Home Blog Page 2004

Amazon Web Services Announces New Renewable Energy Project in Virginia

5

Great news on the clean energy front here in Virginia, of COURSE not from the fossil fools at Dominion or from our bought-and-paid-for General Aseembly, but from Amazon.com.

Amazon Web Services Announces New Renewable Energy Project in Virginia

Amazon Solar Farm US East Will Be Virginia’s Largest Solar Farm, Expected to Produce Approximately 170,000 MWh of Energy Annually



SEATTLE–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Jun. 10, 2015– Amazon Web Services, Inc. (AWS), an Amazon.com company (NASDAQ:AMZN), today announced that it has teamed with Community Energy, Inc. to support the construction and operation of an 80 megawatt (MW) solar farm in Accomack County, Virginia, called Amazon Solar Farm US East. This new solar farm is expected to start generating approximately 170,000 megawatt hours (MWh) of solar power annually as early as October 2016 – or the equivalent of that used by approximately 15,000 US homes1 in a year. Amazon Solar Farm US East will be the largest solar farm in the state of Virginia, with all energy generated delivered into the electrical grids that supply both current and future AWS Cloud datacenters. For more information, go to http://aws.amazon.com/about-aw…

In November 2014, AWS shared its long-term commitment to achieve 100 percent renewable energy usage for the global AWS infrastructure footprint. As of April 2015, AWS announced that approximately 25 percent2 of the power consumed by its global infrastructure comes from renewable energy sources with an interim goal of increasing that percentage to at least 40 percent by the end of 2016. The Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) for Amazon Solar Farm US East follows a similar PPA for Amazon Wind Farm (Fowler Ridge) in Benton County, Indiana, that was announced in January 2015 and is expected to generate approximately 500,000 MWh of wind power annually. Both represent key steps toward meeting these goals.

“We continue to make significant progress towards our long-term commitment to power the global AWS infrastructure with 100 percent renewable energy,” said Jerry Hunter, Vice President of Infrastructure at Amazon Web Services. “Amazon Solar Farm US East – the second PPA that will serve both existing and planned AWS datacenters in the central and eastern US – has the added benefit of working to increase the availability of renewable energy in the Commonwealth of Virginia.”

Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe commented, “Amazon’s new solar project will create good jobs on the Eastern Shore and generate more clean, renewable energy to fuel the new Virginia economy. I look forward to working with Amazon and Accomack to get this project online as we continue our efforts to make Virginia a global leader in the renewable energy sector.”

Community Energy is a pioneer in developing renewable energy with a long history in solar and wind energy. Community’s CEO, Brent Alderfer, said, “We are pleased to work with Amazon Web Services to build the largest solar farm in Virginia and one of the largest east of the Mississippi. This project, which wouldn’t have been possible without AWS’ leadership, helps accelerate the commercialization and deployment of solar photovoltaic (PV) technologies at scale in Virginia.”

Now, we just need about 50-100 more of these projects (that would get us to 4-8 gigawatts of solar power in Virginia) and we’ll really be getting somewhere!

All Hail King Surovell!

7

( – promoted by lowkell)

Tuesday’s primaries were filled with surprises. While many Northern Virginia political observers are focused on results in Arlington and Alexandria, perhaps one of the most remarkable outcomes took place in Fairfax County in the race for Mt. Vernon District Supervisor.

Throughout the campaign, Planning Commissioner and Dominion Power employee Tim Sargeant was considered the frontrunner. However, only one week before the primary, Delegate Scott Surovell (D-44) endorsed Mt. Vernon School Board Member Dan Storck over the three other candidates.

Fairfax Democrats know that Scott Surovell, now running for State Senate, is popular and well-liked in his district, but Tuesday’s results prove just how respected he really is.

Highlights from the election:

Dan Storck won 11 of the 12 precincts in HD-44, losing only Riverside precinct by just 13 votes.

Dan Storck did not win a single precinct outside HD-44.

Tim Sargeant won 12 of 14 precincts outside HD-44. Sargeant tied in Gunston precinct and Jack Dobbyn won Westgate Precinct.

Dan Storck beat Tim Sargeant by 16.4 points inside HD-44, while he lost to Sargeant by 20.3 points outside of HD-44.

Both Tim Sargeant and Dan Storck received a number of endorsements by elected officials, and Sargeant was endorsed by the Washington Post. However, as these results show, by far the most valuable endorsement in this race was Scott Surovell’s, and he singlehandedly determined the outcome of this race.

The results are a big win for Team Surovell, including Paul Krizek who won the primary for Surovell’s House Seat with 68% of the vote, political strategist Ben Tribbett who organized the joint campaign, and Surovell Campaign Manager Megan Howard.

Congratulations to Dan Storck, Paul Krizek, and King Surovell!

Additional graphs and tables after the jump

National and Virginia News Headlines: Wednesday Morning

2

Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Wednesday, June 10. Also check out the photo of my favorite Revenue Commissioner, Ingrid Morroy, with Katie Cristol and Christian Dorsey, both of whom are on their way to the Arlington County Board after victories yesterday.

*BREAKING: Court Throws Out Challenge To Obama’s Climate Change Rule

*How the next few weeks could determine the fate of Obama’s legacy

*The Fifth Circuit Just Stuck A Knife In Roe v. Wade

*A resilient democracy (“The global importance of Turkey’s election”)

*Dems set budget trap for GOP

*Watch Jeb Bush Defend a Campaign Ad That Exploited the Murder of a 10-Year-Old Girl

*Obama hits Republicans with a healthcare truth bomb: Obamacare is the new normal (“President Obama lays out the reality the GOP refuses to recognize: The ACA has changed our healthcare expectations”)

*Behind the Jeb Bush campaign shake-up

*Former GOP Senator Trashes Party’s Presidential Field: ‘Scares Me To Death,’ ‘Not Ready For Primetime’ (LOL)

*GOP aiming for Friday trade vote, but snag remains

*Our view: A supreme victory for Sweet Briar supporters

*Virginia Supreme Court opens door to stopping Sweet Briar College closure

*Siobhan Dunnavant wins GOP primary, could become 4th Stolle elected (“With 95 percent of the vote counted, Dunnavant had 38 percent. She defeated former Del. Bill Janis, the closest competitor with 30 percent, and Vincent Haley and Edward Whitlock.”)

*Don Caldwell enters race against John Edwards, Nancy Dye for Senate (Democrats’ chances of taking back the Virginia State Senate took a major hit with this announcement, as incumbent Sen. John Edwards is now officially in SERIOUS jeopardy of being unseated this November.)

*VAGA primary wrap: Howell wins, Martin loses (I’ll miss making fun of bigoted nutjob Steve Martin, but still…good riddance!)

*Heretick upsets incumbent Joannou in 79th House District (I can’t tell you how happy I am over this one!)

*Virginia’s top Republican holds off tea-party challenger in primary (“House of Delegates Speaker William J. Howell said the win signals a new era of unity for a fractured state GOP.”)

*Longtime Alexandria Mayor Bill Euille ousted in primary race (“In a strong rebuke, Euille lost to Vice Mayor Silberberg, one of several contests in Northern Virginia.”)

*Cristol and Dorsey win Democratic primary for 2 seats on Arlington Board

*Fairfax County Supervisor Gross fights off challenger in Democratic primary

*DeSteph wins GOP nomination in 8th District Senate race (This guy’s a raging anti-Muslim bigot, among other problems. Blech.)

*Independent candidate files to run in Senate race to replace Raph Smith (Probably won’t make a difference in this race.)

*Mark Levine Wins 45th District House of Delegates Democratic Primary (Impressive, mazel tov to Mark!)

*Hanger fends off 2 in 24th (Apparently, supporting Medicaid expansion wasn’t the kiss of death after all.)

*Gecker wins Democratic primary (Terry McAuliffe gets his man; now we’ll see if he can help push Gecker to victory this November.)

*Incumbent Del. Chris Head defeats Harry Griego in Republican primary

*Dan Storck Wins Mount Vernon District Supervisor Democratic Primary (“Storck will face Republican Jane Gandee in fall election.”)

*Roanoke County supervisors hear about potential threats of Mountain Valley Pipeline from advisory committee

*Nationals lose to Yankees after Desmond’s key error in seventh

*D.C. area forecast: Warm today before mini heat wave

Winners and Losers: Virginia Primaries 2015 Edition

35

Here are a few winners and losers from the primaries held in Virginia last night that I believe are worth highlighting. As always, this list isn’t meant to be comprehensive, just some stuff that jumped out at me, so please add winners and losers of your own in the comments section. Thanks.

Winners

1. “Working Families” Coalition; Charlie Jackson: These guys – Β – Mid-Atlantic Laborers Union/LIUNA, CASA in Action, NAKASEC Action Fund, SEIU Virginia 512, SEIU 32BJ, UFCW Local 400 – waded into four contested Democratic primary contests, endorsing Katie Cristol and Christian Dorsey for Arlington County Board; Penelope Gross for Fairfax County Board; Rosalyn “Roz” Dance for State Senate from the 16th district; and Steve Heretick for House of Delegates from the 79th district. They won them all, with a combination of money, door knocking, phone banking, etc. Hopefully, the Virginia Democratic leadership will take notice! Also, Charlie Jackson, the Democratic political strategist and 10th CD Democratic chair who helped mastermind all this, must have a big smile on his face this morning. πŸ™‚

2. Del. Scott Surovell: Can we say “kingmaker?” He rolled the dice, endorsed Dan Storck over Tim Sargeant for Mt. Vernon District Supervisor, and came out on top last night. Surovell also saw his friend and political ally Paul Krizek sweep to victory. Not too shabby for one evening. Throw in Ben Tribbett as a “winner” here, since he played a role in all this behind the scenes.

3. Team Katie Cristol: Wow, just wow. Cristol came out of nowhere and performed impressively at debates, but she also won the Democratic nomination for Arlington County Board last night because of the strong campaign team behind her (and she also ran a heckuva campaign, let’s face it!). That includes the “Working Families” coalition, of course, but also everyone involved (e.g., her husband, Steve; political strategist Ian Redman, volunteers like Brian Devine) in that effort. Nice job!

4. Team Christian Dorsey: He went into this as a strong favorite to pick up one of the two Arlington County Board Democratic nomination slots, and he did. Mission accomplished by Lauren Hall, Virginia Robinson, Stephanie Clifford, Ingrid Morroy, and the many others involved in this effort. I didn’t endorse Christian, but he’s a really good, sharp guy who should make a fine addition to the Board. Mazel tov!

5. The Stolle Family: The Virginian Pilot headline (“Siobhan Dunnavant wins GOP primary, could become 4th Stolle elected”) says it all on this one.

6. Arlington County Board Member Libby Garvey: I hate putting her on this list, as i view her as a negative, damaging, corrosive force in Arlington politics. Still, she’s got to be happy that the folks most hostile to her lost last night, while someone widely viewed as an ally, Christian Dorsey (for his part, he insists he will be fiercely independent of anyone/everyone, and I hope that’s the case!), won. Not a bad night, all in all.

7. Mike Signer: He was determined to get elected to something (e.g., Lt. Governor in 2009), and he finally did…to the Charlottesville City Council. Signer also recently came out with a book, Becoming Madison: The Extraordinary Origins of the Least Likely Founding Father, and became a father (if not a Founding Father – lol) for the first time. Mazel tov to Mike, who’s definitely in the “winners” category right now.

8. Bill Howell: He could have been the next Eric Cantor, but instead he won resoundingly by working hard, raising tons of money, not taking anything for granted, and did I mention working hard? πŸ™‚

9. Hal Parrish: The Republican nominee in the 29th State Senate District probably has a big smile on his face this morning, after watching the anemic turnout in the Democratic primary yesterday (and also the results).

10. Team Steve Heretick: A superb victory over the seemingly invincible Del. Johnny Joannou (calls himself a “D,” but more of a Republican or even Tea Partier). Nice job!

11. Team Mark Levine: Very impressive, not sure how they did it exactly, but the multi-page mailer they sent out, telling the story of Mark’s heroic efforts to find justice for his murdered sister (and for all women who are victims of domestic violence), has gotten rave reviews. Anyway, great job by Levine’s entire team (particularly campaign manager Jacob Weinberg) in putting together a winning campaign here, despite basically zero establishment support, endorsements, etc.! Also, I’ve got to say, I’m very much looking forward to watching Mark go after far-right-wing lunacy, idiocy, etc. in Richmond. Something tells me I’ll be posting a LOT of Mark Levine video in the coming years. πŸ™‚

Mixed

1. Terry McAuliffe: He got the candidate he Β wanted – Dan Gecker – in the potentially crucial 10th State Senate district (although I have grave doubts that Gecker can motivate the base, in what is clearly a base election, to turn out this November). On the other hand, McAuliffe’s hopes of taking back the State Senate suffered a major blow yesterday, as longtime Democrat Don Caldwell threw his hat in the ring as a third-party candidate against incumbent Democratic Senator John Edwards. If Edwards loses in November, which now appears to be a serious possibility (maybe even a probability), Democrats’ chances of taking back the State Senate are close to zero.

2. Senate Minority Leader Dick Saslaw: Can you lose by winning? Last night, Saslaw got the two candidates – Dan Gecker and Jeremy McPike – he wanted. However, my argument is that both will struggle to win this November for a variety of reasons. Also, see the item about John Edwards above. In short, Saslaw’s chances of becoming Majority Leader again are not looking good right now, even if he doesn’t realize that yet.

3. Lee Hockstader/Washington Post: The Post’s/Lee’s endorsements both hit and missed last night. For instance, Katie Cristol, Paul Krizek and Penny Gross – all of whom the Post/Lee Hockstader endorsed – won last night. On the other hand, Atif Qarni, Craig Fifer, Bill Euille, Peter Fallon and Tim Sargeant – again endorsed by the Post – all lost. So much for the Post’s/Lee Hockstader’s endorsements having much “juice.”

4. Blue Virginia/Yours Truly: Some of my picks (e.g., Paul Krizek, Steve Heretick) won last night, some didn’t (e.g., Peter Fallon, Craig Fifer, Emily Francis, Atif Qarni). Mixed bag, leaning towards the “losers” side.

5. Patrick Hope: Endorsed some winners (Christian Dorsey, Dan Storck, Paul Krizek), endorsed some losers (Peter Fallon, Bill Euille, Julie Jakopic). Mixed bag.

Losers

1. Justin Fairfax: Endorsed and worked for four candidates – Michael Futrell, Jack Dobbyn, Clarence Tong and Derrick Wood – all of whom (particularly Futrell, Dobbyn and Wood, all of whom got trounced) lost badly last night. Not much to show for someone who is clearly angling for statewide office in 2017. Oh, and as an added bonus, Fairfax endorsed Mark Cannady against Scott Surovell (!!!). Zero political judgment with this guy.

2. Del. Rob Krupicka: Attempted to annoint his friend Julie Jakopic as his successor in the Virginia House of Delegates; she finished third last night. Also endorsed Alexandria Mayor Bill Euille for reelection; he lost. Also endorsed James Lander for Arlington County Board; he finished fifth. Not a good night for Krupicka, but on the other hand, he gets to make (and presumably sample) doughnuts for a living, rather than having to deal with being in a tiny/powerless House of Delegates minority, sitting in traffic on I-95, etc.

3. Michael Futrell: He got crushed (as expected) last night after running a poor/nonexistent campaign (including a website with all kinds of stuff “borrowed” without attribution from other people’s sites). On the other hand, he might not a total “loser,” because he could end up back in the House of Delegates, given that the candidate who had replaced him on the ballot (Rod Hall) announced he was dropping out. That means Democrats need to find a new nominee in House District 2, and Michael Futrell is (amazingly) one of the possibilities. However, I’m told this morning that this is less likely than I had thought, and I hope that’s the case; time for some new blood here!

4. Tea Party: Definitely didn’t have a good night. First, Tea Partier and all-around rabble rouser Susan Stimpson lost badly (62%-38%) to House Speaker Bill Howell. Second, right-wing nutjob Del. Mark Berg lost to what the Washington Post described as “a more moderate Republican, Christopher E. Collins.” Third, Sen. Emmett Hanger, who committed the heresy of supporting Medicaid expansion in Virginia, easily defeated Tea Partier Dan Moxley. Fourth, Siobhan Dunnavant – who reportedly considered running as a Democrat, even meeting with Dick Saslaw and Donald McEachin to discuss it – defeated “Newt Gingrich staffer Vincent Haley.” Yes, Tea Partier Amanda Chase won last night, but the guy she defeated – Sen. Steve Martin – is about as far right wing as you can get in this country. I’m also told by Dan Sullivan that “the results in Bedford County were a slap in the face to the local TEA Party/Republican Committee. 2 of 3 Supervisors lost to more moderate challengers.” Oh, and as an added bonus. Tea Party-backed “Democrat” Del. Johnny Joannou also lost last night. #FAIL all around for the Tea Partiers.

5. Alex McMurtrie campaign: Spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to finish…dead last, with 19% of the vote. Lame.

6. Team Peter Fallon: What on earth happened here? By most accounts, Fallon was a strong favorite to win one of the two Arlington County Board Democratic nominations, but he somehow ended up finishing third. Something clearly went wrong there, the question is what?

7. John Fredericks: I hadn’t even thought of this one, but a reader emailed me and said, “I’m pretty sure John Fredericks was off by a mile. Picked Joannou, Preston, etc. Not sure he got anything right.” I’d add that Fredericks also slammed Siobhan Dunnavant, who won last night.

8. Adam Ebbin: Endorsed Craig Fifer (finished second to Mark Levine, who Ebbin almost certainly didn’t want to see win, as Levine could eventually challenge him for either State Senate or House of Representatives) and James Lander (finished fifth). Ouch. (note: I’ve been reminded that Ebbin also endorsed Paul Krizek, who won)

9. Mary Margaret Whipple: Endorsed James Lander and Andrew Schneider for Arlington County Board. Both lost.

10. Virginia Sierra Club: Endorsed Peter Fallon for Arlington County Board and Emily Francis for State Senate. Both lost.

11. Grover Norquist: Endorsed Susan Stimpson, lost badly.

12. Mark Obenshain: Endorsed Sen. Steve Martin for reelection, lost.

13. Emily Francis campaign: Was the protoypical progressive, environmentalist, low-budget, netroots-appealing candidate, but almost completely failed to engage with the progressive netroots both in Virginia and nationally. Inexplicable.

14. Arlington Sun Gazette: Endorsed James Lander (finished a distant fifth) and Peter Fallon (finished third) for Arlington County Board. Apparently, Arlington Democrats weren’t swayed in any way by the local paper’s endorsements.

15. “The doors”. Election after election, I am told how important “the doors” are. Yet election after election, I’m not sure I see it. For instance, in this election, door-knocking champ Charlie Conrad supported Clarence Tong, yet Tong fizzled and ended up finishing fourth. Also, Atif Qarni’s campmaign focused heavily on “the doors,” yet turnout was miniscule and Qarni finished second. I’m not arguing against door knocking, I’m arguing FOR a mult-faceted campaign that employs ALL the tools of campaigning – technology, social media, messaging, narrative, smartly targeted direct mail, etc. – in the year 2015. A great example is Scott Surovell, who uses all those tools – door knocks like crazy, is all over social media, you name it – and seems to do nothing but win, win, win some more.

16. Arlington County Board member Jay Fisette: I can’t imagine he’s happy this morning. As one Democratic friend wrote to me this morning, “it’ll be interesting to see the dynamic on the Board with the new set of five. Β Makes me wonder if Jay Fisette may call it a day…”

17. Tim Sargeant’s campaign for Mt. Vernon District Supervisor: At the outset, Sargeant was thought by many to be a strong favorite for this seat. He ended up running an underwhelming campaign and lost to a highly flawed opponent, Dan Storck.

18. Del. Mark Sickles, Supervisor Jeff McKay: Β McKay got involved (on the losing side) in a primary in a neigboring supervisor’s seat against a guy he’s gotta work with for the next decade. Del. Mark Sickles also endorsed Tim Sargeant over Dan Storck…and lost.

19. Corporate media coverage: With few exceptions, it was shallow, spotty, and just outright lame. What else is new, sadly…

20. Voter turnout: Pathetic as always, even though it’s these primaries that in many/most cases determine who will win in November. Not sure why voters don’t “get” that.

21. Joe Morrissey: Just got this from an astute Virginia Dem political observer – “Morrissey is a big loser. His kingdom is in shambles. Joe Preston lost, Lee Young lost, Preston Brown lost and Alex McMurtrie lost.” Ouch.

2015 Primary reveals two key ways that Democrats need to better Unite & Conquer

0

#1 We need a more effective primary system

I know the Arlington Democrats have been using Instant Runoff Voting in their fire house primaries for School Board and special elections but it is critical that we bring this process to the statewide primary level. There were too many tight three-way and four-way races that could have easily been tipped convincingly if the voter’s second and third choices were included.

This insures the selection of a true consensus candidate for the general election and is much better than doing a costly run-off election a few weeks later like some states would do.

Without IRV in an Open Primary some well-organized minority factions (Republican especially) can have an outsized impact in a Democratic contest and leave the mainstream without a candidate they feel represents them. Regardless of whether they are right or wrong, I think many Northern Virginia Democrats are a bit perplexed with who they chose on June 9th.

This is especially true when a “winner” of a race has 20-30% of the support in an election with 10% turnout….meaning only 2-3% of the voters picked them.

#2 We need to come together on primary night

Alexandria Democrats hosted a “Unity” Party in addition to any individual parties that the candidates hosted and it would be great if this template was used as a Democratic tradition. This was a great way to foster a gracious atmosphere and create a more successful celebration than any one candidate could have provided….and much more timely than a separate event on another night that inevitably will be less attended like Arlington is doing this year.

This is my problem with precinct-level house parties that campaigns and grassroots organization sometimes try to organize before they even have critical mass to be able to host one well-attended event in their neighborhood. You can’t divide-and-conquer until you have united.

There will be quite a few 2016 Democratic Debate and Primary Watching Parties starting in August and it would be smart for grassroots groups to team up as much as possible so activists can come together and connect with their own communities at the same time. For example, if supporters of multiple campaigns reserved multiple tables or rooms in the same bar or restaurant.

If we can balance bringing people together with organizing individually it will be much better for our movement in November 2016 and beyond.

I look forward to discussing how we can move both of these important grassroots issues forward in the weeks and months ahead!

Virginia 2015 Primary Election Results: Live Blog

17

It’s 7 pm, and polls in Virginia are now closed. Which races are you watching? The Top 11 Virginia Primaries I’ll Be Following Most Closely on June 9 include Senate districts 10, 11, 12, 16 and 29; House districts 28, 45 and 79; the Mt. Vernon Supervisor’s race; the Arlington County Board race; and the Alexandria Mayoral primary. As usual, results will be available at VPAP and the State Board of Elections website (assuming they don’t crash, of course!).

UPDATE 9:08 pm: ‏@PotomacLocal reports, “@JeremyMcPike takes Va. 29th Senate district, beats opponents @michaelfutrell and @QarniForSenate.” Not going to pretend otherwise, this one stings.

UPDATE 8:57 pm: Congratulations to Mason District Supervisor Penny Gross on her reelection.

UPDATE 8:53 pm: With 40 of 48 precincts reporting in the 29th State Senate district, it’s Jeremy McPike 1,150-Atif Qarni 1,019-Michael Futrell 481. Not looking great right now for my friend Atif.

UPDATE 8:48 pm: With all precincts reporting in the 45th, the final results are Mark Levine 27.81%-Craig Fifer 24.34%-Julie Jakopic 23.29%-Clarence Tong 17.31%-Larry Altenburg 7.26%. So much for the power of endorsements, huh? Also, Del. @marcussimon tweets, “Congratulations @MarkLevineTalk – the Jewish Caucus in the Va HOD grows 50%.”

UPDATE 8:43 pm: With 28 of 48 precincts reporting in the 29th State Senate district Dem primary, it’s Jeremy McPike 862-Atif Qarni 818-Michael Futrell 315.

UPDATE 8:41 pm: @charliejackson1 tweets, “Great night 4 @maLiUNA @CASAenAccion @32BJ_SEIU @SEIUVA512 @UFCW400 who supported @kcristol @Arl_CDorsey @SteveHeretick @RosalynDance.” I agree, huge win for this coalition, which didn’t just donate money but also door knockers, phone bankers, etc. Invaluable!

UPDATE 8:40 pm: @amaxsmith tweets, “BULLETIN (AP) – Christopher Collins, GOP, nominated House of Delegates, District 29, #Virginia. (Defeats Del. Berg).” Good riddance to Berg, who I’ve been told by many people is a total rightwing nutjob.

UPDATE 8:30 pm: The top three finishers (and winners) for Charlottesville City Council are Wesley Bellamy, former LG candidate Mike Signer and Kathleen Galvin.

UPDATE 8:28 pm: With 28 of 28 precincts reporting in Alexandria, it’s Allison Silberberg 5,044-Bill Euille 4,732-Kerry Donley 3,660. Huge upset there!

UPDATE 8:27 pm: @MSchmidtRTD tweets, “BREAKING: Tea party favorite Amanda Chase ends Steve Martin’s 21-year run in #SD11.” Good riddance to a bigoted nutjob, although Chase is also a far-right Republican so not much improvement there. Blech.

UPDATE 8:26 pm: ‏@amaxsmith tweets, “BULLETIN (AP) – Mark Levine, Dem, nominated House of Delegates, District 45, #Virginia.” Congratulations to Mark, a great guy who will be a strong, progressive delegate!

UPDATE 8:24 pm: The final result in the 10th State Senate district Dem primary was Dan Gecker 46.5%-Emily Francis 34.3%-Alex McMurtrie 19.2%. Big win for Gov. McAuliffe, who strongly backed Gecker, in that one.

UPDATE 8:22 pm: With 19 of 24 precincts reporting in the 45th, Levine still leads, with 2,352 votes to 2,093 for Craig Fifer and 1,985 for Julie Jakopic. Wow.

UPDATE 8:16 pm: With 17 of 24 precincts reporting in the 45th, it’s now Levine 2,128-Fifer 1,952-Jakopic 1,838-Tong 1,334-Altenburg 614. Looking like Levine might win this, but Fifer and Jakopic still have a chance. Congratulations to Lashrecse Aird, the next delegate from the 63rd House district, who is winning by a wide margin.

UPDATE 8:15 pm: Congratulations to Paul Krizek, who is winning with over 68% of the vote in the 44th House of Delegates district Democratic primary. Paul’s going to make a superb delegate!

UPDATE 8:14 pm:  β€@JulieCareyNBC tweets, “Smiles for #AlexandriaVA Dem Mayoral primary leader Allison Silberberg. 3 precincts still out.” And @amaxsmith tweets, “#Alexandria: Just one precinct (plus absentees) left: Silberberg 37.4%, Euille 35.9 %, Donley 26.7%. Less than 200 vote gap for D for Mayor.”

UPDATE 8:09 pm: Dave Wasserman (@Redistrict) tweets ,”Ready to call other open Arlington nod to Christian Dorsey (D), who leads Peter Fallon (D) 3,582 to 3,334. Cristol (D) still 1st at 3,695.” Wow, not what I expected at all! Also, it’s looking like Siobhan Dunnavant will win the 12th Senate District GOP primary over Bill Janis.

UPDATE 8:07 pm: With 15 of 48 precincts reporting in the 29th State Senate District Dem primary, it’s neck and neck between Jeremy McPike (604) and Atif Qarni (587), with Michael Futrell trailing far behind (141).

UPDATE 8:06 pm: @AlexTimesNews tweets, “Two more precincts reporting, now 22/28 (78.57). Silberberg now leads by just eight votes over Euille – 0.09 percent.” Wow.

UPDATE 8:03 pm: Reporter Max Smith tweets, “#Alexandria Dem Mayor’s race coming down to single votes: Silberberg and Euille close at 36.5%, Donley 27%.”

UPDATE 8:01 pm: RTD reporter Andrew Cain tweets, “Challenger Steve Heretick unseats Del. Johnny Joannou, D-Portsmouth, in House District 79, AP reports.” Great news, good riddance to Joannou! πŸ™‚ Much worse news: “Dan Gecker wins Democratic primary to run for seat of retiring Sen. John Watkins, R-Powhatan, AP says.” Also “Sen. Rosalyn Dance, D-Petersburg and Del. Betsy Carr, D-Richmond defeat primary challengers, per AP.”

UPDATE 8:00 pm: Dave Wasserman tweets, “Ready to call one of the two Arlington seats for newcomer Katie Cristol (D), in 1st place at 3,420. Dorsey in 2nd with 3,323. Fallon 3,185.”

UPDATE 7:57 pm: According to Ben “Not Larry Sabato” Tribbett, with 2 precincts left to count in the Mt. Vernon district supervisor race, it looks like Dan Storck is going to win, as he leads 2448-2102 over Tim Sargeant.

UPDATE 7:53 pm: With 5 of 18 precincts reporting in the 79th HoD Dem primary, it’s real Democrat Steve Heretick over Tea Party-backed “Democrat” Johnny Joannou 343-124 votes. Still a ways to go in that one, but looking good so far!  Also, with 7 of 18 precincts reporting in the 44th HoD Dem primary, it’s Paul Krizek 71%-Justin Brown 29%.

UPDATE 7:48 pm: With 6 of 24 precincts reporting in the 45th House district Dem primary, it’s Levine 846-Fifer 747-Jakopic 727-Tong 509-Altenburg 270. Could Mark Levine win this thing, even though Fifer and Jakopic got almost all the endorsements? Stay tuned! Also, with 14 of 28 precincts reporting, Mayor Bill Euille (41%) had the edge over Allison Silberberg (33%) and Kerry Donley (26%).

UPDATE 7:45 pm: With 42 of 68 precincts reporting in the 10th Senate district Dem primary, it’s Gecker 3,592-Francis 2,494. Not looking good for Francis or her supporters (myself included). Sigh.

UPDATE 7:43 pm: Dave Wasserman tweets, “More Arlington reporting: Cristol (D) 2,646, Dorsey (D) 2,627, Fallon (D) 2,597, Schneider (D) 2,433. Wow, extremely close for 2 seats.”

UPDATE 7:42 pm: RTD reporter Markus Schmidt tweets, “BREAKING: Howell wins in #HD28; Brat-style challenge from Stimpson falls flat.” I’m not surprised at all. Also, “In #VA74, Bagby is on an early path to a landslide with 83/16 Young.” Not surprising either.

UPDATE 7:40 pm: Reporter Max Smith tweets, “BULLETIN (AP) _ Rosalyn Dance, Dem, nominated State Senate, District 16, Virginia.” Also, “Really close in #Arlington Dems for 2 County Board seats: Fallon 2369, Cristol 2368, Dorsey 2338, Schneider 2198,  Lander 1585, Wiljanen 414.” And “Penny Gross leads Swanson 862-414 in early going, Sargeant leads Storck 661-467 w/Bennett & Dobbyn trailing.” And “In Winchester/Front Royal and west: Del. Berg trails Collins 650-503 with 40% of precincts in.”

UPDATE 7:39 pm: Dave Wasserman tweets, “2/3 of Arlington in: Fallon (D) 2,369, Cristol (D) 2,368, Dorsey (D) 2,338. 31 votes separate 1st & 3rd. Schneider’s home precinct still out.”

UPDATE 7:27 pm: With 2 of 24 precincts reporting in the 45th HoD Dem primary, it’s Jakopic 321-Levine 318-Fifer 276-Tong 218-Altenburg 163. With 10 of 23 precincts reporting in the 28th HoD GOP primary, it’s House Speaker Bill Howell 2,295-Susan Stimpson 1,363. That one looks good for Howell.

UPDATE 7:18 pm: According to the Chesterfield County Registrar, with 19 of 24 10th Senate district precincts reporting, it’s Dan Gecker 2,096-Emily Francis 889-Alex McMurtrie 729. In the 11th Senate district Republican primary, it’s Amanda Chase 3,641-Steve Martin 2,823-Barry Moore 2,100 with 34 of 41 precincts reporting. In the 16th Senate district Democratic primary, it’s Rosalyn Dance 885-Joseph Preston 466 with 7 of 11 precincts reporting. And in the 63rd House district Democratic primary, it’s Lashrecse Aird 310-Larry Brown 160-Gerry Rawlinson 155-Atiba Muse 117.

FACT SHEET: Health Care in Virginia

0

From the White House: 

FACT SHEET: Health Care in Virginia

What the Affordable Care Act is doing for Virginia families

The Affordable Care Act has already covered one in four uninsured Americans – more than ten million – and improved coverage for virtually everyone with health coverage. Insurers can no longer discriminate against preexisting conditions, charge women more just for being women, or put caps on the care you receive. Hospitals, doctors and other providers are changing the way they operate to deliver better care at lower cost. In the years to come, the ability to buy portable and affordable plans on a competitive marketplace will allow countless Americans to move, start businesses, and dream big American dreams — without worrying if an illness will bankrupt them. Here is how the Affordable Care Act is working for families in Virginia:

 

After Health Reform: Improved Access to Care 

·         And Gallup recently estimated that the uninsured rate in Virginia in 2014 was 13 percent, down from 13.3 percent in 2013. 

·         Prohibits coverage denials and reduced benefits, protecting as many as 3,491,076 Virginians who have some type of pre-existing health condition, including 437,558 children.

·         Eliminates lifetime and annual limits on insurance coverage and establishes annual limits on out-of-pocket spending on essential health benefits, benefiting 2,974,000 people in Virginia, including 1,121,000 women and 817,000 children. 

·         Expands Medicaid to all non-eligible adults with incomes under 133% of the federal poverty level.  If Virginia expands Medicaid, an additional 180,000 uninsured people would gain coverage. 

·         Establishes a system of state and federal health insurance exchanges, or marketplaces, to make it easier for individuals and small-business employees to purchase health plans at affordable prices through which 335,033 people in Virginia were covered in March 2015. 

·         Created a temporary high-risk pool program to cover uninsured people with pre-existing conditions prior to 2014 reforms which helped more than 3,252 people in Virginia. 

·         Creates health plan disclosure requirements and simple, standardized summaries so 4,969,900 people in Virginia can better understand coverage information and compare benefits. 

 

After Health Reform: More Affordable Care


 

·         Creates a tax credit to help 285,938 people in Virginia who otherwise cannot afford it purchase health coverage through health insurance marketplaces. 

·         Requires health insurers to provide consumers with rebates if the amount they spend on health benefits and quality of care, as opposed to advertising and marketing, is too low.  Last year, 104,774 consumers in Virginia received $8,913,605 in rebates. 

·         Eliminates out-of-pocket costs for preventive services like immunizations, certain cancer screenings, contraception, reproductive counseling, obesity screening, and behavioral assessments for children.  This coverage is guaranteed for more than 3,902,716 people in Virginia including 1,587,663 women. 

·         Eliminates out-of-pocket costs for 943,647 Medicare beneficiaries in Virginia for preventive services like cancer screenings, bone-mass measurements, annual physicals, and smoking cessation. 

·         Phases out the “donut hole” coverage gap for 111,997 Medicare prescription drug beneficiaries in Virginia, who have saved an average of $914 per beneficiary. 

 

·         Creates Accountable Care Organizations consisting of doctors and other health-care providers who share in savings from keeping patients well while improving quality, helping 279,319 Medicare beneficiaries in Virginia.

 

·         Phases out overpayments through the Medicare Advantage system, while requiring Medicare Advantage plans to spend at least 85 percent of Medicare revenue on patient care.  Medicare Advantage enrollment has grown by 88,201 to 237,689 in Virginia since 2009.

 

After Health Reform: Improved Quality and Accountability to You

 

·         Provides incentives to hospitals in Medicare to reduce hospital-acquired infections and avoidable readmissions.  Creates a collaborative health-safety learning network, the Partnership for Patients, that includes 69 hospitals in Virginia to promote best quality practices. 

 

We're not done.  Other legislation and executive actions are continuing to advance the cause of effective, accountable and affordable health care.
This includes:

 

·         Incentive payments for doctors, hospitals, and other providers to adopt and use certified electronic health records (EHR).  In Virginia more than 65.2 percent of hospitals and 51.2 percent of providers have electronic health records systems. 

·         A new funding pool for Community Health Centers to build, expand and operate health-care facilities in underserved communities.  Health Center grantees in Virginia now serve 286,604 patients and received $173,538,756 under the health care law to offer a broader array of primary care services, extend their hours of operations, hire more providers, and renovate or build new clinical spaces. 

·         Health provider training opportunities, with an emphasis on primary care, including a significant expansion of the National Health Service Corps.  As of September 30, 2014, there were 108 Corps clinicians providing primary care services in Virginia, compared to 52 clinicians in 2008. 

National and Virginia News Headlines: Primary Day 2015

0

Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Tuesday, Primary Day 2015.

*G7: End of fossil fuel era? (Let’s hope!)

*Obama: Supreme Court shouldn’t have heard Obamacare challenge (Absolutely right, this is ridiculous!)

*Scott Walker’s Revolt Back Home (“The governor’s presidential maneuvering is wearing thin in Wisconsin.”)

*“The Girl Was No Saint Either”: Fox Jumps To Defend McKinney Police Officer’s Brutal Manhandling Of Teen Girl At Pool Party (Breaking: Fox continues to be despicable. OK, not “breaking” after all; they’ve always been like this.)

*Republicans might as well pound sand (“The GOP can’t stop Clinton’s momentum.”)

*Republican pledges $175 million to push party on climate (“A North Carolina executive is pouring his own money into trying to sway people in the GOP to take global warming seriously.”)

*Jeb Bush shakes up team ahead of campaign launch (“While Bush has raised more than $100 million since December, the staff moves are an acknowledgment that his “exploratory phase” has not gone well.”)

*The romance with Rand Paul is gone (“Rand Paul’s rhetorical recklessness.” Not just rhetorical, also substantive.)

*Why the fate of Virginia’s congressional map matters

*Goodlatte expects appeal of congressional redistricting lawsuit

*Opinion: We encourage Virginians to get involved in this year’s election

*Gov. Terry McAuliffe heading to Europe

*What’s at stake in Tuesday’s Virginia primary (“GOP House Speaker William J. Howell is in perhaps the most closely watched primary of the season.” This one’s on my list, but far from the “most closely watched.”)

*Atif Qarni is the Leader the 29th Deserves (Bingo!)

*Eight percent turnout expected for today’s primary in Prince William (The 92% who don’t vote should be ashamed of themselves.)

*State faces urgent decisions on managing information technology

*When is packing packing

*Editorial: Republican primary day is here (“Today’s Republican primaries primaries in Stafford County and Fredericksburg are expected to bring out tens of thousands of voters.”)

*Editorial: Virginia, localities look to get a handle on fracking

*Large turnout anticipated for Charlottesville primary

*Central VA Primary Elections See Record Funds Raised and More Competition

*United, District reach final terms on stadium deal (“‘We go after every deal. Some work out, some don’t,’ said McAuliffe spokesman Brian Coy.”)

*Victim in Jesse Matthew case describes brutal attack

*Arlington/Alexandria are 2nd best places to retire

*D.C. area forecast: Morning showers then afternoon clearing; Hot late week

Virginia Primary Day 2015: Open Thread

10

Today is primary election day in Virginia (polls are open from 6 am to 7 pm; vote at your regular polling location). There are hot races all over the state, so make sure your voice is heard! With that…what are you seeing and hearing out there? What’s turnout like in your neck of the woods? Who did you vote for and why? Feel free to add your observations in the comments section.

UPDATE 6:43 pm: The Bull Elephant (TBE) reports: “It’s looking like commuters are engaging when they are getting home, or the election day knock-and-drag efforts of the Howell campaign have paid off (or both), but turnout looks to end pretty high in the 28th district…That is likely welcome news in the Howell camp.” Also TBE thinks that Sen. “Emmett Hanger’s folks think he has it in the bag” and that “Amanda Chase is reportedly far outstripping incumbent Sen. Steve Martin in terms of working the polls and election day operations, making this upset seem increasingly likely.”

UPDATE 4:19 pm: The Richmond Times-Dispatch has some info: “In Henrico, about 3.5 percent of registered voters had cast ballots in races that included the 12th Senate District Republican primary, the 74th House District Democratic primary, and countywide Republican primary elections for commonwealth’s attorney and clerk of the circuit court;” “In the Chesterfield precincts of the 10th District, fewer than 2,500 people had voted in the Democratic primary, or about 3.4 percent of registered voters;” etc.

UPDATE 2:20 pm: In Mason District (Fairfax County) about 2 hours ago, Holmes #1 precinct was at 20 voters and Holmes #2 wa at 98 voters. 1 hour ago, Walnut Hill preinct was at 97 voters. I hear these are mostly older folks, likely Penny Gross supporters. I’m also hearing there’s strong turnout at Dan Storck’s home precinct in Mt. Vernon district.

UPDATE 1:19 pm: At 12:45 pm, 164 people had voted in Fairlington precinct in Arlington (for comparison purposes, 249 voted in the 2013 Democratic LG primary in that precinct). Also, at 12:15 pm, 70 people had voted in Jefferson precinct in Arlington (for comparison purposes, 161 voted in the 2013 Dem LG primary in that precinct).

UPDATE 11:09 am: Just heard that Salisbury precinct in Chesterfield County has had 53 voters. That’s a very wealthy, very Republican, big precinct in Senate District 10. I also hear that Manassas Park has had only about 32 people come vote.

UPDATE 11:06 am: Just saw this on the Bull Elephant blog. “10:55 AM – Ridiculously low turnout in Prince William. Belmont precinct (House District 2) reports 10 voters as of a few minutes ago.” Also, “8:10 AM – Relatively low turnout so far in Stafford.”

UPDATE 9:50 am: I just voted ten minutes ago, was #39 at Virginia Square in Arlington. Pathetic. Also, there was not a soul there from any campaign to greet voters. I think that’s the first time in all my years of voting in Arlington that I’ve seen that…

Video: Sen. Emmett Hanger (R) Works to Fight Off Tea Party “Invasion”

0

A Republican primary to keep your eye on tomorrow is in the 24th State Senate District (Augusta County, Rockingham County, Staunton, Culpeper County, Waynesboro, Greene County, Madison County), where longtime incumbent, State Senator Emmett Hanger, is fighting off not one but two opponents. Opponent #1 is Dan Moxley, a Tea Partier endorsed by the usual band o’ crazies: E.W. Jackson, Susan Stimpson, the “Middle Resolution” PAC, the Virginia Citizens Defense League, etc. Opponent #2 is Marshall Pattie, “a former local Democratic Party committee chair” who, “[a]fter working on behalf of Barack Obama and Creigh Deeds…switched allegiances to Mitt Romney and Ken Cuccinelli, presumably with an eye toward Hanger’s seat in 2015” (and has been “running somehow to the right of Emmett Hanger”…including opposition to Medicaid expansion). Ee gads.

So why is Hanger, a conservative Republican who has been in the State Senate for nearly 20 years, being primaried? Because, of course, even conservative Republicans aren’t safe these days from Tea Party challenges. Yeah, it’s nuts, but sadly it’s the way things are in the once-great Republican Party these days – stray even one iota from hard-right orthodoxy, and you risk your political career. In Hanger’s case, it was the unspeakable heresy of pushing a compromise proposal, called “Marketplace Virginia,” which would have helped provide health care coverage to 400,000 Virginians while getting back $2 billion per year of our own money. Hanger did make one big mistake, however. As Chris Graham of the Augusta Free Press explains:

…[Hanger in 2014] voted with the rest of his Republican Party in approving changes to the state budget effectively killing the Marketplace Virginia Medicaid expansion that he had himself helped to craft earlier this year. In so doing, I offered to the Senate veteran, he had sided with the Tea Party, which is never going to support Hanger, a staunch conservative by pre-2008 terms, who now looks like a centrist moderate with the 2014 GOP ever further to the right, at the expense of his actual constituency, which includes mainstream Republicans, who do still exist, the rumors of their mass deaths having been grossly exaggerated, plus independents and crossover Democrats, myself included in that latter group.

The Tea Party, I reminded Hanger, was lining up its candidates to run against him in 2015, but the battle that I expected him to wage was already lost, because in helping kill Marketplace Virginia, Hanger was sure to lose at the least the crossover Democrats, plus a fair number of the independents and perhaps some of the mainstream Republicans, all of whom are tiring of the new business as usual.

So, tomorrow we’ll see if Hanger survives his challenges from the right by two opponents. My guess is that he will, comfortably, in part because he’s facing TWO opponents, not one, and they will split the anti-Hanger vote. If Hanger wins tomorrow, it will also be after fighting off what he calls an “invasion from outside attack groups” you’ve probably never heard of, like the aforementioned “Middle Resolution” PAC, as well as whatever VCA, NAGR, and C4L stand for. So…good for Sen. Hanger for responding with a humorous ad which mocks these wackos. Sure, it’s unconventional, but it’s certainly no “Demon Sheep” or anything like that (note: the candidate who ran that insane ad is now runnning for…yep, you guessed it, the Republican nomination for PRESIDENT in 2016!). Anyway, good luck to Sen. Hanger tomorrow, as his victory will demonstrate that there’s a least a tiny bit of sanity left in the Virginia Republican Party these days…