Category Archive: About Hampton Roads

Nov 18

Virginia leaders learn about Hampton Roads

By Matt Isner, LEAD VIRGINIA Class of 2011. Matt is a vice president at Charles Ryan Associates, an integrated marketing communications firm located in Shockoe Bottom in Richmond.

The 2011 class of LEAD VIRGINIA visited Hampton Roads in October to take in all of the region we could in a very short time period. LEAD VIRGINIA is a nonprofit and non-partisan organization that educates proven leaders about regional differences, opportunities and challenges across the commonwealth. This was the fifth regional session for the class of 2011. Although the focuses of the session – economic development; importance of the port; reliance on the military; advancements in technology, simulation and modeling – were not so much a surprise for an outsider to the region; the first-hand experiences that took place were invaluable. Learn more at LeadVA.org.

We started our time in the region with a little rain (and a rainbow), but quickly found it could not dampen the spirits of the class of 2011. After some back and forth over who would share umbrellas and who would wear the ponchos, our class boarded the Hampton Roads Transit ferry to Portsmouth and learned about Hampton Roads from local leaders at the impressive Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.

Every session has experiences that we, as class members, say we will remember, and the evening’s dinner and port cruise definitely made it onto that list. Seeing the port from that perspective was amazing and sharing it with fellow class members and representatives from the region made it that much better. The next day we talked with representatives from Norfolk Southern and the Virginia Port Authority. We certainly saw first-hand the importance of the port, not only to the region, but to the commonwealth as a whole.

I mentioned before the special experiences, and we had another one with a tour of the USS Enterprise. Being on the carrier and hearing from those who have called it “home” is an experience that is hard to describe appropriately.  Personally, it helped to remind me of the huge sacrifices made by some for the many others of us. At the ODU Virginia Modeling and Analysis Simulation Center, a lot of us were impressed to learn that you can make a living playing video games. We also learned that it would not be a good idea for a fellow classmate to quit his day job as a COO and become a crane operator, showing the important reason these simulations exist.

We visited An Achievable Dream Academy and heard from its director, Lee Vreeland, and two of her students. What has been done there, and the spirit and pride that it exudes, is more than impressive. Many class members were overheard saying they would like to take just a piece of what the academy offers back to their various regions. That evening we traveled to Fort Monroe where we received a lively history lesson about the region and a discussion about plans for the future.

We ended the next day at the Sandler Center for Performing Arts in the Town Center of Virginia Beach with discussions about economic development and the impact of the military. 

Yes, our schedule was full, but we always take time to wrap up each session by discussing our thoughts about the region. Many of us mentioned that we would like to have the water and the range of activities that are available, the strength of the port, military and local leaders. And, although taking the ferry seems very attractive, the evident transportation challenges did make it somewhat difficult to leave. Thank you for the hospitality shown in Hampton Roads. You have built a region and I promise, I will never utter  the “T” word in describing it. 

Pictured:  “The Region’s Reliance on the Military” panel, including Capt. (ret.) Casey Collins, ’05 & Hampton Roads session Co-Chair; The Hon. Terrie L. Suit, Secretary of Veteran Affairs & Homeland Security, Commonwealth of Virginia; The Hon. Scott Rigell, United States House of Representatives, Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District; and Rear Admiral Craig Quigley, USN (ret.), Executive Director, Hampton Roads Military & Federal Facilities Alliance.

Photos courtesy of LEAD Virginia

Nov 17

Darden Award for Regional Leadership 2011

Joshua P. Darden, Jr., is the Founder Emeritus of the CIVIC Leadership Institute. It would be hard to find someone who has done more to change the face of Hampton Roads in the last 50 years than Josh Darden. A man of grace and energy, he is the quiet force behind countless initiatives that make life better for the people of our region.

His pivotal leadership of The Norfolk Foundation paved the way for what is now the Hampton Roads Community Foundation. Today, the Foundation puts to work more than $200 million in assets for the good of the region. An auto dealer by trade, Mr. Darden chaired the University of Virginia Board of Visitors, where he engineered a $1 billion campaign – one of the most successful in the history of any university. Josh Darden’s success on behalf of so many organizations bears witness to the wisdom of his personal philosophy: “There is no limit to what one can do if one doesn’t mind who receives the credit.”

Upon completion of a year-long program, CIVIC Leadership Institute members leverage their new relationships to improve life in Hampton Roads. The organization’s signature honor is
the Darden Award for Regional Leadership which is presented annually to an individual who meets one or more of the following criteria:

  • Creates sustainable efforts toward the betterment of life for the people of Hampton Roads.
  • Makes significant progress in bridging divisions within the region, especially across the Hampton Roads harbor.
  • Delivers extraordinary service as a board or commission volunteer within a regional organization.
  • Demonstrates exceptional leadership in the pursuit of regional cooperation.

The 2011 honoree is Hampton Roads native, Dr. Deborah M. DiCroce, who has devoted her career to public service and forging partnerships for the public good. Her work in expanding the reach of Tidewater Community College across workforce, gender, racial and cultural boundaries has been especially heralded, and with good reason.

During her tenure, TCC has experienced 13 years of record enrollment increases and unprecedented programmatic expansion. Under her stewardship, TCC generated a capital building program approaching $500 million. She has served on state-wide commissions and committees under five Virginia governors.

As a civic leader, Dr. DiCroce chairs the Hampton Roads Partnership. Previously she chaired the regional board of the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce, the United Way’s regional campaign and the Urban League Board of Directors.

Among her many accolades, Dr. DiCroce was named this year to Inside Business’ Power List as one of the 75 Most Powerful People in Hampton Roads. Earlier this month, it was announced that she will retire from state service in March 2012 to become President and CEO of the Hampton Roads Community Foundation.

Past Darden Award Honorees include:

Nov 11

Henderson is Habitat for Humanity Dream Builder

Habitat for Humanity of South Hampton Roads, Inc. (Habitat SHR) recognized Charles Henderson, Jr., Market President of Bank of America, with the third Habitat SHR Community “Dream Builder” award on November 3 at the Norfolk Waterside Marriott. The award pays tribute to individuals, organizations and companies that continually commit time, resources, leadership and vision to the advancement of affordable housing in South Hampton Roads.

(Photo left to right; Charles Henderson Jr.; Don Weeks, Habitat SHR Board President; Helen Sommer, Habitat SHR Executive Director.)

Habitat for Humanity of South Hampton Roads serves the community by eliminating substandard housing and providing an opportunity of homeownership for qualified low-income families. Through volunteer labor, donations of money and materials, Habitat builds houses with the homebuyer’s help.  Habitat houses are then sold to selected families at no profit and financed with affordable, no–interest loans. Their mortgage payments are then used to finance homes for other qualified families.

Habitat for Humanity of South Hampton Roads serves Chesapeake, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Suffolk, Virginia Beach, and Isle of Wight County. For more information, contact Habitat SHR at (757) 640-0590 or info@shrhabitat.org.

Nov 10

Charting future growth in Hampton Roads

From WVEC.com, posted on November 10, 2011; photo credit: Sabrina K. Zimring

– Hampton Roads will take a reality check about future growth.  

As many as 300 people from development, government, military, agriculture, environmental, non-profit, transportation and other sectors will meet May 17 at ODU to discuss how the Peninsula and Southside might meet the needs of the estimated 350,000 people who will call the area home by 2035. Where will everyone live, work and play?

Results of the exercise, during which participants will use Lego and string to position future housing, job centers and transportation corridors, will be shared with the audience during an afternoon session and collected into a more formal document that will be distributed later.

Members of the general public with an interest in land use can nominate themselves to participate on the Reality Check website.  

The motto of the group is One Region, One Future, One Day.

Tampa Bay, Jacksonville, Charleston, Washington DC, Baltimore, Raleigh-Durham have used this day-long exercise to chart a path into the future.

Nov 02

White House Video: Hampton Roads gets its national monument


Direct Video Link

From the White House YouTube Channel:  President Obama signs a declaration to declare Fort Monroe in Hampton, Virginia, as a national monument on November 1, 2011.

More on Fort Monroe

Nov 02

President confirms Fort Monroe’s park designation

From left, Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va.; Mayor Molly Ward, Hampton, Va.; Interior Secretary Ken Salazar; watch President Barack Obama sign a Proclamation to designate Fort Monroe, in Hampton, Va., a National Monument under the Antiquities Act, in the Oval Office, Nov. 1, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

From Wil LaVeist  of The Wil LaVeist Show:  Hampton is Black America’s Ellis Island

In a ceremony at the White House yesterday, President Barack Obama confirmed Fort Monroe as a national monument, saying it was all about “preserving our nation’s treasures.” It is the first time he has used the Antiquities Act to create a national monument.

Now the site ought to be the location for the proposed National Slavery Museum, if the museum is going to be built at all. The museum, the vision of former Virginia Gov. Douglas Wilder, the nation’s first elected black governor, is in bankruptcy court. Old Point Comfort, the site of Fort Monroe, is where the first African indentured servants arrived in English speaking America in 1619. It’s also the location where slaves began to gain their freedom in mass during the Civil War in 1861, becoming known as the Contraband Slaves

Read more by the Daily Press:  It’s official – President Obama confirms Fort Monroe park designation 

The Wil LaVeist Show can be heard every Wednesday @ noon to 1 p.m. EST live via the Web on www.whov.org or in Hampton Roads on 88.1FM WHOV. 

More on Fort Monroe

Nov 02

Fort Monroe and the antiquities act, deep roots in Hampton Roads

National Monument move at Fort Monroe is welcomed

Posted October 30, 2011, by David Macaulay for the Daily Press

News that President Barack Obama is poised to declare Fort Monroe a national monument was welcomed by local decision makers.

“Overall, we are hopeful that Tuesday will culminate in a park being established to preserve and tell the American story that unfolded at Fort Monroe. This has been a huge unified effort and we are all holding our breath for Tuesday,” said Terrie Suit, chairman of the board of the Fort Monroe Authority.

Senator Mark Warner, (D-Virginia) the co-sponsor of a Senate bill to bring a national park to Fort Monroe, said: “A National Park Service presence at Fort Monroe will go a long way in preserving and highlighting the remarkable role of ‘Freedom’s Fortress’ in our nation’s history.

Read the rest of this entry »

Nov 01

Hampton Roads Community Foundation Names New President and CEO

Dr. Deborah M. DiCroce, president of Tidewater Community College, has been named president and chief executive officer of the Hampton Roads Community Foundation — southeastern Virginia’s largest grant and scholarship provider.

Dr. DiCroce of Chesapeake was selected from more than 100 applicants during a nationwide search conducted by the foundation’s board and Kittleman & Associates of Chicago, which specializes in nonprofit executive searches. She will assume her new position on March 1. The Foundation’s current president and CEO, Angelica D. Light, will retire in March after more than 12 years at the helm of the Foundation.

“Debbie DiCroce has the experience and skills in working regionally that match our board’s vision of taking the foundation to the next level,” says Harry T. Lester, chair of the foundation’s board. “One of the most important qualities she possesses is passion.”

Dr. DiCroce has led Tidewater Community College since 1998 and previously headed Piedmont Virginia Community College in Charlottesville. Under her leadership, TCC has experienced 13 years of record enrollment growth and expansions in programs and facilities at its four Hampton Roads campuses. It is the largest provider of undergraduate education in Hampton Roads with more than 46,000 students, and enrollment has nearly doubled under Dr. DiCroce’s leadership.

Read the rest of this entry »

Oct 31

The region has no clothes …

Regional Envy or Regional Denial? What We Miss by Not Believing in a Region

By Chris Bonney, an independent marketing researcher whose clients include corporations, nonprofits, educational institutions, agencies of local, state and national government and others. [You can reach Chris at: chris@bonneyresearch.com.]

 

Is Hampton Roads really a region? Do we look like a region? Are we willing to act as a region?

There are few things as important in determining the destiny of our Hampton Roads communities as the answers to these questions.

Competition for everything from good jobs to healthcare resources to shopping to entertainment choices to federal tax dollars is based today on competition between regions, not individual cities or states. Indeed, if you talk to anyone involved in economic development you’ll hear almost nothing but how we want to be the next Raleigh-Durham, San Jose, Austin, Indianapolis or any number of other regions that are outperforming us in these challenging economic times.

There are many reasons why these regions are doing better than Hampton Roads. A lot of them have to do with … Download and read this short Regional Manifesto.

Photo credit:  Nicole Hennig on Flickr and Duncan C. on Flickr

Oct 23

“The American History Guys” on Indians in Virginia

Indian Country Virginia: Real & Imagined << Click link to listen to show

In this live performance at Colonial Williamsburg’s Kimball Theatre, the History Guys take on the history of Indians in Virginia. From Jamestown to Thomas Jefferson to Disney’s Pocahontas, they consider some of the ways Virginian Indians have been imagined by non-Native people, and reflect on how those images have shifted over the centuries. Along the way, they are joined by two special guests, actor Larry Pourier, native production manager for Colonial Williamsburg, and Buck Woodard, manager at the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation and adjunct instructor at Virginia Commonwealth University and the College of William and Mary — both of whom contributed to the 2005 film The New World.

Pictured:  Louis Firetail (Sioux, Crow Creek), wearing tribal clothing, in American history class, Hampton Institute, Hampton, Virginia, ca. 1900 (Library of Congress) Click on photo for larger view.

BackStory, a program of the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, is a radio broadcast that brings historical perspective to the events happening around us today. Renowned U.S. historians Ed Ayers, Peter Onuf and Brian Balogh take headlines and dive into their historical depths. Together, they drill down to colonial times and earlier, revealing the connections (and disconnections) between past and present.

NOTE: Ed Ayers, perhaps better known as president of the University of Richmond, will speak at The Norfolk Forum on January 10, 2012.

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