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Education 2025: COSTIN, MAJ. GEN. DONDI E. (U.S. AIR FORCE, RET.)

Costin, a retired 32-year Air Force veteran who went on to serve five years as president of Charleston Southern University, became president of Liberty in 2023 during a time of turmoil.

The private evangelical university was rocked by the 2020 ouster of former President and Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr., the late founder’s son, and in 2021, 22 former students and employees claimed in a federal lawsuit that Liberty officials discouraged them from reporting sexual assaults to authorities.

In 2024, Liberty agreed to pay Falwell $15 million in a settlement that includes a $5.5 million payment to resolve lawsuits and about $9.7 million as part of his retirement package.

This year, Liberty had its largest-ever commencement with more than 32,000 graduates. Gov. Glenn Youngkin spoke at the graduation ceremony.

A decorated combat veteran who finished his military career as Air Force chief of chaplains, Costin holds five master’s degrees, including two from

Liberty, along with a doctor of ministry degree and a Ph.D. in organizational leadership. Costin received the 2024 Leadership Achievement Award from the U.S. Air Force Academy Association of Graduates.

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Law firms integrate AI into daily practices

Summary

  • Virginia attorneys embrace AI for efficiency and strategy
  • Some firms cautious, citing ethics and client data concerns
  • AI creates “Goldilocks dilemma” for small, midsize and large firms
  • schools adapt curricula to prepare students for AI-enabled careers

Despite dire warnings about how could upend white collar work as we know it, attorneys at Virginia who have incorporated AI into their daily work are optimistic the is already changing the industry for the better.

An AI-enabled future is no longer theoretical. In the span of a few years, have adapted their curricula to prepare the next generation for AI proficiency, while the standard practice of billable hours is being reassessed. These changes give lawyers a rare opportunity to reimagine what it means to practice law.

But clients also stand to benefit. An end to the billable hour could create deflationary pressure that will reduce the cost of , make costs more predictable and democratize access to legal services for clients once priced out, says Justin Ritter, founder of Ritter Law in . There are upsides for attorneys, as well: The efficiencies of using AI could free them up to spend more time thinking strategically and engaging in the very enjoyable intellectual aspects of their careers, potentially addressing burnout, he adds.

“I am so excited about what’s coming and where we are right now,” Ritter says.

That sense of optimism is relatively newfound. Until last year, Ritter didn’t encourage people asking for career advice to pursue law school. But after he and his colleague, Christopher Sullivan, incorporated AI into their practice and began co-teaching a course at the University of School of Law focusing on integrating AI into law, Ritter sees the career path in a new light, thanks to AI’s transformative potential.

“Now, you can spend more time being strategic,” he says. “Ultimately, I’m trying to create a high-quality work product faster and cheaper, and these tools allow me to do that and in ways I never really thought were possible.”

Other lawyers, however, haven’t fully embraced AI and are still weighing the risks. That’s created an uneven path of adoption among Virginia law firms.

And while many factors dictate a law firm’s willingness to implement an AI strategy, a lack of tools isn’t one of them. Rather, the sheer number of AI tools can be overwhelming to navigate, as no clear winner has emerged to claim market share dominance in the legal industry, Ritter notes.

Goldilocks dilemma

Some AI providers court only the largest law firms, while others offer hyper-specific solutions that may be too specialized. Factor in some of the resource or bureaucracy constraints exacerbated by a firm’s size, and lawyers face a Goldilocks dilemma of identifying which tools are “just right” for their needs.

Solo practitioners might greatly benefit from AI, but they may be hampered by a lack of time and money to experiment, notes Kellam T. Parks, managing member of Parks Zeigler in Virginia Beach. Mean-while, he adds, AI implementation plans at larger firms could get waylaid in committees and bureaucracy for months, if not years.

A firm like Parks Zeigler, with 13 attorneys, is in a “sweet spot” for AI adoption — nimble enough to adapt quickly and large enough to have the resources for experimentation, Parks says. Being an early adopter, he says, can offer firms like his competitive advantages against larger, deeper-pocketed law firms — at least in the short term. “When they figure it out,” however, he adds, “they’re going to lap me.”

Parks still has a considerable head start: He began experimenting with AI following the public release of ChatGPT in late 2022 and hasn’t stopped. Now well-versed in the current array of providers, Parks rattles through a carefully vetted list of at least 15 tools his firm regularly uses for administrative and legal tasks.

That number may seem high, but each tool serves an extremely specific purpose. Parks uses Dialpad and Fireflies.ai to summarize and transcribe client conversations; speech coaching tool Yoodli to prepare for trials; and Lexis+ AI and Callidus for assistance with research and drafting legal documents. Finally, the firm uses Billables AI to automate billing by tracking the amount of time spent working on each client.

That list doesn’t even include many other AI tools the firm uses for nonlegal tasks like preparing a slideshow or drafting marketing materials. Lest there be any doubt about Parks’ enthusiasm for AI, even the firm’s professional headshots are AI-generated.

“We're trying to balance innovation with responsibility,” Beth Burgin Waller, chair of Woods Rogers' cybersecurity and data privacy practice, says of the firm's AI adoption strategy. Photo courtesy Woods Rogers
“We’re trying to balance innovation with responsibility,” Beth Burgin Waller, chair of Woods Rogers’ cybersecurity and data privacy practice, says of the firm’s AI adoption strategy. Photo courtesy Woods Rogers

The subscription costs of these various tools, while expensive, are easily justified. “AI costs money, but it also builds efficiencies,” Parks says. “We’re always exploring new tools.”

Two-step approach

Some of the largest U.S. law firms — including Kirkland & Ellis and DLA Piper — have developed proprietary AI tools for their practice areas. That solution often isn’t practical for midsize firms, while the ad hoc approach favored by small firms also isn’t feasible.

Midsize firms risk being left behind as both their larger and smaller competitors forge ahead. And this makes them the target of AI providers eager to pounce on potential new customers.

Even as providers tout their AI tools’ capabilities, law firms must be discerning about whether applications address their needs, sufficiently protect client data and adhere to professional ethical duties, notes Beth Burgin Waller, principal and chair of the cybersecurity and data privacy practice at Woods Rogers in Richmond and Roanoke.

Waller characterizes Woods Rogers as being “on the cusp of big changes,” and the firm is currently evaluating several tools that can be customized to its needs. The firm’s attorneys and staff are already using five to 10 commercially available and customized tools for tasks ranging from summarizing materials to drafting documents. And a year from now, she expects AI to play an even bigger role in daily business.

But handling sensitive client and firm information is another concern with artificial intelligence. “We’re trying to balance innovation with responsibility,” Waller says. “We’re trying to be thoughtful about how we deploy tools that protect our secrets.”

Gentry Locke Attorneys is similarly vetting options but has yet to integrate any AI tools into its legal practice. The Roanoke-based firm hasn’t shied away from AI altogether — attorneys and support staff use tools for a variety of nonbillable tasks — but it’s proceeding with caution with respect to legal work, says K. Brett Marston, the firm’s managing partner.

How ethical rules pertain to the use of AI has been a heavy focus for the Virginia State Bar, for which Marston serves as this year’s president.

As AI tools become more advanced, the human element cannot be ignored — particularly as young associates navigate an AI-enabled future while still learning the letter of the law. “The No. 1 job of attorneys will be to ask, ‘Did you use AI to help prepare this, and is it accurate?’” Marston says.

To assess both the opportunities and the risks, Jessiah Hulle, a Richmond-based associate with Gentry Locke, has been tracking instances of AI misuse in litigation, including more than 100 cases in which attorneys nationwide have filed briefs that contained AI-hallucinated information. Hulle expanded his monitoring to include the misuse of AI by other parties, such as expert witnesses, and the potential effect on evidence. “That kind of stuff is good to keep an eye on,” he says.

The perceived risks of missing out on the AI bandwagon are more than outweighed by the potential reputational risks of misusing this technology. “We’re being a little more purposeful with our approach,” Hulle adds.

AI in the classroom

Just as law firms are undergoing a technological revolution, so are law schools. Prospective attorneys must prepare for AI-enabled jobs by becoming adept at using a broad array of tech tools and understanding the limitations and vulnerabilities of those systems, says Margaret Hu, a professor and director of the Digital Democracy Lab at William & Mary Law School.

“It’s absolutely imperative that law schools begin shifting the way they teach to accommodate the rapid transformation of the legal profession by AI and other emerging technology,” Hu says.

There will be a steep learning curve for junior law firm associates to become comfortable deconstructing whether AI outputs are accurate and contain any vulnerabilities or risks, Hu says. This will require critical thinking skills to determine when it’s necessary to override an AI system if the output is incorrect, she adds. “Will they have the skills to be able to do that responsibly and effectively? That’s the question.”

Ritter is optimistic that opportunities for law school students are far from some industry analysts’ doom-and-gloom predictions that AI will take away a significant number of jobs from law school grads.

For the final project in the course he’s been teaching with Sullivan for the past two years at the University of Richmond School of Law, students must develop an AI bot to address a very narrow legal topic, and he’s been impressed both by their innovations and AI proficiency. Such skills immediately make them “way more useful” to law firms, he adds. “It’s very inspiring to see.”

 

Education 2025: KRESS, ANNE M.

After starting her post-secondary career as a faculty member teaching English, Kress now presides over Virginia’s largest community college — and one of the nation’s largest — with more than 70,000 students across six campuses, including NOVA’s Medical Education Campus in Springfield. This year, NOVA opened its new data center operations training center in Woodbridge, supported by a $5 million federal grant, and broke ground on the college’s first skilled trades center in Manassas.

In October 2024, however, Kress received an overwhelming “no confidence” vote from college faculty who claim she has harmed students by removing athletic programs, ignoring staff input and reducing summer class offerings. In a statement, Kress said she’s “committed to fully informed, open and honest communications.”

Her tenure at NVCC began in 2020 following a nearly 30-year career including posts as provost at Santa Fe University and president of Monroe Community College in Florida.

WHAT PEOPLE WOULD BE SURPRISED TO LEARN ABOUT ME: My husband and I are avid concertgoers. We’ve seen artists ranging from Devo to Max Richter to the Wu-Tang Clan to Alison Krauss and Union Station, and have tickets for Beyoncé, Big Thief and Haim.

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Government Contractors | Technology 2025: RHYU, JAMES J.

Rhyu joined for-profit tech company Stride in 2013 and has served as its CEO since 2021. Founded in 2000 as K12, Stride offers career-learning services for middle and high school curricula, programs for businesses and the military, and professional skills training in health care and for adult learners. Stride reported just over $2 billion in fiscal 2024 revenue, up from $1.84 billion the previous year.

In October 2024, a report from a short seller caused Stride’s shares to temporarily tumble after it claimed that the company’s profits had been bloated by COVID-19-era relief funds. In May, Stride lost a contract with New Mexico’s largest school district over claims of poor service.

Rhyu previously served as Stride’s chief financial officer, president of corporate strategy, marketing and technology, and president of product and technology. He also worked as chief administrative officer and chief financial officer for Match.com, and senior vice president of finance at Dow Jones & Co. Rhyu added Stride’s board chair to his title in 2024.

Rhyu holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and an MBA from the London Business School.

Education 2025: MCDONNELL, KARL

Focused primarily on online learning for working adults, Strategic was formed in 2018 through the $2 billion merger of Strayer Education and Capella Education. Year-over-year revenue for Strategic Education increased nearly 5% in the first quarter of this year.

McDonnell previously served as president and CEO of Strayer, which he joined in 2006. He was chief operating officer and later was a board member before taking the corner office in 2013.

Strategic Education’s programs range from Capella and Strayer in the U.S., which offer primarily online associate, bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral programs, to three programs in Australia and New Zealand.

Its Education Services division has an education benefits administration program for employers and offers Sophia Learning, with online general education-level courses for college credits.

McDonnell previously was COO of Intelistaf Healthcare, and before that, worked as a vice president at Goldman Sachs. From 1995 to 2000, he was general manager of Walt Disney World.

McDonnell has a bachelor’s degree in political science from Virginia Wesleyan University and an MBA from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business.

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Government Contractors | Technology 2025: FERNANDEZ, RAUL

A Maryland native, Fernandez was named president and CEO of IT services and consulting company DXC in 2024 after serving as interim head. He succeeded former CEO Mike Salvino following three years of declining revenues. In May, the company’s board extended Fernandez’s contract through 2028.

Headquartered in Ashburn, DXC has roughly 130,000 employees serving 6,000 customers worldwide. Its fiscal 2025 revenue was $12.8 billion, down 5.8% year-over-year.

Fernandez is also vice chairman and a co-owner of Monumental Sports & Entertainment, which owns the Washington Capitals, the Washington Wizards and the Washington Mystics.

In January, DXC announced it would develop the next generation of Ferrari’s in-vehicle infotainment systems. In June, the company announced a multiyear deal to power shipboard, shore and port technology for Carnival Cruise Lines.

Fernandez founded website and internet services developer Proxicom, which Dimension Data acquired in 2001, and he then was CEO of Dimension Data North America and ObjectVideo, which Alarm.com bought in 2017. He also served on corporate boards for Kate Spade & Co., Broadcom and GameStop.

Government Contractors | Technology 2025: HAYES, ROBIN

Hayes began his career in by delivering duty-free items to passengers at Boston’s Logan International Airport. In 2024, he became chairman and CEO of Airbus Americas, leading European corporation Airbus SE’s commercial aircraft business and coordinating among its helicopter, space and defense businesses in North America. Hayes was previously JetBlue’s CEO.

Hayes took on Airbus’ North American operations as the company aims to win business from Arlington-based competitor Boeing, which has been beset by a string of safety woes in recent years, including the June 12 crash of a Boeing 787-Dreamliner operated by Air India that killed at least 270 people.

In 2024, Airbus delivered 766 commercial aircraft. It reported revenues of $81.5 billion, up from $65.4 billion the year prior. Hayes has warned that tariffs imposed by the Trump administration could ground the aerospace industry supply chain.

Hayes grew up in London and earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in engineering from the University of Bath. He joined British Airways in 1989, rising to become its executive vice president for the Americas before joining JetBlue in 2008. He served as the airline’s CEO from 2015 to 2024.

Government Contractors | Technology 2025: PETERS, MARK

Peters succeeded Jason Providakes as president and CEO of Mitre, a not-for-profit research and development corporation that manages federally funded R&D centers, in September 2024. Mitre has more than 60 sites worldwide, employing about 8,000 workers and more than 200 labs.

Peters served as executive vice president of laboratory management and operations at ‘s Battelle Memorial Institute from 2020 to 2024. He previously directed Idaho National Laboratory and was president of Battelle Energy Alliance. He is vice president/president-elect of the American Nuclear Society’s board.

Mitre expected to lay off 442 Virginia employees this year as the result of the Trump administration cancelling 11 contracts totaling more than $28 million.

In April, a last-minute reprieve from the Cyber and Infrastructure Security Agency saved Mitre’s Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures program from shuttering.

Peters received his first Wash100 award, which recognizes top government contracting leaders, from Executive Mosaic in 2025. He has a doctorate from the University of Chicago and a bachelor’s degree from Auburn University.

ADVICE FOR NEW COLLEGE GRADS: Stay curious and keep learning; your degree is just the beginning.

Education 2025: HALLOCK, KEVIN F.

An economist with a doctorate from Princeton, Hallock joined University of in 2021. One of the private school’s long-term goals has been affordability. Need-based aid packages average $64,880 toward roughly $84,000 in annual costs for tuition and room and board. Starting this fall, families earning $75,000 or less qualify for a full ride.

This fall, UR plans to launch The Center for Liberal Arts and AI, “bringing together researchers, students, and educators from across the Associated Colleges of the South to explore pressing social, cultural, and questions and dimensions of .”

In 2023, UR’s Robins School of Business received an anonymous $10 million gift to establish an endowed scholarship fund, and alumni Carole and Marcus Weinstein donated $25 million to support a student learning center based at UR’s library.

With a student body of about 3,700 students, 10% of UR’s enrollment is made up of international students representing almost 80 countries.

Hallock spent 16 years at Cornell University, including as dean of its business college. He co-founded PayStandards, a software company that assists companies in setting equitable salaries.

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Government Contractors | Technology 2025: MARRON, MARK P.

Marron started at , a provider of IT assets and financing services, in 2005. He became president and CEO in 2016 and a member of the company’s board in 2018.

In August 2024, ePlus acquired Minnesota-based IT services company Bailiwick Services for an undisclosed amount. In June, the company sold off its U.S. finance business to New Jersey-based PEAC Solutions for an undisclosed sum; Marron said ePlus plans to focus on its solutions while using money from the sale for future growth and acquisitions.

In November 2024, the company and Texas-based data center services company Digital Realty announced a partnership to launch the AI Experience Center at Digital Realty’s Ashburn innovation lab.

In fiscal 2025, ePlus reported $2.06 billion in net sales, down 7% percent from the year prior. The company has about 2,100 employees across the globe.

Marron formerly served as senior vice president of worldwide sales and service for Net IQ and was general manager of worldwide channel sales for Computer Associates International. He is a graduate of Montclair State University, where he earned his bachelor’s degree in computer science.