After downplaying his Democratic predecessor’s consecutive wins in CNBC‘s America’s Top States for Business study, Gov. Glenn Youngkin found himself as Virginia’s top cheerleader on CNBC July 11, playing the commonwealth regained its crown as No. 1.
With this year’s win, the state has been named the nation’s top state for business a record six times, although it was the
first No. 1 ranking during Youngkin’s tenure. Last year, the Old Dominion scored second place behind North Carolina, but this year the Tar Heel State slid back to the No. 2 slot.
“How exciting and what an honor it is to have CNBC here recognizing Virginia as the top state for business,” Youngkin said in a live interview on the financial news cable network. “I think we work incredibly well together. Economic development is a team sport, and our administration has taken huge strides over the last 2 1/2 years to address some real areas of importance.”
Those include readying more sites for economic development, the governor pointed out. The 2024 CNBC rankings weighted infrastructure greatest this year, with the network noting that Virginia has a “wealth of shovel-ready sites the state offers for companies that want to build fast.” Virginia ranked third in the nation for infrastructure, in addition to retaining first place for education. Home to the world’s greatest concentration of data centers, the commonwealth also ranked fourth for artificial intelligence.
The CNBC win came during a busy week for Youngkin, who announced that LS GreenLink USA, a subsidiary of a South Korean cable manufacturer, plans to build a $681 million subsea cable manufacturing plant in Chesapeake that’s expected to create 338 jobs. The facility would produce cables used for offshore wind farms — the first such facility in the United States. The next day, the governor was on hand for a Dominion Energy announcement that the Fortune 500 utility issued a request for proposals for developing a small modular reactor at Louisa County’s North Anna nuclear power plant in the next decade.
Economic development has been one area where Republicans and Democrats can find some common ground, even when there are disputes over corporate tax cuts desired by the governor, or when projects are opposed by Democratic legislators, such as the failed Alexandria sports arena touted by Youngkin.
While Virginia still has a way to go to attract as many $1 billion-plus megaprojects as other states, clearly the governor’s focus — and funding — for site preparation has created momentum both in terms of business interest and media recognition.
Previously, Bhattacharyya worked as project director of Indiana State University’s Logistics 4.0 Innovation Hub, where students study artificial intelligence, machine learning and the management of logistics companies. He also worked as executive director of graduate programs and as chair of ISU’s Scott College of Business’ Department of Marketing and Operations. While directing ISU’s graduate programs, Bhattacharyya streamlined curriculums, coursework and student experience and led the creation of an online MBA program.
Bhattacharyya earned a master’s degree in management from the University of Akron and a doctorate in operations management from Kent State University. He is also a certified risk manager.
Bhattacharyya is a perfect fit for the role, said ODU Provost Brian K. Payne. “Dr. Bhattacharyya brings experience in strategic sourcing, supply chain management, financial economics, humanitarian logistics and Industry 4.0 applications in manufacturing to lead the new school which will prepare students for impactful careers in the maritime industry,” Payne said in a statement.
“Leveraging our strategic location, the SSCLMO will work closely with maritime, supply chain and logistics companies to support the shipbuilding and ship repair, transportation and defense industries, as well as others, to best prepare our students for exciting careers that are so vital to our country’s blue economy,” Elspeth McMahon, associate vice president for maritime initiatives at ODU, stated in the news release.
The school will be located in Innovation Research Park 1 on Monarch Way and housed under the Office of Academic Affairs.
The corporate espionage civil case between rivals Appian and Pegasystems is heading back to court, the Virginia Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday. The three-judge panel ordered a new trial, saying that Appian was improperly relieved of the burden of proving that Pega financially benefited from misappropriating Appian’s trade secrets.
In May 2022, McLean cloud computing firm Appian won a record-setting $2.03 billion award against Massachusetts-based Pega in Fairfax County Circuit Court, based on allegations that Pega used multiple methods to spy on its rival over eight years, from 2012 through May 2020. In a statement, Appian said it plans to appeal Tuesday’s decision to the Virginia Supreme Court.
In the original lawsuit, Appian claimed that Pegasystems hired Youyong Zou, an employee of a government contractor using Appian software, to provide Pega with access to the backend of that software. Pega says, however, that the software was available to Appian users.
Appian included Zou, a software architect, in the lawsuit, and he was ordered to pay Appian $5,000.
In the 2020 complaint, Appian claimed that it lost 201 customers and claimed $479 million in “unjust enrichment of Pega” between 2012 and 2020, but Pegasystems’ attorneys argued that the information gained by the company was not actually “trade secrets” because some of it was sourced to publicly available materials, according to the trial transcript.
Tuesday’s appeals court opinion authored by Judge Frank K. Friedman rejected Pega’s claim that “Appian failed to establish misappropriation of any trade secret as a matter of law. However, we agree with Pega that the trial court erred in granting [a jury instruction], which relieved Appian of its proper burden to prove causation between the alleged misappropriation and any damages.”
Moreover, the opinion reads, Appian was allowed to use Pega’s total sales during the eight-year period to prove unjust enrichment — but the trial court improperly blocked Pega “from showing that many of Pega’s total sales were in areas in which Appian did not even compete with Pega.”
The trial court also “abused its discretion” by not permitting Pega to attempt to authenticate software evidence during the trial. Instead, the circuit court judge excluded software because it was on “a different laptop than provided in discovery.” Finally, the appeals decision says that the trial court “should refrain from instructing the jury that the number of people with access to Appian’s platform is ‘not relevant.'”
The opinion concludes with an order for a new trial consistent with the appeals court’s ruling.
“We will appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court of Virginia and will seek to reinstate the verdict,” Appian said in a statement Tuesday. “We remain confident that the evidence of misappropriation and our right to corresponding damages will be properly addressed by Virginia courts.”
A Pega spokesperson said in response to the decision, “We are extremely pleased by today’s decision throwing out an award we believe was never rational. As the unanimous decision stated, ‘The trial court committed a series of errors that require us to reverse the judgment as to Appian’s trade secret claims.’ This ruling supports our view that the verdict was a result of a flawed trial on many fronts, including that we were prevented from showing that our software never adopted any Appian supposed trade secrets.
“As we’ve said from the beginning, the overturned judgment had the structural integrity of a skyscraper of cards, so it is no surprise it has collapsed. We applaud the court for seeing through Appian’s tactics to prevent the jury from hearing critical facts in this case.”
In 2022, DISA, which provides information technology and communications services for national leaders, the military services and others, awarded Leidos with a $11.5 billion indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract to consolidate IT services for multiple agencies onto a single network, DoDNet.
With the five-year task order, Leidos will ensure DoDNet is secure, scalable and operational and will offer cybersecurity support, systems engineering, network architecture and management and technical support. Leidos will also provide a virtual desktop for users, allowing them to access a reliable network on any device, according to a news release.
The work will expand support from 30,000 users to more than 160,000 users, including users at 14 agencies that provide functions critical to military services. When complete, DoDNet will support about 370,000 users.
Leidos provides technology, engineering and science services to defense, intelligence, civil and health market customers. It has about 47,000 employees and reported approximately $15.4 billion in 2023 revenue.
Leidos has named Ron Keesing its first chief AI officer, the RestonFortune 500 contractor announced Tuesday.
Keesing, who joined Leidos in 2004, has more than two decades of experience in artificial intelligence, machine learning and advanced analytics. His roles have included serving as founding director of the Leidos AI Accelerator and as senior vice president of technology integration, responsible for “driving mission-critical AI as a core discriminator of the company’s data-driven solutions.”
In addition to earning a bachelor’s degree in symbolic systems and a master’s degree in biological sciences from Stanford University, Keesing has a MBA from the University of Maryland, according to his LinkedIn page.
“Ron Keesing’s appointment as chief AI officer marks a pivotal moment for Leidos,” Leidos CEO Tom Bell said in a statement. “As we navigate a landscape shaped by rapid technological advancements, his leadership will be instrumental in ensuring that AI remains at the forefront of our solutions. At Leidos, we don’t view AI as a replacement for human ingenuity but rather as a trusted partner that enhances our capabilities to deliver unparalleled support for critical customer missions.”
Leidos’ approach to AI, Keesing explained in the news release, is rooted in “anticipating technological trends and leveraging AI’s potential to solve complex challenges across our customers’ missions.”
Also on Tuesday, Leidos announced second quarter results, including revenues of $4.1 billion, up 8% year-over-year.
Leidos provides technology, engineering and science services to defense, intelligence, civil and health market customers. It has about 47,000 employees and reported approximately $15.4 billion in 2023 revenue.
Former Northrop Grumman Chairman and CEO Wes Bush and his wife, Natalie, sold their McLean mansion June 28 for $9.95 million, according to Fairfax County records.
Steven A. Sigsbury, an attorney with the Cochran Law Group in Tysons, is listed as the buyer of 903 Turkey Run Road and Baldy’s Bait and Tackle Trust is listed as a co-owner. Daniel Heider of TTR Sotheby’s International Realty, who represented the buyer, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Marianne Prendergast of Washington Fine Properties represented the Bushes in the sale. She declined to name the buyer of the property. The Bushes, she said Monday, are moving “to the Virginia countryside.”
The six-bedroom home on Turkey Run Road, which has 12,000 square feet of living space, was listed for sale Feb. 1 for $10.5 million. In 2010, the property was purchased by the Golden Paws Trust, a fund associated with the Bushes, according to Prendergast. The home was constructed on the property in 2011 by Harrison Design, a high-end residential architecture, interior design and landscape architecture firm with an office in Washington, D.C.
The home boasts a billiard room, a wood-paneled elevator, a pool and a 1,200-bottle, temperature-controlled wine cellar with adjoining tasting room.
Bush served as CEO of the Falls Church defense contractor from 2010 to 2018 and as chair from 2011 to 2019. He sits on the boards of General Motors, Cisco Systems and Dow, as well as MIT Corp., Conservation International and American University. In April, The New York Times speculated Bush could be a contender to become the new CEO of aerospace and defense contractor Boeing, which is headquartered in Arlington County. Boeing President and CEO Dave Calhoun has announced he intends to step down by the end of the year, amid ongoing bad press over production and safety problems, including a high-profile January incident in which a wall panel blew out of a Boeing 737 Max 9 jet cabin in mid-air.
Bliley’s Funeral Home’s original location was at Third and Marshall streets, where the Greater Richmond Convention Center now stands.
Many of the worst periods in economic history have proven fruitful for entrepreneurship. As Plato, the ancient Greek philosopher, observed, “Necessity is the mother of invention.”
Virginia, like the rest of the country, has experienced a surge in entrepreneurship since the pandemic. In the past four years, the number of applications for business formations in Virginia has averaged about 10,700 each month, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
But those entrepreneurial dreams are often dashed quickly. Less than 57% of Virginia startups celebrate a five-year anniversary, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data analyzed by LendingTree. Being around to celebrate anniversaries decades — or even centuries — later is rare.
Perhaps Plato was onto something. It could be coincidental, but six of seven prominent Virginia-based companies celebrating milestone anniversaries in 2024 opened their doors during years when the U.S. was in an economic recession. Beyond their recession-era beginnings, being family owned is another commonality among these venerable businesses, as are long-tenured leaders and a focus on a strong company culture.
Here, then, are the stories behind seven Virginia companies celebrating milestone anniversaries this year, from 25 to 150 years.
At least one thing has remained constant in Richmond since the late 1800s: When people die, their loved ones need help celebrating and mourning them. For the past 150 years, the Bliley family funeral business has been a stalwart for area funeral and cremation services.
Bliley’s Funeral Home President and CEO M. Carey Bliley (left) and cousin Eric Bliley, executive manager of family experience, are the fourth generation of Blileys to run the 150-year-old family business. Photo by Caroline Martin
It’s a heritage Carey Bliley feels humbled and honored to continue as the fourth generation leading the family business. He joined in 1999 and became president and CEO in 2006, following in the footsteps of his father, Norbert. Growing up, Bliley knew he wanted to work for the family business, having witnessed firsthand the sense of vocation his father and uncles had helping people during their toughest times in life.
“I really learned a lot about how to care for people,” Bliley says. “This work is bigger than us; it’s a way to really serve and give back. It’s never a job.”
If he’d had the opportunity to glimpse the future, Joseph W. Bliley might not have recognized the funeral services business he launched in 1874 as a continuation of the family’s horse-and-buggy livery. But its values are familiar. Like his predecessors, Carey Bliley takes seriously the responsibility to uphold the trust the business has built up over time and to serve the community, families and staff.
Among the secrets to the company’s longevity is that even as it celebrated its 150-year anniversary, leaders were still looking for opportunities to improve. “Our No. 1 value is doing the right thing, always, even when it comes at our expense,” Bliley says.
The first Bliley’s funeral home was downtown, where the Greater Richmond Convention Center is now located. In the many decades since, the company has expanded into three locations in Richmond and the surrounding counties of Henrico and Chesterfield. It’s also modernized its facilities and services, like adding livestreaming capabilities. Notable milestones include providing the first ambulance services in Richmond in 1917, launching a long-running cooperative program in 1985 to provide burial services for unborn children at no cost to families, and opening Bliley’s Cremation Center in 2012 to allow families and friends to be present during the cremation process.
“In our line of work, you have to have total flexibility,” Bliley says. “Every family is unique, and you have to be able to meet them where their needs are.”
For a family business, there aren’t too many Bliley names on the roster of about 120 staff, but the company embraces a family mindset. “We’re all Blileys here,” Bliley says.
That said, Bliley hopes the business will remain in the family for subsequent generations. Both he and his cousin, Eric, have three children who may one day decide to follow their well-trodden path into the family business.
If they do, they’ll find that each leader encounters new ways to reshape and adapt. During his 25 years, Bliley has watched the cremation rate skyrocket to more than 60% nationwide. Helping families find tangible ways to deal with loss when services look different, or families are more spread out are some of the challenges he’s faced.
At the same time, incorporating universal rituals, whether religious or secular, are important today — especially in an era when some people don’t want to deal with negative events. “The more you run from death, the harder it is to move forward,” Bliley says. “Rituals are really important to provide healing.”
100 YEARS
Virginia Chamber of Commerce Richmond
When the Virginia Chamber of Commerce celebrated its centennial earlier this year, the event drew politicians from both parties, leaders across various industries and other notable Virginians. Even while celebrating the chamber’s past accomplishments, the future was also top of mind.
Virginia Chamber of Commerce CEO Barry DuVal speaks at the organization’s centennial celebration in May. Photo courtesy Virginia Chamber of Commerce
Ensuring that Virginia remains one of the nation’s top states for business is a tangible goal for years to come, according to Barry DuVal, president and CEO of the business advocacy organization. Vigilance will also define the chamber’s next 100 years.
“Today, not everybody views business as a force for good,” DuVal says. The chamber must remind elected officials of the important role businesses play in advancing economic growth by creating jobs that lift people out of poverty, while also encouraging businesses to be good corporate citizens, he adds.
Long after his tenure is over, DuVal hopes the chamber will continue to endorse ideas and not political candidates. This was a change he instituted after he took the helm in 2010.
“We’re a purple state, and the business community at the chamber represents people in all political parties, so it’s important to stay focused on issues that are relevant to the business climate of the state,” DuVal says.
The Virginia Chamber of Commerce was founded in 1924 by leaders of several established local chambers with the goal of acting as a unified voice for business in all of Virginia. The founding came about at a time when the state’s economy was transitioning from a largely agrarian economy to becoming increasingly industrialized.
Virginia Chamber of Commerce delegates gathered for a group shot during a 1925 trip to Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Photo courtesy Virginia Chamber of Commerce
As Virginia’s economy has evolved, the chamber’s advocacy efforts have as well, spanning a wide range of public policy issues: education, racial integration, urbanization, transportation, regional competitiveness and economic development. Combined, DuVal and his predecessor, Hugh Keogh, have overseen the Virginia Chamber of Commerce for about a third of its history.
Under DuVal’s leadership, membership has swelled, from about 1,000 in 2010 to about 31,500 today. “We’re focused on making Virginia the best state for business.”
75 YEARS
M.C. Dean Tysons
As a kid, Bill Dean recalls how impressed he was by the employees who worked at the once-small electrical company his grandfather, World War II Navy veteran Marion Caleb “M.C.” Dean, founded. “They were really cool and smart,” Dean says. “A lot of people stayed there for many, many years.”
When Dean took the reins of the Tysons-based company in 1997 from his father, Casey, in 1997 at age 32, he had an eye on growth. M.C. Dean formally established a technology business, building off Dean’s prior experience in wireless technology, and racked up some major government contract wins — the first of which was upgrading the IT infrastructure of the Library of Congress, which led to ongoing maintenance contracts.
Bill Dean. Photo by Will Schermerhorn
Subsequent years saw the company named as engineer of record for the Pentagon, which has resulted in various contracts, each in excess of $250 million, for projects that include updating electronic and physical security systems. M.C. Dean also diversified into major institutional infrastructure systems on its way to surpassing $1 billion in annual revenue a few years ago.
That growth would have been difficult to achieve were it not for the groundwork laid by Dean’s father and grandfather — work that will likewise set the company up for success in its next 75 years as, Dean says, trends like the modularization of complex infrastructures and innovation of new information technologies are likely to “seismically alter” the electrical engineering industry.
The company now employs more than 5,800 and Dean has continued the tradition of hiring people who are problem-solvers, highly capable, come from a variety of backgrounds and enjoy the type of work M.C. Dean does.
While he says it would be nice if the business stays in the family, Dean’s priority is to keep the company private for the foreseeable future.
“The very best thing about working here is the people you work with and the people you work for,” he says. “The offices change, even some of the things you do change, but culture requires a very strong foundation.”
Moonlite Drive-In Theatre Abingdon
How do you preserve and celebrate the history of a community institution that’s been around for 75 years? Well, you can acquire it and continue the tradition as the Blevins family did in March when they bought the Moonlite Drive-In Theatre, making a longtime dream a reality.
Seen here in 2011, the Moonlite Drive-In Theatre in Abingdon first opened in 1949. Moonlite photo by by Michael Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images
The fun — and hard work — of restoring the drive-in to its 20th century glory days has begun. The drive-in hasn’t been fully operational since 2013, save for a COVID-era stint when it hosted live performances by the historic Barter Theatre.
“Some days I think we’re absolutely crazy,” says owner Renee Blevins, “because it’s a bigger undertaking than we realized.”
The Blevinses are the fifth owners in the fractured history of the Moonlite, which was built in 1949 by Thomas Dewey Fields. Blevins has learned a lot about Fields thanks to five trash bags full of receipts from his 16-year ownership that were stored away in the screen tower. Her dream is to reopen the drive-in by April 2025 as a place for local families to enjoy movies and fun activities.
Work needed to get the Moonlite up and running again includes restoring its concession stand and screening tower. From there, the family has even more ambitious dreams for putting their own spin on the place — reinstalling a playground and putt-putt course, converting the concession stand to a 1950s-era diner, building a deck where they can host pre-movie concerts and other community events, and converting the ground level of the screening tower into an apartment they can rent out. But Blevins doesn’t know yet how attainable those dreams are.
The goal for her and her husband, both of whom grew up going to the drive-in, is to restore some of that togetherness in their community.
“It’s really fun, and we hope people will come out and support the activities that we do,” she says. “The biggest thing we need is community support to be successful.”
When Divaris Real Estate celebrated its 50th anniversary this year, the company gave out Amarula chocolate bars to attendees — a nod to the company’s roots in South Africa, where cousins Gerald and Michael Divaris founded the company before moving to Virginia in 1981.
Divaris Real Estate Chairman and CEO Gerald Divaris co-founded his Virginia Beach-based company in South Africa in 1974. photo by Mark Rhodes
Today, the Virginia Beach-based real estate firm manages and leases 40 million-plus square feet of office, retail and industrial space throughout the U.S., represents more than 75 national retailers and employs more than 200 people. He and his company are perhaps best known for developing Virginia Beach Town Center, a bustling mixed-use project with offices, retail, hotels and restaurants.
Chairman and CEO Gerald Divaris attributes the company’s success to four pillars that are embedded in the company’s mantra and philosophy: Work very hard, do work that’s meaningful, never take “no” for an answer, and treat the people who work with you as family. “I follow those four points avidly every day.”
Going into business with family can be problematic, but it was a dynamic Divaris was familiar with because his parents and grandparents were in family retail businesses. Even as Divaris’ real estate company grew beyond his family, it maintained a family feel.
“Immediate family is a strength because you have undivided support if it’s properly harnessed and gives you leverage from others who might only be interested in being there for the day,” Divaris says. “I treat my employees and associates as extended family.”
Crutchfield Corp. Albemarle County
Bill Crutchfield set out to do something novel when he founded a car stereo mail-order retail business out of his mother’s basement in 1974. But when it came to choosing a name for the company, he took a more conventional route, choosing Crutchfield because he believes that companies named for their founders enjoy more longevity than those with generic names. Fifty years later, that hunch proved prescient.
Crutchfield Corp. employees getting acquainted with some cutting-edge technology in 1984 Photo courtesy Crutchfield Corp.
Crutchfield Corp. is a rarity of sorts — the business is still going strong, and he’s been at the helm the entire time as founder and CEO. Consistency has proven to be an important strategy, as Crutchfield attributes his company’s success to frugality, out-of-the-box innovation, and a very strict organizational culture.
His proudest accomplishments during the past half century include never conducting layoffs and consistently ranking among the best employers in Virginia. Plus, the business has thrived amid uncertainty. “I’ve managed through seven recessions while maintaining profitability,” Crutchfield says.
But the early days were trying. When the company started failing in its first year and the bank where Crutchfield obtained a $25,000 line of credit told him it was the worst loan in the statewide system, he had to improvise quickly — an attribute that’s proven valuable in an ever-changing consumer electronics industry.
Crutchfield sent a survey to customers that revealed selling car stereo systems via mail order was a fine business — if only they knew how to install the equipment. He started sending out a “magalog” — a hybrid between a catalog and magazine — that included how-to explainers on installation. “Business just exploded.”
25 YEARS
TowneBank Virginia Beach
When Bob Aston envisioned starting a new community bank headquartered in Hampton Roads in 1998, he didn’t expect locals would rally around the idea to the tune of about $50 million. In fact, TowneBank had more working capital than it needed, so it returned about $13 million to the community before launching in 1999.
“We had no idea we were going to be overwhelmed with money coming in,” recalls Aston, the bank’s founder and executive chairman. “By the same token, these people were investing their trust in us because we had no bank at that point.”
TowneBank Executive Chairman Bob Aston founded the Hampton Roads regional community bank in 1999. Photo by Mark Rhodes
That grassroots effort paid off, both for the bank and investors. The company has paid shareholders some $517 million in dividends and invested $115 million in the community in philanthropic support since 1999, Aston notes.
What’s more, a lot of talented people lined up to work for TowneBank — people who had worked with Aston and his partners in the past or had competed against them and were excited to be part of a new community bank. An initial team of 84 employees has since swelled to nearly 2,800, and the company focuses on hiring people who are “givers and not takers,” he says, because its culture is centered around caring and a strong sense of belonging. “We sort of view ourselves as a Main Street bank.”
Starting in 2001, TowneBank began expanding beyond core banking services and into insurance, real estate and vacation property management. Those businesses have contributed to the company’s success and stability while it weathered some chaotic periods in the industry, including the 2008-2009 financial crisis, Aston adds.
This period of discomfort proved beneficial to the company’s success. Today, it dominates 28% of the deposit market share in Hampton Roads and manages $17 billion-plus in assets. Looking ahead to the next 25 years, Aston says, it’s important to forge ahead with the same business model and culture of caring, while eyeing expansion opportunities along the Interstate 85 corridor as far south as Greenville, South Carolina.
“That’s our future over the next 25 years,” he says.
The U.S. Department of Defense has increased the ceiling of an existing U.S. Air Force contract held by Arlington County‘s Raytheon, a subsidiary of Fortune 500defense contractor RTX, by $325 million, the Department of Defense announced Friday.
The contract, under which Raytheon is producing StormBreaker Increment II small-diameter glide bombs for fighter jets, has been modified to raise its ceiling $275 million to $600 million.
Work will be performed in Tucson, Arizona, and is expected to be completed by the end of 2026, according to the federal government.
In other company news, Raytheon received two mentor-protégé agreement contracts from the U.S. Department of the Navy Office of Small Business Programs to support the development of artificial intelligence for U.S. Department of Defense programs and platforms, the company announced Monday.
Raytheon won three-year contracts to mentor California’s Anacapa Micro Products, which provides IT solutions to the government, and Nara Logics, a Boston developer of a synaptic intelligence platform. Raytheon will provide mentorship on system design, software architecture, systems integration, IT security constraints and authority-to-operate requirements, according to a news release.
Raytheon, Anacapa Micro Products and Nara Logics plan to accelerate the development of next-generation autonomous capabilities to improve the effectiveness of service members’ decision making, the news release stated.
“Through this partnership, we’ll leverage commercial innovations that can make meaningful contributions to our defense capabilities and, ultimately, the success of our servicemen and women,” stated Colin Whelan, president of advanced technology at Raytheon.
Former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Georgia, created the Mentor-Protégé Program in 1990. It helps small businesses “expand their footprint in the defense industrial base,” according to the Department of Defense.
An participant in the program since 1991, Raytheon has nine active mentor-protégé agreements currently, according to a company spokesperson.
Also based in Arlington, RTX has more than 185,000 employees globally and had $68.9 billion in sales in 2023. The company rebranded from Raytheon Technologies to RTX in June 2023 and has three business units: Collins Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney and Raytheon.
The U.S. Department of Defense has awarded Five Rivers Analytics, a subsidiary of Herndon-based government contractorAkima, an indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract worth up to $480 million over 10 years, Akima announced last week.
Based in Colorado, Five Rivers Analytics provides classified IT and mission support services and bills itself as “a small business backed by a global enterprise.” The Satellite Control Network Tracking Station Operations Remote Site and Mission Partner Support (STORMS) contract focuses on operation and maintenance of the U.S. Space Force’s Satellite Control Network, a global network of radio frequency antennas, signal processing and routing communications equipment and computer systems supporting space vehicles. Support services provided by Five Rivers Analytics will include maintenance, cybersecurity measures and system administration.
The Satellite Control Network (SCN) of antennas communicates with and control U.S. government satellites. A 2023 report by the U.S. Government Accountability office described the network as “aging” and “difficult to maintain,” while noting that “demand on the network is increasing as more satellites are launched.”
Following GAO’s recommendation to improve capacity of the SCN, Akima plans to integrate emerging technologies to improve the SCN’s efficiency and resilience. By enhancing SCN capacity, the STORMS contract will “set the stage for significant advancements in satellite control and space defense operations,” according to Akima.
“Our partnership with the U.S. Space Force underscores our commitment to enhancing the Satellite Control Network’s operational efficiency and resilience,” Duncan Greene, president of Akima’s Mission Systems, Engineering and Technology group, stated in a news release. “By integrating emerging technology and expanding system capabilities, we’re not only bolstering national defense and intelligence but also paving the way for revolutionary advancements in space operations.”
Only two bids were received for this contract.
STORMS is a successor to the Consolidated Air Force Satellite Control Network Modifications and Maintenance Operations contract, or CAMMO. CACI International, a Reston Fortune 1000 contractor, previously won that contract in 2016. Bidding for STORMS was limited to small businesses.
Akima operates as a subsidiary of NANA Regional, a for-profit Alaska Native corporation owned by more than 15,000 Indigenous Iñupiat shareholders who live in or have roots in Northwest Alaska. It has 10,000 employees.
DataBank, a Texas provider of data center, cloud, and interconnection services, has signed a lease on a data center currently under construction on Red Rum Drive in Ashburn by GI Partners, the California investment firm announced Thursday.
Two other data center buildings are already located on Red Rum Drive. One is owned by DataBank and the other other is owned by GI Partners, which invests in private equity, real estate and data infrastructure, and leased by DataBank, according to a spokesperson for DataBank.
During construction of the new building, GI Partners will add an additional 29 megawattsof power to the site, according to an announcement.
“GI has a proven track record in strategically adding value to existing and newly acquired data center assets and this project adds to that long list,” Tony Lin, the firm’s managing director, stated in the release.
Construction should be completed by the second quarter of 2025, according to GI Partners. The data center is expected to be ready by the first quarter in 2026, according to a news release distributed by DataBank on Thursday.
A spokesperson for DataBank did not comment on financial terms of the deal.
All three data center properties will be combined into a new data center campus encompassing 18 acres and 375,000 square feet of data center space, according to DataBank.
“This new site demonstrates DataBank’s ability to creatively source additional space and power in extremely constrained markets,” Raul K. Martynek, DataBank’s CEO, stated in the release. “By expanding this Ashburn campus, DataBank is responding to the Northern [Virginia] market’s surging need for colocation space and power that can support the [AI] applications of the future.”
In 2023, DataBank bought 85 acres in Culpeper, where the company plans to build three two-story facilities totaling 1.4 million square feet of data center space with 192 megawatts of power, the company stated. That campus is less than 50 miles away from the Ashburn campus, according to DataBank.
GI Partners data infrastructure team primarily invests in “hard asset infrastructure businesses underpinning the digital economy,” according to the firm’s news release. It owns six data center buildings in Northern Virginia.
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Cookie
Duration
Description
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional
11 months
The cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy
11 months
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
viewed_cookie_policy
11 months
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.