
See more memes at The Bull Elephant.

See more memes at The Bull Elephant.
by Steve Haner

Is Virginia really the number one importer of electricity, the state most dependent upon others to keep the lights on and the servers humming? Yes and no.
The go-to source of data on the electricity industry (and other energy industries) is the federal Energy Information Agency, or EIA.ย EIA data shows Virginia had the dubious distinction in 2024 of being the state with the widest disparity between the amount of electricity produced within its borders and the amount electricity used by its consumers, a shortage of 35 million megawatt hours (MWh).
As noted in yesterdayโs post on the gas plant lawsuit, as a percentage of total electricity sales, five other states and the District of Columbia had even larger electricity deficits. Virginia being number 7 out of 51 on a percentage basis is hardly good news, either.
The quick assumption (and I made it, too) is that those data indicate that Virginia imported 35 million MWh in 2024, but the EIA data shows our full import total in 2024 was 45 million MWh. When you look at the EIA full tally of imports, California is the state with the largest volume of electricity brought in from other locations (including Mexico in Californiaโs case).
But the political narrative that we are the largest importer is deeply embedded now, without any nuance. Perhaps the nuance doesnโt matter. Virginia was the most dependent on imports to serve Virginia residents, but not the largest importer.
As you will read below, that deep deficit is more than three decades old. Virginia remains electricity poor and the gap is probably wider now than in 2024.
(more…)Virginia’s homicide rate is down, thankfully, but do you, as an ordinary citizen feel any safer?

Transparency and Accountability Where Local Systems Fell Short
by Todd Truitt

My guest commentary this week in the Richmond Times-Dispatch expresses thankfulness for Virginiaโs Standards of Learning (SOL) tests. Before statewide testing, local assessments often masked poor performance and hid achievement gaps from parents and policymakers. The SOLs brought essential transparency and continue to keep struggling kids visible and schools accountable.
You can read the full OpEd here.
Key points from the commentary:
Virginia is currently updating its SOLs with more rigorous content standards (adopted in recent years), new aligned assessments, and higher cut scores for proficiency โ demonstrating a continued commitment to raising expectations and using objective measures to drive improvement.
This perspective aligns with recent developments in higher education. Just this week, more than 1,000 University of California STEM faculty (as of the publishing of this article) signed an open letter urging reinstatement of SAT/ACT math scores for STEM admissions, citing severe preparation gaps and the need for reliable readiness measures amid grade inflation. Yale similarly reinstated standardized testing requirements this week, recognizing their predictive value for student success.
(more…)
by James C. Sherlock
Last week, I conducted a short field survey in Virginia Beach of four businesses registered with the federal government to bill Medicaid as providers of Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) (i.e., autism) services. ย
Each is headquartered in Lakewood, NJ. ย
Lakewood is, of course, the location of the Medical Facilities of America DBA LifeWorks Rehab, Virginiaโs infamous and largest nursing home chain. So, I looked there for ABA chains with Virginia locations and visited four located in Virginia Beach.
Many ABA chains offer physical centers. The largest are owned by private equity. ย
Not these. These four offices are virtual.
There was nobody from those Lakewood companies at either of the two addresses where the four companies listed their Virginia Beach offices. ย
The fourย have similar characteristics:
There are perhaps hundreds of similarly situated ABA service providers statewide.
What could go wrong?
Shouldn’t you at least explain why?

John Rocovich, a prominent Roanoke attorney, has served two terms on the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors, twice as rector. Violating the Code of Conduct and Code of Ethics are serious charges. Aren’t he and the public owed an explanation? — JAB
Restoration News holds Essex County (VA) School Board member accountable as grand jury indicts board member, superintendent, and finance director.

by Victoria Manning
An investigation by Restoration News has led to direct accountability for elected officials. When Essex School Board member Garlyn Bundy failed to produce documents requested by Restoration News under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), we took her to court and won. Now a grand jury has issued indictments against Bundy for destruction of public records and embezzlement. Former school employees, including the past superintendent and director of finance, have also been indicted.
Potentially years in prisons on felony charges
Essex County Commonwealth’s Attorney James Sitton confirmed with Restoration News that Essex School Board member Garlyn Bundy has been indicted on charges of embezzlement of government funds. These charges under codeย 18.2-112ย are a class 4 felonyย punishableย by “imprisonment of not less than two years nor more than 10 years.”
Sitton also confirmed that former Essex Schools Superintendent Dr. Harry Thomas and former director of finance Elizabeth Franklin were also indicted for embezzlement of government funds. Franklin has an additional indictment of concealing a felony under code 18.2-462.
Authorities served the trio on May 27 and will appear for arraignment on June 3.
During the FOIA hearing against Bundy in April, Restoration News Attorney Tim Anderson questioned her about why she didn’t produce the requested documents. She ultimately admitted that she had destroyed the documents.
(more…)Former Republican Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling writes on The Republican Standard that the Trumpification of the Republican Party nationally and Virginia is complete.
He writes: Recent primary elections in several states have clearly shown that the Grand Old Party as we once knew it is stone cold dead.
The GOP is no longer the party of Ronald Reagan. Not even close. The GOP has been totally redefined in the image of Donald Trump.

The following missive comes from an email blast distributed by an unidentified “whistle blower” at Virginia Public Media unhappy about public radio’s priorities. I have not vetted this story, and readers should be sensitive to the fact VPM might offer a very different spin, but the allegations seem plausible enough to examine more closely. — JAB
VPM,ย central Virginia’s PBS and NPR member, is spending $80 million of the public’s (FCC spectrum auction) money on a shiny new downtown campus when most of downtown Richmond, including the vacated Richmond Times-Dispatch newsroom, is available for cheap. We already have too much unused square footage here in No. Chesterfield. As an insider, I know you willย hearย no shortage of PR this year about investing in downtown and theย public, etc. I remind youย still that this is as much as $80 million blown, without a second thought, during the worst funding crisis in PBS+NPR history.
VPM is laying off reporters and starving journalism. Ben Paviour, Focal Point VA, forcing out Craig Carper, EP Roberta Oster and others who call bullshit on management. Docking unused vacation days. Reducing full-time-equivalents, to fund management spending and ridiculous overhead.
As you will see in its 990 public filings, VPM is paying its top two executives, J. Swain and S. Humble, a half a million dollars each. They live big, town and country. On the public’s money.
(more…)by Steve Haner

The ongoing fight over the future of natural gas power generation in Virginia has now moved to the Virginia Supreme Court, with environmental activists asking that court to reverse the State Corporation Commissionโs (SCC) decision from six months ago approving a new gas project in Chesterfield County.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is the lead plaintiff. The petition it filed this week raises the same claims about how the SCC had erred that were used in a failed motion for reconsideration.ย The main allegation is that the environmental effects will be unduly detrimental to black Chesterfield residents who live near the proposed plant location, in violation of the Virginia Environmental Justice Act.ย
The petition also tests two key provisions of the 2020 Virginia Clean Economy Act, which was intended byย itsย authors to prevent exactly the kind of electrical generation plant Dominion Energy Virginiaย wants to build.ย If theย highย court agrees with the plaintiffs and overturns the SCC,ย otherย Virginiaย gas plant proposals in the pipeline will also face rejection.ย ย ย
The opponents are challenging the SCCโs finding thatย because theย plant is necessary toย maintainย system reliability for Dominionโsย 2.7 million customers, thatย qualifiesย itย for cost recovery through a rate adjustment clause.ย The VCEA from the beginning allowedย the SCC to approveย construction ofย additionalย gas generationย if needed toย maintainย reliability.ย ย
(more…)Virginia Democrats hold both branches of the General Assembly and the Executive Mansion — and still can’t govern effectively.

by Shaun Kenney
Virginia still doesnโt have a budget.
Instead of working on a budget, Senate Democratic leadership is now openly threatening a government shutdown unless they get what they want. Governor Abigail Spanberger (D-VA) is unapologetic on the vetoes โ even going so far as to claim that the leadership of the Democratic-controlled General Assembly simply isnโt used to female leadership, per Dwayne Yancey over at Cardinal News:
Just as she repeated the phrase โthe devilโs in the detailsโ later in our interview, the governorโs power to propose amendments โ and her intention to use it โ was a theme Spanberger returned to several times during our interview. She also said that some legislators have told her privately that some of the conflict between the General Assembly and the new governor could be due to resentment on the part of some legislators at having to deal with a woman in the role of chief executive for the first time.
Interesting to me is that Yanceyโs conversation seemed to be more confessional than homily, so we should be looking forward to a real glimpse of just where Spanberger is after bankrupting her political capital in pursuit of unconstitutional gerrymandering. If there is a centrist in Spanberger, now is the time to lay down a marker.
In the meantime, Senate Democrats donโt appear to be in any rush to compromise. Neither do House Democrats, where Speaker Don Scott, D-Portsmouth, is playing a similar game with a more reasonable approach.
Then there is Governor Spanbergerโs perspective, which to date has either not been considered by the General Assembly or she simply hasnโt shared her thoughts (or been invited to share them).
(more…)by Kerry Dougherty
Someone recently asked why Iโm so fond of including Tweets, er Xes, in my posts.
Thatโs easy. Thereโs no better way to figure out whatโs going on in the devious hearts of politicians than to read their Tweets.
In the days after her businesses were raided by the FBI State Sen. Louise Lucas, who liked to pepper her posts with obscenities few octogenarians use, was quiet.
Frankly, we missed the foul-mouthed Democrat political boss.
Now sheโs back. And instead of insulting Republicans and bragging about how sheโs loading her bong with Republican tears, sheโs going after the governor. A fellow Democrat.
Itโs an old fashioned cat fight. And Iโm here for it.
Hereโs yesterdayโs offerings as Lucas struck back at Abigail Spanberger who is blaming her for the budget impasse.

by Kerry Dougherty
This is odd.
Seems the same lefties who are unbothered by Fairfax Countyโs Soros-backed commonwealthโs attorney reluctance to prosecute illegal aliens or turn them over to ICE are having hissy fits over prosecutors who announced that they wonโt enforce Virginiaโs new – likely unconstitutional – gun law.
Maybe some law-abiding citizens wouldnโt feel the need to arm themselves if criminals werenโt being turned loose on the public by soft-on-crime prosecutors.
Earlier this month Gov. Abigail Spanberger signed into law a sweeping prohibition on certain types of semi-automatic firearms and high-capacity magazines. This includes of course, Americaโs favorite rifle, the AR-15. Itโs estimated that 20 to 25 million ARs are already in the hands of civilians in the U.S.
After July 1, it will be a crime to sell, manufacture, import or transfer such a weapon in Virginia. Those who already own ARs will be grandfathered under the statute.
Lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the law have been filed in state and federal court and the U.S. Supreme Court seems likely to hear a case from another jurisdiction that addresses a similar ban.
Hopefully, this Virginia law could be short-lived.
In the meantime, commonwealthโs attorneys in at least four jurisdictions have already signaled that they will not be enforcing the new gun restrictions. As constitutional officers, they are sworn to uphold the constitution and are answerable to the voters, not the governor.ย Continue reading.