• Former Roanoke Mayor Switches Parties

    From The Roanoke Star

    (Editor’s Note: Below is a Set. 11, 2023 statement released by David Bowers, who served as the Democratic mayor of Roanoke from 1992 to 2000 and from 2008 to 2016. He ran unsuccessfully for mayor as an independent in 2020.)

    On this Patriot Day, September 11, 2023, after months of reflection, consultation with my wife, Margarita, family, friends and supporters, and much prayer, I have decided that my conscience compels me to join the Republican Party.

    It may be considered โ€œinconsiderateโ€ by some longtime supporters and Democrats who have stood by me in the past. To all who have supported me, you really do have my sincere and heartfelt thanks. Together we have done a lot of good for our city, but I believe, as a citizen, that switching now is the right thing to do. Please be assured that I have made, in my own opinion, and that of my wife, a thoughtful and conscientious decision.

    Todayโ€™s Democratic Party is not the party which embodied those historic and inspiring words of President John F. Kennedy, one of my heroes, in his 1961 Inaugural Address: โ€œAsk not what your country can do for youโ€ฆ Ask what you can do for your country!โ€ Todayโ€™s Democratic Party is all about: What can the government do for me! (more…)


  • A Tale of Two Governors

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Why is anyone surprised that the governor of New Mexico has decided that a spike in crime constitutes a public health emergency that warrants suspension of 2nd Amendment rights of the people to carry a firearm?

    When Americans merrily surrendered their civil rights three years ago during a health emergency, could they not foresee a perpetual state of emergencies, with tyrannical despots infringing on constitutional rights using the flimsiest of excuses?

    I hate to say โ€œI told you so,โ€ but some of us tried to sound the alarm in the winter of 2020, but too many Americans were hiding under their beds to listen to us.

    Now this:

    On Friday, New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, declared a public health emergency in Albuquerque and nearby Bernalillo County citing high crime rates and issued a 30-day ban on the carrying of firearms. She said she was likely to extend the order.

    โ€œI have emergency powers,โ€ Grisham crowed. โ€œGun violence is an epidemic. Therefore, itโ€™s an emergency!โ€

    Never mind that of the five shooting incidents Grisham cited when suspending the Second Amendment, only two were in the Albuquerque area and chances are neither would have been thwarted by her unconstitutional ban. (more…)


  • In Loco Parentis, Part II

    โ€จby A.L. Schuhart

    My last essay here engendered a bunch of predictable comment, as I hoped it would. The fact is, however, that my argument is sound, and my purpose is to reacquaint the public with the principle of in loco parentis as it informs the grand discussion of Education in Virginia and America.

    Those readers who responded that parents do not get to decide curriculum are just wrong. If you look at the examples I gave of things that parents can and should object to, you would see that they are all in what educators term the โ€œaffective domain,โ€ as opposed to the โ€œcognitive domain.โ€

    Whatโ€™s the difference in Education theory and practice?

    The cognitive domain describes concrete skills and cognitive development: math, reading, writing, history, etc. The affective domain is essentially the personal โ€œworld viewโ€ of the student: politics, religion, social attitude, emotions, etc.

    Schools have a mandate to teach the cognitive domain, and traditionally the affective domain is not the business of the teacher or school to intrude upon. It belongs to the parent. (more…)


  • Teach for America in Virginia

    by James C. Sherlock

    One commenter on my last article was highly critical of Teach for America (TFA).ย I cannot let that go without refutation.

    Look at the map of TFA places to work. ย 

    You will see that in Virginia only the inner suburbs of the D.C. area have access to those highly motivated young people. Alexandria is the first school division in Virginia to partner with Teach For America. It is actively recruiting TFA volunteers.

    Now look at North Carolina on the same map. Read the Charlotte-Piedmont Triad TFA web page.

    Now look at the Petersburg teacher charts again. (more…)


  • Did Assembly Trim Dominion Bills $7-$14? No.

    The SCC’s breakdown of Dominion’s energy price for a home using 1,000 kwh.ย  Click for clear view.

    by Steve Haner

    When the Virginia General Assembly passed a complicated electricity regulation change a few months ago, the Richmond Times-Dispatch parroted as fact this Dominion Energy Virginia claim in a front-page paragraph:

    The compromise on electric bills โ€” in legislation that passed nearly unanimously โ€” would bring an immediate $6 to $7 cut in a benchmark 1,000 kilowatt-hour monthly bill, which now stands at $137.

    (more…)


  • Petersburg School Board Folds on Union Bargaining


    by James C. Sherlock

    The Petersburg Education Association has a plan for collective bargaining.

    So, once, did the school board. Unanimously.

    We have been looking for signs of strength in the Petersburg School Board so we can believe it will take strong and innovative measures to improve the city’s dreadful schools.

    It is the wrong place to look. The union routed the board on collective bargaining without resistance.

    Petersburg School Board – Official Photo

    The state, during the Democratic interregnum in the General Assembly and governorship, made local government collective bargaining optional.

    On June 21st, the Petersburg board passed a resolution for teachers, guidance counselors and librarians who hold a teaching license to have a form of collective bargaining.

    As reported by The Progress-Indexโ€™s Joyce Chu,

    The resolution does not allow teachers the ability to negotiate their wages or benefits, limiting the scope of negotiations to hours and scheduling, health and safety, and work rules.

    Just a guess, but that board likely did not vote originally to allow negotiations on wages or benefits for a pretty good reason. (more…)


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    from The Bull Elephant


  • Is K-12 Absenteeism Too Complex a Problem for an Administrative Fix?

    Source: Virginia Department of Education. There is a strong correlation between days of school missed and educational under-achievement.

    by James A. Bacon

    In releasing the 2023 Standards of Learning (SOL) scores, which showed marginal overall improvement from the disastrous 2022 results, Team Youngkin added a bit of useful analysis — it drew a connection between poor educational performance and school absenteeism.

    The Virginia Department of Education press release noted that students in 3rd through 8th grades who missed more than 18 days of school scored 18% lower in reading exams than students with regular attendance. Students who missed more than 36 days scored 43% lower. Similar discrepancies occurred in the math exams.

    This should come as a surprise to no one. Students can’t learn if they’re not in school (or home school, which these children are not).

    To raise SOL scores, the Youngkin administration is targeting the school skippers. #AttendanceMattersVA, according to DOE, “works with Virginia schools and parents to increase attendance by communicating the importance of attendance to families, expanding breakfast after the bell programs, ensuring that every child has a trusted adult at school, monitoring and celebrating successes, and reducing barriers to attendance such as transportation and mental health challenges.”

    Clearly, something must be done. These ideas seem as reasonable as any other. But I fear that the problem may be so deeply rooted in social dysfunction that the initiative will prove ineffective. (more…)


  • The SOL Disaster

    by John Butcher

    The 2023 test results (generally called โ€œSOLsโ€ but including results of other tests) are up on the VDOE Web page. Those numbers are not pretty.

    First, some background.

    2020 was the first year without statewide SOL testing since 1997. Then came 2021, when participation in the testing was voluntary. The VDOE press release (link now broken) said, โ€œIn a typical school year, participation in federally required tests is usually around 99%. In tested grades in 2021, 75.5% of students took the reading assessment, 78.7% took math, and 80% took science.โ€

    So, the โ€˜22 data are the first post-pandemic numbers with a claim to measuring anything beyond individual performance. (more…)


  • An Inspiring Story about Public School Reformation, Beautifully Written

    by James C. Sherlock

    Sometimes it is fun to acknowledge great work.

    For a wonderful story about schools and kids transformed for the better by local action, see “The Rutters of Athens Countyโ€ from New York Magazine reprinted in the Intelligencer.

    It is beautifully written by Dan Xin Huang, an investigative journalist who lived in Ohio for three years to create this story.

    His work was funded in part with a 2020 grant from NYUโ€™s Matthew Power Literary Reporting Award. It was featured in One Great Story, New York Magazine’s reading recommendation newsletter.

    He and his work have proven worthy of all of that.

    The author unfolds the story of a school district reformation in a series of individual conversations over several years with those directly involved, many with contrasting viewpoints.

    School change to achieve excellence takes leadership at the local level first, especially in Virginia, given our constitution.

    For those who need inspiration to engage in that quest, this should do it.


  • How They Spent That Money

    By Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Steve Haner and I unofficially tag-team on the state budget. Fittingly, he covers the revenues (taxes) and I cover the spending.

    Regarding the revenues available for spending, it is notable what was missing from the presentations by the Governor and Secretary of Finance in their appearances before the money committees last month. There was no mention of the $5.1 billion balance tirelessly touted by the Governor in his public calls for more tax reductions.

    In the presentations and charts presented, it was difficult to discern what that unencumbered balance actually was. Using the data in the staff presentation to the Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee, one is able to tease out the $5.1 billion being touted by the Governor. First, there was $2.1 billion. This is hard to follow, but basically it was a balance designated in 2022 for โ€œAdditional Taxpayer Reliefโ€ and subsequently rolled into the unrestricted general fund balance. However, both the administration and the money committees were carrying it on their spreadsheets as an amount reserved for taxpayer relief and that is how the Comptroller identified it in her annual report to the Governor.ย  To that $2.1 billion the Governor added the additional $3.0 billion in general fund revenue projected over the official estimate.

    That was a valid projection of the general fund balance at the end of FY 2023. However, as both Steve and I have pointed out several times on this blog, that was a gross amount. After deducting for the required deposits to the Rainy Day Fund and the Water Quality Improvement Fund, the appropriation in the โ€œskinnyโ€ budget bill enacted last spring, and the amount required to fund the Pass Through Equity Tax previously enacted, the net general fund balance available at the end of FY 2023 was approximately $2.4 billion. (more…)


  • Petersburg Public Schools Cheat Children of Their Futures

    by James C. Sherlock

    We like to think of ourselves as civilized people.

    Virginia and America are at an advanced stage of social and cultural development.

    Arenโ€™t we?

    For the children of Petersburg, we are not. We continue to let them quite publicly and measurably be cheated of their futures by their public schools.

    Queue the excuses for bad schools. Whatever list you can come up with, itโ€™s not good enough. We are not civilized if we, as a state, continue to let it happen to children with no other option.

    Virginia is unique in that our state constitution explicitly gives local school divisions control of their schools.

    Virginia passed a law in 2013 that created a body to take over schools failing to receive accreditation or what is now accreditation with conditions for three consecutive years. It was found unconstitutional.

    I donโ€™t know why the constitution was written without some provision for dealing with failed schools and school divisions after long-term failure.

    But it was, and it was a mistake. We need to change the constitution to give the children of Petersburg and in other failing schools a chance in life.

    That goal is, and must be, worth the effort it will take to accomplish it. (more…)


  • Cheers to the Man in Plaid

    .

    by Jon Baliles

    One of Richmondโ€™s great characters and personalities has decided to step away from spotlight that he occupied and managed so well for years (and always with a smile) after enduring incredibly long days and nights, rainouts, major league talent, loyal fans, a street art festival, a crumbling office, broken political promises, and an ocean of awful plaid pants.

    Flying Squirrels CEO Todd โ€œParneyโ€ Parnell announced this week he will be stepping down from his day-to-day role after this season and remain as a senior advisor to the team for the next five years after 34 years in the baseball business. Parney arrived with the team in 2010 and hasnโ€™t slept much since.

    He told John Oโ€™Connor at the Times-Dispatch, โ€œI think the key difference is Iโ€™m not going to be here from 6:30 in the morning until 1 oโ€™clock in the morning anymore. The toll of that has been taken. Iโ€™m downshifting significantly.โ€

    โ€œI kind of feel like the athlete whoโ€™s stepping back a little bit when he still has a step or two left. I really wanted to โ€” chill outโ€™s the wrong term because Iโ€™m still going to be around โ€” but I wanted to (leave) the day-to-day operations when I still felt like I was at the top of my game. And I do.โ€

    And he has been at the top of his game since he arrived. I knew they would be a different franchise when they enlisted the public to help name the team in late 2009. More than 6,000 entries were received and the finalists included Rock Hoppers, Hambones, Rhinos, Flatheads, and Hush Puppies. And I recall not getting the name โ€œFlying Squirrelsโ€ after it was selected, but then the very next day, Parney said in the paper (and I am paraphrasing) โ€œWe wanted to be fun and we wanted to be a differentโ€ and they have been all that and a home run. (more…)


  • A Concept for Simpler and More Compliant Virginia Regulation of Medical Facilities and Services in Virginia

    By James C. Sherlock

    UVa Childrenโ€™s Hospital courtesy UVa

    I saw a comment somewhere that medical facilities are the second most regulated industry in America, just behind nuclear power.

    Yet we see that it has not been working in Virginia in the case of nursing homes. ย And compliance is considerably harder in the other medical facilities and services in Virginia than it needs to be.

    A big part of the reason is that Virginia has laws and regulations that either:

    1. Do not implement federal laws or regulations that require the state to do so for facilities accepting Medicare or Medicaid/Children’s Health Improvement Program (CHIP); or
    2. Conflict with the Social Security Act and its executing regulations, which take precedence in the case of those federally-funded programs; or
    3. Both.

    In case of omission or conflict with the federal guidelines, state laws and regulations do not add value, just complexity and confusion.

    And to no avail.

    (more…)


  • Deja Taylor Had One Job: Stay Clean and Sober

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Good grief, lady. You had ONE job.

    Just one.

    Your assignment was to stay clean and sober for four months, but apparently Deja Taylor – the mother of the 6-year-old Newport News first grader who shot his teacher with his motherโ€™s gun – couldnโ€™t do that.

    After pleading guilty in June to charges that she lied about being an illegal drug user on federal firearm forms and for unlawful use of a controlled substance while possessing a gun, Taylor tested positive for pot in July. Wait. Thereโ€™s more. On August 26, according to WAVY-TV 10, she had cocaine and marijuana in her system. Both drug tests are awaiting confirmation.

    Taylor also failed to take part in substance abuse treatment that was mandated by the court and she didnโ€™t show up for scheduled drug tests, according to court documents. (more…)