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Followups
Virginia Business
April 2006
- Karen
J. Rae has resigned as director
of the Virginia Department
of Rail and Public Transportation to become
deputy secretary of transportation in Pennsylvania.
Corey W. Hill was appointed interim director of the
Virginia agency. Rae was featured in an article in
February’s issue concerning the prospects for
higher-speed passenger rail service in the state.
- Ontario-based Research
In Motion has agreed to pay $612.5 million to Arlington-based
NTP Inc. to settle a long-running patent infringement lawsuit. The case had
threatened to shut down the use of RIM’s BlackBerry
devices. The case was outlined in the magazine’s
September
2005 issue.
- Now that the dust has settled on
its merger, Sprint Nextel
Corp. plans to cut 2,400
jobs this year to streamline the company’s operations.
While the company hopes to reduce the work force by
about 4 percent to 60,000 workers,
primarily through attrition and buyouts, it’s not ruling out layoffs.
The merger that created Sprint Nextel was profiled in Virginia Business last
November.
Reston is home to the company’s corporate headquarters.
- The Mills Corp., an Arlington-based REIT and one of the country’s largest
mall developers, has hired outside financial advisers to explore selling all
or a part of the company. The real estate investment trust continues to cut workers — 77
additional layoffs are expected — and has withdrawn its 2005 earnings
guidance, as it struggles to reposition, following accounting errors and other
problems
that Virginia Business included in a report in its March issue.
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