byline: Virginia Business
Out & About August 2024
On June 13, Virginia Business honored the winners of the 2024 Virginia CFO Awards during the magazine’s annual black-tie banquet at Richmond’s Jefferson Hotel. Photos by Rick DeBerry.
1. L to R: Virginia CFO Awards nominee Paul Huckfeldt of Hooker Furnishings and wife, Annette; 2024 CFO Awards winner Joel Flax of Cohen Investment Group and wife, Gail.
2. L to R: Courtney Browder, Virginia CFO Awards nominee Juanita Parks, Charlie Knight and Krista Gillespie of
3. L to R: Behrad Amirsoltani and wife, Anna, a Virginia CFO Awards nominee with Cassaday & Company; Craig Brown and wife, nominee BJ Brown, both from the Law Office of Craig A Brown.
4. On July 9, Colonial Williamsburg Resorts broke ground on The Shoe, a new, Rees Jones-designed, nine-hole, par 3 gold course. Colonial Williamsburg’s first new golf course in 33 years, it’s expected to open in summer 2025 at the Golden Horseshoe Golf Club. L to R: Jim Thomas of Williamsburg; Colonial Williamsburg Foundation President and CEO Cliff Fleet; Williamsburg Mayor Doug Pons; and Keith Jackson, Colonial Williamsburg’s vice president of hospitality. Photo courtesy Colonial Williamsburg Resorts.
5. L to R: Chris Harman and teammate Josh McCartney, workers for Kentucky energy company Iron Senergy, simulate performing first aid on a volunteer during a mine rescue contest in late June at the Southwest Virginia Higher Education Center in Abingdon. The event was co-hosted by National Mine Rescue Association Post 7, the Metallurgical Coal Producers Association, the Mine Safety and Health Administration, and the Virginia Department of Energy. Photo courtesy Virginia Energy.
Virginia 500 Spotlight August 2024: MAGGIE REED
PERSONAL MOTTO: She believed she could, so she did.
WHAT MAKES ME HAPPIEST: I am happiest outdoors doing almost anything or curled up with a book and my dogs.
HOBBY/PASSION: I love to read and to learn — be it podcasts, audiobooks, physical books or life experiences.
HOW I CHOSE MY CAREER: I went to school to be an architect and found that construction gave me the freedom to run around and engage in things that used both my education and my proclivity to push for action and test boundaries in good measure. It’s been about saying yes and what’s the worst that can happen in the face of opportunities and seeing what choice you get to make next.
DID YOU KNOW? The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts has selected Gilbane to manage construction of its $190 million renovation and expansion project, which includes the approximately 173,000-square-foot new James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin Wing II and 45,000 square feet of renovations to the existing building.
Virginia companies on the Fortune 500
Total cargo by trade lane
For The Record August 2024
CENTRAL VIRGINIA
Tobacco giant Altria Group, headquartered in Henrico County, will be allowed to market four different menthol-flavored e-cigarettes, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said June 21. The announcement came two months after the Biden administration controversially delayed a decision on banning menthol cigarette sales. Marketed under Altria’s NJOY brand, the products are the first e-cigarettes to be approved that aren’t tobacco flavored. The FDA decided the public health benefits of smokers switching to menthol e-cigarettes from regular cigarettes were greater than the risks posed to teens by the increased appeal of minty e-cigarettes, according to an agency news release. (Bloomberg)
Switzerland-based Condair Group, a manufacturer of commercial and industrial humidification systems, will invest $57.2 million to establish a new production facility in Chesterfield County that is expected to create 180 jobs, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced June 18. The company will convert a pre-existing warehouse facility on 1410 Willis Road into a manufacturing facility, according to Horace Wynn, chief operating officer for Condair’s North American operations. The 400,000-square-foot plant is expected to open in early 2025. Condair plans to transfer its current production operations from Center, Texas, to Richmond by 2026. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Dominion Energy announced July 10 that it had issued an RFP to develop a small modular reactor at the Fortune 500 utility’s North Anna nuclear power plant in Louisa County. Dominion officials said they were issuing a request for proposals for the SMR from nuclear technology companies, stressing that it was not a commitment to build an SMR at North Anna, but the first step in evaluating the feasibility of doing so. Dominion Energy Chair, President and CEO Robert M. Blue said that Dominion hopes to develop the SMR at North Anna in the 2030s, noting that a new state law caps SMR development cost recovery at $1.40 per month for a typical residential customer. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Henrico County is getting a fifth Fortune 500 company. Global health care logistics and supply company Owens & Minor is moving from Hanover County to a new headquarters in Henrico’s Innsbrook Corporate Center. The company is leasing the fourth floor of the Highwoods One building at 10900 Nuckols Road. In April, commercial real estate company Newmark announced it had secured the $33.5 million sale of Owens & Minor’s 160,000-square-foot headquarters in Mechanicsville to the Virginia Department of Transportation, which plans to move to Hanover in summer 2025. Henrico’s other Fortune 500 companies are Altria Group, Markel Group, Genworth Financial and Arko. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
PEOPLE
Chandra Briggman left her position as president and CEO of Richmond tech incubator Activation Capital on July 12. Briggman joined the accelerator arm of the Virginia Biotechnology Research Partnership Authority in May 2020. She played significant roles in raising $31 million to build an innovation center in the Virginia Bio+Tech Park, launching the Alliance for Building Better Medicine, and winning a $53 million federal grant in the Build Back Better Regional Challenge. Briggman planned to “pursue new opportunities to build innovation ecosystems and drive economic development,” but her specific plans were not disclosed. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
The City of Richmond named Matthew Welch its acting director of economic development in mid-June, following the departure of Leonard Sledge, who left to head Hampton’s economic development. Welch is expected to serve through the remainder of Mayor Levar Stoney’s term, which ends in January, and city leaders will then decide on a permanent director. Welch has worked for the city since 2011 and is a senior policy adviser in its department of economic development. He leads the real estate strategies office, which conveys surplus city-owned land for mixed-use developments and affordable housing. (Richmond Times-Dispatch)
EASTERN VIRGINIA
Virginia inspectors have levied $1.9 million in fines against Chesapeake-based Dollar Tree and Family Dollar in the past 10 years for health and safety violations. Between 2014 and 2024, state and federal regulators cited nearly 600 Dollar Tree and Family Dollar stores and warehouses across the U.S. for unsafe and hazardous conditions, according to inspection data. Advocates say that overstacked storage rooms, blocked safety exits and rodent and insect infestations create unsafe and unhealthy environments for many of the chain’s roughly 200,000 workers. (Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism at WHRO)
Dominion Energy Virginia agreed in July to acquire the 40,000-acre Kitty Hawk North Wind offshore wind lease off North Carolina’s Outer Banks for $160 million from Avangrid, a Connecticut-based sustainable energy company. The project will be rebranded as CVOW-South, a nod to Dominion’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) project under development
27 miles off the Virginia Beach coast. Expected to close by the end of 2024, the transaction includes $117 million for lease acquisition and $43 million to reimburse development costs. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Firefly Aerospace has picked Virginia Spaceport Authority’s Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island as a new launch site for its two-stage orbital Alpha rocket, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced in June. A small launch vehicle, the Alpha serves commercial, civil and national security clients and can carry 2,200 pounds to low earth orbit. Founded in 2017, the Texas-headquartered Firefly has launched the Alpha four times from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The company plans to begin launching Alpha from Virginia in 2025. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Liebherr Mining Equipment will invest $72.3 million to expand a manufacturing plant at the border of Newport News and Hampton, creating an estimated 175 jobs, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced in late June. Founded in 1995, the Newport News subsidiary of Liebherr Group manufactures industrial-scale mining trucks used to transport material at open-cast mining operations and has more than 550 employees. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
LS GreenLink USA, a U.S. subsidiary of a South Korean cable manufacturer, announced in July plans to build a $681 million, 750,000-square-foot manufacturing plant in Chesapeake, expected to create 338 jobs. The plant will produce high-voltage, direct-current submarine cables used for offshore wind farms — the first such facility in the nation. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
The Hampton Roads area could soon see new Navy housing that would provide beds for about 8,000 sailors, Vice Adm. Christopher “Scotty” Gray, commander of the Navy Installations Command, said in July. During a roundtable discussion between the Navy and a bipartisan group of state and local elected officials, Gray said he expects 1,000 to 1,500 soldiers will be housed in Newport News, out of 8,000 new beds in Hampton Roads. (The Virginian-Pilot)
Rivers Casino Portsmouth has again agreed to pay a hefty fine following a slew of violations the Virginia Lottery spotted last year and earlier this year. The casino was fined $545,000 in two settlements. One was reached in September 2023 and resulted in a $40,000 fine, and the other was reached in May at a cost of $505,000. Violations included the presence of underaged individuals on the gaming floor in August 2023 — the same offense for which Rivers Casino Portsmouth was fined last year for $275,000.
(The Virginian-Pilot)
PEOPLE
After serving as commander of the Navy Region Mid-Atlantic for a little over a year, Navy Rear Adm. Wesley “Wes” McCall announced his retirement July 3 and Rear Adm. Carl A. Lahti succeeded him in the position. Lahti now oversees 13 installations from Illinois to North Carolina and is stationed at the world’s largest Navy base, Naval Station Norfolk. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
NORTHERN VIRGINIA
Two Fairfax-based credit unions that have been around since the 1950s agreed to combine in June. Apple Federal Credit Union, with $4.4 billion in assets, and $532 million-asset NextMark Credit Union announced their intent to merge by November, with Apple FCU being the surviving institution. The seventh largest credit union based in the greater Washington area by total assets, Apple FCU will continue to be led by President and CEO Andy Grimm after it absorbs NextMark. (Washington Business Journal)
Nine homeowners in Arlington County have sued the county over a landmark zoning change in 2023 that tossed out rules that allowed only single-family houses to be built in certain neighborhoods. The change meant owners could replace their houses with buildings containing multiple small apartments. A July bench trial in Arlington Circuit Court considers the homeowners’ argument that county officials failed to adequately study the impacts of the plan before approving it. (The Washington Post)
In July, Boeing agreed to plead guilty to a felony charge of conspiring to defraud the federal government over two fatal crashes of the 737 Max in 2018 and 2019, in a last-minute deal reached with the Justice Department. The Arlington County-based aerospace and defense contractor agreed to pay a $487.2 million fine and invest at least $455 million over the next three years to strengthen its compliance and safety programs. The criminal probe was prompted by the January midair blowout of a door plug on a Boeing plane. Also, Boeing entered into an agreement in July to reacquire Spirit Aerosystems in a $4.7 billion stock transaction, also assuming Spirit’s net debt in a deal totaling $8.3 billion. (The New York Times; VirginiaBusiness.com)
Arlington-based aerospace and defense technology company CAES will be acquired from private equity firm Advent International by Honeywell for $1.9 billion in cash. The acquisition will enhance Charlotte, North Carolina-based Honeywell’s defense tech portfolio, including new electromagnetic defense tools for end-to-end radio frequency signal management. The deal comes as military spending has ramped up amid long-standing conflicts, including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas conflict in Gaza. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Loudoun County Supervisor Mike Turner wrote a white paper issued in June arguing that data centers’ surging demand for electricity has left the county with no choice but to find a way for the facilities to produce energy on their campuses. With on-site power generation, electric utilities will no longer need to keep building more transmission infrastructure to connect data centers with electricity generated outside the county. Turner’s paper said that his proposals would likely not affect current plans to add transmission lines in Loudoun. Meanwhile, in July, county supervisors passed a policy that would remove data centers as a by-right use on all properties in all zones, meaning all data center proposals would require the board’s discretionary approval. (Loudoun Times-Mirror; Washington Business Journal)
PEOPLE
Mark Peters, an executive vice president at Battelle Memorial Institute in Charlottesville, was named president and CEO of Mitre, succeeding Jason Providakes, effective Sept. 3. Providakes said in a statement he plans to retire. Founded in 1958 with a focus on national security, Mitre is a not-for-profit research and development company with dual headquarters in McLean and Bedford, Massachusetts. Peters is currently executive vice president of laboratory management and operations at Battelle. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
LYNCHBURG/ROANOKE/NEW RIVER VALLEY
Former Advance Auto Parts CEO Nick Taubman and his wife, Jenny, are giving $25 million to a Carilion Clinic campaign to fund a new Roanoke cancer center that could be under construction by the end of the year. Radiation, chemotherapy and related treatments and services provided in a 43-year-old facility on South Jefferson Street and other locations today will move to a new seven-story building on Reserve Avenue. A 2027 opening looks like a possibility, officials said. (The Roanoke Times)
Roanoke-based tech company Luna Innovations filed a document with the Securities and Exchange Commission in June, notifying it that the Nasdaq stock exchange granted Luna’s request to continue its listing while it attempts to compile accurate financial statements. The fiber optic sensing, testing and measuring company has until Sept. 11 to file its 2023 annual and fourth quarter reports — along with reports from 2022 — with the SEC, or Nasdaq could delist it. Luna has seen executive turnover since mid-March, when the company announced it could not produce those reports. (Cardinal News).
Salem City Council approved a contentious rezoning for the HopeTree development on a split vote after a second reading on June 24. Council member Hunter Holliday motioned to table the issue until all members were physically present, as Mayor Renée Turk was out of town and participating remotely. That motion failed. The planned development on the Virginia Baptist Home property owned by HopeTree is proposed to include up to 340 residences as well as commercial space. It will be the largest development of its kind in the city’s history. (The Roanoke Times)
The Roanoke Valley will host six days of racing events for USA Cycling’s Endurance Mountain Biking National Championships in July 2025 and 2026, announced regional tourism group Visit Virginia’s Blue Ridge on June 24. The weeklong event is expected to generate approximately $2.2 million and bring in 1,900 athletes. Racing events will take place July 14-20 next year at Explore Park, Elmwood Park and Carvins Cove. The event is a collaboration between the City of Roanoke, Roanoke County and Hollins University. (The Roanoke Times)
The Volvo Group received a $208 million federal grant for upgrades at its Dublin manufacturing plant, as well as facilities in Maryland and Pennsylvania, officials announced in July. The 2.3 million-square-foot New River Valley plant in Pulaski County employs about 3,600 people. It makes trucks including the Volvo VNR Electric, one of two heavy-duty electric vehicles Volvo manufactures in North America. The U.S. Department of Energy grant will help Volvo upgrade its facilities to more efficiently produce those vehicles and eventually expand its range of electric models. (Cardinal News)
PEOPLE
Maury Strauss, a philanthropist who donated millions of dollars to health care, education and economic development efforts around Roanoke, died June 25 at age 99. Strauss founded real estate development firm Strauss Development Corp. and served as president of the Roanoke Valley Homeowners Association and the Virginia Homebuilders Association. Strauss donated $1 million each to the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC, Virginia Western Community College Educational Foundation and Carilion Clinic’s cancer program between 2018 and 2022. He is survived by three children and five grandchildren. (Cardinal News)
SHENANDOAH VALLEY
The Middletown Town Council decided in its July 1 meeting that a proposal for the historic Wayside Inn to offer recreational vehicle parking for guests will go before the planning commission and again before the council. Earlier this year, Tamara Bullard and her husband, Blake, considered purchasing the inn but withdrew their bid because the town council wasn’t receptive to approving RV parking behind the property. The inn’s current owners said the property at 7783 Main St. is “bleeding” money. The business, which includes Larrick’s Tavern, the Wright House and The Red Hat speakeasy, has been for sale for more than eight months. (The Winchester Star)
Construction on an 800-acre solar project in southern Frederick County was almost complete as of July 1, according to Torch Clean Energy developing manager Sam Gulland. The $150 million-plus Bartonsville Solar project with roughly 315,000 solar panels is the largest of four solar farms that the county’s board of supervisors approved from 2020 to December 2022. The 130-megawatt project could come online later this year, once it is connected to a nearby FirstEnergy 138-kilovolt transmission line. Torch Clean Energy is developing the site, which D.E. Shaw Renewable Investments owns. (The Northern Virginia Daily)
At its June 26 meeting, the Virginia Cannabis Control Authority was expected to announce which company, among 40 applicants, had been selected from a highly competitive process to become the sole licensed pharmaceutical processor of medical cannabis for a region including the entire Shenandoah Valley, as well as the cities of Charlottesville and Fredericksburg and the counties of Spotsylvania and Stafford. But, during that CCA Board of Directors meeting, Shawn Casey, deputy chief of CCA’s regulatory, policy and external affairs office, said the authority’s staff and legal counsel needed more time to study the scoring of the applications and to ensure the authority’s choice complies with all regulatory requirements. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
A group of 29 Virginia Military Institute alumni are suing the school’s alumni association over alleged violations of their civil rights, according to a complaint filed in federal court in June. The plaintiffs claim the institute and its alumni association have become so intertwined that the state-run military college in Lexington essentially controls the alumni association. The suit traces much of the relationship between VMI and its alumni organizations to a 2019 action that moved four alumni corporations — the Keydet Club, the VMI Foundation, the VMI Development Board and the VMI Alumni Association — under the umbrella of VMI Alumni Agencies. (Cardinal News)
PEOPLE
Charlie King assumed the role of interim president of James Madison University on July 1. The university’s former president, Jonathan Alger, left to head American University, a move the Washington, D.C., university announced in March. King retired from JMU in December 2021 after serving as its senior vice president of administration and finance for 25 years. Before joining the Harrisonburg university, he was vice president for business affairs at Radford University from 1991 to 1996. Prior to that, King held various administrative roles at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. (News release)
Winchester Main Street hired Brady Cloven as executive director, the nonprofit announced June 21, making Cloven its first and only paid employee. Winchester Main Street launched late last year as a nine-member board with the goal of transitioning Old Town Winchester’s branding, upkeep and enhancement responsibilities from governmental authority to community authority. Cloven previously worked at Veterans Inc., a nonprofit that supports veterans with housing, employment and meals, in Massachusetts. The board chose Cloven from a group of more than 20 applicants. (The Winchester Star)
SOUTHERN VIRGINIA
Amid what’s described as a “short-term cash crunch,” salaries have been reduced for senior leaders at Averett University, and other staff members were cut to a four-day workweek during summer. The financial stress emerged because of “mismanagement” by a former university official who “misrepresented both the facts and the numbers as regards to the school’s financial position,” according to an Averett spokesperson. The Danville Police Department has not received reports from the university surrounding money issues. The spokesperson said the university will be on the “right track” by the fall semester. (Danville Register & Bee)
Martinsville-based Carter Bank & Trust has reached an agreement with West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, his family and their companies regarding the repayment of approximately $300 million in outstanding loans, according to separate statements. Both sides said that their agreement entails a “pathway of curtailment and payoff of the loans” that Justice; his wife, Cathy; their son, Jay; and their network of family companies have with Carter Bank. The loans, which are backed by collateral including property at the Greenbrier Sporting Club, have been the subject of legal clashes for years. (Cardinal News)
In July, the Danville-Pittsylvania Regional Industrial Facility Authority passed a resolution authorizing a ground lease with Tupelo Storage, an affiliate of Durham, North Carolina-based Strata Solar, to build and operate an energy storage system on 85 acres at the Southern Virginia Mega Site at Berry Hill. The lithium-ion battery system would be built on a 3 ½- to 4-acre concrete pad and connected to the grid, feeding into the new Appalachian Power electric substation. The system would charge overnight, with energy from the battery offsetting consumption of power during peak energy use. Construction is slated to start in mid to late 2026. (Danville Register & Bee)
Dominion Energy wants to build a storage facility capable of holding 2 billion cubic feet of liquified natural gas next to its giant Greensville County power plant, a more than $500 million project. The aim is to provide backup fuel for its two large Southside Virginia power stations in Greensville and Brunswick counties, the company said in filings with the State Corporation Commission. If the SCC approves it, Dominion wants to start construction next year, and would complete the project in 2027. (Richmond Times-Dispatch)
Hitachi Energy plans to invest $26 million into expanding its South Boston transformer manufacturing facility, a move expected to create about 100 jobs. Hitachi’s expansion in Halifax County, where the company has 585 employees, will increase capacity for producing distribution transformers with new equipment, upgrades and other production-line improvements. The new positions created at Hitachi’s South Boston operation will be in skilled manufacturing, engineering and administration. The company did not receive incentives from the state government for the expansion, according to a Hitachi spokesperson. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
PEOPLE
In July, Tory Shepherd became the new market chief operating officer for Sovah Health, a health system with hospital campuses in Danville and Martinsville. Previously, Shepherd held positions as chief operating officer and interim CEO at Sovah Health — Martinsville. In 2022, she joined Rutherford Regional Health System in Rutherfordton, North Carolina, as interim CEO and was soon appointed as Rutherford’s permanent CEO. In her new role, Shepherd will oversee operational functions of both the Martinsville and Danville Sovah campuses. (Martinsville Bulletin)
SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA
Appalachian Sustainable Development unveiled on June 13 plans to build a $12 million agriculture campus on more than 17 acres of land between Bristol and Abingdon. Plans for the site, which is located just off Lee Highway in the Exit 10 area of Interstate 81, include an agriculture business development hub, a food hub, a workforce development hub, a visitor village, a greenhouse, outdoor classrooms and gardens for alley cropping demonstrations, wildflower pollination, agroforestry nursery demonstrations and research. Construction will start as money is raised, and fundraising will go through 2025. (Cardinal News)
Ballad Health was set to open a new Center for Early Learning in Norton in July. The new center is located close to Norton Community Hospital and has the capacity to serve up to 130 children, ranging from 6-week-old infants to 5-year-olds. The Norton center is Ballad’s second in Southwest Virginia; the health system also operates one in Lebanon. Additionally, Ballad plans to open an Abingdon facility in the fall and has plans for a Marion facility. It also operates five Centers for Early Learning in Tennessee. The facilities serve Ballad Health team members and community members. (Bristol Herald Courier)
Dallas-based Catalyst Energy Partners withdrew its application to establish a $400 million, 262-megawatt solar project in Washington County in early July. The company plans to come back with a second, smaller proposal. The board of supervisors had been scheduled to vote on the Wolf Hills Solar project on July 9, before Catalyst withdrew the application. The planning commission had recommended the board deny the special-exception permit that Catalyst needed to build the 500,000-panel farm, part of which would have been in land zoned for agriculture, after a five-hour meeting that drew about 300 people on June 24. (Cardinal News)
Simmons Equipment, a specialty mining equipment manufacturer based in Tazewell County, plans to expand into neighboring Russell County, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced July 8. The company expects to invest $8.5 million into converting two buildings in Lebanon, an investment set to create 75 jobs. Founded in Tazewell in 2005, Simmons produces soft rock mining equipment, including scoops, haulers and longwall support vehicles. The company plans to also retain its Tazewell facilities, where it employs 107 people. Simmons plans to move into the new locations in phases over the next two quarters of the year. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
PEOPLE
Rodney Fogg is now vice president of operations for EO, the Abingdon nonprofit announced June 27. EO is an independent nonprofit that the United Way of Southwest Virginia established earlier this year to spin off its workforce development programs. Fogg will oversee operations for EO’s 87,000-square-foot Regional Workforce and Child Development Hub under construction in Abingdon as well as leading the nonprofit’s administrative and organizational operations. Fogg served 35 years in the U.S. Army and rose to the rank of major general. He previously served as deputy chief for operations at the headquarters of the U.S. Army Materiel Command at Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. (News release)
Megan Parks is the new executive director of the United Way of Southwest Virginia, the nonprofit announced June 25. Parks succeeds Travis Staton as the Abingdon-based nonprofit’s leader. Staton became president and CEO of EO, a nonprofit that UWSWVA established to spin off its workforce development programs, in February. Parks most recently directed strategy and impact initiatives at the Second Harvest Food Bank of Northeast Tennessee. She previously held roles at Ballad Health and at the YWCA in Bristol, and she holds a master’s degree in public administration from Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. (News release)
Virginia 500 Spotlight July 2024: Michael Keegan
FIRST JOB: Installing gas lines into houses in New Jersey
TRAIT I ADMIRE: Empathy
WHAT I’VE LEARNED: Not to complain. I was complaining recently to a friend about having to go to a speech by some “expert” on AI, only to learn later that my friend was the speaker. True story!
SOMETHING I’D NEVER DO AGAIN: Skydive
NEW LIFE EXPERIENCE: Getting closer to my dad since my mom passed away. It is amazing the things he has seen. I am a better listener today and really enjoy his stories.
FAVORITE SPORTS TEAM: Arsenal
ONE THING I’D CHANGE ABOUT VIRGINIA: Virginia’s one-term governor policy. Regardless of what party you support, I think it can result in an inefficient government.
DID YOU KNOW? In 2021, TNS was acquired by a Koch Industries subsidiary, and in August 2022, TNS acquired Agnity Global. Then, in April 2023, TNS bought BornTec’s managed hosting and colocation business.
Out & About July 2024
1. James W. Dyke Jr. with McGuireWoods Consulting received a lifetime achievement award from the Virginia Chamber of Commerce May 16 in Richmond. L to R (front row): Virginia House of Delegates Speaker Don L. Scott Jr., D-Portsmouth; former Gov. Douglas Wilder; Dyke. L to R (back row): Virginia Sen. Lamont Bagby, D-Henrico, former U.S. Sen. George Allen. Photo by Kaveh Sardari, courtesy Virginia Chamber of Commerce. 2. Hollins University held its annual reunion weekend May 31 through June 2. L to R: Mary Ann Harvey Johnson, class of 1967; Agnes Reid Jones Jenny, class of 1944; Mary Clare Abbott, class of 2025; and Hollins President Mary Dana Hinton prepare for the parade. Photo by Anna Logan Lawson, courtesy Hollins University. 3. L to R: Henry Ware, executive sales director at Total Quality Logistics, Norfolk Mayor Kenny Alexander and Hampton Roads Alliance President and CEO Douglas Smith celebrated at a June 4 ribbon-cutting for the freight brokerage’s new Norfolk office. Photo courtesy City of Norfolk. 4. The 25th annual meeting of TowneBank shareholders at the Virginia Beach Convention Center May 22 included a celebration of Judge Richard S. Bray, who died May 4 and was lead director of TowneBank’s corporate board. Bray family members attended, L to R: Bryan Bejarano, Bobby Bray, Oscar Bejarano, Dawn Bray, Shannon Bejarano and Kaylee Bejarano. 5. L to R: Jason Ferguson, Central Virginia Community College’s associate vice president for professional and career studies; Christine Kennedy, Lynchburg Regional Alliance chief operating officer and executive vice president; and Jason Clark, CVCC’s coordinator of CTE initiatives, attended a May 9 business appreciation event hosted by the Bedford County Economic Development Authority at The Venue at 109.
For The Record July 2024
CENTRAL VIRGINIA
Developers broke ground May 30 on The Helios, a $54 million, rent-restricted, solar-powered apartment building in Henrico County, according to an announcement by Bank of America, which is financing construction. A joint venture between Spy Rock Real Estate Group and Crescent Development, both based in Richmond, the apartments will replace an abandoned motel. The project, which is being built on 8.2 acres on Chamberlayne Road, is expected to be completed by the end of 2025. Three mid-rise buildings with elevators will house 186 units with one to three bedrooms. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Chesterfield County unveiled on June 7 its newly renovated softball and baseball complex at Harry G. Daniel Park, The Diamonds at Iron Bridge. Renovations for the park’s six fields totaled $4.1 million, and funding came from a surplus lodging tax revenue. The complex’s upgrades included resodded fields with better drainage; new fencing, backstops and dugouts; improved seating; increased shade; and repaved parking lots. The June 7 ceremony also kicked off the Starz Gold Summer Showcase, a weekend tournament with more than 60 softball teams from several states. (Richmond Times-Dispatch)
Richmond-based Fortune 500 utility Dominion Energy announced June 3 it had closed on its$4.3 billion sale of subsidiaries Questar Gas and Wexpro to Canadian pipeline and energy company Enbridge. Salt Lake City-based natural gas utility Questar serves more than 1.2 million customers in Utah, Wyoming and Idaho. Wexpro supplies natural gas under a cost-of-service agreement to Questar. The deal was first announced Sept. 5, 2023, and this sale was the second of three deals between Dominion and Enbridge announced then that has since been finalized. The first was Dominion’s $6.6 billion sale of East Ohio Gas to Enbridge. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Envigo parent company Inotiv was fined more than $35 million on June 3 in relation to the mistreatment of dogs at Envigo’s Cumberland County facility, from which 4,000 beagles were rescued in 2022. An Envigo subsidiary, Envigo RMS, pleaded guilty to conspiring to knowingly violate the Animal Welfare Act, and subsidiary Envigo Global Services pleaded guilty to knowingly violating the Clean Water Act. In addition to paying the largest fine recorded in an Animal Welfare Act case, Inotiv will be subject to increased animal care standards and to a compliance monitor, according to the U.S. Justice Department. (Axios)
The University of Virginia and the Commonwealth of Virginia will pay $9 million in settlements related to the deadly 2022 shooting on U.Va.’s campus. On May 31, Albemarle County Circuit Judge Claude V. Worrell II approved $2 million settlements for each of the families of slain students D’Sean Perry, Lavel Davis Jr. and Devin Chandler. Two U.Va. students who were injured in the shooting, Michael Hollins Jr. and Marlee Morgan, are receiving a cumulative $3 million from two other settlement agreements that did not need court approval. (The Washington Post)
A former manufacturing facility in West Point will come roaring back to life with a $2.5 million investment by West Point Veneer, a wholly owned subsidiary of Coldwater Veneer, Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s office announced May 21. West Point Veneer expects to hire 92 people for the facility. Once open, the mill, located at 320 Dupont St., will produce wood veneer and ship it globally via the Port of Virginia. Coldwater Veneer CEO Dean Calhoun originally purchased the mill in 1997. Then, in 2017, Calhoun sold it, and the new owner closed it, according to Coldwater Veneer Chief Financial Officer Allen Frydenberg. He later repurchased it.(VirginiaBusiness.com)
EASTERN VIRGINIA
The $350 million Atlantic Park project backed by music icon Pharrell Williams in his hometown of Virginia Beach is progressing, with the 2.6-acre surf lagoon, entertainment venue and other pieces of the project expected to be delivered in spring 2025, Kathy Warren, Virginia Beach’s planning director, told city councilors May 28. A joint project between Williams and Venture Realty Group, Atlantic Park is supported by about $153 million in city funding and broke ground in March 2023. As of late May, the surf lagoon was about half done, the two parking garages were about 71% done, and the rest of the development was in various stages. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Chesapeake-based Fortune 500 discount retailer Dollar Tree announced in early June it was considering selling or spinning off its Family Dollar brand, which it acquired in 2015 for $8.5 billion. As of Feb. 3, Dollar Tree was operating more than 8,350 Family Dollar stores but has closed 550 retail locations of both Dollar Tree and Family Dollar as of the end of the first quarter of this year. The move comes shortly after the company’s announcement that it intends to acquire 99 Cents Only, a discount retailer in the western United States. In May, Dollar Tree purchased 170 leases of 99 Cents Only stores in Arizona, California, Nevada and Texas. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
On May 22, Dominion Energy kicked off construction of the $9.8 billion Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) project, plunging the first monopile into the sea floor for the 176 wind turbines that will be erected 27 miles off the Virginia Beach coastline.
Also, a federal judge in late May denied a preliminary injunction seeking to halt construction of the wind farm. The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Washington, D.C., by several conservative anti-offshore wind groups, argued that the wind farm construction negatively impacts endangered North Atlantic right whales. (VirginiaBusiness.com; The Virginian-Pilot)
A 90-day task force convened by Virginia Beach City Council found that the Virginia Beach Oceanfront should be reserved for tourism events that would fill at least 1,000 hotel rooms, pushing smaller community events to other parks or venues in Virginia Beach during the resort season. That was one of several recommendations presented May 27 by the task force to guide policies for public spending on the growing number of events in the city. Other recommendations included standardizing the application process to qualify for city sponsorship of a festival, and holding festival producers accountable for spending of city funds. (WHRO)
PEOPLE
John Chandler has been promoted to president and principal broker of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices RW Towne Property Management, the Norfolk-based real estate firm announced May 29. Chandler was previously the firm’s director of facilities and compliance and chief operating officer of its property management division, according to his LinkedIn profile. He succeeds his sister-in-law, Lisa Chandler, who announced her retirement in October 2023. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Dustin H. DeVore was named managing partner of Kaufman & Canoles’ Williamsburg office, effective May 21, the law firm announced. DeVore joined Kaufman & Canoles in 2002 and chairs the firm’s lender representation practice group and its credit union team. DeVore takes over from Gregory R. Davis, with whom he’s worked for the past 22 years. Davis will continue at the firm, where he focuses on trust and estate matters. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
NORTHERN VIRGINIA
An Ashburn-based tech company, Arthur Grand Technologies, was fined by the Department of Justice in May after it advertised that it was seeking white candidates for an open job posting. The posting was published on Indeed.com in March 2023 and said that the company was only looking for “U.S. Born Citizens [white] who are local within 60 miles from Dallas, TX [Don’t share with candidates],” according to a Justice Department news release. The company must pay penalties of $38,500, and the agreement requires Arthur Grand to train its personnel on the Immigration and Nationality Act. (WTOP; Associated Press)
Arlington County-based Boeing received orders for only four new planes in May and, for the second straight month, none for its best-selling 737 Max, as fallout continues from the blowout of a side panel on a Max during a January flight. The results released in June compared unfavorably with Europe’s Airbus, which reported net orders for 15 planes in May — 27 sales but 12 cancellations. Boeing delivered 24 jetliners in May, including 19 Max jets, and it still has a huge backlog of more than 5,600 orders. (Associated Press)
McLean-based Capital One Financial is no longer the exclusive issuer of Walmart consumer credit cards, as of late May. The two companies announced they ended their consumer card agreement, which began in 2019. The announcement followed problems first uncovered in late 2022 and early 2023 by Reuters. In April 2023, Walmart filed a federal lawsuit seeking to end the partnership, and the judge ruled in March that the retailer could end the partnership. Capital One retains ownership and servicing of the credit card portfolio. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Inova Health System raised $83 million over the past year, surpassing the “Schar Challenge” issued by donors Dwight and Martha Schar when they made a $75 million matching gift to Inova in May 2023. More than 10,000 people made donations following the Schars’ gift, bringing the Falls Church-based health system’s total raised over the past year to $158 million, Inova announced in June. Dwight Schar founded Reston-based homebuilder and mortgage banker NVR. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
For the second time this spring, two planes nearly collided at Reagan National Airport in Arlington County, prompting Virginia’s U.S. senators to again criticize plans to add more long-haul flights at the airport. In May, an American Airlines flight bound for Boston was told to abort its ongoing takeoff procedure as it was about to cross paths with a private plane that had already landed on an intersecting runway. In a joint statement, U.S. Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner cited the near accident to again speak out against the recent decision to add more flights at DCA. Earlier in May, President Joe Biden signed the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization package into law. (Washington Business Journal)
After close to two years of litigation, bitcoin billionaire Michael Saylor and MicroStrategy, the Tysons-based business software company he co-founded, agreed in June to pay $40 million to resolve a tax fraud lawsuit filed by Washington, D.C.’s attorney general. It’s the largest income tax fraud recovery in the district’s history, according to a news release. The lawsuit alleged Saylor claimed to live in Virginia, a state with a lower income tax, and Florida, a state with no personal income tax, to avoid paying more than $25 million in taxes to the District of Columbia. Saylor and MicroStrategy deny violating D.C.’s tax laws and admitted no wrongdoing. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
SHENANDOAH VALLEY
Boxer Gifts, a British manufacturer of specialty, often wacky gifts, including the “poo timer” and “old-age emergency pants,” will invest $1.4 million to establish its first U.S. light manufacturing, distribution and wholesale operation in Harrisonburg, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced May 28. The project is expected to create 15 jobs. The specialty gift shop plans to retrofit a 10,000-square-foot warehouse on 0.74 acres at 955 Sawtooth Oak Circle that it purchased March 15 for $640,000, according to Boxer Gifts President Thomas O’Brien. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
On May 29, a federal judge sentenced Jennifer McDonald, former executive director of the Front Royal-Warren County Economic Development Authority, to a total of 168 months — 14 years — in prison for committing financial crimes against the EDA: 144 months for 29 counts of wire fraud, bank fraud and money laundering, and 24 months for one count of aggravated identity theft. A jury convicted McDonald on Nov. 1, 2023, of charges related to accusations that she used millions of dollars of EDA money without the authority’s board of directors’ permission for her own benefit. She was arrested on the charges in late August 2021. (The Northern Virginia Daily)
RideSmart, a Front Royal-based commuter service, began providing bus service on weekdays from Clarke County to Rosslyn and Washington, D.C., in May. The company held a ribbon cutting May 15 in the Waterloo Park & Ride lot on U.S. 50. RideSmart is using a $1.5 million grant over five years from the Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation to cover costs to provide the bus service, which Todd Horsley, DRPT’s director of Northern Virginia transit programs, said is intended to be “seed money” for RideSmart to get the service up and running. A one-way trip costs $25, and a round trip is $39. (The Winchester Star)
Winchester-based weatherproof decking maker Trex is building a $450 million factory in Little Rock, Arkansas, that will greatly boost its manufacturing capacity. The company, which makes composite boards with sawdust and old plastic bags, is also rolling out new lines of premium decking, like one that mimics hardwoods and one that is cooler on the feet. The facility is being built on 300 acres with room to expand and probably won’t begin production until 2026. Although as of mid-May, renovation spending was expected to sputter and home improvement stores were reporting declining sales, Trex is betting Americans will add onto their homes instead of moving to new ones. (The Wall Street Journal)
Winchester-based health system Valley Health reported $77.8 million in fiscal 2023 revenue in a semi-annual meeting on May 14. The company had $7 million in operating earnings, and $77.8 million with investment earnings factored in. In 2022, Valley Health lost $71.8 million in revenue. Valley Health President and CEO Mark Nantz said the health system was still recovering from the pandemic, but staff retention rates were “back above pre-pandemic levels.” The system operates six hospitals — four in Virginia and two in West Virginia — along with urgent care clinics, physician practices, medical transport services and a retail pharmacy. (The Winchester Star)
The Warren County Board of Supervisors greenlit on June 4 a proposed hotel in the U.S. 340-522 commercial corridor. The board voted to approve a request for a conditional use permit for a hotel with a height of more than 40 feet and added a condition that no large or unnecessary illuminated signs face adjacent homeowners on the westbound side. Pennoni applied for the permit to build a four-story, 91-room Hyatt hotel on Hospitality Drive, proposing a 53-foot hotel with a 2-foot buffer. Green Pearl Hospitality owns the 3.8-acre property, which is adjacent to the DoubleTree by Hilton off Shadows and Hospitality drives. (The Northern Virginia Daily)
SOUTHERN VIRGINIA
After almost 30 years, Henry County is looking to update its comprehensive plan. During their May 28 meeting, county supervisors began what is expected to be a two-year process by awarding a $212,139 contract to the Berkley Group, a Bridgewater-based administrative consultancy firm that will assist county officials with the planning process. This marks the first time the county has updated its comprehensive plan since 1995. (Cardinal News)
Billions of investment dollars could be coming to Pittsylvania County with the development of a data center that was unanimously recommended by the planning commission at its June 4 meeting. The project represents up to $5 billion in investment and at least $120 million in annual tax revenue, according to the Pittsylvania County Industrial Development Authority. The data center, which would be the first of its kind in Pittsylvania, would also create up to 500 jobs. The commission recommended the rezoning of 946 acres off U.S. 58 in Ringgold, in the southeastern part of the county just a few miles outside Danville, for the project. (Cardinal News)
Last year, Sentara Health unveiled plans to invest $70 million to replace the aging Sentara Halifax Regional Hospital in South Boston with a new acute care hospital. In June, the health care system announced the investment will be closer to $107 million. The 100,000-square-foot hospital is scheduled to be completed in summer 2026. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
VF, a Denver-based global apparel and footwear company with brands including Vans, The North Face, Timberland and Dickies, plans to close its distribution center in Martinsville in March 2025, the company confirmed May 22. During a conference call, Bracken Darrell, who joined VF as the company’s president and CEO last summer, called the strategy “tough medicine that we needed to return to growth.” VF’s plans include “fixing the Americas,” turning around the Vans brand, reducing costs and paying down debt. VF experienced a 13% decline in revenue for the fourth quarter, compared with the same period last year. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Virginia International Raceway was awarded three tourism grants totaling $50,500, the raceway announced June 3. The raceway received awards of $22,500 from the Virginia Tourism Marketing Leverage Program, $18,000 from the Virginia Special Events & Festivals Program and $10,000 from a Visit SoSi regional tourism grant. Two of the grants will be used to further asset development and special event support, mostly around the track’s flagship events, the IMSA Michelin GT Challenge and the Virginia is for Racing Lovers Grand Prix. The third grant will help promote new corporate retreat and team-building capabilities to leverage the historic nearly 1,300-acre property and cross-promote the capabilities of several different local businesses that operate out of the onsite business park. (News release)
PEOPLE
Jason Wells joined the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research as executive vice president of manufacturing advancement on June 3, according to a release from the Danville-based economic development organization. Wells, who has nearly three decades of experience in high-performance manufacturing, replaces Todd Yeatts, who left in August. In his new role, Wells will oversee the operation and strategic direction of the Center for Manufacturing Advancement, which helps manufacturers introduce new and emerging technology into their operations and provides other services to industry leaders. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA
A new collaborative initiative, Accelerate Southwest Virginia, will focus on infrastructure, economic development, health care, housing and lowering the cost of living in the region, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced in Wise on May 23. Youngkin compared the initiative to Partnership for Petersburg, a multifaceted project he announced in August 2022. The Virginia Tobacco Region Revitalization Commission is partnering with the Virginia Small Business Financing Authority to create a $10 million loan fund for economic development, and an additional $18.5 million can be made available, he said. Few details about the initiative or how it will be funded were released. (Cardinal News)
The Tennessee Department of Health has given Ballad Health, a 20-hospital system in northeast Tennessee and Southwest Virginia, A grades and an annual stamp of approval, which has occurred as Ballad hospitals consistently fall short of performance targets established by the state. The state’s scoring rubric largely ignores the hospitals’ performance, so only 5% of Ballad’s final score is based on actual quality of care. Ballad has suffered no penalty for failing to meet the state’s goals in about 50 areas, including surgery complications. Ballad Health was created six years ago after Tennessee and Virginia lawmakers waived federal anti-monopoly laws so two competing hospital companies could merge. (Virginia Mercury)
The Southwest Regional Recreation Authority, parent organization of the Spearhead Trails, will receive $5 million in state funding over the next two fiscal years. The funds were included in the two-year budget that Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed in mid-May, according to a news release from the authority. Using the funding, the organization plans to hire 11 additional staff members, increase trail mileage, purchase equipment and make repairs to its headquarters building. A 2019 study from the Institute for Service Research found that the Spearhead Trails annually generate $18.8 million in economic impact to Virginia. (The Coalfield Progress)
The Health Wagon is working to establish the Southwest Virginia region’s first free and charitable pharmacy. The St. Mary’s Faith Pharmacy will be adjacent to the Health Wagon clinic in Wise and will have a drive-thru window. In early June, the pharmacy began conducting a pre-application survey to learn which medications were most needed by patients in the region. Separately, in May, state lawmakers removed $800,000 earmarked for the Health Wagon from the biennial budget following controversy over sharp increases in Health Wagon executives’ salaries. (Bristol Herald Courier)
Wise-based civil engineering and land surveying firm Thompson & Litton acquired Tennessee-based Tysinger, Hampton & Partners, T&L announced May 20. TH&P joined Thompson & Litton’s employee-owned operation on May 15 and is doing business as Thompson & Litton. Its office will remain in Johnson City, Tennessee. T&L serves a five-state mid-Atlantic client base from offices in Wise, Radford, Tazewell and Chilhowie; Bristol, Johnson City and Mosheim, Tennessee; and Princeton, West Virginia. (Bristol Herald Courier)
PEOPLE
Louise “Lou” Fincher, senior vice president of Emory & Henry University, has been named interim president of the Washington County-based private college beginning Aug. 1, as President John W. Wells steps down and becomes the school’s first chancellor in late July.
The college is transitioning to being a university this fall. Fincher is also the inaugural dean of the E&H School of Health Sciences, a position she accepted in 2014, and became senior vice president in 2020. Fincher helped launch the health sciences school in Marion and has led the development of the Southwest Virginia Healthcare Excellence Academy Laboratory School (SWVA-HEALS). (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Top Five July 2024
1 | 39 Virginia companies make the 2024 Fortune 1000
Thirty-nine companies headquartered in Virginia are on Fortune magazine’s 70th annual Fortune 1000 list, with 24 Virginia companies again making the elite Fortune 500. (June 4)
2 | VDOT buys Owens & Minor’s Hanover headquarters for $33.5 million
The Virginia Department of Transportation plans to move the state agency’s central office into the Mechanicsville building in summer 2025. (May 13)
3 | VIPC launches $100 million fund partnership for Virginia startups
The Virginia Innovation Partnership Corp. is partnering with seven venture capital fund managers to invest $100 million in 100 Virginia-based startups. (For more on this story, see Page 12.) (May 20)
4 | Capital One, Walmart end credit card agreement
McLean-based Capital One Financial is no longer the exclusive issuer of Walmart consumer credit cards. (May 24)
5 | Hampden-Sydney College receives $20 million pledge
Richmond-based Endeavour Legacy Foundation pledged $20 million to Hampden-Sydney College, the second largest gift in the college’s history. (May 14)