• Cville Homeless Camp: 80 Dwellers and Counting

    California, here we come!


  • Virginians May Be Asked to Vote for Higher Taxes

    by Rich Tucker

    Do you want higher taxes? Local politicians may soon give many Virginia residents a chance to answer that question for themselves.

    Earlier this year, state Sen. L. Louise Lucas introduced a bill that would have allowed all local governments to impose an additional 1% sales tax on top of existing levies. At the time the bill was drafted, only Charlotte, Gloucester, Halifax, Henry, Mecklenburg, Northampton, Patrick, and Pittsylvania counties and the City of Danville enjoyed that authority. Lucasโ€™ bill died in committee, but she didnโ€™t earn her job as president pro tempore of the Virginia Senate and reputation as the stateโ€™s most powerful elected official by giving up easily.

    Lucas has other ways to get her ideas into circulation. In this case, language that will allow localities to increase the local sales tax on most purchasesโ€”with the new revenue earmarked to fund school projectsโ€”was added to the two-year state budget presented to lawmakers just days before the July 1 fiscal year began.

    They passed the measure and Gov. Abigail Spanberger signed it, which, of course, needed to happen to prevent a state government shutdown. And so, your tax rate may get a boost, depending on where you live and how your neighbors vote.

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  • High School Official Used Public Resources to Help Dem

    Virginia Beach school director used taxpayer resources to recruit volunteers for Democrat congressional candidate Elaine Luria.

    by Victoria Manning

    On June 23, Melissa Disher, Director of the First Colonial High School (FCHS) Legal Studies Academy in Virginia Beach, sent out a notification to parents. She called it a volunteer opportunity for a “Campaign Fellows Program.” The email and attached flyer, provided to Restoration News by a parent, was a push to get student volunteers for Democrat Elaine Luria’s congressional campaign.

    School board policies prohibit using taxpayer resources for partisan political activity.

    The description for the “fellows program” sent out to families by Ms. Disher would have student volunteers promote the campaign on social media, assist with virtual campaign events including phone banks, “serve as a campus ambassador at [their] high school,” and “spread the word about the campaign and fellowship through [their] networks.”

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  • Solar Farms Come Up Short

    by Kerry Dougherty

    No offense to ordinary, decent schizophrenics, but Virginia Democrats appear to be suffering from this or a similar mental disorder.

    And theyโ€™re off their meds.

    Examples abound, but hereโ€™s just one: The left-wing radicals who once were tree-huggers, have morphed into lovers of solar panels. As far as these loons are concerned, the more fertile farmland thatโ€™s covered in mirrors, the better.

    In fact, the General Assembly passed legislation that took effect July 1 that voids blanket community-wide bans and restrictive caps on solar farms.

    Expect to see more farms and fallow fields transformed into endless seas of reflective solar panels, because โ€œgreenโ€ energy is so much more important than agriculture. No matter how much pollution is created to make the panels.

    According to WJLA reporter Nick Minock, Spotsylvania County, Virginia is home to the largest solar panel development east of the Rockies.

    And itโ€™s hideous. Continue reading.


  • Out-of-State Nursing Home Chains Continue to Plague Virginia – A New Solution

    Out-of-State Nursing Home Chains Continue to Plague Virginia – A New Solution

    by James C. Sherlock

    Nursing home chains headquartered in New Jersey, New York, and Atlanta have, in the last decade, plagued Virginia with their operations here to a degree that should have proven intolerable to the Governor and the General Assembly. New Jersey-based Medical Facilities of America (MFA) is both the largest and the worst-performing chain operating in Virginia, but it is not alone in its practices here.

    Too many facilities of out-of-state chains routinely neglect and abuse Virginians, causing patient injuries and wracked, premature deaths. Those are matters of public record, not conjecture. Many of their facilities and employees have been cited by Virginia Department of Health (VDH) inspection teams and, in some cases, the police at rates that far exceed those of their peers.

    The most direct cause is a combination of understaffing and overpopulation, given existing facility staffing levels. That is actually a model of operation that is imposed and enforced by some chains. It is the core feature of a broader business model that maximizes both profits and tragedy. ย 

    Because of Virginiaโ€™s weakest-in-the-nation nursing home laws, we present a target-rich environment to the unethical. Many out-of-state owners treat their investments as commercial real estate plays and simply do not care about patient and resident outcomes. Virginia regulators, restricted by the General Assembly in authority and personnel, have proven incapable of imposing penalties sufficient to deter them. ย 

    Strong staffing minima have been successfully implemented in nearby states. But none have addressed directly the specific problem posed by the understaff/overadmit business model featured by the worst chains.

    We will highlight an existing option available to all states that is seldom used.

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  • Virginia’s #3 for Business Rank Argues for Stability, Not Change

    by Derrick A. Maxย 

    Key Takeaways: 

    • Virginiaโ€™s rise to No. 3 in CNBCโ€™s ranking is good news, but it reflects past strengths more than future policy risks. 
    • Richmondโ€™s new labor mandates, payroll taxes, energy taxes, and data center tax could make Virginia more expensive and less competitive once fully implemented. 
    • To stay near the top, Virginia must protect Right-to-Work, keep taxes competitive, build reliable energy, and raise expectations in education. 

    Key Quote:โ€ฏโ€œVirginiaโ€™s No. 3 ranking is a credit to the Commonwealthโ€™s inherited strengths, not a blank check for Richmond to tax more, mandate more, and make it harder to do business here.โ€ 


    Virginiaโ€™s climb in CNBCโ€™s newest โ€œTop States for Businessโ€ ranking โ€” moving from No. 4 back to No. 3 โ€” should be welcomed. But it should not be misunderstood. 

    The lesson is not that Virginia has solved its problems. It has not. Nor is the lesson that every decision coming out of Richmond is suddenly validated by a national ranking. It is not. The real lesson is more important: Virginia remains one of the strongest, most durable, most business-capable states in America — despite the federal uncertainty and despite policy choices made this year that will weaken our future competitiveness and ranking once fully implemented. 

    That is why conservatives should resist two temptations. 

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  • Digital Future – Build It the Right Way

    by Chris Saxman

    Too often, conversations about data centers are presented as an either-or: tech companies versus local communities, or economic growth versus environmental protection.

    That is the wrong debate.

    The real challenge is whether communities, businesses, utilities, investors and public leaders can work together to support the infrastructure a growing digital economy requires while planning carefully for the future.

    Digital infrastructure has become as essential to modern life as roads, railroads, ports and power plants were for previous generations. Local businesses, schools and hospitals rely on it. Families rely on it every day, often without realizing it.

    As demand for artificial intelligence, cloud computing, streaming, cybersecurity, advanced manufacturing and digital services continues to grow, communities across the country are grappling with how best to accommodate that growth while preserving the qualities that make those localities strong.

    The answer is not to stop progress. Nor is it to ignore legitimate community questions. The answer is to ensure growth is guided by transparency, collaboration and careful planning.

    Virginia’s clear example

    Virginia offers a clear example of why this issue is more connected than it first appears.

    Through retirement accounts, pension funds, mutual funds, index funds and direct investments, millions of Americans own shares in the hyper-scale technology companies driving the data center boom.

    The Virginia Retirement System reported a record investment portfolio of $122.8 billion for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2025, and paid $6.8 billion in retirement benefits that year, with investment earnings funding approximately two-thirds of those payments.

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  • Virginia’s Reckless Budget Bill

    by Jason Miyares

    Image credit: Chat GPT

    Statement on Governor Spanberger’s Marijuana Budget Debacle

    I warned that rushing marijuana commercialization through Virginia would lead to reckless governing. This week, that warning came true in the worst possible way.

    Governor Abigail Spanberger and the far-left majority in the General Assembly jammed their marijuana retail scheme into the state budget instead of allowing it to go through the normal legislative process, where it could have received the scrutiny it deserved. Now we know the cost of that shortcut: according to Williamsburg-James City Commonwealth’s Attorney Nate Green, former president of the Virginia Association of Commonwealth’s Attorneys, the drafting is so sloppy that Virginia’s own prosecutors are warning the law banning marijuana distribution, and the law protecting Virginians under 21 from possessing marijuana, may have already been repealed a full year earlier than anyone intended.

    Let that sink in.

    Because far left Democrats chose to legislate drug policy through a budget bill instead of a real bill with real hearings, prosecutors across this Commonwealth are now uncertain whether they can even enforce the law against selling marijuana to a minor. Mr. Green himself said it plainly: courts resolve ambiguity against prosecutors, and defense attorneys already have grounds to argue these protections no longer exist.

    This is not a minor technical glitch. This is what happens when ideology outruns competence. Continue reading.


  • Virginiaโ€™s Gun Law Under Fire in Courts

    by Rich Tucker

    Ken Cuccinelli rendered in 18th-century garb in the style of Gilbert Stuart. Image credit: Grok

    Virginiaโ€™s governing Democrats made it a crime to buy, sell, manufacture, or swap so-called assault weapons and high-capacity magazines that hold more than 15 rounds of ammunition. The lawโ€™s July 1 enactment, however, sits in a legal limbo as a wave of lawsuits moves through various courts.

    Plaintiffs in four state jurisdictions have sued to have the law overturned. The lawsuits all claim that the gun law violates Article I, Section 13 of the state constitution, which reads, in part: โ€œThat a well regulated militia, composed of the body of the people, trained to arms, is the proper, natural, and safe defense of a free state, therefore, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.โ€

    Another case, filed in Fauquier County, makes that same legal argument, but adds that the law also violates the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which reads, โ€œA well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.โ€

    Former state Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, lead counsel in the case filed in Spotsylvania County, told the Daily Signal why that case is unique.

    โ€œOur case is unique in that we are suing under the original militia clause. The โ€˜right to keep and bear armsโ€™ language so familiar to people today was only added to Virginiaโ€™s State Constitution in 1971,โ€ Cuccinelli said.

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  • Pittsylvania County Breathes Sigh of Relief

    Berry Hill Mega Site in Pittsylvania County. Picture credit: City of Danville via Cardinal News

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    The Colorado-based company, Stack Infrastructure (Stack), has announced that it will move forward with its plans to build a giant data center complex in Pittsylvania County.

    As was reported earlier in Baconโ€™s Rebellion, the company had made its decision to locate in Virginia contingent on the state continuing its exemption of computer equipment purchased by data centers from the Commonwealthโ€™s sales tax.ย That exemption had been threatened by budget amendments proposed by the State Senate. With the adoption of a budget that leaves the exemption intact, the company will proceed.

    This project is of major importance, not only to Pittsylvania County, but to that area of Southside Virginia. In its performance agreement with the regional industrial development authority, the company has pledged to invest at least $100 billion and create at least 2,500 jobs with salaries of at least $80,500 over a 30-year span.ย Under the provisions of current law, the company will be exempt from the Commonwealthโ€™s sales tax on the purchase of computers and other equipment until at least 2040. That exemption could be extended until 2050 if the company meets certain investment and job creation criteria.

    According to the Virginia Economic Development Partnership, the project represents the largest private investment ever announced in Virginia and one of the top five industrial announcements ever made in the United States.  One local official declared that the agreement would be โ€œtransformationalโ€ for the area.

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  • Some of Virginiaโ€™s Worst Nursing Homes are Being Sold

    Some of Virginiaโ€™s Worst Nursing Homes are Being Sold

    by James C. Sherlock

    One discerning group of investors in the real estate-with-nursing-home-tenants business appears to hire operating chain-management companies exclusively from those headquartered in the Lakewood, New Jersey, area. The chains compete, but are all run by the same small circle of acquaintances.

    That background is meaningful because five of Lakewood-based Medical Facilities of America (MFA)’s facilities in central Virginia are being sold. Not coincidentally, they are among the worst skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) in America:

    • Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center (Colonial Heights) of multiple staff arrests for neglect and wrongful death fame,
    • Henrico Health and Rehabilitation Center in Highland Springs, officially designated the worst nursing home in Virginia,
    • Parham Health Care and Rehab Center in Richmond,
    • Wonder City Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Hopewell, and
    • Westport Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Richmond.

    It may not have been up to the CEO of MFA to decide whether to sell those five facilities or to whom. The facilities are likely being sold not because they are awful, which they have been for years, but rather because their occupancy rates have dropped well below the levels that supported the 20% rates of return investors saw in earlier years.

    That is cause for celebration in Virginia, but not in Lakewood. It is primarily due to WTVR TV6 Newsโ€™ excellent and dogged reporting since the Colonial Heights scandal in December 2024. We all owe that station and its lead reporter on those stories, Tyler Layne, a major vote of appreciation.

    But for investors, it signaled time for a change. They want to be able to advertise โ€œunder new managementโ€ to residents and regulators to wipe away the mess. It may work.

    The owners are changing horses, but not stables.

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  • What Do Virginia Muslims Think?

    Qasim Rashid, (left) a University of Richmond Law School graduate, presented the Independence Day guest session speech at the 76th annual Ahmadiyya Muslim community conference. (Photo courtesy Ahmadiyya Muslim Community USA by way of the Henrico citizen.)

    The question has arisen in the comments of this blog regarding how Virginia Muslims reconcile their devotion to Sharia law with the American constitution. Qasim Rashid, a University of Richmond law school graduate, expounded on this theme in an Independence Day celebration at the Greater Richmond Convention Center. According to the Henrico Citizen, about 10,000 citizens were in attendance. With all due recognition that Muslim views are diverse, Rashid undoubtedly reflects the views of many. Here follow some quotes from the Henrico Citizen article. — JAB


    โ€œThe command of the Quran and the promise of America meet on the very same ground that every human being carries a dignity that is divine in origin and absolute important,โ€ said Qasim Rashid in his address on Saturday. โ€œThere is no peace without justice and there is no justice without that dignity. And here is the remarkable thing, America’s all highest institutions already recognize this unity between the Islamic and the American view of justice. This is not my interpretation; this is historical affirmation.โ€ …

    Rashid emphasized the common ground between Islamic teachings and Americaโ€™s highest ideals, saying: โ€œThe command of the Quran and the promise of America meet on the very same ground: that every human being carries a dignity that is divine in origin and absolute in worth.โ€

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  • Spanbergerโ€™s Backfiring Gun Stance

    by Joe Thomas

    Image credit: Grok

    Who is the best gun salesperson in Virginia? Gov. Abigail Spanbergerโ€”thatโ€™s who.

    According to the FBI background check registryโ€”more about that in a momentโ€”there were 124,319 firearm background checks conducted just in the month of June. Wrap your head around that. Thatโ€™s more privately owned firearms sold just in June than exist in the entire country of Iranโ€”that is, unless you count the ones all the Kurds kept that were supposed to be distributed to civilians so they could stand up to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, but I digress.

    What has Virginians rushing out to their local gun shops and gun shows to make sure they can defend themselves is the idea that maybe they wonโ€™t be able to very soon.

    Two Virginia judges have issued preliminary injunctions blocking the enforcement of the assault weapons ban.

    A Washington County judge granted the most recent injunction, and a Lancaster County judge issued a similar order the week before. Virginia Attorney General Jay Jones claims that these only impact Washington and Lancaster counties and not the state at large. However, the list of law enforcement officers and commonwealthโ€™s attorneys who refuse to enforce these restrictionsโ€”calling them unconstitutionalโ€”continues to grow.

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  • Virginia Court Halts Spanberger’s AR-15 Ban, Delivering Major Victory to Gun Owners

    After months of legal battle and Second Amendment uncertainty, a court order temporarily blocked Virginia from enforcing a ban on AR-15s.

    by Bronson Winslow

    Virginia gun owners secured their first major courtroom victory June 26 after a Lancaster County Circuit Court judge granted a temporary injunction against Gov. Abigail Spanberger’s sweeping ban on the sale and transfer of AR-15s.

    The injunction was secured by the Virginia Citizens Defense League (VCDL), Gun Owners of America (GOA), and Gun Owners Foundation (GOF). Those groups argued that Virginia’s newly enacted “assault firearm” ban violates both the Virginia Constitution and the Second Amendment. The ruling delivered a timely setback to one of the most extreme gun control laws in the nation.

    โ€œArticle I, Section 13 is the commonwealthโ€™s recognition of a pre-existing right with which Virginians were endowed by their creator, and it operates as a fixed limitation on the power of government to enact legislation affecting firearms,โ€ the plaintiffs said in a motion.

    For now, the court’s order prevents the Virginia State Police from enforcing the law while the constitutional challenge proceeds. The law would have taken effect July 1.

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  • PJM’s Heat Wave Warning

    The grid runs on reality, not wishful rhetoric

    by Derrick Max

    Image credit: Grok

    The July heat wave that pushed PJM toward record electricity demand should force Virginia policymakers to confront an uncomfortable truth: the electric grid does not run on mandates, slogans or wishful thinking. It runs on power that is available when people need it.

    During this heat wave, PJM — the regional grid operator serving Virginia and all or parts of 12 other states and DC — came within striking distance of its all-time summer demand record and may well have exceeded it once emergency demand reductions are counted.

    PJMโ€™s measured July 2 peak reached 162.3 gigawatts, just below the old 2006 record of 165.6 gigawatts. But Steve Haner, writing in Baconโ€™s Rebellion, noted that about 6 gigawatts of demand had been shed through emergency demand-reduction programs. Add that curtailed load back, and underlying demand likely exceeded the old record, even if the official metered peak did not.

    That distinction matters. PJM did not avoid a crisis because the needed power was comfortably supplied. It avoided it because emergency tools shaved demand at the moment of greatest stress. Grid failure is no longer a theoretical policy debate — the grid is operating near the edge. 

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