Governor’s Office Announces Key Policy Shifts and Upcoming Legislative Session on Veterans’ Education Benefits

The Governor’s office has been very busy over the last month. Two important announcements from his office include the exciting departure from Virginia’s ties to California’s electric vehicle mandate as well as the announcement of bolstered efforts to maintain an accurate and current registered voter list through information being funneled to the Department of Elections from other state agencies. Click HERE to see a list of recent press releases from the Governor’s office and to subscribe to related email updates.

Additionally, within the last couple weeks, it has been announced that the General Assembly is returning to Richmond to reconsider changes to a program that waives tuition costs for some children of veterans to receive higher education at Virginia public universities. The General Assembly will meet on June 28th to vote on this issue.

Staff Spotlight: Melody Clarke, Deputy Director, EIN

Melody Himel Clarke joined the Institute in 2023 and is the Election Integrity Network’s deputy director for the eastern states.

She also serves as the director of government affairs at Virginia Institute Action where she is essential in coordinating advocacy efforts such as in-person testimony, media campaigns, and maintaining robust relations with grassroots supporters and the media.

Even before joining the Institute, Melody was known as a leader throughout Virginia for her work on public policy, advocacy, coalition building, and activist training. Melody is a lifelong entrepreneur and small business owner with over four decades of management and team-building experience. She is Christian, married, and for fun enjoys equestrian activities, recreational shooting, and is learning to bird hunt with her Wirehaired Vizslas.

The Federalist: Voters Prohibit ‘Zuckbucks’-Style Private Funding And Staff From Wisconsin Elections

This insightful article delves into the recent decision by Wisconsin voters to pass two pivotal constitutional amendments, thereby fortifying the integrity and impartiality of their electoral process. These amendments aim to staunch the flow of private funding in elections and ensure that only legally appointed officials are at the helm of election administration— a direct countermeasure against the controversial “Zuckbucks”-style electioneering, where substantial private funds, notably from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, were injected into the electoral system to predominately benefit Democrat-majority counties. The article also highlights the relentless efforts of conservative groups and activists across Wisconsin, who worked tirelessly to mobilize voters and secure the passage of these amendments. These measures are seen as a significant step towards preventing potential biases and irregularities in future elections, although questions remain about the impact of previously accepted private grants on upcoming elections. In sum, the article underscores the importance of grassroots activism and coordinated efforts among organizations in achieving these electoral reforms, reflecting a commitment to maintaining the fairness and integrity of the electoral process.

Click here to read the full article at The Federalist.

 

Education Cost and Effectiveness

The Intricate Dance of Funding and Educational Outcomes in the Wake of a Pandemic

In the realm of education, the allocation of resources has always been a topic of fervent discussion. Per Pupil Expenditures (PPE) and, by proxy, teacher salaries often serve as a
barometer for gauging educational investment within the political discourse. However, the question that looms ever larger is whether an increase in PPE invariably leads to enhanced
educational outcomes. This debate has gained even more traction in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, which introduced the pressing issue of “learning loss.”

The Cost of Focusing on Cost

It’s a seemingly straightforward equation: more funds should equate to better resources, leading to improved education. With a boost in PPE, schools, in theory, can employ more adept
educators, reduce class sizes, and invest in state-of-the-art technology. Yet, by and large, statistical evidence suggests little to no relationship between increasing educational funding and
measurable benefits to educational outcomes for children.

An interesting example is the district-level spending afforded by the monies in the American Rescue Plan’s Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ARP ESSER). A
recent working paper published by NBER observed no statistical significance to the effect of ARP ESSER funding categories on the year-over-year changes, positive or negative, in testing
proficiency for both the English Language Arts (ELA) and mathematics. This could be for one of two reasons: the programs are near-universally ineffective, or the programs are near-universally “theoretical,” i.e., unimplemented beyond what was initially required to receive funding.

The observations in this study echo long-standing and oft-replicated research bringing into question the argument that good educational outcomes are a function of high education
spending. Although some spending, whether done publicly or privately, is certainly required to fund any service, the question remains: does increasing funding lead to better outcomes?
Considering the penultimate growth in education funding in contrast with the mild and, at times, inverse progress made in educational outcomes, the answer is, most assuredly, no.

As indicated by NBER’s working paper, the pandemic has added a layer of complexity to this subject. Schools, particularly Virginia schools, face considerable gaps in those foundational
skills children must have to succeed in the modern world. A scorecard tracking education recovery produced collaboratively by Stanford and Harvard Universities provides a record of the
gains or losses in education suffered since the epidemic began. Virginia’s students have suffered more than most other states, with nearly every district behind by approximately 1.5 years in ELA and mathematics by the end of the 2022 school year.

While additional expenditures can potentially address some of these gaps for some kids, the relationship between funding and outcomes is neither linear nor particularly significant. While
we continue to wait to see exactly where the ARP ESSER funding has landed in each district, it is important to recognize that past performance, parental involvement, and teacher autonomy are going to play a comparatively outsized role in whether or not the current generation of students ever recover from the learning loss foisted upon them by poorly considered pandemic
lockdowns.

Money makes the world go-‘round, but not particularly well.

But why isn’t there any consistent correlation between additional funding and increased outcomes? The answer here is simple; funding does not necessarily equate to more resources,
better teachers, or greater opportunities for learning. Funding only guarantees some resources, some teachers, and some opportunities without any consistent assurance of quality.

The key to quality is fundamentally about group incentives. Several key identities are involved in the education system, each operating under dissimilar needs. Teachers may be socially or
morally incentivized to endeavor to become excellent at their job, but collectively, their number one incentive is compensation. Teaching is the way in which they care for their own families,
after all. Administrators are much the same, but as the perceived arbiters of quality control in public and private education, they have an added incentive to avoid regular (or any) interaction
with “abusive” or hyper-involved parents. Teachers’ unions are incentivized to collect more and higher dues. To accomplish this goal, they must be perceived as effective representatives of the
teachers’ interests with their employer. In the case of public instruction, this means an effective apparatus for lobbying the state and tweaking public opinion.

Students are broadly incentivized to graduate, but there is probably a much more disparate series of incentives for students than any other group, given the conventional challenges of maturing in a modern first-world society. Finally, parents, as a group, have the strongest incentive to see real and positive outcomes from their children’s education. Cynically, this might be attributed to a desire for their children to move out as soon as possible or a hope that their children will supplement their care in their old age. More reasonably and charitably, however, parents do genuinely love their children and care very much about their future.

Oddly, the American public school system has successfully divorced the incentives of educators from that of parents as the only interested party with an inherent and near-universal collective
desire for positive educational outcomes. This is, of course, not what we see from other goods and services we utilize for the benefit of our children. Summer camps, tutoring services, toys,
and even snack foods all tend to be provided exactly within the spectrum of quantity and quality that different families are hoping to consume. This is because the incentives of the providers of these goods and services (e.g., to receive compensation and avoid complaints) align directly with the desires of their target consumers (e.g., family-friendly fun, education, enjoyment, or
playtime).

To simplify, third-party payers disconnect the service provider’s incentives from the consumer’s needs. If teachers and administrators rely on the government for the food on their tables, they
have little intrinsic need to perform services to the standards of the average Joe sending their child to school.

What’s going on today?

Of course, effectively zero percent of the American public wants to revisit the decision to have a public education system. Even parents who educate their children at home hope their local public school continues operating as it has. People do, by and large, trust in the good faith efforts of their local teachers and school administrators, and that’s certainly a good thing. But all the outstanding data suggests we could, and should, be doing much better. This said, several interesting experiments being performed around the country have provided additional education
opportunities outside the traditional model with promising levels of success – Education Savings Accounts, tax credits, and Virginia’s own EISTC program, for example. Governor Youngkin’s
recent efforts to provide access to ARP ESSER funding in the form of “learning recovery” grants, directly providing one-time funding to get extra educational help for children who need it,
is a positive step or at least a well-intentioned and considered step, bearing in mind the operational difficulty the program has faced at its outset.

These experiments, although politically challenging to enact regardless of the partisan makeup of a state, stand to provide massive amounts of data and numerous opportunities to refine and
reinvent American education for the better. As anyone who has truly considered the miracles of the internet, Amazon, or even a simple grocery store in the context of world history will know,
choice and accessibility are nearly always the cure for widely divergent beliefs and needs in a civil society. The challenge is that it is much easier for political leaders to see a one-size-fits-all
solution as a viable and necessary option, even when we all recognize that one size doesn’t ever really fit anybody.

Another more concrete difficulty is how the balance of the $2.2 billion ARP ESSER funds has been used or may be used. Although annual reporting was a requirement for receiving federal
funding, the Commonwealth and its districts have reported only how much of the grant has been spent, about $1.7 billion as of the end of the 2022-2023 school year. Virginia does not, however, provide any detail as to what the funding has been used for other than the state and local plans initially submitted to receive the funding. Nor does the state or its various localities seem to indicate whether the activities, personnel, goods, or services purchased have been delivered. As far as fiscal accountability is concerned, the federal government, the average Virginian, and possibly even the state government have been left in the dark.

With the noted exception of Governor Youngkin’s highly visible grant program, the Commonwealth’s rather nonchalant disinterest in public transparency compounds the challenges
that Virginia is facing regarding education, broadly, and learning loss, more particularly. Without the ability to track the use of this money, there is no way to determine what local efforts worked and which did not. If we cannot replicate or reject educational programs based on measures of outcomes in the context of cost, then all the programs are simply moot.

Policy Primer: Regulatory Reform (2023)

The cost of regulation between 1980 and today is estimated to be more than $5 trillion representing a 25% shortfall in would-be economic growth. This number is exceedingly difficult for most people to visualize, so this simple mental exercise can be beneficial in communicating just how much has been lost:

Five million seconds is about 58 days;

Five trillion seconds is 158,440 years.

As anyone can see, this loss of real value to our economy is not insignificant. In response, the Virginia Institute for Public Policy’s regulatory reform initiative proposes the implementation of a Regulatory Budget Program coupled with establishing a Universal Regulatory Sandbox. These measures aim to promote economic growth, innovation, and regulatory efficiency by limiting or eliminating the continued inflation of regulatory requirements while providing an environment where compliance burdens are temporarily removed to enhance and promote experimentation and development of new products, services, and business methodologies in the Commonwealth.

VIPP Policy Primer: Regulatory Reform (2023)

Click HERE to view or download.

Introducing Regulatory Sandboxes

This year, the Virginia Institute has successfully introduced an innovative policy called Regulatory Sandboxes to the public policy and legislative community in Virginia. A Regulatory Sandbox creates a space and time for innovators to offer new goods and services to consumers without the initial burden of some regulations. Sandboxes provide opportunities for new and old businesses to test fresh ideas in the market while simultaneously providing a constant stream of pilot programs and data for regulators to determine what regulations work with the least possible burden on the community.

Epoch Times: Grassroots Election Integrity Movement Sweeps Battleground States

This article was originally published in The Epoch Times.

At ten past five in the morning on Election Day in 2021, retired construction company owner Warren Jenkins slid into his business-casual attire in a panic, knowing he had to get to the polling station in 20 minutes. He was the only Republican poll watcher at an important precinct.

Jenkin’s wife, prescient, pre-made lunch for her husband, who then arrived at the polls to begin his 15-hour shift—from 5:30 a.m. to about 9 p.m.—just in time.

As a volunteer poll watcher in Virginia, Jenkins would… [Click HERE to read more.]

Save Virginia’s Education Improvement Scholarship Tax Credit

A new state budget was recently approved by the Virginia Legislature, including an education related amendment that has been made by the conference committee legislators. If enacted, this budget will cut funding for the Virginia Education Improvement Scholarship Tax Credit (EISTC). This funding is critical for providing thousands of children in Virginia better educational opportunities.

The Virginia EISTC program allows individuals and businesses the opportunity to donate to private state-qualified scholarship foundations and in turn receive up to a 65% tax credit. However, only $25 million of tax credits are available. This upcoming budget will cut the funding in half — down to $12 million. In the 2020-21 school year, 4,592 students utilized funds from participating scholarship foundations. The new budget amendment would strip away the ability to give more students life changing education opportunities at a time when kids need it the most. With less funding for the tax incentive, students in Virginia will have less access to these scholarships and subsequently less access to the schools of their choice.

Governor Youngkin can save this program by requesting an amendment to the budget before he signs it. Contact the Governor’s office right now and tell him you want him to restore funding for the EISTC. Virginia’s children deserve a high quality education. We believe opportunity and freedom of choice are essential components for improving education.

Contact the Governor’s office today!
Call 804-786-2211 or click here.

Virginia Absentee Ballots: Absent From the State?

For election accountability purposes, chain of custody for ballots should be observable and publicly verifiable. So, why are two of the largest counties in Virginia, as well as other localities, planning to expand the chain of custody to include a third-party absentee ballot processing company from Washington state, who was caught red-handed ignoring the security measures built into the law?

Before 2021, absentee ballots were mailed from local registrars’ offices and processed and supervised by the registrar’s staff. In 2021, a bill (SB 1239) was passed that permits localities to hire a third-party company to print, assemble, and mail absentee ballots. Once hired, this vendor receives the name, address, precinct, district and voter ID information for individual voters. In Loudoun County, for example, the list of permanent absentee ballots that would be handed over to the private vendor would number around 15,000. 

Last year, Fairfax County, the most populous county in Virginia, outsourced the printing and mailing of their absentee ballots to a company called K&H located in Washington State. K&H failed to follow Virginia law. They did not sign a legally required (VA Code 24.2-616) oath before they began their work. The law says, “The printer contracting with or employed by the electoral board or general registrar to print the ballots shall sign a statement before the work is commenced…” A public information request found that the vendor failed to comply with Virginia law and did not sign the oaths until months after the election was over. 

Entrusting bulk absentee ballots, the most fraud-prone part of  our elections, to strangers on the other side of the country is a bad idea. Some ballots are going to people who may not have recently asked for them, the chain of custody barely exists, and private voter information is being handled by a third-party company. If all that starts to look like a nightmare in the making, in real life it gets much worse.

Loudoun County recently announced they may also follow Fairfax County and make a similar contract with the same vendor for the upcoming 2022 General Election. Judy Brown, the Loudoun County registrar, was advised against outsourcing by local citizens and election security advocates including a Loudoun County election integrity working group, former State Board of Elections member Dr. Clara Belle Wheeler, Delegate Dave LaRock, and the nonpartisan, statewide, Virginia Fair Elections coalition, as well as many others. 

She had reportedly decided against the initial plan to outsource their county’s absentee ballot printing and mailing process only to flip flop without explanation. 

The number of absentee votes cast have skyrocketed over the last couple of years. In Virginia, several laws were hastily enacted to expand the duration of elections and the processes used to distribute and process ballots. The often exaggerated precautions associated with COVID-19 were used to justify large-scale expansion of absentee voting. A new state law passed in 2020 (HB 207) opened absentee voting to any qualified voter, regardless of circumstance. The same law allowed for voters to be added to a “permanent absentee” list so a person could opt-in to receive a mailed absentee ballot for all future elections. 

Virginia localities have demonstrated that they are capable of handling large batches of absentee ballots. Loudoun handled about 80,000 absentee ballots in 2020. That number dropped significantly in 2021 to about 23,000 ballots. The process requires diligent care and attention to detail. Some registrars may consider steps such as hiring more staff, or implementing a stricter employment application process. 

For some, the motivation to outsource the process is a new requirement (SB 3) that absentee ballots now be sorted and reported by precinct. That means localities might be handling many different ballots in the same election; yes a challenge, but if a private company can handle it, so a registrar should be able to as well. One option for sorting ballots has been successfully used for more than 10 years in Chesapeake; their locality orders ballots that already have special barcodes that allow sorting by precinct. 

There is clear consensus among many who are scrutinizing this process that this is a bad practice and are opposed to outsourcing to third-parties. They see outsourcing as problematic and flawed and hope that all 133 jurisdictions in Virginia will maintain the integrity of elections in printing and mailing all ballots, especially absentee ballots; one of the best practices would be to keep absentee ballot printing and mailing processes in-state and in-house.

Outsourcing the absentee ballot process will give good reason for Virginia’s voters to question election integrity at a time when voter faith in elections is already greatly diminished.

2022 Legislative Report: Election Integrity

ELECTION INTEGRITY – Restoring Trust in Virginia’s Elections

Do you trust your vote counts? If a medical pulse was taken on America’s trust in our election processes, the results would be alarming— some would say fatal. One authorquantified the problem this way: “After the last election cycle, confidence is waning: Less than 60%2 of all voters were confident that ballots would be accurately cast and counted.” The result of this mistrust is that fewer people show up at the polls to take part in the democratic process of governing and we lose representation of the rich diversity that makes us who we are.

However, as the populace has increasingly lost trust in elections, a large infusion of new energy and support for finding solutions has surfaced. Those who advocate for increased election integrity, also often called election security, believe it should be easy to vote and hard to cheat in the process for our citizenry to select public servants. Yet, current Virginia laws and regulations make it easy to vote and easy to cheat — similar problems are pervasive across the nation. Knowing that the laws are not robust enough to inhibit voter fraud only exacerbates the populace’s mistrust in elections. When election processes are vulnerable to being manipulated with only minimal energy and time required to do so, Virginians’ sacred right to vote is jeopardized.

How can we restore “liberty and justice for all” voters? Good election policy at the state level is the best place to start. To prevent even the temptation for a person to commit voter fraud, it is desirable to safeguard our elections by passing laws to make it difficult to vote more than once or otherwise unduly influence voting results and interfere with the will of “we the people.” Although dozens and dozens of bills that touched on aspects of election security were introduced during this past 2022 Virginia Legislative Session, only a few were passed by the legislature and sent to the Governor’s desk. Below you will find a roadmap of bills introduced this session and some of the strong ideas that lawmakers advanced to secure our elections.

Click here to review the Virginia Institute’s full Legislative Report: Election Integrity (2022).