| Follow-ups
Virginia Business
June 2006 The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
has finished a $37 million project to deepen the inbound
lane of the Hampton
Roads shipping channel to 50 feet. The Corps deepened
the harbor’s outbound lane to 50 feet in the late
1980s. Ships use the channels to reach cargo terminals
and Norfolk Naval Station. Efforts to improve the port
were discussed in May’s cover story about the prospects
for an emerging modeling and simulation industry in Hampton
Roads.
Herndon Mayor Michael O’Reilly
and two town councilors were voted out of office in May.
All three had backed
a taxpayer-funded day-labor hall in Herndon
that became a flashpoint in the national debate on illegal immigration. In
its April issue, Virginia Business looked at outreach
efforts by the Herndon-Dulles
Chamber of Commerce to the local Hispanic business community after the controversy.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
District has upheld a cease-and-desist order from
the National Labor Relations Board against Smithfield
Foods. Issued in 2004, the order addressed complaints by United Food and Commercial
Workers after two failed union drives at Smithfield’s Tar Heel, N.C.,
pork- processing plant. The appeals court left unchallenged NLRB findings that
Smithfield
violated federal labor laws and denied petitions for review by Smithfield and
the union. The labor dispute was explored in a cover story about Smithfield
that ran in November 2004.
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