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Followups
An update on companies and trends
featured in recent issues
Virginia Business
September 2005
Ridership at Richmond International
Airport rose to 256,416 passengers in June,
an 11.7 percent increase from the same month last year.
The June figure was a monthly record for the airport.
Airport officials attribute the higher passenger volume
to a recent decline in air fares. Delta Air Lines restructured
its fares late last year, and all carriers began lowering
prices after discount airline Air Tran announced that
it would begin serving Richmond in June. The efforts
of several Virginia airports to drive down air fares
were detailed in the February
issue.
Congress has approved $142 million
for the widening of Interstate 81.
That amount, plus $166 million from the state, gives
Star Solutions, a group of construction companies,
nearly
$300 million for the project. The amount of government
funding could affect tolls that Star Solutions plans
to charge truckers using I-81. A story in August’s Around
the Old Dominion section discussed growing opposition
to the proposed tolls by 150 Virginia companies and
industry groups.
Chaparral Steel,
which has operated a plant in Dinwiddie County since
1999, has been spun off by its former parent company,
Dallas-based Texas Industries Inc. Chaparral is the
nation’s second largest producer of structural
steel products, with revenue of about $1.1 billion.
Virginia’s steel industry was the subject of a
story in the April
issue.
The Atlantic Menhaden Management
Board has approved plans to restrict Omega
Protein to a harvest of 106,000 metric tons
of fish a year from the Chesapeake Bay. Omega had a
proposed a 131,000-metric-ton cap. The Virginia General
Assembly must approve the cap for it to take effect.
Omega processes menhaden into fish meal and oil, a source
of healthful Omega-3 compounds. The magazine’s
November 2004 issue discussed the revival
of the menhaden industry.
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