for toll funding of HOV lanes or other improvements for all four of Northern Virginia’s major transportation arteries — the Capital Beltway, Interstate 66, Interstate 95 and the Dulles Toll Road — and we’ll soon see details on comparable proposals for major arteries in Hampton Roads. One of these days, the Kaine administration also may decide on how to proceed with prickly Interstate 81 public-private partnership proposals.

    Second, I’m willing to bet that the House of Delegates has more to contribute on the subject of transportation financing. House leaders have been so busy fending off the tax increase this year that they haven’t had the opportunity to lay out their long-term transportation vision. I would expect House Speaker William J. Howell to propose privatizing certain transportation assets and reinvesting the proceeds in projects designed to relieve congestion-causing bottlenecks. Such proposals will be highly controversial, to be sure, but it will be impossible to paint the House as “doing nothing” on transportation.

    Third, I expect we’ll see more moves to overhaul the efficiency with which the Virginia Department of Transportation spends its maintenance dollars. The Senate and House have agreed already to permit design-build contracts, and we may see additional moves to outsource more.

    Finally, there is always the possibility that the Kaine administration and both chambers of the General Assembly will recognize that, in the absence of new geysers of tax dollars, they need to fundamentally re-think Virginia’s emphasis on adding new transportation capacity to accommodate every up-tick in demand. We could conceivably see lawmakers giving more attention to the demand side of the equation: congestion pricing, land use reform, telecommuting/telework, and encouraging the private sector to get more creative with carpooling, van-pooling and bus services.

    One thing we can count on: The transportation debate will be with us for a very long time.


  • Growth of Black Businesses is a Sign of Progress for All

    This week, both the Richmond Times-Dispatch and Washington Post trumpeted the rapid rise in the growth of African-American owned businesses over the past few years. Citing data from the Census Bureau, the media outlets noted that there are, โ€œ1.2 million black-owned businesses in the U.S., a figure that rose 45 percent from 1997 to 2002, according to a report released yesterday by the Census Bureau. There are roughly 23 million U.S. companies.โ€ Thus, black-owned firms account for around 5% of total firms nationwide.

    The picture in Virginia and in Metro Washington is even brighter, where โ€œabout 8 percent of Virginia’s roughly 530,000 businesses are run by a black entrepreneur.โ€ In Metro Washington, โ€œthe increases included huge jumps in the previously small number of black-owned firms in Prince William County, which increased 103 percent, to 2,010, and Howard County, where black businesses grew by 87 percent, to 3,293.โ€

    This amazing growth is both a sign of social progress, as well as, an indicator that the economic fortunes of black Americans are continuing to look upward. Entrepreneurship is the bedrock of the American economy, and only through full participation in what Alexander Hamilton deemed, โ€œthe commercial republicโ€ can some of the more pressing issues that the African-American community faces be adequately addressed.

    This rise in black entrepreneurship also has political ramifications. As blacks gain greater access to the upper-echelons of the economy, it can be expected that they will take on similar voting behaviors as their socioeconomic cohort. Inevitably, their individual economic circumstances will influence their outlook on government, for reasons as simple as keeping more of their hard-earned paychecks or as complex as advocating business-friendly regulatory schemes.

    As the Post article noted, โ€œblack-owned businesses appear to be going the way of theโ€ฆblack population, which for the past decade has been increasingly lured into the suburbs.โ€ This increased suburbanization, coupled with higher income-earning opportunities brought on by increased โ€œboot-strappingโ€ entrepreneurship, stands to redefine the relationship of both the Democratic and Republican Party to the African Americans.

    In the end, this latest economic good news is not about honing in on race as much as it is about acknowledging the steady march of progress that has been powered by the American marketplace. In the words of one Richmond area businessman, “What I’m seeing now is more and more people are realizing there are more quality businesses out there that are minority-owned.” Black business owners are managing to overcome negative perceptions and prove their ability to compete. As such, their continued growth will pay dividends for all Americans.


  • Oil at $75 per Barrel

    Any sign yet that anyone in Virginia’s political leadership is rethinking the state’s commitment to a transportation policy adapted to an era of cheap energy?

    No, I didn’t think so.


  • “Allergic” to Facts at the Washington Post

    If you disagree with the nostrums of the Washington Post, its editorial writers condemn you as an ideologue or a fool. Their arrogance is on display once again, attacking Del. L. Scott Lingamfelter, R-Prince William, for suggesting that Virginians are overtaxed.

    Citing studies that show Virginia to be a low/moderate-tax state (the same studies cited on this blog recently), the Post refers scathingly to Lingamfelter and his “fact-averse” Republican colleagues in the House for their opposition to raising taxes for transportation.

    Mr. Lingamfelter and his colleagues are allergic to a fact-based analysis of tax burdens because the facts are not on their side. That is ridiculous enough when downstate lawmakers mouth this nonsense, heedless as they are of Northern Virginia’s nightmarish traffic. It is galling coming from Mr. Lingamfelter…

    The debate boils down to which facts you pay attention to, and which ones you ignore. The WaPo has certain facts on its side, but chooses to ignore others, such as the fact that Virginia has been running chronic budget surpluses since the passage of the 2004 tax increase. When Del. Lingamfelter suggests that Virginians are overtaxed, I suspect he’s referring to the fact of the budget surpluses.

    Here’s another fact: Virginia has one of the strongest state economies in the country. Several Virginia MSAs are growing faster than the national average (in order of growth): Winchester, Lynchburg, Northern Virginia, Blacksburg, Roanoke and Richmond. One reason — not the only reason, but one of them — is that Virginia has one of the lower tax burdens in the country. Innumerable studies have demonstrated that low taxes are correlated with higher rates of economic growth. That, too, is a fact.

    Low taxes, I would add, are particularly important to downstate Metropolitan Statistical Areas that don’t have the luxury of the federal government, with its power to redistribute the nation’s wealth, to pump up their local economies. We need a low-tax business climate to prosper.

    We could argue all day long on who is more “fact-averse” — the WaPo editorial writers or Del. Lingamfelter. But onl the WaPo is arrogant enough to think that it has a monopoly on the facts.