On 20 June, Virginians in both political parties will be selecting their nominees for the November elections to the General Assembly.
Virginia Democrats seem to be caught in a literal death spiral of trying to out-abortion one another, as flyers are going about accusing certain candidates of being โpro-lifeโ while others proudly announce their fanatical desire to stack the dead baby pile higher than their opposition.
Meanwhile, Virginia Republicans as an electorate seem to be keeping to the Buckley Rule, nominating the most conservative candidates that can win in the November general election. With that in mind, letโs take a look at some of the more contested seats in Virginia (gratuitously stolen numbers from our friends at the Virginia Political Newsletter):
SD-12:
โข Amanda Chase (R)
— $100,026 raised
–$19,199 cash on hand
โข Glen Sturtevant (R)
— $203,945 raised
— $112,882 cash on hand
โข Tina Ramirez (R)
–$218,281 raised
— $31,991 cash on hand (more…)
Mark R. Perry, a senior fellow with the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), has filed 841 complaints over the years against universities whose policies and practices discriminate against men. So far, the Office of Civil Rights has opened 28 investigations just based on more than 100 complaints he’s filed for Do No Harm, a Virginia-based organization formed to fight identity politics in medical schools.
In one of his earlier complaints, filed in 2018 against UVa’s Darden School of Business, Perry argued that the existence of eight scholarships (and an external fellowship) reserved exclusively for women violated the school’s own internal discrimination policies.
UVa argued that the scholarships were “independently selected, funded, and awarded by the UVA Darden School Foundation, and do not involve federal or state funds.” Because the female-only scholarships were privately funded, the university argued, they didn’t violate UVa’s internal anti-discrimination policy.
Perry didn’t buy it. “I thought it was a weak defense given the fact that the Darden School Foundation is physically located in the Darden School of Business and uses UVA Darden emails and UVA Darden phones, etc…. It’s probably the case that the Darden School and NOT the Darden School Foundation decides on who gets the scholarships. In that case, UVA is administering the scholarships and that would violate Title IX.” He recently re-filed the complaint, originally lodged with the university’s Title IX office, with the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights.
In previous posts, I remarked upon the 56/44 ratio of women to men at the University of Virginia and asked why, at a university dedicated to “equity,” such an unbalanced sex ratio would prevail. The reasons are unclear. Any analysis based upon publicly available data leaves many unanswered questions. But two things are indisputable: (1) UVa provides many women-only scholarships, awards and programs; and (2) the administration has evinced no concern about the gender imbalance or discrimination against males. (more…)
Lee Enterprises, about whose frantic search for cash I wrote yesterday, owns a dozen newspapers in Virginia.
For now.
The Daily Progress โ Charlottesville
The Free Lance-Star โ Fredericksburg
Register & Bee/Go Dan River โ Danville
Bristol Herald Courier โ Tricities โ Bristol
Martinsville Bulletin โ Martinsville
The News & Advance โ Lynchburg
The News Virginian โ Waynesboro
Richmond Times-Dispatch โ Richmond
The Roanoke Times โ Roanoke
Culpeper Star-Exponent โ Culpeper
SWVA Today โ Wytheville
The Franklin News-Post โ Rocky Mount
Leeโs current nationwide total of what it calls news โbrandsโ is 85. It is a small and highly leveraged business.
This morning its stock (LEE:NASDAQ) market cap is about $81M at $13.37 per share at yesterdayโs close. With $433M in debt, the enterprise value is $524M (Schwab).
Lee is teetering financially, and has been since it successfully but expensively fought off a late 2021 hostile takeover bid from Alden Global Capital, a hedge fund.
Alden owns The Virginian-Pilot, the Commonwealthโs largest daily, and the Daily Press on the Peninsula. It has been written that Alden’s business model is simple:
gut the staff, sell the real estate, jack up subscription prices, and wring out as much cash as possible.
We have already seen Lee Enterprises gut the staffs of its Virginia papers.
I havenโt tracked the real estate transactions, but now it is jacking up subscription prices to avoid selling its inventory or trying to obtain additional financing.
This is part 4 of a series on nursing homes in Virginia. Part 1 here Part 2 here, Part 3here.
Medicare.gov curates and publishes a system of nursing home assessments that is outstanding in both design and execution.
As discussed in earlier parts of this series, Virginia has far more bad nursing facilities than it should, but the Commonwealth also has more than its share of outstandingones.
Fifty-two of 289 are rated five stars by CMS. Only 10% of the nationโs nursing homes achieve that rating. Eighteen percent of Virginiaโs.
Weโll look at those best-of-breed facilities. (more…)
Notice from The Roanoke Times subscriber services. https://subscriberservicesdsi.lee.net/subscriberservices/Content/Leaving.aspx?Domain=roanoke.com&_mather=2864cc43d3f9efd3
by James C. Sherlock
Lee Enterprises, in a bold move, has massively raised prices for online subscriptions to its Virginia newspapers, to some of which I subscribe.
I have for years subscribed to the ones in bold above. ย Online ad sales must not be going well. ย Lee in a sudden move has roughly tripled online subscription prices.
It also has made it very difficult for customers to cancel.
Perhaps someone should look into this to see if the difficulty of the cancellation is legal. (more…)
Wanted: One more member with common sense for the Virginia Beach School Board. Unfortunately, that wonโt happen until the next election in 2024.
In the meantime, the narrow woke majority that did its best to keep masks on kids, keep schools closed, dumbed down the cityโs public schools and pandered to special interests, will continue to virtue signal and hold pointless, anti-parent votes under the cloak of darkness.
At 2:15 in the morning to be precise.
Perhaps you heard, the Beach school board held a marathon meeting Monday night that stretched into Tuesday morning. Not because the members were desperately trying to find ways to improve academics or test scores, but to grant LGBTQ+ students special protected status that isnโt extended to any other minority, including children with disabilities.
Oh, and there is another, more insidious reason the board passed this resolution: to extend a defiant middle finger to Gov. Glenn Youngkin whose Department of Education has prepared policies guaranteeing parental rights regarding trans students.
The Beachโs ill-conceived resolution passed by a vote of 6-5.
One more member, folks, and we can put an end to this late-night lunacy. (more…)
Do you ever sit around and wish that a public figure would actually stand up and call out a problem for what it is? Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears is out there doing just that when it comes to Richmondโs rising tide of violence.
Virginia Democrats have responded to last weekโs tragedy at Monroe Park, which killed 2 and wounded 17, with the usual tropes. Blame guns โ which if one believes other leftist tropes about fearful gun owners clinging to their firearms and Bibles, you might wonder why all of rural Virginia isnโt some dystopian hell scape.
Instead, the dystopian hell scape seems to be centered in polities where Democrats are imposing their own utopian visions of a safe and secure society only to discover their policies are delivering neither safety nor security. (more…)
First-time, first-year applicants, offers and yields by gender, 2016-2021. Click for more legible image.
by James A. Bacon
As highlighted in our last post, the University of Virginia admits significantly more women than men. The split in the undergraduate student body is roughly 54/46. My aim in pointing out the disparity was not, as some readers presumed, to argue for special preferences for men; admission to UVa should be based on merit. I was exploring the question of whether the goal of achieving “equity” (whether defined as equal “outcomes” or equal “opportunity”) applies to all under-represented groups, including men, or just to so-called “marginalized” groups favored by progressive ideology.
Having documented that males are comparable to females in academic aptitude, at least among those who take the SATs, I suggested that some other factor might account for the disparity in their numbers at UVa. One possibility is that more women than men apply to UVa. All other things being equal, one would expect more women to be admitted if more women applied. Another possibility, which I raised in a previous post, is that UVa is suffused with subtle but systemic anti-male bias.
In this post, we’ll examine the role of the admissions process. I will delve into the issue of campus culture in a future post. (more…)
Those who read this blog know that Virginia has far more than its share of bad nursing homes. They just do not know what can or should be done about it.
This third in a current series on Virginia nursing homes will take on a problem that is self-inflicted – the stateโs nursing home regulatory structure.
Virginiaโs nursing home regulations, upon which Virginia licensing inspections are based, are promulgated by the Board of Health. ย They are at best redundant to federal requirements.
At worst they are different than federal standards, with no discernible gain in nursing home quality. ย Operators follow the federal rules anyway, because they are almost inevitably stricter than those of the state.
Virginia can improve its nursing home regulations by conforming them precisely to federal regulations. ย State law already requires them to be in “substantial conformity.”
This change, if accompanied by the combining of federal and state inspections which it would enable, would make everybody happy. ย It would also go a long way towards fixing the staffing problems at Virginia’s inspection agency by reducing significantly their required efforts.
Letโs take a break from DEI; the shortcomings of UVa, W&M and the rest of higher education; and all the other issues that get us riled up.
Virginia is an interesting state to travel and see.
I have always liked to travel the back roads.ย It is slower than the interstates and the primary highways, but these byways can be so much more interesting.
I donโt know if this is true of other states, but throughout the countryside of Virginia there are a lot of official markers showing place names, but seemingly there is nothing there. Sometimes the markers appear on the state highway map distributed by the Virginia Department of Transportation; sometimes, not. These โnamed placesโ are not random and, if one is willing to dig a little, there is often a story behind them. They were used to designate distinct places in rural Virginia that nearby residents could use as a reference point and sometimes as a place to gather. The reference point could be a building, intersection, store, etc. Eventually, the names were used to denote the surrounding community and often are in use today. (more…)
James Sherlock has done yeomanโs work on this blog with his pointing out the failure of state government to adequately regulate the nursing homes in the Commonwealth. I commend him for his perseverance on this issue.
In doing some research on the budget issues related to this topic, I encountered enough additional information to warrant a separate article, rather than a comment. Therefore, this article should be regarded as a supplement to the recent articles posted by Jim. It also provides me the opportunity to acknowledge that I unfairly criticized the House Republican majority in a comment to one of his earlier posts. (more…)
Over the last few years, homeschooling has grown in Virginia by almost 40 percent. In fact, homeschoolers in Virginia now account for almost 60,000 students — making homeschooling the fifth largest school district in the Commonwealth. Because homeschoolers are self-funded, this saves Virginiaโs state and local governments almost $800 million per year.
Yet, TheWashington Post reported in The Revolt of the Christian Home-Schoolers (May 30, 2023), based almost solely on one couple’s experience, as a โconscious rejection of contemporary ideas about biology, history, gender equity and the role of religion in American Government.โย The article, with scant evidence, concludes that there is an โunmistakable backlashโ of formerly homeschooled children denouncing homeschooling.
Riddled with references to โindoctrinationโ and โabuse,โ homeschooling is painted by TheWashington Post as a fringe and dangerous educational option. These homeschoolers โcould not recover or reconstruct the lost opportunities of their childhoodโ as โthere were so many things they had not learned.โ (more…)
Wokeness is so all-pervasive in Virginia higher-ed that I cannot possibly keep readers abreast of it all. Today I settle for quoting the thoughts of others.
The advertising catchphrase โsee something, say somethingโ calls to mind suspicious packages that might be bombs. At Virginia Tech, that slogan applies to the schoolโs official Bias Intervention and Response Team, or BIRT. Hokies are encouraged to report one anotherโs ill-considered opinions or crass jokes. On May 31 the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals declined to end this, but a dissent by veteran Judgeย J. Harvie Wilkinson IIIย is a persuasive signal flare for the Supreme Court to take the case and defend free speech.
I will offer here a deeper sense of Virginiaโs bad nursing homes. ย And of the historic lack of adequate regulation by the state.
Start with the fact that even the worst of them are still open.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) conduct and update at least quarterly a system of nursing home (and other facilities) assessments that is worthy of your trust. ย I am cautious with all things government, but it has earned mine.
Nationally, 20% of nursing homes are rated one star overall by CMS. ย In Virginia, 34% of nursing homes have that rating.
Donโt be mollified by the official designation of such facilities as โwell below average.โย Many are places persons as vulnerable as nursing home residents should not be permitted to reside.
We are disgraced by having let that happen. ย Virginians, through our state government, need to assure it does not continue.
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion at the University of Virginia is incoherent in theory, arbitrary in practice, and riddled with contradictions. Nowhere is DEI policy more muddled than UVa’s treatment of men and women. UVa’s long-term goal is to recruit a student body that “looks like Virginia” in its racial/ethnic composition. Yet UVa leadership has expressed no qualms about the persistent imbalance of men and women.
Among UVa’s 16,700+ undergraduate students, 54.5% were female and only 45.5% were male — a nine percentage-point differential. The disparity exists across racial/ethnic groups. Only among foreign students are males enrolled in a slightly higher percentage than females.
Why does the disparity exist? Given the university’s commitment to “equity,” why isn’t the ratio close to 50/50? UVa officials never talk about the gender enrollment gap, which is not surprising given that the disparity cuts against the oppression narrative that undergirds the university’s Diversity, Equity & Inclusion initiatives. To the contrary, university officials are in a state of perpetual angst over the fact that some disciplines, particularly engineering and the sciences, enroll more men than women. Yet no one is distressed about insufficient male enrollment in the social sciences and humanities.(more…)
The year: 2075. The American colonies on the Moon are getting restless under Washington’s tyrannical rule….
This second edition of “Dust Mites” has a snazzy new cover, includes helpful lunar maps, and is 5,000 words tighter than the original. The sequel, “Trogs,” is scheduled for publication this summer.
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