Even as the seemingly never-ending COVID-19 pandemic continues to accelerate hybrid and virtual work, one thing doesn’t change — your need to build social capital.
Whether you’re Zooming or returning to in-person events, this third annual list of Virginians to meet in 2022 will introduce you to a variety of innovative, impactful businesspeople and trendsetters whom we think are worthy of your valuable networking time.
They range from The New York Times political columnist Jamelle Bouie, who has a side gig reviewing morning cereals for fun, to the Washington Football Team’s Will Misselbrook, who’s rebranding the NFL franchise for the 21st century, to Loudoun Hunger Relief President and CEO Jennifer Montgomery, who’s feeding hundreds of hungry families in the nation’s wealthiest county.
And just as a reminder, “I saw you in Virginia Business!” is always a great conversation opener.
They might be new to their positions, but they bring decades of expertise and new vantage points to the table. Here’s a sampling of Virginians — some fresh faces, others familiar — who have recently taken on significant new leadership roles.
Stephen Ambrose
Chief climate scientist, Science Applications International Corp.
Reston
Hurricane Agnes slammed the Washington , D.C., region in June 1972, fueling Stephen Ambrose’s interest in climate and weather. Ambrose kept an amateur weather station at his parents’ home in Silver Spring, Maryland. He later worked in meteorology, physical sciences and satellites at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration before following his passion for space and astronomy to NASA, where he worked for a dozen years, including as a disaster manager during Hurricane Katrina. In his newly created role at SAIC, Ambrose expects to tackle solutions to climate’s impact, including incorporating data, to “develop an enterprise solution to contribute to society,” he says. When he’s not working, Ambrose enjoys riding his Harley Davidsons, exploring his family’s genealogy and volunteering with Team Rubicon, a nonprofit disaster response organization.
Erin Burcham
Executive director, Roanoke-Blacksburg Technology Council
Roanoke and Blacksburg
In June, Erin Burcham became the first woman to lead the Roanoke-Blacksburg Technology Council. She’s hoping one of her early wins in the post will be to secure a regional grant from the U.S. Economic Development Administration, which would be used to develop commercial wet-lab space in Roanoke for the biotech industry. “Fralin Biomedical Research Institute is producing multiple teams of researchers that are ready to commercialize,” she says. “They just need some wet lab space to stay in the region.” Burcham, who grew up in Galax and has worked in the New River Valley for the last 15 years, previously led and managed two GO Virginia grants totaling $280,000 as director of talent solutions at the Roanoke Regional Partnership.
Frank Castellanos
Hampton Roads region president, Bank of America
Williamsburg
Frank Castellanos has lived and worked around the globe. In his first career as a foreign service officer, he spent 20 years working for the State Department, serving six tours in the Middle East, Latin America and Asia and holding command positions in war zones and other hostile environments. He was an associate with the National Intelligence Council and served on several interagency boards, guiding U.S. policy and investments, and protecting American interests abroad. Castellanos says his time living in different places gives him great perspective in business. About five years ago, the Cuban native returned to his first love: finance. In September, Castellanos was named Hampton Roads market president for Bank of America, replacing retiring president Charlie Henderson.
Rodney E. Ferguson
Executive vice president, Pamunkey Indian Tribal Gaming Authority
Norfolk
Next year, Rodney Ferguson will be focused on developing the Pamunkey Indian Tribe’s $500 million HeadWaters Resort & Casino in downtown Norfolk, a project anticipated to generate about 2,500 full-time jobs and as much as $30.8 million in local annual tax revenue. He left a “wonderful” job as CEO and general manager of a large Milwaukee casino because this was an amazing opportunity, he says — and it didn’t hurt that he was raised 30 miles from the proposed Norfolk casino and still maintains a home there, which will cut his commute from 1,000 miles to 10. Over the past three decades, Ferguson has worked for casinos all over the country, from Atlantic City to Wisconsin, “[learning] to respect and adapt to various cultures.” Establishing a culture of diversity and inclusion is a primary goal for the new venture, he adds.
Paul Fletcher
Executive director and CEO, Virginia Bar Association
Richmond
For 33 years, Paul Fletcher covered Virginia’s legal scene as editor and publisher of Virginia Lawyers Weekly. Now he’s leaning into the broad network of connections he built as the new executive director and CEO of the commonwealth’s largest voluntary organization of lawyers, judges, law school faculty and students. Previously active as a Virginia Bar Association volunteer, Fletcher now manages the association’s professional staff. He also served as statewide and national president for the Society of Professional Journalists. “I think having the extensive run with SPJ, both at the state level and national level, has really helped to inform my view of association work,” Fletcher says.
Toby J. Heytens
Judge, Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
Richmond
When he was state solicitor general, Toby Heytens helped represent Virginia in the two lawsuits that challenged Gov. Ralph Northam’s order to take down the Robert E. Lee statue on Richmond’s Monument Avenue. In the case brought by the original landowners’ descendent, Heytens argued that “no court has ever recognized a personal, inheritable right to dictate the content of … government speech about a matter of racial equality, and this court should not be the first one ever to do so.” He has argued successfully twice before the U.S. Supreme Court and also was a professor at the University of Virginia School of Law. On Nov. 1, the Senate confirmed Heytens for a judgeship on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit.
Amir Kirkwood
President and CEO,
Virginia Community Capital
Arlington
Amir Kirkwood’s career has evolved from his passion for financing community development. Formerly with Opportunity Finance Network, in September he was named president of Virginia Community Capital, a nonprofit community development financial institution and for-profit bank that funds and promotes job creation, affordable housing, food access and health care initiatives in underserved areas of Virginia. “I was most impressed by [VCC’s] commitment to build direct connections with communities,” he says. “It’s a lot different than a larger bank. Here, people get to know their customers, their communities.” In his new role, Kirkwood helps economically excluded communities by expanding on tools such as the innovative Community Investment Guarantee pool, a $33.1 million national pool fund established in 2020 to catalyze community investments in small businesses, climate change mitigation and affordable housing efforts nationwide.
Tessa Pocock
Chief science officer,
Soli Organic
Harrisonburg
Tessa Pocock grew up digging up plants and replanting them around her childhood home in Canada. This summer, the Ph.D. expert in plant biology and lighting was hired as chief science officer for indoor agriculture producer Soli Organic (formerly known as Shenandoah Growers). She’s in the process of relocating to Harrisonburg from Laramie, Wyoming, where she grew stalks of corn at 7,200 feet above sea level in Wyoming. “Everybody said, ‘You cannot go grow corn in Laramie,’ and I said, ‘Hmm, I’ll take that on,’” she says. In her 40-year career, Pocock has never used pesticides, which makes her a good fit at Soli Organic, which produces indoor-grown herbs and lettuce. Naturally, once she settles in, she plans on starting a garden.
Michael Roussos
President, VCU Medical Center
Richmond
It’s a busy time for Michael Roussos. He and his wife, a trauma surgeon, had their second child in November (the couple also have a 20-month-old), and Roussos is set to start his new job as VCU Medical Center’s president in late December. He previously served as lead administrator at University Hospital in San Antonio, Texas, where he spearheaded the facility’s COVID-19 response and migrated medical records to Epic, an electronic system that VCU is also implementing. At VCU, Roussos plans to emphasize the importance of getting a COVID vaccine, which is now available for everyone ages 5 and older. “We know how fast the delta variant spread through the world, and that could happen again with a new variant,” he warns.
Richmond Vincent
CEO, Goodwill Industries of the Valleys
Roanoke
Richmond Vincent sees a more expansive role for Goodwill Industries of the Valleys, which aims to empower people and eradicate poverty in the Roanoke, Shenandoah and New River valleys. The organization, which employs more than 1,400 workers across 35 counties and 14 cities, provides services ranging from workforce training programs for teens and adults to employment and support services for people with disabilities. In October, the nonprofit installed one of the region’s largest rooftop solar panel arrays at its Roanoke Jobs Campus headquarters, which will generate about 90% of its power needs. Vincent played football for Arizona State University and worked in banking before starting with Goodwill in 2010, where he served as senior vice president for workforce development in Arizona. He came to Roanoke in March after four years leading a Goodwill branch in southern Mississippi. “I really love Goodwill because of our entrepreneurial spirit.”
Saving lives, feeding the hungry or helping those most in need, these Virginians make the commonwealth a better place through their passion, dedication
and sacrifice.
Dr. Sandy Chung
CEO, Trusted Doctors; IT Medical Director, Pediatric Health Network; 2022 president-elect, American Academy of Pediatrics
Fairfax
Multitasker extraordinaire Dr. Sandy Chung is driven by her desire to improve children’s access to care, including mental health care. After one of her teenage patients with bipolar disorder shot and killed a man during a monthlong wait to see a psychiatrist for a prescription refill, she worked to establish the state-funded Virginia Mental Health Access Progam. It trains primary care providers to better manage psychiatric conditions, offering phone consultations with psychiatrists and helping families find mental health care. Now the 2022 president-elect of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Chung wants to focus her term on continuing to improve access to care by optimizing health data and helping health care workers avoid burnout.
Shanteny Jackson
Senior health educator,
Richmond Health Department
Richmond
Shanteny Jackson works at the Richmond Health Department’s resource centers, clinics embedded within neighborhoods, which makes them more accessible for residents without reliable transportation. “It’s very important to reach [clients] where they are,” she says, guidance that also applies to her role as a dual Spanish- and English-speaking public health employee. Her skills were key in improving Virginia’s COVID-19 vaccination rates among Latinx residents, a population that was more likely to contract the virus due to crowded working and living conditions. This summer, then-National Public Radio host Lulu Garcia-Navarro interviewed Jackson about the state’s success, which she attributed in part to those established resource centers. “We have to care and know about our communities,” she told Garcia-Navarro.
Tiffany McGee
CEO, Survivor Ventures and Chelsea Consulting Group
Norfolk
Tiffany McGee was a Department of Defense intelligence analyst and served on anti-trafficking task forces in embassies throughout Africa and Europe. Now, she helps survivors of domestic human trafficking. McGee started her nonprofit in 2018 to help survivors of human trafficking get past barriers to success, such as finding jobs and affordable housing. Survivors to Entrepreneurs, a program within her Survivor Ventures nonprofit, connects survivors with jobs at startups in Hampton Roads. Survivors to Entrepreneurs pays 100% of a trafficking survivor’s salary for the first three months, then 50% and so on, until the business can take on the pay. The nonprofit has a similar model for offering rental assistance and helping survivors build up their credit. Survivor Ventures landed a federal grant to expand, and she plans to expand the program throughout the mid-Atlantic region starting in 2022. McGee also helped establish the Hampton Roads Human Trafficking Task Force.
Charles Meng
CEO, Arlington Food Assistance Center
Arlington
With a law degree from Georgetown University, Charles Meng has tackled a little bit of everything over the course of his career — working as an administrator at Georgetown and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and as executive director of human resources at American University. Meng even designed and sold ornate gravestones. About 13 years ago, he noticed the Arlington Food Assistance Center was seeking a director of operations. The center “was very screwed up at the time,” he says bluntly, “but it had a lot of potential.” Then, the AFAC had assets of about $1 million. Today, the organization’s assets total about $10 million, allowing it to provide 2,100 needy area families with groceries each week.
Jennifer Montgomery
President and CEO, Loudoun Hunger Relief
Leesburg
In the nation’s wealthiest county as determined by median income, Jennifer Montgomery saw Loudoun Hunger Relief’s food recipients quadruple at the pandemic’s height. “We went from serving … 250 families a week to a height of 1,000 families a week for a while there,” recalls Montgomery, who was promoted as the nonprofit’s CEO in February after serving as executive director since 2014. Today, the food pantry serves about 600 families a week. Montgomery, who also chairs the Loudoun Human Services Network board and co-chairs its strategic plan committee, has long been focused on aiding people in need. The pandemic has been the most challenging time of her career, but also the most rewarding, she says, “because of the unbelievable support that the community has given here in Loudoun.”
Rebecca Sprague
Youth and employment program coordinator, Church World Service Harrisonburg
Harrisonburg
After returning from studying dance in India, Rebecca Sprague volunteered as an English teacher in New York about
20 years ago before being hired at an adult education public school. That started her on the path to her current work as she saw the need for career development training, particularly for women and young adults. Church World Service Harrisonburg helps refugees settle in Harrisonburg and the Shenandoah Valley, assisting newcomers — currently mainly composed of recent Afghan refugees — with finding housing, enrolling children in schools, applying for Social Security cards and locating employment, in addition to providing cultural orientation training, adult education and other services. Demonstrating the scope of the agency’s work, Harrisonburg City Public Schools’ students speak more than 60 languages altogether.
Nancy Toscano
President and CEO,
United Methodist Family Services
Richmond
Nancy Toscano knew early on that she’d dedicate her life to service. “Probably since birth, I was built to be a helper,” she says. In April, Toscano became president and CEO of United Methodist Family Services, a 121-year-old statewide nonprofit that serves at-risk children and their families. A licensed clinical social worker, Toscano has worked for the organization since 2007. Currently, she is leading UMFS’s $8 million fundraising campaign to construct a new residential treatment building and make improvements to the organization’s school and campus. While she doesn’t work as closely with clients as she did earlier in her social work career, Toscano likes the challenge of tackling big-picture problems. “I do feel like I can make a bigger impact.”
Joe Wilkins
President, Bon Secours St. Francis Medical Center
Midlothian
As a preteen, Joe Wilkins found inspiration in the physical therapists who helped his father recover from a car wreck. “My goal was to help people walk,” he says. After working as a physical therapist, Wilkins transitioned into health care administration. A year ago, Wilkins became president of Bon Secours St. Francis Medical Center, after a little more than three years as the chief executive at LifePoint Health in Wytheville. The pandemic has been a challenging time for health care workers, with many burning out and leaving hospitals for other jobs. And Wilkins, a member of Lead Virginia’s class of 2021, has pitched in as needed to fill gaps, still working occasionally as a physical therapist. “Health care is about being selfless,” he says. “It’s about taking care of the patients and those who are in front of us.”
Angela F. Williams
President and CEO, United Way Worldwide
Alexandria
Angela Williams joined United Way Worldwide in October, becoming the 130-year-old global nonprofit’s first woman and first Black leader. The organization is at a crossroads — a 2021 investigation found that United Way Worldwide should review its procedures after it received claims of sexual harassment and discrimination. Williams, the former CEO of Easterseals and a former member of the U.S. Air Force Judge Advocate General’s Corps, says the United Way’s board is “engaged in cultural transformation. That work has started, and I’m stepping into that.” A University of Virginia and Virginia Union University graduate who is also an ordained minister, Williams is happy to be back in the commonwealth and enjoys reading, mentoring young women and solving jigsaw puzzles.
Through their efforts, these are people who attract and grow businesses and funding, making the commonwealth wealthier.
Traci Blido
Executive director, Virginia Career Works —Central Region
Lynchburg
Traci Blido hadn’t been looking for a new job. After a decade as Bedford County’s economic development director, she still found the work challenging. “When you have a small staff, you are wearing many different hats, and so I did regional marketing, workforce development and business attraction and retention,” she says. As part of her role, Blido had long partnered with Virginia Career Works, which allocates federal funding for workforce development programs in five Central Virginia localities. When Blido learned the organization needed a new leader, she could see that the skills she’d honed in Bedford, as well as through previous positions with the Central Virginia Planning District Commission, made her a strong candidate. The hiring committee agreed; Blido started her new post in July.
Alec Brebner
Executive director, Crater Planning District Commission
Petersburg
After spending much of his adulthood working in urban design and planning in South Carolina, Alec Brebner arrived in Virginia in August 2020 with his wife and three children. As the Crater Planning District Commission’s executive director, he has multiple focuses: economic development, transportation and environmental concerns. Currently, Brebner and Petersburg-region officials are working on a coastal resilience master plan and disaster mitigation plan for weather events such as the major ice storm that hit the area last year. “I think the area has a lot of potential,” Brebner says, citing its growing pharmaceutical manufacturing hub led by Phlow Corp. A 2021 Lead Virginia class member, Brebner likes to kayak and bike, and he just hung a backyard rope swing for the kids.
Chandra Briggman
President and CEO, Activation Capital
Richmond
Growing up in a tiny South Carolina town, Chandra Briggman found inspiration in the aspirations of others who dreamed bigger, including her father. Now, as head of Richmond-region economic development organization Activation Capital, the MIT and Johns Hopkins grad is developing an unprecedented $2.5 million accelerator program to boost the growing pharmaceutical sector in Richmond and Petersburg. Fascinated by the intersection of entrepreneurship and technology, Briggman previously directed an innovation hub in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Though she loved the Boston area, leading Activation is a good fit. “I really leapt at the opportunity to design a model that will work in a smaller town, a town that looks more like where I grew up,” Briggman says. “Because if we can figure out how to make a model like that work in the smaller towns, then you’re talking about the potential to really transform local economies.”
David Devan
Vice president of economic competitiveness, Virginia Economic Development Partnership
Richmond
From his division at VEDP, David Devan works on economic development strategy, improving the fundamentals of business attractiveness for regional and statewide growth. After serving in the Marine Corps for seven years, Devan earned his MBA from the University of Virginia and went into investment banking, but it lacked the impact and mission orientation he craved. Now he’s growing his team, focusing on site development and capitalizing on business trends coming out of COVID-19, as well as the state’s emphasis on expanding talent for its fast-growing technology sector. “Our top priority is that all regions participate in Virginia’s growth,” says Devan, a 2021 Lead Virginia class member.
Amy Greear
Vice president of institutional advancement, Mountain Empire Community College; executive director, Mountain Empire Community College Foundation
Big Stone Gap
These days, Amy Greear stays busy trying to raise
$2 million to pay for scholarships and infrastructure improvements at Mountain Empire Community College in celebration of the school’s upcoming 50th anniversary. When Greear, a former newspaper reporter and communications director, considered taking this job three years ago, she hesitated, knowing she feels uncomfortable asking people for money. Luckily, she’s found it easier to fundraise by simply talking about how Mountain Empire improves lives. A 2021 Lead Virginia class member, Greear also runs a side business with her husband, Burke, restoring and preserving cemetery monuments. “Usually cemeteries are in the most beautiful places,” she says, “so I get to spend my weekends looking out over beautiful mountain views and reflecting on life.”
Kalen Hunter
Program director of economic development and GO Virginia Region 1, University of Virginia’s College at Wise
Wise
After serving as executive director of the American Red Cross’ Northeast Tennessee chapter, Kalen Hunter returned to Southwest Virginia two years ago to put down roots with her husband. As a regional program director for the state’s GO Virginia economic development initiative, Hunter emphasizes regional collaboration as a means of diversifying the economies of the region’s 13 counties and three cities, as well as to retain talent through initiatives promoting affordable housing, child care and bustling downtowns. Partnerships with planning district commissions, economic development officials and higher education institutions make what the organization does possible. “We might not see it a year from now, or even two years from now, but what we’re doing today is going to make a positive impact for future generations,” says Hunter, a 2021 Lead Virginia class member.
Kristy Johnson
Executive director, Halifax Industrial Development Authority
Halifax County
Kristy Johnson moved to Halifax County in 2008 from Georgia and immediately immersed herself in her new community, becoming the first woman to serve as mayor of the town of Halifax. In September, she became director of the county’s industrial development authority, where she’s worked in various roles since 2009, advancing business retention in the county, and making it a place where people want to live and work. Halifax County has created a Community Wide Strategic Plan, a follow-up to its previously completed Vision 2020 plan. “Halifax County has a tremendous base of community-minded, engaged citizens who have devoted countless hours to planning and working towards the goals set out in those plans, [and] I believe if we continue that work, we will reap the rewards of our efforts,” she says.
Floyd E. Miller II
President and CEO, Metropolitan Business League
Richmond
A Virginia Commonwealth University alum who hails from New Kent County, Floyd Miller has led Richmond’s small, women- and minority-owned business booster organization since 2017. “I think Richmond is really progressing and becoming one of the great places, especially for entrepreneurs,” says Miller, who was previously senior director of urban programs for Special Olympics Virginia. In his spare time, Miller is a fan of the L.A. Lakers and the New York Yankees and enjoys traveling with his wife, Holly Byrd Miller — especially to Miami. They live in Henrico County with their Maltese-poodle mix Carl. Miller’s goals for 2022 are to continue supporting local businesses by helping them get access to capital funds, as well as using technology to stay connected and working collaboratively.
Dan Pleasant
Chief operating officer, Dewberry
Danville
Dan Pleasant takes pride in his commitment to community engagement, especially in rural Virginia. An executive for more than four decades at Dewberry, a Fairfax-based nationwide professional services firm with roughly 800 Virginia employees, Pleasant also serves as chair of the Virginia Economic Development Partnership’s board of directors. The board’s longest-serving member, he will be helping choose a successor for exiting VEDP CEO Stephen Moret, who Pleasant says “transformed [VEDP] into a high-functioning organization,” landing deals such as Amazon.com Inc.’s HQ2 East Coast headquarters. Through his work with VEDP and the Future of the Piedmont Foundation, which supports economic development in Danville and Pittsylvania County, Pleasant is helping craft strategies to help rural Virginia communities bounce back from economic losses of recent decades.
Whether battling climate change, fighting for diversity, equity and inclusion, or volunteering their leadership skills to make a difference in their communities, it’s all in a day’s work for these impactful Virginians.
Traci J. DeShazor
Deputy secretary of the commonwealth, director of African American outreach
Richmond
Being a part of Gov. Ralph Northam’s push for second chances, like restoring the civil rights of 111,000 people, is what Traci DeShazor says makes her proudest of being a public servant. A two-term deputy secretary of the commonwealth and member of Lead Virginia’s class of 2021, DeShazor also served in Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s administration. She is entering her second master’s degree program in the spring, pursuing a degree in public administration and policy from American University to add to her liberal studies, justice and legal studies degree. As the Northam administration reaches its conclusion, she’s excited by the coming transition. Though she hasn’t settled on her next steps, she’ll be pleased “as long as justice and equity are centered in the work.”
Jasen Eige
Vice president and general counsel, The United Co.
Bristol
As general counsel for The United Co., the real estate development company for the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Bristol, Jasen Eige helped lead the successful 2020 push to pass casino legislation in Virginia. A former senior policy adviser to Gov. Bob McDonnell, Eige was well-equipped for the effort. The Hard Rock casino resort is anticipated to bring 2,000 full-time jobs to Bristol, and Eige sees that as a way to give back to the community he returned to after working 14 years in Richmond. The United Co. hopes to temporarily open the casino in the former JCPenney store at the shuttered Bristol Mall, which partner Par Ventures LLC owns, in the first half of 2022 while renovating the mall and building two towers. The permanent casino will be housed in the former Sears store.
Raymond C. “Ray” Knott
Market president, Atlantic Union Bank; co-chair, Justice Equity Diversity and Inclusion Committee, PATH Foundation
Warrenton
Ray Knott was in the group that formed the PATH Foundation, a Warrenton-based philanthropic charity that focuses on improving health outcomes and disparities in Fauquier, Rappahannock and Culpeper counties. Funded through a $250 million endowment, the PATH (Piedmont Action to Health) Foundation emerged from the 2013 sale of Fauquier Health and its local hospital. The foundation has invested $50 million from its $250 million endowment in Culpeper, Fauquier and Rappahannock counties and partnered with Herren Wellness to bring a substance abuse recovery facility to Warrenton. During his term as the foundation’s chairman, he started the foundation’s Justice, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion initiative. “On the short period of time that we spend on this Earth, we’re just stewards of where we live, and it’s our job to make it a better place,” says Knott, a 2021 Lead Virginia class member.
Susan Kruse
Executive director, Community Climate Collaborative (C3)
Charlottesville
Susan Kruse is passionate about social justice and protecting the planet, and those two issues often intersect, she says. “When you’re addressing climate issues at the local level, it might look like advocacy for affordable housing; it might look like access to better transit systems.” In 2019, Kruse took the helm at C3, and earlier this year, the climate change-focused nonprofit launched the Green Business Alliance with 16 Virginia-headquartered businesses committing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 45% by 2025. A member of the state’s Clean Energy Advisory Board, Kruse previously worked as director of philanthropy for Appalachian Voices, an environmental nonprofit focusing on the Appalachian region, and as development director for Charlottesville’s Legal Aid Justice Center.
John Larson
Director for public policy and economic development, Dominion Energy Inc.
Glen Allen
One of the biggest factors that attracted John Larson to Dominion Energy in 1996 was the opportunity the company allowed to learn entrepreneurship methods. It was an era in which utility companies were starting new businesses, and Dominion ventured into new business lines unlike a traditionally vertically integrated power utility, he recalls. Later, Larson joined Dominion’s alternative energy solutions team and worked on laying the stage for the planned $9.8 billion wind farm’s two pilot wind turbines 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach. Now the project is progressing quickly. “It’s just exciting because every day, there’s something that comes up that you get to learn about and you get to share with others,” he says, as well as “advancing to meet that renewable portfolio standard that has been put in place with the Virginia Clean Economy Act.”
Jamica Nadina Love
Chief diversity officer, Virginia Military Institute
Lexington
Jamica Love, a Boston native with more than two decades advising higher education institutions, is still adjusting to life in a small town where people recognize her in the drug store and deer show up in her backyard. Love has one of the state’s highest-profile roles, leading VMI’s diversity, equity and inclusion efforts since July, after a state investigation revealed racist incidents and sexual assaults and harassment against cadets. Love has spent her first few months speaking with faculty, staff, students and alumni and building a peer-implemented program to improve safety for cadets who have been victimized. “VMI, to me, is a perfect training ground for improvement,” Love says. “We don’t bring cadets in here to fail.”
Glenn Oder
Executive director, Fort Monroe Authority
Hampton
Glenn Oder has served as executive director of the Fort Monroe Authority since 2011, when the military base at Old Point Comfort was retired and its land was divided between the state and federal governments. Previously a Republican state delegate representing Newport News, Oder reports to a 14-member board appointed by the city of Hampton and the governor. Noting that Fort Monroe is where the first enslaved Africans entered the New World in 1619, Oder says his job has “caused me to have a much deeper understanding of how complicated our society is.” During the Civil War, enslaved people sought freedom at the fort when it was occupied by Union soldiers. Aside from promoting Fort Monroe’s historic importance, Oder also is seeking development opportunities for Fort Monroe’s 1 million-plus square feet of commercial space. This year, the authority approved a lease for a $40 million redevelopment of the fort’s marina to include a hotel, restaurant and conference center.
Angela D. Reddix
Founder, president and CEO, ARDX
Norfolk
In September, Ebony magazine named ARDX President and CEO Angela Reddix to its 2021 Power 100 list, recognizing her in its Innovation Leaders category for her work supporting female small business owners during the pandemic. In 2020, Reddix launched an initiative to help 20 women-owned small businesses with $2,020 grants. A second round this year awarded $20,000 grants plus mentoring, business coaching and training. An inductee of Old Dominion University’s Strome Entrepreneurial Hall of Fame, Reddix founded ARDX, her Norfolk-based health care management and IT consulting firm, in 2006, with the company going on to land more than $178 million in government contracts. She has founded mentorship programs for women and girls in Hampton Roads and says her purpose is to transform communities of poverty into prosperity. “To whom much is given,” Reddix says, “much is required.”
David M. Sams
Executive director, Community Tax Law Project
Richmond
Five years ago, David Sams left his private practice as a tax and estate attorney to lead the Community Tax Law Project (CTLP), a nonprofit that provides free legal help to low-income individuals and families struggling with tax problems. Sams has found he enjoys the diversity that comes with working with CTLP clients across the state. “The issues facing someone down in, say, Danville are very different than the issues of a low-income person in Northern Virginia, who’s driving an Uber, versus someone who’s working as a general laborer somewhere in Southwest Virginia,” explains Sams, a 2021 Lead Virginia class member. Founded in 1992, CTLP is the nation’s oldest independent clinic serving low-income taxpayers struggling with tax disputes and served as a model for similar clinics across the United States.
Immanuel Sutherland
Senior manager of community impact, Altria Group Inc.
Richmond
Community involvement has been a part of Immanuel Sutherland’s life since he joined a service-oriented fraternity at James Madison University, from which he graduated in 1993. The Richmond native worked in procurement for Altria, parent company of Philip Morris USA, before moving to community impact, which oversees Altria’s corporate donations to local nonprofits. He oversees giving ranging in focus from arts and culture to affordable housing and homeownership to initiatives promoting criminal justice reform and diversity, equity and inclusion. His efforts have included bringing “The Dirty South” art exhibit to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and managing Altria’s $3 million gift to the Better Housing Coalition, the affordable housing nonprofit’s largest-ever corporate donation. A member of Lead Virginia’s 2021 class, Sutherland is passionate about breaking down issues that divide communities. “Anywhere you have a community that thrives, you’ve got to have people that care about inclusion and appreciate the differences in others,” he says.
Jessica Whitehead
Executive director, Old Dominion University’s Institute for Coastal Adaptation and Resilience
Norfolk
Jessica Whitehead remembers waking during a tornado warning after moving to Kansas as a child. “As a kid, you can either freak out about that situation or think the clouds swirling around above you [are] really, really cool, and I was the second one.” Whitehead moved to ODU in February, where she leads its new institute focusing on the humanitarian and policy aspects of climate change, including adapting to it and building resiliency against it, passions she discovered while working on her Ph.D. at Penn State. At her earlier job as North Carolina’s first chief resiliency officer, she witnessed how devastating hurricanes can be, even far from the ocean. She also developed Georgetown University’s course on climate change and emergency management.
Representing industries ranging from retail and fitness to tech and biosciences, these creative, visionary trendsetters and entrepreneurs keep the Old Dominion new and relevant.
Lisa Alcindor
Program element monitor, U.S. Air Force
Alexandria
Lisa Alcindor starts rapping in the middle of the Pentagon’s courtyard: “Prepped my plane, call it Rocket Ship. I’m outer space, ain’t no stoppin’ it. Three-two-one with the blastoff!” A trained helicopter pilot, Alcindor works as a contractor in the planning, programming and budgeting department for the secretary of defense during the day, but she’s set her sights beyond the limits of the sky. An aspiring astronaut, Alcindor hopes to orbit Earth through the nonprofit Space for Humanity program, joining only a few Black women who have gone to space. Alcindor, who has also worked for NASA, considers herself a disrupter, and she’s sharing her journey on her Instagram account, @LisaTheLandstronaut, where she asks, “What do astronauts look like?”
Serene Almomen
CEO and co-founder, Senseware
Vienna
Serene Almomen thrives on challenge. A decal on the wall of her Centreville office states her company’s principles: “Find a way, get it done, and do it right.” She leads Senseware, a tech company specializing in wireless sensor systems for commercial real estate properties, collecting data on air quality, temperature, energy and water consumption and more. She launched Senseware in 2014 with her husband after the two met at a research conference in Portugal. Health care was initially Senseware’s target industry but Almomen pivoted to the more profitable real estate market. In 2019, Forbes featured Senseware as one of 50 woman-led startups that are crushing technology. “For me, that’s where I thrive,” says Almomen, who in her free time has been perfecting her pie-baking skills. “When I have a problem, I come in and find a way to solve it.”
Jerry Cronin
Executive director, OpenSeas Technology Innovation Hub at Old Dominion University
Norfolk
Jerry Cronin has never lived more than a mile from deep water. After growing up in Long Island and attending the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, he spent time on the West Coast, then came to Virginia. He’s done consulting, started an environmental engineering company, worked for Fortune 150 companies, and most recently landed at ODU’s OpenSeas Technology Innovation Hub. “If I look at my career, it’s been having to learn a new subject matter or new nuance or new field on a pretty regular basis,” he says. The tech hub seeks solutions for the maritime and coastal arenas, focusing on commercializing and operationalizing innovation versus research.
Paul Habenicht
Managing partner, VetEvolve
Richmond
Before 2014, dog owner Paul Habenicht had only ever visited a veterinary clinic as a pet parent. That changed when he and two business partners launched VetEvolve, a Richmond company that manages veterinary practices. It was a new realm for Habenicht, a former college lacrosse player and Marine, seeking life after active duty. He found similarities between the military and veterinary business, such as the tenets of teamwork and service. “A lot of our people are pleasers,” Habenicht says. “It’s hard to put boundaries around that. We are constantly trying to help with that and manage the fatigue and burnout.”
After all, service is ingrained in Habenicht, who, aside from raising two adopted children, serves as a mentor at Anna Julia Cooper Episcopal School in Richmond.
Hunter Hanger
Owner and founder, Hanger Law, Talent Termite, Okie Doughkie Donuts
Virginia Beach
Hunter Hanger probably comes up with five to 10 new business ideas each week. The serial entrepreneur and Regent University School of Law grad spent about a decade practicing real estate law before hiring someone else to run his firm so he could focus on entrepreneurial ventures ranging from a termite control company to a doughnut shop to an event venue. “My real passion … is just to take people who are young and trying to figure things out vocationally, and they want to be entrepreneurs and take away the risk factor for them,” says Hanger, who also started VB Fellows, a Christian nonprofit to encourage young men starting careers in Virginia Beach to stay local. What’s next for Hanger? Slowing down, he says, laughing.
Ashley Horner
Owner, Ashley Horner Fitness, American Brew, American Screen Printing
Virginia Beach
Ashley Horner hasn’t met a challenge that she’s afraid to tackle. After the coffee shop in her Virginia Beach neighborhood closed, the entrepreneur opened the kind of shop she wanted to spend time in. She didn’t know anything about running a restaurant before opening American Brew, a coffee and whiskey shop in Virginia Beach, but charged ahead. When she needed a screen printer, she started her own company, American Screen Printing, instead of outsourcing the work. She did the same with her clothing line, Valkyrie. A fitness model and Instagram influencer, she has developed 20 training programs for the military, SWAT teams and others. Her outlook is, “How hard can it be?” and she learns as she goes. A quality she admires in business is the ability to hustle.
Ozzy Jimenez
CEO, Driven Inc.
Falls Church
Ozzy Jimenez was an ambitious entrepreneur even before he joined Driven Inc. as its chief operations officer 16 years ago. Prior to Driven, Jimenez launched and ran a custom homebuilding business. Driven, a Northern Virginia hybrid software and data management consulting company, offered him “an opportunity to get in on the ground of a budding industry that has turned out to be a big industry and continues to grow,” he says. This year, Jimenez was named an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year for the mid-Atlantic region. He’s most proud of Driven’s team, along with the company’s ability to evolve. “I have always been a team-builder,” says Jimenez, who also serves on the board of directors for the nonprofit Lee Mount Vernon Sports Club.
Tanner Johnson
CEO, Pure Shenandoah
Elkton
Tanner Johnson was working at an auto dealership in Harrisonburg when the hemp cultivation and CBD manufacturing company founded in 2018 by some of his younger brothers started to take off. Johnson, who majored in intelligence analysis with a minor in economics at James Madison University, brought his business experience to Pure Shenandoah at the urging of his entrepreneur mother, who founded the University Outpost Bookstore at JMU. Pure Shenadoah takes a holistic approach to hemp, aiming to use the whole plant for its health and wellness qualities, as well as for fiber. The company also is positioning itself as Virginia lawmakers pursue avenues for legalizing commercial marijuana sales. “We’re learning as it goes,” Johnson says, “and we’re giving it our best shot, that’s for sure.”
Elizabeth Paul
Chief strategy officer, The Martin Agency
Richmond
Elizabeth Paul describes herself as a nonlinear conversationalist. A chat with Paul, chief strategy officer for Richmond ad agency The Martin Agency, is likely to touch on everything from pop culture and politics to art and TikTok. Last year, Paul was a finalist for ChamberRVA’s young innovator award for young professionals for helping lead Martin’s clients (which include UPS, Old Navy and Geico) to successfully transform their brands during the pandemic. Ad agency work has suited her well from her career’s start. “I loved that you’re getting to solve a lot of different kinds of problems in a day,” she says. Paul and her family also are highly involved in building community in their Church Hill neighborhood in Richmond.
Paul Robinson
Executive director, RISE
Norfolk
What do aerospace engineering and coastal resilience have in common? More than one would think, says Paul Robinson, who has worked in both fields and values cross-disciplinary approaches to problems. In 2017, Robinson started RISE, which aims to grow coastal resilience-related businesses. “This is a major issue for the whole country, if not the world, so we have the opportunity here to really make a difference, which is very exciting,” he says. In 2022, RISE will run its first Rural Coastal Community Resilience Challenge to deal with climate threats to rural communities. Originally from Scotland, Robinson came to the area in 1990 to work for NASA as an aerospace engineer. He’s also the founder and CEO of AeroTech Research, which specializes in weather hazard detection for aircraft.
Fertram Sigurjonsson
Founder and CEO, Kerecis
Arlington
Fertram Sigurjonsson, CEO of biotech company Kerecis, was one of Ernst & Young’s 2021 Entrepreneur of the Year Mid-Atlantic award winners. But while he was in high school and college, he worked in the fishing industry in his native Iceland. Years later, he had the epiphany that human skin has similarities to fish skin. He began researching and Kerecis was born. The company takes fishing industry waste, washes it and produces it at medical grade quality for skin grafts that encourage damaged tissue to produce cells, healing itself and converting the fish skin to living tissue that never needs to be removed. In 2022, Kerecis will shift to becoming a multiproduct regenerative and cellular therapy company.
Tracy Tynan
Director, Virginia Unmanned Systems Center
Herndon
A licensed drone pilot who oversees the unmanned systems program at the Center for Innovative Technology, Tracy Tynan spends her time spreading the word about the emerging technology, connecting academia, government, industry and the public. That means demonstrating how the tech can be used to perform “dull, dirty and dangerous” jobs safer and more efficiently, like using a drone to read water meter signals. “You could fly a drone over a building, and, with a thermal sensor, it’ll see all the heat loss coming out of the roof of the building,” she says. Once a nationally ranked diver at the University of Virginia, Tynan previously worked for the Virginia Economic Development Partnership and the Greater Richmond Partnership.
Drew Ungvarsky
Founder and CEO, Grow
Norfolk
A proud resident of Norfolk’s Ghent neighborhood, Drew Ungvarsky is proof that a marketing agency can thrive outside of New York, Chicago or Los Angeles. Last year, Ad Age named Grow its small agency of the year for the Southeast region, citing the “digital experiences” it crafted for clients including Adidas, Google, Spotify and Lululemon. Ungvarsky grew up in Virginia Beach and attended Old Dominion University, aiming to become a video game designer but ultimately gravitating to web design. This year, he launched Assembly, a downtown Norfolk office building with nine tenants, including Grow. With multiyear leases and custom-designed spaces, Assembly is meant to be a creative ecosystem. “I’m looking forward to the continued growth of Grow and realizing this vision for a center,” he says.
Aaron Varella
Talent acquisition specialist, Dominion Energy Inc.
Richmond
A 2019 Virginia Commonwealth University graduate, Aaron Varella stays connected to his “Z-lennial” generation through Instagram and LinkedIn. Born in Goa, India, Varella spent most of his youth in upstate New York and Virginia Beach. In his work for Dominion, one of Virginia’s largest employers, Varella focuses on new ways to attract college students and new graduates to work for the Fortune 500 utility. In 2020, he started an Instagram account known as “Cove of Advice” — a play on COVID — offering advice, interviews and other content for recent college grads. The effort made him a finalist for ChamberRVA’s 2020 Innovator Award. Varella says he’s interested in remaining in marketing or human resources, as well as pursuing an MBA.
From architecture to construction, these are the professionals who are building Virginia’s future and leaving legacies in steel, brick and glass.
Corey Clayborne
Executive vice president, American Institute of Architects Virginia
Richmond
Corey Clayborne confesses that he did not make all A’s in his architecture design studio as a college student at Virginia Tech, but he’s working to make an A-plus impact on the architecture profession as executive vice president of the American Institute of Architects Virginia. In December, Clayborne will attend a Washington, D.C., ceremony honoring his 2020 induction into the American Institute of Architects’ prestigious College of Fellows. Passionate about using his platform to bring people together, Clayborne recently launched the Blueprint for Better Communities dinner series to promote relationship building between architects and government leaders. “Iron sharpens iron,” says Clayborne, a mentor with 100 Black Men of Central Virginia and a member of the 2021 class of Lead Virginia. “The more awesome people you can surround yourself with, it has no choice but to impact you.”
Samuel L. Lionberger III
CEO, Lionberger Construction Co.
Roanoke
As a young man, Samuel Lionberger III dreamed of life as a professional golfer. When he discovered he needed money to pay for his car while a student at Virginia Tech, he settled for a job as a laborer at his family’s business, Lionberger Construction Co. Slowly, he fell in love with the industry. “There’s nothing like it,” says Lionberger, who ascended to CEO after his father, Samuel Lionberger Jr., retired in 2010. “It’s a very rewarding career to create.” Founded by Lionberger’s great uncle John C. Senter, the company will celebrate 100 years in business in 2022. Currently, Lionberger Construction is restoring the 1700s-era Warm Spring Pools at the Omni Homestead Resort in Bath County.
Georgie Márquez
President, Andre Marquez Architects Inc.
Norfolk
Georgie Márquez has always been fascinated by drawing and creating spaces. She left her native Puerto Rico for New York to study architecture at the Pratt Institute, where she met her husband, Joel André. In 1993, the couple opened their architecture firm in Norfolk. “Many people think architecture is the building, but it’s really about designing space,” she says. One of the firm’s biggest projects is designing above-ground buildings for the $3.8 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel expansion project. “It’s kind of amazing that a little firm like ours is involved in a project of that size in our region,” Márquez says. A member of the 2021 class of Lead Virginia, Márquez was appointed to the Norfolk mayor’s Advisory Commission on Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation in 2018 and has worked on the technical advisory committee for the Virginia Coastal Resilience Master Plan. She also serves as vice chair of diversity for the Hampton Roads Chamber’s executive committee.
Ranked as CNBC’s Top State for Business for two consecutive years, Virginia earned the distinction in part for its “wealth of colleges and universities.” These are some of the educators and leaders who are helping to grow that national reputation for academic excellence.
Suzanne Bergmeister
Executive director, Gilliam Center for Entrepreneurship
at James Madison University
Harrisonburg
After working for the past 15 years as the University of Louisville’s full-time entrepreneur-in-residence and for the past four years as assistant director for its entrepreneurship center, Suzanne Bergmeister moved to Harrisonburg this summer to lead James Madison University’s Gilliam Center for Entrepreneurship. “I was able to sell my house and buy a house here and move and get most of my stuff unpacked and start work all in about two weeks,” says Bergmeister, who has a background in venture capital. She’s not starting small with her JMU to-do list. “We are trying to instill an entrepreneurial mindset and get people … excited about innovation and creativity, because entrepreneurs change the world.”
Pamela Cipriano
Dean, University of Virginia School of Nursing
Charlottesville
The pandemic has laid bare how essential nurses are, as well as their sacrifices, says Pamela Cipriano, who earned her first nursing degree from the University of Pennsylvania more than 40 years ago and has been a prominent voice for nurses for decades. “They take on the emotional burdens of the work, [and] they exhaust themselves doing everything that they can that they know a patient and family needs,” she says. Aside from overseeing U.Va.’s nursing school curriculum and its combined 800 undergrad and graduate students, Cipriano started her four-year term as president of the International Council of Nurses, which spans 130 countries, in November. She also advises Time’s Up Healthcare, a national initiative to end sexual harassment and gender-based inequality in the field.
Whitt Clement
Special counsel,
Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP; rector, University of Virginia
Richmond
A Danville native and former seven-term state delegate who helped launch Hunton Andrews Kurth’s state government relations practice and served as chair of the State Council of Higher Education in Virginia and the state Bar Association, Whitt Clement began his two-year stint as U.Va.’s rector in July. A Double ’Hoo (with degrees from the university and its law school), Clement is focused on providing more financial assistance for students, especially those from lower-income backgrounds, and maintaining safety during the lingering pandemic. Clement also is working closely with Charlottesville on an affordable housing initiative in the city’s 2030 master plan. Additionally top of mind, he says, is U.Va.’s history with regard to race. “We have a checkered past like other educational institutions,” Clement says.
Zachary Doerzaph
Executive director, Virginia Tech Transportation Institute
Blacksburg
Zachary Doerzaph has been a car geek since playing with Hot Wheels as a child. He restored his first car, a 1972 Chevrolet Chevelle, at age 14. But now he’s not just playing with cars. In October, he became the executive director of the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute, which has conducted pioneering research in the fields of smart highways and autonomous vehicles. A California native, Doerzaph has worked for Tech for 21 years. “I would say my mindset has expanded,” he says. “As a kid, I was really into sort of the car itself, and as I entered graduate school and really thought about what it is I wanted to do and I grew up …let’s just say broadening of my area of interest occurred, and safety is kind of a real core piece to me.”
James Emerson Hall
Manager, Wilson Workforce and Rehabilitation Center
Fishersville
At the Wilson Workforce and Rehabilitation Center, a state-run facility that provides occupational training and rehabilitation services to people with disabilities at a scenic college-like campus nestled in the Shenandoah Valley, James Hall leads four departments — each revolving around vocational evaluation and education or a combination of the two. Hall joined the Wilson Center in 2016 after working as a special education teacher and public school administrator for several years. “We get to take [clients] from a place of nonemployment to a place of employment, which is life-changing, not only for them, but also for their families and their communities as a whole and really for the commonwealth.”
David Matlock
Executive director, Southwest Virginia Higher Education Center
Abingdon
“I’m in the opportunity business,” says David Matlock. His higher education center provides “kindergarten through career” educational opportunities for the Southwest region’s residents, including a K5 STEM Academy, hybrid and online degree programs from 10 colleges and universities, a college for older adults, and professional and recreational learning classes. “We are a great place doing great things because of great people, and I’m just the lucky person that gets to be the talking head,” he says. Additionally, Matlock and his wife started The Justin Foundation, which provides scholarships and leadership training to public school students in their town of Damascus. It’s named for a local 19-year-old who died from a methadone overdose.
Sharon Morrissey
Senior vice chancellor of academic and workforce programs, Virginia Community College System
Richmond
Sharon Morrissey co-chaired a task force that created a six-year strategic plan, adopted in March, for Virginia’s 23 community colleges. “By the year 2027, we won’t have any equity gaps in terms of race, ethnicity, gender or socioeconomic status for our students’ learning outcomes and success,” she says of the plan’s goals. Morrissey rose through the ranks in North Carolina’s community college system, starting as an English instructor and working her way up to chief academic officer, before moving to Virginia in 2014. A 2021 Lead Virginia class member, Morrissey’s current focus is “how can we quickly ramp up to produce the workforce that Virginia needs, but all the while doing it with an eye toward making sure that we are not leaving any students behind.”
Steven Partridge
Vice president of strategy, research
and workforce innovation, Northern Virginia Community College
Annandale
At family dinners, it’s not unusual for Steven Partridge to ask his three sons — a fourth grader, a high schooler and a Virginia Military Institute cadet — if they’d sign up for a certain workshop or a new program if it meant they’d be more likely to snag a well-paying job down the line. “They’re my guinea pigs,” says Partridge, who arrived at Virginia’s largest community college in 2016. He often collaborates with business, government and nonprofit leaders, ensuring that tomorrow’s workers meet the needs of the region’s major employers. Another top priority: making sure every NOVA student understands how to find a promising career. A member of Lead Virginia’s 2021 class, Partridge has focused his career on economic development and workforce education.
Keith Perrigan
Superintendent, Bristol Virginia Public Schools
Bristol
Bristol Virginia Public Schools Superintendent Keith Perrigan hasn’t taken his foot off the gas. On top of starting the Region VII Virtual Academy with 16 other school divisions, being on the state’s Commission on School Construction and Modernization and advocating as president of the Coalition of Small and Rural Schools of Virginia to the General Assembly for funding needed improvements to school facilities, Perrigan started the school system’s Bearcat Bridge program. The career and technical education initiative connects high school seniors to mentors and apprenticeships, and a group of business leaders speaks to students monthly. Some students receive donated cars (which auto mechanic students work on) as scholarships to ensure their transportation to work. Students receive a “Work Ready” diploma seal from the Bristol Chamber of Commerce.
Narketta Sparkman-Key
Academic affairs director for faculty diversity and retention, Old Dominion University
Norfolk
Some of us watched Netflix’s “Tiger King” during the start of the pandemic; Narketta Sparkman-Key learned how to design handbags and has launched a business — Belinda Bea, named for her aunt and grandmother — selling three styles of “boss bags.” Sparkman-Key is a boss herself, running ODU’s initiative to recruit and retain more faculty of color. Although ODU is not perfect, she says, “we’re in this place of change, requiring authenticity and transparency, not just lip service.” The Detroit native has been at ODU since 2012, where she’s spent a significant amount of energy promoting inclusion and diversity, including developing a website that spells out ODU’s values for prospective faculty members.
High achievers all, these Virginians are well-rounded leaders in their fields and their communities, sharing their expertise and moving the needle for growth and progress.
Buffy Barefoot
President Virginia Beach, TowneBank
Virginia Beach
Born and raised in Hampton Roads, Buffy Barefoot hasn’t strayed far from the ZIP code she grew up in. After attending Virginia Tech, she spent 18 years with Bank of America and the past nine with TowneBank. “I just like working with different companies in the community and assisting them with their financial needs in order to help them achieve their goals and dreams,” says Barefoot, who oversees the bank’s largest region, with five branches and almost 30% of the market share in Hampton Roads. A member of Lead Virginia’s class of 2021, Barefoot loves the community aspect of her job. “We make decisions based upon the needs of our community and our decision-making process is localized. We know the folks that we are doing business with. They are our neighbors.”
Jeremy Bennett
Director of intergovernmental affairs, Virginia Association
of Counties
Richmond
As director of intergovernmental affairs for the Virginia Association of Counties, Jeremy Bennett works to find common ground among Virginia’s counties, from Accomack to York. It’s helpful that local government issues tend to be bread-and-butter ones like school funding, which Virginia splits between state and local governments. Local governments appropriate about $4 billion above what is required by Virginia for education, and state funding has not returned to what it used to be before the Great Recession, says Bennett, a member of Lead Virginia’s 2021 class. This General Assembly session, Bennett will advocate for counties to receive increased education funding or to be granted funding methods beyond property taxes, particularly for school construction and modernization, given that about half of Virginia public schools are more than 50 years old.
Michael Cardaci
CEO, HRTec and FedHIVE
Alexandria
A George Mason University graduate who has worked in information technology for more than two decades, Michael Cardaci leads cloud computing company Human Resources Technologies Inc. (HRTec) and FedHIVE, a network of IT experts who help government agencies and contractors navigate FedRAMP and other public sector tech programs. “I’ve always been in IT from school on, and trying to help folks solve problems,” says Cardaci, a member of the 2021 class of Lead Virginia. “You get a particular enjoyment from getting folks ‘fixed.’” That instinct carries over to Cardaci’s personal life. “I want to leave the community better than I found it,” says Cardaci, who coaches girls’ basketball and mentors Northern Virginia Community College students interested in cloud computing and cybersecurity.
Ron Carey
Founder and CEO, Tilt Creative + Production
Richmond
Tilt Creative + Production is making magic, says founder and CEO Ron Carey. “What I love about [content production] is the fact that you have the potential to have a very positive impact on society in terms of … the messaging that you put in front of people,” says Carey, whose agency produces advertising and promotional content for clients including Capital One, Walmart and Audi of America. Attracting good people and a diverse team is key to success, says Carey, a Henrico County native who played football at the University of Virginia. Following COVID-19’s acceleration of technology usage, Tilt can grow with remote teams outside of Richmond, and the all-in-one production company now offers remote video production, allowing clients to see what’s happening in the studio.
Stephanie Ford
Director, Warren Whitney
Richmond
Richmond native Stephanie Ford has been with management consulting firm Warren Whitney since 2004, following an earlier career in commercial banking. Although she works in several areas — strategic marketing, business development, financing and administration — Ford says her primary job is helping small and midsize businesses grow. “I’m just a real believer in doing what’s right for the client,” she says. During the pandemic, a lot of her advice has focused on managing cash flow and helping businesses budget and forecast during uncertain times. Outside of work, Ford is a fan of the James River, hiking, gardening and photography. A member of the 2021 class of Lead Virginia, she’s also a member of the Virginia Council of CEOs board and James Madison University’s Honors Advisory Council.
Damon Griggs
CEO, Dovel Technologies
McLean
A passion for purposeful problem-solving drives Damon Griggs’ business and personal philosophy. Griggs is CEO of Dovel Technologies, a McLean-based software technology company that works with clients across a variety of sectors, from public health to emergency management and community development grants. Griggs, who this year was named an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year for the mid-Atlantic, says he’s not the stereotypical entrepreneur, having picked up the “bug” later in his career. Outside of Dovel, Griggs is an avid soccer fan who has attended at least five World Cups.
Rus Hayslett Jr.
Vice president of operations, Virginia Natural Gas
Smithfield
Portsmouth native Rus Hayslett Jr. grew up hearing about the natural gas industry around the dinner table from his mother, who led customer service operations for a local gas company. Hayslett, who holds a civil engineering technology degree from Old Dominion University, started working in the industry himself at age 18, taking an entry-level position on a crew truck. “I probably connect with our field folks more than anybody else because I’ve been there,” says Hayslett, who joined Virginia Natural Gas in 2010 after working for three other gas companies. A member of Lead Virginia’s 2021 class, Hayslett serves on the executive committee for the Virginia Peninsula Chamber of Commerce’s board of directors and is on the executive advisory board for ODU’s Batten College of Engineering and Technology.
After 13 years as Richmond commonwealth’s attorney, Michael Herring resigned in 2019 to become a partner at McGuireWoods, the state’s largest law firm. In August, he became managing partner of the firm’s Richmond office. Herring decided to re-enter private practice because he believes that turnover is healthy, he says, and thought it was time to pass on the prosecutorial mantle. Though he misses having a broader impact on Richmond and advocating for policy change, he appreciates not worrying that the decisions he makes will be interpreted through a political lens. Another shift is his practice area, which focuses on property rights and business disputes rather than criminal law. From all accounts, McGuireWoods appears to be the right place for him: “I like to tell folks they’ll have to drag me out of here.”
Herb Jones
Co-founder and CEO,
Pyramid Technologies LLC
Providence Forge
Herb Jones says that joining the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps in college was the single best decision of his life, leading to a decade serving in the U.S. Army, where he learned “how to follow and how to lead” during two tours in Iraq. He and his brother Michael then formed Pyramid Technologies, a federal contracting technology business based in Providence Forge. A former three-term New Kent County treasurer, Jones was appointed by Gov. Ralph Northam to the Virginia Military Advisory Council and serves on the boards of several nonprofits, including Virginia NORML, Advancing Community Excellence and Roanoke Area Ministries. A Lead Virginia 2021 class member, Jones unsuccessfully ran for a state Senate seat as a Democrat in 2019 and plans to run again in 2023: “I am at the point in life where it is important to prepare the way for future generations.”
Vanity McDaniel
Senior payments business advisor,
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Richmond
Having begun her career at the state Auditor of Public Accounts, Vanity McDaniel now oversees regional Payments Advisory Councils for the Richmond Fed and serves as a key adviser to executive leadership on strategic initiatives such as FedNow, an upcoming service that will enable financial institutions to deliver end-to-end instant payments to customers. McDaniel is a member of the 2021 class of Lead Virginia, through which, she says, she’s learned the value of open-mindedness in breaking down silos for the community good. She notes that it’s an exciting time for the Fed due to innovations “such as cryptocurrency, mobile payment apps [and] cross-border payments.” In 2022, she’ll be closely watching initiatives related to faster payments, central bank digital currency and collaborations between financial tech companies and financial institutions on payment initiatives.
Scot McRoberts
Executive director, Virginia Council of CEOs
Richmond
It can be lonely at the top for a CEO, but the nonprofit Scot McRoberts heads up provides peer support to top executives. McRoberts helped found the Virginia Council of CEOs 21 years ago and now the organization is setting its sights for statewide expansion beyond Central Virginia, with hopes of doubling the organization’s size in five years. McRoberts has helped set up CEO roundtables in Charlottesville, Roanoke and Northern Virginia and is planning one for Hampton Roads. The council provided a lifeline for CEOs during the pandemic, says McRoberts, a 2021 Lead Virginia class member. Instead of meeting once a month, groups of CEOs would talk weekly, helping each other, trying to figure out what would happen next. The organization restarted smaller in-person events over the summer and held its first large event again in September. But the group is also looking at how to integrate more virtual and targeted events, saving time for busy execs.
Cecilia “Cricket” Middleton
Director of North American contract management, Accenture
Warrenton
“I tell people I worked from home before it was cool,” says Cricket Middleton, who oversees a legal team across the United States and Canada, an endeavor necessitating a lot of virtual communication. During the start of the pandemic, Middleton instituted a nonmandatory “drop-in” virtual call for her employees to bring questions. It proved so popular, it’s become permanent, she says. A native of Florida, Middleton worked for many of the largest government contractors — Harris Corp., Northrop Grumman and Boeing — before joining Accenture, where she focuses on contract management. She and her husband live in Warrenton with two hybrid English sheepdog-poodles, Willoughby and Miss Moneypenny, and spend a lot of time outside. Middleton is in Lead Virginia’s 2021 class.
Kelley C. Miller
Partner,
Reed Smith LLP
Ashburn
Named one of the most influential female federal tax law attorneys in the nation by Law360 in 2019, Kelley Miller is a partner at Reed Smith’s Washington, D.C., office, where her clients include Fortune 25
companies and privately held corporations worth more than $1 billion. Also an adjunct professor who teaches federal partnership tax at Georgetown University Law Center, she loves tax work because it’s challenging, noting that she majored in literary classics as an undergrad. “Federal income tax code is encyclopedic, very dense. … Classical authors [were too].” One of very few lawyers nationwide with expertise in cannabis law, she expects the field to grow in 2022 — pun intended. A member of Lead Virginia’s 2021 class, Miller is a recipient of the American Bar Association Section of Taxation’s Janet Spragens Pro Bono Award and the Thomson Reuters Everyday Hero Award.
Mike Ohmsen
Vice president of operations and electronic tolling, Faneuil Inc.
Hampton
Mike Ohmsen is proud of his Virginia heritage, which goes back hundreds of years on both sides of his family. A Chesapeake native, he lives in the neighborhood he grew up in. He’s always been interested in sales, customer service and taking care of people. A member of Lead Virginia’s class of 2021, Ohmsen likes to say that Faneuil is a fairly large company you’ve never heard of, and that’s by design. The company contracts with tolling companies such as E-Z Pass to provide customer service at call centers and it has contracts up and down the East Coast. Ohmsen, who studied finance at James Madison University, worked for Bank of America for about 25 years. But many people also know Ohmsen for being a nationally ranked water-skier and a past president of the Virginia Water Ski Federation.
Kyle Russell
CEO, Virginia Health Information
Richmond
There’s never been more demand or interest for health care data, says Kyle Russell, who was promoted to CEO of Virginia Health Information in October. VHI partners with state government to collect and disseminate health care-related data, a mission that became even more important for informing public health decisions amid the pandemic. Russell has been with VHI for eight years, starting as a data analyst. VHI’s biggest focus right now is an emergency department care coordination program that links together hospital emergency departments and inpatient facilities with insurance plans for real-time data transfers. A Richmond-area native, Russell also teaches a class on health care analytics at Virginia Commonwealth University and is a member of Lead Virginia’s 2021 class.
L.G. Shaw
CEO, Wave Riding Vehicles (WRV)
Virginia Beach
L.G. Shaw’s nickname comes from a popular 1980s wetsuit brand model. It makes sense, considering that he grew up working in a family business that’s the largest East Coast manufacturer of surfboards and a major retailer of surf products in Virginia Beach and the Outer Banks, where WRV’s five-dolphins/wave logo is a familiar sight. Shaw, who became CEO this year, taking over from his father, also serves as president for Friends of the Creative District, which promotes and supports Virginia Beach’s ViBe Creative District. In his spare time, he enjoys surfing, snowboarding and fishing. “At the end of the day, we just want to surf and enjoy
Monica Sturgis
Chief human resources officer, Virginia Port Authority
Norfolk
Mississippi native Monica Sturgis has worked for a variety of major companies, including Bridgestone, BASF, Pfizer and Diageo, before joining the Port of Virginia about a year ago. Her wide-ranging background has helped her understand the importance of supply chains and logistics to business operations, she says. The Port of Virginia stands out for its excellence in service, as well as the key role the port plays as an economic driver, says Sturgis, adding that her true passion is people. “My core — human resources — [the] beat of my heart, if you will, is to … help people find jobs and the resources they need to sustain their livelihood.” Sturgis is a member of the 2021 class of statewide leadership program Lead Virginia.
From helping the Washington Football Team rebrand itself to safeguarding the legacy of a beloved painter for a new generation to launching a $1 billion university campus, these are the people who lend their faces and voices to high-profile endeavors.
Franki Fitterer
Director of communications and marketing, Virginia Tech Innovation Campus
Alexandria
Franki Fitterer became Virginia Tech Innovation Campus’ director of communications and marketing on Aug. 25, three weeks before the groundbreaking on the $1 billion campus. The position is right for her, she says, as it lets her apply her prior experience with opening American University’s Washington College of Law, while also pursuing her interest in the tech industry. “I get to do something different almost every day,” says Fitterer. “I work with a variety of audiences, ranging from students to alumni to faculty and board members, all of whom require different communications methods.”
Brandon Jarvis
Editor, Virginia Scope
Colonial Heights
This has been the year of the email newsletter, with many high-profile columnists and other writers decamping from legacy publications to self-run email missives focused on a cornucopia of topics. Brandon Jarvis is Virginia’s go-to General Assembly interpreter, “taking these crazy processes and boiling them down” to a newsletter format that makes sense to the layperson. He also keeps about 6,000 newsletter subscribers informed about statewide political races. The Virginia Commonwealth University grad had an epiphany when an editor rejected a freelance story pitch, deeming it “too local.” Jarvis says “too local” is exactly what some readers want in their coverage, so he launched Virginia Scope in July 2020. Next year, he’ll be focusing on Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin’s new administration, and hot topics such as commercial marijuana.
Ha Koehler
Managing partner, On Point Transportation PR
Virginia Beach
Ha Koehler is like a translator, but the language she speaks is the technical jargon of complicated infrastructure projects around the commonwealth. About three years ago, she and her business partner founded On Point PR, which specializes in handling marketing and public relations for infrastructure, transportation, transit, stormwater and construction projects around Virginia. “We found that there is a little bit of a need in helping to translate to the public what’s going on,” says Koehler, who is working with the Virginia Department of Transportation to promote its massive, $3.8 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel expansion project. A lot of her work requires breaking down technical jargon into easier-to-understand terms. Next year, she hopes to expand On Point’s focus across the state.
Will Misselbrook
Chief creative and digital officer, Washington Football Team
Ashburn
A U.K. native who built a marketing and branding career at The Wall Street Journal, Coach and Condé Nast, Misselbrook now is responsible for the rebranding of the Washington Football Team, which he joined in May as the first chief creative officer in NFL history. Washington’s new name and logo — replacing the generic, interim “Football Team” name instituted last year after the team dropped its racially offensive Redskins moniker — will be revealed at an as-yet-undisclosed date in 2022, he says. In the meantime, Misselbrook is working on day-to-day content during the NFL season and growing his marketing team into a “fully fledged branded studio,” which will involve hiring additional people in the next six to 12 months before the reveal. A fan of soccer and, now, American football, Misselbrook splits his time between Northern Virginia and Los Angeles, where his fiancée lives.
Sarah Strohl
Executive assistant, Bob Ross Inc.
Herndon
When Sarah Strohl watched the Netflix documentary “Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed” this summer, she was surprised to spot herself on screen. Strohl oversees social media accounts for Herndon-based Bob Ross Inc., which carries on the legacy of the beloved landscape painter, who died in 1995 but lives on via reruns of his “Joy of Painting” episodes. Strohl often advises her bosses on licensing deals — her successes include the popular Funko Pop! figure of Ross — and has also facilitated loans of Ross’ paintings and artifacts to institutions including the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. The documentary painted a fairly negative portrait of Bob Ross Inc., which was sued by Ross’ son over intellectual property rights, but Strohl says the film hasn’t impacted her day-to-day life. “I haven’t had anyone come up to me yet and ask, ‘Are you that person?’”
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