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Second Petersburg casino bill dies in Senate committee

Updated Friday, Feb. 17

Petersburg voters won’t get an opportunity to approve a casino this fall, and Richmond may get a second chance to vote on a casino referendum in 2023, state legislators decided Thursday in a 10-6 vote. However, the matter could come down to last-minute state budget negotiations.

The Virginia State Senate’s Finance and Appropriations Committee killed a House of Delegates bill Thursday that would have placed a referendum on Petersburg ballots in November and prevented a second referendum for Richmond, where voters defeated a casino referendum in 2021. Without a law stopping Richmond from holding another referendum, one could appear on city ballots this year.

In 2022, state lawmakers blocked a second referendum in Richmond and ordered a study by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) that indicated that both Richmond and Petersburg could successfully host casinos.

The Senate Finance committee voted down a similar bill from Sen. Joe Morrissey, D-Richmond, earlier in the month, but the measure from Del. Kim Taylor, R-Dinwiddie, survived multiple votes in the House, including a 49-44 floor vote with one abstention, which allowed the bill to proceed to the Senate for consideration.

Sen. Dick Saslaw made an amendment to the bill requiring that Cordish would pay the prevailing local wage listed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a change that was passed by voice vote. Ultimately, though, Sen. Louise Lucas, who has been a longtime supporter of casino legalization, made a motion to pass the bill by indefinitely, which won with 10 “yes” votes.

“When we started down this path, we all agreed that we will be more methodical about the way we go about establishing casinos in the commonwealth of Virginia,” Lucas said.

Lucas twice opposed the twin bills, although Democratic Sen. David Marsden and Republican Sen. Frank M. Ruff Jr. switched their votes, with Marsden voting against the Taylor bill and Ruff voting for it, after taking opposite positions on Morrissey’s bill, which failed 7-8.

Boosters of the bill were mainly Petersburg officials; Petersburg City Council signed a commitment with Baltimore-based commercial real estate company The Cordish Cos. in October 2022 to develop a Live! Casino & Hotel resort, pending passage of Morrissey’s and Taylor’s bills and Petersburg voters’ support of a casino referendum this fall. Cordish officials promised to spend $1.4 billion to build a casino, hotel and parking garage, as well as a multiuse development on the surrounding 90 acres, producing 1,800 direct jobs. The Maryland-based company, which has developed casinos across the mid-Atlantic and Florida, said it was not interested in developing a casino if Petersburg and Richmond both got the green light to build.

However, Cordish was not giving up the fight yet, as the state legislature continues negotiations to reconcile differing budgets from the House and the Senate, leaving some hope for a future referendum in Petersburg, if not this year.

“Our $1.4 billion urban revitalization project would be transformational for Petersburg, with 4,000 new jobs and millions of dollars in additional local and state tax revenue,” Zed Smith, Cordish’s chief operating officer, said in a statement Thursday. “As the General Assembly continues its deliberations, we hope the state’s elected leaders will explore every avenue to help provide this major economic development boost to Petersburg.”

Morrissey said Friday afternoon that “the game … is still in play. I fully expect there will be budget language preventing Richmond from holding a referendum anywhere in the next one to five years.” According to a Richmond Times-Dispatch article, House Appropriations Chairman Barry Knight, R-Virginia Beach, said it’s “absolutely an option” to pause a second Richmond casino referendum. Morrissey confirmed that this is a possibility; Knight was not available for comment Friday afternoon.

What Morrissey suggested could happen is that the House of Delegates’ budget conferees would insert language preventing Richmond from holding a referendum that could be part of a compromise budget between the House and the state Senate. Currently, the two bodies’ budget amendments differ widely, with the Republican-controlled House supporting $1 billion in tax cuts while the Democratic-held Senate seeks school spending in the same amount. The Senate and House money committees will continue to meet next week as the General Assembly session winds down, and the governor can call a special session if necessary to pass an amended budget.

“It’s early in the fourth quarter, and this game is going to be won late in the fourth quarter and possibly in the last two minutes,” Morrissey said. He added that he was “really upset” about Lucas’ vote to pass by Taylor’s bill, saying that she was putting “rich white casino developers” ahead of Black residents of Petersburg, and that she had told him the developers of the Norfolk and Portsmouth casinos in her district didn’t want the competition from Cordish in Petersburg. Lucas’ office did not immediately respond to messages left Friday afternoon.

Richmond officials have been largely opposed to Morrissey’s and Taylor’s bills. Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney and several city councilors have backed a second chance at passing a referendum to allow construction of Urban One Inc.’s proposed $565 million ONE Casino + Resort in the city’s South Side. When the state legalized commercial casinos in 2020, it limited the options for casinos to one facility apiece in five economically disadvantaged cities — Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond.

Urban One and Churchill Downs Inc. released a joint statement late Thursday:

“We appreciate the General Assembly’s careful, deliberate process and open mind in considering and addressing this important decision. For us, the process has always been about determining what is best for the commonwealth, and that answer has always been quite clear. Every study conducted has consistently revealed that a casino resort in Richmond will generate the most jobs, revenue, opportunity and economic benefits for the city, Central Virginia and the entire commonwealth.

“Now, we turn our attention to a successful referendum in November. We are eager to share our vision for this project and its many benefits including thousands of quality jobs, millions for schools and tax relief, and revitalization of neighborhoods that have too often been left behind.”

It’s official — Ford plant going to Michigan

Ford Motor Co. announced Monday that it will build an electric vehicle battery plant in Michigan, a $3.5 billion project that Virginia was considered for until Gov. Glenn Youngkin pulled the state out of it late last year.

Youngkin’s concern, he said in January, was over the involvement of China-based Contemporary Amperex Technology Ltd. (CATL), which would operate the plant, and that he didn’t want Ford to serve as “a front for China” in Virginia. The plant would have been located in Pittsylvania County’s 3,528-acre Southern Virginia Mega Site at Berry Hill industrial site, which so far has no tenants.

Virginia and Michigan were the finalists for the plant, which will be 100% owned by the U.S. automaker. The Ford plant will be located about 100 miles west of Detroit at a 1,900-acre megasite in Marshall, Michigan. It is expected to create 2,500 jobs, with manufacturing beginning in 2026. During the announcement Monday, Ford executives said a Ford-owned subsidiary would own the plant and employ workers, with CATL providing technology and some equipment and staff.

Virginia Democrats decried Youngkin’s decision to block the plant from coming to Virginia as politically motivated and hypocritical, given his financial benefits from The Carlyle Group’s Chinese investments when Youngkin was co-CEO of the private equity company. Also, they criticized the governor for potentially depriving Southern Virginia of the 2,500 jobs the plant would have created.

“We all thought we were trying to achieve the same bipartisan goals of bringing good-paying jobs and economic development to Virginia, but apparently, in his absence last year, the governor missed that part of the transition briefing,” Loudoun County Del. David Reid, a Democrat, said on the House of Delegates’ floor Jan. 17. Reid was referring to Youngkin’s extensive 2022 domestic travel schedule, which many political onlookers saw as Youngkin testing the waters for a 2024 presidential run. “At this point, the governor needs to go to Southside, hold a town hall and explain why it is OK for him to make tens of millions of dollars off of investments in China and Chinese investments in the United States when he was in Carlyle Group, but he decided to play politics when it came to the livelihood for an entire region.”

Republicans, however, defended Youngkin’s decision as a responsible move for national security. “Bringing the right jobs to Danville … is critical,” said Del. Terry Kilgore, a Republican who serves on the state Tobacco Region Revitalization Commission, which assists localities in Southern and Southwest Virginia in boosting economic development projects with funds from tobacco civil lawsuits settled decades ago. “But Bloomberg reported in December that Ford Motor Co. was planning to run this proposed electric vehicle plant through a conglomerate that coordinates closely with the Chinese Communist Party.”

During Youngkin’s time at Carlyle, the company invested in many Chinese businesses, including ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company, and Adicon Holding Ltd., one of China’s largest independent clinical laboratory companies. In 2021, when he was running for governor, Youngkin had an estimated net worth of about $400 million, making him the wealthiest governor in the state’s history. Youngkin removed Virginia from consideration for the Ford plant in late December 2020, after a Bloomberg article outlined cooperation between Ford and CATL on the proposed plant, as well as CATL’s close ties to the Chinese government.

Potential Republican presidential candidates Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott have also made moves against Chinese investments in their states, and some Democrats in Virginia said that Youngkin made his decision based on national ambitions of his own. The governor has neither confirmed nor denied rumors that he may run for president in 2024.

In Monday’s announcement, Ford said the plant will be built in Marshall, Michigan, where lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries will be manufactured as an alternative to nickel cobalt manganese (NCM) batteries, both of which can run electric vehicles. LFP batteries will be added to Ford’s electric vehicle lineup this year with the Mustang Mach-E and in 2024 with the F-150 Lightning.

Ford said it plans to invest more than $50 billion in electric vehicles globally through 2026, resulting in more than 18,000 direct jobs in Michigan, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio and Missouri.

ASM Global to develop, run GreenCity arena in Henrico

ASM Global will develop and operate the 17,000-seat arena at Henrico County’s $2.3 billion GreenCity development, county officials announced Monday.

Billed as what will be the nation’s greenest arena with net-zero energy impact, the venue is set to be part of a multiuse community with a focus on environmental sustainability at the intersection of Interstates 95 and 295 at East Parham Road, the former home of Best Products’ headquarters. Design of the arena is expected to be finished this fall, and construction is scheduled to start in early 2024, with completion in 2026, according to Monday’s announcement. GreenCity was announced in December 2020.

The county will issue and sell bonds to finance the arena, and on-site revenue will be used to pay them off. In January, the county Board of Supervisors established the GreenCity Community Development Authority to issue bonds and finance public infrastructure at the 204-acre property; the authority will have its own board, and JPMorgan Chase & Co. is expected to lead underwriting, the county said.

Officials from Henrico County, ASM and GreenCity developers didn’t specify particular music acts or sports that will be part of the arena’s schedule, but Liam Thornton, ASM’s executive vice president of development, said the company “believe[s] this is an optimal location for a new arena,” as it’s right off of I-95 and convenient for touring shows.

Michael Hallmark, a GreenCity Partners LLC principal and the project’s main developer, noted that many musical acts have become more environmentally conscious and would be interested in performing at the arena. He added that developers expect to be able to capture rainwater for future use and process organic waste on-site, part of the arena’s sustainability efforts.

Hallmark, an architect who has built other arenas, said that although the arena is the highest-profile part of the GreenCity project, it “is part of a much larger mosaic” and will not just consist of “a one-off arena and a parking lot.” The project is also expected to include two hotels with 600 rooms, about 2.2 million square feet of office space, 280,000 square feet of retail space, 2,100 residential units and green space and plazas. The entire development is expected to be finished by 2033 or 2034, officials have anticipated.

“It’s a beautiful development plan, impressive at every level,” ASM Global President and CEO Ron Bension said in a statement. “GreenCity offers tremendous synergies for the talent we hope to attract as well as the corporate partners we believe will be eager to be a part of this exciting project.”

ASM runs more than 300 stadiums, arenas and other venues around the world, including Charlottesville’s John Paul Jones Arena and Richmond’s Altria Theater and Dominion Energy Center in Virginia.

 

Petersburg casino bill passes Va. House

The Virginia House of Delegates narrowly passed a bill Tuesday that would allow Petersburg residents to vote on a casino referendum this fall. The legislation moves next to the Virginia State Senate, where a similar bill died in committee.

Del. Kim Taylor, R-Dinwiddie, sponsored HB 1373, which passed 49-44 in the full House vote, with one delegate abstaining. Tuesday is the last day before crossover, when bills passed by each legislative body move to the other chamber for consideration. Sen. Joe Morrissey, D-Richmond, was chief patron of the Senate bill, which failed in a narrow vote last week in the Senate Finance and Appropriations committee.

Taylor said on the House floor Tuesday that the measure, which would prevent Richmond from holding another casino referendum until Petersburg residents have had a chance to vote, would mean “economic independence” for Petersburg, which has come close to bankruptcy in recent years. She noted that the average annual income in Petersburg is about $26,000, while jobs at a proposed casino would be in the $60,000-per-year range.

“This bill is about raising the per capita income in my city,” she said.

Petersburg City Council members signed a commitment with Baltimore-based commercial real estate company The Cordish Cos. in October 2022 to develop a Live! Casino & Hotel resort, pending passage of state legislation and Petersburg voters’ support of a casino referendum this fall. Cordish officials have promised to spend $1.4 billion to build a casino, hotel and parking garage, as well as a multiuse development on the surrounding 90 acres, producing 1,800 direct jobs. However, Maryland-based Cordish, which has developed casinos across the mid-Atlantic and Florida, said it is not interested in developing a casino if Petersburg and Richmond both received a legislative green light to build casinos.

“We are excited Petersburg residents are one step closer to a better economic future,” Zed Smith, Cordish’s chief operating officer, said in a statement Tuesday.  “We are hopeful this progress will continue favorably to allow Petersburg, an economically distressed city whose residents have suffered for years from a lack of investment, an opportunity to hold a local referendum and vote on a $1.4 billion transformative, privately funded development that will benefit the city for generations to come.”

Richmond officials, who have backed a second chance at passing a referendum to allow construction of Urban One Inc.’s proposed $565 million ONE Casino + Resort in the city’s South Side, oppose the bill. In November 2021, Richmond voters defeated a referendum that would have allowed the casino to be built.

Del. Mark Sickles, D-Springfield, was the only Democrat to support the bill in the House Appropriations committee last week, along with 11 Republicans. He said on the House floor Tuesday that the measure has “been presented as a zero-sum game, and I don’t really like it,” and noted that a study by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (JLARC) said that both Richmond and Petersburg could potentially support casinos.

Sickles also said that Taylor’s bill’s passage in the Senate is “questionable,” given the defeat of Morrissey’s bill, but he said he would support the measure to keep the possibility of a Petersburg referendum alive.

Morrissey’s Petersburg casino bill fails in Senate Finance

Updated Friday, Feb. 3

With an 7-8 no vote Thursday evening, the Virginia Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee killed state Sen. Joe Morrissey’s measure to bring a casino referendum to Petersburg’s ballots this fall. A similar bill in the House of Delegates, however, is still alive.

A few days after receiving support from the Senate gaming subcommittee and the General Laws and Technology Committee, which sent the bill to Senate Finance with an 11-4 vote Wednesday, eight senators — Republicans and Democrats — voted ‘no’ on a motion to report the bill for a Senate floor vote. Seven others voted to send the bill on for a full Senate vote.

As the matter stands, Petersburg could still have a referendum for a $1.4 billion casino development this fall, or Richmond voters could vote a second time on a proposed casino.

Although the measure took about five minutes in the busy finance committee agenda, supporters and opponents of a Petersburg casino came out in force to testify at the gaming subcommittee meeting last week. Morrissey’s bill would have added Petersburg to the list of cities eligible to host a casino in the state, and it effectively would have prevented Richmond from holding a second casino referendum vote this fall, following a 2021 defeat.

Del. Kim Taylor’s bill, which also adds Petersburg to the list of five eligible cities and would not allow Richmond to hold a referendum, was reported to the House Appropriations committee by a General Laws subcommittee this week in a 5-2 vote. On Friday, the House Appropriations committee voted 12-9 to send the bill to a full vote. One Democrat, Del. Mark Sickles, joined Republicans in voting yes on the motion.

According to the state Department of Planning and Budget, the proposed legislation would not have an impact on state spending, but additional Virginia Lottery and Petersburg staffing and operational spending would be necessary.

Most opponents to the bills are city of Richmond officials, who have backed a second chance at passing a referendum to allow construction of Urban One Inc.’s proposed $565 million ONE Casino + Resort in the city’s South Side.

Boosters of the bills are mainly Petersburg officials; Petersburg City Council signed a commitment with Baltimore-based commercial real estate company The Cordish Cos. in October 2022 to develop a Live! Casino & Hotel resort, pending passage of Morrissey’s and Taylor’s bills and Petersburg voters’ support of a casino referendum this fall. Cordish officials have promised to spend $1.4 billion to build a casino, hotel and parking garage, as well as a multiuse development on the surrounding 90 acres, producing 1,800 direct jobs. The Maryland-based company, which has developed casinos across the mid-Atlantic and Florida, said it is not interested in developing a casino if Petersburg and Richmond both got the green light to build casinos.

“We will continue to work with local leaders and members of the General Assembly to bring a transformative urban revitalization project to Petersburg that will generate desperately needed new jobs for Petersburg, along with substantial additional tax revenue for the city and commonwealth,” Zed Smith, Cordish’s chief operating officer, said in a statement Thursday night.

When the state legalized commercial casinos in 2020, it limited the options for casinos to one facility apiece in five economically disadvantaged cities — Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond. Morrissey and other proponents of a Petersburg casino said that the city — which has suffered serious financial setbacks in recent decades — deserved a chance to bring in a casino before giving Richmond a second bite at the apple.

“Petersburg was much more of a natural fit,” Morrissey said in a November 2022 interview with Virginia Business. “The casino legislation was to help struggling cities in the commonwealth, not counties or cities that were going gangbusters. You had to work to construct language that allowed Richmond to fit into one of the five host cities.”

Morrissey and Taylor’s staffs did not respond to requests for comment Thursday evening.

Members only

Credit unions in Virginia would like to grow their membership, but a rule change relaxing the state’s policy is not in the cards this spring.

This year’s short General Assembly session — in an election year with a split legislature — makes it harder to pass bills with any controversial elements, and any major expansion of membership at credit unions will bring opposition from community banks. Under state law, credit unions cannot add more than 3,000 members at once without approval from the State Corporation Commission.

“Given the political circumstances, it’s unlikely we will see that this session,” says Carrie Hunt, president and CEO of the Virginia Credit Union League, an advocacy organization for Virginia-based credit unions, both state- and federally chartered.

“We’re still fishing for the federal legislation,” she adds, referring to a bill working its way through the U.S. Senate that would expand credit union fields of membership, or the legal definition of who is eligible to join a particular credit union under its charter. “It hinges on that.”

Meanwhile, Hunt says, “A lot of what we’re doing is … [playing] defense during the [state] legislative session.”

The same could be said, though, for Virginia’s community banks, which won a three-year battle against the credit union industry last August after the SCC ruled that the Virginia Credit Union could not expand its membership to the Medical Society of Virginia, which would have included up to 10,000 people.

The dispute arose in 2019, when the state Bureau of Financial Institutions approved Virginia Credit Union’s request to offer membership to MSV members. The Virginia Bankers Association and seven community banks appealed to the SCC in protest, arguing that the credit union — which at more than 300,000 members and $5 billion-plus in assets is larger than many smaller banks — would have too great an advantage over community banks.

Bruce Whitehurst, president and CEO of the VBA, said in December 2022 that the MSV expansion could have meant up to 40,000 new credit union members, if the 10,000 physicians and their family members all joined Virginia Credit Union — a move he says would have been a threat to banks. “The banking industry is never going to be OK with expansion,” he says, “unless it’s a level playing field.”

But Hunt, who joined VACUL in 2021 after a tenure as executive vice president of government affairs and general counsel for the National Association of Federally-Insured Credit Unions, says that credit unions are “not a competitive threat to banks. Bigger banks are a threat.”

Virginia Bankers Association President and CEO Bruce Whitehurst says the banking industry is “never going to be OK” with credit union expansion without an even playing field. Photo by Caroline Martin
Virginia Bankers Association President and CEO Bruce Whitehurst says the banking industry is “never going to be OK” with credit union expansion without an even playing field. Photo by Caroline Martin

Fixing financial deserts

In June 2022, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Financial Services Racial Equity, Inclusion, and Economic Justice Act. Sponsored by U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-California, the act is intended to increase access to financial services in underserved communities. An identical bill was introduced in the Senate in September 2022 by U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, D-California, but was paused in committee. “I am proud to introduce this legislation to allow all federally chartered credit unions to expand their field of membership to underserved areas from the credit union member business lending cap,” Padilla said on the Senate floor.

Supported by the Credit Union National Association, the legislation would allow federally chartered credit unions to add underbanked areas to their fields of membership. It expands the definition of “underserved” to include any area more than 10 miles from a financial institution’s branch office. With banks closing many physical branches in response to the growth of electronic banking, CUNA says that more than 750 census tracts in the U.S. are now “financial deserts.”

“I would love for everyone in the commonwealth to have the opportunity to join a credit union,” Hunt says. “There are many people in banking deserts in the state.”

Also, she says, banking and credit union legislation often have bipartisan support, although in the divided U.S. and Virginia legislatures, “it tends to take longer to debate issues. It’s more an issue of priority-setting.”

Whitehurst agrees: “In Virginia, we’ve enjoyed the ability to work on both sides of the aisle. There tends to be a lot of agreement on economic issues.”

Often, state-chartered credit unions seek the same powers as their federally chartered peers after passage of federal legislation. In the 2022 General Assembly session, Del. Jeion Ward, D-Hampton, sponsored HB 1314, allowing any state-chartered credit union to expand its field of membership to include individuals and organizations in one or more underserved areas. The bill was continued to the 2023 session by the House Commerce and Labor Subcommittee.

Giving no ground

Whitehurst says that banks would only accept a major change in field of membership expansion if state-chartered credit unions are taxed — and in Virginia, credit unions could switch to federal charters to avoid new taxes, he notes. “You’ve got something that’s broken from a policy perspective.” Credit unions do not have to pay federal or state corporate income taxes, while banks in Virginia do, although credit unions are responsible for paying real estate and personal property taxes, the VACUL notes.

That’s the crux of the banks’ argument, that nonprofit credit unions operate under easier rules than community banks do, with a much lower tax burden. “Credit unions are exempt from some regulatory measures,” says Steve Yeakel, president and CEO of the Virginia Association of Community Banks. “We feel like they’re moving away from their original charter.”

Yeakel adds that he sees credit unions gaining enormous financial ground on banks in recent years. In 1934, the Federal Credit Union Act was signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, authorizing federally chartered credit unions, and state-chartered credit unions were founded before that, including the Virginia Credit Union, chartered in 1928 by a group of state employees. As member-owned, not-for-profit financial cooperatives, credit unions offer similar services as banks, but tout a broader range of loans and savings services at a cheaper cost to members.

Traditionally, credit unions were open only to people with the same employer or residents in the same community or state. However, in the 1980s, federal and state-chartered credit unions began to gain more flexibility in accepting members, leading to larger memberships and assets, while still bypassing corporate income taxes. Today, Yeakel says, some credit unions can undertake major financing deals that many bankers view as a departure from credit unions’ initial missions.

As an example, he points out that McLean-based Pentagon Federal Credit Union, aka PenFed, is partnering with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. on an $847 million private construction loan for The Wharf, a waterfront development in Washington, D.C. Also, in other states, credit unions have purchased community banks, making 13 acquisitions nationwide during 2022.

Despite these disputes, the short General Assembly session — with a divided legislature facing elections this fall — is largely a time to let sleeping dogs lie, Whitehurst says. “In a short session, [legislators] don’t like to see industry vs. industry.”

Crypto and cannabis

If the central question of membership expansion is on hold, that doesn’t mean all banking legislation is. For instance, Hunt’s paying close attention to credit unions’ rights regarding cryptocurrencies.

According to CUNA, “even in a more regulated, consumer-friendly form, digital assets such as stablecoins and retail digital currencies represent an existential threat to credit unions’ deposit funding.”

In essence, cryptocurrencies don’t fall under the governance of the Federal Reserve to authenticate value or regulate transfers, although the Biden administration and members of Congress are taking action to rein in the growing industry.   

Following the late 2022 implosion of crypto exchange FTX, in which founder Sam Bankman-Fried was indicted on money laundering charges and federal fraud offenses, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D- Massachusetts, and U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kansas, filed legislation in December 2022 to close some loopholes in cryptocurrency that create security risks related to international money laundering.

Meanwhile, in Virginia, banks gained the right in July 2022 to provide customers with “virtual currency custody services” — in other words, cryptocurrency assets that exist only on a blockchain — as long as the banks have proper risk-management protocols.

Hunt says one of her goals is to achieve similar state legislation for Virginia-chartered credit unions. According to the National Credit Union Administration, federal credit unions can use distributed ledger technology used to support cryptocurrencies if they stay within federal regulations. A House of Delegates bill permitting credit unions to provide cryptocurrency services passed unanimously in the Committee on Commerce and Energy in mid-January.

Other areas of legislative interest for banks and credit unions include marijuana legislation, both federal and state-level, particularly regarding financial institutions. A major issue for banks and credit unions is the risk of criminal prosecution under federal laws if they allow marijuana businesses to create banking accounts. At the end of 2022, the Senate failed to pass the Secure and Fair Enforcement Banking Act, which would have created a safe harbor for such transactions. The bill has bipartisan support and proponents are hopeful it will pass in 2023.

In 2023, Virginia’s General Assembly is expected to take up some medical marijuana legislation, although full regulation of
retail marijuana sales is likely to be put on
pause until 2024, lawmakers have said. A bill filed by Republican Del. Keith Hodges would permit the Virginia Cannabis Control Authority to issue marijuana retail licenses in July 2024, and in July 2023, some pharmaceutical and industrial hemp processors would be allowed to sell cannabis products to adults age 21 or older. A second House bill would allow the authority to issue marijuana licenses as soon as Jan. 1, 2024, but no sales could occur before Jan. 1, 2025.

Cybersecurity and private deposits are also important matters for credit unions, notes Brian Schools, president and CEO of Virginia Beach-based Chartway Federal Credit Union, a federally chartered institution that’s also a VACUL member. In December 2022, VACUL members met with Gov. Glenn Youngkin to discuss an array of subjects, including membership growth, cryptocurrency and the possibility of allowing state-chartered credit unions to accept municipal deposits. It’s a VACUL priority to authorize state credit unions to hold public deposits, just like federal credit unions and banks already can.

Hunt says that credit card fraud costs are also a significant issue for credit unions, which pay part of the fees to customers who were victims of fraud, along with the card companies, but fraud impacts all financial institutions.

According to a September 2022 study by fraud prevention software company Featurespace and payments news site PYMNTS, 62% of all financial institutions reported an increase in fraudulent transactions in 2021 and 2022, but smaller banks and credit unions — holding between $5 billion and $25 billion in assets — suffered the most, incurring higher costs per incident. About 66% of smaller institutions reported such transactions.

As for banks, “we are tracking what may or may not happen with corporate income tax,” Whitehurst says. In December 2022, Youngkin proposed a corporate tax cut from 6% to 5%, as well as a 10% income tax deduction for small businesses. 

Making strides

Black History Month traces its origins to an annual weeklong observance started in 1926 by historian and scholar Carter G. Woodson, a Virginia native. And since then, the February celebration of Black history makers and events has been intertwined with commemorating successful business icons like fellow Virginia-born greats Maggie Walker and Booker T. Washington.

With this in mind, Virginia Business presents our 2023 Virginia Black Business Leaders Awards, recognizing a reader-nominated group of some of the state’s most accomplished Black executives. On this inaugural list are 17 leaders, chosen from 108 nominated executives in finance, federal contracting, higher education, law, technology and other sectors. Our editorial team selected the 17 winners, scoring nominations based on factors including overall professional achievement, community impact and mentoring.

Additionally, Virginia Business’ editors selected four of these 17 award-winning executives for additional recognition as inaugural members of our Virginia Black Business Leaders Hall of Fame, celebrating their outstanding careers and general excellence in business leadership. Our 2023 Hall of Fame members are: Gilbert Bland of the Urban League of Hampton Roads; Victor Branch of Bank of America; Victor O. Cardwell of Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black; and Warren Thompson of Thompson Hospitality Corp. 

In this feature, you’ll read about our winners’ influences, what they’ve learned in the professional world and how they continue to pay that knowledge forward to others.

Congratulations to all the winners of our 2023 Virginia Black Business Leaders Awards!

Click on the names to read more about our winners. 

KEN AMPY

CEO,  Astyra Corp., Richmond

 

 


AISHA BOWE

Founder and CEO, STEMBoard, Arlington

 

 


CHANDRA BRIGGMAN

President and CEO, Activation Capital, Richmond

 

 


MARCIA CONSTON

President, Tidewater Community College, Norfolk

 

 


THOMAS HASTY

Senior executive vice president and chief regulatory and risk management officer, TowneBank, Suffolk

 

 


FLOYD E. MILLER II

President and CEO, Metropolitan Business League, Richmond

 

 


ANGELA D. REDDIX

Founder, CEO and president, ARDX; founder, Envision Lead Grow, Norfolk

 

 


SHARON SMOOT

President, BWXT Nuclear Operations Group Inc., Lynchburg

 

 


FRED THOMPSON JR.

Chief administrative officer, Thompson Hospitality Corp.; co-founder, Opportunity Scholars and the Global Good Fund, Reston

 

 


RICHMOND VINCENT JR.

President and CEO, Goodwill Industries of the Valleys, Roanoke

 

 


KEVIN M. WIDEMAN

CEO, Koniag Government Services, Chantilly

 

 


JOSEPH D. WILKINS

President, Bon Secours St. Francis Medical Center, Chesterfield County

 

 


CATHY T. WILLIAMS

Business diversity and government administration manager, Ferguson Enterprises Inc., Newport News

 

 


VIRGINIA BLACK BUSINESS LEADERS HALL OF FAME

GILBERT BLAND

President, chairman and CEO, Urban League of Hampton Roads; founder and chairman, The GilJoy Group, Norfolk

 

 


VICTOR BRANCH

Richmond market president, Bank of America, Richmond

 

 


VICTOR CARDWELL

Chairman, Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black, Roanoke

 

 


 

WARREN THOMPSON

Founder, president and chairman, Thompson Hospitality Corp., Reston

 

 

 

Petersburg casino bill moves to Senate committee

A Virginia State Senate bill that would allow Petersburg residents to vote on allowing a casino in their city is still in play, following a 7-2 vote by the Senate gaming subcommittee Thursday. The bill will progress to a General Laws and Technology committee vote Wednesday.

The bill from Sen. Joe Morrissey, D-Richmond, adds Petersburg to the list of cities eligible to host a casino in the state, and it effectively prevents Richmond from holding a second casino referendum vote this fall, following a Richmond casino referendum’s 2021 defeat. In an interview with Virginia Business in November 2022, Morrissey said a proposed Petersburg casino operated by Maryland-based The Cordish Cos. could bring up to 1,800 jobs to the city, as well as multiuse development of the surrounding 90 acres. According to news reports, the project would involve $1.4 billion in investments over the next 15 years.

Speaking Thursday evening, Morrissey, whose district includes Petersburg, promised music performers like Bruce Springsteen, Snoop Dogg and Carrie Underwood would play the Petersburg casino, which he said would create 1,700 jobs with an average salary of $60,000 in the first phase of the project, including the casino, a hotel and parking garage. He predicted the casino would ultimately create 10,000 jobs, both direct and indirect hires, within a decade of its completion.

Although the Petersburg City Council entered into an agreement with Cordish to develop a casino, Petersburg residents would still need to vote in favor of the referendum for the casino to be built, according to state law, and Morrissey’s bill must pass the General Assembly and be signed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin for Petersburg to be able to place a referendum on ballots this fall. When the state legalized commercial casinos in 2020, it limited the options for casinos to one facility apiece in five economically disadvantaged cities — Bristol, Danville, Norfolk, Portsmouth and Richmond.

Cordish, which operates Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casinos in Hollywood and Tampa, Florida, and developed and operates Live! Casino & Hotel resorts in Maryland and Pennsylvania, has said it is not interested in building a casino in Petersburg if Richmond gets a green light this fall from voters to build a casino.

Petersburg city officials spoke in favor of the bill. “We just believe the time is now,” said City Manager John “March” Altman Jr., for what he described as a “once-in-a-lifetime economic opportunity.”

Cordish’s chief operating officer, Zed Smith, said his company’s officers “are urbanists at heart. Petersburg has struggled for many, many years. This is an opportunity. It gives the citizens of Petersburg the opportunity to move the needle in their own city.”

However, proponents of a Richmond casino, including Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney, oppose Morrissey’s bill because it would prohibit Richmond from holding a second local referendum on the same question “until the other eligible host city” — Petersburg — “has had a reasonable opportunity.”

Four Richmond City Council members and the city’s economic development director, Leonard Sledge, spoke against the bill. Most passionately opposed was council member Reva Trammell, who represents the South Side district where the proposed $565 million ONE Casino + Resort was to be built if its November 2021 referendum had passed.

Trammell said that her district is “struggling. Sen. Morrissey should know that. … I represent mostly brown and Black [people] in my district. … I’m out there taking them food and clothes. We don’t have internet in our house. We don’t have computers. We can’t afford them. What do we do? How do we survive? How do we send our children to school when they don’t have shoes to put on their feet? It breaks my heart. I’m just asking you please, please, give us one more chance.”

A few other speakers opposed the bill for other reasons, including Petersburg resident Lafayette Jefferson, a local NAACP leader who Morrissey had sharp words with last year in an incident at the state Capitol. Morrissey has admitted saying “I’ll rip your heart out of your chest” to Jefferson during an argument.

Jefferson said Thursday that Morrissey’s promise of an average $60,000 salary was “manipulation,” because it didn’t take into account taxes and other deductions. “The take-home [money] will be a lot less.” He also said that Petersburg’s process in choosing Cordish was not transparent, because there was not a public request for proposals. Instead, the city hired a third-party consultant to vet seven companies. Morrissey said later that the process is allowed under current state law, and in Bristol, Portsmouth and Norfolk, city council members chose their casino operators without public input.

Voters in Bristol, Danville, Norfolk and Portsmouth passed casino referendums by wide margins in 2020. Three permanent casinos are now under construction, and Rivers Casino Portsmouth, the state’s first permanent casino, opened Jan. 23.

 

Framatome CEO retiring; CFO to be promoted

Framatome Inc. President and CEO Gary Mignogna will retire July 1, and Chief Financial Officer Katherine Williams will succeed him, the Lynchburg-based nuclear reactor and fuel company announced Tuesday. Mignogna will become chairman of Framatome Inc.’s board upon his retirement.

Williams, who will continue to serve as CFO, has worked for Framatome, a French nuclear reactor company, for more than 20 years. She lived in Paris for seven years while with the company, and as CFO, she manages all Framatome’s financial activities in North America. Williams also serves on the Framatome Inc., Framatome Canada and Isogen boards. Framatome has 14,000 employees worldwide and 1,300 in Lynchburg. Its business includes designing and providing equipment, services and fuel for nuclear power plants.

Gary Mignogna

Mignogna has worked for Framatome and its predecessor, Areva Inc., for 45 years, according to the company’s announcement. A mechanical engineer who earned degrees from Drexel University and an MBA from the University of Lynchburg, Mignogna became president and CEO of Framatome Inc. in 2014. In 2018, its North American headquarters moved from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Lynchburg.

“First, we congratulate Gary as he prepares to transition to a new role and we count on his continued support and counsel. His legacy of thoughtful leadership will be a tremendous asset as chair of the Framatome Inc. board of directors,” Frédéric Lelièvre, senior executive vice president and current chairman of the Framatome Inc. board, said in a statement. “I am confident that the strong leadership that has positioned Framatome as a leader in the U.S. market will continue under Katherine. Her two decades of service to this company exemplify our core values of performance, integrity and passion for the future of nuclear energy.”

In 2021, Framatome Inc. started an independent subsidiary, Framatome U.S. Government Solutions LLC, which focuses on nuclear projects for federal agencies.

Before joining Framatome, Williams worked in financial management at DuPont, Westinghouse and Duke Energy.

$100M donor gift to launch U.Va. biotech institute

The University of Virginia will build a biotechnology institute funded with a $100 million donation from Charlottesville investor Paul Manning and his wife, Diane, the university announced Friday.

Along with the Mannings’ gift, U.Va. will contribute $150 million, and the state has allocated $50 million in initial investments for the institute in its 2022-24 budget, according to the announcement.

The Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology will focus on translational medical research to produce new medical treatments — such as cellular and gene therapies, nanotechnology and immunotherapy — that are expected to treat many different diseases. Although the new facility is expected to open in about four years at U.Va.’s Fontaine Research Park in Charlottesville, UVA Health has begun recruiting researchers who will work in the system’s existing facilities, UVA Health CEO Dr. Craig Kent said in an interview with Virginia Business this week.

Ultimately, Kent expects to hire about 100 scientists, as well as other employees to run the new institute, which will include a biomanufacturing facility about four times the size of UVA Health’s current biomanufacturing center, which is about 7,500 square feet and has researchers studying treatments for type 1 diabetes and Parkinson’s disease. In the new facility, which would provide between 30,000 and 40,000 square feet of lab space, researchers will be expected to test new therapies that could treat multiple diseases. According to U.Va.’s announcement, the institute will “bring together under one roof … high-tech research facilities, state-of-the-art manufacturing capabilities and welcoming patient care space.”

Additionally, Kent said, “we think this could be an incredible economic engine” for the Charlottesville area and beyond, drawing biotech companies. U.Va. is “very anxious to partner with other universities around the state,” such as medical researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University, Virginia Tech and George Mason University, as well as the existing biotech sectors in Richmond and Petersburg, he added.

Dr. Craig Kent, CEO of UVA Health. Photo courtesy UVA Health

U.Va. also aims to collaborate with multiple hospital systems to provide their patients access to treatments undergoing trials; UVA Health purchased the former Novant Health System in 2021 with three Northern Virginia hospitals, and it has an affiliation agreement with Lynchburg-based Centra Health Inc., which has four hospitals in Bedford, Farmville and Lynchburg. Kent said UVA Health is having “similar conversations with other health care companies in the state [to] not duplicate their offerings but make trials available to their patients.”

Virginia could eventually compete with the biotech industry’s hubs in Boston and North Carolina’s Research Triangle, Kent predicted. Charlottesville probably will grow as a result of the institute, he said, “but also this will affect the whole state. I could see biotech growing in all of these areas,” especially in the Richmond and Northern Virginia regions, which are easily accessible from Charlottesville. “Health care is evolving incredibly rapidly now. Knowledge about health and disease is growing, and treatment has changed a lot over the past 10 years. In the end, it’s about the research and the people.”

Discussions about the institute began between the Mannings and U.Va. officials about a year and a half before Friday’s announcement, Kent said, and Paul Manning, whose investment firm PBM Capital has invested in numerous pharmaceutical and life sciences companies, accompanied UVA Health officials to Richmond during the 2022 General Assembly session.

Virginia Senate Majority Leader Dick Saslaw, a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, sought $75 million from the state’s general fund last year “for the initial recruitment of researchers to staff the Institute for Biotechnology,” and ultimately the state allocated $50 million in initial funding for the project in the 2022-24 budget, according to Friday’s announcement. Kent said he hopes the state will spend more on the institute in the future.

“Our goal is to have the best possible medicine — next-generation medicine — for the residents of Virginia and people around the globe,” Paul Manning said in a statement. “We’re building a world-class facility that will compete with anybody … in terms of research, manufacturing and treatment.”

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin was set to attend the announcement Friday afternoon at U.Va.’s Rotunda.

“The announcement of the cutting-edge Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology represents a critical step in Virginia’s rise in the biotech industry,” Youngkin said in a statement. “This major investment will help attract pharmaceutical companies to the commonwealth and further my administration’s commitment to develop a thriving health care system. I’m grateful for Paul and Diane Manning’s generous commitment, which will ensure more Virginians are able to receive the care and treatment right here in the commonwealth.”

The Mannings’ $100 million gift is among the largest private donations in U.Va.’s history, along with a $120 million gift in 2019 from Jaffray and Merrill Woodriff to start the School of Data Science, and David and Jane Walentas’ $100 million gift in 2019, most of which is used for first-generation student scholarships.

The Mannings have made significant philanthropic gifts to U.Va. and the University of Massachusetts Amherst in recent years, including more than $6 million toward diabetes and COVID-19 research at UVA Health and U.Va. Paul Manning, a UMass alum who founded PBM Capital after selling his infant formula company PBM Holdings Inc. for about $808 million in 2010, has served on the UVA Health Foundation board, the U.Va. Strategic Planning Committee and the U.Va. President’s Advisory Committee.

“We live in an incredibly exciting time of discovery in medicine — and the Manning Institute will ensure U.Va. remains at the forefront of research and patient care,” U.Va. President James E. Ryan said in a statement. “Paul and Diane Manning’s extraordinary gift will mean new treatments and therapies for the patients who need them most, and I’m immensely grateful for their generosity and vision. Importantly, this transformational investment in health care for Virginians was also made possible by critical support from Gov. Youngkin and key leaders in the General Assembly.”