What might a 10-to-1 Virginia congressional map look like? Chaz Nuttycomb, president of State Navigate, gives it a shot:

So much for congressional districts representing natural communities of interest.
What might a 10-to-1 Virginia congressional map look like? Chaz Nuttycomb, president of State Navigate, gives it a shot:

So much for congressional districts representing natural communities of interest.

VRE and Norfolk โTideโ are big wastes of tax dollars.
by Ken Reid
โThe Tide,โ the cute name given to the 7.4 mile-Norfolk light rail now entering its 15th year of service, was dubbed in an August expose the โWorst LRT in America.โ
According to Hampton Roads Transit’s 2026 budget, the annual cost of operating the Tide is $14 million and “local funding” (which means funds from HRT and City of Norfolk taxpayers) totals is $8.2 million while $4.847 million comes from federal and state sources. Only $944,567 are from fares.
This means the โfarebox recoveryโ (to use transit parlance) is only 7 percent!!! Many of the Hampton Roads Transit buses have but 3 to 12 percent farebox recovery, according to reports, but operating costs for buses are about 50 percent less than the rail.
Monthly Tide ridership is high in the summer โ about 3,000 a day — likely because Norfolk Tides minor league games get a number of passengers, but it was only about 2,200 a day in November 2025.
Assuming 2,200 riders per day, Norfolk and state taxpayers are paying $6,363 a year per passenger ($10.6 million divided by 2,000, 365 days a year) — meaning, it would be cheaper to buy each passenger a used car โ or put the money into police, schools or other needy services.
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by Victoria Manning
A Virginia school district has spent precious educational funding on a controversial outside mental health counseling program for studentsโwithout parental knowledge or consent. One of the largest districts in the Commonwealthย recently announcedย a $255,000 contract with Uwill Mental Health to provide online counseling to 35,000 students in grades 6-12. Uwillโs ideology is in clear opposition to the tenets of many faith groups, likely unknown by parents.
Telehealth provider “UWill”
Virginia Beach City Public Schools (VBCPS) spends over a half million dollars on outside mental health counseling for students โ over and above more than 100 full-time school counselors employed by the division.
Uwill, the contractor used by VBCPS, brags that 25 percent of their counselors identify as LGBTQIA+ and some of their top therapists specialize in sexual identity counseling. Yet they donโt offer support based on a studentโs religious beliefs, a central tenet of mental health treatment for many Christians and other faith traditions.
(more…)by Derrick A. Max
Governor Glenn Youngkinโs final State of the Commonwealth address last night offered more than a farewell. It served as an empirical rebuttal to the claim that conservative, pro-growth governance, like those supported by the Thomas Jefferson Institute, cannot deliver tangible results. By every meaningful metric — jobs, investment, education outcomes, revenue growth, and regulatory efficiency โ we agree with Governor Youngkin that Virginia today stands much stronger than it did four years ago.ย
Business Development and Job Creationย
Youngkinโs speech underscoredย what isย probably hisย administrationโsย defining achievement: restoring Virginiaโs reputation as a place where businesses can invest, expand, and hire. Since declaring Virginia โOpen for Businessโ on Day One, the Commonwealth has:ย
These areย real,ย high payingย positions in manufacturing, life sciences,ย andย advanced technologyย —ย all acrossย the Commonwealth.ย
Governorย Youngkinย warned the incoming administration and theย newย General Assembly that this growth requires policy certainty,ย right-to-workย protections,ย lowerย taxesย and a government that competes rather than obstructs. Hisย passionateย warning against altering Virginiaโs right-to-work law was notย ideological,ย it was empirical, rooted inย observedย capital flight from high-tax, high-regulation states.ย
by Steve Haner
Proposed legislation to require Virginiaโs two main electric utilities to load up on battery storage in the next 20 years has now been introduced, and the target battery amounts for Dominion Energy Virginia grew even larger than in the version of the bill previewed by a study commission in December. It is way larger and more expensive than the bill vetoed by Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) last year.ย
For Dominion and Appalachian Power Company combined, doing a bit of simple math, the bill is calling for more than 135 gigawatt hours of battery storage. That is probably enough stored electricity to meet their current customer demand three or four times over (five times on a slow day). At the estimated price per gigawatt hour used in this previous post, the capital cost (less profit and operating expenses) would surpass $90 billion.
If they existed today, they would hold enough electricity to cover the entire 13-state PJM regional transmission organization on all but a few days. These folks want to back up the entire PJM system with batteries paid for by Virginia ratepayers. (It is a bit more complicated than that, but this does indicate the scale of power involved. Their first hour of combined discharge would be 21 GW, still a stunning amount of electricity.)
Incoming Governor Abigail Spanberger (D) has since listed this $90 billion battery legislation as one part of her โenergy affordabilityโ agenda, so a veto this time seems unlikely. It is also fair to assume Spanberger or at least some of her advisors saw this new draft before it appeared as a bill in the past 24 hours. This new version is House Bill 895, from Delegate Richard Sullivan, D-Fairfax, and a Senate companion bill is expected.
Most of the capital cost and years of profit for the utilities would show up on peopleโs bills long after Spanberger leaves office in four years.ย ย ย

by Hans Bader
A progressive Virginia legislator apparently thinks the parole board isnโt releasing enough inmates. So he has introduced a bill, HB318, that would let progressive legislators, rather than the governor, pick many of the parole boardโs members. His bill would also make it much easier to parole inmates serving life sentences โ which could result in the release of many killers โ and make it hard not to parole inmates who committed crimes as juveniles, if their continuing dangerousness is due to โthe nature of the offenseโ they committed or other factors beyond their โdemonstrated ability to control.โ
Right now, the Virginia Parole Board has five members, all picked by the governor and confirmed by the General Assembly. HB318, sponsored by Delegate Patrick Hope, D-Arlington, would expand the parole board to 10 members, and let individual legislators pick five of them. โThree ofโ those five would โbe appointed by the Speaker of the House of Delegates,โ and โtwo ofโ them would โbe appointed by the Chair of the Senate Committee on Rules.โ (The Speaker of the House is Don Scott, who in 2020 proposed a failed bill that would have required the release of many inmates based on their age, leaving the parole board with no discretion to block their release even if they were still dangerous).
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by Kerry Dougherty
Virginiaโs General Assembly convenes tomorrow in Richmond. But a handful of pre-filed bills give us a taste of whatโs to come when Democrats come roaring back into power.
Remember when Virginia Democrats promised to make Virginia more “affordable?โ
Yeah, about that.
Not sure how authorizing localities to impose an additional sales tax will make life more affordable.
Ask a Democrat. Continue reading.

by Todd Truitt
In December 2025, the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) issued new school report cards for the 2024-25 school year under the new school accountability system.
The school report cards provide an overview of schools’ performance under the new system, as well as summarize such results into 1 of 4 summative ratings: Distinguished; On Track; Off Track; or Needs Intensive Support.
The new system looks at various factors largely prescribed by federal law, such as: academic proficiency and growth for elementary and middle schools; academic proficiency for high schools; chronic absenteeism for all schools; career and college readiness for high schools; and graduation rates for high schools. More information on the scoring system for such ratings are available on the VDOEโs website here.
As stated in the December 2025 (generally positive) report of Virginiaโs Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) on the new school accountability system: โthe [new system] is an improvement over the prior systemโฆand has design elements that more precisely and comprehensively measure performance than the prior system.โ JLARC said no major revisions to the new system are needed, while suggesting various “refinements”. (Matt Hurt of the Comprehensive Instructional Program wrote about some tweaks he would like to see.)
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Newly appointed UVA President Scott Beardsley (appearing at the 1:06 point in the video) looks old, tired, and drained in his testimony before the General Assembly. Based on this performance, the odds of him standing up to lawmakers’ demands appear to be roughly zero. Interesting question: Will legislators decide to keep him, thinking that he can be badgered and bullied into compliance, or will they agree only to a board that will select someone more to their ideological liking? — JAB
Amusing tongue-in-cheek conversation between John Reid and former Governor/Senator George Allen.
by Matt Hurt

In December JLARC released a report on the School Performance and Support Framework (SPSF), Virginiaโs new accountability system.ย The report states that the new system is better than the old Accreditation system, but improvements are needed.ย From the perspective of an educator who has spent the last twenty years focusing on student outcomes and accountability, I largely agree with the report.ย The following are some facets of the system that should be reviewed and hopefully improved.
Complexity
I used to believe that the old Accreditation system (our previous accountability system) was extremely convoluted. However, compared to the SPSF, I would now consider the old Accreditation system the model of simplicity.
Under the old Accreditation system, there were only a few things that were calculated differently among schools by level (elementary, middle, or high school), namely graduation rates, college and career readiness, and growth.ย Given that there was no summative score for each school, there was more inherent simplicity.ย There were thresholds for each of those categories to identify schools for overall support, and there were predetermined thresholds for subgroup performance for federal accountability purposes that everyone knew prior to beginning the school year.
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I’m pleased to announce that Todd Truitt will join the Bacon’s Rebellion team as a regular contributor. His editorial concentration will be K-12 education policy in the commonwealth.
Todd is a parent of two Arlington Public Schools (APS) students in Arlington County and an education advocate during his free time. He has been active on K-12 education policy issues as a volunteer at the local level for 5 years and at the state level for two years. His main areas of focus in education policy are on accountability, assessment, instruction (especially math) and school finance.
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by Kerry Dougherty
This is a cautionary tale. So when the ghoulishness of Canada spreads to Virginia you canโt say you werenโt warned.
Hereโs how it starts:
In 2016 Canada passed the so-called MAID law, legalizing medical assistance in dying.
It was presented as a compassionate measure. One that would allow suffering patients, whose deaths were imminent, to get help from their doctors in ending their lives.
However, it wasnโt long before so-called medical doctors were actively killing patients who were not near death but whose conditions were uncomfortable. A decade later, theyโre starting to execute the mentally ill. (Killing the mentally ill was approved in Canada last year but implementation was supposedly delayed until March 2026. The case cited below shows itโs already in effect.)
Between 2016 and 2023 60,000 Canadians were killed by these executioners with medical degrees. In 2023 alone 15,000 Canadians were murdered by medical providers.
MAID now accounts for 4.7% of all deaths in Canada. Continue reading.
by Steve Haner
A key, but poorly understood, provision of the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) is a requirement that Virginiaโs two largest electric utilities must either generate or purchase a growing number of renewable energy certificates (RECs). Eventually their RECs must equal 100% of their non-nuclear generation. What are RECs and why do they matter to you? ย
Put simply, aย RECย is an electronic record that provesย aย generatorย producedย one megawatt hour ofย electricity fromย an approved โrenewableโ source, usuallyย solar orย wind.ย It can be a utility, an independent energy generator, a business with solar on its roof or even a shared community solar systemย thatย isย granted a REC.ย A smallย portionย of RECs are awarded for hydro or geothermal generation.ย ย ย
The certificate is issued and tracked by a third party, and โ here is the point โ can be sold. Recording and tracking RECs is one of the jobs done by the PJM Interconnection regional grid operator. There are several marketplaces compiling and transferring them.ย ย ย
The buyer then โretiresโ the REC, in effect cashing in the environmental virtue of that โgreenโ energy. It can be retired only once. The entity that earns the REC can also be the one to retire it, but usually they are traded.ย ย ย
Oneย website that reports on the REC industry put the total world REC market at more than $20 billion in 2024, predicting it will exceed $40 billion by 2030. The annual compound growth rate is higher than 10%. The same website was quite open about what is going on:ย ย ย
โBy buying RECs, companies can effectively offset their carbon emissions and achieve 100% renewable energy consumption without significant investment in renewable energy infrastructure.โย ย ย