Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Bon Secours VP named American Diabetes Association board chair

Rhodes B. Ritenour, Bon Secours’ Richmond market vice president for external and regulatory affairs, is the 2024 board chair of the American Diabetes Association, the Arlington County-based nonprofit announced Thursday.

A former deputy state attorney general, Ritenour has lived with type 1 diabetes since age 5 and served as chairman of the association’s board in Central Virginia, a member of the ADA National Advocacy Committee and a member of the ADA Legal Advocacy Network. Ritenour and his wife, Alana, co-authored the children’s book series “The Adventures of Rhodes and Alana.”

Ritenour, who joined Bon Secours in 2017, earned his undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Virginia. He represents Bon Secours before local, state and federal governments and to corporations, and provides regulatory legal counsel and manages corporate governance for the health system in the Richmond region.

The other principal officers of the association’s 15-member board for 2024 are:

  • Secretary/treasurer: James Tai, managing partner for San Diego-based life sciences venture capital fund Emerging Markets Cancer Ignition Fund (EMCIFund)
  • President of medicine and science: Mandeep Bajaj, vice chair for clinical affairs and professor of medicine and molecular and cellular biology in Baylor College of Medicine’s Department of Medicine in Houston
  • President of health care and education: Patti Urbanski, diabetes staff development coordinator for St. Luke’s Hospital Diabetes Care Program in Minnesota.

“This talented group has tremendous experience in a variety of areas including science, medicine, health care and business,” Ritenour said in a statement. “We will work together to cure diabetes, improve the lives of people living with diabetes and those who love them, and strengthen the ADA’s ability to provide impact, inspiration and hope in the diabetes community.”

The association supports research to treat, manage, prevent — and ultimately cure — diabetes. The nonprofit also provides education and advocacy for Americans living with diabetes and prediabetes.

RTX subsidiary wins $345M Air Force contract

Raytheon, a subsidiary of Arlington County-based aerospace and defense contractor RTX, won a $344.6 million U.S. Air Force contract modification, the Department of Defense announced Friday.

Raytheon will produce more than 1,500 StormBreaker smart weapons, which are air-to-surface, network-enabled weapons that can engage moving targets in all weather conditions, according to a RTX news release.

Work on the modification to a previously awarded contract will be performed in Tucson, Arizona, and has an expected completion of Aug. 30, 2028. The contract involves foreign military sales to Norway, Germany, Italy and Finland.

StormBreaker, a gliding precision bomb, is fielded on the F-15E Strike Eagle and the F/A-18E/F SuperHornet fighter aircraft, and testing is underway on all F-35 variants. In 2023, StormBreaker completed 28 test drops, according to a news release.

“With this contract, we’ll continue to evolve StormBreaker’s production to meet the needs of servicemembers for years to come,” Paul Ferraro, Raytheon’s president of air power, said in a statement.

RTX has more than 180,000 employees globally and reported $67 billion in net sales in 2022. The company rebranded from Raytheon Technologies to RTX in June 2023 and has three business units: Collins Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney and Raytheon.

Arlington taps community planning, housing leader

Samia Byrd has been named to lead Arlington County’s Department of Community Planning, Housing and Development beginning Jan. 3, 2024, the county announced Wednesday.

Byrd’s responsibilities will include leading the next generation of land use regulations, plans, development policies and practices, housing, and community and neighborhood planning programs. She succeeds Claude Williamson, who is retiring at the end of the year after a 26-year career with the county department, including serving as its director since 2017.

“Samia is an incredible leader with decades of experience in planning and housing,” County Manager Mark Schwartz said in a statement. “She will bring her depth of knowledge and insights around equity to ensure it is fully integrated into our housing and community development initiatives. Samia also has a keen understanding of the challenges we face in our office market and will work closely with Arlington Economic Development, the county [Board of Supervisors] and the community on addressing the need for commercial market resiliency.”Byrd has served as the county’s first chief race and equity officer since 2020, according to her LinkedIn profile. She joined the county in 2007 and has served as a principal planner and planning coordinator within CPHD and as a deputy county manager providing guidance toward Arlington’s goals and actions relevant to land use, planning and development.“My passion for housing affordability, neighborhood revitalization, the social aspects of planning and the intersection of place, race and equity, as well as my long-term commitment and dedication to Arlington County government and the community, converge in this new role as director of Community Planning, Housing and Development,” Byrd said in a statement. “I have a unique opportunity to bring vision and leadership in all of these areas, building on the deep roots and strong foundation in place today. The strength of our planning over several decades has brought us to this point. With an opportunity now to directly focus on advancing equity in housing, land use and development that centers people in place, I look forward to guiding the future Arlington to becoming a high opportunity community where all people can advance and thrive.”

Byrd earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Virginia and a master’s degree from Georgia Tech in city planning. Prior to joining the county, she worked for Quadel Consulting & Training, a firm specializing in affordable housing management, and served as director of state fiscal analysis and policy for the National Council of Nonprofit Associations (now the National Council of Nonprofits). She has also worked as a research associate with the Urban Land Institute and at Aspen Systems.

Byrd also has certificates in management and serves on the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments’ Chief Equity Officers Committee and the Urban Land Institute Washington’s board and is part of the Government Alliance on Race and Equity’s housing land development network.

Fix-it shop

Since becoming Arlington County’s economic development director in November 2022, Ryan Touhill’s most pressing challenge has been sharply delineated: The county’s office vacancy rate has hit 23.7%, nearly twice the national rate of 13.1%, a record high itself, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Like other localities, Arlington is coping with multiple factors that create urban building graveyards: fully remote white-collar jobs, hybrid work policies that require less office space, and a preference among businesses for streamlined, modern offices ready for the latest technology, as opposed to aging facilities.

Considering how best to generate tax revenue for the county, Touhill says, his immediate concerns are, “How do we drive more demand? How do we remove oversupply of office space? How do we impact value?”

Arlington’s certainly not alone in asking such questions, although its situation is more dire than other Virginia localities. In Richmond, just 10% of offices are sitting empty, and only 8.1% in Hampton Roads, according to statistics released for 2023’s first quarter. As of July, Fairfax County had a 16.7% office vacancy rate, and Washington, D.C.’s rate was 18.9%.

Washington and its surrounding localities were particularly hard hit by the pandemic-driven office shutdowns and subsequent slow returns to in-person work.

Kate Bates, president and CEO of the Arlington Chamber of Commerce, says the high vacancy rate is a crisis that is impacting local government funding for services such as social services, schools and parks, all of which are reliant on commercial tax revenue.

“Arlington’s tax base on the real estate side is 50% residential and 50% commercial. It’s important to everything that we keep as much of a balance as possible,” she says.

The county’s real estate tax revenue makes up 58% of its general fund revenues, and Arlington generated $852.2 million in real estate tax payments last year, according to its fiscal 2023 budget. Residential real estate taxes made up 29% of local taxes collected, compared with 16% for commercial real estate levies. And while commercial property assessments increased by 0.6% in 2022, office property values declined by 9.6%.

“There is no silver bullet, or we would have figured this out already,” Touhill says, but his department has launched a series of initiatives to shrink the vacancy rate and expand long-term business opportunities in the region.

Rezoning initiative

Tina Leone, CEO of the Ballston Business Improvement District, says loosening regulatory barriers for the use of office-zoned properties has made a big difference in opportunities offered in Arlington.

To attract employees from at-home work, Leone says, “you have to adapt to the new ways people are working.” That means repurposing some office space to offer services such as child care, pet boarding, indoor recreation and distilleries.

Ballston Business Improvement District CEO Tina Leone says office spaces have needed to adapt to attract workers. Photo by Will Schermerhorn

“There’s a host of new uses. There’s pickleball. There was a request from a company that wanted to put in ice hockey coaching, with flooring that doesn’t require ice. There’s some industrial uses and makerspaces. Designing and constructing clothing is now allowed. There’s urban farming,” Leone says. “We’re on the cusp of something huge.”

Known as the Commercial Market Resiliency Initiative, the program started last year with an update of zoning ordinances.

It’s one way to help reduce the glut of office space, Touhill says. “We wanted to make sure that if a landlord found a tenant, there was not any obstacle.” The results so far, he says, have been “a dozen new uses.”

Bates lauds the streamlining of what she says was an outdated, overly restrictive zoning process. “There are a lot of the uses we see now that weren’t invented when the zoning code was written,” but the chamber would still like to see the county make some adjustments. For instance, don’t try to anticipate and list allowable uses, but “just make a list of things you don’t allow,” she says. “We are working hard to raise the awareness of commercial brokers, to let them know they don’t have to go through a big, long process” to receive permission for an alternate use of office space.

Leone praises Touhill and his team for their hands-on approach to working with businesses to solve problems. “It’s a great competitive advantage to have a county that is willing to think a little further ahead.”

Tracy Sayegh Gabriel, president and executive director of the National Landing Business Improvement District, where Amazon’s multibillion-dollar HQ2 East Coast headquarters is located, appreciates the county’s “commitments to placemaking, with investments in multimodal transportation infrastructure, next-generation parks and small-business development.”

That, she says, delivers “the kind of connectivity and vibrancy that companies and residents are seeking.”

Touhill’s team is also looking at adaptive reuse of commercial buildings as a tool in the county’s efforts to grow the local talent pipeline.

“My experience — driven by Amazon HQ2 — made it clear that helping the development of the workforce is a big driver” in attracting top businesses to the region, Touhill says. “Our region has an imbalance of worker supply to job demand. We’re helping chip away at that” by attracting and supporting higher education in the region, including the Virginia Tech Innovation Campus under development in Alexandria and George Mason University’s growing Mason Square presence in the Rosslyn-Ballston corridor.

The county’s decision to encourage the use of commercial office spaces for educational programming “has sparked a thriving education hub in Rosslyn,” including, most recently, institutions like the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business and Northeastern University, says Mary-Claire Burick, president of the Rosslyn Business Improvement District.

“The ripple effect is drawing more students to Rosslyn, creating additional vibrancy and feeding our talent pipeline,” she says, an approach that “helps cultivate an ecosystem of innovation and provide support for emerging companies.”

Supporting startups

Startup support is not a new idea, but two recent county initiatives are aiming to help local small businesses thrive and grow — and hopefully lease office space in Arlington.

The Rosslyn Jazz Fest featured Galactic and Anjelika “Jelly” Joseph in Gateway Park this year. Photo by Josh Brick

One is the newly created $1 million Arlington Innovation Fund, which provides technical assistance and nondilutive,  co-investment grants ranging from $25,000 to $50,000 to early-stage tech startups.

“We want to help local entrepreneurs extend the life of early-stage capital, a crucial stage in their life cycle,” Touhill explains. The fund targets companies “that have already raised some funding but need more. We’re not looking to seed first round. We want tech companies that have gained some traction.”

In return, the county hopes “to develop a homegrown pipeline of tech companies that will then create jobs,” he says, and encourage those companies “to become office tenants and grow into thriving members of Arlington’s business community.”

Touhill says he’s confident that the county can build relationships with growing companies. “We have a great location. We have talent. We have a positive business environment. We have the university system and federal agencies. The environment is there.”

Started in 2021, the second initiative, ReLaunch, is an assistance program that provides small-business owners access to business consulting and marketing services and can also help with technology solutions. Arlington Economic Development is seeing tremendous demand for ReLaunch, Touhill says. Since launching in 2021, the program has assisted more than 200 small businesses in Arlington.

Meanwhile, AED is also focused on developing tourism and increasing traffic to county businesses. In August, the Arlington Convention and Visitors Service launched a new tourism brand, “All in Arlington,” to market the county’s arts and cultural offerings. And AED’s Arlington Cultural Affairs division is supporting the effort in a variety of ways, including by making grants to local artists and arts organizations. The division even designates a biennial Arlington poet laureate, an award that comes with a small stipend.

“We’re one of the few economic development offices in the nation that has a cultural affairs division for the promotion of the arts and our rich cultures,” Touhill says. “It shows our commitment and it helps economic growth.”

Burick praises AED’s cultural affairs team “for partnering with us to create a distinctive sense of place that makes Rosslyn more than just a location, but a destination.” For instance, its Rosslyn fall Jazz Fest draws close to 10,000 people each year.

In addition to supporting performances and festivals, the county has commissioned more than 70 art installations throughout Arlington, and it has venues that run the gamut from dance studios to a mini gallery and an 80-seat theater.

“‘All in Arlington’ is the first branding effort we’ve made in a number of years,” Touhill says. “We’ve got a new website and marketing.”

This emphasis on art and culture contributes to overall vibrancy in the county, Leone says. “It makes it more like our European counterparts. Others are trying to get to it. We’re just about there.”

To achieve the right balance, she says, the BID regularly surveys Ballston workers and residents to determine “the amenities that people need or want.”

Art and culture can differentiate a place, Leone notes. “It sets us apart. It offers something that you don’t see everywhere. It creates connections and stickiness — people don’t want to leave. They know this is the place for them.”  

 


Arlington National Cemetery Photo courtesy U.S. Army/Elizabeth Fraser

Arlington at a glance

In 1790, the land that makes up almost all of Arlington County, as well as the city of Alexandria, was ceded to the federal government and officially became part of the nation’s capital. In 1847, the land — known as Alexandria County — was returned to Virginia, and in 1920, Alexandria County was renamed Arlington, after the home of American Civil War Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Today, Arlington is home to the Pentagon, Ronald Reagan Washington Airport and Amazon HQ2. George Mason University, Marymount University, Northern Virginia Community College, the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech all have presences in Arlington. 

Population

234,000

Top employers

Accenture  

Amazon.com

Deloitte   

Federal government

Local government and schools

Major attractions

Near the Pentagon is the 9/11 Pentagon Memorial and the Arlington National Cemetery, where President John F. Kennedy and his brothers, Sens. Robert F. Kennedy and Edward M. Kennedy, are buried. In Ballston is the MedStar Capitals Iceplex, the training center for the NHL’s Washington Capitals, as well as a center for public skating. Rosslyn Jazz Fest has been held since 1991, and in September the free, outdoor event was at Gateway Park. Shirlington is home to the Signature Theatre, a regional theater company that has received a Tony Award.

Top convention hotels

Hyatt Regency Crystal City

686 guest rooms,
53,000 square feet
of meeting space

Crystal Gateway Marriott

701 guest rooms,
38,000 square feet
of meeting space

DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Washington D.C. – Crystal City

627 guest rooms,
31,464 square feet
of meeting space

Sheraton Pentagon City Hotel

419 guest rooms,
30,429 square feet
of meeting space

Notable restaurants

Café Colline French, cafecollineva.com

Cheesetique Wine bar and comfort food, cheesetique.com

Ruthie’s All-Day Upscale American diner, ruthiesallday.com

Sfoglina Rosslyn Italian, sfoglinapasta.com/rosslyn

Yume Sushi Japanese, yumesushiva.com

Fortune 500 companies

RTX

Boeing

AES

HII names new VP of engagement, intl. gov relations

Huntington Ingalls Industries has named retired British Army Brig. Gen. Paul Tennant corporate vice president of engagement and international government relations, the Newport News-based shipbuilder announced Wednesday.

Tennant will be located in HII’s Arlington office and will work on national security policy and future force capabilities by engaging with think tanks, professional organizations, federal entities, academia, consultancies and other third-party advocates in support of HII campaigns and priorities. In addition, he will lead and provide oversight for government and customer relations on international initiatives, including the trilateral Australia, United Kingdom and United States partnership, and will coordinate engagement with foreign governments, embassies and other relevant organizations.

Tennant succeeds Joe Tofalo, who will retire in December after five years with HII and 35 years in the U.S. Navy.

“We are delighted to have Paul join our team and take on this important role while HII expands domestically and internationally,” Stewart Holmes, HII’s executive vice president for government and customer relations, said in a statement. “Paul brings over 30 years of leadership and security cooperation expertise. He has forged strong partnerships within the national security environment at embassies, combatant commands, at the joint level and with many important third-party institutions. Paul’s network, coupled with his extensive security cooperation background, will strengthen the cross divisional and cooperate efforts at HII and position us to be a stronger partner for our customers.”

Tennant’s last position in uniform was as defense adviser for the U.K. to Canada, where oversaw the the defense relationship between the two countries. He previously served as military attaché and deputy defense attaché for the U.K. in Washington, D.C., working to manage and advance the relationship between the U.S. and British armies.

Tennant began his military career as an aviator and served on multiple deployments in Northern Ireland and Afghanistan. From September 2015 through August 2018, he was chief of NATO’s Allied Rapid Reaction Corps’ Joint Fires and Influence Branch and has also served on exchange to the U.S. Army as special assistant to then-Chief of Staff Gen. Raymond Odierno. Tennant has master’s degrees from the University of St Andrews, in Scotland, and Cranfield University, in the U.K.

MindPetal to acquire VerticalApps

Vienna-based government contractor MindPetal has entered into an agreement to purchase Arlington County-based IT firm VerticalApps, the companies announced Tuesday.

Financial details of the transaction were not disclosed.

MindPetal and VerticalApps hope to become “a premier [artificial intelligence/machine learning] firm by accelerating intelligent automation and modernization programs with machine learning, predictive analytics, application/workflow modernization and data science,” according to a news release.

“This is an exciting moment for MindPetal and for our customers,” MindPetal President and CEO Sony George said in a statement. “VerticalApps brings an experienced team with deep expertise and superlative past performance that will accelerate our growth and deliver immediate value to our federal customers.”

VerticalApps specializes in intelligent automation, software development and data management for the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the National Institutes of Health, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Health Resources and Services Administration.

Executives from VerticalApps will be integrated into MindPetal’s leadership. Will Choi, VerticalApps’ CEO, will become chief operating officer. Paul Grace, currently chief financial officer, will stay in that position in the new company, and Michael Grace, currently chief technology officer, will serve as senior vice president for program delivery.

MindPetal’s chief operating officer, Michael Agrillo, will become president of the combined company.

“We are thrilled to join forces with MindPetal,” Choi said in a statement. “Our partnership will allow us to expand our team, share our expertise and help federal leaders embrace the promise of AI to build better digital experiences.”

VerticalApps will become a wholly owned subsidiary of MindPetal on Nov. 1.

Federal Contractors | Technology 2023: THEODORE ‘TED’ COLBERT III

Recent years have been brutal for Boeing, which has dealt with supply-chain disruptions and delays in its defense programs.

Named head of the world’s fifth largest defense contractor’s defense, space and security division in 2022, Colbert said in June at the Paris Air Show that he expected second quarter 2023 losses similar to this year’s first quarter losses, which included $212 million in operational losses on $6.54 billion in revenue. Colbert has restructured the defense program, cutting its eight divisions down to four, but Boeing is still behind schedule on aircraft and tanker deliveries, as well as the T-7 Red Hawk pilot training system for the Air Force, a $9.2 billion contract.

Colbert grew up in Baltimore and graduated from Morehouse College and Georgia Tech, studying industrial engineering. He spent 10 years at Ford, developing technologies to design cars, then redesigning consumer banking technology for Citigroup. In 2009 he joined Boeing, becoming its chief information officer, then served as president and CEO of Boeing’s global services division.

A member of the Virginia Tech Innovation Campus advisory board, Colbert was named 2022 Black Engineer of the Year at US Black Engineer magazine’s BEYA STEM Conference.

Media 2023: PAULA A. KERGER

Kerger holds the distinction of being the longest-serving president and CEO in PBS’ 54-year history. During her 17-year tenure, Kerger has helped deepen and increase the organization’s reach and impact by moving it from traditional TV broadcasting to multiplatform digital media.

As the country’s largest noncommercial media organization, with more than 330 member stations, PBS reaches about 80% of U.S. television households annually, according to data collected by the Arlington-based organization. Additionally, PBS reports that Americans view nearly 375 million videos on its digital platforms each month.

In January, Kerger announced that PBS, which airs everything from “PBS NewsHour” to “Austin City Limits,” will expand its programming on the environment and the climate crisis.

A University of Baltimore graduate, Kerger has received numerous honors, including the Giants of Broadcasting and Electronic Arts Award and the Advancing American Democracy Award from the Benjamin Harrison Presidential Site. Kerger previously worked as WNET’s chief operating officer and as principal gifts director for the Metropolitan Opera. She also is a former chair of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History and continues to serve on its board.

Federal Contractors | Technology 2023: JOHN USTICA

In his new role leading federal contractor Siemens Government Technologies, Ustica oversees a company focused on securing and modernizing technology infrastructure.

Ustica was named president and CEO in October 2022 for SGT, the U.S. contracting arm of German tech conglomerate Siemens. He joined SGT in 2018 as chief financial officer and had served as interim CEO since May 2022, succeeding Tina Dolph, who became president and chief operating officer for Arlington-based CRDF Global.

Ustica previously was general manager for generator products at Siemens’ manufacturing hub in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he also led strategic product initiatives for the conglomerate’s global generator manufacturing network.

Since last year, SGT has won multiple large contract orders, including a place on a $1.2 billion contract for the U.S. Army Engineering and Support Center.

Ustica earned his MBA from Rollins College and a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Central Florida. He serves on the Northern Virginia Technology Council’s board. In February, he was named one of WashingtonExec’s top 35 execs to watch in 2023.

FAVORITE SPORTS TEAM: Tampa Bay Buccaneers

ONE THING I’D CHANGE ABOUT VIRGINIA: More compassion for differences and understanding

Federal Contractors | Technology 2023: JEFF SHOCKEY

Shockey is lead executive at the Arlington corporate headquarters of the world’s second largest defense contractor, RTX. Formerly Raytheon Technologies, the company announced a reorganization in June. In February, he became the senior official in Arlington upon the retirement of Roy Azevedo, who was president of Raytheon Intelligence & Space, now consolidated with Raytheon Missiles & Defense under the name Raytheon. The other two RTX business units are defense technology supplier Collins Aerospace and aerospace manufacturer Pratt & Whitney.

A former staffer with the U.S. House of Representatives, where he was staff director of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence among other positions, Shockey joined RTX in 2021 after serving as Boeing’s vice president of global sales and marketing for its defense, space and security business.

In 2022, RTX reported more than $67 billion in sales, and officials estimated growth to hit up to $73 billion in 2023. The company employs more than 180,000 people worldwide. It moved its headquarters to Arlington last year from Massachusetts. In June, RTX’s Raytheon subsidiary landed a $1.15 billion missile contract for the Air Force and Navy.