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Top Doctors 2024: Pediatric Surgery

Dr. Charles E. Bagwell
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. Laura A. Boomer
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. Katherine Davenport
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Joseph Dilustro
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Jeffrey W. Gander
UVA Health Children’s – Pediatric Surgery, Charlottesville

Dr. Jamie Golden
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Michael Goretsky
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Jeffrey Haynes
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. Stephen Kim
Inova Children’s General and Thoracic Surgery, Fairfax

Dr. M. Ann Kuhn
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Patricia A. Lange
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. David Lanning
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. Eugene D. McGahren
UVA Health Children’s – Pediatric Surgery, Charlottesville

Dr. Robert Obermeyer
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Claudio Oiticica
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. Natalie O’Neill
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Jason Sulkowski
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Click here to read the rest of 2024 Top Doctors.

Pediatric Surgery Q&As with Dr. Laura Boomer and Dr. David Lanning

 

 

TOP DOCTORS 2024: Pediatric Cardiology Q&As

Dr. Douglas R. Allen, pediatric cardiologist, UVA Health Children’s – Pediatric Specialty Care Richmond, Richmond

Education: Bachelor’s degree, William & Mary; medical degree, Medical College of Virginia at Virginia Commonwealth University (now VCU School of Medicine); pediatrics residency and pediatric cardiology fellowship, VCU

Family: Married 27 years to Christina Allen, a senior project manager with Sentara Health. Children: Henry, 19, studying international relations with a minor in Korean at the University of Virginia; Sarah, 22, with a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Washington & Lee University and working for CBS19 News in Charlottesville. 

Career mentor: The late Dr. Arnold Salzberg, legendary chief of pediatric surgery at VCU.
Dr. Salzberg taught me that being the best physician you could be was important, but being the best man you could be was more important.

Where would you like to travel that you haven’t yet visited? As a bit of a foodie and the cook in our home, I would most like to travel to both France and Italy, primarily to eat my way through their cuisines.

Is there a particular innovation in pediatric cardiology you’re excited about? There has been a growing acceptance that regionalization and development of multi-institutional networks yields better results in the management of congenital heart disease. I am now part of a statewide collaboration including UVA Health, Children’s Hospital of The Kings’ Daughters and Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, through which we are able to confidently provide the highest level of care for our often-fragile patients in the most appropriate and convenient locations. 

I strongly believe such cooperation among multiple institutions is the best way to care for children with heart disease and am excited to see such networks develop and thrive.


Dr. Alexander Ellis

Dr. Alexander Ellis

Pediatric and adult congenital cardiologist, Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters; associate professor of internal medicine and pediatrics, Eastern Virginia Medical Center, Norfolk

Other medical specialties: I am also the co-director of advanced cardiac imaging at CHKD and the director of the adult congenital heart disease program.

Education: Bachelor’s degree, Princeton University; master’s in biology, McGill University; medical degree, Medical College of Virginia/Virginia Commonwealth University; internal medicine/pediatrics residency and pediatric cardiology fellowship, Medical University of South Carolina; adult congenital heart disease training, Children’s Hospital Philadelphia

Family: My wife, Amy Skorupa, and I met in medical school at MCV (literally over a dead body).  She is now an adult medical oncologist here in Hampton Roads, specializing in breast oncology. We have two children, Jacob, 20, and Sarah, 17. Jacob is a junior at the University of Richmond, concentrating in political science and leadership and running on the cross-country/track team. Sarah is a senior at Princess Anne High School in the international baccalaureate program and will also be attending the University of Richmond, where she was recruited to play field hockey.

Career mentors: Growing up, my next-door neighbor was Dr. Edwin Myer, chair of pediatric neurology at MCV, and he was a major influence for me to enter medicine, especially pediatrics. Within cardiology, I have had many wonderful mentors and attending physicians at MUSC, but especially Dr. Andy Atz, and Dr. Gary Webb from the Children’s Hospital Philadelphia.

Fan of: I married into a Chicago Cubs household so I certainly cheer for them, but it is often a source of frustration and disappointment (except in 2016!).  I am a big fan of music — of many genres — and love to attend concerts or shows. I also love to see my kids’ athletic events — especially track meets and field hockey games.

You worked in Panama’s rainforests. How did you go from that to working in medicine? After college, I knew I did not want to go straight to medical school. My thesis adviser at Princeton offered me the opportunity to do field work for him on Barro Colorado Island in Panama (part of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute). After a few months in the rainforest working on his projects, I was fortunate that he helped me develop my own research project involving climate change and tropical forests, which then became my graduate thesis at McGill.

However, after lugging heavy gas analyzers and other equipment miles into the rainforest every day, dealing with aggressive monkeys and mosquitoes, and especially having to write never-ending grant-funding proposals, I thought I could have a more immediate and concrete impact on peoples’ lives as a physician. If nothing else, I would not get as many bug bites.

What new congenital heart disease treatments are you particularly excited about? I am especially interested in cardiac imaging, whether that be echocardiography or CT/MRI. One of the major advances that our field has had in the last 30 years has been the ability to noninvasively image the heart and great vessels with significantly more clarity/resolution than we have ever had, allowing for better preoperative/transcatheter procedural planning, shorter intervention times and higher success rates.

I am also enthusiastic about new research collaboratives for patients with congenital heart disease. This is a vulnerable, complex population that has previously not benefited from many dedicated research initiatives. Now, there are pharmacologic and medical device trials specifically geared towards patients with congenital heart disease, especially the teenagers and adults living with it.

Read the 2024 Pediatric Cardiology Top Doctors list.

Click here to read the rest of 2024 Top Doctors.

Top Doctors 2024: Pediatric Cardiology

Dr. Douglas R. Allen
UVA Health Children’s – Pediatric Specialty Care Richmond, Richmond

Dr. Dilli Bhurtel
VCU Health – Ridgefield Medical, Richmond

Dr. Julia Burden
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters – Health Center at Harbour View, Suffolk

Dr. Kerri A. Carter
VCU Health – VCU Medical Center Critical Care Hospital, Richmond

Dr. Rose Cummings
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Alexander Ellis
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Robert B. Escalera
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Jonathan Fleenor
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters – Health Center at Lightfoot, Williamsburg

Dr. Scott D. Gullquist
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. Lopa Hartke
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Bradford R. McQuilkin
Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond

Dr. Elliot Tucker
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Michael Vance
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, Norfolk

Dr. Laurie L. Shinn
Commonwealth Dermatology, Richmond

Dr. Judith Williams
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters – Health Center at Fort Norfolk, Norfolk

Click here to read the rest of 2024 Top Doctors.

Pediatric Cardiology Q&As with Dr. Douglas R. Allen and Dr. Alexander Ellis

 

TOP DOCTORS 2024: Gastroenterology Q&A

Dr. Danielle Culbert, gastroenterologist, hepatologist and president of Tidewater-Suffolk division, Capital Digestive Care, Suffolk

Education: Bachelor’s degree, William & Mary; master’s of biomedical science and medical degree, Eastern Virginia Medical School; internal medicine internship and residency, Virginia Commonwealth University; gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition fellowship, Ohio State University Medical Center

Family: Married for 22 years to David Culbert, with three children. Oldest son, Dylan, is 18 and a freshman at Savannah College of Art and Design, and our 13-year-old twins, Austin and Addison, are in eighth grade at Nansemond Suffolk Academy in Suffolk. Also, a 3-year-old golden retriever named Bocephus

Career mentors: The late Dr. Fred Thomas, Ohio State University Medical Center, and Dr. Todd Stravitz, VCU

Which TV shows about doctors get it really right or wrong? They all get it so incredibly wrong. The fact that residents go into work and leave work with the sun shining is in itself absurd!

How would you change patient behavior? It would be for patients to be kinder to themselves. Especially as women, we expect too much from ourselves, and sometimes we just need a break. We cannot be everything to everyone all the time without that taking a tremendous toll on our health, particularly our gastrointestinal health.

Click here to read the rest of 2024 Top Doctors.

Read the 2024 Gastroenterology Top Doctors list. 

100 People to Meet in 2024: Storytellers

Dating back to Edgar Allan Poe and William Faulkner, Virginia has hosted its fair share of writers and creative types, a rich tradition that these Virginians carry into the present.

S.A. Cosby

Author
Gloucester

Before his writing career took off, S.A. Cosby, who goes by Shawn, worked a lot of jobs similar to the characters in his novels — bouncer, forklift driver, landscaper, construction worker. It took a couple of decades and a lot of rejections until he caught a break, finding a Manhattan-based literary agent.

Today, Cosby’s a celebrated “Southern noir” author whose crime novels are set in familiar places in rural Virginia, like Mathews County, where he grew up, and Gloucester County. 

His 2020 novel, “Blacktop Wasteland,” received critical acclaim; subsequent novels “Razorblade Tears” and “All the Sinners Bleed” have been New York Times bestsellers and landed on several “best of” reading lists, including former President Barack Obama’s.

The first time Obama singled out one of his novels was “surreal,” Cosby says, thinking he’d reached his pinnacle. “The second time, it makes you feel like, ‘OK, what is happening?’”


Barbara Kingsolver

Author and poet
Washington County

Celebrated author Barbara Kingsolver grew up in Nicholas County, Kentucky, though she later learned of family roots in Virginia’s Washington County. She has also lived in the Republic of Congo, France, Arizona and the Canary Islands, but in 1993, a fellowship at then-Emory & Henry College brought her to Virginia, where the mother of two moved full-time in 2004.

Her novels generally center on social justice issues. Her most recent, “Demon Copperhead,” won a 2023 Pulitzer Prize for literature. A retelling of Charles Dickens’ “David Copperfield” set in Southwest Virginia, it tackles the opioids crisis and rural poverty. Her 1998 novel, “The Poisonwood Bible” was also a Pulitzer finalist.

In 2000, Kingsolver established the PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction, which awards a publishing contract and $25,000 to the author of an unpublished novel every other year.


John Park

Co-owner and co-founder, The JPG Agency
Roanoke

John Park spent 19 years as a financial planner, but digital storytelling — especially about food — is his true calling. In 2018, Park co-founded his marketing agency to help restaurants and other small businesses with digital marketing and managing their social media presences. An avid foodie and food photographer, Park is perhaps best known for his “Hungry Asian” (@hungryasianrke) Instagram account, which has grown to more than 10,000 followers over the past decade. “I don’t consider myself an influencer,” Park says. “To me, it’s just a way to share my life and food journey, mainly through the Southeast.”


Courteney Stuart

Podcast host, “Small Town, Big Crime”; radio host, WINA
Charlottesville

A longtime journalist and local radio news host, Courteney Stuart switched mediums several times while pursuing her love of investigative journalism, including stints in TV news, radio and podcasting. “I’ve sort of been cavorting through the media landscape in Charlottesville,” she says. “I love stories.”

In 2019, Stuart and her “Small Town, Big Crime” podcast co-host, Rachel Ryan, began investigating a notorious 1985 Virginia double murder. Jens Soering, then a University of Virginia student from Germany, was found guilty of murdering his girlfriend’s parents in their Bedford County home; his girlfriend and fellow U.Va. student, Elizabeth Haysom, was convicted of two counts of accessory before the fact. But there have long been questions about Soering’s guilt, even among some law enforcement officers, an angle Stuart and Ryan examined.

In November, Stuart was featured in Netflix’s “Till Murder Do Us Part: Soering vs. Haysom,” which quickly shot to the streaming platform’s No. 1 show in the U.S. and the United Kingdom. A second podcast season, covering a new case, is coming soon.

Check out the other 100 People to Meet in 2024.

100 People to Meet in 2024: Public Faces

From the commander of the world’s largest naval base to a viral, small-town country music sensation, these people are highly visible representatives of their communities and industries.

Oliver Anthony

Singer and songwriter
Farmville

You would have had to be living under a big rock not to hear about the splash country-folk singer Oliver Anthony — the stage name of Farmville resident Christopher Anthony Lunsford — made this summer with his viral song “Rich Men North of Richmond.” Despite not having the same corporate backing as, say, Taylor Swift, Anthony’s populist-libertarian anthem about Washington, D.C., politicians hit No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 in August, and as of early November, the song’s YouTube video had 89.5 million views. In September, Anthony signed with Nashville-based United Talent Agency and announced he will be recording his first full album in January — outdoors. He’s scheduled to play the ServPro Pavilion in Doswell on May 17, 2024.


Eric Bach

Broadcasting and media relations manager, Fredericksburg Nationals
Fredericksburg

The voice of the Single-A Fredericksburg Nationals Minor League Baseball team, Eric Bach is, by the time you read this, relaxing in the offseason and traveling to see friends and family, as well as officiating high school and college basketball and football games. In the spring and summer, though, “it’s six games a week and it’s 132 games in sixish months,” he notes. “It’s 75-, 80-hour weeks during the season. But you know, we all are here because we love baseball, right?” As the only openly gay MiLB broadcaster in the nation, Bach is a rarity, a fact noted in a July feature about him in The New York Times. “Visibility is so important,” says Bach, who hopes to work one day for a major league team. “Just the fact that you’re existing in that space is pretty profound for a lot of people.”


Angela Costello

Vice president of communications and marketing, Virginia Innovation Partnership Corp.
Norfolk

A longtime marketing strategist who started her own video company in 1989, Angela Costello is using her skills to build interest in VIPC, the state’s tech innovation not-for-profit corporation, which connects entrepreneurs with funding, training and mentors. An aviation lover, Costello is a licensed pilot who flies drones too. A graduate of Virginia Wesleyan University and the Harvard Kennedy School, Costello is a certified chaplain. In 2017, her virtual reality company, SwivelVR, produced what was billed as the first live VR concert, which allowed fans to watch and interact with a streaming concert by rock band Matchbox Twenty.


Capt. Janet Days

Commander, Naval Station Norfolk
Norfolk

Capt. Janet Days is the first African American commanding officer of the world’s largest naval base, a post she assumed in February. As a career surface warfare officer, her role as commanding officer of the Norfolk base, which employs 89,000 active-duty military personnel and 52,000 civilian employees, involves ensuring that the Navy’s operational forces have the necessary infrastructure and support for training and operations.

Days comes from a family with a long tradition of military service and values continuing that legacy. Off base, she enjoys traveling with her husband to jazz concerts and is an avid reader.

“I love what I do, and that matters,” she says. “I’ve been serving for a while and could have retired by now, but I’m not ready to yet. If there’s an opportunity to advocate, coach and mentor, I’ll continue to do that.”


Robby Demeria

Chief corporate affairs officer, Phlow
Richmond

A former Virginia deputy secretary of commerce for technology and innovation, Robby Demeria joined Phlow in 2020 as its chief of staff, becoming the pharma company’s chief corporate affairs officer this year. He’s also inaugural board chair of the Alliance for Building Better Medicine, a cluster of advanced pharmaceutical manufacturers and researchers developing a production hub in the Richmond and Petersburg region. So far, the companies collectively are bringing $500 million in investments to the effort, creating about 350 jobs, Demeria notes proudly. Phlow has a $354 million federal contract to create a domestic supply chain for essential pharmaceutical drugs and ingredients. With its new factories scheduled to be online in early 2024, Phlow has potential to earn a six-year extension on its contract from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, which expires in May 2024.


Hayley DeRoche

Writer and @sadbeige TikTok creator; branch manager, Richmond Public Library
Petersburg

A Richmond Public Library librarian and mom of two, Hayley DeRoche still squeezes in time to create satirical “sad beige clothing for sad beige children” videos for the more than 300,000 followers of the TikTok account she started in 2021 and its accompanying Instagram.

A reaction to marketing of neutral-colored children’s clothes modeled by somber kids, DeRoche’s videos feature catalog pictures and her imitation of stoic German filmmaker Werner Herzog in voiceovers like, “I call this one ‘the faceless misery of existential dread romper.’ $70. Available in cinnamon.” In November, the unthinkable happened: Herzog acknowledged DeRoche’s videos and declared, “A little bit of self-irony is not bad at all, anyway.”

The Petersburg resident has written several humor pieces for McSweeney’s and authored “Hello Lovelies!: A Novel,” an audiobook satirizing mommy blogs. As of early October, DeRoche had a novel and a picture book out for submission. 


John Fishwick Jr.

Attorney and owner, Fishwick & Associates
Roanoke

Lawyer John Fishwick Jr. has become a go-to legal commentator on former President Donald Trump’s court cases over the past year, as well as other high-profile legal matters, including the infamous Murdaugh murders in South Carolina. A former U.S. attorney for the Western District of Virginia, Fishwick jokes, “Some of the big dogs must not have answered their cell phones,” when he got his first cable news invitation. But with a background in civil rights, federal criminal law and personal injury law, Fishwick is accomplished in his field. Outside of work, he’s an avid tennis player and is aiming to get Congress to rename a federal courthouse in Roanoke for the late civil rights attorney Reuben E. Lawson. “That’s not an easy thing,” Fishwick says, “but we’re in for the long haul.”


Stephen Kirkland

Executive director, Nauticus
Norfolk

Stephen Kirkland used to spend his days as a cruise director on Carnival Cruise Line’s ships traveling around the world. Now he brings cruise ships into Norfolk, an initiative that will majorly expand in 2024 and 2025, when Carnival plans to operate year-round from the cruise terminal in Norfolk. Kirkland built Norfolk’s growing cruise ship program from the ground up, starting as cruise marketing director, and using his relationship-building skills and experience working on cruise ships to bring it to life. Kirkland’s other baby, Nauticus, a maritime discovery center adjacent to the cruise terminal, is also undergoing a multimillion-dollar refresh that will be done at the end of 2024. Working in the cruise industry wasn’t Kirkland’s first career, though. The University of South Carolina graduate got his start in broadcast news.


Linda Peck

Executive director, Norfolk Innovation Corridor and Greater Norfolk Corp.
Norfolk

A Portsmouth native, Linda Peck had a career in corporate finance in Manhattan after earning degrees at the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University, but she wasn’t passionate about the work. “It wasn’t what I wanted to read about on vacation or think about in the shower,” she says. So, she tried a few other paths, including teaching middle school for 19 years and being executive director of a synagogue before landing at Greater Norfolk Corp., one of the city’s economic development partners, in 2021. Peck became executive director of the Norfolk Innovation Corridor, part of downtown Norfolk zoned to incentivize tech startups focused on sea-level rise and recurrent flooding, and then was named GNC’s executive director in 2022. Through these posts, Peck says, she’s able to “help make Norfolk better” and follow her passions.


Valentina Peleggi

Music director and Lewis T. Booker music director chair, Richmond Symphony
Richmond

Considered a rising star in classical music circles, Valentina Peleggi joined the Richmond Symphony during the 2020-21 season, a less-than-auspicious time for live performances. But since returning to in-person concerts, Peleggi has made up for lost time, guest conducting for the Chicago, Dallas and Baltimore symphonies, and in May 2024, she’s scheduled to conduct “The Barber of Seville” at the Seattle Opera. The Richmond Symphony renewed her contract in September to extend through the 2027-28 season.

With degrees in conducting from Rome’s Conservatorio Santa Cecilia and the Royal Academy of Music of London, Peleggi was resident conductor at the São Paulo Symphony Orchestra in Brazil and has worked with orchestras around the world. She is a native of Florence, Italy, and was part of a children’s choir directed by Zubin Mehta, conductor emeritus of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra.


Chris Piper

Executive director, Virginia Public Access Project
Richmond

Chris Piper has been interested in electoral politics since watching Rock the Vote programming on MTV as a 15-year-old, which led him to his professional purpose: informing voters so they can make the choices that most align with their values.

After serving as state elections commissioner during the Northam administration, Piper joined an election administration consulting firm. In June, he started his newest role: leading VPAP, which keeps politically minded Virginians up to date on campaign finances and statewide races.

The job was a “natural fit,” he says, since he has firsthand knowledge of the workings of state government and had worked in his previous role with former VPAP Executive Director David Poole.

In 2024, VPAP will focus on its next phase, which could include growth beyond Virginia’s borders, says Piper, who has run 14 marathons.


Colleen Shogan

Archivist of the United States
Arlington County

The first woman to serve as the federal government’s head archivist, Colleen Shogan was nominated by President Joe Biden in August 2022 and was sworn in as the nation’s 11th archivist in May. Before starting her new job, Shogan was an associate professor of government and politics at George Mason University, served as director of the David M. Rubenstein National Center for White House History, worked at the Library of Congress and has published eight D.C.-set murder mystery novels. Speaking at Shogan’s September swearing-in by Chief Justice John Roberts, first lady Jill Biden quoted the new archivist: “[Shogan] said, ‘Although this truth is self-evident, we know from our almost 250 years of American history that it is not self-executing. It’s our job, collectively, to uphold these principles and protect them.’ Well done.”


Jayme Swain

President and CEO, VPM Media/Virginia Foundation for Public Media
Richmond

After 60 years on Sesame Street in Chesterfield County, VPM plans to move in 2026 to a new downtown Richmond building on Broad Street. That’s just one of the changes Jayme Swain has instituted since becoming CEO in 2019 of Virginia’s public television and radio stations serving Central Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley. The new building will have capacity for podcast studios and live performances, as well as up-to-date radio, digital and TV production facilities.

“We are public media, and it felt increasingly isolated in Chesterfield,” says Swain, who looked at about 70 properties before deciding on Broad Street. “Being right in the heart of downtown Richmond better represents the citizens that we serve across the commonwealth.” Also in the works is a rebrand of Style Weekly, the Richmond alternative weekly publication VPM purchased in 2021.

Outside of work, Swain is an avid swimmer who occasionally competes in triathlons and loves to travel.


Renée Turk

Mayor, City of Salem
Salem

A Roanoke College graduate, former teacher, car salesperson and radio station account executive, Renée Turk narrowly lost her 2018 bid for Salem City Council by 79 votes. She decided in 2020 to try again — and succeeded. Then she was chosen by the council to serve as Salem’s first female mayor. Though it’s not a position intended as a full-time job, Turk says, “I’ve gotten out and gone to a lot more things in the community and in the region … because I happen to be retired and have the time. Every single day, I think it’s important for us to communicate with each other and to work together.” Her council term ends in 2024, but Turk plans to run again.


Lakshmi Williams

North America general counsel and corporate secretary, Transurban; board chair, Virginia Chamber of Commerce
Tysons

Lakshmi Williams watches the ribbons of connected roadways that are visible from her Tysons office window and realizes how critical her work is to getting travelers to their destinations. Williams manages legal matters for Australian toll road company Transurban’s North America branch, which operates express lanes throughout Northern Virginia.

“Unlike toll roads, customers can choose if or when to use express lanes,” she explains. “Transportation is on the cusp of exciting changes,” she adds, noting that managed lanes are candidates for the future use of connected autonomous vehicles. In October, Transurban took part in a CAV trial on a closed-off section of the 395 Express Lanes.

As of January, she’s also serving as board chair for the Virginia Chamber of Commerce. Keeping Virginia ranked as a top state for business is one of her highest priorities, she says.

This feature has been corrected since publication.

Check out the other 100 People to Meet in 2024.

100 People to Meet in 2024: Rainmakers

These are the professionals who attract and grow businesses and funding, making the commonwealth wealthier.

Deseria Creighton-Barney

Fundraising campaign tri-chair, Virginia Tech
Chesterfield County

A 1986 communications graduate of Virginia Tech, Deseria Creighton-Barney aims to push 100,000 of her fellow Hokie alums into action to reach the university’s expanded 2023 fundraising goal of $1.872 billion, a nod to Tech’s 1872 founding. In some ways, Creighton-Barney never left Tech, where she serves on the Alumni Advisory Board of the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences and previously served on the Virginia Tech Foundation board of directors. The HR professional, who is starting her own consulting firm, is a past president of Tech’s Alumni Board of Directors, the first Black woman to hold that position. She’s also active in the 110-year-old Delta Sigma Theta sorority and public service organization.


Katie Cristol

CEO, Tysons Community Alliance
McLean

Starting in the 1960s, Tysons embarked on a development boom that took it from a rural crossroads into an edge city with office parks, corporate headquarters, malls, hotels, apartment buildings and Metro stations. Today, Katie Cristol leads an organization that is sparking the community’s rebirth as a new urban center. Cristol stepped down from the Arlington County Board of Supervisors this year to become the first permanent CEO of the Tysons Community Alliance, the nonprofit advocacy group that replaced the Tysons Partnership last year. Cristol has a passion for the way transportation connects everyone in the region and impacts housing and economic development. “It can really power dramatic opportunities for the residents of the region,” she says.


Dana Cronkhite

Economic development director, Dickenson County
Clintwood

In August 2022, Dana Cronkhite became Dickenson County’s economic development director, a newly created role. A county native, Cronkhite returned home with her daughter and husband after he retired from the Marine Corps. Her background in social work translates to economic development, she says: “Both … are about relationships and being able to advocate for what you need.”

The numerous development projects underway in the Southwest Virginia county include Kentucky-based Addiction Recovery Care’s first facility in Virginia, which is expected to open in the first quarter of 2024, depending on licensing and certifications. The 112-bed men’s addiction treatment facility will provide workforce training, which could be customized for an employer in the Red Onion industrial site being built across the road.


Tracy Sayegh Gabriel

President and executive director, National Landing Business Improvement District
Arlington County

Downtown Arlington has undergone significant transformation in the past five years, largely driven by Amazon.com’s HQ2 and substantial investments in residential and commercial development, parks and transportation. Helping to lead the change has been a “dream role,” Tracy Sayegh Gabriel says.

While HQ2 has opened two 22-story office towers, Gabriel says there’s still a need for balanced development of office and residential space, as well as the growth of local businesses.

The business improvement district puts on 200 events a year and plans to launch a National Landing Foundation to support the district’s evolving needs. “We see ourselves as the stewards for managing the incredible transformation underway,” she says. “It’s a unique opportunity because we are the fastest-growing area in the D.C. region.”


Sarah Jane Kirkland

Associate vice president for corporate partnerships, Old Dominion University
Norfolk

Sarah Jane Kirkland started as a ballerina in her native United Kingdom but soon left her hometown of Startford-upon-Avon, Shakepeare’s birthplace, to work on cruise ships. That’s where she met her husband, Stephen, who convinced her to move to Norfolk with him when they decided it was time to drop anchor. She worked on and off for the nonprofit Civic Leadership Institute and Carnival Cruise Line for several years, and in March started in a newly created position at ODU. There, she focuses on forming relationships with senior executives at corporations and nonprofits to develop partnership opportunities, such as internships, corporate research and development grants, and workforce development initiatives.


Kevin Leslie

Associate vice president for innovation and commercialization, Old Dominion University
Norfolk

Kevin Leslie has worked at various educational institutions in Virginia, specializing in health care technology, and has witnessed the growth of biomedical research in the state. In January he was named ODU’s first associate vice president for innovation and commercialization, and will assist students, staff and faculty with turning their innovative ideas and inventions into commercial products. “If you have a scientist who does something interesting in a lab, but maybe that could eventually be a product or a drug or device, we help them navigate the entire process of going from idea and protecting it to then shepherding it all the way out and helping to commercialize that,” he explains. Leslie previously was executive director of Hampton Roads Biomedical Research Consortium, a partnership among Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk State University, Sentara Health and ODU.


Duane Miller

Executive director, LENOWISCO Planning District
Duffield

In his senior year at what was then Clinch Valley College and now the University of Virginia’s College at Wise, Duane Miller interned with the LENOWISCO Planning District, where he’s now worked for almost 30 years. Originally from Fredericksburg, Miller fell in love with Southwest Virginia.

Infrastructure development is a priority for the district, which had over $30 million in active water and sewer projects in its region (Lee, Wise and Scott counties and Norton) in October, Miller says. In August, LENOWISCO partner Scott County Telephone Cooperative won a $25 million federal grant to help expand broadband districtwide.

One of the planning district’s many current projects is a study on the jobs impact of a small nuclear modular reactor, which Gov. Glenn Youngkin is bullish on building in Southwest. Miller estimates the report will be finished in early 2024.

Check out the other 100 People to Meet in 2024.

100 People to Meet in 2024: Innovators

These scientists, inventors and entrepreneurs are leading the way in tomorrow’s industries, from artificial intelligence and drone technologies to biotech research.

Michael Beiro

Founder and CEO, Linebird
Ashland

Michael Beiro’s bio on X (formerly Twitter) is to the point: “I make robots that can touch power lines for a living.” Under his leadership, Linebird has developed the first-ever solution to allow “off-the-shelf drones to do hands-on work on live power lines, previously achieved by linemen hanging out of helicopters,” says Beiro, a Virginia Commonwealth University mechanical engineering grad who teamed up with an ex-lineman to develop the concept. Being a power lineworker is one of the 10 most lethal occupations in the U.S., so Linebird’s drones not only save utilities time and money, but they also have the potential to save lives. The company is based in the Dominion Energy Innovation Center’s coworking space in Ashland.


Marc Breton

Professor and associate director of research at Center for Diabetes Technology, University of Virginia
Charlottesville

Marc Breton hails from a long line of scientists and doctors, joking that he tried his best to escape the family business and failed. Despite his master’s degree and Ph.D. in systems engineering, the native of France jumped when offered a chance to head a research project with applications in medicine.

“It was an incredible chance to see the fruits of my research applied in clinical care,” he says of inventing an artificial pancreas that could monitor and automatically regulate the blood glucose levels of Type 1 diabetes patients. “It’s mind-boggling that 400,000 to half-a-million people worldwide are now using the device.”

As a result, Breton received U.Va.’s 2022 Edlich-Henderson Innovator of the Year award for faculty members whose work makes an impact on society. The father of three tries hard not to work all the time but notes, “That balance is not always struck.”


Alex Fox

Chief growth officer, HawkEye 360
Herndon

At satellite analytics company HawkEye 360, Alex Fox is responsible for various aspects of business development, sales, marketing and sales engineering. His background is in space technology, having previously worked for Harris Corp. as director of space intelligence, surveillance
and reconnaissance solutions. In January, three HawkEye
360 satellites went into orbit during Rocket Lab’s first launch in the United States, which took place at NASA’s Wallops Island facility. The company operates 21 satellites and plans to have 20 clusters with three satellites each by 2025.

Fox enjoys spending time with his family, including helping his son develop his own cybersecurity career and attending his daughter’s soccer and softball games. He serves on the advisory board for alma mater Georgia Tech’s College of Computing.


Susan Ginsburg

Founder and CEO, Criticality Sciences
Alexandria

Examining the causes and consequences of the Sept. 11 attacks as a senior counsel on the 9/11 Commission made Susan Ginsburg passionate about making sure that when the unexpected happens, failures are kept small and recovery happens rapidly. Those too were her goals in starting software company Criticality Sciences, which aims to build resilience into critical infrastructure like utilities.

An attorney whose career was centered on public policy and government, Ginsburg is an adviser to the American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Law and National Security.

Keeping failures small and recovering rapidly not only protects essential producers but also protects the communities they supply and serve, Ginsburg notes. Criticality Sciences entered the market in 2021 and was part of the Dominion Energy Innovation Center, an independent nonprofit accelerator and incubator in Ashland.


Christopher Goyne

Associate professor and Aerospace Research Laboratory director, University of Virginia
Charlottesville

Boarding an aircraft in New York City and landing in Los Angeles 40 minutes later could be possible within 15 years, says Christopher Goyne, an Australian expert
in hypersonic technology.

“Hypersonic is flight in the atmosphere at Mach 5 and faster, or five times the speed of sound,” explains Goyne, director of U.Va.’s Aerospace Research Laboratory. “We are developing next-generation technology for use by commercial companies, NASA and the U.S. Department of Defense.”

Under a $4.5 million DOD award, Goyne leads a team of collaborating universities and industry partners to develop components for a supersonic combustion scramjet that can handle speeds above Mach 5. Besides fulfilling military needs, the work promises longer-term applications as well, specifically high-speed reusable aircraft that can transport people and goods quickly around the world and space travel that is more efficient and safer than using conventional rockets.


Nanci Hardwick

Founder and CEO, Aeroprobe and Meld Manufacturing
Christiansburg

Serial entrepreneur Nanci Hardwick says being called a disruptor at the R&D 100 Awards in 2018 was one of her proudest moments. At the event, her metal 3D printing company, Meld Manufacturing, was named among the 100 most innovative companies in the world and received the award for most market-disruptive new technology.

Rather than melting metal, the company uses pressure and friction to layer materials into shapes of any size, resulting in stronger products that are made faster and with less waste than through traditional manufacturing. Meld is a spinoff of Aeroprobe, another company started by Hardwick, and she also has launched Meld PrintWorks to fulfill customer metal orders.

“I am passionate about restoring manufacturing independence and self-sufficiency in our country,” says Hardwick, who participated in a 2022 roundtable with Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen about the semiconductor chip supply chain crisis. “Investments must be made for that to become true again.”


Nikki Hastings

Executive director and co-founder, CvilleBioHub; Instructor of commerce and Shumway Business Health Science Fellow, University of Virginia
Charlottesville

Nikki Hastings thinks of herself as a scientist helping scientists to do their best work by applying entrepreneurial methodologies. She has a doctorate in biomedical engineering from the University of Virginia, where she leads the graduate-level biotech track at the McIntyre School of Commerce. With the January announcement that U.Va. is establishing the $300 million Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology, Hastings has been busier than ever with CvilleBioHub, a nonprofit focused on Charlottesville’s biotech community. In March, the organization received a $100,000 GO Virginia grant to launch CvilleBioLab, an accelerator for early-stage biotech startups.

Hastings, who has been immersed in research, launching companies and helping connect people to one other, says there is “great vision to attract new research to the region.” Also an avid Taylor Swift fan, Hastings snagged a lucky ticket to see the singer on her Eras tour in Atlanta earlier this year. 


John S. Langford

Chairman and CEO, Electra.aero
Manassas

John Langford’s team at aerospace startup Electra.aero has unveiled a new kind of airplane, a hybrid-electric short takeoff and landing vehicle that can take off and land on soccer-field-size spaces.

The Federal Aviation Administration has approved Electra’s two-seat technology demonstrator, the EL-2 Goldfinch, for testing under a special airworthiness certificate; demonstrations are set to begin in 2024, with a nine-passenger vehicle in commercial operation by 2028.

Compared with vertical lift designs, Electra’s quiet plane uses blown-lift technology to more economically deliver twice the payload at 10 times the range while still being able to take off and land almost anywhere. Langford says the plane is ideal for middle-mile passenger mobility and cargo logistics.

Before starting Electra in 2020, Langford co-founded Boeing subsidiary Aurora Flight Sciences and was president of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.


Grace Mittl

CEO and co-founder, Absurd Snacks
Richmond

An athlete in high school and at the University of Richmond, Grace Mittl was constantly looking for healthier ways to revamp salads. At UR, where she ran track, she soaked beans in bins and buckets in her apartment overnight, seeking the best texture.

“My roommates probably hated me at the time,” she says in hindsight.

Absurd Snacks was born in 2022, the result of a yearlong startups class at UR. Mittl was also inspired by a classmate who suffered anaphylaxis after eating a granola bar contaminated with nuts from the supply chain. Absurd’s savory and sweet trail mixes, by contrast, are free of major allergens.

In September, the brand expanded to Whole Foods, reaching 14 locations throughout Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C., and in October, expanded to Amazon.com.


Sharon Nelson

President, Sensei Enterprises
Fairfax

Ask Sharon Nelson, a former Virginia State Bar president, how Sensei Enterprises came to be, and she’ll say it began when she asked John Simek to computerize her law practice in the ’80s. Now vice president, Simek always wanted to own a tech company.

“So, we took a chance, and somewhere along the way, we got married,” Nelson laughs. Their company, Sensei Enterprises, is a boutique provider of IT, cybersecurity and digital forensics services, established in 1997 by Nelson, a practicing attorney, and Simek, who holds a wealth of technical certifications.

Although Nelson’s technology knowledge was slim at the time, she became an expert, and she and Simek have lectured on legal technology, cybersecurity and other topics in all 50 states and around the world. Nelson balances that schedule with a “rich tapestry of family life,” including spending time with the couple’s 10 grandchildren.


Alexander Olesen

CEO and co-founder, Babylon Micro-Farms
Richmond

When Alexander Olesen and fellow Babylon Micro-Farms co-founder Graham Smith dreamed up their “plug and play” hydroponic micro-farm concept as University of Virginia undergrads, they had little work experience, let alone farming chops. But they had a vision: leveraging technology to grow nutritious food. Based in Richmond’s fast-growing Scott’s Addition neighborhood, the company produces indoor, vertical hydroponic farms that let schools, hospitals and other businesses grow their own climate-controlled produce, saving labor and requiring less experience. Since its founding in 2017, the business has expanded impressively into international business. In April, Babylon announced $8 million in Series A funding, two years after snagging $3 million in seed funding.


Neal Piper

CEO and founder, Luminoah
Charlottesville

Neal Piper came to his present job with a background in pharmaceutical sales at Pfizer, as well as being founding executive of Presidential Precinct, a nonprofit focused on improving health outcomes through leadership training. He used that expertise to found his med-tech startup in 2020 after his then-3-year-old son, Noah, was diagnosed with cancer in 2019.

“It rips your heart out when you go into a pediatric cancer floor, and it completely transforms your mindset,” Piper recalls, but the experience also gave him an idea for a needed innovation.

Luminoah, named for Piper’s son, is developing a wearable solution to free patients from being tethered to a pole to receive tube feeding. The company raised $6 million in a Series A round that finished in the summer and plans to use that toward expansion and regulatory approval.

Noah, who has a twin sister, Saphia, is now 7 and cancer free.


Chris Rawlings

Founder and CEO, Bowerbird Energy; podcast host, “Energy Sense”
Richmond

An Iraq War veteran, Chris Rawlings was an aircraft maintenance supervisor and program manager for the Marine Corps and Northrop Grumman before starting his energy services contracting business in 2014. Named for a species of bird that builds complicated nests to attract mates, Bowerbird Energy specializes in designing, building and maintaining renewable-energy and energy-efficient HVAC, electrical and lighting systems for industry and government clients nationwide. Around Virginia, Bowerbird’s projects include replacing natural gas-fired hot water heaters with a solar thermal system at Joint Base Langley–Eustis. A renewable energy industry influencer, Rawlings also hosts the podcast “Energy Sense,” taking deep dives into timely topics such as utility-scale battery storage, microgrids, energy security and offshore wind power.


Tim Ryan

Executive director, Innovate Hampton Roads
Norfolk

Tim Ryan’s no stranger to Hampton Roads’ entrepreneurial scene, having served as executive director of StartWheel, which provides resources to startups and more established businesses. In May, StartWheel and Hampton Roads Innovation Collaborative merged their education programs, naming the joint venture Innovate Hampton Roads. Its mission is to centralize efforts that foster the growth of startups and create more visibility for small businesses locally. Ryan previously worked in the incubator and accelerator sector in Williamsburg, as well as consulting with East Coast startups through his business, Arcphor. He also is an avid runner, covering an average of six miles daily for the past 10 years. “Through hurricanes, snowstorms and before early morning flights, I’m out there getting in my miles,” he says. “To succeed, you must do hard things, and this is something that keeps me tough.”


Gymama Slaughter

Executive director, Center for Bioelectronics, Old Dominion University
Norfolk

Growing up, Gymama Slaughter thought she would become a medical doctor, but in biology class, she realized dissections left her feeling very squeamish. Nonetheless, she found a way to continue working in the biomedical space and now focuses on innovative research to diagnose and treat cancer without invasive surgery. She’s particularly excited about ODU’s July 2024 merger with Eastern Virginia Medical School, and plans to host a biotech conference to promote academic and research discussions next year. “That collaboration is big for us in terms of being able to translate our product from the lab to the clinic and then to the consumer market,” Slaughter notes. She’s also involved with community outreach to engage young people, especially from underrepresented minority groups, in STEM-related fields.


Kim Snyder

CEO and founder, KlariVis
Roanoke

Kim Snyder landed in banking in 2005 when Valley Bank in Roanoke recruited her to be its chief financial officer. She immediately fell in love with community banking and helping small businesses.

After Valley Bank was sold in 2015, Snyder worked as a consultant and discovered that every bank she worked with had the same data problems. Beginning in 2018, she started building a proof of concept for what would become KlariVis, her business that helps small banks centralize and analyze data so that they can better compete with large banks.

KlariVis launched in the first quarter of 2020, just ahead of the pandemic. By the end of the year, they’d picked up seven clients, 45 by the end of 2022 and 90 this year. Snyder’s goal for 2024 is to become profitable and continue growing the platform.


Paula Sorrell

Associate vice president for innovation and economic development, George Mason University
Arlington County

Sorrell comes from a family of engineers, and though she’s not one, she calls herself a “good translator of technology.” At George Mason, she oversees a team of 200 people across the state, including six incubators and the Office of Technology Transfer, as well as federal and state programs that offer funding and help to startups, entrepreneurs and small businesses. She’s also in charge of growing GMU’s Arlington campus.

With degrees from Central Michigan University in marketing and marketing management, Sorrell is well-versed in the world she’s helping others navigate. She worked in marketing for several startups, was vice president of entrepreneurship, innovation and venture capital for Michigan Economic Development Corp. and directed the University of Michigan’s Economic Growth Institute before joining GMU in 2020.


Bill Tolpegin

CEO, AURA
Vienna

With decades of experience in telecommunications and internet technology, Bill Tolpegin now champions the development of uncrewed aviation vehicles such as air taxis and large cargo-hauling autonomous vehicles. Tolpegin is the former owner of a group of television stations and founder of the C-Band Alliance, a group of four satellite operators that banded together to roll out 5G wireless communications. Following CBA’s dissolution, he started AURA (Advanced Ultra Reliable Aviation). It’s building a nationwide wireless communications network to support large drones to fly beyond visual line-of-sight in the national airspace. “People don’t believe it, but it is real,” says Tolpegin, who’s a science-fiction writer in his spare time, of unmanned flight. “It’s coming faster than people think. It’s going to really change things in a positive way.”


Beth Burgin Waller

Principal, cybersecurity and data privacy chair, Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black
Roanoke

Beth Burgin Waller has family members who worked as lawyers, but her legal specialty is something they probably couldn’t have foreseen — the burgeoning fields of artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and data privacy. Waller, who majored in creative writing at Hollins University, says she’s always enjoyed “tinkering” with computers and found that technology law was an excellent intersection of those interests. “We have to stay on top of the technology itself … and also having to be on top of these new laws that are coming into play every few months,” she says. “Virginia is like a mini-Silicon Valley in a lot of ways.”


Ann Xu

CEO, ElectroTempo
Arlington County

The poor air quality in Beijing set Ann Xu on the path of her life’s work. As an undergraduate in environmental science, she learned what a major contributor transportation was to air pollution and became determined to get to the root of the problem. In 2020, as a Texas A&M Transportation Institute research scientist based in Washington, D.C., Xu founded ElectroTempo, a Northern Virginia startup focused on electric vehicle charging software. Xu raised $4 million in funding to market her creation: a scalable toolkit that uses transportation data to predict future EV demand and its impact on infrastructure and emissions. With a five-year focus on electric trucks, Xu’s vision is bold. “Our goal is to quadruple our revenue within five years,” she says. “We want to be the analytic background of the electrical charging infrastructure.”


Yuhao Zhang

Assistant professor, Virginia Tech
Blacksburg

Virginia Tech’s Center for Power Electronics Systems was partly responsible for attracting Yuhao Zhang to Virginia. “It’s one of the most respected institutes in the field of power electronics in the world,” he says.

A native of China who received his doctorate in electrical engineering from MIT, Zhang teaches undergraduate and graduate courses, and he’s noticed a trend in students’ growing interest in the technology related to semiconductors. He attributes this to students witnessing the major changes that semiconductors have wrought in consumer electronics such as faster chargers for laptops and phones.

Zhang leads a four-person research team that received a $1.5 million grant last year from the National Science Foundation to design the components for a greener grid that will better support renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power.

Check out the other 100 People to Meet in 2024.

FOR THE RECORD DECEMBER 2023

CENTRAL VIRGINIA

Cedar Fair Entertainment, the parent company of Hanover County theme park Kings Dominion, is merging with Six Flags Entertainment in an all-stock deal valued at $2 billion, the companies announced Nov. 2. Cedar Fair unitholders will own 51.2% and Six Flags shareholders will own approximately 48.8%. The new combined company will have 27 amusement parks, 25 water parks and nine resort properties and will be valued at about $8 billion. The company will operate under the name Six Flags, trading under the ticker symbol FUN on the New York Stock Exchange and structured as a C corporation. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

PGT Innovations, a Florida-based manufacturer and supplier of windows and doors, will invest $54.3 million to establish a glass manufacturing operation in the former Rolls-Royce facility in Prince George County’s Crosspointe Logistics Center, creating 659 jobs, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Nov. 3. The plant, for which Virginia competed with Arizona, will manufacture glass under the company’s Triple Diamond Glass subsidiary. The company’s portfolio includes impact-resistant windows and doors and other products that can withstand strong storms. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

Richmond will use $100 million over the next five years to combat its affordable housing crisis, according to an Oct. 31 announcement from Mayor Levar Stoney and Richmond City Council. Each year for the next five years, nonprofit community development financial institution Local Initiatives Support Corp. (LISC) will match the city’s commitment of $10 million. The city and LISC plan to establish a Housing Development Training Institute to train up-and-coming and existing developers on how to better accommodate all income levels, and the funds will support a Small Building Loan Program for developers and rental property owners building or rehabilitating properties with five to 49 units. (Richmond Times-Dispatch)

A University of  Virginia Darden School of Business alumnus and his wife, also a U.Va. graduate, added $50 million to an earlier gift of $44 million for the business school, adding up to the largest donation in Darden’s 68-year history. Philanthropists David and Kathleen LaCross made their initial donation in October 2022, then the school’s third largest donation, and that gift spurred $6 million in matching funds from the university. With the $50 million addition announced in late October, the gift totals more than $107 million, including matching funds from the university. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

Food and beverage distributor World Class Distribution opened its nearly completed $275 million, 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center in Caroline County’s Caroline 95 Logistics Park in Ruther Glen in October with 400 employees. When the center was announced in November 2022, WCD expected to add 745 jobs, but the company has expanded its plans to hire 1,000 workers, which would make it Caroline’s largest employer, according to a news release. Founded in 2009, WCD is a subsidiary of Tact Holding and distributes canned foods, dry foods, candy, grocery, beer and wine, frozen foods and other refrigerated products. WCD manages 11 distribution centers nationwide and has more than 4,500 employees in eight states. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

PEOPLE

The Medical Society of Virginia elected Richmond-based Dr. Alice Coombs as its next president at the organization’s Oct. 14 annual meeting. Coombs, a critical care specialist, anesthesiologist and internist, as well as chair of Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine’s anesthesiology department, is the fourth woman and first Black president of MSV, which was founded in 1820 and is headquartered in Richmond. Coombs’ agenda as president includes a focus on physicians’ and physicians’ assistants’ mental health and wellness. (VirginiaBusiness.com)


EASTERN VIRGINIA

Dominion Energy on Oct. 31 passed another critical federal hurdle on its way to gaining approval to begin construction on its $9.8 billion, 176-turbine offshore wind farm 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management granted a favorable record of decision for the Richmond-based Fortune 500 electric utility’s 2.6-gigawatt Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project. The decision represents the final step in the National Environmental Policy Act review process for its construction and operations plan. Also Oct. 31, Dominion earned approval from the Department of the Interior for its construction and operation plan. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

The merger of Eastern Virginia Medical School into Old Dominion University has been pushed back six months to July 1, 2024, instead of January as originally planned, ODU President Brian O. Hemphill announced Nov. 2 during his State of the University address. While that date reflects the July 1, 2024, deadline set by Gov. Glenn Youngkin and the General Assembly, ODU and EVMS had been aiming to merge in January 2024. But Hemphill and EVMS President, Provost and Dean Dr. Alfred Abuhamad said there’s more work that needs to be done before EVMS is folded into ODU, though Abuhamad added that the merger is “very, very close” to being finalized. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

A Newport News Circuit Court judge ruled Nov. 3 that the first-grade teacher shot by a 6-year-old student at Richneck Elementary School in January can proceed with her $40 million lawsuit against the school division. In the ruling, Judge Matthew W. Hoffman said Abigail Zwerner, 25, is not limited to filing a workers’ compensation claim, as attorneys for the Newport News School Board and other defendants asserted. “The Court finds the injury suffered by Plaintiff did not arise out of her employment,” Hoffman wrote in the eight-page decision. (Daily Press)

Newport News Shipbuilding has started production at a satellite campus at Fairwinds Landing in Norfolk to support its main shipyard. The new maritime operations and logistics hub supporting Hampton Roads’ offshore wind, defense and transportation industries is located at Lambert’s Point Docks. About 20 workers are constructing steel panels that will make up units on the future USS Enterprise, the third ship in the Navy’s Gerald R. Ford class of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. By the end of the year, NNS expects to have 80 employees, and next year it will grow to 150. So far, NNS has invested about $25 million, but is going to work with the Navy to look for opportunities for future expansion. That could be upwards of $100 million over five years. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

Amid failing turbine components and financial challenges, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy said Nov. 10 it has “discontinued” its plans to build the nation’s first offshore wind-turbine blade manufacturing facility at the Port of Virginia’s Portsmouth Marine Terminal. The $200 million project, first announced in October 2021, was expected to create 310 jobs in Portsmouth — and also was viewed as a major step toward creating a U.S. offshore wind manufacturing hub in Hampton Roads. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

The Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility will lead a $300 million to $500 million data science computing hub that will make scientific data more accessible to sciences nationwide, the U.S. Department of Energy announced Oct. 16.  The High Performance Data Facility hub (HPDF) will be based at the Newport News-based lab in a new data center to be funded by the state, which has allocated $6 million in seed funding for the hub and committed to provide $43 million for construction. (VirginiaBusiness.com)


NORTHERN VIRGINIA

Arlington County-based Boeing said it was investigating a cyberattack after the LockBit cybercrime gang said on Oct. 27 that it had stolen sensitive data from the Fortune 500 defense contractor and threatened to dump it online if it didn’t pay a ransom by Nov. 2. Boeing said flight safety was not impacted, though some elements of its parts and distribution business, which falls under its Global Services division, took a hit as some of those webpages went down. LockBit has hit 1,700 United States organizations since 2020, according to the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. (Reuters)

Guidehouse entered into an agreement to be acquired by a Bain Capital Private Equity affiliate for $5.3 billion, the McLean-based consultancy announced Nov. 6. The investment will support Guidehouse’s growth plans, the company said, and it will continue to operate under its current management team, which is led by Chairman and CEO Scott McIntyre. Guidehouse has been owned by Veritas Capital since 2018; the management consultancy formed that year when Veritas acquired PricewaterhouseCoopers’ public sector arm. Guidehouse employs more than 17,000 people across 55 locations around the globe. The company opened its new McLean headquarters in 2022. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

The $900 million, 1.38 million-square-foot Spotsylvania County Kalahari Resort, located between U.S. Route 1 and Interstate 95 in Thornburg, broke ground Oct. 20. The massive water park from Wisconsin-based Kalahari Holdings is expected to offer a 907-room hotel and a 175,000-square-foot indoor waterpark. Also planned are 10 acres of outdoor pools and a 90,000-square-foot adventure park, a dozen on-site food and beverage offerings and more than 150,000 square feet of meeting and convention space. It is slated to open in 2026. Along with construction jobs, the resort is expected to generate 1,400 full- and part-time jobs. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

After a 24-hour meeting, the Prince William County Planning Commission on Nov. 9 recommended denial of the controversial 2,100-acre Digital Gateway proposed along Pageland Lane in Gainesville. QTS Realty Trust and Compass Datacenters want to rezone three parcels with the aim of adding 23 million square feet of data centers. County planning staff had previously recommended denial, citing lack of information from developers. Some commissioners attempted to defer a vote but didn’t garner enough support. The rezoning goes before the lame-duck Board of Supervisors Dec. 12 and is expected to pass. (VirginiaBusiness.com, Inside NoVa)

RTX has agreed to sell its cybersecurity, intelligence and services business segment for about $1.3 billion and announced a $10 billion stock buyback program Oct. 24 as it seeks to recover from a manufacturing quality issue in a jetliner engine that has plagued the Arlington County-based Fortune 500 defense and aerospace contractor since the summer. RTX, which rebranded from Raytheon Technologies Corp. in June, revealed its plans in its third quarter 2023 results, which included news of a nearly $1 billion loss in its Connecticut-based Pratt & Whitney aerospace division. The buyer for the cybersecurity, intelligence and services business, part of its Raytheon division, was not disclosed. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

PEOPLE

Months after new Leidos CEO Tom Bell hinted at a “new North Star” for the Reston-based Fortune 500 contractor, the company on Nov. 2 announced a shakeup of its C-suite and a reorganization. Beginning Jan. 1, 2024, Leidos will be organized into five sectors. Those are: health and civil, led by President Liz Porter; national security, led by President Roy Stevens; commercial and international, led by President Vicki Schmanske; digital modernization, led by President Steve Hull; and defense systems, led by President Cindy Gruensfelder, who previously served as vice president and general manager of Arlington County-based Boeing’s missile and weapons systems division. (VirginiaBusiness.com)


ROANOKE/NEW RIVER VALLEY

Wytheville-based third-party logistics company Camrett Logistics will invest more than $2 million to expand in Pulaski County, creating an estimated 58 jobs, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Oct. 24. Camrett Logistics’ investment in its Dublin facility will include construction, renovating existing space and buying new forklifts and electric trucks. Founded in 1995, the warehouse and third-party logistics services company operates 11 facilities totaling 1.8 million square feet in West Virginia and Virginia, including locations in Atkins, Rural Retreat, Wytheville, Dublin and Radford. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

Ferrum College is taking another step it hopes will boost enrollment and help more young people complete a college education. Several months ago, the school announced Panther Promise, a program that provides free tuition to Virginia residents who qualify. Now, Ferrum is going even further with a tuition reset for everyone else. “Ferrum College, yet again, affirms our commitment to provide affordable access to higher education,” President Mirta Martin told students, faculty and staff Nov. 2. She announced a $10,000 reduction in tuition rates for all students, starting in fall 2024. In addition, the school will award juniors and seniors what it’s calling “persistence grants” of $500 each year to help them complete their education. (WDBJ)

Three companies looking to join the battle against cancer are coming to the Roanoke-Blacksburg area, courtesy of a Johnson & Johnson Innovation challenge. Bacchus Therapeutics of Manassas, QurCan Therapeutics of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Minneapolis-based Luminary Therapeutics were among companies from across the world that competed last month in J&J’s Advancing Oncology InnoVAtion QuickFire Challenge. They will each receive a $100,000 grant, a one-year residency at the Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center in Blacksburg, access to the corporation’s JLABS life science and health care incubator in Washington, D.C., and mentorship from Johnson & Johnson experts. (Cardinal News)

Radford University announced Oct. 25 that it will dramatically lower the financial threshold for in-state applicants hoping to earn a degree. A new program will cover all tuition costs for in-state applicants with a household adjusted gross income of less than $100,000 per year. The “Radford Tuition Promise” is expected to begin in August 2024. Bret Danilowicz, the university’s president, said the new program lowers the threshold for entrance significantly more than similar tuition programs statewide. (The Roanoke Times)

A Virginia Tech-led partnership has received more than $450,000 from the Appalachian Regional Commission to develop a workforce training strategy focused on modular construction. Modular, or industrialized, construction is being looked at as one potential solution to the concurrent problems of construction industry labor shortages and increasingly unaffordable housing. The Tech-led coalition of more than 40 organizations aims to create a roadmap over the next year for growing the industry across seven states: Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Tennessee. After that, the partnership could be eligible to apply for up to $10 million from the Appalachian Regional Commission to implement its strategies. (Cardinal News)

PEOPLE

Mirta Martin has been named the 13th president of Ferrum College, after serving in an interim role since January. The private college’s board of trustees announced Martin’s appointment in a letter sent Oct. 27 to faculty, staff and students. The board’s decision followed campuswide community “listening sessions” in September. Martin formerly served as president of Fairmont State University in West Virginia and Fort Hays State University in Kansas, and as dean of the business school at Virginia State University.  (The Roanoke Times)


SHENANDOAH VALLEY

In a 5-2 vote on Nov. 8, the Frederick County Board of Supervisors approved a proposal by Carmeuse Lime and Stone to establish a new limestone mine in Clear Brook, in which the company sought to rezone 392 acres north of Brucetown Road and east of Interstate 81 for a future limestone quarry. The new mine is expected to open in eight to 15 years, after Carmeuse’s nearby quarry next to Clearbrook Park reaches the end of its lifespan, officials said. After some residents complained about problems with their wells, Carmeuse funded a hydrogeologic study to see if the existing quarry was having an impact on water quality, but the study did not find any effects of mining on nearby water sources, with the exception of one 14-foot hand-dug well. (The Winchester Star)

Denied earlier this year by three layers of NCAA governance, James Madison University authored an 11th-hour appeal in November, requesting bowl eligibility for its undefeated and nationally ranked football team. Citing computer ratings, human polls and student-athlete welfare, JMU President Jonathan Alger, Board of Visitors Rector Maribeth Herod and Athletic Director Jeff Bourne signed a letter to University of Georgia President Jere Morehead, chairman of the NCAA Division I Board of Directors. JMU moved from the Championship Subdivision (FCS) to the Bowl Subdivision (FBS) last season, but longstanding NCAA rules mandate that programs upgrading to the FBS serve a two-year transition in which they are ineligible for bowls. (Richmond Times-Dispatch)

In October, The Omni Homestead Resort reopened after completing its $150 million renovation, which includes a refresh of 483 guest rooms and 72,000 square feet of meeting space, as well as the construction of a 4,000-square-foot event pavilion. The renovation project started in October 2021 with the $4.6 million rehabilitation of the Warm Springs Pools, formerly known as the Jefferson Pools, which took 14 months to complete. (News release)

Shenandoah National Park closed the Rapidan Camp in Madison County in November due to a wildfire. Firefighters and support staff from the Virginia Department of Forestry, Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources and National Park Service continued efforts to contain the fire, which has affected 2,960 acres on private, state and federal lands, including about 670 acres within Shenandoah’s boundary. Earlier closures included the entire length of the Graves Mill Trail and the Wilhite Wagon trail. (Daily News-Record)

Shenandoah Telecommunications, or Shentel, announced plans in October to acquire Horizon Telecom for $385 million. Ohio-based Horizon is a commercial fiber provider with a 7,000 route-mile fiber network and more than 9,000 net locations. Shentel will pay $305 million in cash and the rest in common stock, and the transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2024. Shentel President and CEO Christopher E. French said the deal is expected to double the size of Shentel’s commercial fiber business. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

PEOPLE

A U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia jury found the former executive director of the Front Royal-Warren County Economic Development Authority guilty Nov. 1 of stealing $5.27 million from the government agency. Jennifer Rae McDonald was found guilty of all 34 counts against her, including federal charges of wire fraud, bank fraud, money laundering and aggravated identity theft. Jurors deliberated for about four hours after hearing from 52 prosecution witnesses and three defense witnesses. A sentencing date had not been set as of mid-November. (The Winchester Star)


SOUTHERN VIRGINIA

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, along with his wife, son and a portfolio of companies tied to the Justice family, filed a new lawsuit in November against Martinsville-based Carter Bank & Trust and members of its board, seeking at least $1 billion. It’s the latest move in a yearslong dispute between the Justices and the bank over hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid loans, and it comes as the two sides were scheduled in mid-November in Martinsville Circuit Court over a related case. Justice, a Republican, is currently running for the U.S. Senate, seeking the seat that will be vacated by Democrat Joe Manchin, who announced Nov. 9 he won’t seek another term next year. (Cardinal News)

Danville Utilities has several projects planned for 2024-25, including a $30 million project for replacement of the Southside wastewater pumping station. The project will expand the station’s capacity by roughly 40% to 45%, from about 7.6 million gallons per day to about 11 million gallons per day, said Danville Utilities Director Jason Grey. Expansion of capacity is needed to serve new industry at the southern portion of the Dan River, he said. (Danville Register & Bee)

As Virginia localities continue to receive applications from companies seeking to build new solar power plants, several Southside local governments are tapping the brakes with new rules aimed at capping how much land can be used for solar development. As solar proposals began crossing the desks of county planners and supervisors, many officials realized that their regulations and long-range plans needed updates to address renewable energy. Capping the amount of land that can be used for solar development is among the latest kinds of regulation being considered, and since March of this year, Henry, Mecklenburg and Pittsylvania counties have adopted such caps. (Cardinal News)

IperionX has received a $12.7 million grant award from the U.S. Department of Defense to expand its titanium recycling demonstration plant in South Boston, a step toward bolstering the nation’s supply chain for the defense industry. The federal award will allow IperionX to produce 125 metric tons of titanium powder annually, according to an Oct. 30 statement by DoD. IperionX is preparing to ramp up operations at its new plant in South Boston at the Southern Virginia Technology Park. The company is the first completely recycled titanium manufacturer in the U.S. With the DoD award, provided through the Defense Production Act Investment program, IperionX will scale up the South Boston plant to a demonstration facility, a key step in commercializing the company’s industrial process for titanium recycling. (SoVa Now)

The Mecklenburg County Industrial Development Authority sold the Stage Stores Distribution Center building for about $1.8 million to Starglory Investment Holding in a deal that closed Oct. 30. Starglory committed to investing $10 million into the facility, which will create at least 40 jobs. The building is 109,000 square feet, with two additional outside buildings on a total of 31.41 acres. Starglory plans to launch manufacturing, recycling, energy and agricultural technology projects at the building, which was owned jointly by the IDA and the Virginia Tobacco Region Revitalization Commission. (News release)

Michigan-based step van manufacturer Morgan Olson filed a WARN notice with the state announcing plans to lay off more than 400 workers by mid-December. This comes just a few years after the company invested millions to open a delivery truck assembly plant in the former IKEA factory space at Cane Creek Centre in Pittsylvania County, just outside Danville. The manufacturing company says it’s also reducing its workforce in Tennessee and Michigan due to current economic conditions. (WSLS)


SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA

Friends of Southwest Virginia will receive $980,000 for its Creative Economy and Tourism Workforce Initiative from the Appalachian Regional Commission, according to an Oct. 19 announcement. The initiative aims to make the regional tourism workforce more competitive and promote the cultural and outdoor recreation assets of 18 counties and four cities through steps like developing a hospitality and tourism workforce training initiative, conducting market research for future marketing campaigns and launching a national Southwest Virginia branding campaign. Over three years, the organization expects the project to retain 9,782 jobs and create 245 jobs. (The Coalfield Progress)

Abingdon-based health and human services agency People Inc. of Virginia cut the ribbon on the second phase of its Sweetbriar affordable housing project in Abingdon in late October. People completed the first phase of the project, building 20 affordable housing units, in 2011. The second phase added 22 units, but the need for affordable housing is far from met. Nearly 200 people are on the waiting list for Sweetbriar II, according to People President and CEO Bryan Phipps. The nonprofit is currently rehabilitating 32 units at another affordable housing project in Abingdon and preparing to start construction on 16 units in Culpeper. (Bristol Herald Courier)

Tate, a data center supplier, will invest $14.9 million to establish a new manufacturing facility in Russell County, creating 170 jobs, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Nov. 2. The new plant will focus primarily on data center component manufacturing and containment products to serve clients in Virginia and other data center sites. Tate is seeking a quality supervisor and maintenance manager, according to its hiring website. The company also said it soon will be hiring for positions such as mechanical techs, electrical techs, paint techs and laser techs. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

The United Way of Southwest Virginia broke ground Oct. 26 for its $25 million regional workforce and child development hub. The nonprofit is converting a former Kmart in Abingdon into the hub, which will hold an early childhood care and education center and a GO TEC lab with 3D printers, robotics and other technologies for K-12 teachers, and a year-round workforce exploration center for K-12 students with manufacturing and STEM career simulations. So far, UWSWVA has raised $21.6 million, nearly 78% of which has come from private sources, for the project. (News release, VirginiaBusiness.com)

The Virginia Department of Transportation hosted a ceremonial opening Oct. 9 at the Southern Gap Visitor Center for 8.7 miles of the U.S. 460/U.S. 121 Corridor Q project that runs from the Breaks Park Road area to Southern Gap. Of that road, 2.57 miles overlap the planned Coalfields Expressway, marking the first mileage of the CFX to be completed and opened to travel in Virginia. Authorized by Congress in 1995, CFX is planned as a 115-mile federal highway running from U.S. Route 23 in Pound to Interstates 64 and 77 in West Virginia. (Cardinal News, VirginiaBusiness.com)

PEOPLE

Bristol Casino: Future Home of Hard Rock hired husband-and-wife team Sunwoo Choi and Christine Choi as the casino’s vice president of food and beverage and marketing director, respectively, the casino announced in early November. Sunwoo Choi has worked in gaming and hospitality for more than 17 years and was most recently vice president of nongaming operations for Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course in Grantville, Pennsylvania. Christine Choi started her career as an engineer before entering the hospitality industry and most recently worked at the Hollywood Casino at The Meadows in Washington, Pennsylvania.
(Bristol Herald Courier)

Legal Elite 2023 Real Estate/ Land Use

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Daniel Todd Campbell
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Vanessa Steltenpohl Carter
Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black, Norfolk

Deborah M. Casey
Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black, Norfolk

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Williams Mullen, Norfolk

John Jordan Chappell III
Glasser and Glasser, Norfolk

Matthew E. Cheek
Williams Mullen, Richmond

John Cabell Chenault V
Hunton Andrews Kurth, Richmond

Karen L. Cohen
Gentry Locke Attorneys, Richmond

Andrew M. Condlin
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John Colby
Cowherd Cowherd PLC, Vienna

Ann K. Crenshaw
Kaufman & Canoles, Virginia Beach

Richard J. Crouch
Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black, Norfolk

Jennifer Magalhaes Cuddy
Reed Smith, Tysons

Alyssa Carducci Dangler
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Christopher DeMers
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Robert L. Dewey
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Toula Dreifuss
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J. Alden English
Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black, Charlottesville

John W. Farrell
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John H. Foote
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Laura Lee Garrett
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Paul W. Gerhardt
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Glenn Feldmann Darby & Goodlatte, Roanoke

Howard E. Gordon
Williams Mullen, Norfolk

Callaghan S. Guy
Christian & Barton, Richmond

Gifford R. Hampshire
Blankingship & Keith, Fairfax

Hunter Hanger
Hanger Law, Virginia Beach

David C. Hannah
Hirschler Fleischer, Tysons

Brooke R. Hannah
Litten & Sipe, Harrisonburg

Adam Nelson Harrell Jr.
Harrell & Chambliss, Richmond

Lisa Anne Hawkins
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Peter L. Henderer
McCandlish Holton, Richmond

Sean D. Hicks
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Katja H. Hill
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Nicole Ingle
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Williams Mullen, Richmond

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Williams Mullen, Virginia Beach

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Check out the rest of the 2023 Legal Elite.