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Industrialist sees potential profit in helping keep
highways clean
by Calvin Trice
for Virginia Business
October 2005
Walter M. "Gator" Hopkins
in many ways personifies the Shenandoah Valley's agrarian
roots and its growing
industrial might.
A farm boy who graduated from a local high school and
James Madison University, Hopkins is president of Cave
Hill Corp., a small, heavy-industry business in McGaheysville
in eastern Rockingham County.
Although his business interests operate
in 48 states, the Valley is all Hopkins has ever known
as home. "I'm proud to be here. Very proud," says
the 51-year-old entrepreneur.
Hopkins is the sixth generation
of his family to live in the Valley. His ancestors
moved to the McGaheysville
area in 1830 and began farming. The family farm has focused
on poultry and dairy, but the site has produced just
about everything at some time. "You name it, it's
been grown there," he says.
But Hopkins, the oldest of four
children, was never interested in working on the farm. "I loved growing
up on a farm, but I didn't want to farm," he says.
Instead, Hopkins, a high-energy innovator and inventor,
started Cave Hill when he was 26. In the past 25 years,
he has created six divisions under the Cave Hill umbrella.
The companies employ 48 people and generate just under
$5 million in annual revenue. Hopkins' various businesses
fabricate steel, rent industrial cranes, install oil-change
equipment, build storage tanks and invest in real estate.
His latest enterprise is Gator Industries LLC. The venture
is based on the Gator Getter, Hopkins' invention, which
can be used to remove highway debris. The Gator Getter
is a cylindrical device that is attached to the front
of state highway vehicles. It is designed to pick up
debris in the middle of roadways that might compromise
motorist safety. Hopkins says the Gator Getter can, for
example, retrieve tire treads, dead animals and automotive
parts at full highway speeds.
Hopkins says research supports the need for his invention.
A recent study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety,
for example, found that road debris caused an estimated
25,000 wrecks annually in North America resulting in
80 to 90 deaths.
Hopkins believes the Gator Getter,
could save time, money and possibly lives at highway
departments around
the country. "The state has at its fingertips a
tool that has come to the market and has proven that
it can keep Virginia Department of Transportation workers
out of harm's way," he says.
So far, however, the state is not biting. VDOT officials
met with Hopkins to discuss the device, but they decided
that the agency doesn't need it right
now, says department spokeswoman Tamara Neale. "If we were to [use it]
we would have to test it and make sure it meets our specifications, with safety
being our utmost priority," Neale says.
Hopkins, however, is undaunted. He is pitching the Gator
Getter to departments of transportation and state police
throughout the Southeast. He envisions selling as many
as 10,000 of the devices in the next few years at $7,000
to $9,000 apiece.
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