• The Fitch Files

    The apparent darling of this blog, Warrenton Mayor and Republican gubernatorial candidate George Fitch, looks to be making the rounds of Virginia papers.

    Allison Brophy Champion (What a great name! What great initials!) has an interview with Fitch in the Culpeper Star-Exponent.

    He’s singing my song:

    For the most part, said Fitch, Gov. Mark Warner has done a good job in bringing a business-like approach to Richmond. โ€œBut I donโ€™t think heโ€™s taken it far enough,โ€ Fitch added.

    During the last biannual budget process, there was too little attention given to cutting the expense side, said Fitch, and too much haste to raise taxes.

    I was going to do a post on this subject as a spin-off from Becky Dale’s Quorum article, but I’ll let Fitch do the heavy lifting: “Fitch said each and every one of Virginiaโ€™s state boards and commissions could be done away with since ‘they serve no pressing need.’โ€

    Speaking of heavy lifting, where are the real wonk posters today?


  • If You Can’t Say Something Nice ….

    Let us pause from our relentless bashing of the House of Delegates for this kind characterization from Warren Fiske of the Virginian-Pilot:

    Some lawmakers describe the disagreements between the two Republican-controlled chambers as a biorhythm of the legislative process; after all, the legislative bodies were created as a check on each other.
    The House, up for election every two years, is a boiling pot of ideas. The Senate, which faces voters every four years, traditionally takes a more deliberative and long-term view.

    This should quiet those who say many House measures are half-baked. They’re boiled!


  • Holy Bat Bill, Robin!

    What was the point of this stunt? And how did a variation make it to the Richmond Times-Dispatch editorial page?


  • Learn to Love Your Property Taxes

    In my current Virginia Pundit Watch column, I noted a Sunday op-ed in the Washington Post by David Brunori, a contributing editor to State Tax Notes magazine and a research professor of public policy at George Washington University. He strongly defended the local property tax.

    Brunori was on-line today, taking reader questions and sticking to his guns on the overall fairness of the local property tax system. If you think your locality is taking in too much money, throw the supervisors out was his prescription.

    At least two NVA readers complained about subsizing other parts of the state, including this gem:

    I advocate secession from the rest of state.

    Subsidizing the rest of Virginia is not my goal with my tax dollars. Last year Fairfax County residents got back less a quarter for every tax dollar we sent to Richmond. 50 cents of each of my tax dollars should come home to Fairfax County.


  • Adding to NOVA’s Tax Burden

    Given the unrelenting assault on family budgets in NOVA, with higher property taxes, last yearโ€™s tax increase (the largest tax increase in the history of our State), the proposed toll increase on the Dulles Toll Road, just to list a few, I find it preposterous that any elected official from NOVA would vote for even higher taxes against NOVA residents.

    Iโ€™m not surprised that Sen. Mary Margaret Whipple would propose greater tax burden on her own constituents (SB 1099 – Motor Fuels Tax; Additional Imposition in the NOVA Transportation District), while Richmond is diverting NOVA’s taxes to other parts of the State. Sheโ€™s after all a Democrat and thatโ€™s what they believe in.

    But Iโ€™m shocked, shocked that any Republican Senator representing NOVA would vote for this abomination. Unfortunately, Jeannemarie Devolites Davis (R-Vienna) and Sen. Bill Mims (R-Leesburg) voted in favor of this bill.


  • Power to Spotsylvania

    The Spotsylvania Board of Supervisors has voted 5-2 in opposition to adding a reactor to the North Anna Nuclear Power Plant. They cited conerns about the water level in Lake Anna and the fact that they are one of the fastest growing regions in Virginia.

    Wonder where they expect the electric power new residents will require to come from? Wonder if they’re ok with the coal-fired plants outside their jurisdiction that Barnie says are killing 1000 of us annually?


  • Quorum, Quorum, Who’s Got a Quorum?

    by Becky Dale

    The monitoring of public meetings throws open the question of how to count a quorum.

    Itโ€™s normally easy to know if a quorum exists at a public meeting. You count whoโ€™s there. A quorum is usually a majority of members. When a council has seven members, four is a quorum. If four are present, there is a quorum and the council can then transact business. More


  • Gerrymander Jeremiad

    by John Goolrick

    A hardy perennial in Virginia politics is the ritualistic denunciation of gerrymandering. Sure, redistricting is unfair. But none of the alternatives looks any better.

    My hometown paper, despite its philosophical permutations over the years, has constantly railed editorially about changing Virginia’s system of redistricting. And in response I have always called their proposals half-baked. More


  • Adult Supervision Advised

    by James Atticus Bowden

    The Higher Ed lobby defines the “charter” university issue as all about money. But Virginia citizens must guard against educrats imposing an unwelcome brand of political correctness.

    If “war is too important to be left to the generals”, then certainly “higher education is too important to be left to the educrats”. Generals need civilian authority to set the political goals for wars. Likewise, the goals for Virginiaโ€™s colleges and universities need legislative authority. Education, not indoctrination, requires accountability to elected representatives of the people.
    More >>


  • A Backroom Deal?

    by Phillip Rodokanakis

    Jerry Kilgore hasn’t come out in favor of higher taxes, but he refuses to sign an anti-tax pledge. A circumstantial case can be made that he’s cut a deal with the pro-tax wing of the GOP.

    State Sen. John Chichester, R-Fredericksburg, the Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, is on the warpath for higher taxes. Without wasting any time or taking a breather from the massive tax increase he imposed on Virginia taxpayers last year, Chichester already is talking about increasing taxes again in 2006. More


  • Kaine on Death and Taxes

    by Steven Sisson

    Choir boy Tim Kaine is a political moderate informed by his Catholic beliefs. But look for the Kilgore team to paint him as a liberal for his record on tax hikes and the death penalty.

    The Blue Dog personally views Lt. Gov. Tim Kaine as a moderate-to-conservative politician. Kaine has never been an Amway Christian, nor does he hold a lifetime membership to the C-E Club (i.e., only attending church service on Christmas and Easter holidays). More


  • Give Choice a Chance

    by Chris Braunlich

    The House of Delegates has passed a bill that could provide school choice for up to 5,000 poor kids. Foes are desperate to stop it in the state Senate.

    Stung by House passage of a bill providing new educational opportunities for poor kids, the Virginia Education Association (VEA), People for the American Way (PFAW) and other opponents are gearing up to block the bill in the Virginia state Senate. More


  • What Political Columnists Do

    by Barnie Day

    We talk, we write, we revel in the power of words.

    Even as a small boy I never could get past a hornetโ€™s nest without throwing something at it. Most anything would doโ€”sticks, rocks, pop bottles, shoesโ€”but my projectile of choice was a brick. More


  • Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?

    by Barnie Day

    With a budget surplus looming, Virginia legislators are abandoning all fiscal restraint. Big winners could include beekeepers and Japanese snails.

    Remember the “surplus?” That extra $1.2 billionโ€”give or take a hundred million or soโ€”that a robust economy might be kicking into the stateโ€™s coffers? Donโ€™t get any ideas about laying hands on any of it. Through Tuesday of this week, members of the Virginia House of Delegates had filed budget amendmentsโ€”865 of themโ€”that would spend it three times. More


  • The Mother of All Dysfunction

    by E M Risse

    A failing education system puts Americans at risk in a globally competitive economy and undermines our democracy.

    Most readers of this column, some grudgingly, have come to agree that there is a direct connection between the pattern and density of land use and transportation (aka, mobility and access). Some were surprised to see that in our last column (โ€œEducation and Human Settlement Patternsโ€, Jan. 31, 2005 ) we dragged education into the discussion by examining importance of the size and location of school facilities. More