Amazon.com Inc. has hired 3,500 of its 25,000 planned workers for HQ2, the tech behemoth’s $2.5 billion East Coast headquarters in Arlington. Meanwhile, construction on the two office towers for HQ2’s first phase, Metropolitan Park, is more than halfway complete, company representatives said during a site tour Wednesday.
Clark Construction Group LLC began work on the exterior facade in September.
In 2019, the Virginia General Assembly passed an incentive package that would pay Amazon up to $550 million in grants for hitting annual goals toward hiring 25,000 HQ2 workers at a stipulated average annual wage by 2030. The company has about 2,500 positions that it is working to fill immediately, Amazon’s vice president of public policy, Brian Huseman, said Wednesday.
Clark Construction Group LLC Vice President Jeff King said that construction is on schedule for a 2023 completion.
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, who was present for the HQ2 progress tour, said, “We knew coming into our administration that we needed to diversify our economy. We have always been very dependent on the military and government contracting — and we always will be — but to bring in a company like Amazon was a large step moving forward in diversifying our economy in Virginia.”
“Met Park” will have two 22-story office buildings, 50,000 square feet of retail space, a roughly 2-acre park space and a 700-person meeting center that community groups will be able to use for free. The site is set to be completed by 2023, and Bethesda, Maryland-based Clark Construction Group LLC is on schedule for the project, Clark Construction Vice President Jeff King said Thursday.
As of mid-November, roughly 800 local employees are working at the site, Huseman said, and a new floor is constructed every 8 to 10 days.
Last month, Clark Construction passed the halfway mark on its concrete operations, King said, adding that the company has poured 160,000 cubic yards of concrete since HQ2’s groundbreaking. Crews were working on the 15th level and were preparing to frame level 16 on Wednesday. In September, the contractor started on the exterior facade. King estimates that Met Park as a whole is about 40% finished.
Crews are excavating 10,000 cubic yards of dirt from the 2-acre park in HQ2 that will be open to the public.
The towers will include ground-floor retail space, with Amazon signing two retailers so far: Rako Coffee Roasters and pet care company District Dogs. Amazon anticipates having about seven to 12 retailers, including a child care provider, Amazon Senior Asset Manager Kristin Rincon said. The largest available space for retailers is about 12,000 square feet.
In the park space, crews are currently excavating about 10,000 cubic yards of dirt to make way for underground irrigation and foundation work. The park will include more than 300 trees and 50,000 plants, as well as dog runs, recreation areas, a playground and farmers’ markets.
Amazon HQ2‘s proposed second phase, PenPlace, is expected to include three more 22-story buildings and the 370,000-square-foot, distinctively spiral-shaped “Helix” building.Arlington County supervisors will likely vote on whether to approve Amazon’s PenPlace plans in early 2022.
Kristi Smith, executive vice president of development for Bethesda, Maryland-based JBG Smith Properties, said that the developer’s housing portfolio in Amazon HQ2’s National Landing neighborhood now includes 2,586 existing apartments, 800 units under construction and a development pipeline with the potential for 2,500 units. JBG Smith is Amazon’s development partner on HQ2, managing the first phase of HQ2’s construction and leasing existing office space to Amazon for HQ2 workers during construction.
Prince George County Administrator Percy C. Ashcraft is leaving to take the same role in King William County, county board chairman Floyd Brown Jr. announced Monday.
Ashcraft’s last day in Prince George will be Dec. 3 and he will start in his next role on Dec. 6.
“As chairman, I am saddened by his announcement, but I have to support his decision,” Brown said in a statement. “Mr. Ashcraft had an extremely good hand on how to manage the county through some of the changes in its economic base over the past decade.”
Ashcraft has been with Prince George County since March 2011. He had previously held government management positions in Caroline County, and prior to those, in his hometown of Clarksburg, West Virginia.
“I want to thank the members of the board of supervisors who I have served under and a talented staff who assisted me with guiding so many important projects and building a strong financial base in Prince George County,” he said in a statement. “It has been an incredible decade of progress for expanding services and opportunities for Prince George County residents. It was my pleasure to have been a part of it.”
Ashcraft served more than 12 years in the West Virginia Legislature before moving to Virginia in 1999 at the start of his government management career.
The Prince George County Board of Supervisors are expected to make an announcement about an interim replacement after its Wednesday work session.
“The board considered numerous applicants for the position, but Mr. Ashcraft’s many years of successfully running local governments really set him apart,” said King William County Board Chairman Travis Moskalski in a statement.
Reston-based tech and network security company Electrosoft Services Inc. announced Tuesday that it promoted Justin Lapington to the role of chief financial officer.
Lapington had been the company’s vice president of finance since September 2020. He led the implementation of a new resource planning system and expanded the finance team.
“Justin has been instrumental in building and maturing our back-office teams, systems and processes,” Electrosoft CEO Sarbari Gupta said in a statement. “I am proud to appoint Justin to the role of CFO, recognizing his leadership and expertise in facilitating the company’s growth journey.”
Before joining Electrosoft, Lapington worked with Reston-based government contractor Preferred Systems Solutions Inc., now Solerity Inc., overseeing operations for the firm’s government services that accounts for more than $150 million in annual revenue. He also served as a financial consultant to Electrosoft.
“Knowing that Electrosoft has never taken on debt in its 20-year history, I was impressed with the company and its leadership even before joining the team,” he said in a statement. “It’s an honor to assume this new role and to be a part of all that’s next for Electrosoft.”
Lapington holds an accounting degree from Centenary College of Louisiana.
Founded in 2001, Electrosoft offers cybersecurity, enterprise IT operations and software services for government clients. The company is a small disadvantaged business and an economically disadvantaged woman-owned small business.
Morse Hyun-Myung Tan will be the new dean of Liberty University School of Law beginning Jan. 1, the school announced Tuesday.
Tan was most recently the ambassador at large for the U.S. State Department‘s Office of Global Criminal Justice, where he oversaw the indictment, sanctioning, capture and/or conviction of war criminals in Sri Lanka, Rwanda, the Balkans and Lebanon.
“At Liberty, we look for leaders who not only bring a wealth of experience in their field but are bold about their faith and fully support our Christian mission,” Liberty University President Jerry Prevo said in a statement. “We are excited to welcome Ambassador Tan, who will help train future law professionals with the biblical principles that are so desperately needed in our nation today.”
Tan has served briefly as an attorney and counselor at law. He has worked primarily in legal academia and delivered presentations on bioethics and international human rights, especially on North Korea. He is the author of “North Korea, International Law and the Dual Crises.”
Tan has also served as a law professor or visiting scholar at The University of Texas at Austin School of Law, Florida Coastal School of Law, Northern Illinois University College of Law, Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law and Handong International Law School in Pohang, South Korea, where he helped found the first American law degree program in Asia.
Tan holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Wheaton College and earned his law degree from Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law. He is fluent in Spanish and Korean, with some basic knowledge of French, Chinese, Portuguese and Latin.
The school’s mission attracted Tan, he said in a statement: “The mission was the single biggest factor, by a pretty large margin. It‘s really pretty special to have a law school that is dedicated to following our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in, around and through the legal profession. It’s special to be able to disciple and equip students toward that end and try and impact the world through what they do and what the faculty do, too. This is what really excited me about Liberty and made me want to come and join the team.”
Montreal-based Nature’s Touch Frozen Foods LLC will spend $40.3 million to expand in Warren County, creating 67 jobs, Gov. Ralph Northam announced Tuesday.
Harrisonburg-based InterChange Group Inc. will build a 126,000-square-foot facility for Nature’s Touch. The company will import raw materials directly to the new facility for processing and distribution.
In 2014, Nature’s Touch established its Virginia production facility at Stephens Industrial Park in Warren County. The new facility will be across the street and will allow the company to integrate its product handling, making all parts of the process in-house. The company expects to increase the fruit produced annually through the Port of Virginia from 20 million pounds to 45 million pounds.
“Companies choose to invest in Virginia because they can reach customers around the world through the Port of Virginia, including the Virginia Inland Port in Front Royal,” Northam said in a statement. “Nature’s Touch’s decision to reinvest is a testament to the strong qualities that make Virginia the country’s top state for business.”
Founded in 2004, Nature’s Touch supplies frozen fruit to retailers in Canada, the U.S., Australia and Japan. It offers private label programs in addition to its own brands and is one of the largest buyers of fruit globally.
“Nature’s Touch is excited to extend and expand its presence in Warren County,” Nature’s Touch Chief Operating Officer Dan Jewell said in a statement. “After extensive evaluation, we determined that Front Royal continues to be the most strategic location for the company’s hub facility for the East Coast United States. This, combined with the opportunity to extend the company’s ongoing strategic partnership with InterChange, made the decision to build the facility in Warren County an easy one for Nature’s Touch.”
The Virginia Economic Development Partnership worked with Warren County and the Port of Virginia to secure the project for Virginia, for which the state competed with Montreal. Northam approved a $400,000 Virginia Investment Performance grant, an incentive for existing companies to continue capital investment. Nature’s Touch is eligible to receive benefits from the Port of Virginia Economic and Infrastructure Development Zone Grant Program. The Virginia Talent Accelerator Program, a workforce initiative created by the VEDP and Virginia Community College System, will provide customizable recruitment and training services at no cost to the company.
“Nature’s Touch has been a cornerstone food company in Warren County for the last decade, and we’re excited to have the company invest in this significant expansion and provide more jobs for our residents,” Front Royal Warren County Economic Development Authority Chair Jeff Browne said in a statement. “This expansion helps solidify Warren County’s reputation as an international manufacturing center in the food industry.”
The commonwealth of Virginia and Elizabeth River Crossings OpCo LLC have partnered to expand the Toll Relief Program, Gov. Ralph Northam announced Monday.
Elizabeth River Crossings, partly owned by Spanish company Abertis Infraestructuras S.A, owns Elizabeth River Tunnels, and the program, which was established in 2016, will reduce Downtown and Midtown Tunnel tolls for those eligible.
“This will make it significantly more affordable for working people to use the tunnels in Hampton Roads,” Northam said in a statement. “The commonwealth and the Elizabeth River Crossing team are making commuting easier, and that is something we can all be proud of.”
In 2022, annual funding for the program will increase sixfold to more than $3.2 million, and then grow 3.5% annually.
The funds will allow for the following changes to be implemented in 2022:
Provide participants with a 50% toll discount on up to five round-trips a week to reduce the cost of commuting to and from work
More than double the number of drivers, up to 4,300, eligible for the program
Eliminate the minimum number of trips required before discounts become available
Apply the rebate for the discount on a daily basis instead of monthly
“This is our commitment to easing the financial burden that we know our tolls have on income-restrained residents,” Elizabeth River Crossings CEO David Sullivan said in a statement. “We feel it’s our duty to connect them to relief that they can count on. This $2.7 million increase in toll reduction funding is the most significant commitment our company has ever made to the community. We’re excited to see how the program will improve and the impact it will have on those who need it most.”
The 2022 Toll Relief Program is open to Portsmouth and Norfolk residents who earn less than $30,000 a year. The enrollment period begins December 1 and closes February 15, 2022. Toll reimbursements for the new program begin on March 1, 2022. Current participants must re-enroll to receive the 2022 Toll Reduction Program benefits.
The toll rate increase that was scheduled for 2021 and suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic will now be spread out over the next three years, according to the release.
For the filing week ending Nov. 6, Virginians filed 1,290 new claims, an increase of 202 from the week before. Continued claims totaled 24,922, a decrease of 6,642 from the previous week.
Compared to the same week last year, initial claims were about 87% lower than the 9,909 recorded then. Continued claims were 73% lower than the 91,960 from the comparable week last year.
People receiving unemployment benefits through the VEC must file weekly unemployment claims in order to continue receiving benefits.
The majority of claimants who filed for benefits last week reported being in these industries: accommodation/food services; administrative and waste services; retail; and health care and social assistance.
The VEC has been under scrutiny this year for backlogs of claims and for multiple delays in the launch of its updated claims system. The VEC shut down its system last Monday to launch the new one, and a recent report from the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission shows that the agency has made progress in its backlog, down to 437,000 outstanding claims. The report also shows, though, that the VEC is trying to recoup more than $1.2 billion that was incorrectly paid out, WWBT reported.
Nationwide, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 267,000, a decrease of 4,000 from the previous week’s revised level and the lowest level for initial claims since the 256,000 reported on March 14, 2020. There were 720,432 initial claims in the comparable week in 2020.
Reston-based Fortune 500 contractor CACI International Inc. won a potentially $785 million contract to support the U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC), the company announced Tuesday.
Under the five-year single-award task order for Special Operations Forces Emerging Threats, Operations and Planning Support, CACI will provide expertise in integrated information warfare and electronic warfare solutions, training, readiness and modernization for USASOC missions.
“CACI’s mission expertise in operational support, intelligence analysis, technology integration and training will help Special Operations Forces adapt to the current and future threat environment,” CACI President and CEO John Mengucci said in a statement. “Our experts will leverage advanced solutions for our mission partners and deliver training models based on first-hand experiences to prepare trainees with realistic scenarios.”
The contract has a one-year base period with four one-year options.
Founded in 1962, CACI specializes in enterprise and mission technology. The company has approximately 22,000 employees. CACI made the Fortune 500 list for the first time this year.
Buchanan County-based metal fabrication company Skyline Fabricating Inc. will spend more than $675,000 to build a 25,000-square-foot production facility in the county’s Southern Gap area, creating 22 jobs, Gov. Ralph Northam announced Tuesday.
The facility will help Skyline Fabricating meet increased demand for steel and aluminum fabricated products and its expanded customer base outside Virginia.
“Manufacturers like Skyline Fabricating recognize that Virginia is a great place to expand a business,” Northam said in a statement. “It‘s great news when a company that starts in Virginia continues to grow here. Skyline has been a great partner for Buchanan County and Southwest Virginia, and we appreciate their new investment.”
Founded in 2016, Skyline Fabricating specializes in bridge, walkway and handrail construction and provides aluminum fabrication, mobile welding and plasma cutting. The company has customers in the energy, structural and equipment production industries.
“Skyline Fabricating is excited to expand our operations to the Southern Gap site in Buchanan County,” Skyline Fabricating President Kenneth W. Horne said in a statement. “The developing infrastructure will broaden our markets in the fabricating and manufacturing industries. We look forward to creating additional jobs from the talented and experienced workforce in this area.”
The Virginia Economic Development Partnership (VEDP) worked with Buchanan County, the Buchanan County Industrial Development Authority and the Virginia Coalfield Economic Development Authority to secure the project. VEDP’s Virginia Jobs Investment Program will provide funding to support employee recruitment and training activities.
The Virginia Coalfield Economic Development Authority provided a $538,030 loan to the Buchanan County Industrial Development Authority for site development and construction. Skyline Fabricating will lease-purchase the building from the county IDA.
Virginia Economic Development Partnership President and CEO Stephen Moret will leave VEDP to become president and CEO of Indianapolis-based Strada Education Network in January, Strada and VEDP announced Wednesday.
Moret expects that VEDP’s board will appoint Executive Vice President Jason El Koubi to serve as interim CEO and a nationwide search will be conducted for a permanent successor.
“In my opinion, the VEDP CEO job will be the most attractive economic development opening in America for a variety of reasons, including the advantages and stability of VEDP’s unique authority structure and the attractiveness of Virginia as a premier state for quality of life and for business. It is a really special opportunity for the right person,” Moret said.
Moret said his top priority as he moves toward the exit is to ensure a smooth transition and provide any support requested from the incoming administration of Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin.
In 2019, Moret was named Virginia Business’ Business Person of the Year, based mainly on his shepherding of VEDP, which was struggling and dysfunctional when Moret arrived in 2017, and his work in attracting Amazon.com Inc.’s $2.5 billion-plus HQ2East Coast headquarters to Arlington County, a project expected to create 25,000 jobs in the largest economic development deal in state history.
Instead of relying solely on economic incentives to lure the e-tail giant, Moret focused on workforce education, securing more than $1 billion in state funding for the Tech Talent Investment Program to strengthen high-tech education across Virginia, as well as starting the Virginia Tech Innovation Campus in Alexandria. Moret also led the launch of the Virginia Talent Accelerator Program, the state’s custom recruitment and workforce training initiative.
“Virginia is second to none in economic development, thanks to Stephen’s leadership,” Gov. Ralph Northam said in a statement Wednesday. “We have attracted more than $77 billion in capital investment and 100,000 new jobs in just the past four years alone. Virginia has delivered something unique in the country — becoming one of the best states for workers and earning [CNBC’s] Top State for Business title more times than anyone else. Stephen has been at the center of all this work, and Virginia is a better place for it. It’s no surprise that others are eager for his talents, and we wish him all the best in Indianapolis.”
Dan Pleasant, chairman of VEDP’s board of directors, was part of the search committee when Moret was hired, and recalled Moret being the right fit.
“We thought he was the right person, and it turned out he was definitely the right person,” Pleasant said with a laugh.
Moret leads by example, Pleasant added, and is very creative when it comes to doing deals. The Amazon HQ2 deal is just one example of his creativity, Pleasant said, noting how Moret positioned Virginia apart from the competition.
Higher impact
Strada Education Network was founded in 1960 as United Student Aid Funds or USA Funds and was formerly the nation’s largest guarantor of loans made by the Federal Family Education Loan Program. In 2017, the organization was renamed Strada, and it has become a nonprofit social impact organization, a public charity, focused on “increasing individuals’ economic mobility through purposeful connections between education and employment.”
“Our approach combines innovative research, thought leadership, strategic philanthropy and investments, and support for Strada Collaborative, a nonprofit that provides critical resources, educational support, and career experiences leading to equitable education and employment pathways,” a spokeswoman for Strada wrote in an email.
Moving into this line of work aligns with Moret’s personal values, he said in emailed comments to Virginia Business on Wednesday.
“For decades, I have had a deep personal, professional and intellectual interest in the connections between postsecondary education and employment,” Moret said. “I have witnessed the transformational impact of higher ed in my life and in the lives of many others. Through my professional work in multiple settings, I also have seen the impact higher ed can have on the economic competitiveness and growth of regions, states and our country as a whole. Indeed, my interest in the linkages between higher ed and economic opportunity has been so great that I completed my doctoral dissertation at Penn on that very topic several years ago.”
Moret described growing up with feelings of “economic insecurity” that lingered with him as he grew up. He saw higher education as “a pathway to economic security and mobility.”
“I can still vividly recall weighing my college options and potential major when I was 18, balancing my interests and aspirations against fears of student loan debt that I might later have trouble repaying,” he said.
Moret earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Louisiana State University and an MBA from Harvard Business School. He also holds a doctorate degree in higher education management from the University of Pennsylvania.
Moret said when he visited with Strada’s search committee and ultimately its full board, he shared that he believes “Strada is better positioned than any other single organization to help revitalize and broaden participation in the American Dream.
“While there are bigger organizations than Strada, I’m not aware of any nonprofit of Strada’s scale [or larger] that has Strada’s focused mission paired with such a distinctive, multidimensional approach to accomplishing it,” Moret said.
Moret said he was not seeking for another position and that he has loved his work at VEDP and felt embraced by the business and political leadership of the commonwealth. He also said he had cultivated good relationships with both 2021 gubernatorial candidates.
“Strada was [and is] simply an opportunity of singular interest to me, and it offers an opportunity to make an impact at a national level,” he said. “The timing was simply coincidental, as the Strada CEO position happened to open up this year. I have been inspired by Strada’s mission for many years.”
‘A transformative leader’
Observers often give Moret credit for Virginia’s two-time streak as CNBC’s No. 1 state for business, a title regained in 2019 after the state sank to No. 13 in 2016. But he’s humble about his success.
“While I’m proud of many of the specific things we accomplished, such as winning [Amazon] HQ2 or creating a top-ranked custom workforce initiative [the Virginia Talent Accelerator Program], I hope that my legacy will be that we built a great team, dramatically improved collaboration and communication with partners, and shared a clear and compelling vision for how Virginia can become one of the leading states in America in terms of economic development, economic competitiveness, and growth,” he said.
“While we accomplished much of that vision, there is still much to do. I recently laid out some of the biggest remaining economic development opportunities in separate briefings with former Gov. McAuliffe and now Gov.-elect Youngkin prior to the election.”
Business leaders from around the commonwealth sang Moret’s praises about his work over the past five years.
Dan Clemente, the chairman and CEO of Vienna-based Clemente Development Co. Inc. and member of the VEDP’s board of governors, said that the best thing he did during his time as chairman of the board was signing the contract with Moret: “There’s only one Stephen Moret.”
“He pulled everything together. We were struggling when we hired him,” Clemente said, referring to the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission’s review of VEDP at the time. “He came in knowing that all of this was under examination, and he came in and took over.”
Jennifer Wakefield, president and CEO of the Greater Richmond Partnership, said she has the utmost respect for Moret and the team he assembled.
“He predated me, so I don’t know the before times, but I know the Moret times, and they have been wonderful,” Wakefield said. “He’s really helped to elevate Virginia to the best state for business through his very thoughtful, strategic approach. … It’s definitely a loss for Virginia, but I think that with the plan and the team that he’s assembled in place, we’re stronger for him having served the commonwealth.”
Moret worked with Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam to land Amazon.com Inc.’s coveted second headquarters. Photo courtesy Governor of Virginia
John F. Reinhart, former CEO of the Virginia Port Authority, called Moret “an incredible intellect and creative and collaborative professional.”
Reinhart served on VEDP’s board, and Moret served on the Port’s board as both organizations recovered from financial challenges that occurred before the leaders’ tenures.
“He understood the supply chain and what it took to make things happen,” said Reinhart, who retired earlier this year. “As we were trying to go after economic development projects … he got it. He understood it and could voice that.”
Two projects that stand out to Reinhart as legacies Moret will leave behind are his work on workforce development and Dominion Energy’s offshore wind farm project to erect bring 180 wind turbines 27 miles off Virginia Beach’s coast. These projects will have impacts for decades to come, Reinhart said.
“He was a very transformative leader and set an example for all those he worked with,” Reinhart said.
Pleasant, with the VEDP, said one of the things Moret did that was changing the VEDP’s relationship with rural areas, such as Danville, where lives. “He’s a big advocate of bringing opportunity to rural Virginia,” Pleasant said. When Ikea announced it was leaving the area, Pleasant recalls Moret assuring him that someone would move in within six months.
“I don’t know that I have ever met anyone that had a stronger work ethic,” Pleasant said.
Before he came to Virginia, Moret was president and CEO of the Louisiana State University Foundation, where he put together a plan for a $1.5 billion LSU fundraising campaign, the largest in state history.
In 2008, Moret became Louisiana’s secretary of economic development under Republican Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal. After taking a trip to Georgia to learn about its training program, he implemented Louisiana’s FastStart program, an economic development initiative to quickly train workers in skills needed by specific businesses or sectors at no cost. In 2010, Business Facilities named FastStart the country’s best state workforce program, bumping Georgia from the top spot. Moret later replicated the initiative here as the Virginia Talent Accelerator Program, one of his signature accomplishments.
Prior to becoming a Louisiana cabinet member, Moret served as chief executive of the Baton Rouge Area Chamber. Before joining the chamber, Moret was a consultant with global management consulting firm McKinsey & Co. in Arlington. He also has served as a public policy fellow with the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana and a consultant to Harvard Business School.
Moret expects to relocate to Indianapolis, where Strada is based, in January, when he starts his new job, but will split his time between Henrico and Indiana until the summer, when the rest of his family will move, he said.
Reinhart called Moret “moral, ethical and tireless. People trust him.”
An earlier version of this story contained incorrect information about Strada Education Network.
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