Lara Fritts has resigned as president and CEO of the Greater Richmond Partnership, according to an email sent to the public-private economic development organization’s investors this week. Her resignation is effective as of Nov. 30, and she will be serving actively in the role until that time, according to a spokesperson.
Fritts joined the organization in August 2019. COO Jennifer Wakefield will serve as interim president and CEO as the partnership’s board launches a search for Fritts’ permanent replacement.
Although the email, which was sent by GRP Chair Leslie Haley on Oct. 19, does not disclose Fritts’ future plans, it says that she has “decided to leave GRP to pursue new professional opportunities which better align with her interests.”
Fritts came to Richmond after a long career in economic development, including as director of the Salt Lake City Department of Economic Development, her most recent position before coming to GRP. She also led economic development efforts in Fairfax County, Washington, D.C., Maryland and Wisconsin, and is a Wisconsin native.
Despite the coronavirus‘ dampening effect on many economic sectors, the greater Richmond area — including the capital city and the counties of Henrico, Chesterfield and Hanover — was ranked as a top location for Gross Domestic Product in Business Facilities magazine in 2020, Fritts noted in an August email newsletter.
During her tenure, SimpliSafe, the producer of self-installed home security systems, announced a $5.5 million customer support operation in Henrico that would produce 572 jobs. Last October, GlaxoSmithKline, the global health care company that merged with Pfizer in 2019, announced it would expand its presence in Richmond and hire 150 people for a research and development hub.
GRP, which has worked with more than 500 companies that have relocated or expanded in the region, collaborated with the Virginia Economic Development Partnership and the city of Richmond to land the project, which is expected to cost $16.7 million.
Outside of the spotlight, Fritts was credited in Haley’s email with reassessing the partnership’s marketing goals, “outlining how and when GRP would take credit for when projects locate to the region, and reviewing each project to determine if it was truly a new project and then resetting GRP’s goals appropriately.”
“We are thankful for the work Lara has done to help grow our community and to continue to professionalize our economic development organization,” Haley wrote. “We wish Lara continued success in her future endeavors.”
A recently designated Fellow Member of the International Economic Development Council, Fritts was named to Virginia Business’ inaugural Virginia 500 power list in September and spoke about the coronavirus’ impact on the region’s economy in August.
This past fiscal year, Greater Richmond Partnership exceeded its “goals in [economic development] investment,” she said. “We were on a roll, and then we saw it halt. Now we are starting to see activity pick back up.”
Fritts was not available for comment Friday afternoon.
A firm conducting an investigation at Liberty University will use an encrypted website to allow anonymous whistleblower complaints focused on financial misconduct by “current or former members of university leadership,” the university announced Tuesday night.
Chicago-based public accounting firm Baker Tilly US began its probe of the Lynchburg-based Christian university in early September, several days after the resignation of former president and chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr., who resigned following global media coverage of a scandal involving his wife’s affair with a young pool attendant the couple had befriended and aided with a business deal to receive a stake in a youth hostel purchased by Falwell.
Other media reports in recent years indicated that Falwell and family members may have used university real estate deals and other holdings for their own advantage or to assist friends. A 2019 story by Reuters reported that Falwell had approved real estate transactions by Liberty University, which as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit does not pay taxes, that helped his personal fitness trainer, Benjamin Crosswhite, purchase an 18-acre racquet sports and fitness facility from Liberty for $1.2 million. To aid Crosswhite in the acquisition, Liberty provided Crosswhite with a $550,000 loan at 3% and also agreed to lease back tennis courts for $650,000.
Liberty’s board of trustees announced the outside investigation in August, although it did not specify which firm would conduct it. “One of the leading forensic firms in the world has been retained by Liberty University’s Board of Trustees to conduct a thorough investigation into all facets of Liberty University operations during Jerry Falwell Jr.’s tenure as president, including but not limited to financial, real estate and legal matters,” the board said in a statement then.
In an Oct. 20 letter to the university community, the board’s executive committee did not mention Falwell specifically but requested information that “might be useful to this forensic investigation into potential misconduct in business operations of the university and/or any improper decisions or actions by current or former members of university leadership.”
The portal, which uses encryption methods to ensure privacy and allows anonymous reports, “permits the confidential submission and collection of sensitive information from current and former Liberty University management, personnel, contractors and business affiliates.” The university did not specifically mention student input. The site is hosted by a third-party company, EQS Group, and is being operated independent of Liberty, the letter says. It will be open to receive reports for 60 days, through Dec. 20.
Potential whistleblowers should provide information that suggests a current or former member of university leadership engaged in conduct that is “illegal, unethical from a business perspective, or improper in … the operation of a nonprofit organization,” including “self-dealing, kickbacks, embezzlement, misappropriation, problems with data protection or IT security, tax reporting, taking unauthorized actions, usurping business opportunities [and] misuse of university funds/assets,” according to the site.
Former Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr. Photo by Meridith De Avila Khan
In several places, the site says that Virginia law and university policy prohibit retaliation against anyone who makes a report “in good faith” and “cooperates with any subsequent investigation.” Anyone who reports a potential violation should receive a response within 10 working days, the site adds.
On the first page of the reporting form, site visitors must choose a category from the following options: construction, consulting/vendor agreement, donation/contributions, financial reports/tax issue, hiring/retention, investments (endowment and others), real estate (sale/purchase/lease), self-dealing/personal benefit, student finance/accounts and other.
Site visitors also are asked to describe the situation, including the date and all people involved, as well as if it occurred more than once, and if others have direct knowledge of or access to documents related to an incident. The site also asks if the matter was previously reported to the university board, a member of the executive team or senior leadership.
Save 71, a group of Liberty alumni who have been critical of Falwell and the board, responded to the announcement Tuesday night on Twitter, noting that the scope of the investigation is limited to finances and that it will not look into sexual misconduct allegations.
“Baker Tilly is a reputable accounting/consulting firm,” the group wrote. “But that doesn’t mean this investigation will solve LU’s problems. To anyone who may wish to fill out a report: Read the privacy policy very carefully first. We trust Baker Tilly, but we do not trust the men who hired them.”
Falwell was the subject of an August Reuters report alleging that he and his wife, Becki Falwell, had been involved in a years-long sexual relationship with Giancarlo Granda, which began in 2012 when the former pool attendant was 20. Granda said in an interview with Reuters in August that he had an affair from 2012 to 2018 with Becki Falwell and that Jerry Falwell Jr. participated by watching them have sex, an allegation Falwell denied, although Falwell acknowledged his wife had an “improper relationship” with the now-29-year-old Miami man. Granda also managed a Miami Beach youth hostel that a shell company under Jerry “Trey” Falwell III’s name purchased in 2013 for $4.65 million. According to a 2017 Politico article, Falwell III was given the money to purchase the property by his father. There is no indication that any Liberty funds were used in the transaction and Falwell Jr. said in a 2018 affidavit that he invested $1.8 million of his personal funds into the project. A representative for the Falwells told Reuters that the family gave Granda a stake in the hostel in exchange for managing it.
Falwell has claimed that Granda was attempting to extort money from his family by threatening to go public with his accusations, a charge that Granda denies.
The state’s COVID-19 positivity rate increased last week to 5%, up from 4.5% on Oct. 12. According to the Virginia Department of Health, the state recorded 7,258 new cases and 96 more coronavirus-related deaths over the past week.
Virginia has 166,828 total COVID cases since the pandemic started, as well as 3,457 deaths, as of Oct. 19.
The Lenowisco Health District — which covers Lee, Scott and Wise counties and the city of Norton — saw its positivity rate rise to 11% as of Oct. 15, up from 5.6% on Oct. 9. Including Franklin, Henry and Patrick counties and the city of Martinsville, West Piedmont Health District’s rate reached 11.2% on Oct. 15, up from 10% on Oct. 8.
Several Virginia universities report COVID-19 rates among students, faculty and staff members, although some universities use different reporting metrics and methods. Here are the most current university stats:
James Madison University: 1,585 total cases since July 1. The overall positivity rate of student tests at the university’s health center is 3.3% as of Oct. 18.
Virginia Tech: 1,302 positive tests since Aug. 3, with 74 new cases from Oct. 12 to Oct. 18. The seven-day moving average positivity rate as of Oct. 18 is 10.57%.
University of Virginia: 1,022 positive cases among students and employees reported since Aug. 17. The university recorded 59 new cases from Oct. 9-15, according to its tracker.
Virginia Commonwealth University: 318 total positive tests, including 287 student cases, as of Oct. 16. According to prevalence testing, the positivity rate is 0.32% as of Oct. 19.
Old Dominion University: 142 positive cases out of 4,461 tests performed as of Oct. 18. From Oct. 11-17, there were 21 new positive tests.
George Mason University: 96 positive cases among students and employees between Aug. 17 and Oct. 15.
Radford University: 430 total positive cases among students and employees as of Oct. 13, with 17 new cases since Oct. 6. Cumulative positivity rate is 10% as of Oct. 13. The dashboard is updated each Tuesday.
Liberty University: 122 positive cases from Sept. 30-Oct. 13 among students and staff, out of a total 573 cases between Aug. 16-Oct. 13.
These are the 10 Virginia localities that have seen the most cases in the state, as of Oct. 19:
Globally, there are 40.1 million reported COVID-19 cases and 1,115,521 confirmed deaths as of Oct. 19. The United States, which has the most confirmed cases and deaths worldwide, has seen 8.16 million confirmed cases so far, with 219,811 deaths attributed to the coronavirus since February.
Holly Koons has been named the inaugural executive director of the Christopher Newport University Fine Arts Center, which is scheduled to open next year, the Newport News-based university announced Wednesday. Koons was most recently executive director of the Arlington Arts Center and will start her new position Oct. 15.
“I am honored to join Christopher Newport University and this marvelous new chapter in the cultural life of the campus and the Hampton Roads community,” Koons said in a statement. “Christopher Newport’s commitment to the Fine Arts Center elevates the importance of the visual arts within the tradition of a liberal arts education and acknowledges the powerful role the visual arts play in building community by fostering critical thinking, cultural engagement and lifelong creativity.”
Before joining the Arlington Arts Center four years ago, Koons held leadership positions with the Greater Reston Arts Center and the Telfair Museums in Savannah, Georgia. A graduate of the University of Georgia and the University of Notre Dame, Koons will lead programming and exhibits at the nearly $60 million facility adjoining the Ferguson Center for the Arts. The center will start offering programs and classes in summer 2021 and plans an inaugural exhibit in the fall semester.
A federal judge granted a two-day extension for Virginians to register to vote Wednesday, ruling that the Virginia Department of Elections must allow registration to continue through 11:59 p.m. Thursday.
On Tuesday morning, the original deadline for Virginians to register to vote, a road crew in Chesterfield County accidentally cut a 10-gigabyte circuit, resulting in the shutdown of many key state websites, including the Virginia Department of Elections, the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Virginia Employment Commission.
The elections site was restored before 4 p.m. Tuesday, allowing state residents access to an online portal where they could register to vote before the original 11:59 p.m. deadline. Local registrars’ sites also were affected.
However, several voting rights groups filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday night to extend the deadline by 48 hours and also add a one-day extension to Virginia’s early voting period, which ends Oct. 31. A hearing was set 9 a.m. Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. Attorney General Mark Herring filed a proposed consent decree to extend the deadline to Thursday at midnight, as well as notifying the public of the reopening and extension of the registration period and providing Virginians with more information about alternative methods to register, if there is a system outage during the extension.
Gov. Ralph Northam said Tuesday afternoon that he doesn’t have the authority to extend the deadline for Virginians to register to vote, but that a court could. He said he would support an extension.
“We have been exploring all of our options to extend the voter registration deadline. That deadline is set in our code, and it does not appear that I have the authority to change it,” Northam said during his Tuesday news conference — his first public appearance since testing positive for COVID-19 late last month. “That is up to the courts.”
The Virginia Civic Engagement Table, New Virginia Majority, League of Women Voters of Virginia, Advancement Project National Office and the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law filed the injunction suit against the state Department of Elections, the State Board of Elections and elections commissioner Christopher Piper.
“The commonwealth failed the public, and it must grant a significant extension to ensure all Virginians are given an equal opportunity to exercise their fundamental right to vote,” said Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, which filed a suit in 2016 when an unknown number of Virginians were unable to register to vote because the elections site was overwhelmed. “Extending the registration deadline is a commonsense step that can be taken to address the potential disenfranchisement of thousands of eligible people across Virginia. This now marks two presidential election cycles in a row in which the state’s registration system has collapsed and we hope that this will counsel in favor of stronger systems and backstops to prevent mass disenfranchisement in the future.”
Some people attempting to vote earlier in the day were offered only provisional ballots, according to the groups. The suit requests one more day of early voting to provide adequate relief for the impacted voters, as well as “affirmative steps” to make sure the provisional ballots cast Tuesday are counted.
The timing was especially bad, as Virginia has seen a significant uptick in early voting and requests for absentee ballots; earlier this year, the General Assembly passed new policies allowing no-excuse absentee voting and extended early voting from Sept. 18 to Oct. 31. According to state officials, about 887,000 people in Virginia have already cast their votes in person, by mail or by delivering their ballot to a registrar’s office for the Nov. 3 general election. Oct. 23 is the last day to request an absentee ballot.
According to a news release from the Virginia Information Technologies Agency (VITA), the Verizon fiber was struck during work on a county roadside utilities project in Chester, near VITA’s headquarters, the Commonwealth Enterprise Solutions Center. Repair work continued Tuesday afternoon. The circuit was installed this spring to allow more robust internet speed for state websites after most state employees moved to virtual work during the pandemic.
Secretary of Administration Keyanna Conner said that backup circuits in place before this spring are not as large as the one that was damaged, so several state websites were slowed down, including key public sites such as DMV and unemployment insurance.
In other news, Northam said that he was thankful that both he and first lady of Virginia Pam Northam both had only mild symptoms from the couple’s recent bout with COVID-19. He also said that 65 staff members with whom the Northams had come into close contact had tested negative for the coronavirus. The governor thanked the Richmond Department of Health for leading the contact tracing effort, which included people in seven health districts, after the Northams tested positive on Sept. 25.
Northam attributed the lack of COVID-19 spread to his administration’s continuous use of masks and other safety precautions, and warned Virginians to not be “cavalier” about the virus.
Six men charged with plotting to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer also discussed kidnapping Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, according to an Associated Press report Tuesday. In a statement responding to the report, Northam’s office blamed President Donald Trump‘s “LIBERATE VIRGINIA” tweet in April for “encouraging violence against those who disagree with [Trump].”
During a Tuesday news conference about COVID-19, Northam emphasized that he and first lady Pam Northam were safe: “There is no imminent danger to me or my family.” Northam added that he would not work “under a cloud of intimidation,” noting that he served in the military during the first Gulf War, and that there were also threats made against him in January, during a large gun-rights rally that took over downtown Richmond.
“What is different now, which is concerning to me, is that the people who are making comments and rhetoric about elected officials — these threats are not coming from another country; they are coming from Washington, which I regret, and that needs to stop.”
An FBI agent who was part of the investigation into the antigovernment paramilitary group testified during a Grand Rapids, Michigan, federal court hearing that the men charged in the Michigan plot also also mentioned other possible targets, including “taking a sitting governor, specifically … the governor[s] of Michigan and Virginia, based on the [coronavirus] lockdown orders.”
Special Agent Richard Trask did not mention Northam’s name but added that members of the group — including seven other men who face state terrorism charges — were upset with the two Democratic governors’ restrictions on large gatherings and shutdowns of businesses and schools due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Northam’s office issued a statement earlier Tuesday: “The FBI alerted key members of the governor’s security team throughout the course of their investigation. Per security protocols for highly classified information, neither the governor nor other members of his staff were informed. At no time was the governor or his family in imminent danger.”
The statement went on to add that “enhanced security measures have been in place for Gov. Northam and his family for quite some time, and they will remain.” Northam’s office also laid responsibility for the paramilitary group’s plot at the feet of President Donald Trump: “Here’s the reality: President Trump called upon his supporters to ‘LIBERATE VIRGINIA’ in April — just like Michigan. In fact, the president regularly encourages violence against those who disagree with him. The rhetoric coming out of this White House has serious and potentially deadly consequences. It must stop.”
Trump sent an April 17 tweet that read: “LIBERATE VIRGINIA, and save your great 2nd Amendment. It is under siege!”
“Words have meaning to people,” Northam added during his news conference, referring to the tweet. He went on to criticize the White House gathering to celebrate the U.S. Supreme Court nomination of Amy Coney Barrett, in which several unmasked attendees — including the president and first lady and three senators — were later diagnosed with COVID-19. Northam said the case proves that masks help prevent spread of the virus.
In a statement later Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said, “President Trump has continually condemned white supremacists and all forms of hate. Gov. Whitmer, and now Gov. Northam, are sowing division by making these outlandish allegations. America stands united against hate and in support of our federal law enforcement who stopped this plot.”
This month, the president accused Northam of wanting to “obliterate your Second Amendment” and supporting the “execution” of infants, a reference to a controversy dating to Northam’s January 2019 response to a radio host’s question about a late-term abortion bill. Northam has denied that he supports infanticide, which is illegal, or ridding the state of gun rights, although he does support some gun-control measures.
“In a democracy, we do not resolve our differences by violence or threats of kidnapping. We vote,” U.S. Rep. Donald McEachin said in a statement Tuesday. “That’s what has made America a beacon for the world for over 200 years. Let’s all of us, as Americans, commit to keeping that democracy with peaceful resolution of differences.”
Attorney General Mark Herring also issued a statement: “Words have consequences. When we have a president who regularly spews hate and openly incites violence, people can be put in serious danger. From Day One, President Trump has used his platform as commander-in-chief to vilify his opponents and to urge his supporters to go after anyone who may disagree with them, and that includes both state and national leaders. This kind of harmful rhetoric further divides our country and it needs to stop now before more Americans are hurt.”
Virginia saw an increase of 7,013 COVID-19 cases last week, as well as 85 deaths, according to the Virginia Department of Health’s Oct. 12 update. The state’s positivity rate, 4.5%, decreased by 0.3% since Oct. 5.
The state has reported 159,570 total cases and 3,361 fatalities since the pandemic began. Only one health district statewide — Pittsylvania-Danville, at 10%, up from 7.8% on Oct. 1 — recorded a positivity rate 10% or higher on Oct. 8, the most recent recording available. The district reported 52 outbreaks from Oct. 4-10, including 22 at congregate settings, 11 in long-term care facilities, nine at health care settings, five at child care centers, three at colleges/universities and two at K-12 schools.
Meanwhile, the nation’s eyes remained focused on President Donald Trump, who said Sunday he was ready to resume campaign activities after the White House doctor said he could no longer transmit the virus to others. However, Dr. Sean Conley’s statement Saturday did not address whether Trump had recently tested negative for COVID-19, and several questions — including when the president first tested positive — have gone unanswered.
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, who tested positive for COVID-19 about two weeks ago and has been working from his residence, is set to give an update Tuesday on the state’s coronavirus spread.
Several Virginia universities are reporting COVID-19 rates among students, faculty and staff members, although some universities use different reporting metrics and methods. Here are the most current university stats:
James Madison University: 1,549 total cases since July 1. The overall positivity rate of student tests at the university’s health center is 4% as of Oct. 11.
Virginia Tech: 1,210 positive tests since Aug. 3, with 115 new cases from Oct. 5 to Oct. 11. The seven-day moving average positivity rate as of Oct. 11 is 18.14%.
University of Virginia: 963 positive cases among students and employees reported since Aug. 17. The university recorded 123 new cases from Oct. 2-8, according to its tracker.
Virginia Commonwealth University: 298 total positive tests, including 269 student cases, as of Oct. 9. According to prevalence testing, the positivity rate is 0.38% as of Oct. 9.
Old Dominion University: 121 positive cases out of 3,989 tests performed as of Oct. 12. From Oct. 4-10, there were 51 new positive tests.
George Mason University: 87 positive cases among students and employees between Aug. 17 and Oct. 8.
Radford University: 413 total positive cases among students and employees as of Oct. 5, with two new cases since Sept. 28. Cumulative positivity rate is 9.98% as of Oct. 5. The dashboard is updated each Tuesday.
Liberty University: 128 total positive cases from Sept. 24-Oct. 6, out of a total 506 cases between Aug. 16-Oct. 6.
These are the 10 Virginia localities that have seen the most cases in the state, as of Oct. 5:
Globally, there are 37.6 million reported COVID-19 cases and 1,078,699 confirmed deaths as of Oct. 12. The United States, which has the most confirmed cases and deaths worldwide, has seen 7.79 million confirmed cases so far, with 214,985 deaths attributed to the coronavirus since February.
On Virginia’s first state-recognized Indigenous Peoples’ Day, the Pamunkey Indian Tribe announced Monday that its proposed casino in Norfolk would provide between $3.5 million and $4 million each year to the Virginia Indigenous People‘s Trust Fund.
The proposed $500 million casino and resort is on the Nov. 3 general election ballot in the city of Norfolk; if voters approve the plan, the casino would be built on the waterfront near Harbor Park. If the casino moves forward, it would be the only tribe-affiliated commercial casino in Virginia, where four casinos‘ fates are being decided by voters in local referendums next month.
The Pamunkey Tribe, the first of seven Virginia Native American tribes to be federally recognized, falls under state legislation that directs 1% of gaming proceeds from any tribe-operated casino to be given to a fund to assist the other Virginia tribes that are federally recognized.
According to a news release from the tribe, the fund will provide finances for education, housing, health care and business development to the Chickahominy Tribe and the Chickahominy-Eastern Division; the Monacan Indian Nation; the Nansemond; the Rappahannock Tribe Inc.; and the Upper Mattaponi Tribe. In addition to the fund, about $50 million a year will go toward school construction and renovation, focusing on public schools that were constructed more than 50 years ago.
“As the only tribe eligible to operate a casino in the state, we are thrilled with the opportunities our proposed resort and casino can provide other native Virginians,” Pamunkey Tribe Chief Robert Gray said in a statement. “After suffering injustices for hundreds of years, casino gaming in Norfolk will help continue the process of reconciliation for some of the commonwealth’s first disenfranchised groups. We know what this will mean in terms of new opportunities for our tribe, and that’s why we pushed to have a portion of gaming revenue taxes go to a fund to assist the other tribes.”
Ben Stuart will be the eighth dean of Old Dominion University‘s Frank Batten College of Engineering and Technology, effective Oct. 25, the university announced Friday.
Stuart has served as interim dean since June 2019, during which time the university conducted a national search.
“Ben Stuart is a thoughtful leader and distinguished scholar who cares deeply about engineering students,” President John R. Broderick said in a statement. “Under his leadership, I am confident that the College of Engineering and Technology will continue to experience tremendous growth in stature regionally as well as globally.”
Stuart has led or co-led more than $26 million in research projects, primarily in algal biofuels, which has led to three patents, according to ODU. He has served as chief technology officer of ECO2Capture, a startup company that develops and integrates algae cultivation and air pollution control technologies. He also is a past president of the Institute of Biological Engineering and the Virginia section of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and is currently on the Engineering Technology Commission of ABET (Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology), the accreditation organization for engineering and engineering technology programs worldwide.
Stuart is a registered professional environmental engineer in Ohio, and he received his doctorate from Rutgers University’s Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering.
One thing’s for certain: The one-two punch of the U.S.-China tariffs battle followed by the coronaviruspandemic has hurt farmers in Virginia. But opinions are divided on the future of agriculture and forestry in the commonwealth, and which presidential candidate has better policies to protect jobs and profits here.
On the side of Democratic nominee Joe Biden is former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, one of the former vice president’s chief surrogates in Virginia. Calling President Donald Trump “an existential threat” to the nation, McAuliffe blames the president’s “ridiculous trade wars” for hurting Virginia, which saw agricultural exports to China fall from nearly $700 million in 2016 to just $235 million in 2018, he said, citing statistics from the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
Agriculture and forestry, which make up about $91 billion of the state’s economic impact, are the industries most vulnerable to losing income under Trump’s policies, McAuliffe said.
VDACS spokesman Michael Wallace noted that Virginia’s trade situation with China has been “volatile, with agricultural purchases from Virginia slowing and partially rebounding as trade negotiations with the U.S. wax and wane.” The tariff battle is definitely a factor since 2018, he adds, but so has African Swine Fever, which “decimated” China’s pork production, decreasing it by more than 33%. In 2019, total Virginia exports to China were at $394 million, aided by more than $180 million in pork shipments, and from January through August 2020, the total was reported at $387 million, including $248 million in pork exports.
Virginia’s soybean exports to China also have fluctuated a great deal over the past three years, ranging from $360 million in 2017 and $58 million in 2018 to $109 million in 2019. But for the first six months of 2020, soybean exports to China from Virginia brought in just $300,000, down from $18 million in the same period of 2019, Wallace said. Although U.S. soybean sales to China rebounded in July and August, the same cannot be said for Virginia’s soybean exports. According to Wallace, the bulk of U.S. soybean exports came from the Midwest and were shipped out of New Orleans.
“It is difficult to predict or give projections regarding growth in trade with China, given the uncertainties of where things stand relative to the ‘Phase One’ agreement and the associated commitments,” Wallace said.
It is “critical for Virginia” that Biden win the presidential election, McAuliffe said, adding, “Our farmers [and] our exporters cannot stand another four years of Donald Trump.”
However, as one would expect, Trump’s camp argues the opposite. “Virginia’s farmers and manufacturers are reaping the benefits of a level playing field, thanks to President Trump’s work to renegotiate unfair trade deals that shipped jobs overseas,” Trump campaign spokesperson Samantha Cotten said in a statement. “President Trump continues to put American workers first and has delivered on his promises by securing the USMCA and Phase One of a trade deal with China. Meanwhile, Joe Biden wants to hike taxes and give the upper hand to foreign countries with disastrous policies, which will kill jobs across the commonwealth.”
According to U.S. Census data released in September, the nation’s trade gap was at $63.6 billion in July, the highest rate in 12 years, with China responsible for almost half of it — although the Chinese deficit was lower than before. Currently, the U.S. levies 7.5% tariffs on $120 billion in certain Chinese goods and 25% taxes on about $250 billion of Chinese products. Biden has said he will “insist on fair trade” with the Chinese, and his “Made in All of America” plan focuses on making the U.S. less dependent on Chinese imports and creating and maintaining supply chains within the United States. Biden’s plan also calls for the U.S. to impose carbon-based tariffs on countries that don’t meet global climate-change goals.
Some observers and experts say that if Biden wins the presidency, he may have to continue Trump’s tariffs, although Biden suggested earlier this year that he would scrap them. In September, a Biden policy adviser, Jeff Prescott, told CNBC that Biden would consult with other countries on how best to deal with China. Trump’s deal with China, enacted in January, was unilateral.
Proposed and implemented by the Trump administration, the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, known as the USMCA, went into effect in July and replaces the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, which started in 1994, governing trade between the U.S. and its neighbors to the north and south.
Ben Rowe, national affairs coordinator for the Virginia Farm Bureau, says that the USMCA has been a boon for the commonwealth’s farmers and agricultural exporters, despite the prevalence of the Chinese trade wars in the headlines. “We like to talk about China, but at the end of the day, Canada and Mexico are the U.S.’s top two trade partners,” he said, and the new trade deal was “absolutely necessary. The ag industry is rapidly changing, and the NAFTA agreement is more than 20 years old.”
In 2018, Virginia’s top agricultural export markets were Canada, with $342 million in U.S. exports, and China at $235 million, according to VDACS.
Among the changes implemented in the USMCA that benefit Virginia is a less restrictive Canadian dairy market, which now allows more dairy products from the U.S. to enter Canada, Rowe says. Also, under NAFTA, all U.S. wheat imports to Canada were priced as livestock feed, but the USMCA deal changes wheat-grading standards, fetching higher prices for wheat exports to Canada.
As for the trade war with China — which started when President Trump raised tariff taxes on many Chinese imports to the U.S., and China responded with tariffs of its own on U.S. products, including lumber and soybeans, major exports from Virginia — Rowe says the tariffs “have had a particularly dire impact” on producers in Virginia.
Virginia saw a giant decrease in exports to China during the trade war of 2018 and 2019, Rowe says. But the first phase of Trump’s China trade deal is “certainly promising,” he adds. There will be fewer restrictions on livestock exports, including beef and pork, and a promise of $200 billion in agricultural and other exports from the U.S. to China in the deal.
Wightman’s soybean farm in Shenandoah County
“China is a singular, huge market. We lost a ton of business in China,” Rowe says, “but we’ve gained a lot of customers around the world,” including India, Japan, Korea and markets in Southeast Asia, which helped offset the deficit from China. Also, subsidies from the federal government to farmers have helped them get through the pandemic and trade war, he said, although farmers prefer a steady market to federal subsidies.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, farm subsidies are expected to total a record $37.2 billion this year, but trade war subsidies and pandemic relief funding streams are set to end in 2021.
If Chinese-U.S. relations don’t normalize soon, Rowe says, the nation is likely to lose the trade relationships necessary for future business between the countries. China will instead make deals for soybeans, pork, lumber and other products from producers in other nations, sidestepping products from the U.S.
Brett Wightman, president of the Virginia Soybean Association’s executive committee and a farmer based in Shenandoah County, says it has been a whirlwind year for Virginia soybean farmers like himself.
“With everything that’s gone on the last six months, the tariff talk seems like it happened 10 years ago. I don’t think there was a farmer out there that wanted to get into a trade war and see soybean prices drop,” he says, while adding that he felt the Chinese were getting away with paying the United States less than they owed overall. “It’s ‘pick your poison’ a little bit.”
However, Wightman notes that the Chinese market — which was buying a third of all U.S.-produced soybeans before the tariff war — had slowed down from five or 10 years ago. Hog production declined in China due to a swine flu outbreak, and soybeans are used primarily to feed hogs, says Wightman, who also raises beef cattle and corn, and owns a crop insurance company.
At this point, farmers would like to be free of subsidies — and the tariffs that made them necessary, he adds.
“It doesn’t seem quite as related to supply and demand. We appreciated the USDA payments during the trade war,” Wightman says, but “the farmer wants to get paid by the soybean’s free market.”
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