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Prosperity in tense times
by Robert
C. Powell III
Virginia Business
September 2006
Sept. 11, 2001, began a new era
in the United States. The nation was plunged into a global
war on terrorism
that appears to be as dangerous and unending as the
Cold War. We were reminded of that in August when authorities
thwarted a plan to blow up airplanes leaving Britain
for the U.S. The ironic result of these tense times
is that Virginia’s economy has been a beneficiary
of the nation’s ramp-up in homeland security
spending.
In our cover story, Richmond-based
writer Garry Kranz looks at the emergence of Virginia’s
homeland security industry as we approach the fifth
anniversary of 9/11.
In fact, the industry has grown more than any other
in the commonwealth during the past five years, creating
more than 50,000 IT jobs, to cite just one example.
While the growth is boosting profit at some companies,
Kranz finds another motivating factor in landing homeland
security contracts. Some businesses, such as McLean-based
Booz Allen Hamilton, lost employees on 9/11, and they
welcome the opportunity to fight back.
Northern Virginia is a major
center for homeland security and defense contractors.
Another hotspot
is Hampton
Roads, but the development there that we examine
in this issue
does not involve government money. APM
Terminals Virginia, a subsidiary of the Danish conglomerate
A.P. Moller-Maersk
Group, is building a $450 million container terminal
in Portsmouth, due to open next July. When completed,
the terminal will double the state’s annual
container cargo capacity.
The new terminal already has identified Hampton Roads
as the up-and-coming port of the East Coast. The question
remains how increased truck traffic created by expanded
port capacity will affect an already congested highway
system in Hampton Roads.
Another area of the state, the
Roanoke region, is facing a different kind of growth
issue. Southwest
Virginia is recovering from the loss of many manufacturing
jobs in textiles and furniture. Its solution
is to
grow
slowly, building on the success of stable companies
that employ
a few hundred people rather than thousands.
Economic development officials see promise in the growth
of the area’s biotechnology industry, which has close
ties to Virginia Tech. Roanoke’s strategy
is just another example of statewide efforts
to find
prosperity in tense times.
Lastly, I want to let you know about a change taking
place at our Web site. It is becoming part of Gateway
Virginia, a portal for news and information from around
the state. Typing in www.VirginiaBusiness.com still
will take you to our home page, but you will
need to update
any bookmarks linking directly to other pages,
such as the List of Leaders.
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