Wednesday, January 8, 2014

State of the Commonwealth Address Governor Robert F. McDonnell

Governor of Virginia Bob McDonnell speaking at...
Governor of Virginia Bob McDonnell speaking at CPAC. Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Mr. Speaker. Mr. President.

Justices of the Supreme Court and Judges of the State Corporation Commission,

Ladies and Gentlemen of the General Assembly, now in your 395th year,

My fellow Virginians,

It is my privilege to address you, one last time, as Governor, on the State of the Commonwealth.

I must note that because it’s my last speech the Speaker promised me all the time I wanted… so get comfortable.

For 22 years I have served with you. First, in this chamber as a Delegate. Then as Attorney general. Now, as Governor.

While this public chapter of my life draws to a close, I’m not the only one saying farewell.

Tonight, a grateful Commonwealth salutes the public service of:

Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling, who has redefined the role of his office as a jobs creator,

policy leader, and Cabinet member, and presided over the Senate with grace. Thank you Bill for over 20 years of outstanding service.

And, Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli. Thank you for solid legal advice, strong conservative leadership, and care for the disenfranchised.

I also want to welcome the 16 newly sworn in members of the legislature and implore you to never forget the thrill and privilege of this day.

Governor Mills Godwin rightly said there is no “higher honor” than serving as Governor of Virginia. Serving with you for the last four years has been the greatest professional opportunity of my nearly 60 years of life.

Tonight, I give profound thanks to the people of Virginia for your confidence when you elected me to this high office; an average middle class kid from Fairfax County occupying the same seat once held by Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson. I have tried my very best, with spectacular teamwork, to serve you well.

We have achieved many good things together for the eight million people of our beloved Commonwealth.

Where some may have hoped for conflict, we instead forged consensus.

Where some might have preferred sound bites to solutions, we chose results over rhetoric.

I'm a conservative. I believe strongly that these principles are right for America. Some of you are moderates. Some are progressives. You believe just as deeply that your ideas are correct. But before any philosophical allegiance, there is one identity that comes first, and matters most: we are all Virginians.

We were sent here, to Mr. Jefferson’s Capitol, to be servant leaders of the people. To use the unique talents God has given each of us to expand access to the American Dream, because all are created in the image and likeness of God, and all deserve an equal opportunity to pursue happiness and succeed.

With that in mind, I believe the measure of our success is fairly simple.

Did we help create jobs and opportunity, and make Virginia a better place to live, worship, work, and raise a family?

Did we support a single mother in Roanoke trying to raise her little girls while working two jobs?

Did we make dreams more attainable for a small businessman in Woodbridge focused on helping his customers, and growing his business?

Did we lift up the man in Danville who made a mistake, served his time, and now wants to restart his life?

I can say, without hesitation, we have. And the credit belongs to the 140 leaders in this body, our remarkable can-do Cabinet, and to the citizens of Virginia.

In this Capitol, we debated passionately and civilly, we worked together, we shared the credit. We adhered to the “Virginia Way”, and our democracy is better for it.

In the waning hours of an administration, many like to talk of individual legacies. So I’ll perhaps disappoint you tonight by saying that I’d rather focus on our joint achievements.

I think we’ve done what the Boy Scouts tell us to do: we’ve left the campground a little better than we found it. The gains we made took patience and leadership, and the mettle to demand change when the status quo did not deliver excellence.

Leadership is how, when we finally addressed Virginia’s pressing need for new transportation infrastructure after 27 years, the Speaker of the House, my dear friend Bill Howell, put his own name on the bill…. I figured carrying one bill every three years wouldn’t kill him! And when that bill came to the floor Del. Onzlee Ware stood up to give a strong final speech in favor of its passage……Onzlee got his train… and then promptly retired!

It’s about how, when we took office in January 2010, with unemployment at 7.4%, we laid out a comprehensive set of proposals to get Virginians back to work, and it was Senators Chuck Colgan and William Wampler, and Delegate Lacey Putney and others who said “Governor, we’ll carry those bills.”

It’s about how, when we passed the Opportunity Educational Institution bill and said we will not tolerate a single failing school, it was Delegate Algie Howell who captured the moment when he said, “The next great civil rights battle is in educational opportunity, and today I challenge leaders across the Commonwealth to join me in this fight.”

Time and again, we have rejected the twin ideological poles and navigated toward common ground to make the nation’s best state even better. Looking at the last four years, something important has happened: Virginia’s state government has worked.

When I campaigned for this office, I got the message down to a bumper sticker: “Bob’s for Jobs.” What can I say, I have a good name for politics!

It wasn’t just a slogan; it’s why I ran. That’s why our chief priority has been simple: to put in place the policies necessary to help the great free enterprise system create good jobs and opportunities for our people…. and then get the heck out of the way!

While there is so much that government should not do, there are those limited but important areas where government must act to help individuals prosper and the free market grow. The wisdom of the Founders and of history define the correct rules.

An efficient government has an obligation to ensure our businesses and families have the modern transportation infrastructure necessary to get goods to market, mom and dad to work, and everyone to the soccer game on time.

A responsive government provides our young people greater access and affordability at our top flight colleges and universities, so they can receive the skills necessary to land the in-demand jobs of the 21st Century.

A responsible government keeps its communities and citizens safe and secure.

The wise and frugal government envisioned by Jefferson manages and funds its core functions well, and leaves the rest to individuals, the family, faith-based and benevolent institutions, and the private sector.

It’s a balance, and by most empirical measures, we’ve struck the right one in Virginia.

Since we took office in January 2010, the unemployment rate has fallen from 7.4% to 5.4%.

We have the third-lowest unemployment rate east of the Mississippi, and the lowest in the Southeast…. and for those keeping up with the neighbors, like I do, our rate is a full point lower than Maryland, and two full points lower than North Carolina.

Over 177,000 net new jobs have been added; more than 160,000 in the private sector.

You provided nearly $120 million in new economic development tools, and the result has been 76,000 jobs and $13.6 billion in capital investment from projects announced over the last four years that were either assisted by the state or are receiving state incentives.

One of those projects was Bassett Furniture, a self-described “100-Year-Old Virginia Start-up,” and an integral part of the economy of Southern Virginia. Last month we were able to utilize the Governor’s Opportunity Fund to help the company expand its manufacturing plant in Henry County adding 25 jobs and spending $1.5 million in capital investment. They invested in Virginia, and we invested in them. With us tonight is Vice President Eddie White. Eddie- thanks for believing in Henry County and Virginia!

Bassett is in the right state for growing a business. Forbes recognized that a few months ago when they returned us to #1 and named Virginia America’s “Best State for Business.” Thanks to Bill Bolling, Jim Cheng, Jim Duffey, and Todd Haymore and many of you for strong economic development leadership.

Much of our recent growth has come from making agriculture and forestry, Virginia’s largest industry, a key component of our business development strategy.

With our top quality local products and our expanding world class port, we are successfully selling Virginia to the world.

In the past few years, I’ve completed 9 international trade missions, and we’ve opened agricultural trade offices in India, China, Great Britain, Russia, Mexico, and Costa Rica. Last year agricultural and forest products exports reached a record high of $2.6 billion.

In Beijing they’re drinking Virginia wine; in Moscow they’re eating Virginia beef; and in Tokyo all the talk is Virginia soybeans. It all means more jobs here at home.

While Virginia’s economy has grown, we have kept the size and scope of government properly in check.

We came into office facing record budget shortfalls totaling $6 billion. Now, we leave office having posted four straight budget surpluses totaling a Virginia record $2 billion.

We have budgeted wisely and held the line on growth in general fund spending.

In the 9 years from Fiscal Year 2007 to Fiscal Year 2016, general fund spending will have grown by an average of only 1.2% a year, far less than the rate of growth in population and inflation. We have reduced the number of non-higher education state employees by approximately 2000, and eliminated or consolidated 36 boards and commissions and 9 agencies. Government is doing more with less!

We’ve dramatically increased our financial reserves by growing the Rainy Day Fund from $295 million to just over $1 billion by the end of Fiscal Year 2016; the fourth-largest balance in history.

The budget I introduced uses debt conservatively, to stay within our capacity limits, while targeting important safety, environmental, and maintenance needs. It eliminates the accelerated sales tax gimmick for over 99% of businesses, beefs up a depleted Literary Fund to build schools, and leaves the largest un-appropriated balance since 1991 when the Rainy Day Fund began. Happy New Year!

We have been good stewards of our taxpayer’s dollars, and spent wisely on government’s core functions.

Nowhere was our commitment to core services more evident than in the work last session to pass Virginia’s first sustainable transportation funding plan since 1986…. the year Delegate Yost was born.

In an uncommon demonstration of election year bipartisan cooperation, something we rarely witness nationally, we did it. The transportation bill passed with the votes of 44 Republicans and 43 Democrats. Virginia families and businesses finally got the infrastructure funding that should sustain us for generations.

Before we passed that bill we audited VDOT and located every single efficiency and every available dollar. We used debt capacity to jumpstart 900 projects in 2011 for a short term fix. We expanded the use of PPTA’s to lead the nation. But it wasn’t enough.

The simple fact was this: the gas tax was only raising 46% of what it had in 1986, while the cost of asphalt was up over 350%. Not complicated: We had a math problem.

Traffic in Northern Virginia had become the worst in the country. Hampton Roads was the 20th worst, and Richmond was 60th. Virginians were wasting gas, late for work, and hitting potholes.

Now, thanks to our work, our transportation system will receive over $6 billion in new funding over the next 6 years alone, with an estimated annual economic impact of $9.5 billion and the creation of over 13,000 new jobs.

Already, we’ve seen what this new funding means.

This past year we advertised a Virginia record $2.5 billion in road construction projects.

We finally have the resources to begin widening I-64 from Newport News to Richmond.

We have reached a crucial milestone with long-awaited plans to modernize I-66 in Northern Virginia.

Construction on the critical I-95 Express Lanes from the Mixing Bowl to the Speaker’s district will be completed in early 2015.

We have begun the second phase of Route 460 construction in Buchanan County, and will start the new Route 460 from Hampton Roads to Petersburg soon.

Phase II of Rail to Dulles, the Silver Line, is now funded and will provide needed congestion relief for Northern Virginia.

Amtrak service has returned to Roanoke for the first time in 34 years, and Norfolk for the first time in 35.

All this because you worked, across regional and partisan divides long deemed unbridgeable, and provided a modern, safe and well-funded transportation system for our people. Thanks to the Speaker, Delegates Jones, Albo, and O’Bannon; Senators Howell, Stosch, Watkins, Wagner and Norment for your leadership.

I thank all of you who voted for this bill…. and the rest of you can still take credit for the projects back home.

We also took bold actions to improve our public education system. Like my dad said, to get a good job, you need a good education. We’re helping more children gain that access. Every child, regardless of her zip code or social status, deserves the opportunity of a world-class education with a great teacher in a great school.

We increased the percentage of our education dollars going into the classroom, where our children learn, from 61% to 64%.

We’ve given parents an honest view of the performance of their child’s school with a transparent A-F school grading system.

We rewarded dedicated teachers with their first pay-raise in five years and established an innovative performance pay system.

We ended irresponsible social promotion of third-graders who aren’t reading at grade level, and invested significant new resources in remedial reading programs.

We effectively eliminated teacher tenure, raised the standards for graduation, authorized Teach for America, implemented tuition scholarship tax credits, and reduced bureaucratic red tape and local unfunded mandates. We expanded charter and virtual schools, created a Teacher’s Cabinet, nearly tripled the number of STEM Academies from 8 to 22. And this year’s budget funds the Standards of Quality with over $500 million in new money.

The results: Graduation rates are up 8% since 2008, the dropout rate is down 6% since 2012, and reading scores for 4th graders are 10% higher than the national average.

We have taken a tough love, zero tolerance approach to chronically underperforming schools, by creating the “Opportunity Educational Institution,” allowing the state to turnaround and manage failing schools. This is the civil rights issue of our day. In the 8th most prosperous state in the nation, how can we tolerate a single failing school for our kids? As I leave office, I implore you to let OEI demonstrate that it will help those schools in Petersburg, Alexandria, and Norfolk that have been underperforming for years. Knowing some children aren’t getting the same education as other kids just one school district away is just not right. The time for excuses is over. It’s time for excellence for all.

When young people complete their K-12 education, they must be either career ready or college bound. If they are not, you and I and they have failed. In the globally competitive economy, employers demand more people that are well-educated and well-trained for diverse but very specialized missions.

We’ve made Virginia’s colleges and universities much more affordable and accessible the past few years.

With my budget recommendations, we will have reinvested nearly $600 million in new funding in our colleges over 5 years. My budget provides the highest TAG grant awards in history at $3300 per student annually. The past two years have produced the lowest average yearly tuition increases in over a decade, but our students still have too much debt.

The Top Jobs Higher Education Act of 2011 created the blueprint for the future and put us on track to award an additional 100,000 degrees over 15 years, with a focus on STEM disciplines. Already 14,000 new slots for Virginia students have been added. We also have required universities to be more accountable in spending by reallocating resources to top priorities. My budget contains a new funding formula that rewards performance and compliance with our legislative goals. Please enact it and make it work.

Every new acceptance letter that hits a mailbox in Virginia Beach, Tazewell, or Arlington is a testament to the progress we’ve made and a passport to the American Dream for that student. I’m very grateful to Secretary Fornash, Secretary Siddiqi, Secretary Dyke, Senator Norment, and Delegates Cox and Dance for leading the way.

I learned as a Virginia Beach prosecutor that public safety is the foremost duty of government, because it secures one’s inalienable rights.

Our crime rates continue to decrease, and Virginia now has the nation’s 4th lowest violent crime rate and the 8th lowest property crime rate. This is a testament to the years of tough sentencing and no parole laws we’ve put in place. The major reforms you passed at my request toughen laws for prosecuting gang members, child predators, and repeat drug dealers.

However, justice is not fully served if we’re only tough on the front end, but give no help to those who have paid their debts and want to be a part of their community again. For the 95% of individuals who are eventually released, we want them to be good citizens; not future prisoners. Therefore, the smart approach is to combine tough sentences with targeted assistance to help them fellow Virginians successfully re-enter society.

That’s why we demanded dramatic improvement in Virginia’s prisoner re-entry system.

The success of these efforts is clear: Virginia now has the second-lowest recidivism rate in the country.

But statistics don’t tell the full story. People do.

Tonight, we’re joined in the gallery by Tamio Holmes.


Tamio spent part of his teenage years on the street, dealing drugs, a road that twice led him to prison.

But it was in prison that he found a way out of that sad cycle. During his nine-year term, he successfully completed a work training program where he earned certification in the Groom Elite program in Virginia’s horse industry. After being released, Mr. Holmes used that training to open his own successful business. Even better, he has reunited with his family and serves as a positive role model to his daughters, helping them make good life choices.

Today, Mr. Holmes regularly returns to the prison to teach other offenders the skills and life lessons he learned. Tamio, we thank you for your character and for the positive example you are setting.
In America, we believe deeply in second chances and redemption, so I was pleased to join many of you this summer to sign an executive order for the automatic restoration of civil rights for non-violent offenders.

The sacred right to vote, which our men and women in uniform have died to secure, has been restored to 8,013 people during our four years; almost double the amount of any previous Administration. But civil rights restoration should not be subject to the arbitrary judgment of a governor; it should be made a permanent part of our laws. Therefore, in the coming years, I ask you again to take an important step for justice and pass a constitutional amendment to permit the automatic restoration of civil rights.

And we must not forget that men and women in uniform are still defending that right to vote today.

This summer, in a most special privilege of being governor, I got to meet with brave Virginia warriors at Walter Reed and Ramstein Germany hospitals, in the sands of Kuwait, and at bases in Kabul and Kandahar. We have one of the top National Guard Units in America, and as we gather in safety for this speech, the soldiers of the 1710th Transportation Company in Emporia, who I met with, remain deployed in the dangerous fields of Afghanistan.

Tonight, we are joined by Tabitha Rhodes, wife of Company Commander Rodney Rhodes, and Sarah Talbert, wife of Master Sergeant Albert Talbert, who is on his third deployment. Tabitha and Sarah, the people of Virginia thank you for your sacrifice, commend the leadership of your husbands and all who serve with them, and pray for their safe return next month.

We’ve made great progress making Virginia the most veteran-friendly state in the country. We expanded the Wall of Honor at the Virginia War Memorial, provided in-state tuition for veterans, and created a job placement program for our veterans. We have shown our love and appreciation for the brave few that protect our way of life.

I am also pleased to report that our joint progress extends to the protection of Virginia’s natural beauty.

Over the last four years we’ve conserved 232,000 acres of open space.

Virginians are enjoying cleaner air and water too. America possesses few treasures like the Chesapeake Bay, and each generation must exercise good stewardship. We put $460 million into clean water efforts, including the $221 million bond package you approved last year. We also invested $5 million in oyster restoration and last year’s oyster harvest was the biggest since 1987, and we have the largest blue crab population since 1993. Please, keep this progress up, it tastes great. As they say, save the crabs…then eat them.

I also want to thank our great state employees, the lynchpin of Virginia’s success. Over 100,000 work tirelessly every day from Chincoteague to the Cumberland Gap to serve others.

We have tried to reward that service. We provided the first pay-raise for state workers in six years and two 3% performance bonuses at Christmas in 2010 and 2012, with a third included in my proposed budget. We helped secure your retirement by making the largest deposit into our pension system in history: $2.2 billion in 2012. We also fixed the untenable cash position of VRS with major reforms to reduce future unfunded liabilities by $9 billion over 25 years. I have included $315 million in the budget to fully fund the payback of previous deferrals, and the graduated implementation of the new 7% rate of return.

On a personal note, I want to applaud First Sergeant Marc Wiley and the members of the State Police Executive Protection Unit. You serve around the clock, travel constantly, and do it all with professionalism and character. You’ve become family to my family, and we’re going to miss you greatly.

We’ve also improved customer service in government operations, especially in healthcare.

We are launching Commonwealth Coordinated Care to better facilitate care for those eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare. We’ve saved taxpayer dollars by expanding managed care for Medicaid statewide. Our Medicaid reforms are saving hundreds of millions annually.

We made the largest investments ever in Virginia’s system of intellectual and developmental services stemming from last year’s settlement with the Department of Justice. As a result of this settlement agreement Virginia will provide 750 new Medicaid waiver slots, and expand community based services for individuals with developmental disabilities, in addition to providing transition funding for the closure of the state’s training centers. In this biennial budget I’m also recommending an additional $38 million for critical services like crisis prevention and intervention, community based mental health programs, and bed space capacity.

Mental health issues affect so many Virginia families. We must continue to do all we can to provide immediate help to those in need, and comfort to those who hurt.

We’ve also helped bring a lot of joy into a lot of lives this past year with one of the most heartwarming, and successful, government efforts I’ve ever witnessed.

The “Virginia Adopts Campaign,” led by Secretaries Kelly, Hazel, and soon-to-be Secretary Holton, had a goal of matching 1,000 foster children with permanent loving families over the past year. We exceeded that goal and tonight, here in the gallery, we are joined by the 1000th adoptive family.

The Blanchard’s have been foster parents to over 20 children, and now they are welcoming Michael to the family! Michael – I know you’re thinking about a professional basketball career, but hey, maybe try your hand at politics too; trust me, they could use you down here! Thank you Blanchard family for making Virginia a more loving place to call home.

Adoption is working, It’s creating families; it’s saving taxpayer dollars. That’s why I’ve recommended $10.3 million in the upcoming budget to expand foster care and adoption support to age 21, and I hope you’ll approve that change.

We’ve supported families in other ways as well, and tonight I’m pleased to report that both the teen pregnancy and abortion rate have significantly declined over the last four years.

Virginia has the greatest concentration of technology workers in the country. We continued to grow our “Silicon Dominion” with targeted legislation like a capital gains exemption for technology businesses, creation of an angel investor tax credit, and a tax credit to attract data centers.

We also dramatically reformed and improved the Virginia Information Technology Agency, expanded modeling and simulation opportunities and launched MACH37, the nation's first cyber-security accelerator.

Looking forward, there are many important structural reforms left to address in state government….which I would have done myself if you had just approved a two-term governor!

We need to reform the tax code for the modern Virginia economy, re-examine state and municipal authority and service responsibility, fight for a balanced federal budget and the restoration of federalism and maybe one day finally end the outdated and nonsensical state bourbon & vodka monopoly. I’d say you can still knock all of that out this session if you move real fast.

We have made much progress. But not everything has proceeded as I had wished or hoped.

I am not perfect. But I have always worked tirelessly to do my very best for Virginia. I’ve set very high standards for myself. But, as a flawed human being, I’ve sometimes fallen short of my own expectations.

Choices I made were legal, and as several reviews have shown, no person or company received any special benefits during our Administration.

However, I understand the adverse public impression some of my decisions have left. I have prayed fervently that the collective good we have done over the past four years will not be obscured by this ordeal.

Tonight, I say to you, and to all Virginians, that I am deeply sorry for the problems and pain I’ve caused this past year.

The last four years have been good in making this a true “Commonwealth of Opportunity” for all Virginians.

Unemployment down two full points and over 177,000 new jobs created.

Tuition increases down; on our way to 100,000 more slots for Virginia students.

A transformative transportation infrastructure bill.

Major innovative reforms of our public education system.

Record budget surpluses.

A healthier Chesapeake Bay.

A stronger pension system.

And don’t forget, we reopened 19 rest stops and increased the highway speed limit to 70mph!

We’ve done a lot; accomplished much. But, in the years ahead, when I think back over our term in office, it won’t be the top line bullet points of our success that come first to mind.

Rather, I’ll remember we tried to follow the words of Jesus in the Scriptures to love your neighbor as yourself, and to care for the poor, the hungry, the homeless, the prisoners, the little children, the mentally ill.

I’ll remember eight Virginia universities playing in the Governor’s Holiday Hoops Classic and raising nearly half a million pounds for our Food Banks; and all the Virginia businesses that participated in the Governor’s Bowl Food and Fund Drive and raised another 1.1 million pounds.

I’ll remember the emotion of walking the Richmond Slave Trail and seeing the remnants of horror at Lumpkins Jail, and I ask you to approve the $11 million in the budget for the national slavery and heritage site.

I’ll remember the vision of Bob Sledd, working for free, and Pam Kestner who created our first statewide housing plan and found new resources for the effort, leading to a 16% reduction in homelessness last year.

I’ll remember visiting the brave people of Glade Spring and Pulaski after the devastating tornados that struck those communities; and I’ll remember the outpouring of support from Virginians who donated over $1 million in just one month to the Disaster Relief Fund we created.

In short, I’ll remember the caring, generous, and good-hearted people of Virginia.

We are all very fortunate to call Virginia home. We live in the place where America was born. Now, you have the opportunity to play a pivotal role in where our nation goes from here. As you do, remember the image of George Washington on his knees at Valley Forge, and the words of the great Virginian in his first Inaugural Address: “The propitious smiles of Heaven can never be expected on a nation that disregards the eternal rules of order and right that Heaven itself has ordained.”

Tonight, I also ask you to embrace the new Administration.

Work closely with Governor Terry McAuliffe, Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam, and Attorney General Mark Herring to continue to make Virginia a “Commonwealth of Opportunity” for all our people.

I thank you for your warm friendship, strong partnership, and can-do results oriented leadership, and as I now step aside from the pinnacle of my life of public service, I thank God, once again, for making me a Virginian!

Thank you, and may God in His mercy and wisdom continue to bless the great people of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
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Governor McDonnell Announces Launch of the Commonwealth Innovation and Entrepreneurship Measurement System

English: Governor of Virginia at CPAC in .
English: Governor of Virginia at CPAC in . (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

RICHMOND - Governor Bob McDonnell announced today the launch of the Commonwealth Innovation and Entrepreneurship Measurement System (IEMS), a web-based portal that uses key metrics and outcomes to track the performance of Virginia’s innovation economy.

Speaking about the new system, Governor McDonnell said, “This system, which is available to the public, provides a dashboard and strategic path to new opportunities in the innovation economy using key indicators that can assist lawmakers, industry leaders and other stakeholders determine the best public-private investment priorities and policies. This program is an excellent example of how we can utilize creative solutions to empower the emerging economy and help create the jobs of the future.”

The IEMS was developed by the Center for Innovative Technology (CIT) to further the work of the Commonwealth Research and Technology Strategic Roadmap, which links funding for research commercialization projects to Virginia’s strategic technology priorities.  The IEMS measures five key performance areas of Virginia’s Innovation Economy, as well as the economic impact of innovation and entrepreneurship. The key performance areas are:

·         Talent Pipeline – the degree to which the educational system is developing the skills needed to support entrepreneurism and innovation in the Commonwealth.
·         Research and Development – the level of targeted innovation taking place through research and development activity occurring in the Commonwealth.
·         Access to Capital – the amount of public and private funding deployed to support company formation and taking new ideas to the marketplace.
·         Commercialization – the level of university-based technology licensing and company formation in Virginia.
·         Business Dynamics – tracking outcomes and other elements of an innovative and entrepreneurial ecosystem.

A final category, Outputs, measures the economic impact of innovation and entrepreneurship in Virginia’s economy, especially as they affect employment and wages in key industries.

Data feeding the IEMS come from federal, state and private sources, with economic performance indicators identified by CIT, the Council on Virginia’s Future, the Virginia Chamber of Commerce’s Blueprint Virginia and other sources.

Jane Kusiak, Executive Director of the Council on Virginia’s Future, said, “Fostering innovation and entrepreneurship are essential elements of Virginia’s global competitiveness strategy. The Innovation and Entrepreneurship Measurement System will enable our leaders to discuss quantifiable ways to enhance innovation and entrepreneurship in the Commonwealth. The Council on Virginia’s Future is proud of its partnership with the Center for Innovative Technology on the IEMS and is launching a new indicator on innovation and entrepreneurship on Virginia Performs to showcase this system.”

Governor McDonnell thanked Senator Bryce Reeves and Delegate Charles Poindexter for sponsoring legislation in the 2013 session that led to the creation of the IEMS. 

The IEMS portal can be found HERE.
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Monday, January 6, 2014

Gloucester, VA Officials Circumvent Discovery Throughout The County

Bad news for Gloucester County, Virginia officials.  Starting today, we are now publishing every private email address that the county uses to circumvent discovery in communications with each other.

  What does that mean?  We have discovered that a great deal of Gloucester County, Virginia officials and managers are using private email addresses in their communications that concern public county business.  They are hiding information from public discovery by doing this.  This has been an issue nationwide with politicians getting caught and busted for this exact activity.  We have no issues showing you who is doing this within the county as we continue to collect a list of those using a system that should never be done.  Even if these people have nothing to hide, they are circumventing discovery which means that they are hiding communications.  That is reason to believe they are not up and up in their dealings and are very suspect of wrong doing beyond circumventing discovery.

jjorth@vims.edu   James J Orth.  Gloucester Board of Supervisors.

c_records@yahoo.com  Charles Records, Gloucester School Board Member.
crecords@zandler-dev.com  Another email address for Charles Records above.

kiserben@gmail.com  Ben Kiser, The Kiser, Gloucester Superintendent of Schools.

aburruss2@cox.net  Ann Burruss, Gloucester Schools.

bjduncan12@cox.net  Betty Jane Duncan - Gloucester Schools?

hookc@cox.net  Carla Hook, Gloucester School Board member.

kevinsmith914@gmail.com  Kevin Smith,
rev.kev2@verizon.net  Same as above.  2 email addresses.

kimberlyehensley@gmail.com  Kimberly Hensley, Gloucester County Schools

georgeburak@cox.net  - Randy Burak, Gloucester County Schools

troyandersengp@cox.net  Troy Anderson, Gloucester School Board

This is just our first list of people in Gloucester County, Virginia government who are circumventing discovery by using personal emails in place of county emails to conduct county business.  We have the original emails on file where these addresses came from.

Now all of these people know better.  Heck, one is even an attorney who, without question, knows better.  Now in fairness, JJ Orth, at the top of the list, it's his VIMS email address being used which is still subject to a certain degree of scrutiny for public view.  Each one of these people would seem to be in clear violation to the Freedom of Information act.  You have to ask what it is they are hiding.  Each one of these people should be made to expose everything in their personal email accounts since they have used these accounts for public business.  Do you think any of them will willingly do so?  We don't think so either.  More are coming.




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Gloucester, VA Animal Control Monthly Report Updates Way Out of Date, January 2014.

The most recent monthly report that has been produced and published, by Animal Control of Gloucester, Virginia, for public view was last performed in June of 2011.  Would anyone say that maybe they are just a little out of date?

http://www.gloucesterva.info/AnimalControl/tabid/666/Default.aspx

The above is a link to the page on the county site that states that this report is an annual report, however, when you look at the actual report itself, it shows that is is supposed to be a monthly report.  Is this just to much trouble for the over glorified doggie catchers to stay up with?  At a cost of $600.00 per animal handled by this department, one would figure that they should at least be able to attract semi intelligent help that can at least read and write and do simple math each month.  If you do not want to download a report to look at it.  We have it here below.



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Gloucester, VA County Services Outrageous Costs, $600 Per Cat and Dog In November

Exposing Some of The Outrageous Costs of Gloucester County, Virginia's Government Services:  $600.00 Per Dog and Cat Picked Up In November, 2013. 


According to the figures reported in the Gloucester Mathews Gazette Journal newspaper this past week, Gloucester's Animal Control picked up 41 stray dogs and 6 stray cats during the month of November, 2013.  The latest figures just released to the paper from county officials.  So we decided to see what that translates to as far as the cost per animal incarcerated by these over glorified doggie catchers.  What we came up with was a staggering figure of nearly $600.00 per cat and dog handled by Animal Control for the month of November.

$600.00 Per Cat And Dog To Be Incarcerated As Opposed To $400.00 To Save A Human Life In Gloucester County, Virginia: 

To qualify the above figures, what we did is look at the yearly budget for Animal Control.  We then broke that down by 12 months to come up with a figure of $28,021.00 for one month and then divided that by the number of animals caught and incarcerated.  41 stray dogs and 6 cats.  The final number there came to a staggering $596.20 per animal.  We compared that to what it costs to save a human life by calling an ambulance.  

  Coming up with a figure for an ambulance was a bit tougher and required more work.  In Gloucester, the ambulance ride is supposed to be free as it is county funded through tax dollars and there are no figures to break that down.  So we went through various counties and cities within Hampton Roads and the Middle Peninsula to come up with an upper end figure of about $400.00.  

  Maybe Gloucester County officials should start looking at our emergency response for clues on how to better budget the over glorified doggie catchers.  If they use ambulances, then at least they could transport the animals in accordance with county ordinances.  (You can not transport an animal in a vehicle when the temperature is 80 degrees or above without air conditioning.  An ordinance that is in violation with state codes from what we have reviewed, but the county refuses to follow their own ordinances when transporting animals.  Yet you can leave Grandma in a car when the temperature is 110 degrees without air conditioning and that is just fine.  Just call an ambulance when she passes out.)

(Air Gap Between Truck Front and Truck Bed of Animal Control Vehicles in Gloucester County.  No Air Conditioning Provided for Animals in transport).

  Also, we calculated the time it took to incarcerate an animal.  It was about 16 hours per animal based on the number of animals handled and man hours on the payroll of Animal Control.  It looks like we need a much better plan.  

  Maybe the county should look at a bounty payment plan instead.  Bring in a stray for a bounty of $200.00 would be much cheaper.   Either way, why does it cost more to incarcerate an animal than to save a human life?

 Next time you see a stray dog or cat remember that if you call to have the animal picked up, it's at a cost of about $600.00 to the taxpayers of the county.  But you can save a human life for two thirds that cost.  Does anyone find that outrageous?
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Undermining The Constitution A HISTORY OF LAWLESS GOVERNMENT (Part 1)

Battle of the Hook, 2013
Battle of the Hook, 2013 (Photo credit: Battleofthehook)
By Thomas James Norton

THE REPRESENTATIVE, OR REPUBLICAN, FORM OF GOVERNMENT, CAREFULLY CHOSEN BY THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION IN 1787 AGAINST DEMOCRACY OR DIRECT ACTION BY THE PEOPLE, WAS FIRST UNDERMINED BY THE STATES
In 1893 South Dakota adopted from Switzerland the Initiative and the Referendum, and from then until 1918 one or both of those plans, with the Recall, were taken on by 22 of the 48 States.

Three borrowings from Switzerland against our Constitution

By the Initiative the people can draft a law and put it to a vote; if the majority favor it the legislature is bound to pass it, even though opposed to it.
By the Referendum a bill passed by the legislature is referred to popular vote, and it may be approved or prevented from taking effect.
The Recall is used to unseat a holder of office who has become unsatisfactory, or to revoke a law.
Some States adopted the three expedients, some two of them, some only one. At first the belief spread rapidly.


The first attempt to recall judicial decisions

Colorado was the only State to apply (1912) the Recall to decisions by the courts, and that was held by the Supreme Court of the State to be in conflict with the Colorado constitution.
Theodore Roosevelt, displeased by the decisions of some courts, advocated the recall of decisions of the supreme courts of States. The prestige of the former President gave much impetus to the "movement." The American Bar Association appointed a committee to go to the country in refutation of the constitutionally destructive idea. In 1912 the committee reported the recall of decisions dead. Roosevelt afterward admitted that he had made a mistake.
Kansas limited the Recall (1914) to appointive officials.
The Initiative has never been extensively used, and for a long time not much has been heard of any of the "democratic" devices.
Large populations require representation, not "democracy"
Methods deemed useful to small populations in narrow areas, as in the cantons of Switzerland and the town meetings in New England, could not be accepted as serviceable or safe for large populations and extensive countries. Indeed, that point was discussed in the Constitutional Convention, and the conclusion was reached that for the United States as they then were, and as they would expand to be, only the representative or Republican system would do.
In 1893, when South Dakota led the way, the country


had undergone one of its severest panics. There had also been successive crop failures. The advocates of popular action contended that legislatures were not faithful to the people and that therefore the people should take over. However, the remedy was in the election of better legislators, not in a fundamental change in the form of government. And it is doubtful whether the most capable and honest legislators could have stilled the complaints arising from the panic and the failures of crops.
When people seek paternalism from their government
In all such times the disposition is to look around for a scapegoat, and the people usually feel that government should do something to correct conditions and relieve distress.
This inclination of the people in financial distress to look to the governments of the States to do something about it was the forerunner, as it were, of the wide calls for "Federal aid" of many kinds which were raised in the late 1920s and the early 1930s.
In 1920 the Supreme Court upheld (253 U. S. 233) the creation by a vote of the people of North Dakota of an Industrial Commission to take over and manage utilities, industries, and other business projects, some to be established by law. It was authorized to operate the Bank of North Dakota, the Home-Builders Association, flour mills, grain elevators, a fire insurance company, and other projects. It was empowered to issue bonds, and in 1937 it had floated such paper to the amount of $24,798,000 for rural credit.

From 1934 to 1940, in a time of peace, the National Government built up a deficit of $26,500,000,000, of which $21,500,000,000, or 80 per cent, according to the Governor of Virginia, resulted from "grants in aid" to States and individuals. Subsidies from the taxpayers of the country held up the price of wheat and corn to $3 a bushel as late as 1948. And like support to stockmen put the prices of their commodities so high that beefsteaks, roasts and lamb almost entirely disappeared from the table of the American.
Dependence on government brings unfortunate conditions
And yet the stockmen were unprepared with shelter and feed to care for their herds when the heavy snows and low temperatures came in the Winter of 1948-1949. The States were without organization to help. Governors and stockmen cried to Washington to come out and save them! Long dependence of the people and the States on miscalled "Federal money" had debilitated both.
The army was sent out. It kept the roads open and it fed and saved most of the herds.
Caesar, too, helped the people, but they lost their liberty to him.
The Constitutional Convention set up a thoroughly representative form of Government in each of the three Departments -- the Legislative, the Executive, and the Judicial. The States, which wrote the Constitution by their representatives, provided in section 4 of Article IV particular protection for themselves.

Nation and States given representative government by Constitution
"The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican [not democratic] form of government, and shall protect each of them against invasion."
They obliged the power over all, which they had set up for the common strength, to protect each in its Republican form, and to defend each physically.
Commenting on that provision for a representative form of government, Madison said in No. 43 of The Federalist:
"The only restriction imposed on them is that they shall not exchange Republican for anti-Republican [democratic] constitutions."
The choice by the Convention of the Republican or representative form over the popular or democratic government followed full and able discussions. In explaining what had been considered in this relation, Madison, the note taker of daily doings in the Convention, said in No. 10 ofThe Federalist, after pointing out the evils which factions had always done in democracies:
"The inference to which we are brought is that the causes of faction cannot be removed, and that relief is only to be sought in the means of controlling its effects."

Why Convention rejected democracy or popular control

The turbulence and contention which had given short lives and violent deaths to democracies would be controlled by representative government:
"A Republic, by which I mean a government in which the scheme of representation takes place, opens a different prospect, and promises the cure for which we are seeking."
By "the delegation of the government to a small number of citizens elected by the rest," Madison said, the public views are refined and enlarged "by passing them through the medium of a chosen body of citizens whose wisdom may best discern the true interest of their country, and whose patriotism and love of justice will be least likely to sacrifice it to temporary or partial considerations."
Accordingly:
"Under such a regulation it may well happen that the public voice, pronounced by the representatives of the people, will be more consonant to the public good than if pronounced by the people themselves, convened for the purpose."
The spread of a governmental evil

The Initiative, the Referendum, and the Recall led to other departures from the representative form of government. Officeholders or aspirants who hoped to advantage themselves brought out the direct primary. That primary suggested later the "Presidential preference" primary to seekers of the highest office, who believed that they could "swing" the crowd when the party might not be for them. In many instances the promoters of the "democratic" primary, which had been hailed as the voice of the people, failed of their expectations through them.
As the decayed apple in the barrel damages all the others, so the badness in principle of the Initiative, the Referendum, and the Recall spread after bringing the direct primary and the Presidential primary. In 1912 some members of the United States Senate, doubtless feeling


that they would be more sure of holding their seats if they could appeal to the people from the hustings than if their return were to remain with critical legislatures, proposed an amendment to the Constitution, first suggested in 1869, for the direct election of senators by the people of the States instead of by the legislatures. It was ratified and became effective as the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913.
The great purpose in the Congress frustrated
Thus the two Houses of Congress became alike, whereas the Constitutional Convention designed a House of People and a House of States. The House elected by the States to represent them in the Congress of their Union was destroyed. Two Houses now represent the people and none stands for the States. Does that help to explain why the States have been passing out as the controlling forces in their Union? The extent of their diminution will be fully shown later in this book.
The proponents of the Amendment supported their advocacy by saying that money had been improperly used in some legislatures by backers of candidates for the House of States. But, as we have said with respect to the Initiative, the proper remedy for the people was in electing better legislators, not in unsettling the foundations of the Republic. Besides, candidates for the Senate, in the primary to get the nomination and then in the election contest against the nominee of the other party to get the office, have spent more money than was ever reported as used in a legislature.

A very capable and upright senator from California declined to seek a second term because the expense of the primary which nominated him and of the election campaign which put him in the Senate had been so great that he said the security of his family had been endangered. He was fairly well-to-do, but this "democracy" which had been introduced in the name of "reform" he could not carry.

Some capable men excluded from Senate
Had the Seventeenth Amendment not been put in the Constitution, the legislature of California might have kept him in the service of the State by reelecting him many terms. Thus, Senator Hoar of Massachusetts, an illustrious statesman without means, who did not want to go to the Senate, was chosen by his legislature during his absence from the country and kept there to the end of his life.
Senator Morrill of Vermont and others of those times gave all or most of their working years to their country in the House of States. They did not need to "campaign." That was fortunate, because they had no money.
A poor man who seeks a seat in the Senate now must have "backers," and he may therefore cease to be the owner of himself.
The cure which was sought in haste and some anger through the Initiative and the popular election of senators might have been reached by choosing better legislators. But when the American, after long indifference, arouses himself he is prone "to do the right thing the wrong way."
Lack of learning in Constitution dangerous
It is hard to believe that an educator provided the "slogan" for those two decades: "The cure for the evils of democracy is more democracy." We have it.

In No. 62 of The Federalist the faith in the House of States was expressed (italics inserted):
"It is recommended by the double advantage of favoring a select appointment, and of giving to the State government such an agency in the formation of the Federal Government as must secure the authority of the former, and may form a convenient link between the two systems."
Thus the States would be in Congress as well as the People.
Evil results from decline of Senate
None of the transgressions of constitutional boundaries of recent years could probably have been accomplished had the House of States not been broken down.
It is a fact to be noted that the Sixteenth Amendment, under which Congress has, without specific authority, been gathering the "graduated" income tax of Communism, became effective in February, 1913, and the Seventeenth Amendment, emasculating the House of States, became a part of the Constitution in May of that year. That imports very serious dissatisfaction of a people, unschooled in the principles of their Government, with the system designed by the Constitutional Convention, which contained, Bryce pointed out, "fifty-five men who belong to the history of the world," and many others "less known in Europe who must be mentioned with respect."
Warning of Washington against constitutional innovations
In his Farewell Address caution was given by Washington to resist "the spirit of innovation" upon the principles of the Constitution, "however specious the pretexts."

General and thorough education in constitutional philosophy is essential to our safety.
A final word from The Federalist:
"The necessity of a Senate is not less indicated by the propensity of all single and numerous assemblies to yield to the impulse of sudden and violent passions, and to be seduced by factious leaders into intemperate and pernicious resolutions. Examples on this subject might be cited without number; and from proceedings within the United States, as well as from the history of other nations."
The States in their House would be a check on sudden and ill-considered action by the House of the People.
In the day of the House of States the senators accepted seriously and discharged courageously the responsibility cast upon them by the Constitution in confirming or disapproving the appointments of the President. A confirmation then did not follow as a matter of course. InAutobiography of Seventy Years it is related by Senator Hoar that he went into the Supreme Court to hear Senator Daniel Webster make an argument in a case. Webster began by referring "very impressively" to the changes which had taken place in the Tribunal since he first appeared as counsel before it:
"Not one of the judges who were here then remains. It has been my duty to pass upon the question of the confirmation of every member of the Bench; and I may say that I treated your honors with entire impartiality, for I voted against every one of you."
The alterations in the American system of representative or Republican government here reviewed were as unnecessary as they were ineffectual for the purposes intended.

"Democracy" not suitable to representative system
A review of over half a century of tinkerings with constitutional representative government makes plain that "democracy" is unsuited to the United States.
The cases to be reviewed in the chapters following will serve to clarify the meaning in practice of the representative principle running everywhere through the Constitution. They will help also to an understanding of the structurally important — superior and sustaining — place of the States in the constitutional edifice.

Then it will be clear why, as President Cleveland said, "departure from the lines there laid down is failure."

Part One.

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