• More Graduates, Less Learning

    by John Butcher

    The estimableย Jim Baconย notices the increased graduation rates this year andย wonders how much of the increase reflects the waivers issued by the Superintendent. We have some of the underlying data.

    On May 26, the Governor issuedย Executive Order 51ย that provides, in part:

    Authorization for the heads of executive branch agencies, on behalf of their regulatory boards as appropriate, and with the concurrence of their Cabinet Secretary, to waive any state requirement or regulation. . . .ย  All waivers issued by agencies shall be posted on their websites.

    The following graduation requirements are waived based on authority granted to the Superintendent of Public Instruction per Executive Order Fifty-One (2020): (more…)


  • All Leader Saslaw Cares About: Is Dominion OK?

    Senate Majority Leader Richard “Is Dominion okay with this?” Saslaw

    By Steve Haner

    Every now and then you can actually see the strings, see the puppet master that is Dominion Energy Virginia calling the shots at the Virginia General Assembly. Senate Majority Leader Richard Saslaw, D-Fairfax, provided a glimpse of its power during a floor debate Thursday.

    Republican senators were in revolt. Two days after the House of Delegates had approved a plan to force all utility ratepayers to cover the unpaid bills and late fees for those who have fallen behind, the same language amendment was before the Senate for adoption.

    โ€œOnce again, we have cast the ratepayers aside here in Virginia,โ€ Senator Richard Stuart told his colleagues assembled in their spread formation at the Science Museum of Virginia. The average ratepayer is struggling to pay their own bill in this recession and did not sign up to pay the bills for those others who for whatever reason do not. โ€œThis is immoral. This is not right,โ€ Stuart concluded. (more…)


  • The Jaw Dropping Political Contributions of UVa’s Board of Visitors

    By DJ Rippert

    Waiting for Godot. A recent article on this blog titled, โ€œUVa Board Backs Ryan on Lawn Signage Issue,โ€ seemed to suggest that The University of Virginiaโ€™s Board of Visitors (BoV) was a critical link in UVaโ€™s governance structure. My interpretation of the article was that the author (Jim Bacon) believed the BoV might rise up with indignant fury and put UVa President James Ryan in his place by insisting that a profane sign on university property be taken down. My own thinking was that such a belief was naive. Iโ€™ve always viewed UVaโ€™s BoV as a club of well meaning rich people who were appointed to that board in appreciation for the large political donations they make rather than a serious oversight organization.

    That view was reinforced in 2012 when the BoV tried to act like an honest to goodness board by ousting UVaโ€™s underperforming president โ€“ Teresa Sullivan. Virginiaโ€™s political elite would have none of it. Republican Governor Bob McDonnell threatened to fire the entire board for having the temerity to put down their martini glasses and take action. Since that attempt at actual governance the BoV seems to have returned to its roots as an organization willing to rubber stamp whatever UVaโ€™s leadership decides to do. The idea that the BoV might question Ryanโ€™s acceptance of a sign on a university-owned dorm room door saying โ€œF*** UVaโ€ seemed far fetched to me. However, the articleโ€™s author โ€“ Jim Bacon โ€“ is wise in the ways of all things Virginia. Maybe he was right and the Board of Visitors was appointed based on their willingness to actively manage UVa rather than their political donations.

    As a starting point, I decided to research the political donations of the board members. I was stunned by what I found. I defined the board by including the seventeen independent board members and the faculty representative. I did not include the student representative in the donation calculations. The 18 members of the University of Virginiaโ€™s Board of Visitors, their employers and their spouses have donated $35,252,122 to Virginia politicians since 1997 (when records first started being tracked).ย  The individual board members and their spouses (to the extent I could determine their spouses) have donated $4,859,820 to the stateโ€™s political class since 1997. Their employers have donated $30,392,302 over the same period. These totals count donations to Republicans, Democrats and political organizations classified as “other” by VPAP. (more…)


  • Yes, We Know Something Is Wrong

    Apologies again to readers. Our blog hosting service has been misbehaving since yesterday. For three hours yesterday, the blog was down. It came back up, but for some unfathomable reason, visitors cannot clickthrough to finish reading articles or see comments. I have no idea what is wrong. There may be a connection to the unprecedented volume of traffic we’ve experienced in the past few days (a good thing), but we don’t know that to be a fact. Our host provider is looking into it.

    Thanks for your patience. Please check back later and finish reading the posts.

    Update: We’re still working on some things on the administrative side, but looks like the user experience has been restored. Let us know if you experience any problems.

    — JAB


  • Next to Be Canceled: the Lewis and Clark Expedition

    by James A. Bacon

    The culture wars rage unabated in Charlottesville, although the latest excess emanates from City Council, not the University of Virginia. Council plans to seek proposals to remove the West Main Street statue commemorating the Lewis and Clark expedition, which was launched from Charlottesville.

    The last I recall from my racist, white-privilege history books, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark led a scientific and exploratory expedition. They didn’t conquer any territory, they didn’t enslave anybody. Indeed, they managed to cross the North American continent with a minimum of conflict with the indigenous peoples.

    The problem isn’t with the expedition, per se, as with the rendering of Sacagawea, the Shoshone woman who befriended the explorers and acted as their scout. She is depicted as crouching behind Lewis and Clark in a posture commonly interpreted as tracking. Well, that’s clear enough to any normal person, who grew up thinking of Sacagawea as a heroine who saved the expedition. But not to those who view the world through the prism of racism and oppression. (more…)


  • Jury Duty? Pick Me!

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Maybe itโ€™s because I once covered courts for The Virginian-Pilot and always wondered what went on behind those closed jury doors. Perhaps itโ€™s because one of my favorite movies is the 1957 classic, โ€œTwelve Angry Men.โ€ย I suppose it could be because I read too many John Grisham novels.

    Whatever the reason, Iโ€™ve always wanted to serve on a jury.

    I had a shot last year when I was summoned to federal court. I couldnโ€™t wait to hear evidence in a big drug, wire fraud or racketeering case in the Walter E. Hoffman U.S. Courthouse in Norfolk, within spitting distance of the old Virginian-Pilot building where I worked for 33 years.

    I phoned the courthouse number at the appointed times week after week and was never needed.

    The same thing happened a few years ago in Virginia Beach.

    Apparently Norfolk residents are not nearly so eager to serve. One week into the resumption of trials in Norfolk Circuit Court and almost no one is showing up for jury duty. According to The Virginian-Pilot, 90% of those summoned for duty this week were no-shows. (more…)


  • Time to Be Honest about COVID-19

    By Peter Galuszka

    Two remarkable stories dominate headlines this morning โ€“ Donald Trump has COVID-19 and some 5,000 Virginia college students also have the virus.

    The infection of Trump throws an already chaotic presidential race into further confusion. State colleges are scrambling to find what to do about viral infections since the numbers have exploded from about 500 a month ago to 5,000 today.

    This is no time to say, โ€œI told you so,โ€ but many on this blog really need to ask themselves about their efforts to minimize the worst health crisis the nation has faced. Already 205,000 Americans have died of the coronavirus, but somehow that has not deterred the naysayers.

    We have seen a steady and often snarky campaign to reopen Virginia Beach, send kids back to school too soon, reopen business and blame Gov. Ralph Northam for trying to take needed precautions that just about every other state governor has done. (more…)


  • It Just Got Worse for the Unemployed

    By Dick Hall-Sizemore

    For those on this blog (including me) who have speculated as to why unemployed Virginians, who were getting up to $300 per week in unemployment benefits, could be behind on their rent, mortgage, and utility bills, here is one answer: They have not been getting that money since August 1.

    The Virginian Pilot (and other media outlets) reports that the Virginia Employment Commission is still having trouble distributing the funds made available by President Trumpโ€™s decision to use FEMA balances after the Congressional authorization expired. At first, VEC said that there was sufficient funding for only three weeks, which would be paid retroactively in early September. Then it was six weeksโ€™ worth of funding, but payment would be delayed until September 30. Now, the agency says there has been a programming problem and the target date is October 15, although there is some hope that the payments will go out sooner than that. (more…)


  • Henrico was Right to Defund Special Prosecutor of Police

    Misty Whitehead

    by James A. Bacon

    Henrico County Manager John Vithoulkas has yanked supplementary funding for a police-misconduct prosecutor after reading the social media posts of the woman hired for the job, Misty Whitehead, a defense attorney. In an era in which police actions have come under heightened scrutiny, the new position would have been the first of its kind in the state.

    Vithoulkas told The Virginia Mercury that Whitehead’s posts showed a clear indication of anti-police bias. โ€œWhen I saw what I saw I immediately thought, you know, this is not what [Commonwealth Attorney] Shannon Taylor and I discussed. A county manager canโ€™t tell a commonwealthโ€™s attorney who[m] to hire, but he can recommend whether or not local funds are included to supplement that salary. And in this case, I absolutely will not do it under any circumstances.โ€

    Funds from the county were necessary to augment the pay of $60,000 a year available in the commonwealth’s attorneys’ budget to the $121,000 that the position offered.

    Vithoulkas contended that having an aggressive prosecutor for the position would dampen the county’s ability to recruit and retain officers, reports the Mercury. As a Henrico County resident, I’m with Vithoulkas on this one. (more…)


  • The High School Graduation Rate Improved This Year? Really?

    Despite the closure of schools due to COVID-19 in March, 92.3% of Virginia students entering the ninth grade during the 2016-18 school year earned a diploma and graduated within four years in 2020, Superintendent of Public Instruction James Lane announced yesterday.

    That actually represents an improvement from 91.5% for the 2019 cohort.

    โ€œMy first priority after schools closed was to make sure that every student in the class of 2020 who was on track to earn a diploma was able to graduate on time,โ€ Lane said. โ€œIn addition to congratulating our 2020 graduates, I want to thank all of the educators and administrators who made full use of the flexibility provided under the emergency waivers I issued in the spring to ensure that students were not held back because being unable to take a Standards of Learning test or complete a required course.โ€

    Question:ย Given the fact that the last two months of school this spring were disrupted, did 92.3% of students deserve to graduate, or are Virginia schools unleashing thousands of graduates upon the world who, in the pre-COVID world, would have failed to meet graduation standards?

    — JAB


  • Common Sense: Open the Windows

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Somewhere, my mother is smiling.

    The woman who made us sleep at night — summer and winter — with our windowsย open to fight germs has been vindicated by no less an expert in public health than German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

    OK, Merkel isnโ€™t a public health expert, but politicians everywhere seem to think they are, and at least the German leaderโ€™s recommendations make sense. (Thatโ€™s more than we can say about officials in Alexandria, who began mandating outdoor masks today. Idiotic.)

    The Guardian reports that as the weather turns colder and folks are driven indoors, the spread of COVID-19 is beginning to accelerate in Germany. Studies show that 90% of cases spread inside. To combat this, Merkel is asking folks toย โ€œLรผften,โ€ the age-old German custom of opening windows and letting in fresh air.

    But weโ€™re way ahead of her.

    Back in March, German nativeย Krys Stefanskyย wrote a piece urging everyone to do just that.

    (more…)


  • W&L Alumni Revolt Gains Momentum

    by James A. Bacon

    The Washington & Lee alumni outcry against an initiative to remove Lee’s name from the university is morphing into a powerful constituency demanding influence in university decision-making. Under the name of The Generals Redoubt, alumni protesters have formed a nonprofit, raised $456,000 in funds, and articulated a coherent alternative vision for the institution.

    “The Generals Redoubt is dedicated to the preservation of the history, values, and traditions of Washington and Lee University,” states the website.

    While notย directlyย addressing the administration’s embrace of social justice issues, the Generals Redoubt calls for a student body with “a variety of economic backgrounds and life experiences” as well as “greater political and ideological diversity” in hiring faculty and administrators. The group also seeks “freedom of expression” on campus and the restoration of public prayer (participation optional) at ceremonial functions.

    (more…)


  • UVa Board Backs Ryan on Lawn Signage Issue

    Photo credit: Washington Post

    by James A. Bacon

    The University of Virginia Board of Visitors has issued a statement backing President Jim Ryan for his handling of offensive signs posted on the doors of rooms on the Lawn.

    “Simply put, there are no exceptions to the protections afforded by the First Amendment against state attempts to regulate political speech,” says the letter signed by Rector James B. Murray Jr. “We are required to comply with the law, and the law is very clear.”

    However, an argument advanced by alumnus Aubrey M. Daniel III in a widely disseminated letter — that the Lawn’s status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site allows for regulation of expression — might be constitutionally defensible, says the statement, “if it were narrowly tailored to protecting the environment, if it applied neutrally to all opinions and points of view, and if it preexisted any particular controversy.” (more…)


  • Bacon Bits: Special Ethnic/Racial/Sexual Exploitation Issue

    VCU construction workers allege exploitation. From VPM News: Speaking anonymously, undocumented workers at Virginia Commonwealth University construction sites say they are being exploited by unidentified middle men who misclassify them as contractors instead of employees, deprive them of benefits, and don’t pay them for overtime. VCU said it does not hire undocumented workers (illegal aliens) and cannot account for the practices of the sub-contractors that its general contractors hire. The article leaves a lot of questions unanswered, primarily, which construction companies are engaging in these allegedly illegal practices? Who are the “middle men” the article refers to? Name names. Do Richmond’s larger, more reputable firms engage subs who hire and cheat undocumented workers? Alternatively, are the offending firms owned by Hispanics? If so, does the prevalence of this practice reflect VCU requirements for giving work to minority contractors? At the very least, VPM ought to be asking these questions.

    A COVID bonus. There’s a silver lining to every dark cloud. In the case of the COVID 19 epidemic, the unheralded benefit is universities’ crackdown on big parties. Restrictions on the number of people who can gather in one place puts a huge crimp in fraternity life at James Madison University, which is rated No. 33 for top party schools in America, reports the Daily News-Record. Let’s speculate about the downstream consequences… Tighter COVID-19 restrictions means fewer drunken parties… which means less drunken party sex… which means less “regret” sex. One can predict that fewer cases of regret sex will translate into fewer accusations of rape and sexual assault. We are witnessing a fascinating social scientific experiment. I hope someone is tracking the numbers.

    Meanwhile, in the racial healing department…. The Virginia Department of Education offers its monthly #EdEquityVa webinar series to provide educators with “professional learning opportunities” to advance “education equity.” This month’s offerings for Racial Equity & Anti-Racism include: (more…)


  • College Students See Free Speech on Campus as a Problem

    by James C. Sherlock Updated Sept 30 3:15 PM

    The results of a new, rigorously analyzed and very large-scale scientific survey of nearly 20,000 studentsโ€™ perspectives of free speech at 55 different universities in the U.S. are beyond troubling.

    We will look at the overall results and specific results for the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech.

    This was the largest survey ย of college students ever conducted about free speech on their campuses.

    (more…)