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ENSURING EXPANSION

By Mike Ashley

See tables on top capital investments and employee expansions in 1998 below

It was during a November 1997 trip to New York that Virginia Beach Mayor Meyera Oberndorf first learned that Geico Inc. might expand. She was at a Fortune 500 luncheon, where she happened into a conversation with company President and CEO Tony Nicely.

Geico, the nation's seventh-largest automobile insurer, grew by 16 percent in 1997. With 13,000 employees and coverage for more than 4.5 million automobiles, Nicely's company was looking for more office space as actively as it was looking for new customers.

Bob Miller is heading up Geico's $45.1 million, 4,500-job expansion in Virginia Beach. The insurance company's project was 1998's largest employment announcement. Miller in Geico's parking lot
photo by Mark Rhodes
Thus began a whirlwind courtship, initiated with that informal lunch chat and followed by Virginia Beach brochures, key chains and pens to keep the city on Geico executives' minds. Then came more serious negotiations and a visit from Bob Miller, Geico's mid-Atlantic vice president. The scope of the original project changed.


What was to be a new call center grew into the company's regional headquarters.

"We knew ... Hampton Roads was a good labor market in terms of the quality of associates we've hired there," Miller says. The company has had a presence in Virginia Beach for 36 years. "We had no idea the size of [the area], though. It's a much larger economic base than I thought." More than 1.5 million people live in Hampton Roads.

"The cost of doing business in terms of salary scales, tax rates and those factors is very similar to our offices in Fredericksburg and very competitive -- much more so than Northern Virginia, D.C. or Maryland."

Geico's $45 million expansion in Virginia Beach will bring 4,500 more jobs to that area. It was the Old Dominion's largest employment expansion of 1998.

"Geico had been in Virginia Beach for many, many years, and we could have lost it all in this particular project," says Robert Ruhl, Virginia Beach's business development manager. Economic development is high stakes. "They're going from 200 employees to 4,500, but if we don't team up with the state and retain this business and help them expand, we have nothing."

According to Miller, Geico was also looking at sites in New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio. But the company announced in February 1998 that it would build a new facility on 27 acres in the Virginia Beach Corporate Landing Business Park.

For its part, Virginia kicked in $850,000 from the governor's opportunity fund for site preparation and offered incentives in work force training. Virginia Beach came up with attractive land-option agreements.

"One thing led to another and we just said, 'This is going to work,'" Miller recalls. "The Virginia Beach economic development folks and the mayor are certainly very aggressive and very persuasive."

* * *

The first phase of construction on Geico's 250,000-square-foot facility was completed last fall. "Although it's very exciting to get a new company here, the real payoff is when your own businesses see this as a great place to do business and are willing to reinvest," says Rick Richardson, communications director of the Virginia Economic Development Partnership.

Geico had the biggest job numbers, but it's not alone. MCI WorldCom came close: It is expanding its Internet technology campus in Loudoun County by 4,000 jobs through a $200 million investment. Science Applications International Corp., an information technology consulting group, plans to add 2,000 jobs in Fairfax County as part of a $75 million expansion. Another Loudoun County-based company, satellite builder Orbital Science Corp., is investing $50 million and adding 1,500 employees as it expands its manufacturing and research facilities.

Statewide, the partnership recorded 436 announcements of plans to locate new facilities in the commonwealth or expand existing facilities. Expansions alone accounted for 258 announcements this year, representing more than $1.35 billion in investments and 15,371 new jobs.

According to Richardson, it was Virginia's best year ever for job expansion -- at least in the 30 years that such numbers have been tabulated. Total announcements for 1998 accounted for 48,308 new jobs, a significant jump from the previous high of 30,860 set in 1995. Richardson credits much of this year's success, particularly in expanding businesses, to the Department of Business Assistance.

Established in 1996 by the General Assembly, the department assists state businesses in work force training, financing and small-business counseling and training. The 47-employee office -- plus 18 part-time workers -- serves more than 4,000 state businesses, acting as principal point of contact with the state government.

"It's like a doctor-patient relationship," says Dean Bailey, senior project manager in the existing industry development branch. "We make house calls and regularly check in with our patients to give them a physical. We know their history and we know how to help them."

Serving as ombudsman to Virginia's businesses, the department continually "checks the pulse" of existing businesses, visiting them, answering questions, asking what the state can do to help them and what the state can stop doing that might be hurting them.

Bailey says while the partnership's involvement has a definite timetable, particularly in recruiting and helping larger businesses expand, the Department of Business Assistance's work is ongoing. The department maintains contact and helps guide businesses through expansions, projects and red tape. "For an awful lot of businesses, particularly the smaller ones, we are the [organization] that can make their dreams come true," Bailey says.

* * *

The forecast for 1999 already looks promising. Volvo Trucks is ready to break ground on a $148 million capital expansion that will create 1,300 new jobs at a plant in Pulaski. AOL has a $520 million expansion on the drawing board in Prince William County, and Gateway announced 1,200 new jobs at a new vendor campus in Hampton. "We have a very diverse and strong base of businesses in the commonwealth," Richardson concludes. "There's a very positive climate, and not every state has that."

A key in business expansion, says Virginia Beach's Ruhl, is to diversify while expanding the local economy. "You don't want all your eggs in one basket," he says. "Geico was at the high end of the type of business we were looking for. They're in the finance and insurance sector, and that's at the top of our list just behind information technology, telecommunications and computer businesses." They are high-paying jobs, and add diversity to the Hampton Roads region, which has historically relied on Defense Department jobs.

Modern expansions aren't as easy as making a deal with local government and issuing a press release. In Pulaski, managers at the Volvo factory issued an ultimatum to the local United Auto Workers Union in their negotiations: Endorse an acceptable contract or kiss the expansion and the thousands of jobs goodbye. Eventually, union incentives were hammered out, but it wasn't easy, and some management-employee acrimony may remain.

Bailey says a universal concern for all of business is work force preparedness. Training programs and related incentives are becoming more important in deals like the Geico expansion, according to Bailey. "We're here to do whatever we can to help these businesses," he says. "We're all working together."

Top 50 Capital Investment Expansions in 1998
Company Location Product or service Investment1
MCI WorldCom Loudoun County Intranet access, services $200.0
SAIC Fairfax County Info. technology consulting 75.0
Howmet2 Hampton Cast metal parts 70.5
BGF Industries Mecklenburg County Woven fiberglass 65.0
St. Laurent Paperboard King William County Paperboard 56.0
America Online Loudoun County On-line service provider 50.0
Orbital Sciences Loudoun County Satellites 50.0
Geico2 Virginia Beach Auto insurance 45.0
Booz, Allen & Hamilton Fairfax County Consulting 42.0
Ericsson Lynchburg Cellular telephones 30.0
Kraft Foods2 Frederick County Fruit drinks, snack foods 27.0
DynCorp Fairfax County Professional, tech.services 25.8
Computer Associates Intl. Fairfax County Software 25.0
Whitehall-Robins Healthcare Richmond Pharmaceuticals research 25.0
AlliedSignal Chesterfield County Plastic resins 22.0
Bristol Compressors Washington County AC, heating compressors 20.0
CarMax Goochland County Automobile dealerships 20.0
Oracle Fairfax County Software 20.0
Rehrig International Chesterfield County Plastic carts 20.0
National Wildlife Federation Fairfax County Association 19.5
Norfolk Southern Norfolk Railroad 18.0
Bering Truck Warren County Truck assembly 15.0
Nimbus Manufacturing Greene County Digital video discs 15.0
Tyson Foods Accomack County Poultry processing 15.0
Yupo Chesapeake Synthetic paper 14.0
American Management Sys. Fairfax County Software design 12.9
MRL Pharmaceutical Service Fairfax County Laboratory testing services 12.0
Timken Campbell County Automotive wheel bearings 12.0
Capital One Financial2 Henrico County Credit card service center 10.6
Approved Financial Virginia Beach Home loans 10.1
Colonna's Shipyard Norfolk Yacht repair, maintenance 10.0
Government Tech. Svcs. Farifax County Systems integration 10.0
Virginia Intl.Terminals Norfolk Refrigerated warehouse 10.0
Westvaco Richmond Consumer packaging 10.0
Chubb Computer Services Fairfax County Computer prog. training 9.0
GE Financial Assurance Lynchburg Life insurance 9.0
Greystone James City County Metal plating of components 8.5
Steven Meyers & Associates Fairfax County Defense contractor 8.5
Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Smyth County Furniture 8.1
Bassett Furniture Industries Henry County Furniture 8.0
Decision Support Systems Loudoun County Software development 8.0
Kingston Warren Wythe County Automotive window 8.0
Cisco Systems Fairfax County Integrated computer services 7.4
USAA Fairfax County Consulting services 7.2
Drake Extrusion Henry County Carpet fibers 7.0
Printpack Williamsburg Flexible food 7.0
Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Galax Furniture 7.0
World Wide Automotive Frederick County Auto alternators, starters 7.0
Carter-Wallace2 Chesterfield County Condoms 6.5
Cintas Chesterfield County Uniform supply service 6.4
1 In millions    2 Indicates multiple projects in the same locality
Source: Virginia Economic Development Partnership

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Top 20 Employee Expansions in 1998
Company Location Product or service Jobs
Geico1 Virginia Beach Auto insurance 4,500
MCI WorldCom Loudoun County Intranet access, services 4,000
SAIC Fairfax County Information technology consulting 2,000
Orbital Sciences Loudoun County Satellites 1,500
Capital One Financial1 Henrico County Credit card service center 1,356
CarMax Goochland County Automobile dealerships 1,100
America Online Loudoun County On-line service provider 700
Raytheon Eng. & Depots Grp. Norfolk Electronics, telecom. services 700
Carter-Wallace1 Chesterfield County Condoms 605
Amerigroup Virginia Beach Managed health care 600
Steven Meyers & Associates Fairfax County Defense contractor 600
American Management Sys. Fairfax County Software design 558
Computer Associates Intl. Fairfax County Software 500
Nextel Communications Fairfax County Wireless communications 500
Norfolk Southern Norfolk Railroad 490
Cisco Systems Fairfax County Integrated computer services 479
Gateway1 Hampton Personal computers 450
Approved Financial Virginia Beach Home loans 389
Bristol Compressors Washington County AC, heat compressors 350
Howmet1 Hampton Cast metal parts 346
1 Indicates multiple projects in the same locality
Source: Virginia Economic Development Partnership

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© May 1999, Media General Business Communications, Inc.
publisher of Virginia Business Magazine