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Reporter's Notebook
Notes and thoughts from the travels of Virginia Business writers and editors
June 2005

Talk about carrying coals to Newcastle. Virginia Business brought several boxes of its May issue featuring members of the Fantastic 50 to the program's awards dinner in Chantilly. The magazines were to be distributed at end of the ceremony when the fastest-growing company in the group was revealed. However, at least one box contained not the magazine but the Guide to Doing Business in Virginia, which is also produced by Virginia Business. You could argue that, given the success of this group, a guide to doing business is the last thing they need. In fact, they could write the book.

Real estate appears to be hot throughout the Eastern Shore. One house in Onacock recently sold for $1.5 million. The sales activity has been reflected in the performance of the Shore Bank. Lynn Badger, the bank's special projects manager, says it made $97 million in loans last year. Many of those loans were mortgages but the amount included commercial loans, too. The bank built a 19,000-square-foot headquarters last year in Onley and saw its deposits rise 17.3 percent.

During the recent Virginia Business Opportunity Fair in Richmond (sponsored by the Virginia Minority Supplier Development Council), Virginia Business had the good fortune of dining with Takhirzhan B. Kadyrbekov, chairman of the board of Amanat Insurance in the Republic of Kazakhstan. This was his first trip to the U.S. Kadyrbekov was visiting Richmond, Washington, D.C., and New York in hopes of landing an internship with an American insurance firm. "I want to learn all I can," he said. In Kadyrbekov's country oil is the biggest industry, he says, but the insurance industry is growing. Some of his observations about the U.S so far: Washington is a pretty city, but not as big as he thought. Richmond is friendly and easy to get around.

Few realize the impact that Virginia's equestrian industry has on the state economy, contributing more than $1.46 billion in revenue. In fact, Virginia is the fifth-largest equine state, only surpassed by Texas, California, Missouri and Tennessee. The 600-acre Virginia Horse Center near Lexington attracts 400,000 visitors a year (60 percent from out of state). The state's investment in the Horse Center has paid off. According to a 2004 Weldon Copper study, for every dollar the state has invested, nearly $5 in sales tax are returned to state and local governments. The Horse Center has also generated local economic growth, with eight hotels being built within a mile of the property.

The Greater Richmond Technology Council recently presented its 2005 Technology Awards. The winners are:
• Emerging Company Award: CyMed Inc.
• Technology Innovation Award: The Computer Solution Co. (TCSC)
• Technology SkillBuilder Award: Mathematics & Science Center
• Community Support Award: CapTech Foundation Inc.
• IT Builders Award: Computer Resource Team Inc.
• Leadership Award: Lemuel C. Stewart Jr., chief information officer, Commonwealth of Virginia


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