Newport News-based construction company W.M. Jordan Co. will team up with a national firm, Suffolk, to build Norfolk’s $500 million HeadWaters Resort & Casino project on the Elizabeth River, according to a Friday announcement from the Pamunkey Indian Tribe, the casino’s operator.
Suffolk, which earns $4 billion in annual revenue and employs 2,500 people in locations across the United States, has built new casinos and made major expansions to others in Florida, Arkansas and the Boston Harbor, and was named the No. 1 hotel sector construction firm in 2020 by Building Design + Construction, a trade publication. Jordan, a familiar name in Hampton Roads, has completed more than 100 projects in the city of Norfolk, including the Hilton Norfolk The Main, Nauticus, Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters and buildings at Old Dominion University, Norfolk State University and Eastern Virginia Medical School.
The Pamunkey tribe, which is partnering with Tennessee billionaire Jon Yarbrough on the casino, said in a statement Friday that Jordan and Suffolk were chosen for their use of local subcontractors and suppliers, and the Norfolk casino contract will require “high participation goals” for Black-owned businesses and Black workers in the construction process.
“This construction team will bring this project to life, one nail at a time. They are known for the quality of their work, and I have confidence they can deliver a magnificent project on schedule,” Pamunkey Chief Robert Gray said in a statement. “Just as important as their commitment to quality work, they are equally committed to providing opportunities for small and minority-owned subcontractors and suppliers to play a significant role in this project.”
The 300-room hotel, casino and entertainment venue is expected to produce at least 2,000 construction jobs. Groundbreaking is set for later this year or early 2022, the tribe has said, with the casino opening scheduled in 2023.
The Branch Group Inc. has sold its Roanoke headquarters building for $2.9 million, Poe & Cronk Real Estate Group announced this week.
The 39,016-square-foot building at 442 Rutherford Ave. will remain as the company’s headquarters in a sale-leaseback transaction that allows the construction company to be a tenant.
The buyer, represented by Matt Huff and Bryan Musselwhite of Poe & Cronk, is CJI Property Holdings LLC, a Roanoke-based business entity and investor.
A former SunTrust Bank branch in downtown Charlottesville was recently sold for $2.53 million, Poe & Cronk Real Estate Group announced this week.
Anchor Charlottesville Office 2 LLC, a business entity connected to Charlottesville-based Anchor Health Properties, purchased the 18,746-square-foot property at 402 Park St. from WGM Acquisitions LLC on Aug. 24, according to city property records. Stephen Pendergrass, a vice president with Poe & Cronk, represented the seller.
The new owner plans to occupy the property, according to Poe & Cronk.
Eupepsia, a 250-acre Ayurveda wellness retreat in Bland County, was named the top wellness hotel in the nation this week by USA Today readers, who chose the resort from nominees selected by editors of USA Today’s 10Best rankings section.
Set near the Jefferson National Forest and the Blue Ridge Mountains, Eupepsia offers vegetarian cuisine, health and fitness-focused programs and a spa with floatation therapy, a salt chalet and hydrotherapy services. The facility opened in 2018 and has 26 guest rooms.
USA Today’s 10Best editors nominated 20 wellness resorts, which were then ranked by popular vote. Ranked below Eupepsia were two resorts in North Carolina and two in Arizona, and one each in the states of South Carolina, California, Vermont, Pennsylvania and Hawaii.
Virginia’s new unemployment claims fell for the second week in a row last week, declining by 20%, the Virginia Employment Commission reported Thursday.
Continued jobless claims also decreased for the filing week ending Sept. 4, down 2,036 claims from the previous week to total 44,435. Initial claims totaled 6,179, down 1,598 claims from the previous week.
Compared to this week last year, initial claims were 45% lower last week than 11,135 recorded the first week of September 2020, and continued claims were 80% lower than 217,485 claims filed last year. People receiving unemployment benefits through the VEC must file weekly unemployment claims in order to continue receiving benefits.
Last week’s new jobless claims brought the total number filed since March 21, 2020, to 1,805,058, according to the VEC.
“For the third straight week, initial claims for unemployment benefits are down from the previous week. While the number of initial claims filed are near a pandemic low, they remain nearly three times higher than the level of claims observed during the comparable week in 2019,” Dominique Johnson, research associate at Old Dominion University’s Dragas Center for Economic Analysis and Policy, said in a statement Friday. “The number of Virginians receiving some form of benefits also declined from the previous week but remain more than 2.5 times above the pre-pandemic levels observed during the comparable week in 2019. Overall, Virginia’s labor market shows continued improvement. Data for July showed Virginia’s labor force rose for the third straight month and the unemployment rate declined to 4.2%.”
Monday was a turning point for unemployed people nationwide, as the federal government’s unemployment benefits stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic came to an end, including the $300 a week supplemental benefit Virginians received via VEC. Also, the federal government’s eviction moratorium ended this month, but Virginia extended its moratorium to June 2022 in August. According to U.S. Census data, Virginia has delivered more rent relief than any other state, having distributed more than 50% of funds received from the federal government.
“The loss of extended benefits come on the heels of an underwhelming August jobs report as the impact of delta variant on the economy becomes more apparent,” Dragas Center Director Robert McNab said in a statement. “The nation added less than 250,000 jobs in August, nearly a quarter of the number of jobs added the previous month. While some might believe the end of the pandemic unemployment benefits will immediately solve hiring problems, it is important to remember that millions of Americans dropped out of the labor force entirely. There were more than five million fewer individuals in the labor force in August 2021 than in the month before the pandemic, February 2020.”
Also, the deadline for VEC’s federal court order to get through a backlog of 92,000 unemployment claims ended Tuesday. The VEC reported it has resolved more than 91,000 of the claims, and U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson ordered the state agency and legal aid groups representing plaintiffs whose claims were delayed to meet before Sept. 25 to create a plan to address further issues.
The majority of the claimants who filed for benefits last week in Virginia reported being in these industries: health care and social assistance; retail; administrative and waste services; and accommodations/food service. The regions of the state that have been most impacted continue to be Northern Virginia, Richmond and Hampton Roads.
Nationwide, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims last week was 310,000, a decrease of 35,000 from the previous week’s revised level. There were 857,896 initial claims in the comparable week last year.
After close to 39 years, the Richmond-based alternative weekly newspaper Style Weekly will shut down this week, Editor-in-Chief Brent Baldwin posted on Style’s Facebook page Tuesday.
The publication’s closing came three years after Norfolk-based Landmark Communications Inc. sold its Virginia newspapers — The Virginian-Pilot, Inside Business and Style Weekly — and their associated businesses for $34 million to Tribune Publishing Co. (then known as Tronc Inc.), which already owned the Daily Press in Newport News, as well as the Virginia Gazette in Williamsburg and the Tidewater Review in West Point.
This May, Tribune Publishing was purchased by hedge fund Alden Global Capital in a $633 million deal that has led to the elimination of more than 250 full-time editorial positions through buyouts offered two days after the finalization of the deal, including at the Pilot and the Daily Press.
Even before Alden’s purchase, Tribune Publishing employment fell by 30%, from 4,114 employees at the end of 2019 to 2,865 at the end of 2020, according to a Chicago Tribune story.
The Virginian-Pilot and Daily Press have decreased their newsroom staffs from 101 full-time employees to 36 workers since September 2018, according to the NewsGuild union. Both newspapers’ offices closed last year, with staff working remotely, and the Pilot’s Brambleton Avenue office in Norfolk, its home for 82 years, was sold to residential developers. Style Weekly, too, closed its office in Richmond’s Manchester neighborhood in 2020, and its full-time staff had dwindled to only four full-time staffers working remotely as of April.
Baldwin’s Facebook message announcing the shutdown was short and did not refer to Alden: “Note from the Editor-in-Chief: Style Weekly will cease publishing after the Sept. 8 edition. We thank our talented staff for their award-winning efforts and our loyal readers for their support. Thank you, Richmond.”
Started as a monthly publication in November 1982, Style later became a free weekly paper covering Richmond beginning in 1984 with its sale to Landmark Communications. An alternative to the two daily newspapers — the Richmond Times-Dispatch and the now-defunct Richmond News Leader — Style introduced personal ads, an extensive events calendar, restaurant reviews and annual arts previews to the city, founding publisher and editor Lorna Wyckoff said in an interview Tuesday with Virginia Business. She started the publication in 1982 at her kitchen table. The first issue was a 16-page paper covering the city’s West End, with a very ’80s-appropriate aerobics cover model.
“It is sad, but I’m also proud of our years and proud of what it became,” said Wyckoff, who remained at the weekly through 1992, when it employed 30 or 40 full-time and part-time staffers and ran issues of about 70 or 80 pages. Still, she noted, “it’s kind of an evolution. I think all of us in media have seen this coming. When you have so many changes of ownership in a short period of time, as they have, I think it’s hard to find your way.”
Style also was the home of the popular “You’re Very Richmond If” and “Best of Richmond” features, and it garnered awards and praise for its feature profiles, news photography and news coverage, even as its full-time staff shrank in recent years. In April, Style won 32 Virginia Press Association News and Advertising Contest awards for its work in 2020, including a best-in-show photography award won by staff photographer Scott Elmquist.
“The real joy is in continuing the jobs we love and serving the community with useful, insightful, locally produced stories,” Baldwin wrote in April, noting the difficulty Style had producing the publication during the COVID-19 pandemic with a small staff. “Doing that takes serious, around-the-clock commitment and determination — not to mention unselfish attitudes focused on the team — in order to steer a small alt. weekly into its 40th year.”
Editor’s Note: Virginia Business Associate Publisher Lori Collier Waran, Editor Richard Foster, Art Director Joel Smith, Graphic Designer Kira Jenkins and Account Manager Toni McCracken all previously worked at Style Weekly.
Stu Shea, chairman, president and CEO of Herndon-based national security contractor Peraton Inc., is overseeing the integration of two recently acquired businesses that marked some of Virginia’s most significant business deals in 2021.
Shea has been included in both editions of Virginia Business’ annual Virginia 500 issue, a compilation of the state’s 500 most powerful and influential leaders in business, government and higher education. The 2021 edition was published in September.
Earlier this year, Peraton completed both the $7.1 billion purchase of Chantilly federal IT contractor Perspecta Inc. and the $3.4 billion acquisition of Northrop Grumman Corp.’s federal IT and mission support services business, with the backing of Peraton parent company Veritas Capital, a New York-based private equity firm.
Shea says the integration of two longstanding companies with different cultures into Peraton, which was created in 2017 after Veritas purchased then-122-year-old Harris Corp. Government Services, has been a challenge — especially amid a worldwide pandemic. He anticipates that Peraton’s workforce of 22,000 will remain steady and ultimately grow over time. In July, the company reorganized its executive team, hiring a chief information officer, chief human resources officer and chief procurement officer.
Shea himself is legendary in the field of national security, having designed some of the CIA’s first computer systems in the early 1980s. He also was instrumental in the split of Science Applications International Corp. into Leidos Holdings Inc. and a new SAIC and later became president and chief operating officer for Leidos Holdings Inc.
Virginia Business:How is the integration going, both with Perspecta and with Northrop Grumman’s division?
Shea: First of all, there is the integration of all the people, places and things, and then there’s the integration of the business, the culture, attitudes and those kinds of things. From an integration standpoint, you always have to worry about, “How do I integrate our IT systems?” That’s going very, very well. “How do I integrate our business processes?” — that’s also going very well.
In our case, because we had “heritage Peraton” and then we immediately began to integrate the Northrop Grumman business and then we added to that the Perspecta business, it got a little complicated. Because Perspecta was a publicly traded company that was highly integrated, we are essentially folding ourselves into their systems. From an IT standpoint, we will get the benefit of a rigorous integrated environment.
The challenge is getting the data from Northrop Grumman, for example, because [NG’s systems are] in a completely different form and format. … They have different tools that they use for their business development. We have different tools here.
We had a lot of commonality, so we’ll integrate all the data. Once we integrate the data, you integrate the business processes that surround that. So, what’s your workflow? How do you go about your business? How do you create decisions? We have 700 [or] 800 policies right now that govern all three companies. I’d like to get that down to a couple of dozen.
As you look forward, you’re going to start making choices and [prioritize] one business over another or assimilate businesses.
That also is what unifies people because now they’re all one team, one mission, one fight, in terms of the business.
VB: You’ve had a lot of different jobs in the intelligence sector. How does this period compare with the rest of your career over the past almost 40 years?
Shea:Yes, wow, 40 years. I feel like I’m old. It’s interesting. Early in [my] career, I always considered myself a dry sponge in a wet environment. I wanted to soak up everything. I wanted to learn from people around me. I wanted to really absorb what they did and get a more comprehensive view of things. As a leader today, my responsibility is to help, train, teach [and] provide that experience to others. It’s
about developing leaders as opposed to becoming one.
Each time in your career that you advance to the next level, you take on a new set of challenges. You have more people. When I had 25 people, I thought it was a really big team. When I had 40,000, I had now reached the point where it was a big team, but it didn’t bother me as much because I had very competent leaders behind me in the organization.
Let’s [look at the] three most difficult jobs in my lifetime. The first was taking [Science Applications International Corp.], which was a publicly traded company, $11 billion, 40,000 people, 450 locations throughout the world, and splitting that into two publicly traded companies. That was considered to be an impossible job because very few companies of that size and magnitude can split. I always had this view: “Be unafraid of the impossible.”
I love jobs that are really hard, but that was a really challenging job because it was to take a single unified culture that had been together for 43 years and convince people there’s two paths, right?
The second part of it is when I stopped working at SAIC and Leidos, and I went from the leader of a 40,000-person company to a single consultant who only worked for [myself], that was a really difficult time. It was a challenge because I no longer had that mass of people behind me.
The third biggest challenge was creating something from nothing. If you think about the current Peraton, it was a divestiture from Harris. It had been the island of misfits. It was all the leftover businesses from all their acquisitions. How do you unify them into a single coherent company that could compete head-to-head with anybody? We’re still on that journey of the last four years [in] integrating Peraton.
VB: Why did you decide to make the big acquisitions of Perspecta and the Northrop Grumman division at the same time? Did it just happen that both opportunities came up now?
Shea: Well, first of all, you only buy companies when they’re available to be bought, right?
Northrop Grumman decided to sell that piece of the business. In the case of Perspecta, the board of directors decided to look at strategic alternatives, which had included a sale. We happen to have been able to purchase them because of the great financial backing by Veritas Capital.
We had always talked about having an opportunity to look at national security in a broader way. The belief that we had wasn’t just national security as defined by defense and intelligence. It was homeland security, it was cybersecurity, it was financial security, it was health security, it was the safety of our citizens.
I used to say that career success is all about three things: hard work, luck and serendipity. My belief is that when you build a company, it’s about the same kind of thing.
VB: What does the atmosphere of federal contract competition look like these days?
Shea: First of all, despite the change in administration, despite COVID and everything else that’s happening … the U.S. government, which is our principal customer, moves at pretty much the same pace over a long period of time. It’s a little bit more like a marathon. It’s not a sprint. They’ll put more money in one area, take some money out, but they are basically pretty stable in terms of the things that they fund.
What we had focused on when we [established] the company were really resilient markets, so things like space, intelligence and cyber. Within those markets, we focused on the really resilient parts or subparts of those markets.
In each of the markets we were in, we tried to take the part that had the least amount of impact to the vagaries of an administration change or Congress change or whatever: health business instead of health IT analytics, refocusing on fraud, waste and abuse inside of the health markets.
I think we are pretty well-positioned in the market. We don’t have a high concentration in any one particular [government branch], nor do we have a high concentration in any one particular program.
VB: With the May hack of Colonial Pipeline, we saw how critical cyber-security is to the nation’s infrastructure. How important is that going to be going forward?
Shea: Yes, so a little history is relevant here. In the space market, for example, there were always people talking about threats to space systems, but it wasn’t until 2007 when the Chinese blew up a satellite in orbit that people began to pay attention. It still took us almost 10 years to react to it. Cyber is the same thing.
People have been complaining about the risk to critical infrastructure like pipelines, electrical grids, waterways, all of those things … for the better part of 15 years, but today, it’s front of mind because of the Colonial Pipeline incident. It’s front of mind because [of] the North Koreans’ [2014] hack into Sony.
It’s an area that’s going to get increased attention, but the reason it’s important today is because it’s not about protecting the system. It’s about protecting our way of life that results from the loss of that system. If somebody hacks a satellite and you lose the ability to use your credit card because all credit card transactions go across satellites, all of a sudden you can’t buy food at the grocery store and you can’t buy gasoline at the gas station because everything that we do is computerized. Everything is all integrated. When you affect our way of life, it becomes important to people.
VB: How do you think robots are going to be part of our lives moving forward, and will they displace human workers in some situations?
Shea: Robots in some form have always been there in some way for the last 25 years, and I think you’ll see a lot more of that. Do I think I’m going to see robots walking through my house and serving dinner anytime soon? No, but I think for many things, I think it’s about replacing things that are just repetitive, menial.
The other thing is the dangerous things. For example, we produce a robot that is used by law enforcement and others for explosives. Robots are good for that because you can always buy another robot. You can’t buy another brother or sister.
Now, it really gets down to the risk and the cost. Is it risky to do? If it is, is it cost-efficient to do it that way? You can build a robot to do anything, but is it cost-effective?
VB: What is your larger goal for Peraton in the next five years?
Shea: What I always wanted to create was a company that was incredibly well-respected, did the very best job, the most important jobs that had to be done, the company that everybody had to count on to be there to do missions of consequence. In other words, if we don’t get it done right, somebody will die.
Whether that’s an emergency system to dispatch ambulances in a major metropolitan area or making sure that our satellites are safe or providing our best cyberdefenses in the world or managing the communications of the president of the United States, those are all things that matter.
I also want a company that is fun to work at, a place that is safe to work at, a place [where] you feel respected and rewarded for being there, and you just love being part of that larger team. If you have this feeling of coming to work every day where the things that you do matter, you love working in the environment that you’re in, you work in a good competitive environment, you’re taken care of as a family member, you’re in a safe work environment.
VB: What’s your office environment right now? Have some people returned to work in person?
Shea: We shut down all our offices [during the pandemic], except for basically people that had to be there because they work in a lab environment or a vault or something. We shut everybody else out because we wanted to protect the few that had to go into work, and everybody else went remote. For example, me, I’m sitting in my basement. This became my home office.
We’re going to start rolling back in people. We’re also going to recognize that this is a new way of life, working remotely. We’re going to actually keep some of our team off-campus. Let them continue to work from home and do that. It obviously becomes a cost savings to us.
Because of the three companies coming together, we clearly have an excess in facility space, so we’re going to do some consolidation, which will [take effect] over the next six to 18 months. I think we’ll be a better place because of it. We’ll have an integrated environment, smaller number of facilities, a lot of flexibility for our employees and [be] a safer place.
VB: Is there anything you’re excited about as you consolidate the three companies?
Shea: Well, first of all, from a cultural standpoint, we have three companies with really long traditions and history. I think bringing those three cultures together is pretty exciting. This will be a very different place because of that legacy.
We can build. We can innovate. We can have the two smartest people in the world come up with some new capability, and then we can drag that capability through subsystems to systems to major defense programs and implementing something on behalf of an entire department or agency because we have the enterprise IT skills. We get to see concept to reality from the core kernel of an idea to having it [become] a way of life for a larger organization. There are very few people that can do that.
I guess I would just say that Peraton is a company that’s like a brand-new startup that’s 125 years old.
In July, Virginia retained its place as CNBC’s Top State for Business, becoming the first state to achieve the honor twice in a row and five times in all. And yet, the commonwealth feels worlds away from July 2019, the last time the cable business news network released its rankings.
Two years ago, Northern Virginia economic development officials and Gov. Ralph Northam were taking a victory lap after landing Amazon.com Inc.’s East Coast HQ2 in Arlington in late 2018, a multibillion-dollar billion project expected to bring more than 25,000 jobs.
This time, the reasons behind the honor are more nuanced. CNBC weighted its rankings toward the cost of doing business, also taking inclusiveness and public health measures into consideration, acknowledging the COVID-19 pandemic and 2020’s nationwide racial justice-focused protests.
Northam, who had his own racial reckoning in February 2019 after a blackface photo on his medical school yearbook pages came to light, has focused the remainder of his term on increasing diversity, equity and inclusion — legalizing marijuana, increasing the state’s minimum wage and overhauling the state’s procurement process to make sure woman- and minority-owned businesses receive equal opportunities to bid and win state contracts.
“Our success is a blueprint for creating a vibrant economic climate in the post-pandemic world — and proves that when you lift everyone up, when you treat people right, and when you celebrate diversity, it’s also good for business,” Northam said in a statement about the CNBC ranking.
There are lingering concerns among CEOs, chambers, business owners and others about the fate of Virginia’s right-to-work law, which is still in place but less secure under Democratic control of the General Assembly and the Executive Mansion. But for now, Virginia is still considered tops for business in the nation, with a highly educated workforce and initiatives in place to train future employees in high-tech and renewable energy jobs, including for the state’s burgeoning wind farm industry.
Also on the way are four casinos, which were approved last November by voters in Bristol, Danville, Norfolk and Portsmouth and are likely to be completed by 2023. The gaming resorts are expected to bring more than $1 billion in total annual revenue, and may be joined by the ONE Casino + Resort in Richmond, which is the subject of a local referendum in November. If passed, it would be the nation’s only Black-owned casino.
A Kansas-based industrial developer has purchased 72 acres in Suffolk for $4.1 million, with plans to construct an 813,721-square-foot logistics center by September 2022.
Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer announced the sale Friday, in which Geoff Poston and Ellis Colthorpe handled negotiations on behalf of the seller, Equus Capital Partners Ltd. The 72.52-acre plot at 150 Judkins Court is zoned for industrial use. The buyer, Flint Development, is planning to build the Class A industrial building, with Kansas-based Davidson Architecture & Engineering and Texas-headquartered CBRE Group Inc. and Richmond’s Timmons Group participating in the project.
According to Flint’s vice president of construction, John Puent, the building does not have any tenants yet and is a speculative project. Construction is planned to begin around Labor Day, pending approval from the city of Suffolk.
Flint, which has other industrial, retail and multi-use projects across the country, also plans to build a 1.1 million-square-foot industrial building in Caroline County, just off Interstate 95 at 0 Carmel Church Loop on 105 acres. That building also is speculative, Puent said, but has interest from multiple companies. He said that Amazon.com Inc. is not among the companies that have expressed interest.
An Army Corps of Engineers approval on the Ruther Glen project is pending, but it is planned also to open in the third quarter of 2022.
The Republican and Democratic candidates for Virginia governor are in a virtual tie, a new poll by the L. Douglas Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University reported Friday.
Democratic former Gov. Terry McAuliffe is polling ahead at 40%, while Republican Glenn Youngkin, former co-CEO of The Carlyle Group, polled at 37% among likely voters. McAuliffe’s 3% lead falls within the poll’s 5.23% margin of error, according to the Wilder School. Another 23% of voters polled said they are undecided or unwilling to vote for one of the two major party candidates. Conducted during Aug. 4-15, the poll questioned 823 Virginia adults about their voting plans.
Democratic lieutenant governor candidate Del. Hala Ayala leads with 39%, compared with 31% for Republican nominee Winsome Sears. Incumbent Attorney General Mark Herring, a Democrat running for his third term, holds the largest lead among the statewide candidates, with 41%, compared with 31% for Republican candidate Del. Jason Miyares.
“As of this survey, there have been no debates between the candidates for governor or lieutenant governor. The gubernatorial candidates are in a virtual dead heat,” former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder said in a statement. “That could change once positions are taken on the issues. The lieutenant governor’s race showing the largest difference could also be affected. The attorney general race has 19% of the voters unwilling to vote for either candidate. Added to the 10% undecided, [that] leaves one-third of the voters who could tighten that contest. How the pandemic affects turnout and enthusiasm energizes voters should be of utmost concern.”
With all 100 state delegate seats up in the air this fall, poll respondents were split when asked which party they would rather see in control of the General Assembly. Democrats received 44% to maintain control, while 40% of those surveyed said they’d rather see Republicans regain power of the state legislature.
The regional breakdown held no big surprises, with McAuliffe holding a large lead in Northern Virginia (51% to Youngkin’s 24%) and Youngkin dominating in the northwestern and Southwest regions of the state with 52% to McAuliffe’s 32%. In Southern and Central Virginia, including the Richmond and Petersburg areas, Youngkin has a slight lead of 34% to McAuliffe’s 32% share, although 33% of voters polled in those regions said they are undecided. In the Hampton Roads region, 42% of voters said they support McAuliffe, and 37% are for Youngkin.
Gov. Ralph Northam, entering the final months of his four-year term, received strong approval numbers for his handling of COVID-19, with 57% of those polled saying he did a good job, although only 47% said he handled health care and racial inequities well.
So far, the two gubernatorial candidates have accepted only two debate invites on the same stage, although Youngkin turned down three opportunities that McAuliffe agreed to, and McAuliffe rejected an invite at Liberty University that Youngkin accepted. The two scheduled debates are set for Sept. 16 at the Appalachian State School of Law and Sep.t 28 for the NOVA Chamber of Commerce/NBC4 debate in Northern Virginia.
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