Tag Archive: Newport News

Aug 12

Hampton Roads largest private employer

Photo Release — Northrop Grumman Continues Construction for the Next-Generation Aircraft Carrier, Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) – July 29, 2010.
Gerald R. Ford’s (CVN 78) construction is now 11 percent complete. Named after the 38th president of the United States, Ford, whose keel was laid Nov. 14, 2009, is the first ship of the new Gerald R. Ford class. The Ford class will continue the legacy of highly capable U.S. Navy nuclear-powered aircraft carrier ship platforms. Click on image above for a full-size version.

Newport News shipyard, nation’s largest, is one of Hampton Roads’ economic driving forces

The yard is Hampton Roads’ largest private employer, with about 20,000 workers, and is the nation’s sole maker of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. It is one of two submarine builders.

On the banks of the James River on the tip of the Peninsula, the yard went into operation in 1886, founded by railroad magnate Collis P. Huntington as a sidelight to his coal operations. The yard started out building Navy and commercial ships and has built ships for World War I, World War II and all wars since.

It now focuses nearly exclusively on Navy vessels. The yard boasts one of the strongest cranes in the Western Hemisphere, a 1,050-ton gantry. More than 23 stories high, it has been a local landmark since 1975.

In a new venture, Northrop is partnering with French firm Areva on a new manufacturing facility that will eventually build parts for commercial nuclear reactors. The center is under construction in the north end of the shipyard.

Los Angeles-based Northrop Grumman (soon moving corporate headquarters to Virginia) bought the yard in 2001. Other area shipyards include Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth and BAE Systems Norfolk Ship Repair in Norfolk.

Once Northrop Grumman Corp. completes its process of evaluating the future of its shipbuilding unit, the Newport News shipyard could find itself in a familiar position: on its own again.

The company is leaning toward spinning off its shipbuilding unit, but will still consider selling the business to a qualified private investor.

A spinoff would mean Northrop would break off its shipbuilding operations in Newport News and on the Gulf Coast to form a separate company with its own leadership. In a typical spinoff scenario, shareholders of the parent company would receive equity stakes in the newly formed company.

That’s what happened in Newport News in 1996, when Tenneco Inc. spun off Newport News Shipbuilding into an independent, publicly traded company. The yard remained on its own until 2001, when Northrop bought it for $2.6 billion.

The sale or spinoff of Northrop’s shipbuilding enterprise, which employs about 40,000 people (half of which are located in Hampton Roads) and builds the Navy’s most sophisticated ships, would likely require approval from the Defense Department.

Cmdr. Victor Chen, a Navy spokesman at the Pentagon, characterized Northrop’s move to seek alternatives for its shipbuilding unit as a “business decision.”

The shipbuilding industrial base “has to have adequate capability, adequate capacity and it has to have competition,” Chen said. “The decision Northrop Grumman is making is their own decision, but given that, we’re going to evaluate what happens in order to be able to affordably execute the shipbuilding plan.”

Mike Petters, the former top executive in Newport News, was tapped to lead Northrop’s unified shipbuilding division when Newport News and Gulf Coast operations merged in 2008. Since then, he’s spent considerable time trying to turn around Northrop’s floundering operations in Mississippi and Louisiana, which have never fully recovered since Hurricane Katrina ravaged the region in 2005.

Excerpts from the Daily Press

This isn’t just a shipyard:
For 124 years, shipbuilding has been the lifeblood of Newport News

Former President George H.W. Bush, left, and his sons then-President George W. Bush and then-Florida Gov. Jeb Bush pose after the christening ceremony of the last Nimitz-class aircraft carrier, the USS George H.W. Bush, on Oct 7, 2006, at Northrop Grumman’s Newport News shipyard. (Daily Press file photo / October 5, 2006)

by Dave Fairbank, Daily Press

Newport News has been synonymous with shipbuilding for more than a century. The city’s signature shipyard has built hundreds of commercial and naval fighting vessels and remains the region’s largest private employer.

The shipyard is the most prominent presence on the Peninsula, from the 234-foot gantry crane — the strongest in the Western hemisphere — that dominates the downtown skyline to the more than 550 acres of property it occupies along the James River.

Hear from the workers themselves about the sweat, tears and pride that goes into building something as massive as an aircraft carrier… Dave’s story

Jul 23

Pentagon advisory board: close JFCOM, axe 5100+ employees in Hampton Roads

Steven Bixler, a senior systems analyst briefs a standing room only crowd at the Homeland Defense and Defense Support of Civil Authorities Modeling and Simulation Demonstration hosted by the US Joint Forces Command’s Joint Futures Lab. The demonstration brings state of the art modeling and simulation capabilities to natural disaster and terrorist threat response. (Click on this USJFCOM Photo by Air Force Staff Sgt. Joe Laws for a high-quality image)


From InsideDefense.com:  Defense Business Board: Reducing Overhead and Improving DoD’s Business Operations, July 22, 1010
Presentation (PDF 43 pages, 1.2MB) and Statement of Arnold Punaro, Task Group Chair (PDF 25 pages, <1MB)

Pentagon advisory board recommends axing Joint Forces Command

Command employs more than 5,100 in Hampton Roads
From Peter Frost, Daily Press, July 23, 2010

A Pentagon advisory board is recommending that the Defense Department eliminate the Norfolk-based Joint Forces Command as part of a plan to significantly cut defense spending.

The Defense Business Board, the Pentagon’s independent board of economic and business advisers, made the preliminary recommendation Thursday in a presentation at the Pentagon.

Joint Forces Command is the linchpin of Hampton Roads’ blossoming high-tech industry, a segment that provided almost 4,500 high-paying jobs and pumped about $365 million into the local economy in 2007, according to 2007 Old Dominion University report.

“It would be absolutely devastating” for Hampton Roads if Joint Forces Command would be shut down, said Andrew Sinclair, a program manager for the Hampton Roads Partnership, a nonprofit made up of business leaders and elected officials whose goal is to promote regional development.

“We’ve put a lot of effort and resources into building Hampton Roads into a modeling and simulation cluster, and it has all been built around Joint Forces Command,” he said Friday. “There are a number of businesses that are here only because of Joint Forces Command. If it were to go away, all of our effort to grow the modeling and simulation industry would really be for naught.”

In addition to its headquarters in Norfolk, Joint Forces operates a large facility in northern Suffolk known as the Joint Warfighting Center, and has outposts in Newport News, Nevada and Florida.

It employed more than 3,000 contractors, 1,491 military personnel and 1,533 civilians as of May, said Lt. Cmdr. Robert Lyon, a spokesman. Those figures include personnel deployed throughout the world, he said.

The command is one of the Defense Department’s 10 combatant commands. Its missions include experimentation, training and developing advanced warfighting concepts for all branches of the armed forces. Its 2010 operating budget is $704 million, Lyon said.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates has tasked the Defense Business Board to recommend options for reducing the Pentagon’s spending with a primary focus on limiting overhead costs and making its operations more efficient.

Gates wants to cut about $100 billion of Pentagon spending over the next five years and reallocate that spending into combat personnel and the modernization of weapons systems.

In its report, the board found that Joint Forces Command has more contractors on its payroll than military and civilian personnel.

“Joint Forces Command appears to have its own multiple joint commands,” said Arnold Punaro, a retired Marine Corps general and former executive at defense giant SAIC who chairs the task force working on the recommendations.

Some of the organizations under JFCOM “appear to have almost the same name and mission,” Punaro said, according to a transcript provided by the board.

The board is expected to submit its final recommendations to the secretary in October.

The board’s recommendation drew a strong rebuke from members of Virginia’s congressional delegation, who said in a joint statement that closing Joint Forces Command “would be a step backward and could be harmful to the capabilities of the finest military in the world.”

The statement was signed by Sens. Jim Webb and Mark Warner and Reps. J. Randy Forbes, Glenn Nye, Rob Wittman and Robert C. “Bobby” Scott.

“There may be merit in tightening the structure of various commands … but it is illogical for (the board) to recommend that we undo what our nation has worked so hard to achieve in military jointness over the past two decades,” the statement said.

“I can see no rational basis for this to happen,” Warner told the Daily Press on Friday. “It seems wacky.”

Warner, who as governor championed the development of the modeling and simulation industry in Virginia, said Gates is correct in seeking ways to reduce duplicative programs and unnecessary spending.

But shuttering Joint Forces would appear to be in conflict with that goal, Warner said, because the methods the command employs help the government save money.

Instead of developing and testing emerging technologies and warfighting tactics in the field, the center uses modeling, simulation and experimentation to test those initiatives in virtual labs. The thought is, those methods reduce costs, save time and increase efficiency.

“That’s this command’s responsibilities,” Warner said. “It’s a no-brainer that this is one of the commands that could use more resources.”

Gov. Robert F. McDonnell, who is traveling in Germany, said in a statement: “I am very concerned … Joint Forces Command is essential in ensuring the various branches of our military work together seamlessly to beast safeguard our country and citizens.”

“Our Administration is working with Virginia’s congressional delegation to ensure that this important military asset remains open and headquartered in Norfolk,” he said.

If the command is shuttered, which Warner, Sinclair and others said remains highly unlikely, it could be a tremendous blow to the local economy.

When the operation was stood up about 15 years ago, it spawned the region’s burgeoning modeling and simulation industry, an expected growth area for the Hampton Roads economy.

When Joint Forces Command began planning its Suffolk center in the mid-1990s, it engaged Old Dominion University to help provide a workforce development program to support modeling and simulation activities and support research and development initiatives.

With that partnership, ODU’s Virginia Modeling, Analysis and Simulation Center was born, said John Sokolowski, VMASC’s executive director. ODU also became one of the first schools in the country to launch a graduate program in modeling and simulation.

“It has certainly continued to be a strong relationship,” Sokolowski said, noting that VMASC has a contract to provide technical support and research and development services to the command.

Over the past decade, dozens of businesses sprung up around the complex. Workers in the industry now earn an average salary of nearly $83,000, up 37 percent over 2004 and more than double the average Hampton Roads salary of $38,428, according to the ODU study. Jobs in the industry grew about 25 percent during the same period and are expected to rise an average of 14.5 percent a year through 2012.

About 43 percent of organizations responding to surveys for the ODU study indicated they began their Hampton Roads operations after the modeling center opened. As many as 80 companies have established local roots to gain a foothold in the sector, from small startups with two employees to giant defense contractors like SAIC, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, Raytheon and Lockheed Martin.

Jul 14

Hampton Roads Tourists – A Warm Welcome

Tourists bring more than traffic to Hampton Roads. Residents reap financial and cultural rewards from money spent to attract them.

By Bill Glose, Hampton Roads Magazine

As summer days grow long and already congested roadways bog down with out-of-town vehicles packed with everything but the kitchen sink (except in the case of RVs, which have that too), one could be forgiven for wishing the vacationers would just find somewhere else to go. Except we need them.

It’s easy enough to say tourism is important to Hampton Roads. More than 40,000 workers are employed in jobs that are directly travel-related, and the bulk of their $750 million in annual pay is spent on goods and services throughout the local area. But what if you work a 9-to-5 and don’t sell a product locally? Does tourism have any affect on your life? Yes, even then.

“In Greater Williamsburg (City of Williamsburg, James City County, York County), tourism is responsible for more than 11,400 jobs, more than $1 billion in spending by visitors, and $81.32 million in state and local tax receipts,” says Linda Stanier, director of communications for the Greater Williamsburg Chamber and Tourism Alliance. “For an impact-on-your-wallet perspective: Local taxes generated by our tourism sector are equivalent to about $760 per household annually—taxes that support the programs and services we enjoy from our municipalities but don’t have to pay out of our own pockets. Without tourism in the Greater Williamsburg area, our three municipalities would need to raise taxes by that much per household in order to maintain their current levels of spending.”

According to the Virginia Tourism Corporation, travelers spent $3.76 billion in Hampton Roads during 2008, $142 million of which went to local tax receipts. State tax receipts were even higher, with a portion of that money returned to Hampton Roads earmarked for various programs.

“Tourism has been and still is a huge benefit to the local residents,” says Chris Canavos, president of the Williamsburg Hotel & Motel Association. “It’s clean business. It doesn’t require schools, roads, fire, police. The tax collections from it are phenomenal. It’s a way to showcase an area. Visitors come in a short period of time, and they leave a good amount of money and you don’t have to build an infrastructure for them.”

But nothing in life is free. Each city and county hoping that tourists will come with fat wallets and leave with skinny ones must first spend a few bucks of their own. Take Virginia Beach, for example, which spends approximately $8 million per year on travel-related advertising and marketing. That might sound like a lot, but in 2008 vacationers spent $1.15 billion dollars at the Beach, producing local tax receipts of $47 million. An almost 6-to-1 return on investment (ROI).

In many cases, the money spent to market Hampton Roads as a tourist destination is supplemented by the advertising budgets of privately owned attractions. While the Historic Triangle spends $25–30 million per year on marketing, local businesses kick in up to an additional $20 million. “Colonial Williamsburg and Busch Gardens are the primary marketing drivers for our area,” says Stanier. “The attractions play the major role in marketing to individuals, but since 2004 the Williamsburg Area Destination Marketing Committee (WADMC) has added an important layer to area marketing efforts. WADMC, formed by the General Assembly to oversee expenditure of funds raised from a $2 occupancy tax, markets all aspects of the area: attractions, accommodations, dining, shopping and other activities available to visitors.”

“Over 50 percent of the budget for the city of Williamsburg is tourism related,” Canavos says. “But look how many people they employ and how many companies support them. Vast. It’s a great industry for a municipality.” True enough. Slightly less than half of Williamsburg’s population works for the tourism industry, with a payroll approaching $100 million. Makes sense that the city would spend half its budget to keep its residents employed.

But how has the recent recession influenced vacationers? In hard economic times, those affected tend to cut the frills first, which includes vacations. For the year 2009, real travel and tourism spending across the U.S. declined 4 percent. Hampton Roads fared better than many vacation spots thanks to its central East Coast location; travelers who found airplane tickets to far-off destinations too expensive could still afford to pack the family in the car and drive to Hampton Roads.

“Most people say 2009 was the worst year in the history of travel,” says Tony DiFilippo, president and CEO of the Norfolk Convention and Visitor’s Bureau (CVB). “But our largest markets are the association markets and the government and military markets. So they keep meeting. The associations need to have their annual meetings, because that’s how they make money; that’s how they keep their associations alive.”

Conversely, destinations that typically appeal to vacationers from other states and countries saw a larger drop off in attendance. Last year, Colonial Williamsburg suffered its lowest attendance since 1962. To boost its numbers, WADMC added a new, interactive visitor’s center at Jamestown, opened a new archaeological museum and launched a wide-reaching television and internet advertising campaign meant to showcase the interactive splendor of Colonial Williamsburg.

Some communities have opted to go in the other direction, forgoing out-of-state marketing to focus instead on day trippers from nearby cities. Taking vacations without leaving your local area became so popular during the recession that a new term—staycations—was coined and now appears in the 2009 version of the Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. In this vein, Portsmouth adopted the new marketing slogan:  Give us a day, we’ll give you a vacation.

“We have shifted our focus from marketing our overnight stays,” says Lynette P. James, marketing coordinator for Portsmouth’s Marketing Communications Department, “to that of what the hospitality industry knows as attracting more ‘feet on the street.’ Olde Towne has a quaint, neighborhood feeling. There are plenty of antique and specialty shops within a 10-block radius of the waterfront, and everything is within walking distance to most of our hotels. Once people get here and walk through historic Olde Towne, their impressions tend to be, ‘Omigosh, I didn’t realize all this was here.’ And they want to come back. Which suits us just fine.”

Attracting tourists in a tight market means that locales need to specialize more than ever. It’s not enough that Hampton Roads has the world’s longest pleasure beach, one-of-a-kind historic sites, world-class museums, theme parks, and restaurants to suit every palette. No, the tourist trade in Hampton Roads thrives because cities go out of their way to service special wants and needs. There’s newly opened JT’s Grommet Island Beach Park and Playground in Virginia Beach, the first-ever handicap-accessible oceanfront park. There are resorts for vacationing nude and conventions where one can attend dressed as a Klingon. And there are festivals galore with events to appeal to every niche, from shag dancing to gospel singing to parading your hermit crab in a beauty pageant.

Cities are also searching for ways to provide special services to visitors. Norfolk offers an electronic golf cart called FRED (Free Ride Every Day) that picks tourists up and drops them off free of charge anywhere in the downtown area. “We also have public service ambassadors out on the streets with hand-held computers to help conventioneers,” says DiFilippo. “So when a convention comes, we’ll have their whole agenda programmed into those computers. If people walk up to the ambassadors and say, ‘How do I get to the Chrysler Museum?’ they can print out a map … They will already know, for example, that certain conventioneers have exhibits at Scope Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and that they’re on their own for dinner Thursday and Friday night. So they’ll be positioned strategically throughout the city where the major shopping patterns are anticipated.”

Amenities Aplenty

The fat time for Hampton Roads has always been summer, when tourists come in carloads. But with fewer people traveling, locales have been finding ways to fill the rest of the calendar with vacationers as well. “Our city has evolved into a year-round destination with well over half of our almost 3 million out-of-town visitors coming between September and May,” says Pamela Lingle, communications manager for the Virginia Beach CVB. “Center stage in this renaissance has been the new (515,000-square-foot) Virginia Beach Convention Center … hosting meetings, conferences, conventions and sporting events for people from throughout the country.”

But the festivals, special events, facilities and services aren’t just for the benefit of tourists. “Residents in Virginia Beach and the Hampton Roads area enjoy many amenities that would not be here if it were not for our out-of-town visitors,” says Lingle. “Facilities like the Virginia Aquarium and Marine Science Center are available to locals year round because they are used by both locals and visitors. These amenities benefit our residents from both a quality of life perspective and a financial perspective … It is a win-win for everyone involved.”

Dawn West, a transplanted Chicagoan who served on Newport News’ Sheriff’s Department for 20 years, figured she’d probably move somewhere else after she retired. “Whenever family or friends would come down to visit,” she says, “rarely did I have anything to show them in Newport News. But in the last 10 years, something happened to our dreary city. It woke up, dusted itself off, and put on its Sunday suit. Now we’ve got the revamped Virginia Living Museum, the new USS Monitor Center (at the Mariners’ Museum) and outdoor art festivals at Port Warwick. And Christopher Newport University’s transformation is just incredible. What was once a tiny commuter college now has a Broadway-quality main theater (Ferguson Center for the Arts) that brings in world-class performances. Now I love it when friends come to visit so I can show the place off!”

“Whether it is answering a visitor’s questions, sharing a favorite restaurant or fishing spot, or helping someone research their past,” says Suzanne Pearson, media relations manager for the Newport News Tourism Development Office, “tourism gives us the opportunity to meet, share and learn from other Americans, as well as from people of other countries and cultures.”

Sporting events have been a particular boon to Hampton Roads, bringing in overnight guests from throughout the state and sometimes the country. Hampton plays host to annual high school all-star games, Williamsburg features 14 championship golf courses, and Virginia Beach offers up its flat, fast roads for 24,000+ runners in the Shamrock Marathon.

When the Virginia Beach Convention Center hosts an event such as the National High School Wrestling Championship, it isn’t just the 3,000 individual wrestlers who come to the area; coaches and family members come as well, filling up hotel rooms and restaurants. Likewise, Virginia Beach’s boardwalk, Norfolk’s Town Point Park and Portsmouth’s nTelos Pavilion host events throughout the year, drawing visitors to the area in droves.

The North American Sand Soccer Championship (NASSC) attracts nearly 10,000 players to Virginia Beach for the largest single weekend of beach soccer in the world, with teams coming from as far away as Bosnia and Norway. Fifty thousand spectators also descend on the beach, turning it, like so many other boardwalk events, into one big beach party. West attended one of the tournaments, marking the only time she’d ever watched a complete game of soccer. “The kicks up in the air, the speed, the rhythm of the ocean,” she says, “and of course hunky muscles and shirtless sweaty men with sand stuck to their backs. What’s not to love?”

So, the next time traffic slows to a crawl and you’re surrounded by out-of-state license plates, try to give thanks instead of a toot of the horn. There’s a good chance the destination you’re driving to wouldn’t exist without them.

Jul 02

Newly Elected Officials Get Regional

Newly elected local city council members (from left to right): Donnie Tuck, Tommy Smigiel, Suzy Kelly, Will Moffett, and Scott Matheson. Also in attendance, but not pictured: Lonnie Craig. Story and photo by Janet Boehnlein, Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce Intern and rising Senior at Virginia Wesleyan College.


“Regionalism” was the word at the first Hampton Roads Elected Official’s Regional Orientation meeting held on June 24 at the Hampton Roads Planning District Commission in Chesapeake.

Newly elected city council members met with local business leaders to discuss ways of taking a more regional approach to business-related affairs within each city.  This concept is the first region-wide, comprehensive economic development strategy of its kind, http://VisionHamptonRoads.com.

The Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce and various other regional organizations hosted the event.  A roundtable discussion took place with newly elected city council members from three of the seven cities.  Lonnie Craig, Suzy Kelly and Scott Matheson from Chesapeake, Will Moffett and Donnie Tuck from Hampton and Tommy Smigiel from Norfolk, were introduced to the goals and visions of various regional organizations, with the shared mission of fostering regional growth and prosperity.

Emphasis was placed on building relationships across jurisdictional boundaries and stronger engagement in regional issues.  The issues discussed included workforce development, transportation, military facilities and increasing the competitiveness of Hampton Roads in the global market.

Jack Hornbeck, CCE, President and CEO of the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce, introduced the Chamber’s role by saying, “We’re a little different than some of the other organizations here, but at the end of the day, we all share the same goal:  economic prosperity for Hampton Roads.”

Hornbeck described the various programs within the Chamber such as LEAD Hampton Roads (LHR) and the Hampton Roads Business Political Action Committee (HRBizPAC).  He also discussed the mission of the Chamber’s affiliates, the Small Business Development Center of Hampton Roads (SBDC) and the Hampton Roads Sports Commission (HRSC).

He noted the upcoming AAU Junior Olympic Games, set to take place from July 29 – August 7.  Produced by the HRSC, the amateur sporting event is estimated to have a regional economic impact close to $50 million, with an average attendance of 45,000.  While the events will take place in various cities, Hornbeck pointed out that, “The entire region will benefit from the positive economic impact.”

Hornbeck reiterated that the Chamber is, “A regional organization with a local focus able to mobilize the business community.”

Future meetings for this economic development strategy are planned.

Participating Organizations:

  • Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce (HRCC)
  • Hampton Roads Economic Development Alliance (HREDA)
  • Hampton Roads Military and Federal Facilities Alliance (HRMFFA)
  • Hampton Roads Partnership (HRP)
  • Hampton Roads Planning District Commission (HRPDC)
  • Hampton Roads Transportation Planning Organization (HRTPO)
  • Opportunity, Inc. (Opp-Inc)
  • Peninsula Council for Workforce Development (PCFWD)
  • Virginia Peninsula Chamber of Commerce (VPCC)

Following the May 4 elections, these local City Council members took office July 1.

Chesapeake City Council:
Lonnie E. Craig
John M. de Triquet (incumbent)
Suzy H. Kelly
Scott W. Matheson
Ella P. Ward (incumbent)

Hampton City Council:
Will Moffett
Donnie Tuck
Chris Stuart

Newport News City Council:
Mayor – Dr. McKinley Price

Norfolk City Council:
Mayor – Paul D. Fraim (incumbent)
Anthony Burfoot (incumbent)
Andy A. Protogyrou
Paul R. Riddick (incumbent)
Tommy Smigiel, Jr.
Theresa W. Whibley (incumbent)

Portsmouth City Council:
Paige Cherry
Bill Moody Jr. (incumbent)
Marlene Randall (incumbent)

Williamsburg City Council:
Scott Foster
Doug Pons

Jun 20

Discovering the Wonders of Hampton Roads, Virginia

Story by Kelly Copeland; Photos courtesy of Virginia Living Museum

The Virginia Living Museum (VLM), located in Newport News, is a nationally accredited non-profit institution representing hundreds of Virginia’s native animal species. All regions of Virginia are showcased from the Chesapeake Bay and Blue Ridge Mountains to the Virginia Underground. KJ Jordan, the museum’s Group Sales Manager says, “The museum is an attraction but also an educational institution.”

No matter what your age there is something to learn. Have a question about a horseshoe crab? Just head over to the touch tank at one of the four Discovery Centers and one of the Museum’s dedicated volunteers will be happy to answer it.

One of the Museum’s most popular exhibits, “Dinosaurs and More,” is back for the summer. It is fascinating how the Apatosaurus, Maiasaura, and T-Rex move and interact with such realism. And for the first time, mammals from the Ice Age are on display including a family of saber tooth cats and the massive wholly mammoth. If after seeing the exhibit you want to learn more, the Museum’s gift shop is full of books and other merchandise that are packed with information.

Just last summer the Museum opened the Goodson House, a “Living Green House” environmental education center. As guests tour the house they learn all about the newest and best products and techniques to create a more environmentally friendly home. Some of the house’s features include a roof covered with living plants, alternative wall systems and insulation systems, and a geothermal heat pump and cooling unit. It is the first of its kind in Virginia.

Virginia Living Museum “Living Green” Exhibit

There are so many varied things to see at the Virginia Living Museum. A 3/4 mile boardwalk takes visitors past countless native animals including river otters, bald eagles, and the endangered red wolf. And while guests are outside, they can also stop at The Coastal Plain Aviary which showcases such coastal birds as pelicans and herons or check out The Butterfly Garden.

The schedule for the Abbitt Planetarium is packed for the summer. Several laser shows will be presented including Laser Country and Laser Pop. There is also a companion program to “Dinosaurs and More” called Dinosaur Prophecy. The presentation will explore four different dinosaur digs around the world. The museum’s website, www.thevlm.org, has the dates and times for all of the Planetarium’s shows.

The Virginia Living Museum truly has something for everyone and needs to be on everyone’s “To Do” list this summer.

Kelly Copeland is a recent graduate of the University of North Carolina Wilmington where she majored in Film Studies and minored in Theatre. While searching for the right position on her communication-focused career path, Kelly is interning at WCTV, the City of Chesapeake’s television station, where she is working on Channel 48 News and “Thinking Out Loud” among other programs. She’s also covering Tourism and Arts & Culture for the Hampton Roads blog. Contact Kelly at kellycplnd@gmail.com.

Apr 22

Sea-level rise and its effect on the Peninsula

The Hampton Roads Section of AIAA (World’s Forum for Aerospace Leadership), and the Science and Technology Corporation  cordially invite you to attend a Forum on:  Sea-Level Rise, Climate Change Projections, and Effect on the Peninsula to be held at Hampton University on Monday, April 26th from 5:00pm to 7:00pm.

This is a FREE public service event open to the general public and students.

The discussion panel consists of:

  • Mayor Joe Frank, City of Newport News
  • Dr. Barry Stamey, Noblis Oceanographer
  • Dr. Harry Wang, VIMS modeling
  • Dr. Douglas Dwoyer, Hampton Roads Research Partnership
  • Dr. Samuel Martin, President of ECOS 360 LLC
  • Dr. Eric Walberg, Hampton Roads Planning District

Dr. James Russell III, Center for Atmospheric Sciences at Hampton University will serve as Moderator.

From a Hampton Roads perspective, scientists will present the latest scientific evidence and projected impact of climate change, especially sea-level rise, on the Peninsula. The need for reliable scientific data is well recognized; national security considerations are a high priority; city and county policies may be affected; all citizens need information.

A Reception featuring local foods and sea-foods will precede the Forum (5:00 to 5:30pm).

DATE: Monday, April 26, 2010
TIME:  5 to 7 pm
PLACE: McGrew Towers Conference Center
Campus of Hampton University
530 East Queen Street, Hampton VA
(I-64 to Settlers Landing Road Exit)
Campus police will assist in directions and parking

Mar 31

Jefferson Lab’s Celebration of Science Open House

Jefferson Lab’s Open House provides a unique opportunity for the public to tour the Lab and meet its staff. It is the only event where visitors under 18 can access areas of the Lab normally off-limits. Open House is a well-established event with a track record of drawing 4,000 – 6,000 visitors. It is held rain or shine and is free to the public.

Science Activities & Demonstrations

Saturday, May 1, 2010 Open House

Open House will highlight the latest physics research and technology developments at Jefferson Lab. Lab staff will be on hand to discuss their work, answer questions and provide scientific demonstrations throughout the day. Open House is the only time when visitors under 18 can tour the lab. Jefferson Lab aims to offer an Open House biennially.

The event will feature a variety of hands-on, science-education activities for the young and young-at-heart. Visitors will be able to enter portions of the lab, learn about the $310 million 12 GeV Upgrade project underway that will allow JLab to continue as a world leader in scientific research, and to learn first-hand from staff and users about research underway at the lab.

Local universities, museums, private companies and government agencies will present activities and information on complimentary local science endeavors including the Hampton University Proton Therapy Institute, The Mariners’ Museum, The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) and the Newport News Fire Department.

This year, Open House will be featured as a National Lab Day event. National Lab Day is a federally endorsed, national campaign to foster hands-on learning in science and math. To learn more about National Lab Day, visit: http://www.NationalLabDay.org.

Mar 11

Anchors Aweigh in Hampton Roads?

It is serious this time.  Not just the Navy, but the Secretary of Defense have said they want to base a nuclear aircraft carrier in Jacksonville rather than Norfolk. Troubling to area economists and business and political leaders, the defense department’s stated desire to permanently base a flattop in Florida, rather than in Hampton Roads, could cost the region thousands of jobs and millions in lost income.

On Wednesday, March 17, from 7:45-9:00am at the Town Point Club, World Trade Center in downtown Norfolk, LEAD Hampton Roads will stage a provocative panel discussion on the subject, featuring civic leaders who are working to keep all east coast carriers in Norfolk.  Moderated by former TV talk show host Joel Rubin, the event, entitled “Anchors Away?” will feature the following guests:

If interested in attending, contact Amanda Gant at agant@hrccva.com.

LEAD Hampton Roads, a program of the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce, is a 501-C3 leadership development program now entering its 22nd year of serving the region. The organization has over 1,200 graduates who actively provide bold leadership to more than 600 regional businesses, non-profit organizations and governmental agencies. LEAD Hampton Roads serves the 17 communities that comprise the greater Hampton Roads area.

Feb 26

Global Access to North America’s Largest Maritime Museum in Hampton Roads

The Mariners’ Museum, located in Newport News, Virginia, is the largest maritime museum in North America. Hampton Roads, with the largest naval base in the world, is a fitting location for such a gem.

Besides world class exhibits, the Mariners’ offers educational opportunities for all ages from school programs about the Age of Exploration to adult lectures on topics from the Revolutionary War to World War II.

The Museum invested in cutting-edge technology to provide exhibitions and information about maritime history, science, and culture via the internet. Approximately one million visitors now log onto the web site annually, and the number of people reached through educational programs has grown exponentially. A key aspect of this growth strategy involves interactive video conferencing (IVC) of the educational programs, which increased by 175% in 2008 alone. The IVC facilities have tripled the capacity to broadcast educational programs across the world.

The Mariner’s also offers educational programs designed to meet Virginia SOLs and the National Standards of Learning, online exhibitions, homeschool and scouting programs.

Dollar Tree, headquartered in Chesapeake in Virginia’s Hampton Roads, is an underwriter for these programs.

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