• VDH Has a New K-12 “Outbreaks” Dashboard

    by Carol J. Bova

    The Virginia Department of Health (VDH) published a new dashboard on October 23 that lists K-12 Outbreaks of COVID-19 by locality (county, town or city) and facility. As the VDH website explains: โ€œTransmission must occur within the school facility or at a school-sponsored event among students, faculty, staff, or visitors to be classified as a school-associated outbreak.โ€

    Schools covered are public, private, charter or parochial schools from kindergarten to 12th grade, and pre-kindergarten, if part of a K-12 school if 30 or more students are enrolled. Fewer than five cases or deaths are suppressed. Cases from exposure outside the school setting are not included unless the virus is passed on to someone at the school. (more…)


  • Senator Warner’s Odd Silence on Violence

    Photo credit: Sputnik News

    by Emilio Jaksetic

    Since the tragic death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020 at the hands of a police officer, there have been thousands of (mostly peaceful) demonstrations and hundreds of riots and civil disturbances in towns and cities across the United States. Some took place in Richmond, Virginia Beach, Portsmouth, Fredericksburg and other Virginia jurisdictions.

    Senator Mark Warner, D-VA, issued over 200 press releases between May 25, 2020 and October 22, 2020, covering a wide variety of issues and topics. The releases tell Virginians what he thinks about a wide range of legislation, government activities, issues, and events. But they leave Virginians in the dark about how he sees the many violent civil disturbances that have roiled America.

    Since the death of George Floyd, the senator has issued four press releases relating to the civil unrest: (more…)


  • Why We Love Governor Ralph

    Governor Northam loving those poll numbers. Photo credit: Richmond Times-Dispatch

    By Peter Galuszka

    Heโ€™s been through โ€œcoonman,โ€ โ€œblackface,โ€ a muddled interview about late term abortion, and aggressive and controversial steps to stop the pandemic, but Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam has sprinted through a recent statewide poll with flying colors.

    According to a newย Washington Post-Schar Schoolย poll, more than half of Virginia’s registered voters approve of the overall job performance of Gov. Ralph Northam, and an even larger majority support his handling of the novelย coronavirusย pandemic. โ€œNorthamโ€™s job approval rating of 56 percent is up from 49 percent about a year ago and from 43 percent in the wake of his blackface scandal in early 2019, โ€œThe Post said.

    โ€œHis disapproval is also up, at 38 percent from 31 percent last year, with far fewer voters now expressing no opinion. But his ratings remain net positive by 18 percentage points.โ€

    The Governor gets a drubbing on this blog, but not with people who really count, given their numbers. (more…)


  • Election Board Embraces Humpty Dumpty Logic

    by Emilio Jaksetic

    Despite receiving more than 700 public comments, most of them negative, Virginia’s State Board of Elections has adopted a regulation eliminating the statutory requirement that absentee ballots received after election day be postmarked by no later than election day. The regulation is effective October 23, 2020. Information about the Boardโ€™s action is available here and here.

    In a post I made during the run-up to the decision, I discussed how the Boardโ€™s โ€œinterpretiveโ€ regulation violates the plain language of Virginia election law, usurps the constitutional authority of the General Assembly, and sets a precedent for other Virginia officials to violate the rule of law.

    In effect, the Board has embraced Lewis Carrollโ€™s “Alice in Wonderland” as a guide to statutory construction and regulatory practice. (more…)


  • A Reasonable Approach to Sea-Level Rise

    by James A. Bacon

    Virginia’s environmentalists are smarter and more forward-thinking than California’s environmentalists. That’s a low bar, admittedly, but it’s a not-inconsiderable consolation now that environmental lobbyists and their friends in the Democratic Party run the commonwealth.

    In California, leaders of the environmental/political establishment fervently believe that human-caused climate change is increasing the incidence and severity of heat waves and droughts. But rather than follow through on the logical implications of such convictions, California persisted with forest-management practices and growth-management strategies that turned arid forests into tinderboxes while steering housing development into vulnerable areas. The result has been a series of massively destructive forest conflagrations. Bottom line: California’s environmental and political leaders are idiots.

    Here in Virginia, leaders of the environmental/political establishment fervently believe that human-caused climate change is accelerating the rate of sea-level rise and flooding along Virginia’s coast. The difference is that they are following through the logical implications of this belief and giving serious thought to how to make coastal areas more resilient. Thus, while I could nitpick with the breathless conviction that the science is settled, I find the newly issued “Virginia Coastal Resilience Master Planning Framework” issued by the Northam administration to be a reasonable and useful document. (more…)


  • Racism Case Settled

    The Amet family and Cape Henry Collegiate have settled their differences arising from an incident in which school officials suspended 16-year-old Connor Amet after accusing him of expressing white supremacist statements in class. The school and family released the following statement.

    Cape Henry Collegiate and the Amet Family have met regarding a recent issue that resulted from a classroom discussion. It became the subject of a letter from the Ametsโ€™ attorney that subsequently appeared on the Baconโ€™s Rebellion blog. Without commenting on the letterโ€™s content or the incident that precipitated it, the School and the Amet Family are both satisfied after our meeting. Cape Henry seeks to foster an inclusive environment on our Virginia ย Beach campus where we focus on individual students and their success, both in the classroom and in life.

    The letter, republished here, described from Connor’s perspective how teachers and administrators had incorrectly imputed racist sentiments to his words in a classroom discussion about immigration, berated him repeatedly, and suspended him.

    — JAB


  • Virginia’s Driving-in-the-Dark Bill Is Dead

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Finally.

    A bill so boneheaded that even Gov. Ralph Northam couldnโ€™t sign it.

    Iโ€™m talking about HB 5058, which contained a driving-in-the-dark measure that would have prevented police from pulling over motorists tooling about at night without headlights, tail lights or brake lights.

    You know, those โ€œadd onsโ€ for cars that no one really needs.

    This bill was intended to get rid of bogus reasons that law enforcement use to pull over drivers: Doodads hanging from a rear-view mirror, for instance. Outdated inspection stickers. Or vehicles that reek of marijuana.

    The bill was styled โ€œMarijuana and certain traffic offenses; issuing citations, etc.โ€ and I suspect Democrats in Richmond became giddy at the mere mention of dope and immediately began pumping their little fists in the air. (more…)


  • Are Microschools a Macro Trend?

    by Andy Rotherham

    Around the country a string of public schools with test-based admissions have been under pressure to go to different admission schemes in an effort to increase student diversity โ€“ for instance lottery-based or enrollment slots allocated by feeder school. (At one level itโ€™s a useful reminder that contra the rhetoric, many public schools are not open-admissions for all students. The system is more textured than the rhetoric about it.)

    The debate in New York City over the cityโ€™s selective high schools was pretty high-profile. More recently, in Fairfax County the nationally known Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, or โ€œTJโ€ to locals, just changed its admission schemeย after a contentious debate. San Franciscoโ€™s Lowell is moving that direction.ย Definitelyย a trend.

    Itโ€™s not hard to see why itโ€™s happening. The slow, difficult work of ensuring equitable access to resources, teachers, curriculum, and the other ingredients of high quality and inclusive schooling is a politically contentious slog that is fought at every step by a variety of people for a variety of reasons โ€“ and not just the people you might think. Meanwhile, the very structure of the system is often not set up to support equity. (more…)


  • Hey, What Happened to All the School Shootings?

    by James A. Bacon

    Anyone notice how we don’t hear about school shootings anymore? Ever since the nation became fixated on the COVID-19 epidemic and the Black Lives Matter movement, school shootings have dropped out of the headlines.

    According to an ongoing list compiled byย Wikipedia, there have been eight school shootings (four in Texas, two in California, and one each in Florida and Illinois) so far this year. Six occurred before Feb. 4. Since then, only two school or college shootings been reported. In 2019, there had been 40 shootings by this time of year. What’s going on?

    (more…)


  • The Problem with Higher Education in America

    For your listening pleasure…Yours truly chats with Michael Scheuer and Col. Mike on the “Two Mikes” podcast about the culture wars at the University of Virginia and higher-ed generally. — JAB


  • Private Schools No Haven from the Thought Police

    If you thought sending your child to private school offered any protection against the spreading and increasingly totalitarian virus of Critical Race Theory, consider a recent incident at Cape Henry Collegiate School in Virginia Beach. I publish here an open letter, written by attorney Timothy Anderson, on behalf of student Connor Amet, to school officials. The letter should be read with caution: It represents Connor’s view, not those of school officials. But if the incidents described are remotely representative of actual events, they should terrify every Virginian who values independent thinking and free expression. — JAB

    Christopher Garran, headmaster of Cape Henry Collegiate School

    On October 7, 2020, Connor Amet (“Connor”) was a student at Cape Henry Collegiate School (“Cape Henry”) and was in Mr. [William] Fluharty’s club for global scholars. On that day, Mr. Fluharty commenced a discussion on immigration to the group via Zoom. During that conversation, when there was a discussion about President Trump on immigration and whether immigration is bad/good, Connor weighed in that immigration could have detrimental effects on society. Connor’s opinion was based on his understanding of conflicts that have historically risen in societies that have multicultural immigration policies. (more…)


  • Parole Board Sets Free Another Murderer

    Tonya Chapman, former Portsmouth police chief, now chairman of the Virginia Parole Board. Photo credit: Virginian-Pilot

    Letter from Sen. Bill DeSteph, R-Virginia Beach, sent yesterday to Governor Ralph Northam.

    Dear Governor Northam,

    In August 2019, the Parole Board denied Harry J. Williams, DOC # 1008730, parole. These are the reasons they gave Mr. Williams:

    1. His history of substance abuse.
    2. The serious nature and circumstances of his offense(s).
    3. His prior failure(s) and/or convictions while under community supervision indicated that he was unlikely to comply with conditions of release.

    On June 22nd, just ten months later, the Parole Board miraculously concluded these reasons no longer existed, and decided Mr. Williams should be released from prison. (more…)


  • Warner and Kaine Wrong about D.C. Statehood

    by Emilio Jaksetic

    On June 26, 2020, the House of Representatives passed the Washington D.C. Admission Act (H.R. 51), which would admit the District of Columbia (D.C.) as the 51st State. The House vote was essentially along party lines, with all Democrats (except one) voting yes, and all Republicans (and one Independent) voting no.

    Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine support that legislation. (See July 21, 2020 Warner Press Release, โ€œSenate Democrats Hold Hearing on D.C. Statehood.โ€) They are wrong to support that legislation because it is barred by the unique status D.C. has under the U.S. Constitution and because Congress has no authority to amend or override the Constitution by statute.

    Under Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 of the Constitution, Congress has exclusive authority over D.C. Nothing in that clause authorizes Congress to change the status of D.C. by legislation. (more…)


  • Your Most Important School Board Vote Ever

    Dungeness School House Sequim Washington

    by James C. Sherlock

    It is no secret that many voters in the past have gone to the polls without any clear idea of who they will vote for in the school board contests.

    This year, because of the unprecedented twin black swan events of COVID disruptions and the adoption of critical race theory policies and attacks on Asian students at the state level, the local school board contests are more important than ever.

    Each school board candidate is on record somewhere, often in the local newspaper if you have one, as to their positions on key issues. I will suggest what to look for and what to ask if the answer is not apparent.

    It starts with teacher retention and recruitment. We donโ€™t pay them enough and ask them to do too much. (more…)


  • Critical Race Theory Permeates New Student Survey in Fairfax Public Schools

    โ€˜I donโ€™t need indoctrination, I need a good solid education in math, science, non-revisionist social studies, & English. Is that too much to ask?โ€™

    by Asra Q. Nomani

    FAIRFAX COUNTY, Va. โ€“ On Oct. 19, as students at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology opened their laptops to check in for another difficult week of online learning, Principal Ann Bonitatibus had another priority waiting for them: a questionnaire, entitled, โ€œTJHSST Equity Reflection Student Survey.โ€

    Theย 12-question survey, uploaded hereย and publicly disclosed in this column for the first time, asked students to โ€œthink about your recent experience at TJ as a wholeโ€ and provide answers to โ€œhelp supportโ€ an โ€œinclusive and equitable experience at TJ.โ€ The survey asked if teacher โ€œexpectationsโ€ for students from โ€œdiverse groups,โ€ defined in a parenthetical phrase by โ€œ(race, ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status),โ€ are โ€œequitableโ€ at the school, โ€œboth for achievement and behavior.โ€ While optionalโ€”a sign of a statistically unsound surveyโ€”many students felt obliged to take the survey, and, worse, school officials stated it wouldnโ€™t be anonymous. (more…)