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Counting troubles and blessings
by Robert
C. Powell III
Editor, Virginia Business
Novermber 2006
Virginia is known as a pro-business state. In fact,
Forbes.com, the Web site for the national business magazine,
recently named Virginia the best state for business in
the country.
But all is not well, say the
state’s manufacturers.
They point out that the number of high-paying factory
jobs is dwindling in Virginia, and they say the state
is not doing enough to attract new manufacturers and
encourage expansion by existing companies. In this month’s cover story,
Charlottesville-based writer Jack Milligan looks at Virginia
manufacturers’ complaints that
their tax burden is too high in comparison to other Southern
states.
Prospects for Virginia hospitals in a major disaster
also are less than ideal. Fredericksburg-based writers
Marjolijn Bijlefeld and Robert Burke find that hospitals
have been beefing up their preparedness with $50 million
in federal funding in the past four years. Still, doubts
remain about how long medical facilities could sustain
a massive emergency response.
The good news is that currently many hospitals
are expanding and some have revamped their emergency rooms. One Virginia
chain, Bon Secours, promises to see emergency room patients
in 30 minutes or less at its Richmond-area hospitals,
a trend checked out by Managing Editor Paula Squires.
While manufacturers and hospitals
count their woes, the accounting profession is enjoying
a heyday. Demands placed on business by the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act and other regulations have created a huge demand
for accountants. This issue profiles some of Virginia’s
best as we present our annual Super
CPAs list. As part of our
coverage of the profession, Clifford-based writer Heather
B. Hayes reports that young accountants are using their
marketability to command higher salaries and create careers
that are more conducive to their lifestyles. They may
wind up reshaping the low-profile image of their profession:
accountants with attitude.
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