• Do Offshore Wind Projects Pose National Security Hazard?

    Enemy submarines and drones could exploit points of vulnerability, experts warn

    A large offshore wind turbine installation platform with a crane and multiple turbine components visible against a cloudy sky over the ocean.
    Dominion ship installs wind turbines off Virginia coast. Photo credit: Energynews.us

    by Kevin Mooney

    Offshore wind projects could potentially enable foreign adversaries to hide submarines in U.S. territorial waters and penetrate U.S. air defenses, according to national security and energy policy analysts. 

    For this reason alone, they would like to see President Donald Trumpโ€™s administration pull the plug on projects up and down the East Coast located near to where military exercises take place. The U.S. Air Force and Navy have in the past expressed concern over how wind farms might impact radar and sonar operations to the point where they compromise defensive and offensive capabilities. 

    The Trump administration seems to be listening. 

    Officials have already reversed at least some of the prior approvals President Joe Bidenโ€™s administration extended to offshore wind plans. Trumpโ€™s January executive order called for a temporary cessation and immediate review of federal wind leasing and permitting practices. The decision dealt a blow to several projects that were either already in motion or in the planning stages. 

    โ€œThe U.S. Navy has good reason to be concerned with offshore wind because there could be interference with Navy sonars. Imagine a scenario where China and Russia could park their submarines in the seabed right outside the Chesapeake Bay because our sonars cannot operate as they should.โ€

    (more…)

  • Keep Violent Geezers Behind Bars

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Just what Virginia doesnโ€™t need: Violent predators – murderers and rapists – vomited back into society from prison just because theyโ€™re old. 

    But thatโ€™s what we get in Virginia, thanks to a wrinkle in the law that allows the parole board to spring inmates once they get a few gray hairs.

    Letโ€™s back up. 

    Many Virginians foolishly believe they live in a no-parole commonwealth. 

    After all, in 1994 Gov. George Allen brought us โ€œTruth in Sentencing,โ€ a law that guarantees that every convict would serve almost every single day of his or her prison sentence. That measure was designed to slam shut the revolving doors on Virginia prisons.

    The parole board was left to hold hearings for inmates convicted prior to February 1, 1995 – of which there are very few – and those eligible for geriatric parole. That is, an inmate whoโ€™s at least 65 years old with 5 years served, or 60 with 10 years served. 

    These incarcerated senior citizens can be considered annually by the parole board for release.

    Looks like there are lots of wrinkled convicts. According to the Department of Corrections, there are approximately 3,171 inmates aged 65 and older. And that number just keeps on growing.

    Lest you think these geezers are in the big house for passing bad checks, selling weed or knocking off liquor stores, they arenโ€™t.

    DOC website shows that 90% of those 65 and older are in prison for violent felonies. A full 29 percent of those are in for rape of sexual attacks.

    Bar graph showing the percentage of confined population by current age group and crime type: under 50, 50-64, and 65+. The graph highlights violent crimes in red, property/public order crimes in yellow, and drug-related crimes in blue, indicating that 71% of those under 50, 78% of those aged 50-64, and 90% of those aged 65 and older are incarcerated for violent offenses.

    They should never be released. Even when theyโ€™re in hospital beds hooked up to tubes and monitors. Let โ€˜em die where they belong: in prison. Continue reading.


  • Another Power Struggle Between Youngkin and General Assembly

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Another dispute between Gov. Glenn Youngkin and the General Assembly, one that has faint echoes of one occurring north of the Potomac, has taken on a larger life with parties turning to the Virginia Supreme Court.

    Before going into the details, some background would be helpful.ย The Virginia Constitution provides, โ€œThe Governor shall have the power to veto any particular item or items of an appropriation bill.โ€ The โ€œitem vetoโ€ is a powerful tool for the governor, but it is not an unlimited one.

    The authorization of an item veto has been discussed in some detail earlier on this blog, therefore there is no need to go into that detail here. In summary, the Virginia Supreme Court, in Brault v Holleman, laid out the parameters on the item veto power:

    โ€œWhile the Governor is empowered to veto any particular item or items of an appropriation bill, he must, for his veto to be valid, strike down the whole of an item; he cannot disapprove part of an item and approve the remainder… Where a condition is attached to an appropriation, the condition must be observed. The Governor cannot veto the appropriation without also disapproving the condition; correspondingly, he cannot veto the condition without also disapproving the appropriation.โ€

    The Clerk of the Virginia House of Delegates is a unique position. By law he is designated the โ€œKeeper of the Rolls.โ€ย The law gives the Clerk the responsibility of keeping the originals of all bills that have been passed and signed by the Governor.ย It also directs the Clerk to โ€œenroll all of the acts of the General Assembly and joint resolutions proposing amendments to the Constitution by such other permanent and substantial method or methods as he may deem proper; and shall have the enrolled acts bound for publication after they have been signed by the Speaker of the House of Delegates and the President of the Senate.โ€

    (more…)

  • Once Divided, Data Giants Now United on Dominion Rate Proposal

    By Steve Haner

    Several of the technology giants that own data centers in Virginia and are planning many more have settled their internal dispute over Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s proposal about how to charge them for electricity. The document laying out their new favored compromise was being prepared just as Baconโ€™s Rebellion last week highlighted their broad differences.ย 

    That is the risk when writing about an active dispute in the energy regulatory world. Things change rapidly. The document was filed with the State Corporation Commission at the end of Friday just before the holiday weekend, one business day before a hearing opened Tuesday.

    Amazon Data Services, Google, Microsoft Corporation, the Data Center Coalition and the coalition for Virginiaโ€™s large industrial users โ€“ which are not data centers โ€“ all signed on to the proposal. Another heavy hitter, Wal-Mart, took a position of โ€œnot opposing.โ€ During this week’s ongoing hearing on Dominionโ€™s pending base rate application, proponents told the SCC judges they wanted to โ€œmake your jobs easier.โ€

    The reaction from Dominion was highly negative, complaining both that the move is outside the normal SCC process, and it was wrong to label the document a โ€œstipulation.โ€ It was only a stipulation among the willing, and apparently other parties saw it first when it dropped.

    (more…)


  • NOVA-Only Vehicle Emissions Tests are Ripe for Repeal

    By Derrick Max and Gabrielle Brohard 

    For more than four decades, Northern Virginia drivers have dutifully lined up every two years to have their vehicles inspected for emissions (separate from the equally onerous safety inspections required throughout Virginia). The mandate, which only applies to localities in Northern Virginia, was enacted in 1982 under the 1970 Clean Air Act and was once a reasonable response to the air quality crisis of its time.

    That era is long gone. Todayโ€™s vehicles are technological marvels compared to those on the road when Ronald Reagan was in the White House, and the regionโ€™s air quality has dramatically improved. Yet Virginians are still footing the billโ€”over $50 million every two yearsโ€”for a regulatory program that delivers almost no environmental benefit. Itโ€™s time for policymakers to acknowledge the programโ€™s success and retire it altogether. 

    The results speak for themselves. Cars manufactured today emit 98โ€“99% fewer pollutants than their mid-20th-century predecessors. Air quality in Northern Virginia now consistently meets the federal National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), even accounting for anomalies like the recent Canadian wildfires which blew into our region. 

    Cleaner Cars, Cleaner Air 

    The programโ€™s original goal was clear: reduce the smog and pollution caused by older, less efficient vehicles. At the time, many cars lacked catalytic converters, and even newer models had no sophisticated onboard diagnostics. Thatโ€™s no longer the case. 

    (more…)

  • SOL Scores: Post-Covid Recovery Still Incomplete

    by John Butcher

    The 2025 SOL data are up on the VDOE Web site. This post looks at the statewide data.

    But First: VDOE reports pass rate averages for โ€œeconomically disadvantagedโ€ students (โ€œEDโ€ here, mostly those who qualify forย free/reduced price meals), their more affluent peers (โ€œNot EDโ€), and all students. ED students generally perform less well than the Not ED, see below.ย Most reports and, it appears, the newย Accreditation systemย look at the all-students averages. That serves to unfairly penalize the divisions with large ED populations. A fair system would look at both groups and probably would emphasize the performance of the group that needs more attention, the ED.ย This post looks at the ED and Not ED data in addition to those for all students.

    VDOE scores SOL pass rates on a 600-point scale.ย Scores above 500 are counted as Pass/Advanced. Those from 400 to 500, Pass/Proficient. The sum of those two rates in the overall pass rate.ย Note: The Board of โ€œEducationโ€ย lowered the cut scoresย to the current levels in 2020, creating modest uncertainty in the calculation of the pandemicโ€™s effects. Topic for another day: As set out in the document at that link, Virginia reports proficiency at rates roughly double those published by the NAEP.

    The 2021 testing was voluntary so that yearโ€™s data surely are not reliable measures. Iโ€™ve omitted them here.

    The Big Two subjects for Accreditation (and, probably, for functioning in life) are reading and math. To a lesser degree, the accreditation process considers the science pass rates. For reasons that will become obvious, Iโ€™ll start with math.

    Here are the 2015 to 2025 state average pass rates for the mathematics tests. The Board of โ€œEducationโ€ relaxed the math standards in 2019, hence the bump in pass rates that year.

    Line graph depicting mathematics pass rates for all students from 2014 to 2026, showing categories for Advanced, Proficient, and overall Pass rates.
    (more…)

  • My Soapbox: Dorm Rooms

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    A common complaint, on Baconโ€™s Rebellion and generally, is about the high costs of colleges.ย I am usually sympathetic to such complaints. I see the projected costs of the higher ed institutions my grandkids are going to or are considering.ย But, then, I run across articles like this and this and I become very cynical.

    For those of you who do not have access to the Washington Post and the New York Times, I will summarize the articles. They are about students and their parents spending tons of money to decorate their college dorm rooms.ย There is a whole market out there for items to decorate dorm rooms.ย Here is the result of a Google search of โ€œDecorate dorm rooms.โ€ย The pictures are amazing.

    And it is not just the cost of the furnishings.ย Many students hire specialized design consultants to help them make their dorm rooms โ€œlivable.โ€ Costs vary, depending on the range of services desired.ย A full package can include consulting with the client over what is desired, selecting and procuring the furnishings, and showing up on move-in day to completely set up the room.ย It is big business in some areas.ย One dorm design consultant, who graduated from college in 2021 with a degree in integrated marketing communications (I have no idea what that entails), had more than 200 clients in 2024.ย She employed 25 seasonal employees.ย Her fee was $10,000 per room ($5,000 for each student).ย Another consultant, for a โ€œbasic bedding, design and decor packageโ€ typically charges โ€œ$2,500 in design and $3,500 in procurement.โ€

    The National Retail Federation projects that Americans will spend $12.8 billion this year for dorm or college apartment furnishings. Keep in mind that this is for rooms that come already furnished by the college.

    (more…)

  • Sunday Memes (On Monday)

    Sunday Memesโ€“Stupid Woke in Great Britain and crime in the US โ€“ The Bull Elephant

     


  • Labor Day: a New Start

    A man sitting on a couch is eating potato chips from a large bag while holding a remote control in one hand.
    Celebrating a proud American tradition of labor! — JAB

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Labor Day. Americaโ€™s most ambiguous national holiday.

    Think about it. On other special days โ€“ Memorial, Independence, Veterans, Thanksgiving, Presidents, Martin Luther King and Christmas โ€“ we pause, however briefly, to honor a beloved person or a historical event.

    We have parades, visit cemeteries, blast fireworks, give thanks, recite a famous speech or watch โ€œItโ€™s a Wonderful Life.โ€

    Not on Labor Day.

    Take a peek at the festivities scheduled this weekend. Wait. What festivities? The Rock โ€˜nโ€™ Roll Half Marathon moved on years ago, so thereโ€™s nothing to do today other than hit the beach and cook out.

    Swimming and eating burgers has nothing to do with Labor Dayโ€™s grittier, trade union roots.

    And thatโ€™s a good thing.

    Iโ€™m not sure anyone wants to mark Labor Day by dragging a picket sign to the beach or by joining a national scavenger hunt to look for Jimmy Hoffaโ€™s body.

    Does anyone plan to watch โ€œNorma Raeโ€ today? Or gather the family together for a few choruses of โ€œThe Ballad of Joe Hillโ€?

    Anyone inviting the repulsive Randi Weingarten to their cookout?

    I didnโ€™t think so.

    On Labor Day, itโ€™s not what we do, itโ€™s what we donโ€™t do โ€“ labor. Continue reading.


  • The Latest Thought Crime: “We Love Bacon”

    A distraught man in a gray shirt is being restrained by two police officers in uniform, while another officer watches. The scene is set against a backdrop of domes and towers, suggesting a tense confrontation.
    I pulled this image off the Internet. Upon reflection, I did not check its provenance when I originally posted it. I suspect it is AI-generated. I do not vouch for its authenticity. — JAB

    The world is descending into a very dark place when a man gets arrested for professing his love for bacon. But that’s what it’s come to in the United Kingdom. The gentleman shown above was participating in a July protest in Dalton-in-Furness against construction of a mega-mosque when he broke into a sing-song chant of “we love bacon.” Police hauled him off on suspicion of a public order offence, specifically “racially or religiously aggravated harassment intended to incite disorder or offend the Muslim community.” 

    Some peoples’ sensitivities apparently matter more than others’.


  • Virginia’s Upper Body

    Coat of arms featuring a crowned figure, a red bird, and a red dragon, with shields and a banner below.

    Finding inspiration in all the wrong places

    by Gordon C. Morse

    Virginia Senate Democrats โ€“ the leadership, primarily โ€“ have taken a wrecking crew mentality to higher education and exposed themselves to condemnation for doing the very things they passionately denounce others for doing.

    In this instance, on Thursday afternoon, the majority Democrats serving on the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee made quick work of Gov. Glenn Youngkinโ€™s recent board appointments to George Mason University, the University of Virginia and Virginia Military Institute.

    Figuratively speaking, the Democrats balled up the list of names and contemptuously threw it out the window. It was meant to be preemptive and performative, a crude demonstration of their presumed power to act independently of the General Assembly as a whole and lay waste to Younkinโ€™s choices.

    This was Round Two. The Senate P&E Committee did this previously in June and in similarly obnoxious fashion. That little dance ushered in litigation and the matter now sits before the Virginia Supreme Court.

    Republican committee members asked, why do this now? What was the point?

    But the Democrats were not in a talkative mood and likely would have preferred a darkened space to do their work, removed and detached, where they could punch, run and suffer no bother.

    They were, however, good enough to distribute a copy of the letter theyโ€™d had dashed off to Gov. Youngkin.

    (more…)

  • Princess Anne and the Blob

    Princess Anne and the Blob

    by James C. Sherlock

    I posted earlier today about the cutoff of Princess Anne Health and Rehabilitation Center (Princess Anne) in Virginia Beach from Medicare and Medicaid participation. ย 

    Federal and state officials had as evidence very recent smoking guns from a February 2025 complaint inspection and a June 2025 revisit by the VDH Office of Licensure and Certification (OLC). Those were apparently the final straws in the case of Princess Anne. Combined with Princess Anneโ€™s multi-year track record under the same ownership, those recent reports provide good and sufficient cause for the action.

    Your author has named Innovative Healthcare Management, Medical Facilities of America and LifeWorks Rehab the blob. One group of chain operators and one group of owners control all three. The chain operators swap the facilities around, sometimes overnight, among the three names. They likely have a new name, or several, ready to go. So, the blob it is.

    Princess Anne is not even the worst blob facility in Virginia, just the one to be exposed so badly recently. ย 

    In a broader view, Virginia has only one Special Focus Facility (SFF) among 290 nursing homes certified for Medicare and Medicaid. An SFF is so designated because it has been so bad for so long that it needs special oversight. Henrico Health and Rehabilitation Center (Henrico), another blob outpost, is the current awardee. ย 

    Neither the blob’s Princess Anne nor its infamous Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center (Colonial Heights) are even SFF Candidates. Virginia has five of those: ย 

    • Wonder City Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Hopewell – blob;
    • Birchwood Park Rehabilitation (Virginia Beach) and Seven Hills Rehabilitation and Nursing of Lynchburg owned by Clifton, New Jerseyโ€™s Eastern Healthcare Group, a blob lookalike;
    • Mount Vernon Healthcare Center of Cincinnatiโ€™s Communicare Health; and
    • Augusta Nursing & Rehab Center was owned by 44-facility Consulate Healthcare of Atlanta. Consulate, after having been driven out of Florida more than a year ago, shut down operations on May 31. I donโ€™t know what has become of that situation.

    Here we will take a look at what one author has called โ€œtunnelingโ€ of Medicare and Medicaid funds that has become the norm among the worst chains.ย  I probably haven’t found the full scope of the Princess Anne corporate architecture with a single hour’s research, but it is illustrative, even if childโ€™s play compared to some of them. ย 

    It will get your attention and inform.

    (more…)


  • Two Virginia Wind Energy Grants Cancelled by Trump’s DOT

    by Steve Haner

    President Donald Trumpโ€™s war on the offshore wind industry has finally reached Virginia with the cancellation of two U.S. Department of Transportation grants intended to help develop Hampton Roads as a hub for that now-endangered industry. The decision was announced Friday.

    There still has been no attempt, and not even any public discussion, of the Trump Interior Department seeking to alter or cancel the permits or leases it granted under President Biden to Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s $11.3 billion wind turbine construction project. Nor has there been any indication from Washington that the project is safe from interference.

    If it is, it would seem to be almost alone in enjoying that protection. Recently the Trump Administration cancelled a New England wind project that was past the halfway point in its construction phase and has indicated it will kill a project off Delaware by simply siding in a lawsuit with the projectโ€™s opponents. That second project was not yet under construction.ย 

    A New York-based project poised for construction was also terminated, but the Trump Administration reversed its decision and allowed it to proceed. It has been reported a deal was struck with New York authorities to proceed with some long-opposed natural gas pipeline proposals in exchange for relenting on the wind cancellation.ย 

    The 176-turbine. 2.6-gigawatt Dominion project is the largest offshore facility proposed so far in the United States and is one of the few (if not the only one) with the active support of a Republican governor and his administration. It is also the only one owned by a monopoly utility and financed by that utility’s ratepayers, who could bear the full $6-8 billion stranded cost of its cancellation.ย 

    The other projects targeted are owned by merchant generators planning to sell the electricity, but with the risk carried by their investors. Many are foreign-based.ย  One legal pathway they may take is to sue for full compensation for their losses from the government by claiming the actions were a taking.ย 

    Now Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy has announced that $679 million in federal funding for several projects around the United States, mostly shore-based facilities in support of offshore wind, was being withdrawn or cancelled. Of that, $427 million was for a proposed facility to support a floating wind project off Humbolt, California.

    (more…)


  • One Down

    One Down

    by James C. Sherlock

    For the first time ever, a Virginia nursing home, Princess Anne Health and Rehabilitation Center (Princess Anne) in Virginia Beach, has been evicted from the Medicare and Medicaid programs. ย 

    Before I get to it, I want to acknowledge and thank those who have been working to improve nursing facilities in Virginia. ย 

    Federal. ย Medicare is administered by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) under Dr. Mehmet Oz. ย The federal HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) under Juliet Hodgkins investigates wrongdoing in Medicare. Most chains operate in more than one state, making full owner accountability a federal matter under the investigative responsibility of the HHS OIG.ย 

    Virginia. In this Commonwealth, acknowledgements start with Governor Youngkin, his team and the General Assembly.

    The Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources Secretariat led administration efforts under both John Littel, now the Governorโ€™s Chief of Staff, and Janet Kelley. The Departments of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS), Virginiaโ€™s Medicaid agency, under Cheryl Roberts and the Virginia Department of Health (VDH) led by Health Commissioner Dr. Karen Shelton have earned the gratitude of all Virginians. ย 

    The Virginia Department of Social Servicesโ€™ Adult Protective Services under Paige McCleary was responsible for the raid on Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center (Colonial Heights that woke up both the citizens and the General Assembly. ย 

    The legacy media, TV and print press, did its job well. Reporting on Colonial Heights by Tyler Lane of WTVR CBS 6 in Richmond has been particularly dogged and superb.

    The General Assembly had been the place where nursing home oversight legislation went to die for nearly five decades. I have repeatedly skewered them here for it. But after the Colonial Heights scandal and its publicity, bipartisan support emerged for 2025 legislation that has provided more authority and money to supplement VDH inspection efforts. ย 

    Special thanks to OLC. ย Most of all, I acknowledge the work of VDHโ€™s Office of Licensure and Certification (OLC) under both previous Director Kim Beazley and Acting Director James Jenkins. ย 

    OLC inspections teams, understaffed and underpaid, have doggedly and professionally inspected Virginiaโ€™s nursing homes for decades. It is their work that I most often quote here. It is that office that finally this year, after four decades, was given authorization and funding by the General Assembly to staff their activities properly. ย 

    OLC this year shot the arrows that finally finished off Princess Anne. Here is their complaint inspection report from February and revisit report from June.ย  Apparently, the final straws.

    (more…)


  • Richmond Justice: From Gun-Safety Class to Murder

    An illegal alien plea bargains firearms and narcotics offenses down to therapy and a gun safety class — and goes on to commit murder.

    Marvin Ramos, murder victim. Photo credit: WTVR News

    by Victoria Manning

    New documents obtained by Restoration News show four violent illegal alien criminals were charged with murder over just two years in Richmond, Virginia, while multiple others were charged with unlawful firearm possession.

    Richmondโ€™s Democrat Sheriff Antionette Irving, who oversees a sanctuary city, refuses to cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) while the cityโ€™s progressive prosecutor, Colette McEachin, goes easy on gun-toting illegal aliens.

    McEachin, who is seeking reelection this year, is endorsed by Abigail Spanberger, the former Democrat congresswoman now running for governor and Ghazala Hashmi, running for lieutenant governor.

    Sheriff Irving confirmed she has not turned over any inmates to ICE this year, and ICE told Restoration News that Richmond does not cooperate with its officers. While Democrats push for more restrictions on law-abiding gun owners, they wonโ€™t take unlawful guns out of illegal aliensโ€™ hands.

    Prosecutor gives illegal alien ridiculous plea deal

    Police pulled Yonathan Zelaya-Beltran over for a traffic violation on Feb. 10, 2023. Beltran failed to produce a driverโ€™s license or identification, and a search revealed he had a concealed firearm in his pocket. He was also in possession of narcotics.

    Richmond prosecutors agreed to a plea bargain for Beltran requiring him to complete community service, substance abuse treatment program, and a firearm safety course.

    (more…)