Virginia
Businesses in the News
Legal
and Regulatory
| Have
News to Report? |
For
the Record is
compiled from company releases, business
journals and newspaper reports from around
the state. If you have an item for these
listings:
Mail it to:
For the Record
Virginia Business Magazine
P.O. Box 85333
Richmond, VA 23293
E-mail it to ForTheRecord@va-business.com
Fax it to (804)
649-6311 |
RBX Corp., a Roanoke County
manufacturer of rubber products, filed for Chapter
11 bankruptcy protection. The company had previously
filed for Chapter 11 in December 2000 and emerged
in August 2001 through financing by Congress Financial
Corp. RBX received notification in December it
was in default of certain provisions of that financing,
triggering the latest move to Chapter 11. (02/26/04,
The Roanoke Times)
Rutter, Walsh, Mills &
Rutter, a Norfolk law firm focused on personal
injury litigation, changed its name to Rutter
Mills and relocated to new offices at 160 W.
Brambleton Ave. (02/20/04, Press release)
Performance Food Group,
a Richmond-based food distributor, reached a
settlement with the Securities and Exchange
Commission over accounting errors at one of
its subsidiaries first announced in 2002. Without
admitting or denying wrongdoing cited in the
SEC’s findings, the company agreed to
comply with directives concerning accurate bookkeeping
and records. (02/13/04, Business Wire)
XO Communications, a
broadband services provider headquartered in
Reston, was the winning bidder for substantially
all of the assets of Allegiance Telecom, a Dallas-based
local exchange carrier, for $311 million in
cash and 45.38 million shares of XO common stock.
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District
of New York approved the bid. The deal makes
XO the nation’s largest independent provider
of national local telecommunications and broadband
services. (02/13/04, Business Wire)
Duke Energy North America
received an air permit from the State Corporation
Commission for a proposed gas-fired power plant
in Wythe County. The company plans to wait until
at least November 2005 to put the plant in service,
citing economic considerations. (02/12/04,
The Roanoke Times)
Capital One,
a McLean-based issuer of credit cards, was released
from a 2002 agreement with federal and state regulators
under which the company’s internal audit
controls were closely scrutinized. Under the agreement,
Capital One invested in technology infrastructure,
internal audits and moved more conservatively
with high-risk lending. The company’s rapid
expansion over the past decade triggered concerns
about its protection against risk factors. (01/30/2004,
The Washington Post)