This claim is grounded in verifiable facts regarding Newport News Public Schools (NNPS) leadership and Virginia Retirement System (VRS) policies, though the exact administrative mechanism behind the scenes would require an open records request to definitively prove.Here is a breakdown of the facts validating the core of this claim: 1. The Title and the TimelineStatus: TrueDr. Wayne Smith is indeed currently serving as the "Acting Chief Schools Officer" for Newport News Public Schools. A review of NNPS documents, including the Annual Comprehensive Financial Reports and proposed operating budgets, confirms that Dr. Smith has held this "Acting" title continuously across multiple fiscal years. Maintaining a temporary "acting" title for a senior executive role for two and a half years is highly unusual in corporate or educational governance. 2. The VRS "Double-Dipping" RulesStatus: True (with specific structural context)Under standard Virginia Retirement System (VRS) rules, if a retired employee returns to work in a full-time, covered position for a VRS-participating employer (like a public school district), their retirement pension payments must immediately stop.However, VRS allows for a few distinct exceptions that permit a retiree to collect both their full pension and a salary simultaneously:The Interim Appointment Exception: Retirees can return to work in an "interim" or "acting" capacity while an employer actively recruits for a permanent replacement. However, VRS policy explicitly states this is limited to up to six months.The Critical Shortage Exception: Retirees can return to work full-time as teachers or administrators if the state designates the role as a "critical shortage" area, provided they have a six-month break in service prior to returning.Part-Time Restriction: Retirees can work part-time (80% or fewer hours of a full-time equivalent) without losing benefits. 3. The "Loophole"Status: Valid concernThe claim asserts that keeping the "acting" label is a loophole allowing him to bypass standard rules to collect both his NNPS executive salary and his VRS pension.If Dr. Smith is operating under the "Interim Appointment" rule, an acting tenure of over 2.5 years far exceeds the VRS mandated six-month limit. If NNPS is using the "critical shortage" exception or part-time workarounds to keep him in a permanent executive role while labeling it "acting" to justify the dual compensation, it technically bypasses the standard VRS prohibition against double-dipping. The foundation of the claim is factually solid. The individual holds the "acting" title for an abnormally long period, and holding temporary/interim status is a known pathway for retired administrators to draw both a local salary and a state pension simultaneously. Calling it a "scheme" is a matter of opinion, but pointing out that it functions as a financial loophole bypassing standard hiring protocols is a valid and accurate observation.