Return to Virginia Business - February 2003

Report cards: A’s, D’s and F’s

It’s report card time for the Old Dominion. First, the good news. Virginia earned straight As for its work closing the income gaps between rich and poor and for attracting high-tech firms, according to the Corporation for Enterprise Development, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank. Only four other states — Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Minnesota — fared as well in the ranking, now in its 16th year. Last year Virginia got a B.

The bad news? When it comes to tobacco, Virginia’s a dolt. The American Lung Association handed Virginia “F’s” for not restricting smoking in public places and for having the lowest per-pack state tax on cigarettes in the U.S. The Old Dominion didn’t do much better, earning “D’s” for restricting youth access to tobacco and for its handling of its share of the $206 billion settlement 46 states won from tobacco companies in 1998. The lung association wants more spending on health warnings; Virginia has added other things, such as doling out free cash payments to tobacco quota holders.

Virginia Business - February 2003