PolitiFact: McAuliffe claim is “dead wrong”

Terry McAuliffe: “Every single Petersburg school was accredited when I left office.”

PolitiFact: “Mostly False” & “dead wrong”

ICYMI, PolitiFact rated McAuliffe’s bold-faced lie Mostly False and exposed the failures of his previous administration.

“Yet again, Terry McAuliffe has shown Virginians that nothing — not even facts — will get in the way of his campaign/vanity project to get back into the governor’s mansion,” said RGA Spokesperson Maddie Anderson. “Unfortunately for McAuliffe, not only is he getting called out for his lie, the repeated failures of his governorship are now under scrutiny. It’s clear that Virginia students and parents cannot afford four more years of the deceitful and failure-ridden McAuliffe administration.”

PolitiFact:
During a May 6 debate with four other candidates seeking the Democratic nomination for governor, McAuliffe said that when he took office, two-thirds of Petersburg’s public schools were unaccredited by the state because of poor academic performance.

“I’m very proud to say by the end of our term, with a lot of resources and a lot of help, every single Petersburg school was accredited when I left office,” he said.

McAuliffe’s statement was disputed by former Del. Jennifer Carroll  Foy, who grew up in Petersburg and also is running in the June 8 Democratic primary for governor. So, we looked into McAuliffe’s claim that all Petersburg schools were accredited at the end of his term and found a lot of problems.

McAuliffe’s term as governor ended in January 2018. Since he said every Petersburg school was accredited when he “left office,” we looked at records from the 2017-2018 school year. They show none of the city’s six public schools was fully accredited then. In contrast, 86% of schools across the state were fully accredited.

Three Petersburg schools were denied accreditation that year and three were partially accredited.

McAuliffe’s claim that “every single Petersburg school was accredited” is misleading. Only two of the city’s six schools were fully accredited – up none the previous year. The other four schools were “conditionally accredited,” meaning they were performing below state standards in at least one area and required remedial action. They were among the bottom-performing 7% of schools in Virginia.

McAuliffe’s statement skirts another important factor: No Virginia public school has been denied accreditation since the new standards went into effect – conditionally accredited is the worst rating that has been doled out. (The state did not go through the rating process for the 2020-2021 school year because of COVID-19). During the 2017-2018 school year – the last under the old standards – 88 schools were denied accreditation.

When McAuliffe made his claim during the debate, Carroll Foy replied, “I would like to say that facts matter, and right now there is only one accredited school in Petersburg, Va.” She was referring to the 2019-2020 ratings – the most recent – which fully accredited one of the city’s schools and deemed the other five conditionally accredited.

McAuliffe says, “Every single Petersburg school was accredited when I left office,” implying there was a turnaround in the city’s scholastic performance during his time as governor.

He’s dead wrong if you look at the end of his term in January 2018, when none of the city’s public schools was fully accredited by the state based on standardized testing, three were denied accreditation, and three were partially certified.

Two of Petersburg’s six schools were fully accredited in 2019, while 92% of schools across the state met that ideal. The other four were conditionally accredited, meaning they were performing below standards in at least one area and were required to take corrective actions. They were among the worst-performing 7% of Virginia schools.

So there are problems with McAuliffe’s claim, even when we give him the advantage of using the 2019 ratings. By saying all Petersburg schools were accredited – and deftly avoiding the distinction between fully and conditionally accredited – he creates a misleading impression of the city’s progress during his term.

We rate McAuliffe’s statement Mostly False.

You can read the full PolitiFact article here.