• Fairfax Schools at a Crossroads

    Rising budgets, declining outcomes

    by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora

    Fairfax Countyโ€™s school board members are scheduled to vote today on the fiscal year 2027 $4.1 billion budget. Although there will be a $197 million increase in funds from last year, district leaders are still pointing to what they describe as a $28 million โ€œbudget gap,โ€ referring to the countyโ€™s Board of Supervisors not transferring FCPSโ€™s full requested amount.ย (Editor’s note: the School Board adopted the budget last night, a 5.0% increase over 2026.)

    Rather than addressing administrative bloat, district leadership is shifting resources away from classrooms to close the so-called โ€œbudget gap.โ€ A Freedom of Information Act request revealed that FCPS spent $272 million on salaries for 2,346 non-school-based administrators in fiscal year 2026.  Meanwhile, the district plans to reduce school reserve staffing by $8.8 million, eliminating 70 positions, which raises serious concerns. As class sizes increase in Fall 2026, some grades may require additional teachers, but reducing reserve staffing will limit flexibility to respond to enrollment shifts and will ultimately contribute to larger class sizes and reduced instructional support.

    Increasing administrative spending while simultaneously cutting school-level resources and increasing class sizes raises serious concerns about fiscal priorities. And a 36% increase in the superintendentโ€™s salary since 2019, as shown in the table below, has not coincided with improved student outcomes. In fact, since 2019, Fairfax County Public Schoolsโ€™ average SAT score has declined by 35 points.  

    Table displaying fiscal year data, including cost per pupil, total budget, superintendent salary, and average SAT score from 2019 to 2027.
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  • Dan Helmer Doesnโ€™t Believe in an Independent Judiciary

    by Kerry Dougherty

    A close-up of a furious green-skinned character resembling a fictional superhero, wearing a suit with torn sleeves, displaying intense emotions in a courtroom setting.
    Dan Helmer as the Incredible Hulk with rage face. Image credit: Grok

    Poor Dan Helmer.

    No one wants to be a member of Congress more than this 44-year-old man, yet so far heโ€™s been unable to win a Democrat primary election.

    Not for lack of trying.

    For the time being, heโ€™ll have to be content with his seat in the House of Delegates representing the 40th District. Small potatoes compared with Congress.

    It must be frustrating. On paper, Helmer has it all: West Point grad, Rhodes Scholar, Army vet.

    And yet, the voters in Virginiaโ€™s 10th Congressional District just arenโ€™t into him.

    He tried to get the Democrat nomination in that blue district in 2018, but lost to Jennifer Wexton who went on to serve until 2024 when an illness forced her to step down.

    In 2024 Helmer lost the Democrat primary to Suhas Subrananyam, who is presently serving in Congress.

    Helmerโ€™s hopes soared when Virginia Democrats cooked up their illegal referendum that would redraw congressional districts across the the commonwealth. Thatโ€™s when the infamous 7th Lobster District was born.

    One of the claws of the lobster reportedly included Helmerโ€™s neighborhood.

    At last! Helmer had a congressional district carved out just for him. Continue reading.


  • A Rising Democratic Star Disappoints Teachersโ€™ Unions in Virginia

    by Kevin Mahnken, The 74

    Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger vetoed an expansion of collective bargaining rights last week. Her allies in the labor movement werenโ€™t pleased.

    Photo credit: Governor of Virginia’s webpage

    Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanbergerโ€™s rejection of a new law expanding collective bargaining rights for teachers has led to a division in the stateโ€™s Democratic coalition. It also generated discontent with a figure thought to be among her partyโ€™s future national leaders.

    Last Thursday, Spanberger vetoed legislation that would have allowed public school teachers, among other public-sector employees, to form unions and negotiate over their wages and working conditions throughout Virginia. At present, those workers can organize only in localities that opt into such arrangements; those number fewer than 20 of the stateโ€™s 133 city- or county-level governments.

    Many of the governorโ€™s supporters in labor were outraged by the decision, calling it a โ€œbetrayalโ€ of a key constituency. One of the largest unions in the state, the Virginia Education Association, endorsed Spanbergerโ€™s campaign almost a full year before last fallโ€™s election, putting their membership of more than 40,000 teachers and school personnel behind a high-profile effort to retake the governorโ€™s mansion from Republican control. 

    VEA President Carol Bauer referenced her organizationโ€™s efforts in an interview with The 74, calling the veto โ€œa great disappointment.โ€

    โ€œOur members campaigned for Gov. Spanberger on the promise that she supported workers, supported affordability, and supported collective bargaining, and we were hopeful,โ€ Bauer said. โ€œWe had every indication she was going to sign a collective bargaining bill.โ€

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  • A Lesson from Amsterdam

    A transportation infrastructure built around the primacy of bicycles works OK for the Dutch, but Virginians would never accept it.

    A blue bicycle decorated with colorful artificial flowers, positioned near a canal with a lamppost and people walking by.

    by James A. Bacon

    Amsterdammers love their bicycles. They ride their two-wheelers in the sun, in the drizzle and in the rain. They bedeck them in flowers and deck them out with baskets. Like the Inuit who have words to distinguish between different types of snow, the Dutch have an elaborate vocabulary to describe bicycle accessories, such as kinderzitje (child seats), fietskar (bike trailers), and bakfiets (large boxes mounted in front of the rider that carry groceries, children, or anything else that fits).

    According to CoPilot AI, there are about 800,000 bicycles in Amsterdam, a city of roughly one million inhabitants, compared to maybe 400,000 automobiles. The city is a dream come true for smart growthers. In the city’s historic district, bicycles exceed cars in the streets at any given time by prodigious numbers, and both are outnumbered by the swarm of pedestrians.

    A pedestrian/bicycle-centric society is a desideratum of the green, zero-carbon future. Amsterdam, Copenhagen and some smaller European cities are held up as models to be emulated in the United States. Whether Amsterdam’s bike-centric model could be replicated in Virginia, however, is doubtful. Whether anyone in an American city would even want such a transportation system is questionable.

    A bicycle-centric transportation network is not traffic nirvana. CoPilot notes that there were more than 5,000 traffic accidents in Amsterdam in 2022, about half of which involved bicycles. I know about that from personal experience. (More on that in a bit).

    Then there’s a factor that no one ever talks about: bicycles trash up the landscape. Those 800,000 bicycles have to be stored somewhere. Usually outdoors. The city has endless, long racks of them. And they are ugly…. as in uuuuugly. Amsterdam would be a much more beautiful city without them.

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  • An Unbecoming Reaction

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Justice Arthur Kelsey, Virginia Supreme Court

    Justice Arthur Kelsey of the Virginia Supreme Court was the author of the recent decision in which the Court struck down the recently approved constitutional amendment regarding redistricting.ย Justice Kelseyโ€™s current 12-term on the Court will expire next January.ย To continue on the Court, he would have to be re-elected by the General Assembly to a new term.

    Del. Dan Helmer (D-Fairfax) was quoted in the Virginia Political Newsletter as saying, โ€œWe will make sure that Justice Kelsy does not serve anymore come this January.โ€

    That is an outrageous statement. It smacks of Donald Trumpโ€™s campaign of retribution against legislators and other officials who disagree with him.

    Del. Dan Helmer (D-Fairfax)

    If the decision and opinion of the Virginia Supreme Court were blatantly partisan, that would be grounds for not electing Kelsey to another term.ย But the decision was not partisan. It rested on perfectly sound reasoning:ย an โ€œelection,โ€ in the modern sense, is comprised of more than one day. It is the means whereby citizens register their choices for candidates or questions on the ballot. In Virginia, the process in which citizens can register their choices, i.e. an election, runs from 45 days prior to Election Day, the last day on which they are able to cast a ballot, to noon on the third day after Election Day, the time period in which registrars may receive and count mailed-in ballots postmarked on or before Election Day.ย 

    Democrats want to have their cake and eat it, too.ย On the one hand, they want to argue that the language in the Virginia Constitution referring to the โ€œnext general election of members of the House of Delegates,โ€ relating to the adoption of amendments to the constitution, refers to Election Day.ย On the other hand, they want to argue that casting of ballots in an election does not have to occur on Election Day to be valid.ย They canโ€™t have it both ways.

    It was a divided decision.ย Three Justices of the Court disagreed, arguing that the โ€œnext general election of members of the House of Delegatesโ€ means Election Day. That is the nature of the judicial process; reasonable people can disagree. It is a matter of which argument is the most persuasive to most of the members of the Court.

    Democrats could have avoided this situation.ย They could have adopted the redistricting amendment the first time last August or September, before early voting began, instead of waiting until the last of October, a few days before Election Day.

    Now, they are claiming that the Court has overturned the โ€œwill of the people.โ€ย However, it was the Democrats who argued to the Court in proceedings before the referendum process got underway that precedent required it to wait until the referendum was over before it issued a ruling.ย  See https://www.vacourts.gov/static/opinions/opnscvwp/1260127.pdf.ย In the end, the Court did not rule on the substance of the proposed amendment, but on the process by which the amendment was put before the people.ย It found that the General Assembly did not follow the process laid out in the constitution for amending it and, thus, the referendum itself, not the changes that would have been effected by the referendum, was invalid.ย Process is important in a democracy.

    The Democrats in the General Assembly rolled the dice and lost.ย Now, they are calling for vengeance. It is unbecoming.


  • Why We Can’t Build Anything Anywhere Near Anything

    Is there a creative solution that would preserve the historic site of Powhatan’s birthplace while allowing development to proceed? Or will this become a zero-sum game like everything else in our society?

    A bronze statue of a Native American man standing with arms crossed, wearing a traditional outfit with fringed edges, surrounded by green foliage and flowering bushes.
    Image credit: StaticFlickr

    Press release from the Southern Environmental Law Center:

    Today Preservation Virginia named the site of WaHลnSeNaKah (Powhatan)โ€™s birthplace one of Virginiaโ€™s most endangered places of 2026.  

    Located on the north bank of the James River immediately downstream from present Richmond, Powhatanโ€™s birthplace is depicted as a prominent settlement on historic maps and initial archaeological work has uncovered tens of thousands of artifacts at the site. The site holds immense cultural significance to Virginiaโ€™s Tribes and reflects a long-standing and ongoing relationship between Tribal Nations and the landscape. The property was later home to a plantation and enslaved community and it is recognized as the site of Richmondโ€™s surrender at the end of the Civil War.ย ย 

    Today, it is one of the last undeveloped parcels near Richmond on Route 5/Old Osborne Turnpike โ€” one of the oldest roads in the state and designated as a Virginia Byway for its high aesthetic and cultural value. It is also in danger of being lost to development.  

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  • Housing Costs and Fertility Rates

    A scatter plot showing the relationship between the total fertility rate and the cost of a 2-bedroom home relative to median prime-age adult income across different states in 2024. The trend indicates that states with higher housing costs have lower fertility rates.

    From the Institute for Family Studies:

    The US fertility rate hit a record low in 2025. But fertility rates vary significantly across states, ranging from under 1.4 children per woman in states like Vermont and Oregon to over 1.9 in Nebraska and South Dakota. IFSโ€™sย Family Structure Indexย found that housing affordability explains 25% of this variation in total fertility rates, rising to 31% when outliers California and Hawaii are excluded. Expensive housing suppresses fertility by creating budget constraints, shifting young families into smaller housing, and driving theย migrationย of families to more affordable areas. IFS senior fellow Lyman Stone offers one solution to the fertility decline: buildย family-friendly housing.

    Note: Judging from the chart above, Virginia is slightly below the trend line, with fertility rate and housing costs as a ratio of prime-age adult income both in the middle of the pack nationally.


  • Do Democrats Really Believe in a Constitutional Republic?

    The meltdown over the Virginia Supreme Court striking down Democratsโ€™ illegal gerrymandering shows how far they’ve fallen from America’s constitutional foundations.

    A pin in the shape of a donkey, colored in red, white, and blue with stars, set against a textured background featuring American flag colors.

    by Jacon Grandstaff

    The childish meltdown Democrats have had in reaction to the Virginia Supreme Courtโ€™s striking down their unconstitutional gerrymandering shows they donโ€™t know much about our republican form of government or simply donโ€™t support it.

    Virginia Democrats tried to flip Virginia’s congressional map from a 6โ€“5 Democratic advantage to an egregious 10โ€“1 split before the 2026 midterms.

    A map of Virginia highlighting congressional districts, with red arrows indicating areas of focus. The map uses blue to represent Democratic areas and red for Republican areas.

    On May 8, the State Supreme Courtย ruledย that the General Assembly violated the constitutional procedure to submit the proposal to voters.

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  • Rampaging Teens Need Handcuffs And Charges

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Stop calling them โ€œteen meet-upsโ€ or โ€œteen takeovers.โ€ Those terms downplay whatโ€™s going on.

    Iโ€™m talking, of course, about the violent mobs of young people that spontaneously appear, wreak havoc and then disperse, looking like extras from the disturbing 2013 movie โ€œThe Purge.โ€

    Worse, theyโ€™re erupting around the country.

    Letโ€™s call them what they are: Rioters. The barbarians involved should be cuffed and booked. If they really ARE teens, their parents should be hauled into court along with them and charged with child neglect.

    That most certainly didnโ€™t happen Sunday night in West Ghent when a mob of uncivilized people descended on an intersection. They were driving like maniacs and setting off fireworks. One of these โ€œteensโ€ brought out a flamethrower and set the street on fire.

    The list of laws this crowd broke are as long as Leviticus. Continue reading.


  • An Untimely Endorsement for Louise Lucas

    A portrait of an older woman with silver hair styled in a voluminous manner, wearing a black top and a chunky silver necklace, smiling warmly at the camera.

    This author has just noted that Louise Lucas’s cannabis stores in Portsmouth and Norfolk, both raided by the FBI last week, are not registered with the Virginia Cannabis Control Authority.  

    Perhaps they do not have to register. The Portsmouth store advertises Vape cartridges and tincture oil, not medical marijuana. 

    But one of the featured reviews of her The Cannabis Outlet in Portsmouth is perhaps untimely:ย 

    I am not sure about the past but currently, this is a very good store. Lots of very strong strains. I love this place! I get what I want, when I want it.
    – Jeff Childers
    May 18, 2024

    We and the FBI are left to wonder whether Mr. Childers obtained “very strong strains” of the vape cartridges or the tincture oil.

     


  • Spanberger Isn’t Moderating, She’s Muddling

    Vetoing the collective bargaining bill, observing court orders, and honoring MOUs on data center tax exemptions isn’t pivoting to the center — it’s muddling through.

    by Shaun Kenney

    The Washington Post โ€” alternately condemned for being a fascist propaganda machine now that it no longer reflexively agrees with the political left, alternately praised as defending democracy behind paywalls โ€” seems to believe that in the span of just one week, Governor Abigail Spanberger (D-VA) has rediscovered her mojo and is returning to her moderate roots.

    How is she doing this? With one-word answers as to whether or not the Virginia Department of Elections will obey the rulings of the Supreme Court of Virginia, with a veto of collective bargaining, and with the slow walking back of repudiating the MOUs signed with data centers on tax exemptions. Is this the standard of moderation?

    If the argument is that nothing has changed, then yes โ€” we are indeed moderating, but not because of anything Spanberger is actively doing to calm waters nor because Spanberger didnโ€™t do her utmost to change things.

    Instead, she is merely being presented with a series of facts by an objective reality. One of those realities isย math. State Senator Mark Obenshain (R-Harrisonburg) laid out those realities,ย in terms of both political and electoral cost:

    Letโ€™s remember what actually happened.

    The General Assembly passed a bill deliberately designed to delay implementation until 2028 โ€” safely after the 2027 elections and after the next budget cycle โ€” so Virginians wouldnโ€™t immediately feel the tax increases and financial consequences.

    Governor Spanberger didnโ€™t oppose the policy. In fact, she made clear she was willing to sign it. Her only objection was that the delay wasnโ€™t long enough.

    Her amendment would have pushed implementation all the way to 2030 โ€” an extraordinary attempt to kick the consequences entirely beyond her own term in office so another Governor and another General Assembly would be left holding the bag.

    When lawmakers rejected her effort to avoid political accountability, she vetoed the bill.

    This veto was not about protecting taxpayers, local governments, or Virginia families from the costs of forced collective bargaining.

    It was about protecting Abigail Spanberger from the blame.

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  • Is Targeted Tax Relief Just The First Step?

    by Jon Baliles

    While running for Mayor in 2024, candidate Danny Avulaโ€™s top priority in the โ€œThriving neighborhoods and affordable housingโ€ section of his platform stated:

    As Mayor, he will:

    • Fight displacement of long-term residents and expand the supply of deeply affordable housing for low-income and working residents.

    His third bullet point in that part of his policy platform claimed he would โ€œstrengthen protections and resources available for our most vulnerable residents.โ€

    Somewhere between that lofty rhetoric and todayโ€™s reality, Mayor Avula has pushed back against any type of relief for property owners since taking office. Last year, he fought successfully against a four-cent reduction in the real estate tax rate that he said would be a disaster and favored targeted tax relief. Last week, however, the administration once again professed their opposition to relief in general. This time, it is opposition to aย proposed ordinanceย that would provide targeted tax relief and disrupt the pace of gentrification and offer a deferral to those who qualify and help people stay in their homes untilย theyย decide itโ€™s time to sell instead of being driven out by ever increasing assessment and tax bills.

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  • Potential Investigations of Louise Lucas, Lisa Lucas-Burke, Lucas Lodge and The Cannabis Outlet

    Potential Investigations of Louise Lucas, Lisa Lucas-Burke, Lucas Lodge and The Cannabis Outlet

    by James C. Sherlock

    In an interview Sunday in the Virginian-Pilot, Sen. Louise Lucas, president pro tempore of the Virginia state senate, says she still doesnโ€™t know why the feds raided her businesses. We will look at the possibilities.

    Senator Lucas has a right to due process and a presumption of innocence. But there are clear signs of what violations federal and state prosecutors might investigate.ย In response to Sen. Lucasโ€™s quandary, the author (see endnote) will outline potential sources of evidence and the roles of federal and state investigators in examining them.

    Potential evidence

    The scope of potential evidence against Louise Lucas, Lisa Lucas-Burke, Lucas Lodge, and Louise Lucasโ€™s The Cannabis Outlet is indicated from five sources:

    1. Whatever evidence that convinced a federal judge to sign off on search warrants of Lucas Lodge and The Cannabis Outlet.
    2. The FBI has not publicly detailed the specific target of the probe of The Cannabis Outlet, although the New York Times reported a lengthy Justice Department investigation connected to possible corruption related to marijuana dispensaries and bribery allegations.ย 
    3. Lisa Lucas Burke told the Virginian-Pilot that the FBI seized medical records from Lucas Lodge (Louise Lucas, CEO, and Lisa Lucas-Burke, Executive Director). That appears to indicate a separate investigation into concerns about the treatment of the Medicaid clients who populate Lucas Lodge, the services rendered or not rendered that were billed to Medicaid, or both.ย 
    4. The records of the Department of Behavioral Health and Disability Services (DBHDS) inspections of Lucas Lodge may offer a source of potential evidence of neglect and abuse of Medicaid clients, or of Medicaid fraud through serial citations of non-compliance with regulations, or both. ย 
    5. Bacons Rebellion has provided in-depth analysis of the DBHDS inspections and of Sen. Lucasโ€™s activities in the Senate of Virginia.

    Federal investigations

    From the evidence above, federal investigations may inquire into:

    1. Lucas Lodge, Louise Lucas (CEO), and Lisa Lucas-Burke (Executive Director) for potential Medicaid fraud. Medicaid funds all of the government payments to Lucas Lodge for services to people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, which constitutes Lucas Lodgeโ€™s entire business. Federal Medicaid fraud is investigated under several core statutes, primarily the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. ยงยง 3729-3733), the Health Care Fraud Statute (18 U.S.C. ยง 1347), and the Anti-Kickback Statute (42 U.S.C. ยง 1320a-7b). Those laws enforce severe civil and criminal penalties for submitting false claims, paying for patient referrals, and executing schemes to defraud government health care programs. Medicaid fraud is investigated at the federal level by the Office of Inspector General for Health Care, Department of Health and Human Services (HHS OIG). HHS OIG investigators have the authority and responsibility to assess DBHDS inspection reports, the medical records seized from Lucas Lodge, and any other evidence that may have persuaded a federal judge to issue the search warrants. The Virginia Attorney Generalโ€™s website offers an excellent summary of the complex subjects of Medicaid fraud and abuse, related investigations and prosecutions, and Virginiaโ€™s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU). Note that states often join the federal government in global settlements of Medicaid fraud charges. Any federal investigation of Medicaid fraud will be led by HHS OIG investigators, with the state MFCU normally joining.
    2. Lucas Lodge, Louise Lucas (CEO), and Lisa Lucas-Burke (Executive Director) for neglect and abuse of persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities, again from evidence in DBHDS inspection reports. Specific federal definitions of abuse and neglect are offered in the Code of Federal Regulations. Key federal statutes proscribing neglect and abuse of such persons include the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act (DD Act), Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). A federal investigation would again be led by HHS OIG investigators. State police, Portsmouth Police, or both might join the federal investigation.
    3. Louise Lucas and/or her employees for various violations of law at her The Cannabis Outlet. There are numerous laws governing the sale of cannabis. The report that the raid was looking for evidence of โ€œbribery,” if true, suggests it was seeking evidence of bribery involving a public official. The investigation will be led by the FBI. There is no public information on what the raid was specifically looking for or the evidence that led a federal judge to sign the search warrants. Once again, state police, Portsmouth Police, or both might join the investigation.
    4. Louise Lucas for potential public corruption.ย Federal statutes include 18 U.S.C. ยง 201, (It distinguishes between bribery (a direct quid pro quo to influence future actions) and illegal gratuities (rewards given for acts already performed; 18 U.S.C. ยง 666 (Bribery);ย and 18 U.S.C. ยงยง 1341, 1343, 1346 (Honest Services fraud). Those investigations are led by the FBI. The Federal public corruption statutes are generally less forgiving than Virginia’s.

    Virginia Medicaid fraud investigation

    Federal regulation, state Medicaid fraud investigation. State Medicaid agencies (DMAS in Virginia), assisted by the Attorney Generalโ€™s MFCU, are directed by federal regulation to investigate Medicaid fraud and abuse.

    ย ยง 455.15 Full investigation

    If the findings of a preliminary investigation give the (State Medicaid) agency reason to believe that an incident of fraud or abuse has occurred in the Medicaid program, the agency must take the following action, as appropriate:

    ย  ย (a) If a provider is suspected of fraud or abuse, the agency mustโ€”

    ย  ย  ย  (1) In States with a State Medicaid fraud control unit certified under subpart C of part 1002 of this title (Virginia has an MFCU), refer the case to the unit under the terms of its agreement with the unit entered into under ยง 1002.309 of this title; or

    ย  ย  ย  ย  ย (b) If there is reason to believe that a beneficiary has defrauded the Medicaid program, the agency must refer the case to an appropriate law enforcement agency.

    ย  ย (c) If there is reason to believe that a beneficiary has abused the Medicaid program, the agency must conduct a full investigation of the abuse.ย ย 

    Virginia law, Medicaid fraud investigation. ย ยง 32.1-320. Duties of Attorney General: the medical services providers audit and investigation unit (MFCU) provides the Attorney General with sweeping authority and a special unit to investigate Medicaid fraud and the neglect and abuse of Medicaid patients. That special unit is directed to all of the states by federal law.

    A. There shall be established within the Office of the Attorney General a unit to audit and investigate providers of services furnished under the State Medical Assistance Plan. The Department of Medical Assistance Services shall cooperate with the Office of the Attorney General in conducting such audits and investigations and shall provide such information for these purposes as may be requested by the Attorney General or his authorized representative.

    The Attorney General shall:

    Conduct audits and investigations of providers of medical and other services furnished under medical assistance. Such investigations shall include investigation of complaints alleging abuse or neglect of persons in the care or custody of others who receive payments for providing health care services under the state plan for medical assistance, regardless of whether the patient who is the subject of the complaint is a recipient of medical assistance.

    State investigations are subject to 42 CFR Part 1002, Subpart C, ยง 1002.210, which directs states to have procedures in place to exclude providers from Medicaid participation. That Subpart also requires:

    Before imposing an exclusion under ยง 1002.210, the State agency must give the individual or entity the opportunity to submit documents and written argument against the exclusion. The individual or entity must also be given any additional appeals rights that would otherwise be available under procedures established by the State.

    Other potential Virginia investigations

    1. The Virginia Senate Ethics Committee can investigate potential violations of Virginia’s General Assembly Conflicts of Interest Act and refer findings to the Attorney General.ย Enforcement is the responsibility of the Attorney General. If he determines that any legislator has knowingly violated any provision of this chapter, he shall designate an attorney for the Commonwealth who shall have complete and independent discretion in the prosecution of the legislator. The author presumes but is not certain that any additional investigation in support of an indictment would be conducted by the state police.
    2. There was mention of bribery in connection with the raid on The Cannabis Outlet. If it involves bribery of a public servant, such allegations and evidence are investigated by local and state law enforcement agencies, including the Portsmouth Police Department and the Virginia State Police.
    3. State investigations of felony neglect or abuse of vulnerable adults.ย In Virginia, that is a Crime Involving Morals and Decency.ย Any such allegations and evidence will once again be investigated by local and state law enforcement agencies, including the Portsmouth Police Department and the Virginia State Police.ย 
    4. State and local investigations and prosecutions of criminal behavior related to activities associated with The Cannabis Outlet, not including bribery, would normally be led by the Portsmouth police. ย 
    5. State investigation of potential charges against Louise Lucas for operating that business without an active registration with the State Corporation Commission, a Class 1 misdemeanor, would be conducted by the appropriate state authorities.

    Bottom line

    This article has offered a summary of potential investigations and the evidence that might be pursued. We reiterate that we, like Sen. Lucas, are not sure which investigations will be pursued or where the evidence may lead. All parties are innocent until proven guilty.

    Like Sen. Lucas, Virginians watch and wait.

    End Note. ย James Sherlock is a more than ten-year veteran of journalistic investigations into Medicare fraud, the neglect and abuse of the elderly, and the neglect and abuse of persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the Commonwealth.ย He was selected as a member of the Governorโ€™s Nursing Home Oversight and Accountability Advisory Board based on those qualifications. The author is not an attorney and presents here only information gathered from public sources.ย 


  • Virginia Dems Turn Their Ire on U.S. Supreme Court

    A close-up of a bronze statue of Lady Justice holding a set of balanced scales, symbolizing fairness and law.

    by Kerry Dougherty

    When you attempt to do something illegal and the courts stop you, thereโ€™s only one thing to do: Attack the court and try to eliminate judicial independence.

    Thatโ€™s a very dangerous game. And itโ€™s the game Democrats are playing right now.

    Here are a few fun facts about the recent Democrat debacle in Virginia:

    Virginia Democratic leadership knew they were violating the commonwealthโ€™s constitution when they threw together their wild โ€œ10 effing 1โ€ redistricting referendum in the fall of 2025.

    They didnโ€™t care.

    How do we know that they knew? Lawyers are overwhelmingly Democrat, surely a few of them who were cooking up this referendum were familiar with the Virginia Constitution.

    They were just arrogant enough to think theyโ€™d get away with it.

    When the Virginia Supreme Court refused to roll over and green light their illegal scheme, they wailed and gnashed their teeth and appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, knowing that their pleading was frivolous and that the Supremes almost never interfere in state matters.

    On Friday a unanimous Supreme Court – including the far-left nut, Ketanji Brown Jackson – denied Virginiaโ€™s request to overturn the decision of the commonwealthโ€™s highest court.

    Now Democrats are using that absolutely predictable UNANIMOUS outcome to undermine confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Theyโ€™re lying. Continue reading.


  • The Budget Clock is Ticking and It is not Getting Any Easier

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Luke Torian (D-Prince William), Chair, House Appropriations Committee

    Due to economic development announcements and actions by Governor Spanberger, the job of the General Assembly negotiators on the biennial budget just got harder.

    The Governor has vetoed two pieces of legislation which would have produced revenue that each house had built into its budget.ย  =For the Senate, it was SB 542 (Aird-D, Petersburg), which would have established a framework for the legal sale of cannabis.ย = The proposed Senate budget includes $71.1 million for the biennium in projected revenues from the passage of that bill.ย 

    The budget proposals of both houses included projected revenue from the legalization and regulation of โ€œskill games.โ€ย  =The House was counting on the enactment of HB 1272 (Hayes-D, Chesapeake) and included $265.3 million in projected additional general revenue from this bill in its budget. Unfortunately for the House budget, the bill got caught up in a dispute between the House and the Senate and a compromise bill agreed to by conferees was narrowly defeated by the House.ย The Senate took a different approach with another bill (SB 661, Rouse-D, Virginia Beach).ย The legislation specified that revenue from licensing of skill games be treated as non-general fund revenue and be deposited into a special fund for education.ย The Senate budget bill projected that $80 million from those revenues would be distributed to local school districts in the second year of the biennium.ย The Governor vetoed this bill.

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