Surveillance of some… Senate Bill 84: “Authorizes state and local law-enforcement agencies to place and operate pedestrian crossing violation and stop sign violation monitoring systems in school crossing zones, highway work zones, and high-risk speed corridors for purposes of recording pedestrian cross and stop sign violations.”
But not of others… Senate Bill 83: “Requires the chief judge of each general district court, juvenile and domestic relations court, and circuit court to set a policy regarding the use and possession of portable electronic devices, defined in the bill as a personal laptop, a tablet, a mobile telephone, an electronic calendar, and electronic book reader, a smart watch or any other electronic personal communication device.”
๐จBOMBSHELL: There is no written report from the firm hired by the BOV to investigate the UVA Health scandal.
The Cavalier Daily has finally covered the 239 FOIA documents created during the UVA Health investigation and obtained by TJC. In the article, the Cav Daily speaks withโฆ pic.twitter.com/8LJmx8cfeX
Restoration News has uncovered school districts across Virginia offering telehealth mental health therapy for children without parental permission. State lawย permitsย telehealth in schools, but requires parental consent and the adoption of school board policies on the topic. Federal law also prohibits the disclosure of private student information, but these laws are ignored in multiple districts.
Hazel Health is a third-party provider for mental health services for at least 13 school districts in Virginia. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to these districts reveal most are ignoring state telehealth laws. School boards are required to develop policies that include specific provisions of the law. They must also enter into a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the provider in accordance with a model memo adopted by the state Education Department.
While school boards are not required to offer telehealth counseling, those that do must meet legal obligations. State law requires school board policies to include a provision for parental consent and to designate a private location in the school for students to receive counseling services.
The Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) prohibits schools from disclosing personally identifiable information in student records. Yet multiple Virginia school districts are defying this law.
Within minutes of taking office, the Governor issued a number of Executive Orders which rolled back Republican initiatives and implemented an aggressively Democratic agenda. To the victor go the spoils.
True leadership, of course, is rising about partisanship to do what’s right for the people. Very few leaders in America have that type of moxie.
The “flex version” comes into play if “any state,” regardless of size, context or partisan leanings, decides to draw a new Congressional map. (Presumably, California qualifies as “any state” — so the threshold is already met). The bottom line is that HJR 4 is intended to render Virginia’s “non-partisan redistricting” law a dead letter, before it reaches its fifth birthday.
Lower Power Bills: Suspend costly energy mandates when prices spike or grid reliability is threatened, protecting families from being forced to choose between food and heat.
Car Tax Relief: Make good on the long-promised repeal of the car tax up to $20,000, putting real money back into household budgets.
Tax Protection: Permanently extend the enhanced standard deduction, preventing an automatic tax hike and saving a married couple an average of $661 per year.
Grocery Tax Repeal: End Virginiaโs tax on groceries โ one of only ten states that still imposes it โ saving a family of four about $150 annually while holding local governments harmless.
Lower Car Insurance Costs: Allow, but do not require, insurers to offer preferred repair networks, creating a path to more affordable premiums for drivers.
Data centers cut property taxes on homeowners, by providing lots of additional property to tax. The more property there is to tax, the less tax needs to be imposed on each property. Data centers use very few government services (unlike homeowners, who use things like schools and parks), so data centers donโt add much to a countyโs costs.
Democratic-run Loudoun County has lots of data centers and lower property taxes than other Democratic counties in northern Virginia, such as neighboring Fairfax County and Arlington County. Data centers generate almost half its property tax revenue, enabling it to tax homeowners at lower rates despite Loudoun Countyโs rapidly rising government spending under Democratic control.
Senator Stella Pekarsky, D-Fairfax County, is sponsoring a bill this legislative session that would require the Virginia Board of Education to develop and โimplement alternative graduation pathwaysโ that allow students to earn a Standard Diploma without passing the statewide Standards of Learning (SOL) assessments.
Currently to graduate from high school in Virginia, students must pass end of course (EOC) SOL exams in specific courses in English, Math, Science and Social Studies. Under Sen. Pekarskyโs bill, the Board would have to consult a range of stakeholders โ from educators and administrators to parents and students โ to design options that could include โnon-assessment demonstrations of competenciesโ like locally developed performance assessments, portfolios, capstone projects, work-based learning, dual-enrollment courses, or industry credentials.
Senator Stella Pekarsky
As directed by Governor Abigail Spanbergerโs inauguration day education executive order, Secretary of Education Jeffrey O. Smith and State Superintendent Jenna Conway will conduct listening sessions throughout Virginia during the first 100 days of her administration with โstudents, parents, educators, school leaders, superintendents, school board members, and community members about the challenges and successes facing their schools.โ
Will changing this EOC graduation requirement even be a major concern to this broad section of stakeholders?
A federal renewable energy laboratoryโs public website on the cost of building utility battery storage indicates the cost now being paid by Virginiaโs two major utilities is well above the average. Predicting future costs is always iffy, but the National Laboratory of the Rockies website does that, too.ย
National Laboratory of the Rockies data found here.
In earlier posts,Baconโs Rebellion reported (accurately) that Dominion Energy Virginia has applications pending at the State Corporation Commission to build battery storage at average costs of about $675,000 per megawatt-hour.ย
The federal data puts the 2026 cost of a four-hour battery system at $520,000 per megawatt hour, or $520 million* per gigawatt hour, with a slightly lower cost for 10-hour units.ย Reworking the numbers from the earlier post, the utilities would still need more than $50 billion to build all storage called for in House Bill 895 at today’s prices. Some numbers are detailed at the end.ย
The earlier post did spark a response from one of the advocates for the bill, which is a massive expansion on the utility battery mandate now included in the Virginia Clean Economy Act. He made the point that there are examples of battery projects costing far less than Dominionโs, and that the utility does not have a stellar record of keeping its costs in line with or below outside competition. Their bill also promotes competition, which is good.
Last time Democrats controlled Virginia, they tried to turn the commonwealth into California.
High taxes, high gas prices, EV mandates, oppressive covid restrictions.
This time, itโs worse. They aim to turn Virginia into Minnesota.
Gov. Abigail Spanberger apparently looked West, saw an unaffordable state full of environmental laws that make things like rebuilding a home after a wildfire impossible and decided that wasnโt enough of a dramatic change for the commonwealth.
Instead, in her inaugural address she made it clear that Virginia – like Minnesota – is at war with the federal government. Henceforth a sanctuary state where the Virginia State Police are forbidden to work with ICE agents to peacefully deport illegal aliens.
Listen to her:
She refused to give anything close to a direct answer -on the very few times she was asked- whether, as governor, she would cooperate with ICE or whether she'd govern like Newsom and Walz.
Now, at her inauguration, voters hear her very clear position: RESIST https://t.co/7rdjV2SBhe
Governor Abigail Spanberger has announced 27 appointments to the Boards of Visitors of the University of Virginia, George Mason University, and the Virginia Military Institute. The appointees fill vacancies created by the departure of board members selected by former Governor Glenn Youngkin, either because they were rejected by the state Senate or because Spanberger asked them to resign.
Most prominent among the new appointees is former Governor Ralph Northam to the Virginia Military Institute. As the Washington Post notes, “In 2020, Northam, a VMI graduate,ย orderedย an investigation into the schoolโs treatment of Black students.”
Democrats, says the Post, have criticized Youngkin for “being overly involved in Virginiaโs colleges.”
Someone once described GMโs Vega as a vehicle completely unencumbered by the engineering process. And then there was the country mechanic who once suggested to the driver of a Vega that they fix a particular problem by jacking up the radiator cap and driving a new car in underneath it.
Weโll get back to that.
There are a number of issues with the current Harrisonburg City Council. Many of them nest under the umbrella of Proverbs 29:18. โWhere there is no vision, the people perish.โ
It is not clear whoโs driving and where theyโre going. Another way of looking at it, as several dozen people have agreed in the past three years, is that the city is headed in the wrong direction.
“We expect certain things of government, and somebody has to make those things work.”
Youโll be getting a W-2 from your employer soon in the mail. Itโs an annual reminder of what you made and what the government took in taxes. You might owe the IRS (like me) or you might get a refund (like many), but either way itโs still sobering to think how much we have to fork over for the privilege of being a citizen.
The biggest line item is federal income tax. Youโll also see deductions for payroll taxes for like Social Security and Medicare, quietly withheld every pay period. It is mysteriously labeled FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) and trust me itโs not a contributionโฆ itโs a tax.
Then thereโs state income tax, where the Commonwealthโs top rate of 5.75% isnโt especially low or high, but itโs another layer on the stack. (Expect this to go up in the next 4 years)
Next comes sales tax. Every little thing you buy, every Amazon order, every trip to the store, is subject to sales tax. Virginiaโs combined state and local rate averages just under six percent, but some localities add much, much more like Richmondโs hot meals tax โ where you pay 13.8% to eat out. In some areas you pay higher rates for transportation, hotel stays, admissions to events, or extra tax if you own a business. BPOL Tax (Business Professional & Licensing Tax) was adopted after 1812 to pay for the war of 1812 โ and it never went away.
A legislative commission created in 2008 to oversee one narrow function of two electric utilities is about to expand its scope of oversight of all forms of energy in Virginia, including nuclear, coal, and natural gas. It will be the legislative counterpart โ and counterweight โ to the politically independent State Corporation Commission.ย
The bill toย accomplishย that (House Bill 633) qualifies asย one of theย mostย sweeping and dangerous pieces of legislation pending at the 2026 General Assembly, and that is saying something when one reads the other bills that have been filed. Adding a touch of irony, the patron of the bill granting such sweeping power to legislative Democrats is the Republican House Minority Leader, and he hails from the heart of coal country. ย
The bill abolishes the long-standingย Virginia Coal and Energy Commission he serves on, which admittedly had been inactive in recent years, andย transfers its role to this group. The name changes from the Commission on Electric Utility Regulation (CEUR) to theย Energy Commission of Virginiaย (ECV). The first provision ofย the ECVโsย powersย in the new bill directs it to:ย ย
Examine the production, transmission,โฏdistribution,โฏstorage,โฏandโฏuseโฏofโฏenergy in the Commonwealth,โฏincluding energy efficiency and conservation,โฏas part ofย monitoringย the development and implementation ofโฏthe Energy Policy of the Commonwealth (ยงโฏ45.2-1705โฏet seq.)โฏandโฏthe Virginia Energy Plan (ยงโฏ45.2-1710โฏet seq.).ย ย
Theย energy policy it references in the Code of Virginia could not be more committed to the mission of abolishing hydrocarbon energy in every sector of the economy, not just the electricity industry. Its overriding policy principles include: โClimate change is an urgent and pressing challenge for the Commonwealth. Swift decarbonization and a transition toย clean energy areย requiredย to meet the urgency of the challengeโฆโย
From Governor Abigail Spanberger’s Executive Order No. 10 taking the state police out of immigration-law enforcement:
Ensuring public safety in Virginia requires state and local law enforcement to be focused on their core responsibilities of investigating and deterring criminal activity, staffing jails, and community engagement. Since 2025, Virginians have been deprived of critical public safety resources due to the directives in Executive Order No. 47 (2025) that require and encourage state and local law enforcement to divert their limited resources for use in enforcing federal civil immigration laws. Federal authorities should enforce federal civil immigration lawsโlaw enforcement in the Commonwealth should prioritize the safety and security of all residents in Virginia, the enforcement of local and state laws, and coordination with federal entities on criminal matters.
From Attorney General Jay Jones day one “Actions to Keep Virginians Safe, Lower Costs, and Protect Fundamental Rights.”
Protecting Our Communities: I am directing my team to review my predecessorโs opinion regarding United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainers and develop clear guidance that balances public safety and trust between communities and law enforcement as itย relates to how our immigration laws are implemented.
… and a call for collaboration and principled debate.
Photo credit: Steve Helber/AP
by Derrick Max
Today, the Thomas Jefferson Institute congratulates Governor Abigail Spanberger on her historic inauguration as the 75th governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia — and the first woman in the nearly 250-year history of the Commonwealth to hold this office.
Her assumption of the governorship marks a milestone in Virginiaโs story, one rooted in tradition and as she noted in her inaugural address โrepresents something profoundโฆ the peaceful transfer of powerโฆ a cornerstone of our American democratic experiment.โ
Todayโs ceremony was an elaborate and exciting celebration of what is best about Virginia, and marked an historic day that should make all Virginians, regardless of party, proud!
The Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy (TJI) is dedicated to advancing freedom, opportunity, and prosperity for all Virginians through limited government, free markets, and individual choice. When advancing policies that align with these principles, we stand with Governor Spanberger who rightly noted โour prosperity depends upon unionโฆ that our leaders and our fellow Virginians should join in common cause, find common ground, and pursue common purpose — this is the concept at the heart of what it means to be a Commonwealth.โ
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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Bacon’s Rebellion is Virginia’s leading politically non-aligned portal for news, opinions and analysis about state, regional and local public policy. Read more about us here.
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