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U.Va. breaks ground on data science building

The foundation for the University of Virginia’s new School of Data Science will begin to take shape in the coming months at the corner of Emmet Street and Ivy Road.

The $35 million, 61,000-square-foot building is expected to open to students in spring 2024. It sits on part of a 14-acre site that formerly housed the Cavalier Inn. Additional plans for the site include a hotel, a performing arts center and other academic buildings.

The building is being financed with annual debt service paid completely from the university’s largest private donation — a $120 million endowment created in 2019 by alumni Jaffray and Merrill Woodriff through their nonprofit Quantitative Foundation.

Hopkins Architects of London is the building’s designer, with Charlottesville-based VMDO Architects serving as executive architect.

Arlyn Burgess, the school’s chief of staff, says the design process has involved careful thinking about how physical spaces have had to evolve as technology and the pandemic have changed the way people work and learn.

For example, operable windows that can let in fresh air are a nod to heightened attention to wellness in the workplace. Co-working spaces will let data school participants work during breaks, making it easier for businesses to send employees for activities.

“We are trying to find ways to bring companies into the building so that they can participate in the life of data science at U.Va.,” Burgess explains.

In April 2021, Capital One’s Center for Machine Learning made a $2 million gift to name the school’s central gathering space the Capital One Hub. Featuring floor-to-ceiling windows, a two-story gallery and a large video wall, the space will be visible to people passing by the building.

In operation since 2019, the School of Data Science has grown rapidly — the school added 13 faculty last year and plans to add just as many this year, Dean Philip Bourne says.

“There is clearly a huge demand [for data science skills] across all sectors,” he says. “Every industry is trying to figure out how to leverage their own data or other people’s data to make them more cost-effective and more competitive.”

Bourne notes that employers are demanding more graduates with deeper data science research skills — a reason the school is developing Virginia’s first Ph.D. program in data science. Officials are hopeful it will launch in the 2022-23 academic year.  

Dumfries’ Rose gaming resort could have big local impact

Athough casinos being built in four Virginia cities have grabbed the lion’s share of media attention, construction is also underway on The Rose, a $400 million gaming facility and hotel in Prince William County that represents an additional outcome of the state’s 2020 casino legislation.

Colonial Downs Group is building the hotel and conference center with 175,000 square feet of gaming space and eight restaurants on the former site of the Dumfries landfill. The project’s first phase, including 155 hotel rooms and an 80-acre public park, is expected to open in late 2023, according to Colonial Downs Group Chief Operations Officer Aaron Gomes.

The Rose will replace the Rosie’s Gaming Emporium that currently operates historical horse-racing machines in Dumfries, a town of about 5,000 people with an operating budget of $5.8 million.

Once it opens, The Rose is expected to generate $10.9 million in annual tax revenue for Dumfries and another $6.7 million for Prince William County.

When legislators in 2019 began debating a new law to allow five economically distressed Virginia cities to approve casinos, the historical horse racing industry pointed out that new competition from casinos would hurt their business model, making it harder for their slot-like machines to provide the revenue intended to keep live horse racing happening at Colonial Downs Racetrack in New Kent County.

“Historical horse racing operations were intended to lay the groundwork to bring horse racing back to Virginia,” says state Sen. Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax. “The proceeds from these terminals are used to fund the purses at Colonial Downs.”

As a compromise, the state raised the cap on the number of betting machines authorized in the state from 3,000 to 5,500, opening the door for Colonial Downs to expand on its 150-machine gaming center in Dumfries. The Rose could have as many as 1,800 machines.

Casinos are being built in other areas of the state (Bristol, Danville, Norfolk and Portsmouth), in part because local governments in Northern Virginia did not show much interest in the proposal to allow casinos to be built. 

“I think eventually there will be a discussion about that,” Surovell says, adding that the state should try to recoup some of the revenue from the MGM National Harbor Casino, located in Oxon Hill, Maryland, just across the Potomac from Alexandria. “$300 million a year goes to Maryland to pay for their schools.” 

B-Cubed program aids minority-owned businesses

A minority business assistance program in Harrisonburg and Rockingham County has helped 15 businesses and disbursed $21,700 in grant money in its first year of operation.

With $200,000 in state and federal grant awards announced in October 2021, organizers of the Black- and Brown-Owned Business Growth Program, known as B-Cubed, hope to attract more business owners of color to the region and help existing businesses grow.

Launched in February 2021 as an initiative of the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Chamber of Commerce’s Diversity Business Council, B-Cubed is a partnership also involving James Madison University, Harrisonburg’s Department of Economic Development, the Shenandoah Valley Small Business Development Center and Harrisonburg Downtown Renaissance.

Harrisonburg City Council Member Christopher Jones was alarmed when he saw national studies that found Black-owned businesses were failing at a vastly higher rate than white-owned businesses amid the pandemic. Traditional programs to help minority business owners often miss the mark, Jones says, because of barriers such as cumbersome application processes and office hours that aren’t accessible for entrepreneurs working full-time jobs.

“We needed to come up with a program that spoke to Black and brown people and met them where they are,” Jones says.

To gain assistance from B-Cubed, business owners complete a “participation form” — intended to feel more welcoming than an application — and are connected with regional business development groups, the chamber and mentors that can provide networking and business services. 

B-Cubed also provides technical assistance, such as legal, accounting and website development consultations. Participants can receive grants of up to
$3,000 to help implement their business goals. Jones anticipates grant amounts will increase this year.

Tisha McCoy-Ntiamoah, owner of PrePOPsterous Gourmet Popcorn, a Bridgewater-based retail and e-commerce popcorn company, used a B-Cubed grant to improve her company’s website and to work with an attorney to create a nondisclosure/noncompete agreement for her employees. It was an important tool to help grow her business, she says, helping her make new hires without fear of jeopardizing her proprietary recipes.

The B-Cubed team was able to point her to local attorneys who specialize in such work, an example of the value of connecting business owners with established community networking circles.

“Once I received the grant and was ready to work with an attorney, I didn’t have to search for one on my own,” McCoy-Ntiamoah says. “It really took the burden off me.”

Shenandoah Valley races to develop industrial sites

A flurry of recent industrial investment in the Shenandoah Valley has regional economic development officials eager to make new sites shovel-ready as companies put a premium on locations that will enable them to stand up operations as fast as possible.

Fast-casual restaurant chain Cava’s September announcement that it will build a $30 million, 57,000-square-foot processing and packaging facility in the Mill Place Commerce Park in Verona snatched up the last remaining site in the Shenandoah Valley with a Tier 4 classification — sites ready for construction to take place in 12 to 18 months or sooner, with infrastructure improvements in place or doable within that timeframe — as designated by  the Virginia Economic Development Partnership’s Virginia Business Ready Sites Tier program.

This and other recent developments have regional officials racing to bring new sites to market that will meet businesses’ needs to begin construction quickly, says Jay Langston, executive director of the Shenandoah Valley Partnership.

“The speed-to-market component of our businesses — regardless of sector — has increased beyond anything that we have seen before,” Langston says. “They need it now. So having sites that remove the risk and time delay is paramount to being competitive.”

In March, the state’s GO Virginia economic development initiative awarded the region $821,000 for improvements to six industrial sites totaling 1,112 acres in Augusta, Frederick, Rockingham, Shenandoah and Warren counties. Work is expected to be completed in the next few months and includes environmental, wetlands and geotechnical surveys to raise the sites’ tier categorizations.

One area where officials see promise for future development is the land surrounding the Shenandoah Valley Regional Airport in Weyers Cave. A 500-acre site near the airport is part of the site enhancement project. Complementing that site, the airport received a $100,000 GO Virginia grant in September to fund utility design and engineering at its Aviation Technology Park. The regional airport commission plans to build two 14,000-square-foot hangars in the park.

Airport Executive Director Greg Campbell says this could be the start of more aviation-related development in this part of the region, adding, “There is so much technological evolution in aviation now.”  

Long-term care

Just over a year after becoming CEO of VCU Health System and senior vice president for health sciences at Virginia Commonwealth University, Dr. Arthur Kellermann says the institution’s commitment to providing high-quality medical care while also addressing issues of health equity was a big part of what drew him to take the job.

“Most medical centers over time have moved more towards just highly paying patients,” he says. “The fact that we had a place here that was both highly innovative as an academic health center and deeply committed to the safety net mission … was irresistible.”

The Wonder Tower at Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU is slated to open in spring 2023, offering inpatient, emergency, trauma and outpatient services for children. Rendering by HKS Inc.
The Wonder Tower at Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU is slated to open in spring 2023, offering inpatient, emergency, trauma and outpatient services for children. Rendering by HKS Inc.

VCU’s downtown Richmond medical campus, which dates to 1838, is in the midst of a building boom that will give some of its most notable treatment centers larger, more modern facilities that are better aligned with the way 21st-century health care is delivered.

While these projects are intended to smooth some of the rough edges of seeking health care in a tight urban setting — like the endless search for parking — these are not the only measures VCU Health and VCU’s health sciences schools are taking to reimagine the way they deliver health services and train future health care workers.

Through greater cooperation with other academic departments at the university and within the wider community, Kellermann wants to see VCU build a reputation as a medical system that works as hard to keep people from all backgrounds healthy as it does to treat them once they are admitted for care.

“Our focus going forward is to improve our efficiency and throughput in the facility, but at the same time, if we can do a better job of helping people stay healthy and out of the hospital, then that opens up capacity that we can use to care for more people,” he says.

Building boom

Opening in December at the corner of North 10th and East Leigh streets in downtown Richmond, VCU Health’s $384 million Adult Outpatient Pavilion combines 615,000 square feet of clinical space with more than 1,000 parking spaces in a garage that will allow patients to valet park and enter a building where they can access many different medical specialists.

The building houses outpatient services for VCU Massey Cancer Center, women’s services, infusions, an on-site laboratory, and pharmaceutical and medical imaging services, as well as other outpatient clinics.

Kellermann says the new outpatient building will help VCU Health adopt a model of care akin to what has made the Mayo Clinic such a destination for patients seeking advanced care — that of making a wide array of specialists available in one central location.

“Historically, academic medical centers have tended to be doctor-focused,” he says. “The model we are building is bringing the expertise to the patient.”

VCU Massey Cancer Center Director Dr. Robert Winn says the Adult Outpatient Pavilion will also drive new collaboration among doctors. “I really think we’ll be having more conversations about how to solve the big problem of reducing disparities for everyone,” he says.

The outpatient facility — which will increase the amount of outpatient care space on the downtown campus by seven times — is one of several VCU Health projects that will add a total of more than 1 million square feet of new clinical space in downtown Richmond.

Two blocks down 10th Street from the Adult Outpatient Pavilion, construction is underway on the 16-story Wonder Tower at Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU. This 72-bed, 500,000-square-foot facility, expected to open in spring 2023, completes an entire city block dedicated to serving children and their families, Kellermann says. It will increase the amount of pediatric care space within the health system’s downtown campus by 10 times.

The tower will bring inpatient, emergency, trauma and outpatient services for children under one roof, with a bridge connecting to the VCU Medical Center Gateway Building.

Kellermann expects the Wonder Tower to boost VCU’s profile as a destination for advanced care for children.

“I think it will be a magnet, not just for kids across Virginia, but for kids with complex and life-threatening problems across the country, and probably, in time, internationally, who will be coming to Richmond,” he says. “These are not short stays — this will help the local economy.”

Leaders at some of VCU’s other health sciences schools see the new facilities as valuable additions to the clinical education opportunities they can offer their students.

“Pediatric care, both inpatient and outpatient, is one of the hardest clinical areas to get direct experience with,” says Jean Giddens, dean of the VCU School of Nursing. “Our students are going to have much more robust pediatric experiences because that facility is right there for us. You can’t get those experiences in a lot of other nursing schools, because they don’t have access to that kind of clinical education so easily.”

VCU Health is also part of a $325 million mixed-used development on the former site of the Public Safety Building at 510 N. 10th St. Developer Capital City Partners purchased the building from the city of Richmond in July for $3.5 million. VCU Health System will have 150,000 square feet of office space in the development, which will also include a 35,000-square-foot child-care center to be operated by VCU Health. The project will also feature a 145-room extended-stay hotel operated by Richmond-based hospital hospitality house The Doorways for families of hospital patients, as well as a new 60-room Ronald McDonald House for families of children receiving care at Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU. Construction is expected to begin in spring 2022 and be complete in early 2025.

Jennifer Wakefield, president and CEO of the Greater Richmond Partnership, a regional economic development nonprofit organization, says VCU Health’s expansion is a boost to the Richmond area’s profile.

“When companies are looking to expand or relocate, they want to ensure that there are great universities and great health care for themselves and their team members,” she says. “Additional facilities being built at VCU will definitely add to the cachet of Richmond as companies look at this market.”

Reimagining the safety net

As it builds new facilities to care for the sick, VCU is also looking for new ways to help people stay well, Kellermann says. “We need to rewrite the social contract between academic health systems and their communities,” he says.

Increasingly, this means working with partners outside of the traditional halls of medicine. That approach has helped the school and health system in the race for sponsored research funding, which has grown by more than 8% at the university over the past year.

VCU Massey Cancer Center learned in September that it had won Virginia’s first-ever Special Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) grant from the National Cancer Institute. The $3.3 million grant will establish a research center at Massey that will partner with community groups both regionally and nationally to examine why lung cancer disproportionately affects Black Americans.

Winn says a big part of the work will be compiling data that can help researchers get a better picture of the cancer health of all areas of the commonwealth, down to the neighborhood level.

“If you were to look at the nine districts of Richmond, the ideal for us is to be able to provide enough cancer data so that each of the [City] Council [members] could know the cancer health of their district,” he says of his long-term hopes for what will be known as the Translational Research Center in Lung Cancer Disparities based
at VCU.

By collaborating with community groups such as hospitals and health centers, social workers and even churches and other organizations, researchers hope to gain a clearer picture of how environmental and societal disparities may be contributing to cancer rates.

Partnering with Massey on the project are the Medical University of South Carolina Hollings Cancer Center and the City of Hope National Medical Center in California.

While both South Carolina and Virginia have histories tied to tobacco production that may explain some lung cancer prevalence, California has some rural populations with similar cancer rates, but without the ties to tobacco.

“This is where we can start teasing out the causes. Are there other environmental issues that are contributing to the cancer in California that we can learn something from?” Winn says. “Bringing on these partners expands our reach from just impacting Virginia to having potential national implications.”

Thinking beyond medicine

Kellermann says some of the public health challenges highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrate how VCU’s health sciences schools can benefit from collaboration with other academic areas of the university.

As an example, he cites the Media+Health Lab at VCU’s Richard T. Robertson School of Media and Culture. Access to accurate health information “is probably one of the greatest public health threats our country and our world face. And no school of public health is really getting after that,” Kellerman says. “We are looking at transforming our public health program into a school where one of the major focuses would be communication and community empowerment.”

In September, VCU launched its Office of Health Equity, the product of a five-year process examining how the university could work more closely with the community to address disparities in health outcomes.

As part of that effort, VCU awarded $100,000 in grants in spring 2021 to seven groups led by faculty from across the university, from the School of Medicine to the Center for Environmental Studies, to work on an identified issue in the community.

“The caveat was that they had to partner with a community organization that was focused on that issue,” says Sheryl Garland, chief of health impact at VCU Health.

The grantees tackled problems as varied as affordable housing, food insecurity and oral health for refugee populations.

“Many of the health outcomes we are seeing are driven by social and economic factors,” Garland says. “We have a lot of faculty and programs that think about those things on a daily basis. … It was a no-brainer we needed different perspectives at the table beyond those of our clinical partners.”

 



VCU at a glance

Founded

VCU was founded in 1838 as the Medical College of Hampden-Sydney and was later renamed the Medical College of Virginia. In 1968, MCV merged with Richmond Professional Institute to form Virginia Commonwealth University.

Campus

VCU has two campuses in downtown Richmond covering a total of 168 acres. The Monroe Park Campus houses most undergraduate students and classes. VCU’s five health sciences schools and VCU Medical Center are located on the MCV campus.

Enrollment1

Undergraduate: 22,183

Graduate: 5,648

In-state: 25,510 (87%)

International: 1,256 (4.2%)

Students of color: 13,818 (47%)

Employees

One of the largest employers in the Richmond area, VCU employs nearly 23,400 workers, including 2,501 full-time faculty and 2,909 full-time university and academic professionals.

Tuition and fees2

In-state tuition and fees: $15,118

Tuition and fees (out of state): $36,456

Room and board and other fees: $11,615

Average financial aid awarded to full-time freshmen seeking assistance2: $18,887

1 2020-21 enrollment data

2 For 2021-22 school year

Seeking a cure

Ashley Apple has advice for those hoping to understand the burden nurses face as COVID-19 surges once again while hospitals suffer staff shortages.

“Think of the worst day you’ve ever had at work. Then add in poor staffing and multiple human deaths. Then repeat it every day for 18 months,” she says. “That’s sort of where we are.”

Apple was an emergency room nurse at St. Francis Medical Center in Chesterfield County during the early days of the pandemic. Today, she is a family nurse practitioner with KidMed Pediatric Urgent Care. While her career transition was already in the works, Apple admits that the pressures of COVID-19 hastened her exit.

Also commissioner on government relations for the Virginia Nurses Association, Apple is troubled as she hears from colleagues choosing to leave their hospital jobs.

“This is not sustainable,” Apple says of the rate of turnover among nurses. “We have to do something, or we are going to face dire public health consequences.”

Hospitals across Virginia are struggling to retain and recruit nurses as the pandemic nears the two-year mark.

In its 2021 industry report, national nurse staffing firm Nursing Solutions Inc. found that in its Southeast region, which includes Virginia, turnover among registered nurses working at hospitals during 2020 was 24.6% — a 4.7% increase over the previous year, and higher than the national average of 19.5%.

Amid a COVID-19 surge in recent months, the challenge facing many hospitals has not been having enough licensed beds, but having enough staff members available to care for the patients who occupy those beds, says Julian Walker, vice president of communications for the Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Association.

Enrollment applications are up at VCU’s School of Nursing, says Shelley Conroy, associate dean of graduate programs, but it’s difficult to find enough faculty members. Photo by Matthew R.O. Brown
Enrollment applications are up at VCU’s School of Nursing, says Shelley Conroy, associate dean of graduate programs, but it’s difficult to find enough faculty members. Photo by Matthew R.O. Brown

The situation is forcing hospital administrators to make difficult decisions about whether to cancel or delay nonemergency procedures, divert ambulances or hire expensive travel nurses — contract workers who are hired for temporary positions at hospitals around the country.

A chronic problem

While the pandemic has highlighted the nursing shortage, the problem is not new. In 2010, the Virginia Nurses Association published a study warning that by 2020, one in three Virginians would not receive necessary health care because of a shortage of registered nurses.

As the most recent wave of the pandemic floods emergency departments, some in the profession worry that the impact on nurses’ mental health will have ongoing repercussions that will be a long-term burden on this workforce.

“I am seeing a level of post-traumatic stress disorder in individuals now going through the second wave with COVID,” says Linda Shepherd, chief nursing officer at Johnston Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, which is owned by Ballad Health. Shepherd is also president of the Virginia Nurses Association.

Hospital administrators and human resources executives are seeing nurses retire early, transition into nonclinical roles or leave staff jobs for higher-paying travel nurse positions.

“A surprising number are leaving health care altogether, which is really breaking my heart,” says Wendy Horton, CEO of the University of Virginia Medical Center.

The UVA Health system’s voluntary turnover rate among registered nurses this September was 19.1% — significantly higher than the 10% to 12% rate Horton is accustomed to seeing at the hospital. “This is the first time in my career that I have seen this type of turnover,” she says.

“We are seeing the fatigue of this marathon of COVID,” notes Paul Hudgins, senior vice president and chief human resources officer at Carilion Clinic in Roanoke. “Folks are getting out of bedside care and looking at other types of jobs.”

‘Tradeoffs every day’

As a result, hospitals are forced to decide how to allocate their staff.

At Johnston Memorial Hospital, Shepherd says that managers and other nonclinical staff are jumping in to take on tasks such as answering phones, which can free up nurses to focus on caring for an increased patient load.

Several Virginia hospitals have had to request emergency medical services to temporarily divert ambulances to other hospitals, a measure Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital took twice in late August and early September, officials told local media outlets. Diversion orders lasted at most four hours.

“Staffing is a big part of it and a big contributor to why you are seeing hospitals and health systems take unprecedented steps,” Hudgins says.

The Old Dominion EMS Alliance, which includes 25 hospitals and 100 emergency
medical services agencies in Central Virginia, operated under “code black” —
meaning at least eight of its member hospitals were diverting ambulances — for  an unprecedented 35 consecutive days ending Sept. 22, according to Executive Director Heidi Hooker. 

Hooker emphasizes that code black allows ambulance dispatchers to evenly distribute patient load among hospitals that have capacity — but adds that patients with critical issues will always be taken to the nearest hospital.

In late August, UVA Health announced that it was postponing some nonemergency surgeries due to rising patient loads and staffing concerns — a step that other hospitals around the state have also taken during the most recent wave of rising COVID-19 cases.

Horton says this is one of the many options hospital leaders examine daily to manage available resources while also balancing extra work related to the pandemic, such as testing and vaccination drives. “There are tradeoffs every day,” she says.

Meanwhile, the nationwide shortage of nurses has boosted the pay rates for travel nurses as high as $7,000 to $8,000 a week. By comparison, a registered nurse in Virginia earned about $1,488 a week in 2020, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ mean wage report. 

“In Virginia we are not seeing the super-high rates we are seeing in some of the other states, but the nurses are,” says registered nurse Diana Wylie, who is vice president of business development for FlexRN, a Fredericksburg-based nurse staffing agency that’s part of American Medical Staffing. “They see they can make $8,000 to $10,000 a week in Florida or Texas or Louisiana. Now you are pulling on a workforce that maybe wasn’t willing to travel before, but can now go make double or triple their normal wage if they leave Virginia.”

Horton says the salary boost in other states presents problems for hospitals here to attract contracted nurses.

“We can’t even get travelers to come here because they are very attracted to those very high rates and also to the hotspot areas,” Horton says. “Many are breaking their contracts early and going to hotspots.”

For staff nurses, watching a temporary employee make multiple times their pay for the same job can be demoralizing, says Apple.

It also highlights a problem that predates the pandemic: Nurses already felt overwhelmed as nurse staffing levels declined in many hospitals in an effort to contain costs.

“Going into the pandemic, they were already burned out, working mandatory overtime — things like that,” Apple says. “It has compounded an already stressful situation.”

A fear of losing even more staffers has caused some Virginia hospitals to stop short of mandating COVID-19 vaccines for their staff members — even as health care officials urge the public to get vaccinated to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

So far, Carilion Clinic has not mandated vaccinations for employees, but has instead strongly encouraged it, even offering $150 bonuses for employees to get vaccinated by Oct 1. “Staffing was a part of that discussion,” Hudgins acknowledges. “If there was a statewide mandate, obviously we would do that. If all of our brethren in health care went down this path, I think we would have gone down that path as well.”

Meanwhile, HCA Healthcare, which runs 13 hospital campuses and dozens of smaller facilities in Virginia, and Ballad Health, which operates seven hospitals in Southwest Virginia, also have stopped short of requiring shots among employees.

Other health systems — including Inova Health System, Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, UVA Health and Valley Health — have all mandated vaccinations.
In Hampton Roads, the region’s major health care employers — Chesapeake Regional Healthcare, Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Riverside Health System and Sentara Healthcare — set a deadline of Nov. 1
.

This patchwork of policies may soon be moot, however. The Biden administration was expected in October to issue guidelines requiring vaccinations for workers in most health care settings that receive Medicare or Medicaid reimbursement, including hospitals. The mandate is anticipated to require vaccinations for the majority of health care workers.

Building a better pipeline

Shelley Conroy, associate dean of graduate programs at VCU’s School of Nursing, says she is seeing continued interest in nursing degrees, especially the advanced degrees VCU offers. “Applications are up, to the point that we can’t handle all of the students.”

Two challenges, however, are hiring enough faculty to teach these future nurses — nurses with advanced degrees can earn more money in practice than in academia — and providing students with clinical placements required for the degrees.

VCU has tried to bridge this gap by sharing the pool of nurses with advanced degrees with the university health system. These nurses spend 40% of their time teaching and 60% in clinical work.

In Charlottesville, Piedmont Virginia Community College is working to increase the number of nursing graduates from 100 to 150 per year, working closely with U.Va. to create a smoother pipeline of nurses ready to work.

The 50 new graduates would start work in January instead of August, to provide a more consistent stream of new employees to area hospitals. But the plan is contingent on hiring two new nursing instructors.

“We are searching right now,” PVCC President Frank Friedman says. “It is very difficult to find qualified nursing faculty.” He also notes that while PVCC typically receives 250 to 300 applications for its 100 nursing spots, the pandemic may have an impact on student interest.

“We have seen some current students withdraw from our program out of fear,” he notes. “They don’t want to work in a hospital. They are afraid to expose themselves to COVID. We [also] had about seven individuals withdraw this semester because vaccinations are mandatory” at area hospitals.

Apple, Shepherd and others say that in order to attract and retain nurses, employers need to offer more professional respect, increased mental health support and decreased nurse-to-patient ratios.

While many hospitals are adding mental health resources and experimenting with more flexible scheduling, Horton admits that compensation is a challenge.

In October, UVA Medical Center announced that the health system would commit more than $30 million during the 2022 fiscal year to increase compensation and make market pay adjustments for much of its workforce.

Dorrie Fontaine, former dean of the U.Va. School of Nursing, says she has been getting calls from many hospitals, asking her to talk to their staff about managing stress and anxiety. She recently published a book, “Self Care for New and Student Nurses.”

“Self-care is great,” she says, but hospitals can greatly help their recruitment and retention efforts by ensuring that nurses are supported with adequate staffing and appropriate recognition for the work they do. “Until you have hospital systems who treat nurses with the respect and dignity they deserve, all the yoga in the world is not going to be enough.”

Apple also worries that the current stresses on nurses will have long-lasting impacts on the health care workforce if these professionals aren’t better supported with adequate staffing and appropriate recognition for the work they do.

“We didn’t sign up to be soldiers. We are caretakers,” she says. “We have found ourselves on a battlefield, and we need help.”   

Catching up

As he completed his senior project last spring at Old Dominion University’s Batten College of Engineering & Technology, Kristal Sunuwar researched the development of the global offshore wind industry.

Learning how China, South Korea, Japan and European nations had developed their offshore wind programs, Sunuwar reached an unexpected conclusion: “I was surprised that the USA wasn’t farther ahead” in offshore wind development, he says. He was also struck by how much more cumbersome the governmental approval process for offshore wind projects appeared to be in the U.S. versus other countries.

Now holding a part-time position at ODU in developing offshore wind courses for future workers, Sunuwar says, “If we could make the federal process more streamlined, I think we could get it done a little bit faster.”

Questions such as these are driving work at ODU, in partnership with other educational, government and business entities, to establish a supply chain hub centered in Virginia for the burgeoning offshore wind industry along the East Coast.

In April 2020, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam signed the Virginia Clean Economy Act, which requires Dominion Energy Virginia and Appalachian Power to generate all electricity for Virginia from carbon-free sources by 2045 and 2050 respectively. Meanwhile, Richmond-based Dominion Energy Inc. is working through the approval process for its 2.64-gigawatt, $7.8 billion Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) project 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach. It will include about 180 wind turbines and produce enough power for up to 660,000 homes when completed by 2026.

Also, in 2019, officials with ODU and the state Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy —  rebranded as of Oct. 1 as the Virginia Department of Energy (Virginia Energy)—  signed a memorandum of understanding for the state’s offshore wind projects, including Dominion’s wind farm. 

As part of that agreement, ODU has organized the Commonwealth Offshore Wind Task Force, which brings together more than 200 partners from across the state to examine all aspects of building a brand-new industry — from workforce pipeline needs to supply-chain capability, to how offshore wind would interact with Virginia’s existing maritime industries.

Paul Olsen, executive director of programs and partnerships for ODU’s office of research, co-leads the task force with Jennifer Palestrant of Virginia Energy. As a former commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Norfolk District, Olsen sees offshore wind as the next big “megaproject” that will demand the focus of the entire Hampton Roads region.

Matt Smith, who leads offshore wind business development for the Hampton Roads Alliance, says the task force is “probably the longest ongoing effort to focus on different areas that need work to be done to make Virginia one of the hubs of the industry.”

Olsen’s approach to building the task force mirrors work he did to organize university efforts to address sea level rise when he arrived at Old Dominion in 2015. But as he works to raise funds for ODU’s research efforts, Olsen notes that the business case for offshore wind is much clearer.

“Until we monetize the cost of a milli-meter of sea level rise,” he says, it’s harder to make the case for research funding. “With offshore wind, you can monetize your progress, because you can put a price tag on a kilowatt hour.”

A decade in the making

Making the case that offshore wind presents an economically viable piece of the commonwealth’s energy picture has been part of ODU’s role since 2006, when the General Assembly established the Virginia Coastal Energy Research Consortium (VCERC).

Headquartered at ODU, VCERC brought together researchers from Virginia Tech, James Madison University, William & Mary, Norfolk State University, Hampton University, the University of Virginia and Virginia Commonwealth University.

In its 2010 final report, VCERC researchers reported that with carbon reduction measures expected to increase the cost of coal-fired energy, new offshore wind farms could yield lower energy costs than new coal-fired power plants.

VCERC recommended that Virginia apply for a research lease to conduct a demonstration project on the potential for offshore wind off the Virginia coast to be an economically viable renewable energy source.

“Before that, nobody had even suggested that offshore wind should be in Virginia’s energy future,” says George Hagerman, senior project scientist at ODU’s Center for Coastal Physical Oceanography. “That really catalyzed everything that has happened since.”

At the time the report was released, Hagerman was a senior research associate at Virginia Tech’s Advanced Research Institute. He says ODU’s strengths in electrical engineering and oceanography were particularly valuable in the offshore wind research.

Hagerman joined the faculty at ODU in 2018.

He teamed with ODU chemistry and biochemistry professor Pat Hatcher — who chaired VCERC — and oceanographer Larry Atkinson, an esteemed member of the ODU faculty who died in January, to make presentations to the Virginia legislature and to Dominion Energy about offshore wind’s potential.

That work helped inform Dominion’s development of the CVOW project — the first offshore wind farm in U.S. federal waters.

Dominion installed a two-turbine, 12-megawatt pilot project off the coast of Virginia Beach in summer 2020. The utility plans to begin construction on the larger wind farm in 2024.

Supporting a new industry

As interest in offshore wind has increased, the capacity to review the construction and operation plans for these giant infrastructure projects has struggled to keep up. This created a backlog of plans at the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM).

When U.S. Sen. Mark Warner held a meeting on the issue in February, Olsen suggested that BOEM make use of a federal authority that allows the Army Corps of Engineers to provide interagency help for critical infrastructure projects. The idea led to an agreement between BOEM and the Corps that has sped up federal reviews for offshore wind farms.

“This is an ODU contribution that is going to unlock the industry between Cape Cod and Cape Hatteras,” Hagerman says.

The university also is helping forge connections as the Hampton Roads business community strives to present itself as an attractive place for wind-energy-related businesses to locate — key to establishing a supply chain that can support offshore wind development along the East Coast.

In May, ODU’s OpenSeas Technology Innovation Hub partnered with the Hampton Roads Alliance and the then-Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy to open the Virginia Offshore Wind Landing. A coworking space located in Norfolk’s World Trade Center, Virginia Offshore Wind Landing is meant to be a collaborative space for offshore wind-related companies hoping to learn more about the region.

“It’s really a place where companies who are exploring the market in Hampton Roads have a place to get connected to resources, have meeting space [and] hold events,” says Smith.

He hopes to work with ODU’s Jerry Cronin, who heads the OpenSeas Technology Innovation Hub, to develop programming that can help connect smaller companies with federal agencies and larger players in the offshore wind industry.

“We see the relationship with ODU as a way to promote innovation and thought leadership,” he says.

George Hagerman of ODU’s Center for Coastal Physical Oceanography says Dominion Energy’s twin-turbine pilot wind farm is a fertile ground for research. Hagerman
George Hagerman of ODU’s Center for Coastal Physical Oceanography says Dominion Energy’s twin-turbine pilot wind farm is a fertile ground for research.

Research and education

Hagerman sees the twin pilot wind turbines Dominion installed last summer as a rich bed for research into all aspects of offshore wind in Virginia.

In summer 2020, ODU, in partnership with William & Mary and James Madison University, won a $775,000 Department of Defense grant that will support research to mitigate the effects of wind farm locations on military training, readiness and research.

Hagerman and Olsen both have a long list of research topics for which they’re seeking funding. Their aim is to find ways to help reduce the cost of energy generated from offshore wind farms, to reduce the safety risks to people working on offshore wind projects and to reduce risk to the marine environment.

Olsen is actively seeking funding for research on extending the life of wind turbines, using autonomous vehicles to reduce the risk to wind farm maintenance workers, and optimizing turbine design, placement and positioning to harvest more energy.

“We would love to partner with industry,” Olsen says. “We can solve problems for business that ultimately reduce the cost of the kilowatt hour.”

Momentum around offshore wind also poses a workforce challenge.

To that end, Centura College in Virginia Beach and Thomas Nelson and Tidewater community colleges have begun offering offshore wind technician training courses.

Rema McManus, offshore wind program specialist with ODU’s Center for Coastal Physical Oceanography, traveled to the New College Institute in Martinsville in January to earn the Basic Safety Training certification offered through the Global Wind Organisation.

“I wanted to know firsthand what technicians go through,” she says. The experience opened her eyes to the fact that many skills that already exist in the Hampton Roads workforce — such as those needed to operate cranes at the port — could translate to offshore wind.

Both Smith and Hampton Roads Workforce Council President and CEO Shawn Avery say that as community colleges and technical schools train workers for offshore wind industry construction and technician jobs, ODU can play a role in educating people who could become managers and engineers in the industry.

“We are developing a brand-new industry,” Avery says. “What about the management levels, the engineering levels, the human resources behind the companies? That is where ODU will shine.”

Orlando Ayala, an ODU associate professor of mechanical engineering, is working on a National Science Foundation grant proposal to develop a graduate-level program that could train engineers in all aspects of renewable energy — from the mechanics of offshore wind to the business and geopolitical forces that govern its development.

He worked with colleagues to adapt an existing undergraduate course on energy and the environment to include lecturers working on current renewable energy projects in Virginia, including solar, biomass and Dominion’s offshore wind project.

The course debuted this past summer. Ayala’s hope is for ODU to establish a clear pipeline for students who complete technical coursework that brings them into the industry to continue to build their skills with undergraduate and graduate work at the university.

“We have to create courses that adapt to the needs of the industry,” he says.

 

At a glance

Founded

Old Dominion University was founded in 1930 as an extension of William & Mary and Virginia Tech. The school gained independent status in 1962 as Old Dominion College. Old Dominion began offering master’s degrees in 1964 and doctoral degrees in 1971. It was renamed Old Dominion University in 1969.

Campus

Old Dominion’s 335-acre Norfolk campus is bordered on two sides by the Elizabeth and Lafayette rivers. The school also operates regional higher educational centers in Virginia Beach, Portsmouth and Hampton.

Enrollment1

Undergraduate: 19,372

Graduate: 4,804

In-state: 21,360 (88%)

International: 617 (2.5%)

Students of color: 11,620 (49%)

Employees

3,062

Faculty

901 full-time

Tuition and fees

In-state tuition and fees: $11,160

Tuition and fees (out of state):
$31,320

Room and board and other fees:
$11,523

Average financial aid awarded
to full-time freshmen seeking
assistance: $11,797

1 2020-21 enrollment statistics

This article has been clarified since publication.

The Great American Labor Shortage

At Dough Boy’s Pizza, summer typically brings a steady stream of job applicants seeking work at one of the restaurant’s three locations on the Virginia Beach Oceanfront.

But “this year, it’s next to nothing,” says owner George Kotarides. For Kotarides and other restaurant owners, a season that had been anticipated as the triumphant closing act of the COVID-19 pandemic has instead been an exhausting, stressful slog, as available workers have been scarce.

Kotarides has been in the restaurant business since he took his first job as a dishwasher in 1978. He’s seen challenging times before when the economy has taken turns, but nothing like the last several months. “Not even close,” he says. “It’s a daily challenge, and it’s very stressful for everybody.”

Due to a phenomenon some are calling the Great American Labor Shortage, businesses across Virginia both small and large are being forced to cut back on hours and services to stay open. For example, citing labor shortages, Kings Dominion amusement park in Doswell was open fewer hours (usually 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.) than usual this summer, and it closed some weekdays during June and August.

 “It’s a nightmare,” says George Kotarides, who has struggled this summer to find workers for his three Dough Boy’s Pizza restaurants on Virginia Beach’s Oceanfront. Photo by Mark Rhodes
“It’s a nightmare,” says George Kotarides, who has struggled this summer to find workers for his three Dough Boy’s Pizza restaurants on Virginia Beach’s Oceanfront. Photo by Mark Rhodes

At Dough Boy’s, Kotarides has been closing his restaurants at 10 p.m. instead of midnight and changing menus and ordering processes to adapt to a staffing level that’s 35% lower than past summers.

Nevertheless, Kotarides emphasizes he’s not complaining — he’s thankful that he’s been able to make it through the summer staying open seven days a week. He’s watched as other restaurants have reduced days of operation or gone out of business altogether.

“People are working long shifts. It’s not easy. We jockey the schedule as much as we can to keep people from being overworked, but unfortunately that doesn’t always happen,” he says. “We are not asking for sympathy — just patience.”

September could be a turning point in the tight labor market that has plagued the post-pandemic recovery. But as employers and economists watch to see whether the Sept. 4 end of expanded federal unemployment benefits and a return to in-person school will lead more workers to fill open positions, one thing is becoming apparent: This isn’t 2019.

Whether you’re looking to hire a restaurant cook or a bank compliance officer, talent acquisition strategies have changed dramatically since the pandemic began.

John Asbury, president and CEO of Richmond-based Atlantic Union Bankshares, says the labor market in Virginia looks markedly different from employment recoveries he’s witnessed after past economic slumps. “The employment challenge in Virginia is less about the unemployment rate, and more about the ability of Virginia businesses to fill their open jobs,” he says.

Between February and April 2020, total nonfarm employment in Virginia dropped by 11.7% as the state’s economy shed 480,000 jobs during the pandemic’s initial shutdown. Unemployment in Virginia peaked during April 2020 at 11.3%. This June, it stood at 4.3% — still higher than the pre-pandemic rate of 2.5%.

This paradox of relatively high unemployment paired with record numbers of job openings means that many businesses are in a squeeze to find the workers they need.

In a June report by the National Federation of Independent Businesses, 46% of small-business owners reported having job openings they could not fill — more than double the historical average of 22%.

Parsons
Parsons

Douglas Parsons, executive director of the Front Royal/Warren County Economic Development Authority, says industrial employers in Warren were already seeking additional workers before the pandemic, and “when COVID hit, it just threw a wrench in everything.”

Parsons hears employers complain that expanded federal unemployment benefits have in some cases provided more money than people would earn working. “A lot of [unemployed] folks are saying that it’s not cost-effective for them to give up the benefits they are receiving from the government to come back to work,” he says.

But while many companies hope the end of expanded benefits in September will boost hiring at the lower end of the pay scale, labor experts say federal benefits aren’t the only variable at play, citing issues such as child care or concerns related to COVID-19.

Eric Terry, president of the Virginia Restaurant, Lodging and Travel Association, says that so far, his colleagues in states that opted to end expanded benefits early still aren’t seeing the influx of job applicants many had hoped for.

Pandemic power shift

Signs abound that the balance of power between workers and employers has shifted. Companies are advertising starting salaries in jobs postings and in some cases on big banners along major highways — information that previously would have been held close to the vest. And potential hires are seeking — and often getting — a degree of flexibility in where they live and how they work that very few would have dreamed possible before 2020.

In what’s being called the Great Resignation, increasing numbers of workers are jumping ship in search of more favorable working conditions.

In June, 3.9 million Americans quit their jobs — a rate of 2.7%. The so-called “quits rate” has been above 2.4% since February and in April it reached a record 2.8%, as nearly
4 million workers voluntarily left their jobs.

“The employee is in the catbird seat,” Parsons says.

This power shift is evident across all kinds of industries and jobs.

In July, 2,900 unionized workers at a Volvo Trucks plant in Dublin returned to work after negotiating a new hourly wage agreement, ending an on-and-off strike that began in April.

Harder
Harder

Large national retailers including Costco, Target and Amazon have announced wage increases in recent months. Those decisions have ripple effects for smaller businesses, forcing them to raise pay to keep up in a competitive hiring market. (And these higher labor costs are contributing to higher prices, with the U.S. Department of Labor reporting in July that consumer prices had risen 5.4% during the last year.)

“The pandemic forced us to rethink the entire relationship individuals have with work,” says Joseph Harder, an associate professor at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business. “It’s not just that white collar workers are demanding flexibility … but it’s also [happening with] the entry-level positions that are essential to reopening the economy. People are not working for minimum wage the way they once were. … I don’t know what would have shifted that power without the pandemic.”

“Agile” is the current buzzword among hiring professionals, as companies get creative about how to make employment offers appealing to the individuals they seek to hire.

“We are having to rethink the way we do things,” says Shawn Avery, president and CEO of the Hampton Roads Workforce Council. In addition to bonuses and higher wages, he says, businesses are finding they need to offer new or increased benefits, such as paid vacation time or funds toward education.

Remote work and a tight labor market has given Atlantic Union Bank the flexibility to hire workers from other states to fill jobs that can be performed remotely, says bank CEO John Asbury. Photo by Matthew R.O. Brown
Remote work and a tight labor market has given Atlantic Union Bank the flexibility to hire workers from other states to fill jobs that can be performed remotely, says bank CEO John Asbury. Photo by Matthew R.O. Brown

Further complicating the situation, the highly contagious delta variant of the coronavirus has caused a surge in COVID cases this summer, along with rising hospitalizations. This has employers grappling with issues such as whether to reinstate mask mandates or to require workers to get vaccinated, knowing that this could not only result in some employee terminations or resignations, but could also scare off potential hires.

Meanwhile, residual effects of the pandemic shutdowns — such as the pandemic-related suspension of the J-1 visa program, which brings many foreign workers to Virginia resorts and theme parks — still haven’t been completely resolved, further adding to worker shortages.

What’s the purpose of the office?

Office workers who have spent the past 18 months working remotely are now demanding flexible work options.

In a national survey conducted by Prudential Financial Inc. in March, 68% of respondents said having the ability to work a hybrid schedule is ideal. Of those who worked remotely during the pandemic, 87% reported that they wanted to continue working remotely at least one day per week.

Many companies had been planning for employees to return to offices after Labor Day, but those plans were disrupted by the delta variant surge. McLean-based Capital One Financial Corp. pushed back its plans to move remote employees to hybrid work schedules to Nov. 2 from Sept. 7. In Richmond, Genworth Financial delayed returning workers to the office until at least October.

As of early August, Atlantic Union Bank in Richmond was still uncertain whether it would move forward with its plans for a Sept. 7 return. But when that reopening does occur, CEO Asbury says, the bank’s employees will return to a hybrid schedule, with “collaboration days” where everyone will be on-site, coupled with options to work from home on other days.

“This is a great experiment,” Asbury says. “The only thing we can assure you of is that whatever we do will evolve based on our actual experience. If things continue to go well, there will be more flexibility. If we have challenges, there may be less flexibility.”

Loreen Lagatta, the bank’s chief human resources officer, says the ability to offer workplace flexibility has helped Atlantic Union stay competitive in what she calls the “war for talent.”

The organizations that are listening to their employees, that are willing to test and learn and adapt, are the ones that are continuing to move forward,” she says.

This new world of work has created a national market for talent.

“There are plenty of companies that we would never have expected to have coming after our employees in Virginia, saying, ‘You can work from home,’” Atlantic Union’s Asbury says.

Evans
Evans

Although the bank wants most of its workers to be hybrid and not fully remote, Asbury says, the pandemic’s new work models have given Atlantic Union the flexibility to hire workers from other areas of the country for roles that can be performed remotely. “The truth is, we now have more people working in more states than we ever have before,” he says.

At Sentara Healthcare, Vice President for Recruitment and Workforce Planning Pat Evans says the pandemic proved to the health system that some employees in office-based positions could successfully do their jobs remotely. “That has been a change for us,” she says. “I don’t think we saw clearly that those could be done remotely before COVID.”

As office workers return, Evans says, Sentara is often able to honor their wishes for flexibility. “If we had a closed mind to that, that would have a negative impact on retention and recruitment,” she says.

Evans says overall hiring at Sentara is up about 50% this year, as the health care system has moved forward with hires that were put on hold during the pandemic, and as Sentara’s staffing needs have continued to grow.

“We are seeing lots of interested candidates, and we still need more,” she says. “We are doing more marketing in different ways to attract a broader applicant pool.”

This includes purchasing more sponsored posts on job sites, offering sign-on and referral bonuses and offering more flexible scheduling options where appropriate.

Vaccines: Mandate or encourage?

Amid these staffing challenges, employers are also wrestling with the question of whether to require employees to be vaccinated. In a mid-July survey of 59 Virginia CEOs conducted by the Virginia Council of CEOs and the University of Richmond’s Robins School of Business, only 10% reported that they would require vaccinations for their employees.

Since that survey was conducted, a lot has changed, though.

Gov. Ralph Northam announced that all state employees would be required to get vaccinated by Sept. 1 or be subject to weekly testing. Similarly, the Pentagon announced a vaccine mandate for U.S. military members. Several large private employers, including Walmart and Google, also announced workforce vaccine mandates.

Malone
Malone

Jason Malone, an associate professor at Virginia Tech’s Pamplin College of Business, says that as larger corporations take the lead in requiring vaccines in the workplace, smaller businesses will be watching the potential consequences to job recruitment and retention.

“These smaller to mid-sized businesses are more sensitive to the job market, and they could be impacted to a greater degree by a vaccine requirement,” he says. “By taking that hardline approach, you could alienate existing employees or potential future employees.”

Hospitality workers are scarce

At the onset of the pandemic, Virginia’s leisure and hospitality industry was particularly hard-hit, eliminating 204,800 jobs — 49% of the workforce — statewide between February and April 2020, according to data from the Virginia Employment Commission. By this June, leisure and hospitality employment in Virginia stood at 330,400 jobs — still 20% below its June 2019 level.

In June, there were still 88,000 job openings in restaurants and hotels in Virginia, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“It’s a nightmare,” says Dough Boy’s restaurateur Kotarides, who was shocked when he attended a job fair for hotel and restaurant jobs in Virginia Beach shortly before the July 4 holiday. Twenty-seven employers were represented and “zero applicants showed up,” he says.

Dough Boy’s has raised wages by 35% in the past 12 months, and added benefits such as discounted insurance, free meals and quick promotion opportunities. “We are keeping people. We are thankful for that,” he says. “But people just aren’t walking in the door or applying like they normally would.”

Kotarides is interested to see whether hiring picks up after expanded unemployment benefits expire Sept. 4 — but notes that it will come too late for the tourism-related businesses that needed staff all summer.

Avery says many restaurant owners and managers are working double shifts, leaving them little to no time to recruit, train or interview new workers.

Terry
Terry

VRLTA’s Terry is hearing that the hiring situation is improving in some regions for servers and hosting jobs, but cooks, dishwashers and other back-of-the house positions remain difficult to fill. One in-state restaurant chain had to temporarily relocate employees from Richmond and put them up in hotels so that there would be enough labor to operate their Harrisonburg location, he says.

Hotels continue to struggle to find enough staff, and Terry says one permanent casualty of the pandemic staffing crunch may be that daily hotel room cleaning becomes a relic of the past. “I don’t know if you’re going to see that change for a while,” he says.

Calling the situation a “workforce crisis,” the city of Virginia Beach appropriated $400,000 to the Hampton Roads Workforce Council in July for a program that will pay $1,000 bonuses to up to 250 employees to entice them to take jobs in the tourism industry. Another $100,000 will go into a marketing program targeting potential applicants, and $50,000 will be spent on administration and research to determine why people aren’t returning to these jobs.

In early June, Northam announced that the state was launching a similar worker incentivization effort, the Virginia Return to Earn grant program. The state planned to invest $3 million to provide qualifying small businesses with matching funds to award new employees up to $1,000 signing bonuses.

Gone for good?

In a national study conducted this spring by job search site Joblist, 38% of former hospitality workers reported that they would not consider a hospitality job for their next position. More than half of these workers indicated that no pay increase or incentive would lure them back to their old jobs.

Agarwal
Agarwal

Vinod Agarwal studies the hospitality industry as a professor at Old Dominion University’s Dragas Center for Economic Analysis and Policy. The pandemic was a source of “creative destruction” for the industry, he says, because workers “got time to start thinking about what they wanted to do.”

Coming out of the crisis, businesses will need to be proactive in hiring and retaining workers, he adds. Employers need to think about not only compensating employees but also supporting them as individuals whose lives don’t stop when they clock out of work.

“Were you able to take care of your employees when they needed help? If you didn’t, they aren’t coming back,” Agarwal says. “Wages alone may not do the job.”

Taking care of employees beyond the paycheck has proven successful for Jay Patel, who owns three Edible Arrangements franchises in Hampton Roads and a handful of restaurant franchises on Naval Station Norfolk.

To maintain staffing for a 130% increase in business his Edible Arrangements stores experienced in 2020, Patel successfully sought a temporary change in company policy to allow parents to bring their children to work with them. He upgraded his Wi-Fi so that children could attend virtual classes at the stores and instituted a “hero bonus” raise of $2 per hour for all employees. He’s helped employees get needed car repairs and assisted them in locating affordable housing. These practices grew employee loyalty and have gotten him through the pandemic with minimal staffing challenges, he says.

A single mom from Fredericksburg, Katherine Bray quit her direct mail job and went back to school. Now she works a hybrid part-time job while taking classes. Photo by Will Schermerhorn
A single mom from Fredericksburg, Katherine Bray quit her direct mail job and went back to school. Now she works a hybrid part-time job while taking classes. Photo by Will Schermerhorn

Caren Merrick, CEO of the Virginia Ready Initiative, says former hospitality workers make up about 12.5% of the 2,000 people who have enrolled in its Virginia Ready Scholars program to train for new careers. It’s the second-most represented industry in the program, behind health care. But health care workers are typically seeking increased training for their jobs, she says, while most hospitality workers in the program say they’re leaving their industry altogether.

Virginia Ready Scholars is a partnership among 24 private businesses and the Virginia Community College System. It places participants in one of 34 selected training programs for high-demand skilled industries and offers a $1,000 award and job interview opportunities upon completion.

“These are individuals who would have stayed [in the hospitality industry] for the rest of their career, but because they were forced to take time off, they got to reflect,” Merrick says. “They want more upward mobility. They want training. They want some flexibility.”

Shutdown brought breaking point

Katherine Bray, a 26-year-old single mother in Fredericksburg, was working at a direct mail business when the pandemic hit.

As the volume of political mail increased drastically ahead of the 2020 presidential election, she says, her employer was reluctant to add new workers out of concern of COVID-19 exposure. Bray found herself working up to 60 hours a week.

This put pressure on the child care arrangement she had with her landlord, as her oldest child’s virtual kindergarten classes were proving too much to manage around work.

“We stuck it out as long as we could,” says Bray. “I was constantly putting in applications looking for a work-at-home position.”

Bray, who had previously worked for fast food restaurants, big-box retail stores and call centers, had always known she’d need more education to land the jobs she wanted. Taking classes always seemed like too much to take on — until the pandemic.

Bray called the career and transfer services office at Germanna Community College in December 2020. As a single mother, she qualified for financial aid, she discovered, so she enrolled in classes to earn her associate degree in business management, along with four business certifications.

After her employer denied her request to reduce her weekly schedule to 30 hours so she could take classes, Bray quit her job. “I didn’t have anything else lined up, but I knew that my household could not continue the way it had been,” she says.

When she emailed the college seeking referrals for jobs she could apply for, Germanna offered her a work-study position. She now works 20 hours a week in a job that can be done partly from home while taking classes toward her degree. She pays for fewer hours of child care and feels positive about her career path.

Marie Hawley, Germanna’s coordinator of career and transfer services, says Bray’s story is representative of an increased interest in careers that have remote options and won’t be eliminated if another pandemic hits.

“Students have a strong lack of interest to work in an environment that is subject to working with the public through another pandemic,” she says. “Most are not interested in any front-facing customer services jobs.”

Banks are seeing a similar dynamic in hiring for teller positions.

“In the wake of the pandemic … what I hear a lot of banks say is that staffing their branches has been a real challenge,” says Bruce Whitehurst, president and CEO of the Virginia Banking Association.

Amy Mellinger, senior vice president and director of human resources for Powell Valley National Bank in far Southwest Virginia, says the bank, which has around 90 employees, saw nine resignations this year as of July.

“Every single one was an entry-level teller position,” Mellinger says. But the bank hasn’t had trouble filling the jobs, and new hires have come from the medical and restaurant industries.

“The last entry-level position we hired, the teller had been in the restaurant industry, at the same restaurant for 13 years,” Mellinger says. “She was ready for a change, different hours and a different career path.”

Something different

The great career rethink was a pandemic pastime for many workers.

In a January 2021 Pew Research Center survey, two-thirds of unemployed adults said they had seriously considered changing their occupation. One-third reported taking steps to gain new skills.

After being laid off from his job in electrical sales in spring 2020, Powhatan resident James Sayles was able to take a breather for a few months, due in part to expanded federal unemployment benefits.

Truck driving had always been on his career wish list, and he started looking at what credentials he’d need. Sayles was able to complete commercial driving training for tractor trailer trucks at John Tyler Community College for only $500 out-of-pocket after qualifying for a grant for Virginia residents and a $1,000 Virginia Ready scholarship.

Merrick
Merrick

Virginia Ready’s Merrick says the commercial driver’s license is the No. 1 enrolled credential among the program’s 2,000 enrolled participants.

Making a complete career change at age 51 has given Sayles confidence that he’ll be able to weather future changes in the economy, and he enjoys the freedom and independence of truck driving.

Dale Bennett, president & CEO of the Virginia Trucking Association, would like to hear more stories like that. The trucking industry anticipates a nationwide need for 1.1 million new drivers over the next 10 years, due to rising demand and an aging workforce. Additionally, Bennett says, truck driver training schools and DMV offices were shut down during the pandemic, slowing the onboarding process for new drivers.

Bennett says carriers are raising pay, offering signing bonuses as high as $10,000, and hiring drivers while they are still in training to keep their numbers up.

“We also feel good that during the pandemic, the general public got an understanding for what truck drivers mean to their everyday life,” he says. “Retail store personnel were constantly getting the question, ‘When is the next truck coming?’ It should have been, ‘When is the next driver coming?’”

A greater sense of purpose and work-life compatibility are key to recruiting in the post-pandemic market, U.Va.’s Harder says.

“The strategic question is, ‘Who are the people I absolutely cannot afford to lose?’ Go make sure they are happy enough that you don’t lose them.”

Weathering the storm

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Angelic Jenkins was working toward opening a brick-and-mortar restaurant serving updated versions of the soul food staples she grew up with.

On weekends, Jenkins and her husband catered parties and drove the Angelic’s Kitchen food truck they bought in 2018 to festivals around Virginia. And on weekdays, she worked at her full-time job as the human resources director at the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel in Charlottesville.

When the pandemic shut down the hospitality sector, Jenkins’ schedule at the hotel was temporarily reduced to one day a week, and her husband was laid off from his position as a driver for US Foods.

The couple needed to find a way to keep bringing in income to help them build out their restaurant, which was slated to open in December 2020 in Charlottesville’s new Dairy Market food hall.

“We decided to open the food truck every day. We both just put all of our energy into it,” Jenkins says. 

As the pandemic caused business to drop off at Albemarle Limousine, owner Andrea Saathoff expanded into bicycle repair, car washing and auto repair sidelines. Photo by Caroline Martin
As the pandemic caused business to drop off at Albemarle Limousine, owner Andrea Saathoff expanded into bicycle repair, car washing and auto repair sidelines. Photo by Caroline Martin

They expanded from their usual food truck location on Pantops Mountain to serving food in neighborhoods around the city during a time when people were looking for dine-out options that could operate under the pandemic public health strictures.

Their business was kept afloat during the pandemic by regular orders for hundreds of meals from World Central Kitchen, a Washington, D.C.-based global nonprofit that delivers meals to families and seniors who are food insecure. Jenkins donated beverages to accompany the meals.

As the months wore on, the hotel restored some of Jenkins’ hours, but after
20 years there, she decided to retire in favor of opening her restaurant. She worked with the city of Charlottesville, Dairy Market developer Stony Point Development Group and the Community Investment Collaborative incubator to access grants and loans that helped her get Angelic’s Kitchen ready to open with the rest of the Dairy Market food hall on Dec. 15, 2020.

“It was really scary,” Jenkins says of the past 16 months, “but everything ended up working out.”

Small business owners around the Charlottesville region are beginning to exhale after more than a year of white-knuckled twists and turns, as the pandemic shredded old business models but also revealed new opportunities and lessons for the future.

Pandemic pivots

“Initially there was a fair amount of panic and concern across all industries, but I think we saw pretty quickly a considerable ability to pivot business models and try to be resilient,” says Charlottesville Economic Development Director Chris Engel.

The city saw the pandemic’s economic impact in its meals and lodging tax collections. City budget writers have projected that these two major revenue sources will not reach pre-COVID levels until at least July 2022. By March 2021, however, the revenue had rebounded considerably,  with meals taxes at 80% of pre-COVID levels and lodging taxes at 65%, Engel says.

The extended shutdown had a major impact on the region’s tourism industry. According to Project Rebound, a report produced by a collaboration led by the Charlottesville Regional Chamber of Commerce, leisure and hospitality jobs made up 10.9% of non-farm employment in the region in February 2020. That dropped to 7.6% by April 2020.

The pandemic’s economic impact particularly hurt businesses that rely on business and tourism travelers.

Andrea Saathoff, owner of Albemarle Limousine, watched 90% of her transportation business disappear after the coronavirus shut down business travel, weddings, corporate entertainment and sports team travel in one fell swoop.

“I had a couple of workers saying, ‘Are we going to get laid off?’” Saathoff remembers.

“This time last year, we were terrified,” recalls George Hodson, CEO of Veritas Vineyard in Nelson County. Photo by Caroline Martin
“This time last year, we were terrified,” recalls George Hodson, CEO of
Veritas Vineyard in Nelson County. Photo by Caroline Martin

Saathoff and her workers channeled that fear into a new enterprise.

Ace Bicycle Charlottesville opened in spring 2020 under the same roof as Albemarle Limousine, matching existing skills in Saathoff’s workforce with the huge demand for bicycle maintenance prompted by the pandemic.

Saathoff’s 50 employees also switched gears to pour more labor into a 10-year-old Albemarle Limousine side business — a car washing and detailing service called Virginia Auto Detailing.

“We used our time where we were not providing transportation to try to grow and develop and nurture these little businesses,” Saathoff says. “In a way, surviving the pandemic requires the same kind of skills that entrepreneurship requires. … You have to be ready to quickly take advantage of changing opportunities and changing trends.”

It also requires an appetite for risk, something that Saathoff didn’t shy away from during the shutdown.

As the company’s detailing business outgrew Albemarle Limousine’s small indoor facility, Saathoff began seeking a real estate property where she could open an auto repair business, using the in-house mechanics she’d hired in recent years.

She jumped on the opportunity when Edgecomb’s Auto Sales and Service — a longtime Charlottesville family business — announced in September it was closing for good. Saathoff worked with the Central Virginia Small Business Development Center to secure financing to buy the property and opened Ace Auto Center Express in January.

As the pandemic eases, all four of her businesses are busier than ever, even the bicycle shop, which Saathoff acknowledges was a move of “pure desperation” amid a sharp, pandemic-fueled drop-off for her transportation business.

Relief funds

That’s a feeling many other business owners find relatable.

“This time last year, we were terrified,” says George Hodson, CEO of Veritas Vineyard in Nelson County.

The winery faced the prospect of having to maintain its vineyards and keep its production cycle moving even while its events, restaurant and retail activity ground to a halt.

But the shutdown generated an appetite for venues where families could get out of the house and enjoy a safe and distanced environment. Like many other wineries, Veritas found that its sprawling property fit the bill.

“We had more families, more people here for a much longer time,” he says.

Veritas opened a pop-up restaurant — cheekily named Phase II as a play on Virginia’s COVID-19 restriction level that allowed for on-site dining — and bought igloos to accommodate winter dining.

The shutdown also accelerated a trend Hodson says was already anticipated in the wine industry.

“People have been predicting this tide for years when consumers stop buying wine in stores and got it shipped to their homes,” he says.

With so many Americans working from home, people were able to meet the delivery person during the day to give the signature that had traditionally been the obstacle to widespread online alcohol sales. Hodson says Veritas saw 500% growth in its e-commerce business during 2020.

Providing a stream of funding to keep small businesses going kept localities and regional business development groups busy throughout the pandemic. Government and nonprofit partners in the Charlottesville region got creative to find ways to get cash flowing to businesses that fell through the cracks of federal initiatives such as the Paycheck Protection Program.

Charlottesville partnered with Albemarle County to put money into a revolving loan fund run through the Community Investment Collaborative (CIC), a regional business incubator.

CIC President Stephen Davis says private contributions pushed the loan fund to $600,000.

The Business Recovery Fund, as it is called, offered small businesses loans of up to $10,000 at 1% interest, with no payments for six months and up to three years to repay the full loans.

“We were trying to create an opportunity, especially for the smaller businesses, to access capital,” Davis says.

The loans helped businesses pay rent and keep employees on staff through the hardest part of the pandemic. When CARES Act grants became available — the CIC partnered with 11 local governments in the region to distribute $12 million in CARES grants — some of the demand for loans subsided.

Davis says that all loans were current on payments as of May and a handful had been fully repaid. That has Davis looking toward the next round of loans, which he thinks will be necessary to help businesses recapitalize, rebuild reserves and make capital purchases that had been deferred over the past year.

As many businesses accessed PPP loans and other pandemic resources through the CIC, the organization connected them with the Central Virginia Small Business Development Center.

Davis says the SBDC logged 3,100 hours of business counseling in 2020, compared with 900 in 2019.

“Small business development centers have been critical frontline support for businesses over the past year, providing assistance to navigate PPP,” Davis says. “Once they accessed it, they came back for business counseling.”

In some cases, business owners stayed afloat thanks to cooperation with landlords.

In early 2020, Chris Henry, president of Stony Point Development Group, was finishing the renovation and expansion of the 1937 Monticello dairy into the Dairy Market, a mixed-use development featuring a food hall, office and residential space.

Henry placed an emphasis on locally owned businesses when leasing out the food hall, which houses Starr Hill Brewery, 12 food stalls — including Angelic’s Kitchen — and South and Central, a Latin steakhouse run by longtime Charlottesville restaurateur Will Richey.

However, as restaurants began building out their spaces in fall 2020, many of the restaurateurs discovered that equipment manufacturers were no longer making financing options available to them. So, Henry says, “we created an internal loan facility through our company and lent money to help those tenants buy their equipment. Credit for small businesses really seized up, and we had to step in to fill some of that void.”

The developer also had to navigate requests for rent relief.

“We had to pick and choose, and we tried to help the folks we felt really needed it,” Henry says. “We had office tenants that are publicly traded companies who asked us for rent relief. We were totally comfortable saying no to those kinds of requests, but a lot of the other small businesses in the market hall couldn’t operate without the liquidity we were able to provide.” ν

Petersburg grows pharma manufacturing hub

A cluster of recent investments by pharmaceutical companies in  Petersburg could set the city up to rebuild its manufacturing sector as a major player in U.S. efforts to create and secure a domestic supply chain for producing essential medicines at risk of shortages.

The development centers around the AMPAC Fine Chemicals plant in Petersburg, which was idled by its former owner, German pharmaceutical manufacturer Boehringer Ingelheim, in 2014 due to competition from foreign-made drug ingredients. Gov. Ralph Northam announced May 4 that AMPAC will invest $25 million to expand the plant, creating 125 jobs. AMPAC reactivated the plant in 2019.

This follows a January announcement that pharmaceutical manufacturer Civica Inc. will build a $124.5 million facility adjacent to the AMPAC plant that will create 186 jobs. The effort was supported by a $5.7 million grant from the state Commonwealth’s Development Opportunity Fund.

The two companies are working in partnership with the Medicines for All Institute at VCU’s College of Engineering and Phlow Corp., a company formed in 2020 to use advanced manufacturing practices developed at Medicines for All. Central to their work is a $354 million, four-year federal contract Phlow received from the U.S. Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) to produce essential medications.

Officials are lauding the pharma cluster as an “advanced manufacturing campus” that could attract similar companies bringing high-paying jobs to Petersburg, whose economy has suffered as U.S. manufacturing has declined.

Keith Boswell, president of Virginia’s Gateway Region economic development organization, says the prospect of building a global hub for an emerging pharmaceutical manufacturing sector has energized local leaders in ways he hasn’t seen in years.

“We really think this is the opportunity of a lifetime,” he says. “It’s having a brand-new industry be created out of nothing.”

The initiative was spearheaded by Virginia Commonwealth University professor Frank Gupton, CEO of Richmond-based Medicines for All Institute and Phlow co-founder, to optimize the production of active pharmaceutical ingredients.

A strategic plan released this spring by VCU emphasizes that state and local government need to invest in site readiness, workforce development and available lab space to keep the momentum going.

“You have this opportunity in front of you to do something really unique and different in a space that nobody is in right now,” says Gupton. “If you make those investments, people are out there waiting to come.