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SERVING THE ROANOKE/BLACKSBURG/ NEW RIVER VALLEY REGION NOVEMBER 2015 SERVING THE ROANOKE/ BLACKSBURG/ NEW RIVER VALLEY REGION NOVEMBER 2015 The profit in nonprofits Community service organizations contribute millions to the economy and strengthen the region’s social fabric

Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

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COVER STORY: The profit in nonprofits.

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Page 1: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

SERVING THE ROANOKE/BLACKSBURG/NEW RIVER VALLEY REGION

NOVEMBER 2015 SERVING THE ROANOKE/BLACKSBURG/NEW RIVER VALLEY REGION

NOVEMBER 2015

The profit

in

nonprofitsCommunity service organizations contribute millions to the economy and strengthen the region’s social fabric

Page 2: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

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Page 4: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

2 NOVEMBER 2015

D E P A R T M E N T S

November 2015C O N T E N T S

S E R V I N G T H E R O A N O K E / B L A C K S B U R G /N E W R I V E R V A L L E Y R E G I O N

8

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F E A T U R E SCOVER STORY

8 The profi t in nonprofi ts Community service organizations contribute millions to theeconomy and strengthen the region’s social fabric. by Sandra Brown Kelly

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE

14  W.M. Jordan’s new horizon Building spurs economic development,

which spurs more building.by Kathie Dickenson

TECHNOLOGY

20  A new kind of student You thought it up at Virginia Tech; but who owns the idea? A step toward entrepreneurship.

by Dan Radmacher

HIGHER EDUCATION

27 Hokie growthVirginia Tech has a lot going for it: high rankings, new majors and new buildings.

by Shawna Morrison

24 INTERVIEW: Linda Balentine founder, Crowning Touch Senior Moving Services Hardship births a company tailored to seniors From being homeless to selling franchises: ‘You’re good at a lot more than you think you’re good at.’ by Beth JoJack

30 COMMUNITY PROFILE: Salem ‘The true small town’ The Salem Way: Be business-friendly, citizen-serving and sports crazy by Gene Marrano

34 NEWS FROM THE CHAMBER• Leadership Roanoke Valley Class of

2016 selected

• Member news & recognitions

Page 5: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

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Page 6: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

4 NOVEMBER 2015

S E R V I N G T H E R O A N O K E / B L A C K S B U R G /N E W R I V E R V A L L E Y R E G I O N

Vol. 4 NOVEMBER 2015 No. 11

President & Publisher Bernard A. Niemeier Roanoke Business Editor Tim Thornton Contributing Editor Paula C. Squires Writers Kathie Dickenson Beth JoJack Sandra Brown Kelly Gene Marrano Shawna Morrison Dan Radmacher Art Director Adrienne R. Watson Contributing Photographer Don Petersen

Production Manager Kevin L. Dick Circulation Manager Karen Chenault Accounting Manager Ashley Henry Vice President of Advertising Hunter Bendall Account Representative Lynn Williams

CONTACT:EDITORIAL: (540) 520-2399

ADVERTISING: (540) 597-2499210 S. Jefferson St., Roanoke, VA 24011-1702

We welcome your feedback.Email Letters to the Editor to

Tim Thornton at [email protected]

VIRGINIA BUSINESS PUBLICATIONS LLC

A portfolio company of Virginia Capital Partners LLC

Frederick L. Russell Jr., chairman,

on the coverJim Sears,

president and general managerCenter in the Square

RoanokePhoto by Don Petersen

Dismal discovery by Tim Thornton

When Janet Yellen was explaining in September how the economy is doing well, but not well enough to justify raising interest rates yet, I

started thinking about the models, metrics and indexes that purport to measure various aspects of the economy. That’s how I fell into the Internet’s rabbit hole.

I looked up some statistics about unemployment and wages. That led to a couple of articles about interest rates, which led to a video of Paul Krugman talking about economists. That led to a column about the dismal science, which led to a paper by an Australian econo-mist named Robert Dixon explaining the

origins of the term “dismal science.”The mythical explanation is historian Thomas Carlyle

created the phrase in response to economist Thomas Malthus’ writings about the relationship between popula-tion growth and food production. Some have interpreted Malthus’ work as a vision of humankind perpetually on the brink of starvation. Apparently that’s not exactly what Malthus meant, but it is a decidedly dismal view of the future.

Carlyle apparently used the term quite a lot. The fi rst time was in a magazine article, later reprinted as a pam-phlet, that said the social science we call economics “is a dreary, desolate, and indeed quite abject and distressing one; what we might call ... the dismal science.” Carlyle wrote that “Dismal Science people” had divorced their fi eld from morality and asked, “Is there no value, then, in human things, but what can write itself down in a cash-ledger?”

Carlyle, it seems, wasn’t singling out Malthus and his dismal view of humankind’s future. He was decrying ledger-book accounting of human value. Well, some hu-mans’ value. The economic theory of supply and demand seemed so dismal to Carlyle, not because it reduced a person’s worth to what that person’s time and effort could bring in an unfettered market. Economics was dis-mal because it didn’t take into account what Carlyle saw as the natural order in which some are “born lord” and others are “born to be a servant.”

When Carlyle fi rst used “dismal science” in print, slaves had recently been emancipated in the West In-dies. Their former masters were complaining they could no longer fi nd enough laborers to conduct their business — at least, not enough laborers willing to work for the wages and under the conditions those former masters preferred.

Economics may be a dismal science, but the birth of that term is more dismal still.

FROM THE EDITOR

Page 7: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015
Page 8: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

Out & AboutCityworks (X)po (X)po n. \ek’spo\ an interactive summit of people involved in and passionate about the work of creating vibrant, dynamic, wonderful communities. Occurs annually in Roanoke, Virginia, in early October.

The fifth Cityworks (X)po filled Charter Hall and spread out all over Roanoke, convening a collection of community-improving people from all around the country and all around the region.

1

6

5 4

3

2

6 NOVEMBER 2015 Photos courtesy Bella-Muse Photography

1. Deric Feacher, T. Michael Stavres, Carol DeHaven, Anita Strong and Merle Bishop are holding CityWorks (X)po in Winter Haven, Fla., in April. Feacher is the city manager.

2. Abby Verdillo and Ashley Marshall, both of United Way of Roanoke Valley.

3. Brent Cochran, River Rock Climbing; and Duke Bal-dridge, Dominion Risk Advi-sors.

4. Robert Kulp, Mike Whiteside and dog Molly May of Black Dog Salvage.

5. Back row: Robert Reynolds, (X)po speaker; Adnan Sosic, Grandin CoLab; Kathryn Ha-tam, Alexander Films; Sarah Allin, (X)po speaker; Front Row: Fe Nguyen and Ariel Lev, Grandin CoLab.

6. Allie Marshall and Rachael Eplee, Virginia Tech students; and Hallie Martin, CityWorks LLC.

Page 9: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

Letter to the Editor

ROANOKE BUSINESS 7

Shooting didn’t break community’s strong bonds

To the Editor:

Smith Mountain Lake is an amaz-ing community, and I’m so proud to be recognized as one of its leaders. The tragedy on Aug. 26 that claimed the lives of talented WDBJ7 journalists Ali-son Parker and Adam Ward thrust our community into an international spot-light. There were so many questions left unanswered.

The intense media coverage — lo-cal, regional, state, national, even inter-national —served a purpose, and that was to tell the story of how our com-munity responded with strength and dignity. Senseless acts of violence hap-pen all too often. While circumstances may be different, the act is always un-expected and often misunderstood. In many cases, communities are divided, destroyed and left with an unshakeable dark shadow because residents are un-

prepared and don’t know how else to vent their grief and frustration.

That was not the case with Smith Mountain Lake. I can say with pride that as a direct result of this horrific act, an incredible number of lake residents have reached out to meet new “neigh-bors” and develop new friendships. A powerful shield of respect now blankets our region, serving as a reminder of the sacrifice members of our law enforce-ment community and rescue crews provide 24/7. We witnessed prompt action and support by businesses, orga-nizations and individuals. The hashtag #SMLStrong was created and brought to life with amazing speed and pride.

The Day of Remembrance on Sept. 19 at Bridgewater Plaza, the site of the shooting, was perhaps the most visible testimony to the strength of the Smith

Mountain Lake community with hun-dreds turning out in bright blue T-shirts emblazoned with #SMLStrong to honor Adam and Alison and see a permanent memorial to them unveiled. Watching everyone join hands to embrace the plaza was truly inspirational and an im-portant step on our road to healing.

I can’t say thank you enough for the support shown to me in my recovery. Cards, flowers and gifts have arrived from all over the world and are a defi-nite boost to my spirits. I wish I could respond to all, but the volume is over-whelming, so just know that each and every gesture is so appreciated! Gen-erous donations also continue to arrive at the Chamber for “Vicki’s Vision,” a project I hope to be able to share more details on soon. In a nutshell, the goal is to create a much-needed gathering spot that will be not only a tremendous benefit to the region, but a lasting trib-ute to Alison and Adam.

The healing process is slow, but I am feeling stronger each day and am eager to return to doing the job I love: promoting Smith Mountain Lake! Par-ticipating in all of the events scheduled to celebrate SML’s 50th anniversary — now just a few months away — provides a powerful incentive for me. I hope you’ll find out more about how you can be part of the excitement at www.Vis-itSmithMountainLake.com.

Senseless acts of violence will not end here. We cannot change what has happened, and there is nothing we can do that will bring Alison and Adam back to their loved ones. However, the com-munity of Smith Mountain Lake can con-tinue to serve as a worldwide example of how unity, leadership and vision can make a community stronger, its mem-bers closer than ever.

Stay #SMLStrong,Vicki Gardner

Executive directorSmith Mountain Lake Regional

Chamber of Commerce

Vicki Gardner was wounded when Vester Lee Flanagan II, a disgruntled former employee of WDBJ7 in Roanoke, killed journalists Alison Parker and Adam Ward during a live interview at Smith Mountain Lake. The gunman later took his own life after a police chase.

Associated Press/Erica Yoon,The Roanoke Times

Page 10: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

8 NOVEMBER 2015

COVER STORY

The profit in nonprofitsCommunity service organizations contribute millions to the economy and strengthen the region’s social fabric by Sandra Brown Kelly

It’s easy to see a nonprofit or-ganization’s work as just col-lecting donations and hand-ing out aid. Yet, the true image of such groups is quite different. Even nonprofit

businesses cannot be separated from a bottom line, and the Roanoke re-gion’s hundreds of organizations show substantial returns, both finan-cial and social.

Behind the success of t his sector is a group of savvy leaders who work together. Indeed partnerships are becoming the lifeblood for survival in the nonprofit world. Even with the challenges, they manage to procure millions of dollars in federal grants and donor contributions, harness the energy of volunteers and produce evidence of the human side of the equation by showing how their pro-grams work.

In the state of Virginia in 2013, nonprofits employed 235,100 peo-ple, paid $8.2 billion in wages, re-ceived $54.8 billion in revenues and held assets of more than $136.3 bil-lion, according to Independent Sec-tor, a trade organization for nonprof-its.

In the Roanoke region, a 2013 study by the Roanoke Valley-Allegh-any Regional Commission of 15 arts and cultural groups found that they brought in nearly $11 million in visi-tor dollars annually with a total im-pact of nearly $24 million.

In the past 12 years, arts and cul-ture groups have invested more than $110 million in capital improvements in downtown Roanoke, points out James Sears, president of downtown’s Center in the Square. It houses three museums and Mill Mountain The-atre and partners with four other cultural groups.

“Nonprofits bring a lot of money to the region, federal and state mon-ey that would not be here,” says Dan Merenda, president of the Council of Community Services (CCS). “The economic impact of the nonprofit sector is not often considered.”

At the regional level, CCS pro-vides a good example of the impact. It has 53 employees and received more than $2.4 million in state and federal money in 2013. Its Drop-In Center for HIV testing, which served 1,807 people in that same period, was chosen by the state as a model for such centers. CCS links people to community resources, whether peo-ple in need of services or volunteers looking for a place to give their time. It also helps nonprofits with plan-ning throughout Southwest Virginia.

IRS guidelines list more than 25 categories of organizations that quali-fy as federal tax-exempt because they “benefit the broad public interest, not just the interests of its members.” Hospitals, some higher education in-stitutions and religious organizations are in this group. So are Opera Roa-

noke, the Roanoke Ballet Theatre and the June Bug Center in Floyd where businesses, nonprofits and civ-ic groups can hold programs such as a free clinic and yoga classes.

Merenda is concerned, though, about the future with so many enti-ties vying for grants and donations. “How are we going to grow this sec-tor? We are not going to grow local and state monies.”

Finding new routes to fundingMerenda applauds agencies that

have found new financial support by recasting their mission, or teaming up with other agencies to deliver ser-vices. He points to Trust House as a survivor.

Started as a crisis center, Trust had moved into transitional housing and was near bankruptcy six years ago when it called on Merenda’s group for planning help. The re-sult was a shift of focus to include a program for military veterans. Trust won a contract with the Salem VA Hospital to assist homeless veterans. That contract was worth more than $200,000 last year, says Ali Hamed-Moore, Trust’s executive director. The agency also has a grant from the Department of Housing and Ur-ban Development (HUD) to assist the chronically homeless. In 2014, HUD recognized Trust as an “excel-lent example” of the leadership of a nonprofit organization recognizing a

Page 11: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 9Photo by Don P:etersen

Dan Merenda, president of the Council of Community

Services, says that even though nonprofi ts bring

millions of dollars to the regional economy, their

future is uncertain.

community need and then working with other groups to meet that need.

“We work with the seriously mentally ill, substance abusers and chronically homeless,” explains Hamed-Moore. “Our goal is to keep them from coming into a shel-ter.” In addition to the temporary housing program, Trust offers a program of support to former Trust residents dur-ing their first year in a new residence. That support can be assistance with credit, skills development or even music therapy, all of which are contracted out.

Even with its successes, Hamed-Moore says, Trust’s $500,000 annual budget places it in a precarious position. “We have a large concentration of nonprofits, and it has become increasingly more difficult to be a nonprofit un-der one million dollars.” In September, the boards of Trust and Bethany Hall, a home for women recovering from ad-diction, were in talks to determine how they might work together for greater efficiencies. Bethany Hall’s budget is about the same as Trust’s.

“We will see more and more nonprofits finding syn-ergy, working together to serve the community,” predicts Hamed-Moore.

Page 12: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

10 NOVEMBER 2015

cover story

Partnerships are the futureAlready working in the partner-

ship arena is the United Way of Roa-noke Valley. It builds partnerships to meet needs in the area, says Abby Verdillo, UW vice president for Com-munity Impact. For instance, after a study indicated a large number of area residents did not use a bank or credit union, United Way brought banking sources together for a Bank On program that offered no-cost or low-cost accounts. More than 1,000 people opened accounts.

“We are moving into an era where we realize that programs can be strong individually, but it is more important what collectively they can accomplish,” says Verdillo. United Way in 2013-2014 gave $475,000 in grants to 26 agencies representing 56 funded programs. In the same peri-od, 369 volunteers spent 1,692 hours helping UW raise money and review member applicants, a value of more than $38,000, says Verdillo.

UW helped facilitate dental ser-vices through New Horizons Health-care and a literacy program operated by the United Methodist Community Outreach. The dental initiative grew out of Healthy Roanoke Valley, which was created in response to Carilion Clinic’s 2012 community needs as-

sessment. Carilion periodically teams with area governments and agencies to determine the health needs of the area, and oral health was one of those needs.

Child Health Investment Part-nership (CHIP) of Roanoke Valley had begun a children’s dental pro-gram, but low-income adults had lit-tle access to dental care. To get a pro-gram for adults started, Eileen Lepro, CEO of New Horizons, helped write applications for funding through the Virginia Healthcare Foundation and United Way.

From November 2014, when New Horizons opened its dental clinic, through July 2015, the agency saw more than 1,000 individuals for 2,078 visits. The first-year budget for the dental program was $892,623, with $527,693 coming from foun-dations and grants. The remainder of the budget expenses come from patient sliding fees and third-party insurance reimbursements. “We esti-mate that 70 percent of our patients have incomes at or below 200 per-cent of the federal poverty level,” says Lepro.

During calendar year 2014, New Horizons, a federally qualified clinic, provided medical, behavioral and/or dental services to 6,783 individuals,

says Lepro. The literacy program operated

by United Methodist Community Outreach is a much smaller program that also grew out of partnerships. The United Methodist group already had a reading program for young-sters in grades four through eight when United Way invited agencies to write grants related to education. “We worked with Blue Ridge Litera-cy to see if we could create a space where first- to third-grade children can come to read,” says Rebecca Par-sons, the Community Outreach ex-ecutive director.

Starting in September, up to 30 first-through-third-graders from Fal-lon Park, Highland Park and Wasena Elementary schools began coming daily to the new after-school reading program at Trinity United Method-ist Church. Seed2Seed, a community farming organization that also is a partner in the program, brings food and prepares dinner for the children and parents on one or more evenings as part of instruction on nutritional cooking and home gardening. One night a week, staff from Blue Ridge Literacy also is on hand to help chil-dren and parents, some of whom have English as a second language. The United Methodist programs are funded mainly by grants but also by donations and in-kind services.

The heavy hittersCarilion Clinic, the Roanoke Val-

ley’s largest employer, also dominates the nonprofit scene in the Roanoke region, with $138.8 million in com-munity support, according to its 2013-2014 annual report. This in-cludes a variety of services ranging from $2,400 to provide overnight accommodations to families in need, up to $72.1 million provided in char-ity care.

In a somewhat different arena, Goodwill Industries of the Valleys defines the “way to grow without inordinate dependence on philan-thropy,” says Merenda of the Council of Community Services. Along with sales of donated clothing and other items, Goodwill offers substantial

Nonprofits at a glance • Goodwill Industries of the Valleys’ 37 area retail

stores in Roanoke region employ more than 800 people and return more than $1.6 million in sales tax revenue.

• The Roanoke Rescue Mission in 2013 served 291,709 meals and had 114,555 volunteer hours.

• The Bradley Free clinic had nearly $3.9 million

in donations and grants in 2013.• Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine

received $17.7 million in contributions and grants.

• Feeding America received $34.3 million in grants and contributions.

• Habitat for Humanity’s Restore store had annual revenue of $479,862 for year ended June 2014.

Sources: 2014 IRS filings, agency interviews

Profile of nonprofit sector in Virginia • 41,353 organizations, including public charities,

private foundations and nonprofit organizations• Total 2013 revenue for public charities in state:

$61.4 billion• Private foundations’ revenue: $997.5 million

• In 2013, (latest data available) nonprofits employed 235,100 people, paid $8.2 billion in wages, received $54.8 billion in annual rev-enues, held assets of more than $136.3 billion

Subsectors (based on September 2015 data) • 2,824 arts, culture, humanities groups with $1.6

billion in annual revenue• 4,564 education organi zations, with $8 billion revenue

• 2,194 health/hospital nonprofits with $20.9 billion revenue

Sources: National Center for Charitable Statistics at the Urban Institute; Independent Sector. Revenues reflect 990 filings. Not all agencies file.

Page 13: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 11

1/2 HOR

manufacturing services and receives educational grants for workforce re-training.

Goodwill Industries of the Val-leys’ Radford facility builds compo-nents for Volvo Trucks North Amer-ica and its Mack trucks division and produces custom shipping pallets for more than 25 customers. It even sells the sawdust from the manufactur-ing process to a company that uses it as heating fuel. “We are looking for ways to use the wood scraps,” says Jodi Henrickson, senior director of com-mercial services.

Other Goodwill ventures in-clude packaging medical test kits for TechLab and manufacturing “water clarifying” mechanisms for Tetra. Both are Blacksburg companies.

“One reason we are in manufac-turing is that we are in counties where manufacturing is an important part of employment. Workers can move on from Goodwill to employment else-where,” says Henrickson.

Goodwill Packaging operations

and e-commerce are based at the Goodwill headquarters facility on Melrose Avenue where donor books from the 31-county Goodwill terri-tory are scanned and cataloged for sale in Valley Books and More, the online store on Amazon.com. This year, Henrickson expects online book sales to be more than a half million dollars. Before the online store was established, book sales were about $50,000 a year.

Goodwill also has branched into home services with its Good Choice Companion Program, which offers nonmedical care such as sitting and grocery shopping in the Roanoke Metro Area. The program allows workers to try out health care at the entry level to see whether it is some-thing they might be interested in doing and going to school to study. Goodwill also is beginning a certified nursing assistant program, Henrick-son says.

Goodwill Industries of the Val-leys had a $229.5 million economic

impact on the 31 counties and 13 cities it served in 2013, according to a study by Elliott D. Pollack and Co., based in Scottsdale, Ariz. Goodwill employed more than 1,000 people in its service areas and listed payroll tax of $763,000. Its retail stores em-ployed 800-plus workers and gener-ated more than $1.6 million in sales tax revenue. The agency placed 2,900 people “facing employment chal-lenges” in jobs with an average hourly wage of $12.85.

The agency has partnered with Virginia Western Community Col-lege to create a learning center on the Melrose Avenue site offering classes leading to a variety of Microsoft certi-fications as well as training in certifi-cation in MS office specialist, medical administrative assistant and an in-dustrial maintenance program. Early graduates from the industrial main-tenance program have gotten jobs at upward of $17 an hour, says Mary Ann Gilmer, Goodwill vice president for workforce development.

Page 14: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

12 NOVEMBER 2015

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The programs are funded by more than $3.9 million in federal and state grants for workforce develop-ment programs and by an assistance program for veterans. A $2.5 million federal grant related to health profes-sions education is pending, says Leah Coffman, coordinator of Workforce Solutions at VWCC. The college has

an adviser on-site at Goodwill to work with students, who also have access to Goodwill’s job and career center ser-vices.

“Students coming in with such wraparound support are complet-ing (courses) at a much higher rate,” says Coffman. “We had not been able to give that opportunity before. The

partnership with Goodwill has been awesome.”

Like Goodwill, Total Action for Progress (TAP) covers an area broad-er than the Roanoke Valley. Its terri-tory extends to 11 localities, includ-ing Rockbridge County. The agency has 330 employees. It sponsors Early Head Start and Head Start programs in the New River Valley, the Virginia Highlands area and Lexington. In each case, TAP teams up with already established child-care programs to give the program’s teachers and di-rectors training.

Kaleah Jones, 2, is one of the program’s beneficiaries. Kaleah likes kale salad, has been potty-trained and shares well with other children. Her mother, Shaneice Jones, gives much credit for Kaleah’s interests and ac-complishments to the Early Head Start program, designed for infants as young as 6 weeks old up to 3-year-olds.

“She’s learning her ABCs and can count to 10,” says Shaneice, who

cover story

TAP’s Early Head Start program teaches Kaleah Jones about letters and

numbers and healthy eating. That helps her

mother, Shaneice Jones, work her two jobs.

Photo by Don Petersen

Page 15: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 13Photo by Don Petersen

learned about the free preschool while participating in a TAP pro-gram for pregnant women. “It’s re-ally helped out because I can work at night and then I can sleep,” she said.

TAP’s 14 Early Head Start centers in the Roanoke Valley can accommo-date 120 youngsters, and a waiting list generally has more than 100 names on it. Shaneice’s 10-week-old son, Ken-drick, is on the waitlist. Other centers operate outside the Valley; all are de-pendent upon federal grant money.

Parents have to transport the children to and from the preschool programs. Shaneice works as night supervisor with Sheetz, and each morning she takes Kaleah to the Brand Hardin Sims Early Head Start and Head Start Child Development Center on Shenandoah Avenue. The toddler starts her day with breakfast, and Shaneice goes home to sleep. She picks Kaleah up around 3:30 – “so we can have our time together” – before heading to work again. Shaneice re-cently took a second job as a cashier with Wal-Mart, part of her plan to find “the resources to get housing for myself and the kids.”

The family lives with her father. He helps with the children, but he also works and takes care of Shaneice’s mother, who is in a rehabilitation cen-ter recovering from a stroke. A grand-mother also provides child care.

Shaneice, 21, says she hopes some-day to be able to participate in the Habitat for Humanity home owner-ship program. For now, she takes ad-vantage of the resources provided to Head Start parents, such as a 10-week “Cooking Matters” class. “It changed the way I cook; I now cook a variety of foods.” That’s when kale became an addition to the menu, she says.

The tomato plant she brought home from a gardening class was still producing in late September. And, each month, she and Kaleah get $10 to shop the West End Farmers Mar-ket where the toddler always went for strawberries when they were in sea-son. “We also get fresh eggs,” Shaneice says.

TAP has been awarded more than $12 million for its Early Head Start

and Head Start programs, which since 2009 have annually served 784 pre-schoolers and 97 infants, toddlers and pregnant women.

“Not only is the grant money com-ing into the area, but we are hiring working class folks, and that money stays here,” says Amy Hatheway, co-vice president for planning and re-

source development.TAP’s main focus has been help-

ing people who aren’t successful in traditional classrooms become em-ployable.

We are helping equip individuals with the skills needed to be successful, helping them get back to school, get a GED. Not only get hard skills, but soft skills,” notes Annette Lewis, the group’s president and CEO.

“TAP could not do what we do without other nonprofits in this com-munity,” Lewis adds. “If we have to deal with mental health, we go to Family Services or Blue Ridge Behav-ioral Care. For people with disabilities, we call on RADAR transportation. The Rescue Mission provides emer-gency shelter. When family violence is involved, TAP turns to The Salva-tion Army’s Turning Point program. Goodwill provides job placement. TAP worked with Habitat for Humanity to build new homes and repair homes.

“All of us working together helps,” says Lewis.

TAP’s Amy Hatheway says much of the money nonprofi ts bring to the

region stays in the region.

Page 16: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

14 NOVEMBER 2015 Photo courtesy Hung Lieu

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE

W.M. Jordan’s new horizon Building spurs economic development, which spurs more buildingby Kathie Dickenson

Until recently, one of the state’s major contractors wasn’t a player in western

Virginia. But that changed last year when W.M. Jordan Company opened an office in Roanoke’s Val-leypointe office park in January 2014.

Paul Galloway, a contracting and development veteran, man-ages what is Jordan’s fourth office. The company has its headquarters in Newport News and other loca-

tions in Richmond and Wilming-ton, N.C.

The company decided to get into the western Virginia market to be closer to its new customers.

“I like the city and the area, for both quality of life and job oppor-tunities,” CEO John Lawson says of the decision. “We had picked up a number of nice projects in the area, and I’ve always felt that to be of good service to your customer you need to be geographically fair-

ly close.” Those projects include Rad-

ford University’s 114,000-square-foot Center for the Sciences build-ing, expansion and renovation of the Virginia Department of Fo-rensic Sciences’ Western Labora-tory in Roanoke County, Virginia Tech’s 84,000-square-foot indoor athletic practice facility and a 73,400-square-foot Virginia Tech classroom building, “the first one they’ve built in probably 40 years,”

Interesting developments are popping up all over. Last year, Shelor Automotive Group turned an old warehouse into living space for ballplayers. Shelor renovated Pulaski’s historic ballpark, too.

Page 17: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 15

says Lawson. His comment is based partly

on personal recollection: Lawson graduated from Tech 40 years ago with a degree in geophysics.

His deep connection to Vir-ginia Tech is another draw to the region. Lawson’s father, Robert T. Lawson, the 1958 co-founder of W.M. Jordan, was a Tech graduate. “He had me going up to football games when I was just a toddler – and I’m talking about every game,” recalls Lawson, whose son is now a third-year building construction major at Tech.

A former rector of the board of visitors and a member of the Vir-ginia Tech Foundation Board, Law-son was a national steering com-

mittee co-chair for the university’s billion-dollar capital campaign that ended in 2011. He is the alumni as-sociation chair of Sigma Phi Epsi-lon fraternity. He and fraternity brother Ross Myers, a 1972 civil engineering graduate and CEO of Pennsylvania construction firm Allan Myers, helped found the My-ers-Lawson School of Construction with a shared $10 million pledge. Lawson adds that he is building a home in Blacksburg’s Fiddler’s Green, “in walking distance of campus.”

Since the Roanoke office opened, Lawson says, it has brought in somewhere between $75 million and $100 million of business. His goal for the location is more than

$100 million in business a year.Don’t ask him to be more ex-

act. He is “not a fan” of traditional strategic planning or setting nu-merical goals in terms of revenue or profits. “I’m after continuous improvement,” he explains. “I think you need to reinvent yourself every day.” Unlike traditional construc-tion companies, he says, “we love change.”

The company uses progressive technology for four-dimensional modeling and augmented real-ity and implements photography drones for infrared mapping and digital panning.

The corporate culture is re-flected in an active wellness pro-gram, learning opportunities in

Page 18: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

16 NOVEMBER 2015 Photo credit

commercial real estate

personal development and con-struction education, an internship program from which new employ-ees are often selected and delega-tion of authority “all the way down to the lowest levels of the company. I set expectations and let them fig-ure out a way to do things. But I do float a lot of proposals, sometimes crazy ideas, to these bright young people and it’s amazing what they come up with,” says Lawson.

“I encourage everyone to dream and to suggest things that are not necessarily normal, in an attempt to have continual im-provement. When you build a cul-ture like that, it feeds on itself.”

Barry Ward, vice president and office brokerage specialist with Cushman & Wakefield|Thalhimer, assisted W.M. Jordan with its move into Roanoke. He says the choice says something positive about the region. “A large contractor moving into the area, I think that’s a good sign,” says Ward. “They came be-cause of work they are doing here, but they could have done it from anywhere.”

In Ward’s opinion, the region is a good place to invest. He estimates less than a 10 percent vacancy for office space in downtown Roanoke and the northwest and southwest

county. “We are getting inquiries and proposals on vacancies both from within the market and from folks outside the market looking to expand into our market.”

In Blacksburg, Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center Ex-ecutive Director Joe Meredith says the CRC is “on track to win more new tenants in 2015 than in any of the last seven years.”

Retail growth is evident in Christiansburg, where California-based Harbor Freight Tools moved

into Marketplace Shopping Cen-ter over the summer. Kohl’s de-partment store is renovating the vacant Sears store in New River Valley Mall, and Panda Express is building a restaurant – its first in Southwest Virginia – on the pe-rimeter of the mall. Plus, a True Value Hardware store is under construction on Roanoke Street. Because demand drives retail loca-tion, says assistant town manager Randy Wingfield, such commercial growth indicates “this is a desirable place to do business.”

Local developers are invest-ing, too. Charlie Jewell, executive director of the New River Valley Economic Development Alliance, observes that one local company, Taylor Hollow Construction LLC, has restored several historic retail buildings in Radford for reuse as restaurants and apartments and is converting an old Montgomery County school into senior living space. Last year Shelor Automo-tive Group purchased and reno-vated, through SHAH Develop-ment LLC, Pulaski’s historic Calfee baseball park and converted an old warehouse near the park into an extended-stay hotel for player housing.

“A willingness by local develop-ers or national chains to invest in

Photo courtesy Richard Boyd, Boyd Pearman Photography

W.M. Jordan Company’s projects include Virginia Tech’s 84,000-square-foot indoor practice facility.

Construction such as the Homewood Suites going up in Christiansburg is touted as an endorsement of the

region’s economy.

Page 19: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 17Photo courtesy Town of Christiansburg

the community means the econo-my is strong enough for their in-vestment,” says Jewell.

Lawson points out that a major construction project has a quick economic impact on a community. A $10 million project, he says, can multiply into $40 million in spend-ing, as the customer pays the con-tractor, who pays subcontractors, who pay their subcontractors and suppliers, who spend dollars in the community. “Now that’s over a finite period of time,” cautions Lawson, “maybe one or two years, until the job ends. But the idea is to secure additional work during that time.”

W.M. Jordan is known for such projects as Newport News’ 1.9-million-square-foot Tech Cen-ter at Oyster Point, the U.S. Army’s 23-structure, 300-acre Asymmetric Warfare Group Training Complex at Fort A.P. Hill in Caroline County and the 14-story oceanfront Hilton Garden Inn in Virginia Beach.

“We don’t just do competitive-bid work,” Lawson explains, “we’re also a developer. We build projects for other people, but we also build them for ourselves.” The company engages in private and public-pri-vate partnerships. Its diverse port-folio includes higher education, government, hospitality, health care, senior living, planned com-munities, heavy manufacturing and historic restoration.

Do Lawson’s successes and con-nections in the region mean he might invest in the types of projects he has developed in other parts of the state?

Lawson says his company is “careful, when we go away from our home base, about picking the right projects and the right part-ners, but there will be opportuni-ties for us to work with people that bring value to the table to help complete a project” that requires the skill sets of both partners.

“We haven’t identified those opportunities yet because we’re new to the area,” says Lawson, “but they always happen.”

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Page 22: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

20 NOVEMBER 2015

A new kind of student You thought it up at Virginia Tech; but who owns the idea? A step toward entrepreneurship

by Dan Radmacher

Earlier this summer, the Vir-ginia Tech board of visitors revised the university’s in-

tellectual property policy, giving students ownership of the intellec-tual property they create while on campus. According to college of-ficials and faculty members, that’s just one sign of the recognition that Tech is attracting a new kind of student.

Sean Collins, the new direc-tor of Innovate, a “living-learn-ing community” that resides in Pritchard Hall, says Tech’s grow-ing emphasis on creating a culture that encourages entrepreneurship is “demand-driven.” Innovate stu-

dents are immersed in an entrepreneurial culture, living togeth-er in Pritchard their first year. They are in-troduced to potential mentors and funders and offered profes-sional development coursework aimed at teaching a “tolerance for ambiguity” as Collins put it. “This is what these students are looking for,” Collins says. “I credit Virginia Tech’s leadership for recognizing that.”

The change to the intellectual property policy grew out of con-cern that the university might be

stifling students’ entrepreneurial activities. “The old policy clearly states that any intellectual property developed on campus using a uni-versity-provided tool is owned by the university,” says Srinath Ekkad, vice president of research. “Some of the things that are written in the policy aren’t what we want to be known as, or how we really practice.”

The change clarifies that if a student is using infrastructure or equipment available to any stu-dent, then any intellectual prop-erty developed remains the stu-dent’s. “We’ve never done other-wise,” Ekkad says. “But we wanted to clarify.”

TECHNOLOGY

Adam Donato and David Henry liked Stephan Sabo’s pitch for a startup better than their own, so they joined him in creating Card Isle, kind of a “Red Box for greeting cards.”

Collins

Photo courtesy Virginia Tech

Page 23: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 21

Photo courtesy Mitchell Harris

Photo courtesy Virginia Tech

That clarification was welcomed by Allie Howe, president of Virginia Tech’s Entrepreneur Club. In an email exchange, she says the previ-ous policy had a chilling effect. She and other students feared that even using software offered on university computers, such as Adobe Photo-shop, would give the university the right to ideas students developed. “With the policy change, students feel a lot more motivated to create and work on our ideas, and it makes us more imaginative and hopeful when we think about the future,” Howe wrote.

If a student con-ducts research as part of university employ-ment or a contract with the federal government or corporation, the terms of the contract will determine who

owns marketable ideas that result, Ekkad says. “We want to empower our students and faculty. We want to be a partner in innovation, not have them worry about anybody trying to steal their ideas.”

In addition to Innovate, Virgin-ia Tech also is offering a minor in entrepreneurship. It includes “the startup class,” and interested stu-dents must interview to get into the class. On the first day of class, they are required to pitch an idea for a startup company.

Adam Donato was a member of the first class, along with Stephan Sabo and David Henry. Donato and Henry heard Sabo’s pitch for a com-pany that would reinvent the greet-ing card industry, and they loved it. “We liked it so much better than our own ideas that we hopped on board with him” Donato says.

That teaming, and the lessons learned in the startup class, led to Card Isle, kind of a “Red Box for greeting cards,” as Donato puts it. The class was invaluable, he says, in helping to bring the idea to frui-tion. “They taught us that the rea-son new businesses fail isn’t neces-sarily a lack of money or technical capability or the other typical things

you’d think about. The class empha-sized customer discovery: Go out and talk to people. Look beyond what you yourself know or can find on Google.”

The trio talked to 700 strangers – getting kicked out of Valley View Mall in the process – to find out what people looked for when buy-

ing greeting cards, and what was missing from the current experi-ence. “There was a lot of frustra-tion with the search,” Donato says. “People were looking for more personalization and selection.”

Things that Card Isle could of-fer through kiosks include the op-portunity for customers to design

Ekkad

Ojas Mhetar, Allie Howe and Jordan White, leaders of the Entrepreneur Club at Virginia Tech.

Innovate is a Virginia Tech program that offers support and community to student entrepreneurs.

Page 24: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

22 NOVEMBER 2015

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and print their own greeting cards.The startup class led to an in-

vitation to join NuSpark, a collab-orative space provided by a part-nership between the Virginia Tech Foundation, the Institute for Cre-ativity, Arts and Technology and a number of other partners, includ-

ing successful entrepreneurs with links to the university.

Card Isle was one of the first teams invited to use the space. “I don’t even know how to categorize it,” Donato says. “Initially, we weren’t quite sure what to expect, but it turned out to be pretty wonderful

for us.”Card Isle had been working out

of a tiny room in one of the found-ers’ homes. The NuSpark space exposed them to other developers and entrepreneurs, enabling them to bounce ideas off one another and share differing levels of exper-tise and experience.

“What’s happening at Virginia Tech is quite exciting,” says Ben Knapp, director of ICAT. “We are creating a pathway between the research and development that’s occurring here to actual entrepre-neurship.”

The NuSpark experience helped the Card Isle team make the progress and connections that got them accepted into Techstars, a prestigious and selective “startup accelerator.” Techstars was founded in Boulder, Colo., but now has loca-tions in Chicago, Seattle, New York, Berlin, London and Austin, Texas. The connections the Card Isle team made at Techstars opened even

technology

Michael Fleming, CEO of TORC Robotics, says Virginia Tech’s entrepreneurial culture

has improved dramatically since he graduated in 2003.

Page 25: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 23

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more doors. “The whole thing is snowballing,” Donato says.

Michael Fleming, CEO of TORC Robotics and one of the early entrepreneurial success sto-ries out of Virginia Tech, describes Tech’s entrepreneurial culture today as “night and day differ-ent” from when he was a student. “There wasn’t much support when we started,” Fleming says. “Today, it’s very different. Virginia Tech has changed the culture, but more work must be done.”

Fleming also credits students for driving the changes. “Noth-ing is more powerful than having students say, ‘This is the direction we’re headed.’ This is apparent in student-run groups such as the En-trepreneur Club.”

The recent years of economic struggles and uncertainty have helped stoke entrepreneurial at-titudes among today’s students, some university officials believe.

“These students are a product of the history of the country and where we are economically,” says Derick Maggard, executive direc-tor of the university’s Apex Sys-tems Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, which launched the Innovate program two years ago. “They lived through the Great Recession, and they really experi-enced it.”

Many students saw a parent get laid off from what they thought were secure jobs, Maggard adds. “They want to learn to work for themselves and not have to worry that everything can be pulled from under them without warning. It’s a very powerful mindset and, with the pace of technological change, it’s a perfect storm to build and cre-ate more. It’s an exciting time.”

Maggard predicts that pro-grams like Innovate and other Tech-sponsored initiatives will have an immense impact. “We have the right leadership. We have the right programs. We have the right students,” he says. “Now we have the right policies. We just have to get out of the students’ ways.”

Page 26: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

24 NOVEMBER 2015 Photo by Don Petersen

From being homeless to selling franchises: ‘You’re good at a lot more than you think you’re good at.’by Beth JoJack

INTERVIEW: Linda Balentine, founder, Crowning Touch Senior Moving Services

Hardship births a company tailored to seniors

Page 27: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 25

Crowning Touch Moving Ser-vices was born out of hard-ship. The Roanoke-based business that helps seniors move when they decide to downsize is the creation of founder Linda Balentine,

who was homeless when she start-ed the company nearly two decades ago.

She came up with the idea while working for a moving company that quickly went out of business and couldn’t even pay her for the re-search she had done to generate another revenue stream for the fi rm. So, she took the idea and ran with it.

At the time, following a divorce, Balentine was basically homeless and raising a daughter on her own. In the borrowed bedrooms of two church friends, Balentine crafted fl i-ers and business cards. While her daughter was in school, she met with marketing directors at retire-ment communities and gave pre-sentations on her services to real estate professionals. Eventually, she landed her fi rst gig: a senior look-ing to move out of a South Roanoke home.

“Then I had to face the reality of what I was committing to and that was: I’d never been on a moving truck in my life,” she says. “I knew nothing about moves. I’d never hired a mover. Out in Highland County, if you want to move, you get a cattle truck and some bales of hay.”

Still, she took on the challenge and that laid the foundation for her company. Twenty years later, Crown-ing Touch Moving Services employs 22 people and enjoys an annual rev-enue of $1.5 million. They handle about 500 moves annually.

Balentine is in the beginning stages of vetting candidates for franchises of the business in several locations around the country after attending the International Fran-chise Expo in June. “We are being highly selective,” she says. Franchis-es will sell for between $50,000 and

$65,000. The total is based on the size of the area where the franchise will be located. “Each franchise lo-cation will be scaled to service a mil-lion plus population, so the revenue they are expected to generate will be at least $5 million annually,” she explained in an email.

Not a bad track record for a woman well versed in starting over. Before the divorce from her second husband, Dan Roach, a house fi re killed her fi rst husband and her fi rst-born, a 7-year-old daughter. “That’s a kick in the teeth,” she’ll tell you with her trademark bluntness.

Balentine started Crown-ing Touch with some experience. While married to Roach, they had run Woodpeckers Ltd., a Highland County company that manufac-tured mailboxes and lampposts.

Then, the marriage fell apart. “That was just a shocker,” she says. “I never thought we’d fi nd our-selves in that situation.”

The couple sold the business as part of the divorce. Balentine went on to obtain a patent on a sand-blasting process before taking a position at a moving company that wanted her to come up with new revenue streams. That’s where she came up with an idea to provide services tailored to seniors looking to downsize. When Balentine an-nounced her big concept, though, she learned the company was go-ing out of business, and she didn’t get paid for her work.

Thankfully, those days are over.

Roanoke Business: What was the toughest part about that period of your life when you were living in other people’s houses?Linda Balentine: My daughter was with some friends, and they asked what she was getting for Christ-mas. Her response was so mature. She said, “We’re not celebrating Christmas this year. We’re focusing on what’s really important.”

The woman she said that to slipped me $100 Christmas Eve and

said, “You need to run out and get her something.”And I did. I went straight to Walmart.

I know what it is to have noth-ing. I am really grateful that I had that experience … If you get the correct perspective on life, and you haven’t suffered, then you are really blessed because it’s hard to get it any other way.

So when my employees are struggling or need to go buy a car or need a down payment, I’m right there for them. Because people were there for me. It’s the old pay-it-forward thing. Once you’ve re-ally suffered, it enlarges your heart. What it made me was a better busi-ness owner, and it made me more sensitive to my clients.

RB: Where did you initially get the idea for a senior moving company? Did you have elderly parents who had trouble down-sizing? Balentine: No. It was a God-in-spired idea. I’m a Christian. I’m not ashamed of the fact that God gives me inspiration, just like he gives me strength in every breath I take. When I was at the fork, I had my idea, which was the idea of the whole patented process … But there was no doubt in my mind that God wanted me to go and pursue the senior moving company.

It was my goal to try to relieve the stress [for the senior client], which meant not being afraid to absorb the details not traditionally addressed by the moving industry. Even today if you hire somebody to unpack you … they will put the box here, and they will fi ll every hori-zontal surface including the fl oor with whatever is in the box. They don’t put it away. They don’t orga-nize your kitchen. They don’t hang your clothes up and put your shoes out. But we’re doing that stuff. Be-cause they need that stuff done. They can’t do it.RB: How did you know how to move that fi rst client?

Page 28: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

26 NOVEMBER 2015

Balentine: You just use common sense. You put the big heavy pieces on the bottom and the light fragile stuff on top. This is not hard. It’s not rocket science. But it does take a dedication and a sensitivity to es-tablishing systems that are right and correct and then adhering to those systems. In other words, don’t ever lower your standards … I was on ev-ery job for the fi rst fi ve or six years. I would do all my marketing at night, and after hours I would do the pay-roll and pay my bills on Sundays.

RB: Were you scared when you took that fi rst job?Balentine: Here’s one of the great-est things about being entrepre-neurial. You’re good at a lot more than you think you’re good at. You just need to not be afraid to wade into the deep, and you have to get used to doing things afraid. Don’t let fear be the reason you don’t do something. Just say, “I’m afraid, and I’m going to do it anyway. I’m go-ing to do it afraid.” If you wait to feel comfortable about everything you do in life, you’re going to spend a lot of time sitting on the sidelines, not doing what you should be do-ing.

RB: The moving business grew. Eventually, you were able to move into your own house and buy of-fi ce space. You also remarried Dan Roach. Wouldn’t you have saved a lot of trouble if you’d just stayed married? Balentine: Yes. That is correct [laughs].

RB: So the next step was buying the stuff the seniors no longer needed when they downsized? Balentine: All I’m trying to do at that point was to test the water. I had a formula. Can I buy it for this and sell it for twice as much? A sim-ple formula. I rented a place that had no heat, had no water, had no bathroom. I would sit there in the wintertime and open it up on a Sat-urday. I had my daughter and my

husband with me, and we would sit there and sell that stuff as a fam-ily. I did that for about a year. I did that half a dozen times. Then I had proof of concept. At this point, we knew we had the consigning busi-ness.

RB: Later you purchased your cur-rent building on Williamson Road and opened a consignment shop. How does that help your senior clients? Balentine: These people can’t get on Craigslist. They’re not going to have strangers showing up at their house at 6 p.m. at night. They just can’t. It’s way too intimidating. How are they going to get rid of this stuff? Their friends are all the same age. What are they going to do? The kids don’t want the stuff. They should want the stuff, but they don’t. It’s a Crate and Barrel world. If they had Crate and Barrel stuff and Ikea stuff and Pier One stuff, they’d have no problem getting rid of it. But they don’t. They have classical traditional furniture, extremely well made, but dated. We do fi nd homes for that stuff. There are people furnishing different styles of homes that are thrilled to get high-end furniture at bargain prices.

RB: From there, you purchased the building next door and opened an auction house.Balentine: I couldn’t sell fast enough in the consignment shop. I was overloaded. I had storage units I was renting [that were] full of stuff. I needed a way to sell more stuff. It was a bigger market than I antici-pated. The auction house allowed me to sell not only different catego-ries, but it allowed me to sell more, faster.

RB: Now you’re set up so people can bid online?Balentine: We aren’t just an online auction. Those people can’t see or touch what they’re bidding on. We are an event. So we’re a hybridized system. You can come to the auc-

tion as if you were coming to see and touch everything, and you can physically pick it up from there. At the same time, you have the conve-nience of bidding from home.

RB: Then you added your real es-tate division?Balentine: We are a moving com-pany that focuses on helping seniors sell their homes As Is. All of these homes are dated. The average home these seniors are moving out of was built in [early to mid-1970s]. A lot of these seniors, once they bought a nice house they didn’t up-grade the bathrooms just to have granite countertops. They would rather have sent their children and grandchildren through school. They had a whole different set of priori-ties … what you do is sell the house as is and here’s why: the upgrades are so expensive, because it’s the kitchens and bathrooms that have to be redone. Selling the house as-is takes the price down $40,000-50,000. That allows a younger fam-ily who couldn’t afford a price point $40,000 more to go in and get the house.

RB: You attended the Internation-al Franchise Expo in June. Your goal is to sell 10 franchises of your concept over the next couple of years. How did it go? Balentine: That was our coming-out party. We had a tremendous re-ception there. We met people we’re working with now in Chicago and in L.A. and in Florida. You talk to peo-ple. You open doors. It takes months from the fi rst time you meet a po-tential franchisee because they’re also looking at other franchises.

RB: Are you ever going to retire? Balentine: Yeah, I’m going to do fi ve more years.

RB: That’ll make you 72. Balentine: That’s OK. I work out. I go to the gym. I take care of myself. I’ve been on this marathon for 20 years.

interview

Page 29: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 27Photo courtesy Virginia Tech

Hokie growthVirginia Tech has a lot going for it: high rankings, new majors and new buildings

by Shawna Morrison

Happiest students. Best cam-pus food. Best quality of life.

Those are three of the categories in which Virginia Tech was highly ranked this year by publica-tions that measure American colleges and universities. In The Princeton Review’s “Best 380 Colleges” 2016 edition, student surveys earned Tech the No. 2 spot for Happiest Students, falling behind only Vanderbilt Uni-versity in Nashville.

Tech came in No. 3 for Best Cam-pus Food and No. 4 in the three ar-eas of Best Quality of Life, Their Students Love These Colleges and Town-Gown Relations are Great. The Prince ton Review listed the top 20 schools in 62 different categories.

Virginia Tech also gets high marks in value rankings. Money and Forbes based their rankings on factors that include affordability, debt and career earnings. After studying 736 schools, Money placed Virginia Tech in the top 50 of all institutions and the top 20 among public institutions. Forbes placed Virginia Tech at number 23 on its list of the 25 best public colleges.

Rankings aren’t the only thing fueling Tech’s continued growth. Officials also look to new buildings and majors as draws for students, although the national rankings cer-tainly help.

“We always do very well on value rankings,” says Larry Hincker, the longtime associate vice president

for university relations, who retired shortly after talking with Roanoke Business for this story. “The metric that we think is important is one that’s showing us against public universities. And we look pretty good. You can get a good education in this country, but at some places it’s going to cost you a lot of money. The value rankings do a consumer service by showing those really good schools that give a top ed-ucation but at a relatively competitive rate.”

Another notable ranking came from the National Science Founda-tion. It ranked Virginia Tech No. 38 on a list of U.S. research universities and said it was the No. 1 academic research institution in Virginia, based

HGHER EDUCATION: VIRGINIA TECH

Hokies are happy, well fed and get a good return on their education investment, according to people and publications that rank universities.

Page 30: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

28 NOVEMBER 2015

primarily on research expenditure. The survey ranked 891 degree-granting institutions that spent at least $150,000 on research and de-velopment. “That one really reflects the essential nature of our academic profile,” Hincker says.

“Those rankings are just showing the rest of the world what all Hok-ies already know,” says Liz Stewart of Roanoke, a French teacher for Bote-tourt County Public Schools. Stewart

attended Tech from 2002 to 2007, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in French and a Master of Arts in education. She said Tech deserves the recognition it gets. “My five years at Virginia Tech were defi-nitely some of the best of my life. Everything about that school em-bodies Ut Prosim (Latin for “That I May Serve,” Virginia Tech’s motto). My five years proved that Hokie nation is really a Hokie family. As an alumna, I know I can go back to university any time.”

Apparently the desire to be part of the Hokie nation is at an all-time high. Applications for this year’s fall class increased 8 percent over the previous academic year to a record 22,500. School administra-tors had agreed to grow enrollment by about 500 students per year for four years, totaling 2,000 new un-dergraduate students. They over-shot that number this year, enroll-ing about 800 additional students and growing the size of the fresh-man class to about 6,300, bumping up the size of the undergraduate student body to nearly 25,000 stu-dents.

“But we were able to get profes-sors lined up, classes lined up,” says Hincker. According to him, the uni-versity has been planning to increase the number of students in part to meet the demand for degrees in the STEM-H fields – science, technol-ogy, engineering, mathematics and health care. Half of Virginia Tech graduates earn a STEM-H degree, and the university produces almost a quarter of all STEM degrees among the state’s four-year public universities, he says.

“Virginia Tech has grown con-siderably since I graduated,” says Allison Perry Woody of Roanoke. She graduated in 2003 with a de-gree in marketing management and works as a marketing assistant for Luna Innovations. “While I be-lieve growth is extremely important, especially from a funding perspec-tive, I would hate to see the campus grow too quickly or outgrow itself.”

In part to accommodate the

student body’s growth, several ma-jor construction projects are un-derway or were recently completed. A $42 million, 73,400-square-foot, three-story classroom building set to open next year is being con-structed at the corner of West Campus Drive and Perry Street. It will contain 15 new classrooms and four teaching laboratories with seats for more than 1,450 students, plus study rooms and group meet-ing space. The building also will in-clude rooms that can be subdivided and reconfigured as teaching needs change.

“It will address not only a chronic shortage but also address new ways of teaching,” Hincker says. “Professors are changing pedagogy slightly … Students do a lot of independent work and they come to class and they’ll have dis-cussion groups. They’ll be working on certain things while the profes-sor is there, so the professor isn’t just standing in front of the class. There are several of those ‘reverse classrooms’ in this new building. It’s more like graduate work, where most of the learning takes place outside of the classroom. When you learn by doing, it’s a much more solid way of learning.”

Two residence halls are under construction for the Corps of Ca-dets. Pearson Hall was originally scheduled to open in August but wasn’t finished. It contains 234 residence hall rooms in five above-ground floors, plus a basement and a room to house Skipper, the corps’ cannon. The second residence hall will house about 1,100 students and will replace Brodie Hall, Monteith Hall, Rasche Hall and Thomas Hall.

Tech’s award-winning dairy sci-ence program moved from the for-mer dairy science complex on South-gate Drive to a new modern com-plex at Kentland Farm. It includes an 11,900-square-foot milking par-lor with a computerized milk-mon-itoring system, a 46,000-square-foot barn to house the 232 milking cows and a modern waste management system. Construction is set to begin

higher education

Virginia TechOpened in October 1872.

Has operated under four different names: Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College (1872-1896), Virginia Agricultural and Mechan-ical College and Polytechnic In-stitute (1896-1944), Virginia Poly-technic Institute (1944-1970) and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (1970-present).

The university motto “Ut Prosim,” Latin for “That I May Serve,” was adopted in 1896.

Hokie Stone, from which most university buildings are made, is limestone. Virginia Tech has op-erated its own quarry since the 1950s.

Orange and maroon have been the school’s colors since 1896.

More than 90 undergraduate ma-jors are offered, the most popular of which are general engineering; university studies; general biosci-ences; business; human nutrition, foods and exercise; animal and poultry sciences; physics; archi-tecture; math; and business infor-mation technology.

This year’s freshman class was ex-pected to increase by about 500 students but increased by about 800, growing the class to about 6,300 students.

Sources: Larry Hincker, vt.edu

Page 31: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 29Photo by Logan Wallace, courtesy Virginia Tech

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next year on a second phase of the dairy relocation project.

Work also is underway on a ma-jor new interchange that will replace the intersection of Southgate Drive and U.S. 460. The project, which will significantly change the entrances to the south end of Tech’s campus, is scheduled to be completed in late 2018.

This fall, Virginia Tech rolled out several new and innovative de-gree programs. “We are particularly proud of several degrees normally seen only at the graduate level,” Hincker says. Four new bachelor’s degree programs in the STEM-H fields got their start: computational modeling and data analytics, micro-biology, nanoscience and neurosci-ence.

Tech also debuted a new degree called Water: Resources, Policy, and Management. “It is unusual because it’s administered by six colleges and offers very flexible options for the students,” Hincker says.

Virginia Tech leaders are work-

ing on ways to increase opportunities for experiential learning, according to Hincker. Opportunities include research projects, internships, study abroad programs and co-op pro-grams, through which students work for a semester and then study for a

semester.“The idea is that there are many,

many ways – in addition to class-room learning – to learn,” he says. “It helps you learn what it is you’ve come here to study. And it’s a great, great jumpstart in getting a job.”

Members of the Corps of Cadets sign a beam that will become part of the Corps’ new residence hall.

Page 32: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

A wagon ride with vibrant fall colors — just part of Salem’s small town lifestyle.

30 NOVEMBER 2015

Page 33: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 31

COMMUNITY PROFILE: SALEM

‘The true small town’Th e Salem Way: Be business-friendly, citizen-serving and sports crazy by Gene Marrano

People in Salem like to say they do things a little differently – efficiently, progressively and

without much hullabaloo. The Sa-lem Way focuses on being business-friendly and red-tape averse, some-thing that’s easier to do when all five City Council members know what it’s like to own and run a small busi-ness.

City Manager Kevin Boggess (recruited to Salem from his former post as Vinton’s town manager) says being business- and citizen-friendly “is one of the things we try very hard to do ... to apply common sense to is-sues and questions the best that we can. If I were a business owner, how would I want to be treated?”

Council members’ business ex-perience helps put them in sync with Salem staffers who want to grow the city’s economic base. Boggess says he and his team are “learning our way,” through new state regulations” with an eye toward determining what “in-terferes the least with our ability to conduct business and thrive in Sa-lem.”

The Salem Way led Long Is-land, N.Y., native Bob Rotanz to stick around after he graduated from Roanoke College, located in Salem, in 1978. Rotanz scored the winning goal when the Maroons won the NCAA Division II lacrosse champi-onship in 1978. (“The best shot of my life,” Rotanz says.) Two years later, Rotanz and fellow Roanoke College graduate Jim “Mac” McEnerney opened Mac and Bob’s as a 10-stool sub pub on Main Street.

McEnerney left the restaurant business for wealth management, and Mac and Bob’s moved down the street, more than tripling in size. The business expanded and continued to expand. Today’s Mac and Bob’s can seat 330 people – 33 times the capac-ity of the original. Through all the moving and growing, Rotanz says, the city has been supportive. “In all my years,” Rotanz says, “I’ve never re-ally had a problem [with red tape]. They’re so business-friendly.” Ro-tanz says outside consultants he has worked with tell him, “It’s so much easier in Salem than in other places.”

Photos courtesy City of Salem

Page 34: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

32 NOVEMBER 2015 Photos courtesy City of Salem

Salem has worked not only at being business-friendly but at turning sports into business. The city has attracted dozens of NCAA Division II and III national cham-

pionships to the Salem Civic Cen-ter, Salem Stadium and the Moyer Sports Complex. So far, 76 nation-al collegiate champions have been crowned in the city. The Moyer

Sports Complex also hosts many amateur softball tournaments.

Parks and Recreation Direc-tor John Shaner says the growth of softball at Moyer has been good for the whole region, with softball tournaments spilling over into other localities – including a new complex in Botetourt County. That’s led to bigger events, with participants, families and fans who eat, shop and sleep in the region. “It’s really enhanced the whole Ro-anoke Valley.”

Shaner says that in an ultra-competitive bidding world with softball facilities elsewhere that now surpass the 23-year-old Moyer complex, “we completely hang our hat on what we can deliver. That’s what is keeping us so competitive throughout the country.” Shaner says getting a visitor’s dollar to turn over several times is the “whole reason” Salem is so invested in sports marketing. He knows things are going well, he says, when the Little Caesar’s near Moyer runs out of dough.

Carey Harveycutter is director of tourism in Salem after decades of being in charge of civic center facilities. He has helped draw events like the nationally televised NCAA football Division III cham-pionship Stagg Bowl to Salem Sta-dium. “We really got ahead of the ball on sports marketing,” he says. Valley wide, Harveycutter puts the annual economic impact from sporting events at $4 million.

Main Street in the heart of Sa-lem is full of shops and eateries – the upscale Blue Apron is a local favorite – but that doesn’t mean a facelift isn’t in order. Planning and Economic Development Di-rector Melinda Payne has invited the public to weigh in on a plan she hopes to present to council in early 2016. “We are taking 10 rec-ommendations and fleshing those out,” says Payne.

More entertainment venues “and a better mix of what we have,” are at the top of that wish list, according to Payne. “Some-

community profi le

Salem is a small city that hosts championships for small schools. Seventy-six NCAA Division II and Division III champions have won their titles in Salem.

cutline....

Salem FOUNDED: 1802 in what was then Botetourt County, now Roanoke County. The town of Salem became the city of Salem after the General Assembly ap- proved a measure to change its charter in 1968. After separating from Roanoke County, Salem developed its own public safety departments and school system.

AREA: 14.3 square miles

POPULATION: 25,483 (2014 estimate)

GOVERNMENT: A city manager and elected City Council. Salem owns and operates its own water, electric distribution and sewerage system.

LARGEST EMPLOYERS: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (there is a VA medical center in Salem), HCA Health System (Lewis-Gale), Yokohama Tire, city of Salem schools system, General Electric, Roanoke College.

FAST FACTS: Andrew Lewis, a colleague of George Washington, was the best known of Salem’s early settlers. Lewis evicted the last British governor, Lord Dunmore, from Virginia during the American Revolution. Lewis’ estate, Rich-fi eld, stood roughly where the Salem Civic Center complex is – and where a statue of Lewis stands. Several Civil War battles were fought in Salem. A mem-ber of the Salem Flying Artillery is credited with fi ring the last shot for Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia before the surrender at Appomattox.

Sources: Salemva.gov and Virginia Employment Commission

Page 35: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

ROANOKE BUSINESS 33

SALEM STADIUMFRIDAY, DECeMBER 18

APRIL 10

thing that adds to the ambience in our downtown,” especially to help keep people in town at night, is the target.

Finding enough land for new companies in a small land-locked city is the biggest economic de-velopment challenge. “People like the way we do business in Salem because we do our best to make the process easy and quick,” she says, “but when you have limited land … it makes it very challeng-ing.”

She describes regional coop-eration as “probably the best it has ever been” in her 10 years on the job. The valley’s high-speed broadband installation plan is evidence of that, she says, and Payne’s office also has partnered with Roanoke College’s Center for Leadership and Entrepreneurial Innovation (CLEI), for a business concept competition called “The Pitch.”

Mayor Randy Fol-ey, a hometown hero, calls Salem “the true small town.” He is a former Air Force officer who played football for the Salem High School Spartans

and then the University of Virgin-ia Cavaliers. Today, he’s a partner in Salem-based Nicus Software Inc. Streamlining the process to make Salem as business-friendly as possible is always at the top of City Council’s to-do list, says Foley. He also wants to market Salem better to the outside world.

Acknowledging that he is in the business, Foley says he envi-sions small IT firms as the future of the city’s economic develop-ment. He’ll gladly take a new start-up from a Roanoke College or Virginia Tech graduate. “We need to be an attractive place to live or to have an office,” Foley says. “We need to be cool.

“There’s a lot of good things happening,” the mayor adds, “and I’m very optimistic about where we are headed.”

Foley

Page 36: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

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Page 37: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce | SPONSORED CONTENT

ROANOKE BUSINESS 35

Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce | SPONSORED CONTENT

ROANOKE BUSINESS 35

Leadership Roanoke Valley Class of 2016 selected

The Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce’s Leadership Roanoke Valley Class of 2015-2016 has

been selected. The 32 members began the 10-month program with an open-ing breakfast Aug. 12. Graduation will be held in June 2016.

The class includes: Zenith Barrett, Goodwill Industries of the Valley; Heather Baum, Roanoke-Blacksburg Technology Council; Claire Bissot, CBIZ Inc.; Lia Boggs, Carilion Clinic; Sarah Boswell, Jefferson College of Health Sciences; Mo Boyd, Allstate Insurance; Tim Cerebe, Freedom First Credit Union;

Holly DiGangi, Taubman Museum of Art; David Epperly, Red Canary; Mc-

Knight Garner, Waldvogel Commercial Properties Inc.; Sarah Gibbons, Farmer Auctions; Nathan Gwartney, Mill Mountain Theatre; Teresa Hamilton Hall, Appalachian Power ; Ellie Hammer, Merrill Lynch; Amy Hartley, Wells Fargo Bank; Richard Hedley, Cherry Bekaert LLP; Bryan Hill, Roanoke Valley-Alleghany Regional Commission; Brie Jackson, WSLS Channel 10 ; Paige Kauffman, Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals for Carilion Clinic Children’s Hospital;

Tara Lilly, Member One Federal Credit Union; Erika Lovegreen, Medical Facilities of America; Lydia Merritt, United Way of Roanoke Valley; Jessamyn Newcomb, Hughes Associates Architects & Engineers; Ken Nicely, Roanoke County Public Schools; Dani Poe, Hall Associates Inc.; Cara Price, Member One Federal Credit Union; Kimberly Robertson, New Horizons Healthcare; Ann Satterwhite, SFCS Inc.; Aaron Shearer, Western Virginia Water Authority; Suzanne Smith, Carilion Clinic; Jonathan Templeton; and William Vagts, Bay Diesel & Generator.

In each issue, the Roanoke Regional Chamber will recognize its Chamber Champions and event sponsors. This is the updated list for 2015.

Please note the change of Valley Bank to BNC Bank.

2015 CHAMBER CHAMPIONSBNC Bank

Brown Edwards

Cox Business

Gentry Locke Attorneys

LifeWorks REHAB (Medical Facilities of America)

MB Contractors

Pepsi Bottling Group

rev.net

The Roanoke Times

Rockydale Quarries

Spilman Thomas & Battle PLLC

Trane

Woods Rogers Attorneys at Law

NEW MEMBERSThe following new members joined

the Roanoke Regional Chamber from Aug. 8 to Sept. 10, 2015.

@ Work Personnel Services

Copenhaver, Ellett & Derrico

Corporate Image Barber Shop

Cosmetic Essence Inc.

Creative Occasions Events, Flowers & Gifts

Digital Doc

First Bank & Trust Co.

Greenbrier Nurseries

Life Ring Foundation

Paradise of Virginia

Republic Services

Somos Media Group

South Peak

Talecris Plasma Resources - a Grifols Company

Thursday Overtime – Sept. 3

Carrabba’s Italian GrillSpilman Thomas & Battle PLLC

2015 State of the City Address – Sept. 3

Appalachian Power

Cox Business

First Citizens Bank

Hall Associates

RGC Resources

Taubman Museum of Art

29th Annual Small Business of the Year Awards – Sept. 17

Cox BusinessFirst Citizens Bank

Gentry Locke AttorneysCity of Roanoke

County of RoanokeFirst Piedmont Waste SolutionsSir Speedy Printing & Marketing

Servicesxpedx

Business Before Hours – Sept. 30Transitional Options for Women

Doctors Express Roanoke

EVENT SPONSORSHIP

Page 38: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

SPONSORED CONTENT | Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce

36 NOVEMBER 2015

SPONSORED CONTENT | Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce

Bartorillo

J. William Karbach, CEO of The Branch Group, has an-nounced that Patrick Bartoril-lo has been appointed presi-dent of Branch Highways Inc. Bartorillo joined Branch High-ways in 2013 and was named

general manager in 2015.

Carilion Clinic has purchased the Shenan-doah Life headquarters property at 2301 Brambleton Ave. Though plans for the building have not been determined, Car-ilion is exploring alternatives that would free up clinical space. Carilion is partner-ing with Shenandoah Life to ensure the company will be able to occupy the cur-rent office space for up to a year while they finalize plans for relocating operations to another location in Roanoke.

Deatherage

Robin Deatherage has been named customer service and automation manager of Chas. Lunsford Sons & Associates.

CowanPerry PC has announced that three of their attorneys were selected by their peers for inclusion in this year’s Best Lawyers in America. They are: James K. Cowan, employment law management; Douglas W. Densmore, banking and fi-nance law, corporate law, financial ser-vices regulation law, and mergers and acquisitions law; and Tara A. Branscom, trademark law.

Jefferson College of Health Sciences has been named one of the top colleges in Virginia in the category of capital im-provement by Virginia Living Magazine. The recognition highlights the completion and opening of the Virginia Intercollegiate Anatomy Lab on the Jefferson College campus at Carilion Roanoke Community Hospital in Roanoke. The $2.5 million proj-ect opened in May 2015 and was the result of a collaboration between Jefferson Col-lege of Health Sciences, the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and Radford University.

Johnson, Ayers & Matthews has an-nounced that five of its attorneys were

selected by their peers for inclusion in the 2016 edition of Best Lawyers in America.

Those named are: Ronald M. Ayers, emi-nent domain and condemnation law, per-sonal injury litigation – defendants; Wil-liam P. Wallace Jr., personal injury litiga-tion – defendants; John D. Eure, appellate practice, insurance law; Kenneth J. Ries, insurance law, personal injury litigation – defendants; and Bryan Grimes Creasy, commercial litigation, litigation – real es-tate, and railroad law.

LeClairRyan has announced that 91 attor-neys in 57 practice areas were selected by their peers for inclusion in the 2016 edi-tion of Best Lawyers in America. Eight are resident in the firm’s Roanoke office. They are: William E. Callahan, Jr., bankruptcy and creditor-debtor rights/insolvency and reorganization law, litigation – bankrupt-cy; John T. Jessee, medical malpractice law – defendants, personal injury litiga-tion – defendants; Paul C. Kuhnel, medi-cal malpractice law – defendants; Powell M. “Nick” Leitch III, medical malpractice law – defendants; Clinton S. Morse, em-ployment law – management, labor law – management; Kevin P. Oddo, commer-cial litigation, litigation – banking and fi-nance, litigation – bankruptcy; Joseph M. Rainsbury, appellate practice; and Lori D. Thompson, bankruptcy and creditor-debt-or rights/insolvency and reorganization law, litigation – bankruptcy.

Minnix

The Roanoke Regional Airport Commission has named H. Odell “Fuzzy” Minnix chair-man of the commission for the 2015-2016 term. Minnix, a Roanoke County appointee, served on the airport commis-

sion from 1992 to 1994 and has been on the commission since 2006. Minnix re-places W. William Gust as chair of the commission. Dr. John Dooley has been named vice chair.

Myers

Roanoke County Administra-tor Thomas Gates has an-nounced the appointment of Carlan Myers as human re-sources director. Myers as-sumed the new position in September. He had previously

served as the chief human resources offi-cer for Kissito Healthcare in Roanoke.

Roanoke County Finance Director Re-becca Owens presented the results of a recent bond refunding program that al-lows the county to retire $2.6 million in all outstanding capital leases, literacy loans and the 2011 EDA lease revenue bonds in the current year. On Aug. 6, the county completed the board-approved refunding transaction of $40.7 million of lease reve-nue bonds previously issued to finance the construction of the Fleet Service Center, South County Library, Green Ridge Recre-ation Center, North County Fire Station and the purchase of the Roanoke County 800 MHZ public safety radio system.

The Roanoke County School Board has ap-pointed Jason Moretz as the new Windsor Hills District member for the school board. Moretz filled the unexpired term of Drew Barrineau, who resigned his seat due to a work-related relocation. Moretz will serve until the November 2016 election is certi-fied. Moretz is a vice president/bank man-ager of First Bank of Virginia.

Hugh B. Wellons, a member attorney of the law firm Spilman Thomas & Battle, was named the 2016 Roanoke Banking and Finance Law “Lawyer of the Year” by the Best Lawyers in America. Only a single attorney is recognized as such for each practice area in each community.

Blanks

Mark Blanks has been named associate director of the mid-At-lantic Aviation Partnership at Virginia Tech. Blanks will be re-sponsible for the day-to-day op-eration of Virginia Tech’s test site for unmanned aircraft systems.

Cowan Densmore Branscom

Ayers Wallace Eure

Ries Creasy

Callahan Jessee Kuhnel Leitch

Morse Oddo Rainsbury Thompson

Page 39: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce | SPONSORED CONTENT

ROANOKE BUSINESS 37

Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce | SPONSORED CONTENT

ROANOKE BUSINESS 37

The law firm Spilman Thomas & Battle an-nounced that seven attorneys were select-ed by their peers for inclusion in the Best Lawyers in America directory of leading at-torneys. The following were selected: N.A. “Nick” Ammar Jr., employee benefits law, trusts and estates; F.B. Webster Day, corporate law, public finance law; Olin R. Melchionna Jr., trusts and estates; Peter M. Pearl, bankruptcy and creditor debtor rights/insolvency and reorganization law; Douglas T. Stark, commercial litigation; King F. Tower, employment law – manage-ment, labor law – management; and Hugh B. Wellons, banking and finance law, bio-technology law, financial services regula-tion law and securities/capital markets law.

Batra

Romesh C. Batra, who holds the Clifton C. Garvin Profes-sorship at Virginia Tech, is the recipient of a 2015 American Society of Mechanical Engi-neers’ Honorary Membership award given to no more than

five people worldwide annually. The orga-nization cited Batra for his mentoring of graduate and post-graduate students and pioneering work in applied mechanics.

Brown

Robert M. Brown, the Curling Professor of Accounting and Information Systems in the Pamplin College of Business at Virginia Tech, has been con-ferred the title of “professor emeritus” by the Virginia Tech

board of visitors. He has been a member of the Virginia Tech community since 1977.

Crawford

The American Chemical Soci-ety (AFC) has named T. Daniel Crawford, professor of chem-istry in the College of Science at Virginia Tech, a member of the 2015 class of ACS Fellows. ACS Fellows are nominated by

peers in the field and selected based on outstanding achievements in and contribu-tions to the science profession.

Feiertag

Howard Feiertag, an instruc-tor of hospitality and tourism management in the Pamplin College of Business at Virginia Tech, has been recognized as one of the top 30 profession-als in the global meetings and

events industry.

Gelinas

Nicole Gelinas of the Manhat-tan Institute gave the BB&T Distinguished Lecture in Sep-tember at Virginia Tech. The Pamplin College of Business hosted the talk, which was a part of its BB&T Distinguished

Lecture Series on Capitalism.

Mallikarjunan

Kumar Mallikarjunan, a pro-fessor of biological systems engineering housed in both the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech, recently received the

Kishida International Award from the American Society of Agricultural and Bio-logical Engineers.

Markgraf

Karl Markgraf, who has spent the last 17 years as director of the Center for International Education at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, has been hired as the new associ-ate vice president for interna-

tional affairs at Virginia Tech.

Neff-Henderson

Laura L. Neff-Henderson has been named communications director for the administrative services division at Virginia Tech. She has served as the communications manager in Virginia Tech’s Department of

Human Resources since 2012. She also is the former director of communications and public relations at North Cross School from 2006 to 2010.

Ragsdale

Virginia Tech’s Pamplin Col-lege of Business has appoint-ed business information tech-nology professor Cliff Rags-dale as the new academic di-rector for its Center for Busi-ness Intelligence and Analyt-

ics. Ragsdale will lead the center together

with executive director Linda Oldham.

Vosburgh

Tracy Vosburgh, associate vice president of university communications at Cornell University, has been named senior associate vice president for university relations at Vir-ginia Tech. Vosburgh succeed-

ed Larry Hincker, who announced his re-tirement earlier this year after 27 years at Virginia Tech.

Wolfe

Mary Leigh Wolfe, professor of biological systems engi-neering and department head at Virginia Tech, has taken of-fice as the 2015-2016 presi-dent of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological

Engineers (ASABE). Named an ASABE Fel-low in 2006, Wolfe has previously served ASABE on a variety of educational and technical committees, as well as the soci-ety and foundation boards of trustees.

Blankenship

Vitality Business Group has announced that Cody Blan-kenship, managing director of the firm, has received an affili-ate certification by the Re-source Associates Corporation in Pennsylvania. As an affiliate

of the International Network of Senior-Lev-el Business and Executive Development, Blankenship is trained in executive coach-ing, process development, and discover-ing personal and organizational values through assessments.

Perkinson

Two WVTF Public Radio’s mu-sic hosts retired in August. Charlie Perkinson, former host of the nightly “Jazz To-night” and the weekend “All That Jazz,” and Steve Brown, music director and former

host of “Morning Classics” and “Afternoon Classics” both announced their retire-ments from the station after many years of public radio service.

Ammar Day Melchionna Pearl

Stark Tower Wellons

Page 40: Roanoke Business- Nov. 2015

CELEBRATING TEN YEARS OF

LOCAL ROOTS

ROANOKE I SALEM I NEW RIVER BANK I SMITH MOUNTAIN LAKE

The vision to lead.The courage to innovate.

The heart to serve our community.

MEMBER FDIC

On our tenth anniversary, HomeTown Bank wishes to express a very special thanks to our Board of Directors for their continuing vision, guidance, and dedication. Their leadership has provided the foundation for our central mission: local banking that puts people first.

Banking on the future by helping our community grow. That’s how we do local.

hometownbank.com