Virginia
Businesses in the News
Deals
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Virginia Business Magazine
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DanChem,
a Danville chemical firm, and United Food
and Commercial Workers Local 400 agreed
on a new labor contract, ending a 10-month strike
at the plant. Under the new pact, 70 hourly
DanChem workers will receive overtime after
40 hours work. Other provisions addressed wage
and pension benefits, work schedules and medical
insurance. (Danville Register & Bee)
Lydall Distribution Services,
an importer and exporter of paper goods, signed
a 15-year deal with Virginia International Terminals,
doubling the size of its operations at Newport
News Marine Terminal to 225,000 square feet.
Lydall will begin a project to export paper
products to India. (Daily Press)
Nextel, a Reston-based
telecommunications company, and rival Verizon
Wireless reached agreement over Nextel's use
of new wireless frequencies allocated it by
the Federal Communications Commission. Verizon
agreed to drop its objections. In exchange Nextel
said it will stop challenging the right of Verizon
and other wireless providers to use the phrase
"push to talk" in marketing their services.
The FCC had authorized Nextel to use new airwaves
in order to resolve conflicts between its wireless
operations and radio systems used by emergency
response agencies. (The Washington Post)
PBM Nutritionals Inc.,
an affiliate of food and pharmaceutical products
manufacturer PBM Products Inc. of Gordonsville,
purchased Wyeth Nutritionals' facility in Georgia,
Vt., for the manufacture of infant formula.
Since 1997, PBM has been the exclusive U.S.
marketer and distributor of Wyeth's infant formula.
(PRNewswire)