• Maybe Ryan Should Have Toughed it Out

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    The Trump administration has found that George Mason University (GMU) has violated federal law with its DEI policies.ย A spokesman for the Dept. of Education said, GMU “waged a university-wide campaign to implement unlawful DEI policies that intentionally discriminate on the basis of race.”

    The penalty?ย The president of the university, Gregory Washington, must publicly apologize for his actions and pledge to follow the law. In addition, the Richmond Times Dispatch reports, โ€œthe school must review its policies and documents, such as instructions for hiring panels and scoring rubrics for resumes, to ensure they comply with Title VI. And Mason must conduct an annual training for administrators who make hires and promotions.โ€

    Wow!ย Thatโ€™s it for such serious offenses?ย All he has to do is apologize and promise not to do it again?ย At UVa., the president had to resign.ย At Harvard, Columbia, and Brown, fines are in the tens and hundreds of millions of dollars.ย The administration is seeking a $1 billion settlement against UCLA.ย  Trump is obviously going after schools with deep pockets and lots of federal research grants.ย There is not that kind of leverage against a large, public university that has a relatively small research budget. In addition, thumping GMU does not generate the national headlines.

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  • There’s Drama in Small- Town Virginia School Districts, Too

    Two superintendents and a school board chair step down amid allegations of wrongdoing.

    A classroom featuring wooden desks and chairs arranged in rows, with a green chalkboard and a bookshelf in the background.

    by Victoria Manning

    Large Virginia school districts like Loudoun and Fairfax public schools arenโ€™t the only ones in trouble โ€” theyโ€™re just the ones making the headlines.

    School superintendents in Essex and Northumberland Counties were recently removed as state police conduct investigations. Plus, the Essex School Board Chair, Garlyn Bundy, stepped down amidst a police investigation and accusations of defamation.

    Essex County Schools investigation

    Reports indicate potential financial mismanagement by Essex schools. In 2022โ€“23, the reported special education program expenditure amount was different than what was reported to the state. That left the small division of Essex, a small county in eastern Virginia on the Rappahannock River, owing over $450,000, a large chunk of its $20 million budget.

    Earlier this year, accounting director Elizabeth Franklin was removed by the school board. The board also put Superintendent Dr. Harry Thomas III on administrative leave; he ultimately retired from the position. In a letter to the community, Thomas acknowledged a โ€œlitany of mistakes, miscues, and missteps along the way. . ..โ€ The Rappahannock Times further reported financial issues related to salary payments and retirement benefits currently under investigation.

    Drama seeped into an Essex school board meeting in June when Garlyn Bundy, who was scheduled to step down from her position as board chair, instead pointing fingers at others and refusing to step aside. She is accused of making defamatory statements against acting Superintendent Doranda Scott during that meeting.

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  • Barbara Jean Monaco: Still Missing After 47 Years

    by Kerry Dougherty

    This is a story I could write in my sleep. After all, Iโ€™ve penned some version of it almost every year since 1985.

    The first installment appeared in The Pilot on Sept. 1, 1985, after Pauline Monaco called the newspaper to ask us to write again about her daughter – Barbara Jean – whoโ€™d been missing for seven years.

    I just happened to answer the phone that day. I didnโ€™t know that decades later, the story would be still be a cruel mystery.

    A young woman with curly dark hair wearing a red top, looking down thoughtfully.
    Barbara Jean Monaco

    Intrigued, I found a file and a series of front-page stories about an 18-year-old from Connecticut who came to Virginia Beach for a weekโ€™s vacation in the summer of โ€™78 and never went home.

    Since then Iโ€™ve written about the case so many times Iโ€™ve almost memorized the details.

    The pretty majorette from Derby, Conn., her older sister Joanne and a friend arrived in town on Aug. 20, 1978, and checked into the old Aloha Motel on 15th Street.

    They hit the beach during the day, the clubs at night. Early on the morning of Aug. 23 โ€” a Wednesday โ€” Barbara Jean left the motel to meet a bartender at Peabodyโ€™s who was finishing his shift.

    She walked along Pacific Avenue. Yet somewhere between 15th and 21st Streets, Barbara Jean vanished.

    Her frantic sister went to the police in the morning, but the cops made her wait 48 hours to file a missing personโ€™s report.

    By then, it was already too late. Continue reading.


  • Dark Money Activists Behind Key Virginia Redistricting Lawsuit

    A lawsuit could increase Democrat influence in the stateโ€™s largest city, and thatโ€™s by design.

    A close-up of a map highlighting Norfolk and Virginia Beach in Virginia, with a red pin marking the location.

    by Hayden Ludwig

    A far-left Beltway group is behind a lawsuit to boost Democrat control of a major Virginia city by redrawing its voting maps, Restoration News has learned.

    The Campaign Legal Center (CLC), a D.C. litigation group once bankrolled with millions of dollars from infamous crypto-fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried, is representing two Virginia Beach plaintiffs in a lawsuit to change how residents elect their city council and school board officials. If successful, the lawsuit could carve out new Democrat-controlled “majority-minority” seats, or districts whose residents are mostly non-white.

    The lawsuit centers on Virginia Beach’s complex “7-3-1” voting system, which is divided into seven single-member council districtsโ€”where candidates must reside to run for local office in order to properly represent those neighborhoodsโ€”and three at-large council seats, whose eligible candidates may live anywhere in the city. Residents also elect a mayor city-wide, hence “7-3-1.”

    In practice, voters might cast their ballots for 5 councilmembers total: One member for their district plus one member per at-large seat, in addition to the mayor. This system is embedded in Virginia Beach’s city charter, which also requires the local school board follow the same systemโ€”meaning the stakes are high for controlling the future of Virginia’s largest city.

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  • Mother Of Dead Infant Pleads Guilty To Child Neglect

    A close-up photo of a newborn baby being held by an adult, both looking at the camera. The adult is wearing a face mask. The background suggests a hospital setting.

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Norfolkโ€™s Commonwealth Attorney Ramin Fatehi promised to talk to us about what appeared to be a lenient plea agreement in the case of a dead infant after the mother whoโ€™d been charged with murdering her 9-day-old daughter had her day in court.

    He kept his word.

    And Fatehiโ€™s explanation for comparatively mild sentences for both parents of the battered baby makes sense.

    Still, it doesnโ€™t sit right. It doesnโ€™t seem that justice was served. Neither parent confessed to killing the baby, neither pointed the finger at each other.

    Theyโ€™re both culpable.

    And if jurors have been given a glimpse of that tiny childโ€™s broken body, if theyโ€™d seen what must be a harrowing autopsy report, they may very well have sent both of these monsters to prison for life.

    As it is, the father, Hilary Darnell Johnson II, pleaded guilty to second degree murder and according to a plea agreement accepted by the judge, will be sentenced in October to no more than 19 years in prison. (The maximum sentence is 40 years.)

    On Tuesday, the mother of Iijayah Johnson, Zโ€™Ibreyea Parker, pleaded guilty to felony child neglect and could face up to 10 years behind bars.

    Hereโ€™s an explanation from the prosecutor: Continue reading.


  • A Trusted Source Crawls Out on a Political Limb

    By Steve Haner

    One nice thing about detailed economic prognostication is that the predictions can later be checked and compared to reality. But the grim forecast for Virginia produced recently by the Weldon-Cooper Center for Public Service will have done its political damage long before the results are tallied.

    The predictions of job losses and at best a flat state economy for 2026 were highlighted on the Richmond Times-Dispatch front page and gave Cardinal News editor Dwayne Yancey fodder to predict it will hurt Republicans in the coming election.ย The spin will intensify when Democratic campaign messaging kicks in, with a heavy dose of blame placing on President Donald Trump.

    Weldon-Cooper has long been the trusted repository of key economic and U.S. Census data. It has earned quite a bit of brand impact and that is why this report is potent political ammunition.

    Weldon-Cooper is new to the economic forecasting game. It started publishing what is planned to be a quarterly analysis in February, โ€œas a useful resource for the good of the Commonwealth.โ€ The rule on economic models is the same as on all the others out there: all models are wrong, but some models are useful.ย Many economists count themselves as good at predictions if they successfully call four of the next two recessions.

    Weldon-Cooper is not displaying any genius in predicting that federal government layoffs and the wave of new tariffs will have a disproportionate impact on Virginia.ย Virginia is home to major federal agencies, huge federal contracting operations, and a major deep channel port. ย 

    But this new August report is already proving its April report was too pessimistic.ย The April report predicted Virginia would lose 32,000 jobs overall during 2025 and the August report has already retreated and now predicts 11,700 fewer jobs this year. Too late however — the higher 32,000 figure is already highlighted in Democratic attack ads on Republicans and expect it to stay there despite Weldon-Cooperโ€™s downward revision.

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  • Will Richmond Tackle Corruption or Pretend It Doesn’t Exist?

    by Jon Baliles

    A chaotic scene inside a city hall office, with startled officials reacting to scattered papers flying around, depicting a sense of urgency and confusion.
    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    Inspector Generals are (and should be) vital cogs in any governmental or organizational machine. Many federal agencies have them, state governments use them, and local governments depend on them. They bring to light the waste, fraud, and abuse that can permeate and be hidden so well at the local level they arenโ€™t caught for years, and deprive localities of millions of dollars that could be used for needed city services.

    Take for example the ongoing case in Richmond where Reginald Thomas, a former employee, over the course of several years set up three fake businesses and used city credit cards and purchase orders. The news of that scandal at City Hall, however, broke not from the release of an Inspector General (IG) report but because of Samuel Parker at the Times-Dispatch.

    When Parker first reported the story in May, he had uncovered almost $840,000 in highly questionable expenses (like $75,000 for custom cabinets). In June, Parker kept digging and reported the amount of alleged fraud had grown to $2 million that began in 2017 and apparently went undetected for eight years. Now that it is a known story and in the media but there are still invoices to be examined and uncovered and that amount could easily pole vault past $2 million. The city cut Parkerโ€™s FOIA requests off after that, but recently agreed to again allow him to examine other invoices related to the spending โ€” but only after the Times-Dispatch sent a copy of a lawsuit they were preparing to file against the city.

    That is why the not-so-distant history of the IG office and the recent turmoil this summer is something the city simply cannot afford to continue. IG Jim Osuna was fired/resigned/relieved by City Council in May at a surprise personnel meeting with no explanation or comment. This week, the latest news is that Craig Johnson, the former Deputy IG, is no longer with the city and, once again, no one knows why (personnel decisions are usually not commented on) and unsurprisingly, no one on City Council responded for comment.

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  • Selling JMU to Itself

    Academic department puts million-dollar mark on football field

    by Joe Fitzgerald

    Aerial view of James Madison University's football field, showcasing the field's markings, including the JMU logo at center field and 'DUKES' at the end zone.
    Image credit: Helix Steel

    There either is or should be a rule that says if your organization is doing something that makes absolutely no sense to most of the people outside and many of the people inside, you should explain it better or do it differently.

    Specifically, if one of your academic departments is paying a million dollars to the athletic department to advertise on the football field, you might want to explain it as more than a partnership. But first, youโ€™d have to figure out what it is.

    Paraphrasing the Daily News-Record story, with sponsorship logos on the playing surface now allowed by the NCAA, the JMU School of Professional and Continuing Education had purchased the right to place its logo at each 25-yard line at Bridgeforth Stadium. JMU SPCE will pay JMU athletics $1,066,675 total through the 2028-29 academic year.

    Images in JMUโ€™s marketing of this deal show just the name of the SPCE painted on the field. Nothing about what the school does or what it can do for the average football fan. Just the name.

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  • Another Violent Immigrant Caught

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    On August 8, ICE officers arrested and detained another violent immigrant in the Richmond area. Arman Momand, a 19-year old rising senior at Henricoโ€™s J.R. Tucker High School, had been charged by Henrico police with reckless driving, evading police, and driving without a license following a driving incident last December. However, the Commonwealthโ€™s attorney had downgraded some of the charges and dropped others. He pled guilty to misdemeanor disorderly conduct and reckless driving charges, with no jail time ordered by the judge.

    He was arrested by ICE shortly after his court appearance and eventually transferred to a detention facility near Farmville.

    These intrepid officers did not let the fact that Momand was in the United States legally deter them from protecting Henrico citizens from this dangerous criminal.ย He has a special visa granted for his familyโ€™s help to the U.S. military in Afghanistan.

    Henrico citizens can sleep better knowing that this violent criminal has been caught and detained.


  • All Dominion’s Solar Plants Are Failing Their Energy Promises

    The average number of minutes Dominion customers lost power in 2023, compared to various peer utilities, including Appalachian Power and PEPCO. Source: SCC testimony

    by Steve Haner

    Every solar facility in Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s expanding fleet of silicone panels is failing to perform up to its initial energy promises, according to a State Corporation Commission staff analysis.ย  In many cases the shortfalls are dramatic.ย 

    The data popped up in testimony that is part of the utilityโ€™s application for a base rate increase. There are dozens of issues in that pending case, set for a public hearing September 2. One issue is whether the company has earned a bonus on its profit margin due to good performance, and the SCC staff has recommended it not get it, in part because of the poor solar performance.

    Neil Joshipura of the SCC staff wrote in his testimony:

    Based on the data provided, all of the Companyโ€™s solar facilities had average actual capacity factors that were lower than their respective design capacity factors. The absolute differences between the design and actual values ranged from 1.2 to 10.3 percentage points, with an average difference of 4.3 percentage points. Piney Creek Solar had the largest absolute difference; its design capacity factor was 22.6 percent, while its actual capacity factor for 2024, the only year with available data, was 12.3 percent. This represents a 48 percent shortfall relative to the design value.

    Capacity factor is a measure of how often a power plant produces electricity, and it is never 100% over time. When the plant is advertised as producing 100 megawatts or 500 or more, that is the nameplate value at 100%. That must then be multiplied by the capacity factor, and in the case of solar fields here in Virginia, that capacity factor is a very low number, usually below 25%.ย 

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  • Virginia Feminists Resist the Gender Borg

    by Margot Heffernan

    Itโ€™s a dangerous time to be a woman, a female, regardless of age. Iโ€™ll tell you why: โ€œTransgenderism,โ€ the grand ideology that has corrupted virtually every corner of our society is a straight up threat to everyone, but especially to women and girls.

    It is a lie, a hoax, a jacked-up scam promoted by medical societies and corporations alike, a dangerous scheme that goads the most vulnerable into believing that their troubles are caused by a misalignment between oneโ€™s sex and a mythical  โ€œgender identity.โ€

    And, no, Virginia, Loudoun County has not gotten the message. In fact, the commonwealth represents a microcosm of the problem writ large as scandal after scandal brings more real-world harm to women and girls each day in Loudoun and four other counties that define northern Virginia.

    Hysterical? Overblown? Hyperbole you say? No, no, and no again.

    When Governor Ralph Northam released the original set of โ€œModel Policies for the Treatment of Transgender Students in Public Elementary and Secondary Schoolsโ€ in 2021, red flags were raised by those concerned about womenโ€™s rights and private spaces. These policies crush the material reality of human biology by elevating the illusory concept of gender over sex.

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  • Virginia’s Unaffiliated Numbers

    And the limits of partisanship

    A cartoon character in a suit, sitting at a desk while writing and using a calculator, with dollar signs above indicating a focus on finances.

    by Gordon C. Morse

    Heโ€™s at least consistent.

    And so is the press.

    Gov. Glenn Youngkin told General Assembly members last week that Virginiaโ€™s economy is as strong as ever and concerns that federal employment reductions (thanks to the Trump administration) would drag down Virginiaโ€™s overall fiscal condition were exaggerated.

    Every news story that followed โ€“ as best I can tell โ€“ expressed skepticism and, letโ€™s face it, it ainโ€™t skepticism at all. Itโ€™s flat out political opposition. The uniformity of press opinion, as expressed in the news columns (not the opinion spaces) is stunning.

    โ€œRosy picture,โ€ reported the Virginia Mercury.

    โ€œRose-colored,โ€ said the Associated Press.

    โ€œLooks rosy,โ€ declared the Virginia-Pilot.

    โ€œMoses supposes his toeses are roses, but Moses supposes erroneously. Moses he knowses his toeses aren’t roses, as Moses supposes his toeses to be!โ€

    Those are lyrics from โ€œSinging in the Rainโ€ and at least song-writers Adolph Green and Betty Comden made roses fun.

    In point-of-fact, Youngkin and his fiscal managers have been saying this since last year, that the impact of federal job reductions would not be so severe and they have numbers to support this conclusion.

    In response, the Democrats appear to not like these numbers and the press scribes nodded in unison.

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  • Virginia Dems Woo the Felon Vote

    Close-up of prison bars with shadows and a chain lock.

    With support from top Democrats Abigail Spanberger and Jay Jones.

    by Hayden Ludwig

    A proposed amendment to Virginia’s constitution would automatically grant voting rights to felons, part of a nationwide push by the Left to curry favor withโ€”and earn votes fromโ€”ex-criminals.

    Under current Virginia law, criminals permanently lose their voting rights after a felony conviction and must have their rights restored by the governor. The amendment, introduced as a bill by House Democrats, would restore all felons’ voting rights immediately after finishing their prison sentence. To go into effect, the bill must pass both houses during two General Assembly sessions, at which point it would go before voters on the November 2026 ballot.

    Abigail Spanberger, the Democrat running for governor this year, has praised the amendment. “I’m glad to see the VA House of Delegates move forward a constitutional amendment to automatically restore voting rights to formerly incarcerated Virginians,” she tweeted in January, later calling it “real progress.”

    Jay Jones, the ex-delegate running for Attorney General, introduced a similar bill to restore felon voting rights in 2021 (HJ 546) and later voted for a similar bill incorporating his own legislation. In 2023, Jones also represented the left-wing NAACP in arguing for a rights restoration pipeline under the Youngkin administration.

    Other Democrats in competitive House districts voted for the amendment, among them the radical pro-abortion pastor Joshua Cole (HD-65, Stafford), Michael Feggans (HD-97, Virginia Beach), Josh Thomas (HD 21, Chesapeake), and Nadarius Clark (HD-84, Franklin).

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  • High School Abortion Coverup: Read the Tick-Tock.

    School district learned of abortion scandal just last week? Teacher says she warned the school district seven times.

    Headshot of a woman with light blonde hair wearing a red shirt and green earrings, smiling at the camera.
    Zenaida Perez

    by Asra Nomani

    There is an important story happening in Fairfax County, Va., about a school systemโ€™s social worker who allegedly arranged and financed an abortion by a 17-year-old girl without her legal guardianโ€™s consent or knowledge. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has told the Virginia State Police to conduct a criminal investigation.

    If you have any tips about minors getting abortions without parental or guardian knowledge, please contact me at [email protected]

    Here is what I reported on Monday in an article at Fox News:

    Public school teacher reveals years-long effort to expose alleged student abortion scandal.

    Zenaida Perez claims she warned Fairfax County school officials seven times about social worker allegedly facilitating student abortion.

    Please read the story at this link.

    As part of our work at the Pearl Project, a nonprofit journalism initiative dedicated to reporting in the public interest, we are publicly providing documentation in this case so other journalists, investigators and the public can see the evidence themselves. If you seek additional information or have a tip, please contact me at [email protected].

    I am uploading documents for public use, media reporting and investigative research in a folder on DocumentCloud at this link and sharing the links in this timeline, which I will keep updating.

    Here is the summary timeline with links to the evidence. Below is a fuller chronology of events. I call this my Tick-Tock, something I do for every story I report. Contact me if you want unredacted content.

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  • Youngkin: Virginia In “An Extraordinary Position of Financial Strength”

    By Steve Haner

    Governor Glenn Youngkin (R)

    The Commonwealth of Virginia ended its last full fiscal year under Governor Glenn Youngkin with a large stash of ready cash, $1.7 billion, despite more than $7 billion in tax cuts and tax rebates over the past three years. That includes the $200 rebate income taxpayers will get before the November election.

    Another $4.7 billion was resting in the largest two reserve funds as of June 30.ย  Four years earlier, before Youngkin took over, that balance was $1.5 billion. He has tripled it.ย 

    The state is in โ€œan extraordinary position of financial strengthโ€ Youngkin told a meeting of the General Assemblyโ€™s financial committees on Thursday. Yes, the future is marked by some uncertainty and reasons for caution, thanks to action at the federal level, but unencumbered cash is there to deal with what comes.

    Because the fiscal year just ended saw revenues $2.7 billion ahead of initial estimates, and even $572 million ahead of the revised estimate adopted later, revenue really doesnโ€™t have to grow to cover the new budget. The required growth for fiscal year 2026, already underway, is just 4 tenths of one percent more money than was collected this year.

    And that is after accounting for the fourth year of tax relief under Governor Youngkin, another $1.6 billion in taxes which otherwise would have been collected in FY 26. They include the lower taxes resulting from the higher standard deduction, elimination of state sales taxes on groceries, two increases in the Earned Income Tax Credit and the elimination of income taxes on the first $40,000 of military retiree pay.

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