Virginia Beach mayor honors fallen police officers during State of the City
VIRGINIA BEACH — Every year at the State of the City event, Mayor Bobby Dyer highlights the accomplishments of the city's public safety personnel.
'This year, sadly, is different,' the mayor said on Wednesday inside the convention center.
Dyer called for a moment of silence for police officers Cameron Girvin and Christopher Reese, who died after they were shot during a traffic stop on Feb. 21.
'Anytime a first responder loses their life on the job, it's painful and tragic,' the mayor said. 'To lose two in the same incident is staggering and almost beyond comprehension. We grieve for the family for our public safety departments and for our city.'
Recognizing heroes and the city's major economic successes took center stage at the annual event hosted by the Hampton Roads Chamber.
Roughly 1,300 people attended including dozens of local business leaders, state and city officials, two former governors and Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.
Dyer and City Manager Patrick Duhaney took turns speaking to the audience as they have in years past.
Among the many individuals recognized at the event was Vada Carawan and her dad, Cameron Carawan. Vada, a Virginia Beach Girl Scout, recently saved her father's life with CPR with assistance from 911 dispatcher David Fowler. All three attended and received a standing ovation.
The city's newest entertainment venue The Dome, set to open May 4, inspired interactive audience participation. Attendees scanned a QR code with their phones and responded to the question of who they want to see perform at The Dome, and what was the first concert they saw. The responses were shared live on two screens.
The venue is part of Atlantic Park, a $350 million project and the city's largest public-private partnership to date. Atlantic Park will include an entertainment venue, surf park, retail, restaurants, apartments and offices. Venture Realty Group in partnership with celebrity Pharrell Williams are behind the project. In total, the city has funded $153 million for Atlantic Park.
'It's an exciting project and will reinforce Virginia Beach as an outstanding place to live as well as a year-round vacation destination,' Dyer said.
Duhaney gave a nod to Virginia Beach's tourism industry, which sustains 33,000 jobs, representing 19% of the city's workforce, he said.
Visitor spending contributes $336 million in state and local tax revenues, reducing the annual tax burden by almost $2,000 per Virginia Beach household, Duhaney said.
Virginia Beach wants to be the highest capacity digital port on the eastern seaboard, Duhaney said.
Globalinx will add four additional subsea cables at its Sandbridge landing site, more than doubling the capacity of its data center in Corporate Landing Business Park. The center is currently connected to three subsea cables that land in Virginia Beach.
Dominion Energy's Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project is marching along. When completed, the 2.6 gigawatt project will power up to 660,000 homes. Half of the monopile foundations which are needed for the 176 turbines have been installed, the mayor said. Construction is expected to be completed by 2026.
Sign up for the Virginia Beach Today daily newsletter
Dyer and Duhaney both touted new and expanding businesses in the city, including Amazon's 650,000-square-foot robotics fulfillment center off Dam Neck Road. The new facility will add 2,000 full-time jobs in Virginia Beach and nearly 200 electric delivery vans will operate out of the center, the mayor said.
Zim, a container shipping company, invested $30 million to relocate and expand its U.S. headquarters in Virginia Beach. And Doma Technologies, a cloud-based document management software company, is currently expanding its headquarters.
Duhaney, who was hired five years ago and is Virginia Beach's first Black city manager, said city contracts with minority and women-owned businesses in 2024 increased by $75 million compared to the previous year.
Stacy Parker, 757-222-5125, stacy.parker@pilotonline.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
23-05-2025
- Axios
Hudson's Detroit to host tech entrepreneurs and creatives
An exclusive network of entrepreneurs, artists and executives is coming to Detroit next month for a conference at the new Hudson's Detroit building and other high-profile local venues. Why it matters: The event, known as Summit Detroit, opens a window into Detroit's evolving reputation and the allure of its culture, past and present. It's also one of Hudson's first major events following the mayor's State of the City speech in March. State of play: More than 2,000 people are expected to attend the "immersive ideas festival," taking place June 5-8 at a handful of locales, including Michigan Central, the Detroit Opera House, the Harmonie Club and Hudson's. The lineup of speakers includes Twitter co-founder Ev Williams, Sade Lythcott of the National Black Theatre, artist Shepard Fairey, author and psychotherapist Lori Gottlieb and Mayor Mike Duggan. The talks focus on innovation and storytelling, and they are meant to spark creativity and personal connections between attendees. Context: The Detroit event follows previous Summit Series gatherings, dating back to 2008, in places like Peru, Palm Desert, California, and Aspen, Colorado. At a 2019 conference in Los Angeles that focused on food sustainability, attendees met with Chief Raoni Metuktire to discuss efforts to protect the Amazon rainforest. How it works: Membership in the Summit community, which boasts more than 30,000 members, is by application. Tickets to Summit Detroit start at $4,500. What they're saying: Detroit's renaissance is the ideal backdrop for Summit's business leaders and entrepreneurs to forge new connections, organizers say. "There's a group of people that are operating at a really high level, that are connected by curiosity, that show up to build and dream and create together, which is inherently what the city has always had," Summit CEO Jody Levy tells Axios. Between the lines: Food, music and mental health are also part of the programming, with strong local influences. Chefs from restaurants Barda, Baobab Fare and Takoi will be on hand. Detroit DJ and musician Moodymann and former U of M football player and investor Dhani Jones are on Summit Detroit's advisory board. Jones said he's excited for attendees to experience the city's new Hudson's skyscraper, its "Michelin-quality cuisine" and the spirit of innovation across a wide range of professions and passions.
Yahoo
22-05-2025
- Yahoo
Funeral announced for Cape Cod high school senior, 18, killed in crash after prom
Funeral services have been announced for an 18-year-old high school senior killed in a crash right after her prom night on Cape Cod. Ava Lodico, 18, of Falmouth, died in a single-car crash that happened around 11 p.m. on May 17 on Acapesket Road, according to Falmouth police. Lodico had just attended the high school's junior-senior prom, themed 'Garden of Lights,' which ended at 10 p.m. on Saturday. The crash happened about 10 minutes from the prom venue. Visitations for Lodico will be held on May 27 from 3 p.m. until 7 p.m. at Chapman Funerals & Cremations, located in Falmouth. A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on May 28 at Cape Cod Church, located at 1206 Nathan Ellis Hwy. in East Falmouth. After her death, Lodico's loved ones were left behind devastated. 'We were all just dancing and having a great time at prom,' a friend of Lodico's, Erin Barr, told Boston 25. 'It's just so upsetting that this happened and extremely surreal .... She was just the sweetest soul to everybody,' Barr said. One of Lodico's friends, Jazzy Fernandes, said she got a call about Lodico's crash on Saturday night, the outlet reported. She tried to go to the scene of the crash, but it was blocked off, and found out Lodico had died when she got to the hospital. Fernandes said, 'It doesn't feel real.' Another close friend of Lodico's, Bea Mariani, said the two had been planning their joint graduation party and just made their invite list, the outlet said. Mariani took the first boat back from Martha's Vineyard when she heard of her friend's death. Popular New England '80s band reunites for first live show in 33 years Shadow of ICE arrest hangs over Worcester 'State of the City' speech Suspect yells 'Free, free Palestine' after killing Israeli Embassy staff members in DC Mass. State Lottery winner: Cumberland Farms sells $100,000 ticket Mass. weather: Nor'easter to drench state with cold rain, whipping winds Read the original article on MassLive.

Yahoo
07-05-2025
- Yahoo
Thomas Dambo and volunteers will build Wauwatosa troll this month before the big reveal
A 24-foot-tall troll sculpture made mostly from locally recycled materials that's expected to draw tourists into Wauwatosa will be unveiled to the public by its world-renowned creator at the end of May. Danish recycling artist Thomas Dambo, known for creating larger-than-life troll sculptures all over the world, was commissioned by the city to create his first Wisconsin troll in Wauwatosa's new Firefly Grove Park, residents learned in August 2024. Dambo, his traveling staff and local volunteers will build the sculpture during the month of May using recyclables including wood sourced mostly from trees that were removed from Wauwatosa's public parks and spaces, according to a news release. The Danish artist will reveal the new troll at an 11 a.m. ribbon cutting ceremony Wednesday, May 28, at the park at 116th Street and Gilbert Avenue. Dambo will be joined by elected officials including Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Sara Rodriguez, Wisconsin Department of Tourism Secretary Anne Sayers and Wauwatosa Mayor Dennis McBride. A public celebration of the new park is also planned for 4 to 6 p.m. Dambo has created more than 138 of the whimsical creatures in communities globally, often with the help of local volunteers. Each Dambo troll is made entirely out of recyclables, oftentimes pallets, and earns a name and personality. Tourists from all over are known to flock to Dambo's trolls, and Beth Gleesing, tourism specialist of the City of Wauwatosa, said at the city's 'State of the City' address April 23 that she expects the same impact in Wauwatosa. The troll is the latest art initiative the city has invested in throughout recent years. ART 64, a bracket-style, live painting competition, will happen in the Wauwatosa Village June 6 and 7. Firefly Grove Park will also have five benches designed and created by artists, according to the release. Bridget Fogarty reports on Wauwatosa, Brookfield and Elm Grove. Contact the reporter at bfogarty@ This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Thomas Dambo constructs Wauwatosa troll before big reveal May 28