Business North Carolina January 2023

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Price: $3.95 businessnc.com JANUARY 2023 COOL KIDS: TOP N.C. LAWYERS SHARE THEIR HIGH SCHOOL PASSIONS CENTENE’S ABRUPT EXIT | WOOBLES’ CRAFTY SUCCESS | APP STATE’S GRIDIRON SCHEME

6 POWER LIST INTERVIEW

Developer Kirk Bradley kicks off a new BNC series of interviews with prominent state leaders.

8 ENERGIZERS

Two Duke University grads craft a success story by teaching people how to crochet.

10 NC TREND

Stacey Moore lifts cornhole to unexpected heights; Jim Segrave pilots flyExclusive to the public markets; Four investors pick stocks that can rebound; The Petty family grinds away with a shop for high-performance cars; What you missed from the N.C. Tribune 80

GREEN SHOOTS

Lumberton wants its $3 million civic-center expansion to rouse the Robeson County city.

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28 ROUND TABLE: ADVOCACY

Leaders of N.C. bankers, hospitals and other groups discuss the coming legislative session.

80 COMMUNITY CLOSE UP: FORSYTH COUNTY

Medical marvels are routine in Winston-Salem, which has become a potent innovation hub.

LEGAL ELITE

January 2023, Vol. 43, No. 1 (ISSN 0279-4276). Business North Carolina is published monthly by Business North Carolina at 1230 West Morehead Street, Suite 308, Charlotte, NC 28208. Phone: 704-523-6987. Fax: 704-523-4211. All contents copyright © by Old North State Magazines LLC. Subscription rate: 1 year, $30. For change of address, send mailing label and allow six to eight weeks. Periodicals postage paid at Charlotte, NC, and additional offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA, 1230 West Morehead Street, Suite 308, Charlotte, NC 28208 or email circulation@businessnc.com.

NOT JUST MONEY

Appalachian State’s winning football tradition may offer clues for others seeking success.

DASHED HOPES

Charlotte scored big with Centene’s expansion plan. Then the world changed.

Start your day with business news from across the state, direct to your inbox. SIGN UP AT BUSINESSNC.COM/DAILY-DIGEST.

3 JANUARY 2023
COVER PHOTOS BY BRYAN REGAN
+ DEPARTMENTS
4 UP FRONT
COVER STORY
2023
It’s our annual list of top North Carolina lawyers as selected by their peers. We asked the talented barristers to share briefs on their favorite high school activities, revealing some jocks, nerds and a “floater.”

PUBLISHER Ben Kinney bkinney@businessnc.com EDITOR David Mildenberg dmildenberg@businessnc.com

ASSOCIATE

I’ve called Pinehurst home for the past 27 years and am always proud of our Eden in the Pines.

But, I was especially proud of the Sandhills during the nearly weeklong power outage in early December. So much so, I practically popped a couple of buttons o my shirt. at’s because our service-above-self ethos was on full display — along with a heaping helping of resiliency — when villains attacked two electrical transmission stations and plunged us into darkness.

e attack happened on a Saturday night. It took most businesses the better part of Sunday to get the word out about what had happened and to make a plan for the workweek. In true Sandhills fashion, that plan was all about philanthropy.

From First Bank (headquartered in Southern Pines) partnering with e Country Bookshop (part of our company) to dole out free books to 500 stunned and suddenly unplugged children, to the Chamber of Commerce grilling hot dogs at the Southern Pines Growler Co. when hot meals were in short supply, we helped each other cope with the deeds done by society’s darker elements.

Caring communities like ours don’t happen by accident. ey’re built by businesses devoted to the community’s betterment.

e assault on our electrical infrastructure couldn’t have come at a worse time for the small businesses in our small towns — in the middle of the Christmas season. ey call the day a er anksgiving Black Friday for a reason. at's when most retailers hit pro tability. is nefarious act moved the goalpost for nancial sustainability that much further away.

So, the best thing you can do to help is to come visit our charming central North Carolina community, shop in our unique shops, play golf on our world-class golf courses

and dine in our eclectic restaurants.

In the midst of the crisis, our Convention and Visitors Bureau created the Moore Miracles advertising campaign. CEO Phil Werz and his able crew built a website and directory of independent retailers, restaurants and accommodations as well as allocated $50,000 for a national and statewide advertising blitz to raise awareness of these negatively impacted businesses.

You can see their impressive work here: www.homeofgolf.com/MooreMiracles is unforeseen disaster occurs as Moore County is enjoying some notable gains. FirstHealth of the Carolinas will cut the ribbon on a $70 million cancer center in a few weeks; Pinehurst Resort is riding the wave of golf’s postCOVID resurgence; the United States Golf Association is building its second headquarters in Pinehurst; and Sandhills Community College just opened a $30 million nursing and health sciences building.

We have plenty to be grateful for here in the Sandhills. No doubt, this attack shocked our community. But, it also gave us the opportunity to demonstrate to the entire state our gumption and grace under pressure.

We didn’t let that opportunity go to waste. We remained unbowed and unbroken.

As I re ected on the events of early December, I remembered then-Vice President George H.W. Bush’s speech accepting the Republican Party’s presidential nomination in 1988.

Here in the suddenly darkened Sandhills, we did our best to live up to his pledge “to keep America moving forward, always forward — for a better America, for an endless enduring dream and a thousand points of light.”

— David Worono is president of Old North State Magazines. He lives in Pinehurst and says his golf handicap is ridiculously high.

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SHINING

LIST INTERVIEW

UNLIMITED UPSIDE

Kirk Bradley is CEO of Lee-Moore Capital, a Sanfordbased real-estate development company with projects including Governors Club and Triangle Innovation Point. He has a bachelor’s degree from the University of Georgia and a Duke University MBA. The Chapel Hill resident was appointed to the UNC Board of Governors in 2021.

During the interview, Qubein told Bradley, “Any organization or city or community or state, to be truly ready for the future, must have leaders like you who care deeply about it and who invest themselves in every way.”

This story includes excerpts from Bradley’s interview and was lightly edited for clarity.

What are you focused on at your company?

The biggest thing we are working on is Mosaic, which is a gateway to Chatham Park, the 8,500-acre project being built around Pittsboro. We’re doing a 750,000-square-foot mixed-use urban development with buildings that will be one to six stories. It’s going to be the heart of the projects around Chatham Park.

What’s your view of North Carolina’s future?

I’m very excited for the next 20 years with what’s happening with our business climate.

Our university and community college system, the military and our expertise in the life sciences. We can be the Silicon Valley of ag tech, power electronics and many other things.

You see that in a microcosm with the plants we’ve gotten, VinFast and Wolfspeed (planned for Chatham County) and the Toyota battery plant (in Randolph County). All of these are terrific future industries for our country and the world. Surprisingly, Sanford is now the global center of excellence for gene therapy manufacturing, which is the future of life sciences. You take all of that and the upside for North Carolina is unlimited.

What must happen for North Carolina to remain prosperous?

I’d say it’s workforce, workforce, workforce. We’ve got to have people educating themselves, whether it’s the 18-to-24 age group, which is the university system’s target market, or those

with Nido Qubein at High Point University
6 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA
Kirk Bradley is the first participant in Business North Carolina’s Power List Interview feature in which High Point University President Nido Qubein talks with some of the state’s most influential leaders.

people who need to change careers. We’ve got to have systems in the community colleges and flexibility in our universities with certificate programs and other educational attainment services.

It’s a challenge and not going to be easy. But if we can master that, we’ll have a competitive advantage not only in the rest of the United States but the rest of the world.

What else do we need to do to create more jobs and a stronger workforce?

I think certain infrastructure is missing. Funding is an issue. But it’s also a mindset. What are our mission, vision, values? You look at successful enterprises, be it a town or private enterprise, and if they are having success, they have defined their mission, vision and values. We have not quite defined that and pulled it all together as a state.

It’s great to win, and I’m all for winning, but sometimes you win by accident. Sometimes you win by design. I like winning by design because then you can repeat it and sustain it. That’s what you are really talking about here for the workforce.

I think it’s a combination of getting elected leaders as well as private business, industry and other stakeholders and others in the state to have an understanding about what we can do.

I’m very concerned about our rural areas. We have 100 counties; 51 of them lost population. I want to find things in those counties so that we get the kind of economic development that will [aid] the counties east of I-95 and west of I-77. The cities are always going to do well, but if we have a conscious strategy, we can grow our rural areas as well.

What are your impressions of the UNC System? Is there agreement around the BOG table?

First and foremost, you have to have a great leader. President Hans is terrific. I think Peter was born and spent most of his career preparing, not necessarily because he knew it, to become president of the university system.

The chairman, Randy Ramsey, is doing a great job bringing the other 23 of us on the board together in a structural way that is positive. You can have disagreement, but there needs to be a way to resolve that disagreement over specific issues without having that go all the way through. The board has had some challenges, but most of those have been resolved. So we’re very focused.

At the individual campus level, great chancellors make great universities. Having longevity, strategic planning, these things take a while. Those campuses that get good leaders make a difference. We’ve got some chancellors that are nearing the end of their careers, so the challenge is to bring a leader who is equally as good to keep those campuses moving forward.

How many more people can North Carolina accommodate without losing its appeal?

People need to accept density. People say they don’t want urban sprawl but when you try and do a dense development, they resist that. Elected officials have got to understand that we have to encourage more density, which allows for mass transit. We’re going to have certain elements of rail but in our urban areas, we need to be working on bus mass transit. That makes sense. We’re still too

spread out and always will be. I think we can accommodate, who knows, 5 or 10 million more people.

But we need to be mindful if we are going to double in population that we have a design that encourages the kinds of things that do not diminish this great quality of life we have.

Whose job is it to lead in our state?

You’ve got to have great convenors. I think the university can do that. The Piedmont Triad Partnership is a good example. Obviously our chief executive, which is our governor, needs to do that. Our General Assembly leaders, Senator Berger and Speaker Moore, need to be a part of that. It’s up to whoever wants to go forward. We’ve got to convene the right stakeholders and get everybody focused on that same mission, vision and values.

Do you see that type of united effort developing?

I get very frustrated. We’ve had a lot of success but I don’t think our economic development infrastructure is anywhere near where it should be for North Carolina to reach its full potential.

What is your view of the Carolina Core concept?

Carolina Core is a great name. From Winston-Salem to Fayetteville, we’ve got all the things we’ve talked about. Great places to live and work. Great workforce, between the military and our universities, which are well represented. We have the land set aside. To think we have Boom Supersonic on one end and silicon chips on the other and electric vehicles all through that. It was a good name before we knew they were coming and it’s still a good name.

We’ve got to figure out a way to work together. People don’t care where the county line is. We need borders, but most people don’t care if they are in Lee or Chatham County as long as what they need for their company or their families is in the right place.

You’ve shown great interest in environmental issues. Is that unusual for a developer?

To me, they fit together because if you are a good steward of the environment, you are able to sustain the quality of life. It’s a balancing act, and when you are developing, you are grading, you are putting the environment at risk, it’s a risk you have to take, but it’s a calculated risk. I think some of my environmental friends don’t understand that and want to leave everything to nature. But that can’t accommodate the kind of growth that we are going to have. You’re better to be proactive.

What lies ahead for you?

Just trying to make North Carolina a better place and look after my family. We got our first grandchild and I’m excited about that. When I first started at the company, I dropped my keys on the floor and I saw these picture frames under the desk. I pulled them out and my uncle apparently had done this sometime before. It was a quote from Benjamin Franklin that said, “The use of money is the only use there is in having money.” Whether that’s used for a philanthropic intent or economic development or a private enterprise, I enjoy doing that. It’s a passion of mine. That’s what my future is going to be about. ■

7 JANUARY 2023

ENERGIZERS

FIRED BY FIERO

The rush of learning something new, something that seemed impossible, has taken Justine Tiu and Adrian Zhang from a modest $200 investment to a $5 million business in just two years.

They describe Cary-based Woobles as an ed-tech company that teaches the art of crocheting miniature plushies, while combining physical crafting kits with online education. Using the Japanese art of amigurumi simplified into an easy step-by-step process, customers create colorful penguins, dinosaurs and assorted cute critters. The crafting inspires renewed confidence in one’s ability to tackle unknowns.

The couple, who got married in 2021, use a term popular among some gaming enthusiasts, “fiero,” to describe the adrenaline rush of conquering the challenges of starting and now scaling their entrepreneurial venture.

They mainly sell direct to consumers through the company website and Amazon and by wholesale channels to boutique stores and chain retailers. It’s a big shift from their former New York jobs on Wall Street (Zhang at Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan) and in technology (Tiu at Google) before the Duke University graduates returned to North Carolina in 2020.

Amid filling orders for the 2022 holiday rush, Zhang says, “We’re 10 times busier this year. Last year we were packing orders from a single bedroom in my parents’ basement. Now we’re in four warehouses [in Apex.]”

Their fulfillment team has grown from one to eight associates, shipping six, sometimes seven, days a week. As for the business partners-newlyweds, they live, breathe and dream Woobles.

“I don’t even think about how many hours we’re working; pretty much if we’re not cooking, eating, or walking our dog, we’re working,” Tiu says.

While the first two years were a whirlwind, the last six months have accelerated even more dramatically, punctuated with a winning Sept. 30 appearance on the ABC TV network’s “Shark Tank,” publication of a crafting book that became an Amazon bestseller and the launch of Shortcake, their proprietary online learning platform that simplifies the craft process.

The couple were surprised by the opportunity to compete on “Shark Tank,” but even more astounded when business tycoons Mark Cuban and Lori Greiner agreed to invest $450,000 for a 6% stake in Woobles — well above their pitch for $250,000. (The transaction was never completed. “It simply wasn’t the right fit for us,” Tiu says.)

“It was a fantastic experience. We didn’t know what to expect but what you see on TV is exactly what happens there,” Zhang says. They are thrilled with how the prime-time moment catapulted awareness of their company.

In July, Woobles had 14,000 Facebook followers and 34,500 followers on Instagram. By December, their Facebook following topped 37,000 and Instagram, 97,000.

8 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA
Two Duke University graduates craft a success story by inspiring people to learn crochet. Energizers is a new Business North Carolina feature spotlighting enterprising young Tar Heel entrepreneurs.

The book has also raised awareness. Launched in mid-October, “Crochet Amigurumi for Every Occasion: 21 Easy Projects to Celebrate Life’s Happy Moments” became Amazon’s No. 1 book in toy making, No. 1 in stuffed-animal crafts and No. 3 in crochet — all within one month.

Popi Makris, owner of After School Brilliance in Madison in Rockingham County, was hooked by the “Shark Tank” episode. She ordered a kit for her 10-year-old and liked it so much she began selling Woobles at her store, which is about 30 miles north of Greensboro. The kits typically sell for about $30.

“They flew off the shelves,” Makris says. “I ordered two more shipments and then Woobles told me they couldn’t ship more wholesale orders until January. I’ll resume selling them as soon as they’re available.”

Woobles are for sale at a variety of retail settings, including the gift shop at the N.C. Museum of Art and Durham’s Crafts and Drafts N.C. bar. Next on the to-do list is growing the wholesale business through national chains. Canadian retailer Loblaws was the first chain to stock Woobles, while a U.S.–based retailer is expected to soon offer the product.

The biggest challenge for Zhang and Tiu is scaling to meet demand. They see huge growth potential for businesses that effectively combine physical products with online learning. In their case, Shortcake is a series of videos that walks Wooblers through the

learning process as simply as possible. Shortcake’s videos never last more than 60 seconds, which is critical, Tiu says.

“When people try to learn something on YouTube, inevitably what happens is they try to follow along, mess up somewhere, but the video keeps going and suddenly it’s at 10 minutes and they’re still stuck at 30 seconds, so that’s like an impossible place,” she says.

Problem-solving is second nature to the couple, whose engineering backgrounds led them to design their Easy Peasy yarn that effectively eliminates the pesky habit of traditional yarn to fray, snag and undermine every stitch. It’s a hassle that frustrates many would-be knitters. Every Woobles kit utilizes the Chinese-made yarn, while individual skeins can be bought on Amazon.

Now the challenge is finding a textile manufacturer closer to home to speed delivery and support growth.

“Because our yarn is not like regular yarn, we don’t know how to find the right manufacturer in North Carolina,” Zhang says. The complicated aspect is the specialized process to make the yarn, which isn’t adaptable to traditional industry machinery.

“We’d like to talk with anyone interested in doing this because we’d love to bring some of the production to North Carolina,” he says.

Other goals for 2023 and beyond include adding licensed characters, such as Harry Potter or Pokemon, expanding into international markets and, ideally, replacing multiple warehouses with one large one. ■

9 JANUARY 2023
FOUNDERS
Tiu AGES: 33 EDUCATION Duke University bachelor’s degrees: Biomedical engineering and economics (Zhang); electrical engineering, visual arts and German (Tiu) HEADQUARTERS: Cary LAUNCHED: July 2020 EMPLOYEES: 20 ANNUAL REVENUE: $5 million
FACTS Real men wooble! 30% of customers are male. 90% of sales are from the company website. A new Wooble is introduced monthly. Google picked Woobles as the sole N.C. business featured in its 2021 Economic Impact Report.
COMPANY The Woobles
Adrian Zhang and Justine
FUN
PHOTOS BY DYAD PHOTOGRAPHY AND PETER TAYLOR

BEAN BAG BO NANZA

ornhole has become continually more popular since emerging in the 1980s as a favorite game at bars and football tailgates. But only one person, Charlotte’s Stacey Moore, has had the vision to elevate it from a game to a sport.

e 52-year-old commissioner of the American Cornhole League is seven years into a venture that no one, including his friends and family, saw as ending well.

e privately held business has a regular slot with ESPN, where it has periodically attracted more viewers than more established sports. It also has a three-year contract with CBS Sports, a database of 250,000 players in 15 countries, and a stake in manufacturing cornhole boards. Sponsors, including Bacardi, Discount Tire, Johnsonville and Mike’s Hard Lemonade, view cornhole as a savvy pitch to the target market of 21- to 40-year-old males.

“ ere was no one that said, ‘Hey, Stacey, I think this is a great idea,’” Moore says. “Other than cornhole players. ey said, ‘If you can bring us prize money, we’ll come play for your league.’”

In 2015, when he established the ACL, Moore spent $50,000 in prize money. Last year, the company paid out more than $5 million to contestants, including $1 million to tournament winners among the 250 professionals in the league’s top division.

e 1991 graduate of N.C. State University is the son and grandson of textile executives. His grandfather rose from mopping the factory oor to CEO of Reeves Brothers, a New York textile company that had North Carolina plants. His father, William Moore, was a top executive there and later owned Spartanburg, South Carolina-based Sally Foster Gi Wrap, a school fundraising product.

Moore graduated from college a year early to help his family launch the Greensboro Gators professional basketball franchise in Greensboro. It folded a er just one season in the Global Basketball Association.

A er working as portfolio manager for Bank of America and later for his own investment rm, Moore started Tailgating Ventures, which combined his love for sports and game-day fun. What he

discovered was the potential to grow cornhole.

Moore, whose o ce is in Rock Hill, South Carolina, discussed how he saw what nobody else did. is interview was edited for clarity.

How did you land on cornhole?

Everywhere we went, people were playing cornhole way more seriously than other tailgating games. I thought, “What is it about this particular tailgating game that gets everyone so amped up?” I started talking to players who were playing competitively, who wanted to enter in tournaments and play for money, to get to know more about it. e best way to learn is to actually run events. So that’s what I did [with the Carolinas Cornhole Tour in 2013-14].

What were they so passionate about?

Cornhole gets compared a lot to bowling or another recreational sport, but to me it was always more like tennis because you’ve got o ense and defense. You’re throwing a bag and the result of that bag determines the strategy for the next person. ere was a lot more strategy to the sport at the competitive level than people were recognizing. And I enjoyed watching it: the pace of play, the cadence, the interaction between opponents.

What made your league di erent from your peers?

We developed so ware to capture scores and stats and manage events speci c to the sport of cornhole. en being able to display it on television to an audience was the next part.

How did ESPN get into the picture?

[A high school friend] introduced me to one of his buddies who was working at Disney ABC. en I got introduced to someone on the content team at ESPN that I just started pitching. ey gave us a shot on ESPN3 on their digital network. at was in 2016. We were about two months out from the World Championships in 2017, and a person said, “Hey, we’ve got a live slot on ESPN2 on Saturday during your world championships. Do you want to do something?”

10 Entertainment 12 Aviation 14 Investing 18 Automotive 20 Public affairs 22 Statewide
10 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA NC TREND ›››
C
Entertainment
Tossing aside cynics’ doubts, Stacey Moore is lifting cornhole to unexpected heights.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF AMERICAN CORNHOLE LEAGUE
By Carroll Walton

What was your biggest challenge then?

When I got the price of what it was going to take to produce the show, I had sticker shock. I had to nd another sponsor, and I didn’t have a ton of time to do it. I picked ve companies to email on LinkedIn, and [Wisconsin-based sausage company] Johnsonville was one of the ve. (I wrote,) “I’ve got a cornhole broadcast on ESPN coming up and I’m looking for sponsors. Would you be interested?” And he emailed me back, “You had me at cornhole.” It was just timing. It was the right person. A lot of it was luck.

How did the broadcast go?

Within 10 minutes of the opening of the show, we got an email from a producer [at ESPN] saying, “You did this wrong, this wrong, and this wrong.” I thought, “We’re done.” But then halfway through our show, the executive producer said, “Do you have any idea what’s going on Twitter?” I said, “No, I’m just trying to make sure the next player is out of the bathroom and to the board on time.”

What was happening on Twitter?

Twitter erupted about the broadcast and the fact that cornhole was on live TV. A lot of people wanted to make a joke about it and laugh about it. But people tuned in just to see what it’s all about, and then they realized they wanted to keep on watching it. Coming out of that broadcast, ESPN entered into a two-year agreement with us.

Was that your most gratifying moment?

at rst telecast. Running that championship took four days. We didn’t sleep. e people working at it may have gotten an hour or two of sleep a day. Just the stress of not having ever done a linear telecast or know what that’s all about. en to have it blow up like that was pretty crazy. Once all the dust settled that night, it was a really emotional time.

Why was it so emotional?

No one else could see what I was seeing with the sport. Even the people that were working there, friends and everyone else around, no one understood the magnitude of what just happened.

Were you thinking of your late father, knowing he would have been proud?

Yeah, you could say that. By the same token, I may not have done it if he was still alive. He might have talked me out of it. He probably would have been the only person in my family telling me that I was crazy where I probably would have thought, “OK, I’m not going to take the risk on it because he told me it was dumb.”

What’s the closest you’ve come to giving up?

ere were times I thought, nancially, I was going to be forced to pack it up. Once COVID hit, that was one of the times I thought we were done. We were up in Cleveland in March 2020. We’d set up 180,000 square feet, 200 sets of boards, and a broadcast court. Everyone from the production companies, all the players had own in that ursday to start the rst thing Friday morning. ey pulled the plug on us ursday night. We had already paid a ton of money to put on that show, and then we couldn’t execute on it.

How did you pull yourself out of that?

It was probably three or four days, where I thought, “ is thing has just miserably crashed and burned. It’s over.” But then I said, “You know what? We’re going to become the rst live sport back on TV.”

What made you think that?

Our sport has a natural social distance component to it that no other sport has. We developed social distancing rules, pitched them to ESPN and to the governor of South Carolina. We limited the number of players that could come and play to 25-to-30 or 30-to-60, depending on the location. e second place I was targeting was Texas because we needed to get somewhere within driving distance of at least 30 good pros. And we went to Phoenix.

Were you the rst live sport back on TV?

Yes. Ultimate Fighting Championship did an event the same day we did but later in the day, so technically, we were rst. And we were on for seven straight weeks.

Did regular ESPN airtime cause a shock to the heart that ACL needed?

Yeah, people were watching the sport, loving the sport. Our social media went to a di erent level. And that’s when I started getting emails from groups out of New York, saying, “Hey, we got money we’re going to throw your way.” I knew I was going to need investors and other partners, so I listened to three di erent groups. e people I liked best were John ompson III (a former Georgetown University basketball coach who is with Monumental Sports & Entertainment in Washington, D.C.) and his partner Jim Simmons (of Asland Capital Partners in New York). at enabled us to build out the headquarters, invest more money in infrastructure and hire more people. ■

11 JANUARY 2023
Stacey Moore

SKY’S THE LIMIT

everal thousand feet below the approach of a flyExclusive jet into Kinston Regional Jetport, Lenoir County sprawls with farms and forests in one of the state’s least robust areas economically. This, concedes President Tommy Sowers, is an unlikely site to attract former managers at the likes of Delta Air Lines, Spirit Airlines and NetJets, the leader in the business of selling shares of aircra for use by businesses and wealthy individuals.

“But we can offer what companies based in large towns can’t,” says Sowers, who joined the company in July 2021 and has recruited executives from those companies.

e London School of Economics graduate is a former Army Green Beret major. He held senior positions in the U.S. Department of Veterans A airs, taught at Duke University and ran unsuccessfully for a Missouri congressional seat in 2009.

“I tell them if you want to be an anonymous business executive, you’ve got the rest of the world. [In Kinston], you can walk into Lowe’s and people stop you and say, ‘Hey, my cousin works there!’ That’s usually my closing pitch.”

CEO Jim Segrave formed flyExclusive in 2015, five years after he sold a similar charter-jet service to Delta Air Lines for an undisclosed amount.

In October, the Kinston company said it will go public in early 2023 through a combination with a special purpose acquisition company led by New York investor Gregg Hymowitz of EnTrust Global. Segrave will be CEO of the

company, which is expected to be valued at $600 million and trade on the New York Stock Exchange.

The plans come amid turmoil at the company and in the private-jet travel industry. On Dec. 16, flyExclusive cut 50 jobs “to insure the long-term health and success of the company,” Sower said in a staff email. Operations, maintenance and HR units were affected.

Rival JetSuite of Dallas filed for bankruptcy protection in 2020. New York-based Wheels Up Experience, which went public by merging with a special-purpose company, has lost more than $350 million over the last three years. Its shares have slumped from $10 to about $1 since its IPO.

Sowers and Segrave say they can defy the odds. FlyExclusive flew about 43,000 hours in 2021, 75% more than a year earlier and the fastest growth rate of the industry’s four largest companies. The market leader is Berkshire Hathaway’s NetJets, which flew about 470,000 hours.

Jet clubs typically sign fliers to memberships –flyExclusive’s can cost $150,000 or more – for guaranteed future flights.

Over the last two years, flyExclusive’s jet fleet increased from 60 aircraft to about 90, and it is poised to expand after ordering 30 new Cessna Citations in April, for $330 million. They are the first new jets purchased by the company, which like most peers relies on used aircraft. Delivery will occur over five years, Sowers says.

12 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA NC TREND ›››
S
Aviation
PHOTOS COURTESY OF FLYEXCLUSIVE
Jim Segrave’s private-jet company is going public, creating a potential Down East high flier.

Sales are expected to exceed $360 million in 2022 and $530 million this year, with pre-tax operating earnings of $52 million and $63.7 million, respectively, according to flyExclusive.

Demand for charter jet service has grown as affluent people prefer to avoid crowded commercial airports. Meanwhile, the number of used jets for sale is at a record low, which has boosted their value, according to New York investment bank Jeffries Financial Group.

That demand has also prompted flyExclusive’s parent company, LGM Enterprises, to expand its jet-refurbishing business, Jetstream Aviation, which was formed three years ago. About 100 employees were hired in mid-2022 as Jetstream expanded into maintenance of the electronic systems that keep today’s planes in the air.

Overall, Segrave’s businesses employ 750 workers, including more than 500 in North Carolina. Many are parttimers. A 15-member software development team has been organized in the Triangle area. In early October, flyExclusive opened its fourth hangar in Kinston as it plans to handle 80% of its maintenance in-house.

“People put off a lot of travel during the pandemic, and now they want to do it, with minimum trouble and delays, and they want to do it safely,” Sowers says. “We’ve got the highest safety rating in the industry, we own our aircraft and they’re flown by our pilots. If I’m flying loved ones across the country at 500 miles per hour and 43,000 feet, I want to know who’s in the cockpit.” ■

13 JANUARY 2023
Tommy Sowers Jim Segrave

TOP STOCK PICKS FOR 2023

TOP N.C. GAINERS

Take a bow, Frank Jolley! e veteran Rocky Mount investor pulled o an amazing feat, selecting three stocks that paid o during a bloody year in the markets. Shares of Jolley’s picks — Novartis, Nutrien and Honeywell — have each increased over the last year, through midDecember. e S&P 500 Index tumbled 17% in the same period.

It continues a history of success for Jolley, who has participated in Business North Carolina’s annual feature for many years. His typical approach is to favor well-capitalized companies that are out of favor and avoid the more speculative names.

Our other stock pickers hope that no one paid attention to last year’s story. Only one of last year’s 12 other stock picks showed a gain: Walmart, which increased 1%. Ten companies declined more than the S&P Index, including nine that lost more than 25%.

But these folks are gamers, willing to share their thoughts again because investing is a long-term activity. e companies have to be based in North Carolina or have major operations here.

LESSONS LEARNED

Panelist Ann Zuraw made three picks for BNC in 2021 that bombed this year. Don’t beat her up: She’s had success in previous years. But the experience prompted her to share these key investing principles.

Diversify. Do not have a portfolio of only three stocks. Enforce stop-loss rules. While I worked for Bank of America, the trading desk sold a stock if it declined 20%. It was no longer my decision.

ere are always market cycles. When everything has been too good to be true — then it is.

Know your risk tolerance. It is better to go for base hits and not a home run.

Keep investing in public stocks and bonds. Real estate and private equity have done well, but both are illiquid and entail long-term risk.

De ne honestly what long term means to you. My de nition is ve-plus years.

Never give up. Keep studying opportunities. We can gure it out together.

ADVANCE AUTO PARTS (AAP)

Higher interest rates and clientcentered technology and digital offerings position Charlotte-based Bank of America well for the coming year. BofA trades at 10 times earnings. We believe fears of recession and credit fears are priced in the shares, which are down more than 35% from the 52-week high.

in the coming year. Target shares trade at about 16 times forward earnings estimates.

Raleigh-based Advance Auto Parts is a leading retailer of aftermarket auto parts and accessories. The most recent quarter was disappointing, and the shares are trading more than 40% below their January 2022 highs. The shares trade at a large discount to peers AutoZone and O’Reilly Automotive and we would expect shares to recover in 2023. With a strong dividend, investors get paid to wait.

14 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA NC TREND ›››
Investing
BANK OF AMERICA (BAC) MARKET CAP: $254 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD: 2.8%
FRANK JOLLEY Managing director and co-chief investment officer Live Oak Private Wealth Rocky Mount
TARGET (TGT) MARKET CAP: $68 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD 2.9%
The general-merchandise retail company’s shares have suffered in 2022 as bloated inventories, due to supply chain issues, resulted in huge markdowns. We believe the bad news is largely priced in and sets the company up for easy year-over-year comparisons
MARKET CAP: $8.4 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD 4.2%
Liquidia 47 % Nucor 24 Curtiss-Wright 23 Peoples Bank 11 SPX 9
Avaya -97 % Science37 -95 Precision Biosciences -86 LendingTree -83 Glatfelter -80 Data shown for 12 months through Dec. 16.
TOP N.C. DECLINERS

THERMO FISHER SCIENTIFIC (TMO)

MARKET CAP: $218 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD 0.2%

TMO, which already has major N.C. operations, bought Wilmingtonbased PPD in December 2021, adding a clinical research organization to its life sciences and analytics businesses. The company has high levels of recurring revenue due to the consumables used in its testing and diagnostic equipment. During the pandemic, increased testing benefited TMO, but investors have underestimated the staying power of some of that business. COVID testing and treatments have declined, but not nearly as much as some anticipated. Demand for TMO’s non-COVID business should continue to rebound.

DOLLAR GENERAL (DG)

MARKET CAP: $55 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD 0.9%

DG is a retailer with defensive characteristics allowing it to grow in both good and bad economic times. High gasoline prices and elevated inflation set DG up to outperform many retail peers because customers tend to stay closer to home for fill-in grocery trips. Also, in high-inflation periods, DG’s low-price offerings attract higher income customers who normally don’t shop there regularly. With plans to add more than 1,000 stores in 2023, DG has room to grow even if sales per store is more muted.

RAYTHEON TECHNOLOGIES

(RTX)

MARKET CAP: $144 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD: 2.2%

RTX’s commercial aerospace and defense businesses provide the company with a rare combination of short-term stability and longerterm secular growth opportunities. In commercial aerospace, RTX should continue to benefit from a recovery in consumer and business air travel, both in its aftermarket parts sales and with new installations of its Pratt & Whitney Geared Turbofan engine. The defense segment has dealt with myriad supply chain and labor issues in 2022, but RTX is poised to capitalize on significant increases in global defense budgets and strong bookings thanks to its technologically advanced capabilities in air and missile defense systems and electronic warfare.

INSTEEL INDUSTRIES (IIIN)

MARKET CAP: $500 MILLION DIVIDEND YIELD: 0.5%

The Mount Airy-based company is the largest maker of steel-wire reinforcing products used for concrete construction. It has $50 million in cash, property and equipment valued at $250 million and virtually no debt. CEO H.O. Woltz III learned the pitfalls of debt in 2007, having borrowed $140 to enhance growth. A tough economy and a lot of debt is something he probably wants to avoid. The company paid a $2 special dividend in December.

AMAZON (AMZN)

MARKET CAP: $897 BILLION

DIVIDEND YIELD: N.A.

Duke Energy signed a three-year deal with Amazon’s cloud com puting unit to advance power grid and clean energy goals, showing the power of the e-commerce giant. The stock trades for less than $90 after peaking at more than $170, creating a bargain price. Cash is $58 billion, while debt is $164 billion. Andy Jassey is a hyper-competitive CEO. The acquisition of One Medical makes expansion into health care look promising. Don’t ever bet against founder Jeff Bezos.

EDWARDS LIFESCIENCES (EW)

MARKET CAP: $46 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD: N.A.

Edwards, with its heart-valve products in major hospitals, is a phenomenal health care company. It has $1.5 billion in cash and $500 million in debt. CEO Michael Mussallem is a super-smart CEO who cares about peoples’ health. Demand for heart-disease products will increase, including in other nations. Revenue and profit should grow by double digits in 2023, though a strong dollar hurts.

RXO (RXO)

SEALED AIR (SEE)

The Charlotte-based truck brokerage company was spun off in November from Greenwich, Conn.-based XPO. Its connections to a network of independent carriers provides shippers access to capacity for truckload, less-thantruckload and other transportation services. The company’s proprietary technology and highly variable cost structure helps optimize productivity, profit and volume.

Shares declined from about $20 at the IPO to $16 in mid-December.

The Burlington-based company offers nearly 5,000 different tests and operates about 2,000 patient service centers. It has invested in greater automation and information technology to increase efficiency for physicians and patients, which should also lead to improved profit. Shares declined by more than 20% in the last year.

The Charlotte-based company owns food-packaging brands such as Cryovac, Darfresh, and OptiDure, while other products include Bubble Wrap, Instapak and various shrinkfilm packaging systems. In November Sealed Air bought Liquibox for $1.15 billion. It expects earnings growth from the fast-growing Cryovac fluids business. Shares are off more than 25% from previous highs.

15 JANUARY 2023
CHRISTY
MARKET CAP: $1.9 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD: N.A.
LABCORP (LH) MARKET CAP: $20 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD: 1.2%
MARKET CAP: $7.5 BILLION DIVIDEND YIELD: 1.6%
ANN BENJAMIN ZURAW President Zuraw Financial Advisors Greensboro Capital Investment Companies Raleigh

GARAGE GURUS

hen her Filipino family visits Randolph County, Charina Reeder of Asheboro says there’s one clear way to show them “how America feels.” at involves a visit to the Richard Petty Museum and Petty’s Garage in Level Cross in rural Randolph County, 15 miles south of downtown Greensboro.

In the Triad countryside, she is spot on — especially in NASCAR country, where the Petty name has de ned motorsports for generations.

Within a 2-mile radius of the Petty museum and garage are acres of farmland, more than a dozen churches, motorcycle and gun shops, and a couple of mom-and-pop service stations. e sole national brand is Dollar General.

Remarkably, the Petty name is living on 30 years a er the retirement of the most successful driver in NASCAR history, in large part because of the mechanical skills of about 20 technicians who attract a nationwide clientele.

Richard Petty, 85, clocked 200 career wins and seven series championship titles during a career stretching from 1958 to 1992. David Pearson, with a total of 105 wins, is a distant second. Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt matched Petty’s seven NASCAR championship titles, but neither approached 100 wins.

e Petty legacy extends beyond Richard, of course. His father, Lee, won the rst Daytona 500 in 1959 and set records for dirttrack racing before the sport moved to asphalt tracks. His son, Kyle, also had signi cant success in NASCAR between 1979 to 2009.

at legacy draws roughly 15,000 to 20,000 museum visitors annually, while the family’s racing business, Petty Enterprises, was sold and moved to Mooresville in 2008 to be closer to other NASCAR operations. While Richard Petty retains an interest in what is now the Petty GMS, its majority owner since 2021 has been Maury Gallagher, the CEO of Allegiant Air. Jimmie Johnson bought a minority stake in November.

Separately, Petty’s Garage has become a substantial business since its formation in 2008.

e garage has performed work for celebrity car bu s including musician Kid Rock, NFL quarterback Tim Tebow, and rockerturned-racer Brian Johnson of AC/DC fame.

“We work on cars from Texas, Michigan, New York, all across the U.S., and Canada; and people from all over the world order our parts. But the guy 15 minutes up the road doesn’t know we’re here,” says Rebecca Petty Mo tt, Richard’s youngest daughter and executive director of the Petty Family Foundation.

Outside NASCAR, few people may know about their garage. But people who covet high-performance, speed-infused rides, from backyard mechanics to grassroots racers, nd their way along the back roads of Randolph County.

Petty’s Garage has continued the legacy of building highperformance cars at the site where it all began, utilizing a mishmash of buildings encircling the “reaper shed.”

“My grandfather started racing in 1949 and this barn is where they built his cars,” Mo tt says. “ ey called it the reaper shed because the tractor was usually out farming.”

e building is now listed as a historic landmark. It’s miniscule compared to the company’s main multi-bay garage.

18 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA NC TREND ›››
W
Automotive
The Pettys
no longer dominate NASCAR. But family members still lead in revving high-performance cars.
PHOTOS COURTESY
RICHARD PETTY MUSEUM AND
GARAGE
Rebecca Petty Moffitt and her father, Richard Petty.
OF
PETTY’S

“I have the same birthday as the King, July 2,” says a visitor who had driven from his home in Pennsylvania’s Poconos Mountains to see the Petty museum. “Been waiting to meet him for over 30 years. It would be really cool if I could see him.” anking them for their visit, Mo tt says, “Looks like Daddy’s car is over there, so he must be around here somewhere.” She welcomes them to sit by the car and wait.

Richard Petty frequents the property and stays engaged with fans and the industry. Most of his followers are over 55, although Pixar’s animated 2006 movie “Cars,” which featured Petty’s voice for the Plymouth Superbird, has raised his pro le with a younger set.

For all the nostalgia and history packed into the museum, Petty’s Garage is a serious business. A full restoration can run $150,000 to $200,000 and take 18 months or more to complete. A “restomod,” which Mo tt explains is a car that has the classic “old” appearance with modern tech and creature comforts, can be a similar undertaking.

“If you’re looking at supercharging the car, which is more horsepower, it’s usually around $10,000,” she says. “ e highest we’ve done is 1,000 horsepower.”

Wolfgang Schulz, a self-proclaimed “car crazy,” follows NASCAR religiously and collects high-performance cars of all makes and models. His favorite: A 2010 Dodge Challenger, that he hauled from his home near Ottawa, Canada, to Petty’s Garage, where he invested around $40,000 getting the car rebuilt with a new motor, supercharger, sway bars, strut bars — the list goes on.

“I had it painted Plum Crazy Purple, with custom logos on the head rests, Petty oor mats, all kinds of things,” Schulz says. “ at was 2019. Today I expect the same build would cost $55,000 to $60,000. But I got to meet Richard Petty and Dale Inman (Petty’s crew chief) when I picked up the car, and they signed the car with me there.”

Schulz, an operations manager, typically does the mechanical work on his cars. But his 2010 Dodge was always destined for Petty’s signature build.

“We might have a customer bring an $80,000 Hellcat [Challenger] in here and want some modi cations to it, or we can take a $35,000 model and do $40,000 of add-ons to personalize it,” says Greg Steadman, the garage’s chief operating o cer and a former NASCAR crew chief. “We’ve done race car restorations and some expensive classic muscle cars, but now we’re getting a lot of newer cars, 2005 and up.”

Restoration and performance upgrades make up 75% of the revenue with parts sales making up the balance. Plans call for ipping that percentage as capacity at the garage maxes out.

An expanded website, of which 90% of the products are Petty-branded parts, is expected to fuel that transition. “ e parts and components we focus on are top of the line,” Steadman says. “Richard’s brand is built on high performance; we won’t be selling any bottom-shelf parts.”

e company also builds vehicles used by corporations for promotional or charity campaigns. Clients have included Continental Tire, General Tire, and Wyndham Resorts.

“We don’t donate the cars for charity auctions, but we work within their budget,” Mo tt says. “Like they’ll make $150,000 to $200,000 on a car we’ve built for $75,000.”

Wyndham started in 2021 with a Chevy Camaro contest as an incentive aimed at gathering contact information from potential customers. It followed up with a Jeep Rubicon as a prize in 2022, and a Ford Bronco is on tap this year.

“Petty’s Garage already has a solid base in the industry, but it is time to take the business to the next level,” Steadman says.

19 JANUARY 2023
WINS: 200 RICHARD PETTY’S NASCAR RECORDS POLE POSITIONS: 123 MOST LAPS COMPLETED: 307,836 MOST LAPS LED: 51,514 MOST SERIES CHAMPIONSHIPS: 7* *Tied with Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson.
The Pettys opened a museum in 1988 to showcase the NASCAR legend.

NEW COUNTY TIER DESIGNATIONS SHOW CHANGES

e N.C. Department of Commerce released its new “tier” ratings used to assess each county’s level of “economic distress” for economic development programs.

e report serves as a good indication of how each of the 100 counties is faring economically. e rankings factor in the unemployment rate, median household income, population growth and assessed property value per capita.

A total of 90 counties are staying in their current tier, with Tier 1 as the most “economically distressed” and Tier 3 as the most prosperous. Here are the 10 counties that are changing.

IMPROVING TIERS

• Mountainous Avery and Swain counties are moving from Tier Two to Tier ree because of their improving population growth rate.

• Caldwell County is moving from Tier One to Tier Two thanks to a better unemployment rate.

• Cleveland County is moving from Tier One to Tier Two thanks to lower unemployment and higher household income.

• Pasquotank County is shi ing from Tier One to Tier Two due to improvements in household income.

WORSENING TIERS

• Onslow and Transylvania counties are moving from Tier Two to Tier One thanks to a higher unemployment ranking.

• Pitt, Randolph and Surry counties are shi ing from Tier Two to Tier One due to a decline in median household income.

2023 tier designations

Our paid daily newsletter provides detailed interviews with key lawmakers, Q&As of other political leaders and lots of stories tracking daily happenings at the state legislature as the 2023 long session begins later this month.

Here’s some of what you missed. Sign up today at nctribune.com

MCHENRY, FOXX IN LINE FOR KEY COMMITTEE CHAIR POSTS

As most expected, U.S. Rep. Patrick McHenry was picked by GOP leaders to serve as chair of the House Financial Services Committee next year. He’s been the ranking Republican on the committee.

“As chairman, I will pursue an innovation and opportunity agenda,” he said in a news release. “We will focus our e orts on conducting appropriate and aggressive oversight of the Biden administration, as well as pursuing bipartisan legislation to put Americans back in control of their personal nancial data, enhance capital formation opportunities, and develop a comprehensive regulatory framework for the digital asset ecosystem.”

McHenry might not be the only member of the North Carolina delegation with a powerful gavel next year. U.S. Rep. Virginia Foxx could chair the House Education and Labor Committee. Politico reports that she got a waiver to run for that position, avoiding term limit rules.

NC TREND ››› 20 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA
source: North Carolina Department of Commerce
1
Public affairs

FCC’S BROADBAND MAPS COULD BE INACCURATE

The Federal Communications Commission recently released a draft of its new broadband infrastructure maps, which it calls “the best picture available to date of where broadband is and is not available across the country.”

The maps online paint a surprisingly rosy picture of high-speed internet availability in North Carolina, labeling most areas as having “100% coverage” with the exception of a few sparsely populated spots near the coast and in the far western mountains.

It’s also not an accurate picture, according to the N.C. Department of Information Technology’s Division of Broadband and Digital Equity.

“It overstates broadband‘s availability even more than the FCC’s current maps,” deputy secretary Nate Denny says. He said the data factors in the availability of satellite internet, and while that’s a piece of the broadband puzzle, “it’s not necessarily reliable yet and it’s not necessarily affordable yet.”

Denny says he’s hopeful the FCC will make major improvements in the maps before they’re used to determine future federal funding allocations for broadband. His agency will weigh in with the data it has collected. “It’s a good step in the right direction, but it needs a lot more work” he said.

Fortunately, state government doesn’t have to wait for the mapbased federal $42 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment, or BEAD, program, to launch before it makes major strides in expanding broadband access.

The GREAT grant program has issued $270 million in new grants in recent months, and now NCDIT is working on the new Completing Access to Broadband program, which will involve partnerships with county governments.

LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE FAVORS MORE COMPUTER EDUCATION

Should computer science classes be required as one of the UNC System’s undergraduate admission requirements?

The N.C. House Select Committee on Advancing Women in STEM is considering the change. The committee, formed this year and led by Rep. Erin Paré, R-Wake, wrapped up its work by recommending two draft bills for this year’s long session.

One of the bills would require the UNC Board of Governors to study “whether to incorporate one or more computer science courses into the minimum course requirements for admission as an undergraduate student.” UNC leaders would report their findings to a legislative oversight committee.

The bill comes after the committee heard a presentation from the N.C. Department of Public Instruction that the state has “close to 30,000 unfilled jobs that require some type of computer science and, by 2040, more than 70% of all jobs will require a background in computer science.”

The committee’s report also encourages the legislature to increase computer science course availability in K-12 schools by offering stipends and higher pay to teachers who train to teach those classes.

The second draft bill would appropriate $1 million to create a competitive grant program to expand middle-school STEM offerings. As many as 20 school districts would receive some the funding. ■

21 JANUARY 2023
“Serving the Carolinas for 39 years”

TRUE BELIEVERS

Betting on the popularity of protein grown in a lab instead of a farm, Israel’s Believer Meats plans to set up shop in Wilson with a factory that entails an investment of more than $123 million.

e company expects to add 100 jobs at a 200,000-square foot plant at the Wilson Corporate Park that would be the largest of

its kind globally. e company was founded by Professor Yaakov Nahmias in 2018 and is led by CEO Nicole Johnson-Ho man, a former executive of major beef suppliers OSI Group and Cargill. It has raised nearly $400 million from about 20 investors, according to the Crunchbase website.

Believer’s proprietary process combines biotechnology and agriculture to create products with a goal of sustainability as more consumers opt for healthier foods. e system involves the use of bioreactors, which enable chemical processes that lead to alternatives to traditional farm-grown meat.

Global revenue for alternative meats, including plant-derived products and animal meat grown from cells in labs, is expected to double to $12 billion by 2029, according to the Fortune Business Insights research rm. Still, demand for meat substitutes made by Beyond Meat and others has slowed this year as costs have increased signi cantly.

Believer says its average annual salary of about $60,000 will produce an annual payroll topping $5 million. It’s the company’s rst large-scale food manufacturing facility, following a pilot plant in Rehovot, Israel.

Gov. Roy Cooper says the expansion speaks to the state’s innovative research and development e orts for food technology startups. Regulatory approval is still required for the new plant.

e One North Carolina Fund will support the new location through a $500,000 performance-based grant. ■

impacted company-wide, including 530 employees who worked in multiple Triad facilities in North Carolina.

e decision came as a result of “unforeseen business circumstances,” a company email noted. Some a ected employees in Mississippi and California have initiated lawsuits for lost wages. Retailers remain uncertain regarding equipment and inventory.

United Board Chair David Belford, in a statement provided to the Columbus Business First newspaper in Ohio, said the company’s board was not aware of its severe nancial problems until it was too late. “ is is not the outcome anyone could ever have imagined,” he said.

LANE COLLAPSES

United Furniture Industries, whose business included the venerable Lane Furniture brand, laid o its entire workforce in late November through email and text a er suddenly halting operations in California, Mississippi and North Carolina. More than 2,700 workers were

Remaining sta are working with lenders to handle the liquidation, with hopes that some proceeds can be distributed to former employees and creditors, Belford said. He owns an investment rm, a $23 million home in Naples, Florida, and once donated $10 million to a spinal cord injury research center at Ohio State University, according to the New York Post

e Lane family started the company in Altavista, Virginia in 1912 and diversi ed into tables, casegoods and reclining chairs. United Furniture bought Lane from Heritage Home Group in 2017. ■

22 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA NC TREND ››› Statewide
COURTESY OF BELIEVER MEATS
PHOTO

CHARLOTTE

CHARLOTTE

The Skiptown pet services startup received $27 million in new funding for expansion plans. Maggie Williams started the company in 2018 and has created dog and cat care operations in eight cities. Investors include Focus Impact Partners, Meaningful Partners and former Dave & Buster’s CEO Steve King.

Atrium Health closed its combination with Illinois-based Advocate Aurora Health to create Advocate Health, which operates in six states and ranks as the fifth-largest U.S. nonprofit health care system. National Gypsum CEO Tom Nelson will chair the board.

Former Mars executive Jeremiah Ashukian will succeed Josh Charlesworth as Krispy Kreme’s CFO. Charlesworth will remain global president.

Richard Matheiu was named president of Johnson & Wales University’s local campus. He has been dean of Queens University’s McColl School of Business.

KINGS MOUNTAIN

Catawba Two Kings Casino may face fines and possible closure for violating gaming laws, according to a National Indian Gaming Commission report. It notes that the Catawba Indian Nation failed to submit required contracts for approval.

NEWTON

Pasta Piccinini will move its U.S. production, operations and corporate office here from Pasadena, California. It plans a $6 million investment and 27 jobs with an average salary of $48,000.

CLINTON

Donna Bullard is the new CEO of Star Communications based here. She succeeds Jeffrey Nethercutt, who held the position since August 2017 and had worked for the company for nearly 30 years. Bullard joined Star in 1998.

FOUR OAKS

Johnston County leaders plan to contribute $17.5 million for a jobtraining center here in an effort to attract advanced manufacturers. Johnston Community College will use 70% of the 60,000-square-foot building.

Albemarle Corp. is adding a $180 million R&D center in Charlotte that is expected to create at least 200 jobs. Salaries will average around $94,000 with research focused on lithium use in electric-vehicle batteries.

Skyla Credit Union, based here, agreed to merge with California-based Parsons Federal Credit Union, creating a $1.4 billion asset group. The move adds three offices in California and Virginia. Charlotte Metro and Greensboro-based Premier Federal Credit Union combined to form Skyla in 2021.

CHARLOTTE

Coca Cola Consolidated, the biggest U.S. soft-drink bottler, raised its quarterly cash dividend to 50 cents per share and is paying a special dividend of $3 per share. CEO J. Frank Harrison III credited the company’s strong financial performance.

23 JANUARY 2023
EAST
COURTESY OF ALBEMARLE CORP; KRISPY
DOUGHNUTS; LS3P; COCA COLA CONSOLIDATED
PHOTOS
KREME

LELAND

Cape Fear Commercial’s Bryce Morrison and Lindsey Hess have partnered with SAMM Properties on The Offices & Shoppes of Waterford. Construction is planned to start early this year.

WILMINGTON

Dark Horse Studios, which is based here, plans a $20 million expansion starting in March. Additions include two 40,750-square-foot sound stages.

TRIAD

CLEMMONS

Pool equipment manufacturer Hayward Holdings is cutting 57 jobs at its factory here. The Charlotte-based company is the town’s biggest private employer with more than 1,000 workers.

GREENSBORO

Florida Turbine Technologies was named as the engine developer for Boom Supersonic’s Overture aircraft. The partnership was announced as site preparation is under way for Boom’s planned $500 million, 400,000-square-foot factory at Piedmont Triad International Airport.

HIGH POINT

Local CPA firm Smith Leonard acquired the Hickory-based Whisnant & Co. accounting firm. Smith Leonard also has offices in Lexington and Winston-Salem and now has about 100 employees.

MOUNT AIRY

Scott Jafroodi succeeded Mark Carano as CFO of steel wire manufacturer Insteel Industries. Jafroodi was previously the chief accounting officer.

WINSTON-SALEM

Krispy Kreme will add 180 jobs in a $5.8 million expansion focused on its Branded Sweet Treats line. The average pay will average $17 an hour.

Novant Health CEO Carl Armato received a 10% increase in overall compensation to $4.47 million for the 2021 fiscal year. His base salary grew by 16.7%.

WINSTON-SALEM

Nelipak, a health care packaging manufacturer, plans to open an $11.8 million, 110,000-square-foot plant that will create 79 jobs The Cranston, Rhode Island.-based company said the plant will serve as a flagship location. Pay will average $57,500 annually.

Truliant Federal Credit Union surpassed $4 billion in total assets and 300,000 members. Formed to serve Western Electric workers in 1953, it exceeded $1 billion in assets in 2005. It has expanded to Charlotte and Greenville, South Carolina.

24 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA NC TREND ››› Statewide
PHOTOS COURTESY OF DARK HORSE STUDIOS; NELIPAK; BOOM SUPERSONIC; TRULIANT

TRIANGLE

CHAPEL HILL

Michael Andreasen will succeed

Routh as UNC Chapel Hill’s vice chancellor for development. Andreasen previously served as University of Oregon’s vice president for university advancement.

Canada-based Titan Medical will temporarily furlough 40 employees at its facility here. e medtech company has been assessing plans for a potential sale, merger or other alternatives.

DURHAM

G1 erapeutics raised $50 million through a stock o ering with plans to invest in more clinical trials. e oncology company received FDA approval for its Cosela oncology drug.

ROCKY MOUNT

Idaho-based Woodgrain plans to invest $7.5 million to expand here and create 42 additional jobs. e building products company has seven N.C. facilities.

RALEIGH

State Treasurer Dale Folwell said BlackRock CEO Larry Fink should resign or be removed at the New York company that manages about $9.5 trillion. He cited “Wacktivism,” because of Fink’s focus on environmental, social and corporate governance initiatives. BlackRock says it receives criticism from both progressives and conservatives.

Developer Ho man & Associates has started construction on a 149-room Hyatt House hotel at its downtown Seaboard Station development. e project will include a restaurant and a roo op bar as part of the project’s second phase.

WENDELL

New Jersey-based medical testing company Catalent is adding more than 200 jobs here in a ve-year, $40 million expansion. State o cials approved an $805,000 incentive if the company meets its hiring targets over eight years.

Oppidan Investment’s plan for a 257-acre development was approved by the local board. Plans for the $350 million mixed-use development project include a grocery story, commercial and retail space and multifamily units. Former Carolina Hurricane player Tim Brent is the company’s executive vice president of the Southeast.

WILSON

Cyemptive Technologies opened a regional o ce here to support East Coast clients. e Snohomish, Wash.-based cybersecurity company is led by Microso veteran Rob Pike.

25 JANUARY 2023
David
COURTESY OF WOODGRAIN; CATALENT; TOWN OF WENDELL
PHOTOS

WEST

CULLOWHEE

Graduate tuition at Western Carolina University will increase 3% in the 2023 school year. Undergraduate tuition, which is capped at $500 per semester under the N.C. Promise plan will remain unchanged.

HENDERSONVILLE

Lassonde Industries, which makes fruit drinks, is expanding here with a $55 million investment that will add about 30 jobs. The company’s 135 staffers produce more than 200,000 gallons per day.

ASHEVILLE

26 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA NC TREND ››› Statewide
Asheville Mall, which is owned by New York-based Kohan Retail Investment Group, is now at 90% store occupancy. Last August, the mall was purchased for $62 million after the previous owner, CBL Properties, filed for bankruptcy in 2020.

LEGISLATIVE OUTLOOK

Leaders in some of the state’s key industries sat down to discuss issues they’ll be monitoring in the upcoming legislative session. Incentives and new tactics for addressing the dire shortage of employees are at the top of the list. Expanding training programs at high schools and community college could be part of the solution. Also, expect to see a continued push for expanding Medicaid, changes in the state’s alcohol distribution system and more effective public-private partnerships.

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Peter Gwaltney CEO, North Carolina Bankers Association Tim Kent executive director, North Carolina Beer & Wine Wholesalers Association Steve Lawler president and CEO, North Carolina Healthcare Association

North Carolina Beer & Wine Wholesalers Association, North Carolina Healthcare Association, State Employees Association of North Carolina and NC Bankers Association sponsored the discussion. It was moderated by Colin Campbell, editor of N.C. Tribune and Business North Carolina. It was edited for brevity and clarity.

TELL US ABOUT YOUR TOP ISSUES AND GOALS ENTERING THE 2023 LEGISLATIVE SESSION.

SALAMIDO: North Carolina is growing and attracting business. We have good balanced policies, but we have more jobs than we do people. So the question is how do we create and align our education and talent supply and workforce systems to not only train our young people for these jobs, but how do we address the adult learning community? Veterans and spouses of veterans? What do we do with “second chance” hiring? How do we address the folks who, through the pandemic, have reassessed their jobs? How do we get them trained and educated for the jobs of today and tomorrow?

We also want to preserve and protect the tax climate that we have

and all those things that go into the cost of a job. We’re watching the regulatory sides of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative and the new executive order the governor put out about trucks. There’s great innovation. We think innovation does best when it has limited government regulation around it. We’ve got to do better in the state on finding solutions for small businesses to come together. Businesses want to take care of their people, and they want to provide health care. They want to be competitive. The state is continuing to diversify our transportation infrastructure as we’re growing along with other infrastructure pieces like water, sewer and broadband, and computer hardware.

As we attract these larger businesses, what are we doing to make sure that those small businesses can thrive? We always have to take a look at the franchise tax, for lack of a better description, it’s a statewide property tax, everybody pays before they sell one thing on their own. So we are continuing to look at making that competitive and eventually, get rid of it all together. We want to stay competitive on our personal income taxes. On the corporate income tax side, we’re pretty competitive right now.

THE CHAMBER RECENTLY WROTE AN OPED ON POTENTIAL CHANGES TO FUNDING ROADS AND TRANSPORTATION BECAUSE OF CONCERNS OVER THE GAS TAX. WHAT’S THE SOLUTION THERE?

SALAMIDO: The more diversified, the better and the less reliant you are on one or two or three things. So we had some good success last year, allocating a percentage of (vehicle-related) sales tax receipts to transportation funding was a big win. I think looking at an access user fee is a good idea. But there are a lot of good options out there. How do we look at public private partnerships? There aren’t enough resources for the government to do it all alone. So how do we structure those public-private partnerships differently?

So we had some good success last year, allocating a percentage of sales tax receipts to transportation funding was a big win.

WHAT’S HAPPENING OF NOTE IN YOUR WORK, STEVE?

LAWLER: We’re coming off a threeyear, unprecedented event in health care. The pandemic showed the stress

29 JANUARY 2023
Gary Salamido president and CEO, NC Chamber Dave Simpson president and CEO, Carolinas AGC Ardis Watkins executive director, State Employees Association of North Carolina

and pure volume of work within the field. So folks who had thought about retiring, they decided that it was just time to do so. Our top priority is making sure that we have a way to recruit and retain the best talent. That means creating a workforce environment that’s safe and healthy. Right now health care organizations have the highest incidence of workplace violence, more than any other business minus the prison system.

When we have programs to recruit and retain the best kids coming out of school, there’s a really high likelihood of them staying in state. So it takes working with local school systems to really elevate STEM programs that get kids interested in science and health care and working to provide scholarships for those kids.

Stabilizing our current health care ecosystem is really important. These past three years have been the most difficult three years in the history of health care in North Carolina.

You know, right now, you know, the average operating margin for hospitals is almost negative 4%. So there are significant pressures on hospitals and health systems financially.

We look for innovative ways to support hospitals to ensure that they’re able to continue to be an active part of that community, especially in rural communities where many hospitals are the top three employers.

Medicaid expansion is really important. It creates coverage for 600,000 North Carolinians. It brings millions of dollars into the state, that we can purpose for jobs. There’s

also a program at the federal level, the Healthcare Access Protection Program, which allows the state to draw down additional federal dollars.

We know that when people are healthier, health care costs less. We’re able to keep dollars in their pocket, and we’re able to help employers reduce the cost of care as well.

WHAT PROSPECTS DO YOU SEE FOR MEDICAID EXPANSION THIS YEAR?

LAWLER: We’re grateful for leadership in the House and Senate for introducing Medicaid expansion into their budgets and their conversations in 2022. So we’re encouraged. We’re going into 2023 committed to working with our elected officials to find pathways to get that done.

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HOSPITALS?

LAWLER: I think taking advantage of the things that worked during the public health emergency and making that standard practice is really important. Telehealth is really an added value as we found out for small communities and allows those small communities to deliver high quality care. So investments in kind of laying that last mile of (broadband) wire are really important, and then making sure that telehealth is available and funded from a payment parity perspective. Medicaid expansion will help create sustainability in the future for those small hospitals.

INDUSTRY.

SIMPSON: It is a huge one. We’ve been involved with two tricked-out tractor trailers that will visit with 40,000 students in North Carolina next year and with similar efforts in South Carolina, pushing construction and other skills that people are not necessarily going to get at four-year colleges but make for a really good career.

And I’d like to point out that on Nov. 8, voters approved every referendum for construction on the statewide ballots — about $4.7 billion total. And everybody wants to live in North Carolina and South

Carolina. You can drive throughout the Carolinas and see tower cranes on building sites and orange traffic cones in the work zones all over the place, and utility work is booming.

We need to get people into the workforce and get them excited about doing what needs to be done. The legislature was very generous to us, awarding to our CAGC Foundation $5.5 million to help with the workforce shortage in the construction industry. We will use that for a statewide training effort focused on minorities, with help from the community colleges.

I will say community colleges are doing an outstanding job in North Carolina in offering training and I’m starting to feel momentum is picking up.

One thing that I’m a little concerned about and we haven’t yet

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ON THE HOSPITAL STABILITY ISSUE, ARE THERE THINGS THAT THE LEGISLATURE SHOULD BE DOING TO HELP RURAL
DAVE, IT SOUNDS LIKE THE WORKFORCE IS PROBABLY GOING TO BE A BIG ISSUE FOR THE CONSTRUCTION

taken a position on it, is the medical marijuana issue. We are concerned about the prospect of people perhaps being legally able to use marijuana, and they’re working on job sites.

TIM, WHAT ARE WE LOOKING AT ON THE ALCOHOL, BEER AND WINE REGULATORY FRONT?

KENT: The hospitality industry took a big hit during the pandemic, like so many other industries. And thankfully, things are returning to normal, but the kinds of challenges that we face, you can boil them down to workforce, fuel prices and supply chain. We’re having trouble hiring CDL (commercial driver’s license) drivers and retaining CDL drivers in a highly competitive situation. Companies like Amazon and others are hiring them up. We have record prices right now for diesel, which is another big challenge.

We’ve worked very closely with Rep. Tim Moffitt, who is soon to be a senator. He has been very active trying to modernize the alcohol and liquor system in the state. And in doing it in a responsible way to make things more efficient. Three bills that were passed in the last session [that led to] 40 different changes made to the alcohol laws. I would expect that there’s going to be one or more omnibus bills in the next two years. Rep. Moffitt primarily wants to make the ABC liquor system more efficient, and make it more capable to meet growing consumer demand. He’s made a couple of trips to Kentucky during the off-season to try to become more fluent on what are some of the challenges facing distillers and liquor supply system.

There’s a very old ABC warehouse, located out in Garner that is just

absolutely overloaded and incapable of meeting all of the needs of the system right now. So I think there’s probably going to be some talk about modernizing the existing warehouse system or building a new one. The [alcohol] system generates $650 million a year for state and local governments. And if you have a more efficient system, it can produce more money for the state. So I think that’s where we’re going to be focused.

What we don’t want is disruption. Because there’s been enough disruption since March of 2020. We would like to have things settled and let us do our work and help provide the products to 20,000 retail permittees. We’ve got a vibrant system across the state with more than 400 craft breweries and 200 wineries. We’ve got a growing distilling business. We just need to let people operate.

ARDIS, WHAT DOES THE STATE EMPLOYEE LANDSCAPE LOOK LIKE?

WATKINS: It’s the same refrain of not being able to get people to take jobs. Vacancy rates are high. At prisons it’s over 50%. There are some prisons with a Sonic (burger store) down the road where you can make the same or better money. So why would you put your life on the line? Not that the work at Sonic is easy, but it’s less dangerous.

The overall [state employment] vacancy rate is around 20%. That affects not only the rest of the state employees who are supposed to (pick up extra work), it affects every taxpayer. They’re paying taxes and getting 20% less services.

We do hope to continue to build that bridge to business to realize we all have to work together because

without a solid infrastructure you won’t have successful businesses. Certainly in prisons and in health and human services facilities, but even when you get on an elevator, you need state employees to not only be there and not have too many vacancies, but you need them to be adequately compensated and respected.

And I know union is a bad word. We’re an advocacy group for workers. Workers in business need to get together. Employers need to do what they can with their resources to treat employees in a way that makes them not get more training and leave. They need to want to stay and give a valuable contribution.

There are jobs where the state is paying a perfectly competitive wage. There are definitely some large gaps and again, we keep coming back to prisons because that’s, I think, what gets the most attention. We are woefully lacking compared to any other state. I’m thankful to Sen. (Phil) Berger because a few years ago, they gave some law enforcement benefits to correctional officers. But we need to complete that process and get them recognized properly as law enforcement across the board. These are some of the toughest jobs in this state. We’re going to have to get some serious retention bonuses in some of these agencies.

LAWLER: Just to tack on to that, I think mental health is a priority for everyone. Our mental health system in North Carolina is broken. We have an opportunity coming off a pandemic, to think differently and say how can we change this to make this better, versus exhaling, and just going back to the way that it was before. On any given day, you’ve got HHS employees that are dealing with behavioral health patients who are

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showing up to work and concerned for their own safety. But even more tragic, we’ve got hundreds of people sitting in emergency departments, including children, that are there for days at a time waiting for placement. So I think it’s the collective work of all North Carolinians to build a better behavioral health system that has better access to care. Medicaid expansion helps with that. But a lot of it is funding and making sure we’ve got the right dollars going to the right place.

WHAT IS THE N.C. BANKERS ASSOCIATION LOOKING AT THIS YEAR?

GWALTNEY: I’m glad to go last, because we’re all so interconnected. The banking industry in North

Carolina is really the backbone of our economy. Our banks only do as well as the local economies and the broader North Carolina economy, so we stand shoulder to shoulder with the NC Chamber on these larger economic issues and public policy issues. We’re one of the major banking states in the country and Charlotte is the second-largest banking center, so we are very involved in advocacy at the national level. Most banking policy is affected at the national level in Congress and in the federal regulatory agencies. In our state legislature, we are more focused on what we refer to as technical bills. They’re important to bankers and customers, because our banking laws have to keep up with innovations technology and

changes in how customers want to work with banks. We also work closely with our state regulator, the Office of Commissioner of Banks, and our top priority in this session will be the nomination and confirmation of our banking commissioner. That’s a four-year position nominated by the governor, confirmed by the Senate. We have a great commissioner in Katherine Bosken. We’ll be working for her reconfirmation as well as a basket of technical bills. North Carolina has always had very progressive banking laws. It’s why we are a major banking state, so we’re always looking at being right where we need to be to make sure that we’re attractive for banks to want to do business here. We have 87 banks doing business in the state from some

33 JANUARY 2023

of the nation’s largest banks to very small banks, and 43 of those banks are headquartered here. More than half of the banks in our state have come from out of state to acquire North Carolina banks, because they want to participate in this economy. They want it to be where there’s growth. And that’s why these larger economic issues, whether it’s transportation, education, early childhood reading, and health care are all important to us, because our banks are only as strong as our economy.

LET’S TALK ABOUT THE STATE BUDGET. WHAT ARE YOUR PRIORITIES?

SALAMIDO: It is continuing to invest in our education and talent supply system, our K-12 education, making sure our young people can read by third grade. If they can’t read, nothing else matters. We look at our high schools and how to get our young people trained. How do we prepare our young people for a post-secondary career of their choice, whatever that looks like.

We talked about it a little bit earlier, getting creative on all types of infrastructure and putting in longterm plans. The state did a great job with the STIP (State Transportation Improvement Program). That same

methodology can be used for water and sewer or broadband.

WATKINS: We always have to have a (State) Health Plan fund and that plan is marching towards potentially being in the red in about three years. So we have to try to make sure we get enough money for the health plan and to fund the retirement system.

For years, if you took a job with the state, you knew that you weren’t gonna make as much, but the benefits made up for that. But that’s not turning out to be the case for our newer retirees. They’re seeing their retirement look a lot different than they had ever envisioned.

I’m not sure exactly how it will play on the budget, but the issue we’re all having in terms of workers, finding workers and getting jobs filled. A lot of that seems to be wrapped around younger workers and what they’re looking for versus what we’re all used to providing. Things like health care or retirement benefits are not necessarily doing the trick. So we’re having to try to figure out how to reinvent ourselves. So that’s part of the work we want to do with the legislature is figure out what kind of things in the budget we can do to make public state employment look more attractive to some of the younger workers.

KENT: The one budget issue we have would be making some sort of investment in the ABC system to get a warehouse that is more efficient, more modernized to address consumer demand. We’re less involved on the appropriation side and more involved on the finance side. We’re concerned about tax law, both as it affects personal income and corporate levels, but also the excise tax. We deliver $160 million dollars a year back to the state so we work with the Revenue Department and the finance chairs on those issues.

DAVE, ARE THERE MORE THINGS THAT CAN BE DONE AT THE STATE LEVEL TO HELP GET MORE PEOPLE INTERESTED IN CONSTRUCTION JOBS?

SIMPSON: Anything that can be done to get the high schools and the community colleges focused on what work is out there to get them to provide the badly needed work is smart ball. I just came back from a national construction meeting, and one of the speakers said that there are 10 million job openings in the United States right now –and 7 million people at home who could work but are choosing not to. It’s just mind boggling. We’ve got all these needs here. And we’re all representing industries and

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businesses and organizations that do great things for the public and for safety and our quality of life. And we need to be able to get people plugged in to making careers out of rewarding opportunities.

STEVE, ARE THERE MAJOR BUDGET INITIATIVES YOU WOULD LIKE TO SEE?

LAWLER: Well, I think, picking up on Medicaid expansion, hospitals have said that we will take on the responsibility for the nonfederal share, which, you know, is significant, it’s close to half a billion dollars a year in commitment that hospitals are making to get that across the finish line. So those two things are important because they impact behavioral health and impact jobs. Health care makes up 6% of the

GDP. So as we think about it, how do we protect that 6% and make sure it’s there for today and tomorrow and future generations?

I think we need targeted funding within our community colleges, to help underwrite the education for people that we need in specific sectors. There are states in the country, where if you’re going into health care, or if you’re going into a state agency that requires a community college degree, your education is paid for, and it’s paid back by years of service. So I think we need that kind of forward thinking.

GWALTNEY: I’m all about investing in things that are working. We are blessed in North Carolina to have a great community college system. One in particular is Blue Ridge Community College in Henderson County. They have a number of apprenticeship

programs, ranging from construction to banking. They reach into the high schools, talk about careers, show students what’s available to them, and then those students can get jobs as apprentices in the industries they’ve chosen while they pursue their education. It’s a brilliant model that should be replicated.

WATKINS: But at the same time, our community college faculty salaries are among the lowest in the country, and by a significant amount. And so if you want to excite young people, you have to have an overall solid program. And I think we’ve just been reluctant to the extent we’re going to have to bite the bullet and make some significant investments. We definitely need to fund our university system properly as well. ■

35 JANUARY 2023

A version of this article was published by The Assembly website.

36 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA
Against the odds, Appalachian State University retains a winning football tradition. Are there clues for others in the cash-crazed sport?
COURTESY OF APPALACHIAN
UNIVERSITY
PHOTO
STATE

When Appalachian State University’s football team went to College Station, Texas, and beat Texas A&M in September, football fans, analysts and bettors were shocked. A&M was ranked sixth in the nation, and App State is a much smaller school in a less prestigious conference.

It was a big story for a few days, recalling the even more shocking upset of Michigan in 2007, when App State was in an even smaller conference. Making the story even more compelling was that A&M paid App State $1.5 million to entice the Mountaineers to show up; instead of getting an easy win, the Aggies paid to lose on their home field.

national aspirations in football. Can they remain relevant, or do they have to jump to the SEC or Big Ten? Fans and deeppocketed boosters expect these football teams to compete for ACC championships and sometimes be Top 25 or even Top 10 programs. How do athletic directors say, “Sorry, we don’t have the money to keep up with Alabama?"

A resort at Texas A&M

But it may not be all about the money. When App State played Texas A&M, it was playing a much better-funded football program on a much larger campus, with more than 68,000 students to App State’s 20,400. Texas A&M spent $36.6 million on football in the year that ended August 2021, according to federal Department of Education reports. App State spent $8.5 million.

The difference is partly coaching salaries. Jimbo Fisher, the Texas A&M coach, makes $9 million a year, making him the sixth-highest-paid college football coach. Shawn Clark, App State’s head coach, makes about $900,000, plus some incentives, according to the USA Today coaching salary database.

The sports world moved on. But I was curious. Usually, teams with deep pockets win against competitors with fewer resources, unless those competitors have figured something out.

Answering the question of what App State has figured out turns out to be important for much of college football, for these are turbulent times. The richest programs are growing richer with new TV money, threatening to relegate the rest to a sideshow.

College football has been dominated by what are called the Power Five conferences: the Southeastern Conference (SEC), including Texas A&M; the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC); the Big Ten; the Pac-12; and the Big 12. App State is in the Sun Belt Conference, one of the five other athletic conferences that play in college football’s top division.

In the past 18 months, the tectonic plates of the Power Five have shifted as Texas, Oklahoma, UCLA and USC have switched to the SEC or Big Ten. The aftershocks have rippled everywhere, especially in North Carolina.

The Big Ten and SEC were already taking in hundreds of millions more than the other three Power Five conferences, and distributing more to their members. The gap will get larger as two dominant leagues will have more cash for coaching salaries and swanky facilities for top recruits. Conferences like the ACC, with members including UNC Chapel Hill, N.C. State, Wake Forest and Duke, will struggle to keep up.

And that raises the stakes for ACC schools that have

As of 2021, the assistant coaches at Texas A&M made five times their App State counterparts in total salary, $7.6 million versus around $1.5 million. The App State assistant-coach salaries ranged from around $100,000 to $300,000; the Texas A&M assistants made from around $375,000 to $2.1 million.

So App State hires less pricey assistants who are on the way up and other coaches who want the Boone lifestyle.

It also keeps a rein on game-day spending – what it takes to get players suited up, transported, housed and fed for games. Texas A&M was spending $4.7 million annually, compared with App State’s $1.4 million.

Facilities also matter because they can drive up operating expenses. Based on photos and video on the football program’s web pages, App State has decent but not ornate athletic facilities that look like normal locker rooms and weight rooms.

Texas A&M’s facilities look like a resort. Players have a spacious lounge filled with TVs and video game consoles. There’s

37 JANUARY 2023
App State at the University of Michigan, 2007.
PHOTO COURTESY OF TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
Texas A&M.'s facilities wow recruits., but wins don't always follow.

a barbershop. A snack bar. A high-tech weight room with dumbbells stamped with a map of Texas. An indoor field with artificial turf to practice lateral movement. A studio for the SEC Network. Club Aggie doesn’t run itself — all this has to be staffed.

And then there is Kyle Field, which can seat more than 100,000 for big games. App State has Kidd Brewer Stadium, which seats 30,000 but can squeeze more on the grass. In September, a crowd of more than 40,000 saw App State lose to UNC, 63-61. (Yes, App State almost beat ACC and SEC teams on successive weekends. The Tar Heels spent $30 million on football, roughly 3.5 times App State’s football budget.)

Crazy work ethic

Since it moved up to Division I-A in 2014, App State has been successful in the Sun Belt and beyond. From 2015 to 2021, it went 73-19, with six bowl wins and four Sun Belt titles, making App State the winningest I-A program in North Carolina during those years.

In 2019, App State went 13-1, beat UNC and South Carolina (in Chapel Hill and Columbia, to boot) and finished 19th in the Associated Press poll. Despite the win against Texas A&M and the near-miss against UNC, App State finished 6-6 this year and was ineligible for a bowl game. Its losses were close and App State is in the tough Sun Belt.

Given the historic success and average attendance of 33,600 this year, a move to a bigger conference with more TV money would seem like a no-brainer. But the sparse population of the Boone area doesn’t impress the networks that invest heavily in conferences. UNC Charlotte, which is in an attractive media market, is moving into the more prominent American Athletic Conference this year despite having had much less football success than App State.

Still, gridiron glory is generally considered a factor in App State’s 15% growth in enrollment between 2013 and 2022. That’s nearly twice as fast as the overall UNC System. During the same period, UNC Charlotte grew by 11%, while UNC Greensboro had a slight decline.

As for why App State punches above its weight in football, two narratives exist. Both are true.

The first is culture and tradition, which started with retired Coach Jerry Moore, who won 215 games in Boone and three national championships in the old I-AA division. The App State program still runs on the template he created from 1989 to 2012, with speed, resiliency and conditioning. There’s a statue of Moore at the stadium.

Conditioning also shouldn’t be overlooked. It doesn’t cost more to have a team that’s going strong in the fourth quarter. What it takes is a very determined coaching staff and players

willing to put in the work because they have large, collective chips on their shoulders about Power Five recruiters.

“I’ve been to enough practices,” says Tommy Bowman, who covered App State for the Winston-Salem Journal during the Moore era. “There were very few, if any, teams that worked any harder than they did. Their work ethic was crazy.”

The other narrative is more of a "Moneyball" explanation. The Michael Lewis book and subsequent movie showed how Major League Baseball’s Oakland Athletics and general manager Billy Beane figured out how to sign undervalued players by focusing on attributes that mattered, as opposed to how players looked. That is how App State has always recruited players.

“Five-star recruits don’t say, ‘I’m going to go to App State over Alabama because I like the mountains,’” says David Jackson, the former associate athletics director and play-by-play announcer who called the Michigan game.

“What schools like App must do is prioritize the diamond in the rough,” says Jackson, now the CEO of the Boone Area Chamber of Commerce.

This can mean different things. It often gets simplified to a high-school center who would be on the Power Five radar if he were 2 inches taller or 30 pounds heavier.

But it is more complicated than that. Power Five schools go certain places and don’t go other places, like corporations that only recruit at elite universities. They also like finished products rather than projects.

The upside is that prospects who aren’t being pursued by Power Five schools tend to be less concerned about player lounges and the quality of game hotels. They just want to play ball.

And because they just want a shot, they’re more likely to be flexible. When Moore was recruiting Armanti Edwards, one of the heroes of the Michigan game in 2007, he wasn’t a lock to play quarterback.

“When we recruited Armanti, we were recruiting CoCo Hillary at the same time,” Moore, now 83, says. “We told both

38 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA
A statue of former App State Coach Jerry Moore honors his legacy.

players we don’t know if you’re going to be a receiver, we don’t know if you’re going to be a defensive back, or if you’re going to be a quarterback. But we want you to come to school at Appalachian State.

“They were both good runners, but we thought Armanti was the better thrower. And it worked out. Hillary was one of the best receivers we had.”

Edwards passed for three touchdowns against Michigan and ran for another. Hillary, playing in his first college game, returned seven kicks for 151 yards and caught four passes for 63 yards.

Perhaps the most well-known find in the bargain bin was Dexter Coakley, a defensive star in the 1990s who built himself through the strength and conditioning program into an NFL prospect, despite being 5’10”. He went to the Pro Bowl three times.

“Coakley wouldn’t open his mouth in practice,” says Moore. “He just worked and worked and worked.”

Chick-fil-A and Gatorade

To illustrate how a frugal program like App State operates, former Athletics Director Charlie Cobb told the story of when he first came from N.C. State to be the athletic director in Boone in 2005. He is now the AD at Georgia State University.

The team buses were headed to a game at Eastern Kentucky. They pulled off the interstate at a rest stop to eat lunch, and pulled coolers out with Chick-fil-A and Gatorades.

“If N.C. State had gone on the road, and we were playing [Kentucky], we’d have left RDU, we’d have had three catered meals and flown 35, 40 minutes to get to Lexington to get to go stay at a hotel and ate again,” he says.

That was 17 years ago, but the culture endures. “We talk all the time, ‘Spend it like it’s yours,’” says Doug Gillin, the current App State athletics director.

He needed to upgrade the nutrition program, which was going to cost $100,000 to $150,000. And so they did it through a golf tournament.

“We do a real nice dinner with a nice silent auction, and candidly, that’s how we raised the money to increase our nutrition spend,” Gillin says. “Because the program didn’t have the money lying around. Selling more game tickets or hot dogs wasn’t an option.”

Among the unsung heroes of App State’s football success are the students, each of whom pays an annual “athletics fee” of $783. The $13.6 million collected in 2021 dwarfed other revenue sources, according to the Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database. While most UNC System students pay comparable fees, those attending N.C. State and UNC Chapel Hill pay $232 and $279, respectively. Big payouts from TV contracts lessen their need to charge students.

Sports boosters also make key impacts at many campuses. Over the years, the late oil tycoon Boone Pickens gave more than $300 million to athletics at Oklahoma State University, according to the university.

At App State, 61 individuals have committed a combined $29 million over the past decade to the Yosef Club’s Circle of Excellence Society. In 2017, Mark Ricks, an alum and securityindustry expert, pledged $10 million. (The club is App State’s athletics booster group.)

Sarah Holder, who is App State’s assistant athletics director for business, spent eight years as an accountant in Boone before joining the university. She holds monthly budget meetings with the athletics department’s programs.

“We’re a public institution,” says Holder, who is a 2006 App State graduate. “We very much have our fingers closely on all our spending.”

Given App State’s success on a limited budget, you might question whether Holder gets asked about this often when she attends conferences on spending among athletic administrators.

“No,” she replies. “Which is surprising. … If someone’s successful at something, you kind of want to know what they’re doing. But I have not gotten any of those phone calls.” ■

39 JANUARY 2023
National rankings of N.C. college football teams N.C. State ........ 25 UNC ................. 26 Duke ................. 40 Wake Forest ..... 42 East Carolina 61 App State 79 Charlotte .......... 125 Source: The Athletic website, Dec. 5 Source: Sports-reference.com Source: Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database Total football victories posted in past five years App State ......... 49 N.C. State .......... 38 Wake Forest ...... 37 UNC .................. 32 Duke 26 East Carolina 24 Charlotte ........... 22 Total Athletics Revenue (2021, in millions) UNC ................. $101.9 N.C. State ......... 78.2 Duke ................. N/A Wake Forest ...... N/A East Carolina ... 43.2 Charlotte 37.7 App State .......... 33.2

DASHED HOPES

The collapse of an insurance industry star’s landmark project cost Charlotte a major windfall.

40 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA

Construction sca olding and exposed beams lent a touch of reality as Centene CEO Michael Neidor , standing next to Gov. Roy Cooper, pointed out details on a tabletop architectural model of a huge building under construction in northeast Charlotte.

“It’s amazing,” Cooper beamed, “what a billion dollars can do.”

At the June 2021 gathering at Charlotte’s University Research Park, Neidor told Cooper, Mayor Vi Lyles and others that 3,230 employees would soon work in the 800,000-squarefoot structure for the nation’s largest Medicaid managed-care insurance company.

e $450 million in potential state and local incentive payments, arranged by Cooper and others, helped entice what promised to be one of North Carolina’s biggest economicdevelopment home runs. Lyles hailed the project as a “milestone” for the area.

e plan called for a completed building by late 2022, when construction would be well under way on adjacent campus projects. Centene envisioned recreational areas, a child-care site and other amenities.

It all sounded logical given Neidorff’s success in creating a Fortune 500 company with 71,000 employees. Centene’s plans seemed akin to New York nancial services giant TIAA, which opened an adjacent 92-acre campus in 2000 that now employs 5,000.

But Neidor ’s promises of new jobs and investment are now a distant memory.

In August, Centene told Cooper it was quitting the un nished project a er investing $700 million. at’s more than triple the amount of money that Carolina Panthers David Tepper walked away from at his ballyhooed Rock Hill, South Carolina development a er disputes with municipal leaders earlier this year.

e Centene property, which Neidor said would become its East Coast headquarters, is listed for sale by the Cushman & Wake eld real estate rm. It’s hoped that a major enterprise will pounce on the building — probably at a big discount. “ ey’re watching a couple of hundred million dollars evaporate,” says a Charlotte executive who helped attract Centene.

Centene, in a statement, says the reversal re ects “a fundamental shi in the way people want to work. About 90% of our workforce is fully remote or in a hybrid work environment, and workplace exibility is essential to attracting and retaining top talent.” O cials declined to elaborate.

e company is "drastically" o ce space across the U.S., as more employees work remotely or in hybrid settings, notes Sam Chan, Cooper’s press secretary. e company employs 1,300 statewide, including 700 in Charlotte.

But there was much more to Centene’s expensive incursion

into the University City area near UNC Charlotte than bungled planning and a shi ing workplace culture, according to people familiar with the failed project. Several other factors behind the abrupt shi have received limited attention.

Perhaps most notable, with all due respect, is that Michael Neidor is dead.

An infection claimed the CEO’s life in April at age 79, ending an increasingly fractious relationship with investors, Centene’s home state of Missouri, regulators, board members and others. He had gone on medical leave two months earlier.

As the Charlotte project was rising, Neidor was facing growing dissatisfaction by institutional investors over the company’s nancial performance and signi cant pressures from regulators over its operations.

In November 2021, he agreed with Boston-based hedge fund Politan Capital Management to step down as CEO and executive chair in late 2022. The deal also included remaking Centene’s board with six directors leaving and five new ones added.

Politan owned less than 1% of Centene’s stock, or about $900 million, while Neidor personally controlled about $500 million. But Politan founder Quentin Ko ey had successfully forced management upheaval at his previous jobs. While working for the New York-based DE Shaw fund in 2018, he was credited with helping oust Robert Niblock, who had been CEO of Mooresville-based Lowe’s Cos. for 13 years.

Given Centene’s long-term history, investor complaints seemed surprising. It’s hard to understate Neidor ’s impact, which in some ways mirrors Charlottean Hugh McColl Jr.’s skill of turning a regional bank into Bank of America.

41 JANUARY 2023
Former CEO Michael Neidorff talks with Gov. Roy Cooper at the Charlotte site in a June 2021 gathering.
CENTENE RENDERING COURTESY OF LS3P; PHOTO CREDIT: DAVID MILDENBERG

e Altoona, Pennsylvania, native joined the health insurance company when it was based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1995. A year later, he moved the headquarters to St. Louis, where he had led a physicians-owned health plan. He took Centene public in 2001 when it had $327 million in revenue and 235,000 members.

By 2013, revenue topped $10 billion with a membership of 2.7 million. Its rapid growth continued with revenue likely to top $135 billion this year. During the decade ended December 2021, the company’s stock soared more than 750%, double the S&P 500 Index.

at history didn’t impress Politan, which criticized Centene for pro t margins that lagged peers, causing its shares to stagnate between 2018-21. Also, it isn’t unusual for hedge funds to target aging CEOs with unclear succession strategies. During his nal years as CEO, Neidor received annual compensation of about $25 million. No other company executive topped $10 million.

Centene also faced headwinds because of criticism that it pro ts at the expense of its main customers, low-income Americans. It’s the largest provider of health-insurance plans through the A ordable Care Act’s marketplaces and the largest provider of Medicaid managed care with 15.4 million enrollees nationally.

Most state Medicaid programs contract with private insurers to cover people who have disabilities or low incomes. e programs are jointly funded by state and federal taxpayers. In many states, the insurers procure medications for the program through a pharmacy bene t manager, which acts as an intermediary between health plans and pharmacies. Centene has both a health plan and a PBM.

In September, Texas became the 12th state to settle claims that Centene had defrauded their Medicaid programs involving excessive charges for pharmacy services. e settlements have totaled $475 million, according to Kaiser Health News.

Centene has denied any wrongdoing and continues to operate in the states where it has struck settlements. But it set aside $1.1 billion to settle the allegations, according to company lings. It’s not clear if Centene is under investigation in North Carolina.

Ohio Attorney General David Yost, in an interview, faults Centene for “corporate greed.” A Mississippi legislator accused the company of taking “$55 million of our money that was supposed to be spent on the poor, the sick, the elderly, the mentally ill and disabled.”

Neidor thought the big Charlotte site could help consolidate operations and improve Centene’s nancial performance, says a company o cial, who asked to remain anonymous. It also re ected an emphasis on East Coast states a er Centene’s $17 billion acquisition of Tampa, Floridabased WellCare Health Plans in 2019. But questions on why companies need more o ce space spiked during the pandemic.

“ e desire for exibility in work was driving change,” says Tobe Holmes, senior director for land use and economic development of University City Partners, a nonpro t that promotes the area where Centene planned to operate. He recalls

discussing the issue with Gov. Cooper before the pandemic broke out in early 2020.

“Centene has some very skilled people, and some call centers can be virtual, with people who can discuss health care, bene ts. Others, like in banking, nd people more e cient when they’re in the o ce together,” Holmes says.

To be sure, the pandemic has changed the landscape of corporate workplaces.

In Charlotte, Duke Energy says remote work is enabling it to cut o ce-space needs by 60%, which will save $90 million a year in real-estate leases. e company is consolidating its downtown Charlotte operations into the new 40-story Duke Energy Plaza slated to open in early 2023. e company ended its lease of 21 oors of the nearby Duke Energy Center and is selling its former 13-story headquarters building.

Other corporations have had second thoughts about remote work a er measuring productivity. Last fall, Bank of America limited the time that some sta ers could work from home to two days a month. CEO Brian Moynihan has emphasized the bene ts of building corporate culture through o ce work.

Centene’s cut-and-run also came amid signi cant tension between Neidor and politicians in the company’s home state. Beyond his status building one of Missouri’s most successful companies, he gained respect for promoting diversity long before it became popular in corporate America. He also made Centene a major philanthropic force in St. Louis, which has struggled to retain major corporate headquarters.

Clayton, Missouri, Mayor Michelle Harris says she grew very fond of Neidor . “He was a visionary leader and a person who’d take action on his visions. He didn’t just talk about it, he went out and did it.”

Neidor also wasn’t afraid to raise concerns publicly. In press interviews and comments to civic groups, he complained about the increasing murder and crime rates in St. Louis.

Leading up to the location decision, several Charlotte o cials say that Neidor repeatedly compared the Queen City’s

42 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA
MEMBERSHIP GROWTH (in millions) source: Centene

crime statistics and available workforce favorably to similar metrics in St. Louis.

“Mr. Neidor basically put a stake in the ground and said, ‘Hell no St. Louis, we aren’t doing this anymore,” says a Charlotte o cial who asked not to be identi ed because of his role in recruiting Centene. “He was really angry at St. Louis, but he kind of kept it under cover. He had a special bee in his bonnet about getting away from there.”

Neidorff also was disappointed that Missouri didn’t increase Medicaid funding, according to several sources familiar with the matter. He met with Gov. Michael Parsons in 2021, but Press Secretary Kelli Jones declined to discuss the subject of the meeting.

Sources say Neidorff told Parsons that Missouri was an “embarrassment” for refusing to boost Medicaid funding, his company’s core business. Missouri voters had approved an increase, but Parsons refused to sign enabling legislation after the state’s Republican lawmakers declined to fund the growth. (North Carolina has not approved expanded Medicaid funding, either.)

Whether the CEO threatened to move the company headquarters to Charlotte is unclear. Clayton Mayor Harris doubts it. “He cared very much about the St. Louis community at large, and he was committed to the business community and trying to attract other companies here,” she says. “His family lives here. I couldn’t imagine him saying that.”

To succeed Neidor a month a er his medical leave began, Centene’s board picked a CEO with a very di erent history: Sarah London, 41, had worked for a venture-capital division of rival United Healthcare before joining Centene to lead digital strategy in 2020. e Harvard University graduate and University of Chicago MBA is an expert in data analytics and technology innovation.

“[She] was the absolute opposite of Neidor ,” says a Charlotte o cial who worked with the company. “ is was a total change in attitude about what technology can

provide for the future.” London had con dence that remote communications technology could serve customers with less need for o ce space.

“Mr. Neidor was proceeding in a way the board didn’t appreciate,” the executive said. “ is gave her the leverage she needed to dump the project altogether.”

Centene paid $10 million for its initial 80-acre tract in University Research Park, then added another 130 acres. It planned to pay average salaries topping more than $100,000, according to data required to secure state incentives.

Writing o hundreds of million of dollars isn’t a major hit for Centene, which has a market value of nearly $50 billion. Its stock gained about 4% this year through early December; the S&P 500 Index declined 14% in the same period.

It’s unclear if the building will end up in the hands of a single tenant or include multiple occupants, says Jade Hubbard, a spokesperson for Cushman & Wakefield. The building remains unfinished.

Holmes, the University Research Park o cial, says “Centene was locating in University City for a reason, and those reasons still exist.” It’s the region’s second-largest employment center with close proximity to nearby UNC Charlotte.

“ at’s exactly the kind of environment that has legs,” he says. ■

43 JANUARY 2023
Michael Neidorff and Centene's new CEO Sarah London
REVENUE GROWTH (in billions) PROFIT PICTURE (millions/billions) CENTENE'S HEALTHY VITALS

CLASS ACTS

Jocks, nerds, hoods and other groups make up the woodwork of every high school, including those attended by the best lawyers in North Carolina. We asked this year’s winners of Business North Carolina’s Legal Elite to recall their favorite friends’ group, or an enjoyable high school activity. The answers to those and other questions provide insight into this talented crew.

44 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA

It’s the 22nd class of Legal Elite, which honors lawyers chosen by their peers. Business North Carolina contracted DataJoe Research to facilitate an online peer-voting and internet research process. About 1,000 lawyers received votes, with those receiving the most getting recognition in 16 specialties as Hall of Fame members.

The responses have been edited for length and clarity. Previous Hall of Fame members are listed by their firm at the time of selection, unless otherwise noted.

DataJoe Research is a Boulder, Colo.-based software and research company specializing in data collection and verification, and conducts various nominations across the nation on behalf of publishers. DataJoe confirmed that each published winner had, at time of review, a current, active license status with the appropriate state regulatory board. If unable to find evidence of a lawyer’s active registration with the state regulatory board, that lawyer was excluded from the list. In addition, we checked available public sources to identify lawyers disciplined for an infraction by the state regulatory board. They were excluded from the list. DataJoe presented the tallied results to Business North Carolina for its final review and adjustments.

DataJoe and Business North Carolina recognize that there are many talented lawyers who are not listed. This is a subset of talented professionals across the state. Inclusion in the list is based on the opinions of responding lawyers in North Carolina. DataJoe thoroughly ensures fair voting but the company understands that the results of this survey nomination and internet research campaign are not an objective metric.

Disclaimers: DataJoe uses best practices and exercises great care in assembling content for this list. DataJoe does not warrant that the data contained within the list are complete or accurate. DataJoe does not assume, and hereby disclaims, any liability to any person for any loss or damage caused by errors or omissions herein whether such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident, or any other cause. All rights reserved. No commercial use of the information in this list may be made without written permission from DataJoe. For research/ methodology questions, contact the research team at surveys@datajoe.com.

45 JANUARY 2023
CONTENTS CATEGORY LIST PROFILE ANTITRUST 47 46 APPELLATE 47 48 BANKRUPTCY 49 50 BUSINESS 51 52 CONSTRUCTION 53 54 CORPORATE 55 56 CRIMINAL 55 58 EMPLOYMENT 61 60 CATEGORY LIST PROFILE ENVIRONMENTAL 63 62 FAMILY 63 64 IMMIGRATION 65 66 INTELLECTUAL 67 68 LITIGATION 67 70 REAL ESTATE 73 72 TAX & ESTATE PLANNING 75 N/A YOUNG GUNS 76 74

ANTITRUST

M. GUNTER

PRACTICED LAW: 33 years HOMETOWN: Bergenfield, New Jersey FAMILY: Husband, Dale Gunter, and cat, Snowball HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Nerds KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Only the Good Die Young” ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: PB&J BUCKET LIST ITEM: A trip to Australia. BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: Moving to North Carolina without having any family or connections. RANDOM IMPULSE BUY: Orthopedic pet dishes for an aging cat. LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “The Watcher” MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “North by Northwest” FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Watching Netflix. FAVORITE SNACK: Ice cream DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Practicing law for 33 years.
UNDERGRADUATE: NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY | LAW: THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Winston-Salem
DENISE
Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough,

DENISE M. GUNTER

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Winston-Salem

Jenna F. Butler

Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

E. Bradley Evans

Ward and Smith PA, Winterville

Jason Doughton Evans

Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, Charlotte

Lisa F. Garrison

Garrison Law Group PLLC, Asheboro

Robert N. Hunter Jr.

Higgins Benjamin, Greensboro M. Keith Kapp

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

Gregory Lee Skidmore

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Mary K. Mandeville

Alexander Ricks PLLC, Charlotte

Larry S. McDevitt

e Van Winkle Law Firm, Asheville

Lawrence C. Moore III

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Clinton R. Pinyan

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Alan M. Ruley

Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

HALL OF FAME: Matthew W. Sawchak, Ellis & Winters LLP, Cary (2002, 2003); Rodrick J. Enns, Enns & Archer LLP, Winston-Salem (2004); Larry B. Sitton, Smith Moore LLP, Greensboro (2005); Everett J. Bowman, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2006 );

Douglas Wayne Kenyon, Hunton & Williams LLP, Raleigh (2007); Mark W. Merritt, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2008); Mark J. Horoschak, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice PLLC, Charlotte (2009); Jennifer K. Van Zant, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro (2010); Catharine B. Arrowood, Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Raleigh (2011); Jonathan Heyl, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, Charlotte (2012); Noel L. Allen, Pinnix & Nichols PA, Raleigh (2013); John F. Graybeal, Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Raleigh (2014); Press Millen, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice PLLC, Raleigh (2015); W. Andrew “Andy” Copenhaver, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice PLLC, WinstonSalem (2016); Stephen Feldman, Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

APPELLATE

ANGELA FARAG

CRADDOCK

Young Moore and Henderson P.A.,

Raleigh

Norris Arden Adams II

Essex Richards PA, Charlotte

Natasha Marie Barone

Jordan Price Wall Gray Jones & Carlton, PLLC, Raleigh

Chad Alan Archer

Blanco Tackabery & Matamoros PA, Winston-Salem

Jaye Elizabeth Bingham-Hinch

Batten Lee PLLC, Raleigh

Christopher Anderson

Brook, Patterson Harkavy LLP, Chapel Hill

Christopher G. Browning Jr.

Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, Raleigh

Alexander Clay Dale Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Robert H. Edmunds Jr. Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Christopher Scott Edwards Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Stephen Daniel Feldman

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Raleigh

Narendra Kumar Ghosh

Patterson Harkavy LLP, Chapel Hill

Robert Daniel Gibson

Stam Law Firm PLLC, Apex

Bonnie Lynn Keith Green e Green Firm PLLC, Charlotte

Harvey M. Hamlet

Hamlet & Associates PLLC, Wilmington

L Cooper Harrell

Mullins Duncan Harrell Russell PLLC, Greensboro

Samuel Batiste Hartzell

Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Raleigh Noah H. Huffstetler III

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Patrick Michael Kane Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

John Joseph Korzen Wake Forest Law, Winston-Salem

Bradley R. Kutrow McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Lorin J. Lapidus

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Winston-Salem

Michael T. Medford

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Allison Overbay Mullins Turning Point Litigation, Greensboro

Kip David Nelson

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Preston O. Odom III

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

David S. Pokela

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Greensboro

Deborah Sandlin

Sandlin Family Law Group, Raleigh

Matthew W. Sawchak

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Raleigh

Troy Shelton

Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh

Mark Russell Sigmon

Sigmon Law PLLC, Raleigh

Amie Carol Sivon

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Paul K. Sun Jr.

Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

D Martin Warf

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Rebecca K. Watts

Collins Family Law Group, Monroe

John R. Wester

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Barbara B. Weyher

Yates Mclamb & Weyher LLP, Raleigh

Erik Randall Zimmerman

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Chapel Hill

HALL OF FAME: Matthew Nis

Leerberg, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, Raleigh (2018); Toby Hampson, Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP / N.C. Court of Appeals, Raleigh (2019); Drew Erteschik, Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh (2020); Beth Brooks Scherer, Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh (2021); Michelle D. Connell, Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh (2022)

47 JANUARY 2023
ANTITRUST

APPELLATE

PRACTICED LAW: 18 years

FAMILY: Wife to Tyler, dog mom to Hoss and glitter aunt to Jacob, Brett, Lauren, Harper and Asher.

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Cheerleader KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Don’t Come Home a Drinkin’” by Loretta Lynn.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Egyptian stuffed cabbage rolls, preferably as prepared by my Aunt Yolanda.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: I’ve still never been to Dollywood. That really needs to change.

RANDOM IMPULSE BUY: Too many things from my Instagram feed early in the morning before my discretion is awake. The latest is a t-shirt with the faces of Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings that says “Where there’s a Willie, there’s a Waylon.”

MOST USED EMOJI: Shoulder shrug

MOVIES YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “The Big Lebowski,” “Clueless,” “Goodfellas” and “Spaceballs”

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Binge-watching Hallmark Channel holiday movies.

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Favorably impacting outcomes — for my family, clients, my team, the jurisprudence and even for, or maybe especially for, the people at the party enjoying music on the playlist I likely insisted on curating for the event.

HOMETOWN: WICHITA FALLS, TEXAS | UNDERGRADUATE: UNC CHAPEL HILL | LAW: UNC SCHOOL OF LAW ANGELA FARAG CRADDOCK Young Moore and Henderson P.A., Raleigh

MATT TOMSIC

Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte

Rayford K. Adams III

Spilman omas & Battle PLLC, Winston-Salem

Brian Richard Anderson

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Charles N. Anderson Jr. Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

Ronald A. Anderson Jr. Anderson Law Firm, Archdale

James B. Angell

Howard Stallings, Raleigh

David R. Badger

David R Badger PA, Charlotte

Paul Rudd Baynard

O t Kurman Attorneys At Law, Charlotte

Stephen L. Beaman

Beaman Bennington PLLC, Wilson

John C. Bircher III

Davis Hartman Wright Attorneys LLP, New Bern

Joseph A. Bledsoe III

Joseph A Bledsoe III, New Bern

Samantha K. Brumbaugh

Ivey McClellan Siegmund Brumbaugh & McDonough LLP, Eden

Daniel C. Bruton

Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Algernon L. Butler III

Butler & Butler LLP, Wilmington

Clyde R. Cash

Craige Brawley Liipfert & Walker LLP, Winston-Salem

Garland S. Cassada

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Richard Preston Cook

Cape Fear Debt Relief, Wilmington

Stacy C. Cordes

Cordes Law PLLC, Charlotte

John Paul Hughes Cournoyer

Northen Blue LLP, Chapel Hill

Damon Terry Duncan

Duncan Law PLLC, Greensboro

Albert F. Durham

Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte

David L. Eades

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Benjamin Robert Eisner e Law O ces of Oliver & Cheek PLLC, Wilson

Paul A. Fanning Ward and Smith PA, Winterville

Joseph Zachary Frost

Buckmiller Boyette Frost PLLC, Raleigh

Joseph W. Grier III

Grier Wright Martinez PA, Charlotte

Edward C. Hay Jr.

Pitts Hay & Hugenschmidt, Asheville

Cole Hayes Hayes Law, Charlotte

Jason L. Hendren

Hendren Redwine & Malone PLLC, Raleigh

Ashley Lee Hogewood III K L Gates LLP, Raleigh

Andrew Thomas Houston

Moon Wright Houston PLLC, Charlotte

Charles M. Ivey III

Ivey McClellan Siegmund Brumbaugh & McDonough LLP, Greensboro

Luis Manuel Lluberas Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Michael Leon Martinez

Grier Wright Martinez PA, Charlotte

Robert Ashley Mays Mays Johnson Law Firm, Asheville

Jack Miller

Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte

John R. Miller Jr. Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte

Dennis M. O’dea

Sfs Law Group, Charlotte

Jeffrey E. Oleynik

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

George M. Oliver

e Law O ces of Oliver & Cheek PLLC, New Bern

Felton E. Parrish

Alexander Ricks PLLC, Charlotte

Benson Thomas Pitts Pitts Hay & Hugenschmidt, Asheville

Alan W. Pope Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Melanie Dawn Johnson

Raubach

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Charles Richard Rayburn III Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte

Travis P. Sasser

Sasser Law Firm, Cary

Philip M. Sasser

Sasser Law Firm, Cary David M. Schilli

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Dirk W. Siegmund

Ivey McClellan Siegmund Brumbaugh & McDonough LLP, Greensboro

Kevin L. Sink Kevin Sink Law, Raleigh

John H. Small Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro Zachary H. Smith Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

William C. Smith Jr.

Manning Fulton & Skinner Pa, Raleigh

Andrew William James Tarr Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Glenn Clark Thompson

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Scott P. Vaughn McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Joseph Jude Vonnegut

Hutchens Law Firm LLP, Fayetteville

Thomas William Waldrep Jr. Waldrep Wall Babcock & Bailey PLLC, Winston-Salem

Jill Christine Walters

Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Raleigh Margaret R. Westbrook K L Gates LLP, Raleigh

James C. White

JC White Law Group PLLC, Chapel Hill

Matthew Alexander Winer

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

A. Cotten Wright

Grier Wright Martinez PA, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: J. Michael Booe, Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman LLP, Charlotte (2002, 2003); Gregory B. Crampton, Nicholls & Crampton PA, Raleigh (2004); Richard M. Hutson II, Hutson Hughes & Powell PA, Durham (2005); C. Richard Rayburn Jr., Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte (2006); Terri L. Gardner, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh (2007); John A. Northen, Northen Blue LLP, Chapel Hill, (2008); Holmes P. Harden, Williams Mullen, Raleigh (2009); Christine Myatt, Nexsen Pruet LLC, Greensboro (2010); Gerald A. “Jeb” Jeutter Jr., Gerald A. “Jeb” Jeutter Jr. Attorney at Law PA,

49 JANUARY 2023
BANKRUPTCY

BANKRUPTCY

MATT TOMSIC

PRACTICED LAW: 5 years

FAMILY: Wife, Patee; Kids, Winnie and Wyatt.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: Attend a Liverpool F.C. match at Anfield.

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: Switching careers from journalism to attend law school. I worked at newspapers in Wilmington, Danville, Virginia and Charleston, South Carolina.

Covering murder trials, including a capital murder case, got me generally interested in the legal field. That interest grew when I got to Charleston and started covering civil litigation and governmental investigations/actions. But for most of those four years, I saw a legal career as something interesting that I would have done if I had a second lifetime as the saying goes. One day, with the help and encouragement of my wife, Patee, I realized it wasn’t too late for me to switch careers and start fresh.

The things I loved about journalism have translated well to a legal career, especially my goal as a reporter to fully understand whatever I was covering better than anyone else might understand it and then to effectively communicate that understanding and story to a wider audience. I was very interested in advocating directly for clients and using my legal training to help others, whether through my private practice or pro bono work.

MOST USED EMOJI: Smiley face LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “The Office”

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “Christmas Vacation”

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Cooking for and going to oyster roasts.

HOMETOWN: WILMINGTON | UNDERGRADUATE: UNC CHAPEL HILL | LAW: UNC SCHOOL OF LAW Rayburn Cooper & Durham, Charlotte

Raleigh (2011); Kenneth M. Greene, Carruthers & Roth PA, Greensboro (2012); Trawick H. “Buzzy” Stubbs Jr., Stubbs & Perdue PA, New Bern (2013); Benjamin Kahn, Nexsen Pruet LLC, Greensboro (2014); James S. “Charlie” Livermon, Poyner Spruill LLP, Rocky Mount (2015); Richard S. Wright, Moon Wright and Houston PLLC, Charlotte (2016); Heather W. Culp, Essex Richards PA, Charlotte (2017); William P. Janvier, Janvier Law Firm PLLC, Raleigh (2018); Richard D. Sparkman, Richard D. Sparkman & Associates PA, Angier (2019); George Sanderson, e Sanderson Law Firm PLLC, Raleigh (2020); John “Woody” C. Woodman, Essex Richards PA, Charlotte (2021); Rebecca Finch Redwine, Hendren Redwine & Malone PLLC, Raleigh (2022)

BUSINESS

JOHN M. CROSS, JR. Brooks Pierce, Greensboro

Justin Evan Agans

Spengler & Agans PLLC, Charlotte

William Albert Anderson III Kennon Craver PLLC, Durham Alexander R. Atchison Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Beth F. Atkins

Howard Stallings, New Bern

Samuel Eric Bass

Venn Law Group, Charlotte

Adam Matthew Beaudoin Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Marc D. Bishop

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Rachel Marie Blunk

Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, Greensboro

Stacey A. Brady

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

William P. Bray

Bray Long PLLC, Charlotte

Dorothy B. Burch

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Michael A. Burger NC Planning, Cary

Terry J. Carlton

Jordan Price Wall Gray Jones Carlton PLLC, Raleigh

Kenneth G. Carroll

Morningstar Law Group, Raleigh

Vincent D. Childress Jr. Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

Ryan William Coffield e Van Winkle Law Firm, Asheville

Galen G. Craun III Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Scott Dillon Carruthers & Roth PA, Greensboro

Randolph M. Fletcher

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Natalie Crenshaw Folmar Tuggle Duggins PA, Greensboro

Kerry A. Friedman

Patla Straus Robinson Moore PA, Asheville

Stephen P. Gennett II

Johnston Allison & Hord Pa, Charlotte

Garland G. Graham

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

William B. Gwyn Jr. Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Dan M. Hartzog

Hartzog Law Group LLP, Raleigh

Steven A. Hockfield Erdman and Hock eld LLP, Charlotte

Lee Carlton Hodge Ward and Smith PA, New Bern

Justin Kenneth Humphries e Humphries Law Firm PC, Wilmington

Michael Anthony Ingersoll Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Charlotte

Cyrus M. Johnson Jr. Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Charlotte

Gene A. Jones Jr. Morningstar Law Group, Raleigh Warren P. Kean

Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte Nick Kendall Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

April Epley Kight

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

Ben E. Klein

Sigmon Klein PLLC, Greensboro

Christopher Henry Kouri

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Charlotte

David R. Krosner

Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh

Stephen F. Later Robbins May & Rich LLP, Pinehurst

David K. Liggett

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Stefan Joseph Longo

Blanco Tackabery & Matamoros PA, Winston-Salem

Carmen Joseph Marzella

Marzella Law Group, Cary

Jeffrey Michael McCraw

Crisp Cherry McCraw PLLC, Charlotte

J. Dickson McLean

Block Crouch Keeter Behm & Sayed LLP, Wilmington

Carolyn P. Meade

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Emily Jeffords Meister Law Firm Calorinas, Greensboro

Joseph William Norman Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Jeffrey James Owen McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Christopher Mark Reinhard Arch Capital, Raleigh

51 JANUARY 2023

BUSINESS

PRACTICED LAW: 22 years

FAMILY: Wife, Jennifer Van Zant; Kids, George, 20, Caroline,18 and Sam,16

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Floater. My friends and I were not limited to one clique, but most of us would qualify as floaters.

KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Wanted Dead or Alive” by Bon Jovi.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Bagels and baguettes

BUCKET LIST ITEM: Build a lake house.

RANDOM IMPULSE BUY: Whatever is near the entrance at Costco on a random Saturday.

MOST USED EMOJI: Thumbs up

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Heels”

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “It’s a Wonderful Life.” I discovered it about the time I was in middle school, just watching TV on a Sunday afternoon. Most of my family groans at the possibility of watching at least part of it each Christmas. What I enjoy most is that George transforms from thinking his life was never worth living to celebrating and loving his life. Nothing about his life changed in the time of that transformation, however. The only thing that changed was his perspective, which was life-changing. His investment in other people comes back to him. It’s a “what goes around, comes around” in the best of terms.

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Skiing

FAVORITE SNACK: Dry cereal. Cheerios, Grape Nuts and granola are probably the most common.

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Happiness grounded in gratefulness and positively impacting others.

HOMETOWN: MARION | UNDERGRADUATE: UNC CHAPEL HILL | LAW: UNC SCHOOL OF LAW JOHN M. CROSS, JR. Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard, Greensboro

Thomas Duke Ricks

Alexander Ricks PLLC, Charlotte

Megan Sadler

Venn Law Group, Charlotte

Gary W. Smith

Venn Law Group, Charlotte

Richard C. Stephenson

Stephenson Law LLP, Cary

Kevin Giese Sweat

Lord Law Firm PLLC, Charlotte

Ritchie W. Taylor

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

David Lee Tkach

David L Tkach PLLC, Charlotte

Bryan Lee Tyson

Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

John C. Woodman

Essex Richards PA, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: Russell M. Robinson II, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2002;2003); Doris R. Bray, Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro (2004); J. Nor eet Pruden III, Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman LLP, Charlotte (2005); William M. Flynn, Hunton & Williams LLP, Raleigh (2006); Robin L. Hinson, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2007); Peter C. Buck, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2008); Gerald F. Roach, Smith, Anderson, Blount, Dorsett, Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

(2009); Mark Davidson, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro (2010); Stephen M. Lynch, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2011); Amalie L. Tu n, Whitmeyer Tu n PLLC, Raleigh (2012); Grayson S. Hale, Morningstar Law Group, Morrisville (2013); David D. Beatty, Myers Bigel Sibley & Sajovec PA, Raleigh (2014); Charles S. Baldwin IV, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Wilmington (2015); James R. Forrest, Forrest Firm PC, Durham (2016); Gregory S. Connor, e Connor Law Firm PLLC, Raleigh (2017); John Babcock, Wall Babcock LLP, Winston-Salem (2018); M. Keith Kapp, Williams Mullen, Raleigh (2019); Matthew Marcellino, Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte (2020); George Stephen Diab, Murchison, Taylor & Gibson PLLC, Wilmington (2021); Daniel Stephen Trimmer, Skufca Law PLLC, Charlotte (2022)

Aleksandra Elzbieta Anderson

e Law Firm of Anderson Legal PLLC, Cary

Thomas Steven Babel

Davis Hartman Wright Attorneys LLP, Wilmington

Stacey Denise Bailey-Pharr Pharr Law PLLC, Winston-Salem Ryan Lee Beaver Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Charlotte

Christopher K. Behm

Block Crouch Keeter Behm & Sayed LLP, Wilmington

John T. Benjamin Jr. Law O ce of John T Benjamin Jr PA, Raleigh

Eric H. Biesecker

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Greensboro

Steven Allen Bimbo

Smith Terry & Johnson, Charlotte

Matthew C. Bouchard

Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh

Ross Joseph Bromberger

Benjamin Thomas Buskirk

Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh

Clay Anders Campbell

Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

David Anderson Carmen

Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Ben David Carson

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

David S. Coats

Bailey Dixon LLP, Raleigh

Chad Joseph Cochran

Hannah Sheridan & Cochran, Raleigh

Keith E. Coltrain

Wall Templeton Haldrup PA, Raleigh

Adam Reese Denobriga Bell Davis Pitt PA, Charlotte

Robert Cowan Derosset IV Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Sean Ferguson Doyle

Ortiz Doyle PLLC, Raleigh

William S. Durr

Ward and Smith PA, Asheville

Stephanie Underwood Eaton Spilman omas & Battle PLLC, Winston-Salem

CONSTRUCTION

ARTY BOLICK II

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh Greg C. Ahlum

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Hedrick Gardner, Charlotte

Melissa D. Brumback

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Carl Jeffress Burchette Rosenwood Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte

Robert L. Burchette Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Luke J. Farley

Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

J. Scott Flowers

Hutchens Law Firm LLP, Fayetteville

John Thomas Floyd Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Chad Lorenz Halliday

McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

53 JANUARY 2023

CONSTRUCTION

ARTY BOLICK II

PRACTICED LAW: 28 years

FAMILY: Cheryl, my wife of 21 years and professor at UNC Chapel Hill; Daughters Ellie, 18, Virginia, 16, and Belle, 13

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: I tried my best to be friends with everyone, but my closest friends were people who enjoyed the outdoors. Growing up in western North Carolina, we were close to great hikes, whitewater streams and ski slopes. We would go skiing after school whenever conditions were good.

KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Don’t Stop Believing.” My girls just used to get a kick out of me singing falsetto to try to match Steve Perry’s voice.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Burritos, as long as I can mix up the fillings from time to time.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: If this is something I have accomplished, it’s sleeping on the rim of the Grand Canyon and watching the sunrise. If it is one I want to do, travel to New Zealand.

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: Signing a contract to buy our current house on March 17, 2020.

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Stranger Things”

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “Caddyshack”

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Skiing; My favorite slope is Heavenly at Lake Tahoe. My favorite place in North Carolina is Sugar Mountain.

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Happiness in all aspects of my life.

HOMETOWN: LENOIR | UNDERGRADUATE: UNC CHAPEL HILL | LAW: UNC SCHOOL OF LAW Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard, Raleigh and Greensboro

David B. Hamilton

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Mark Hamlet

Hamlet & Associates PLLC, Wilmington

Daniel R. Hansen

Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte

Steven C. Hemric

Spilman omas & Battle PLLC, Winston-Salem

Edward F. Hennessey IV

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Robert Jason Herndon

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Raleigh

Jessica Soles Humphries

Hamlet & Associates PLLC, Wilmington

Edward Aubin Jesson

Jesson & Rains PLLC, Charlotte

Neale T. Johnson

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Todd A. Jones

Anderson Jones PLLC, Raleigh

Wesley S. Jones

e Law O ce of Wesley Scott Jones PC, Wilmington

Daniel G. Katzenbach

Cran ll Sumner LLP, Raleigh

Rebecca Ann Knudson

Cran ll Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Michael Aaron Lay

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Nancy Stewart Litwa

Rosenwood Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte

Jeffrey Anderson Long

Bray Long PLLC, Charlotte

Jeffrey Robert Monroe

Miller Monroe Plyler PLLC, Raleigh

Parker Evans Moore

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Joseph W. Moss Jr.

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Charlotte

Evan Monroe Musselwhite Ward and Smith PA, Raleigh

John M. Nunnally

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Michael R. Ortiz

Ortiz Doyle PLLC, Raleigh

James A. Penry

Penry Riemann PLLC, Raleigh

William W. Pollock

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Lindsey Ellis Powell

Anderson Jones PLLC, Raleigh

Eugene F. Rash

Smith Currie Hancock, Charlotte

Jeffrey Mark Reichard

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Greensboro

R. Lee Robertson Jr.

Robertson & Associates, Charlotte

John C. Rogers III

Allen Moore Rogers LLP, Raleigh

Whitaker Boykin Rose

Rosenwood Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte

Stephen Peterson Safran

Safran Law O ces, Raleigh

Byron Lee Saintsing

Smith Debnam Narron Drake

Saintsing & Myers LLP, Raleigh

Bryan G. Scott

Akerman LLP, Winston-Salem

David A. Senter

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Raleigh

Gregory L. Shelton

Shelton Law PLLC, Charlotte

Ronald A. Skufca

Skufca Law PLLC, Charlotte

Nicole B. Slaughter

Hamlet & Associates PLLC, Wilmington

Mitzi Riana Smith

Smith Bowers PLLC, Raleigh

John Edward Spainhour

McAngus Goudelock & Courie LLC, Asheville

Jeffrey Kendal Stahl

Allen Stahl + Kilbourne, Asheville

Jason Trent Strickland

Ward and Smith PA, Raleigh

Ryal W. Tayloe

Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Jay P. Tobin

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Margaret Caroline Lindsey

Trautman

Oak City Law LLP, Durham

Scott M. Tyler Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

William Casey Vaughn

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Judson A. Welborn

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Gary J. Welch

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Martin L. White

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Jay M. Wilkerson

Conner Gwyn Schenck PLLC, Raleigh

Steele B. Windle III

Smith Terry & Johnson, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: James A. Roberts III, Lewis & Roberts PLLC, Raleigh (2004); Je rey J. Davis, Moore & Van Allen PLLC, Charlotte (2005); John L. Shaw, Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh (2006); Dudley Humphrey, Kilpatrick Stockton LLP, Winston-Salem (2007); James S. Schenck IV, Conner Gwyn Schenck PLLC, Raleigh (2008); Michael Wilson, Johnston, Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte (2009); John B. “Jack” Taylor, Nexsen Pruet LLC, Charlotte (2010); Peter J. Marino, Smith, Anderson, Blount, Dorsett, Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh (2011); William H. Gammon, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh (2012); Richard D. Conner, Conner Gwyn Schenck PLLC, Greensboro (2013); Joseph H. Nanney Jr., Meynardie & Nanney PLLC, Raleigh, (2014); Bob Meynardie, Meynardie & Nanney PLLC, Raleigh (2015); Harper Heckman, Nexsen Pruet LLC, Greensboro (2016); Nan E. Hannah, Hannah Sheridan Loughridge & Cochran LLP, Raleigh (2017); James Johnson, Smith Terry & Johnson, Asheville (2018); Tracy James, Hamilton Stephens Steele & Martin PLLC, Charlotte (2019); Jason James, Bell, Davis & Pitt, Charlotte (2020); Bentford “Ben” Martin, Hamilton Stephens Steele

& Martin PLLC, Charlotte (2021); Erik

Scott D. Syfert

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Elizabeth Adell Tedford

CORPORATE

Rosenwood, Rosenwood, Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte (2022) ROB RUST IV

Moore & Van Allen PLLC, Charlotte

Evan K. Auberry

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro Nicole Elizabeth Bleuer Stephenson Law LLP, Cary Galen Edward Boerema Boerema Law PLLC, Raleigh

Philip S. Chubb Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte

W. Scott Cooper Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte

Richard John Crow Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington G. Stephen Diab Murchison Taylor & Gibson PLLC, Wilmington

Megan P. Farley

Allen Stahl + Kilbourne, Asheville John N. Fleming McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville James R. Forrest Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, Raleigh Jeremy H. Godwin Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Gregory S. Hilderbran Hilderbran Hitchcock PA, Asheville Nathan M. Hull Hull Chandler PA, Charlotte

Gregory D. Hutchins Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville G. William Joyner III Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, Winston-Salem

Robert D. Kidwell Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro Deana Ann Labriola Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh

Thomas I. Lyon Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

William David Mannheim Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Matthew Thomas Marcellino Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

Jonathon Adam Martin

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Chapel Hill

Jason L. Martinez

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh Gerald F. Roach

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Brian Everett Russ

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Charlotte

Joseph J. Santaniello

Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte

Jason Robert Schneider Schneider Law Group PLLC, Raleigh

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Chapel Hill

Jennifer L. Van Doren Morningstar Law Group, Raleigh

Jennifer Weaver

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Michael L. Wilson

Northwood Ravin LLC, Charlotte

Jeffrey Robert Wolfe

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

William Huntley Zimmern Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: Russell M. Robinson II, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2002); James E. Creekman, First Citizens Bank & Trust Co., Raleigh (2003); David L. Ward Jr., Ward and Smith PA, New Bern (2004); Douglas R. Edwards, Wachovia Corp., Charlotte (2005); Stephen K. Coss, Sonic Automotive Inc., Charlotte (2006); Keith Smith, Carolinas HealthCare System, Charlotte (2007); John Taggart, Genworth Financial Inc., Raleigh (2008); B. Judd Hartman, Pharmaceutical Product Development Inc., Wilmington (2009); Gaither M. Keener, Lowe’s Cos., Mooresville (2010); Meredith B. Stone, NACCO Materials Handling Group Inc., Greenville (2011); Lisa D. Inman, Waste Industries USA Inc., Raleigh (2012); Robert Wicker, General Parts International Inc., Raleigh (2013); Michael A. Springs, Bank of America Corp., Charlotte (2014); Santiago Estrada, Quintiles Transnational Holdings Inc., Durham (2015); Je rey M. Davis, Lincoln Financial Group, Greensboro (2016); Gerald L. Walden Jr., e Fresh Market Inc., Greensboro (2017); Andrew Spainhour, Replacements Ltd., Greensboro (2018); Chris Matton, Bandwidth Inc., Raleigh (2019); Jennifer Venable, Capitol Broadcasting Co., Raleigh (2020); John M. Cross Jr., Brooks Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro (2021); Jonathan Jenkins, Jenkins Haynes PLLC, Greensboro (2022)

ROB HEROY

Goodman Carr Laughrun Levine & Greene PLLC, Charlotte

A. Brennan Aberle

Aberle Wall LLC, Greensboro

F. Hill Allen IV

arrington Smith LLP, Raleigh

James Thomas Amburgey Amburgey Law, Asheville

Russell D. Babb

arrington Smith LLP, Raleigh

Andrew B. Banzhoff

Devereux Banzho PLLC, Asheville

55 JANUARY 2023
CRIMINAL

CORPORATE

PRACTICED LAW: 19 years

FAMILY: Spouse, Lizzy; Daughters, Dempsey and Molly

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Athletes KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Jolene”

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Pizza. The pepperoni pizza with a chipotle and tomato sauce from Pizza Peel.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: Visiting the Amalfi Coast.

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: Joining Moore & Van Allen as a lateral move almost 17 years ago.

MOST USED EMOJI: Laughing with tears

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “The Princess Bride”

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Skiing in Solitude, Utah.

HOMETOWN: CHARLOTTE | UNDERGRADUATE: THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH | LAW: VANDERBILT LAW SCHOOL ROB RUST IV Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

CRIMINAL

PRACTICED LAW: 16 years

FAMILY: My mother taught history at Northeast Guilford High School, and my dad was a photographer in Greensboro. I have two brothers in Charlotte. My wife, Katie, is a former prosecutor who is now occupied chasing after our maniacal boys, ages 6, 8 and 10.

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: It definitely was not the athletes or the cool kids. We were just normal kids. We played cards, board games and video games. We were surrounded by woods and spent a lot of time exploring.

KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: Karaoke is far and away my greatest fear in life. I was coerced into it once at a Mecklenburg County Bar function. To add insult to injury, I drew “Hit Me Baby One More Time” by Brittany Spears. That was embarrassing.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Nashville hot chicken

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: My law school roommates and I were once fairly serious poker players — online poker and trips to casinos. I came just short of a final table in the World Series of Poker in 2009. As exciting as that life was, I wouldn’t go back to it. I can no longer see myself doing any job but criminal defense.

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Better Call Saul.” No other show comes close to capturing the stress and the pain of trying to make it and to find your way around when you’re new to the practice of criminal law.

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: Name a Will Ferrell movie. I don’t mean to brag, but I have seen “Old School” and “Anchorman” more than 100 times each. I’m kind of a big deal.

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Snow skiing with the maniacal boys mentioned above.

FAVORITE SNACK: My beautiful wife is also an avid runner who talked me into running a marathon with her. So the consistent snack is now salted watermelon flavored running gel washed down with lemon-lime Nuun.

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Criminal law is brutal. High-stakes decisions are made quickly. Each day, I see the impact of those decisions on my clients and their families. It can be hard to step away from that, but to consistently get good results in the arena, you can’t be blinded to the rest of the system. You have to see the Matrix. The judge, law enforcement and the prosecutor are all part of this system with important jobs. You can’t succeed without recognizing everyone’s role.

ROB HEROY Goodman Carr Laughrun Levine & Greene, Charlotte HOMETOWN: SUMMERFIELD | UNDERGRADUATE: UNC CHAPEL HILL | LAW: UNC SCHOOL OF LAW

Christopher Anthony Beechler

Beechler Tomberlin PLLC, Winston-Salem

Robert Daniel Boyce

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Raleigh

David G. Budd II

The Law Offices of David G Budd, Asheville Jones Pharr Byrd Jr.

Freedman Thompson Witt Ceberio & Byrd PLLC, Winston-Salem

Timothy Michael Cannady

Jetton Meredith PLLC, Charlotte

Ames C. Chamberlin

Federal Public Defender’s Office, Greensboro

Marcus W. Chesnutt

Chesnutt Clemmons PA, New Bern

Christine Elizabeth Clarke-Peckham

The Law Office of Chrissy ClarkePeckham, Charlotte

Kathleen Cunningham Clary

Rawls Scheer Clary & Mingo PLLC, Charlotte

Andrew Carter Clifford

Clifford & Harris PLLC, Greensboro

Andrew Nicholas Clifford

The Clifford Law Group PLLC, Raleigh

Christopher R. Clifton

Grace Tisdale Clifton PA, Winston-Salem

Collin Patrick Cook

Cheshire Parker Schneider PLLC, Raleigh

David T. Courie

Beaver Courie Hearp Broadfoot & Quantock, Fayetteville

Jason Harris Cowley

McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Brian S. Cromwell

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Charlotte

Kelly Margolis Dagger

Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

Russell W. Dement III

Dement Askew & Johnson, Raleigh

Sean P. Devereux

Devereux Banzhoff PLLC, Asheville

James Martin Doermann

JMD Law James Doermann PLLC, Greensboro

William Michael Dowling

The Dowling Firm PLLC, Raleigh

John Anderson Fagg Jr. Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

John Kiah Fanney

Fanney Law Office PLLC, Raleigh

Christopher C. Fialko

Fialko Law PLLC, Charlotte

Berryman J. Fitzhugh III

Sandman Finn & Fitzhugh, Raleigh

Shana LaVerne Fulton

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

Christon S. Halkiotis

The Law Office of Christon S. Halkiotis PLLC, Greensboro

Daniel Allen Harris

Clifford & Harris PLLC, Greensboro

Mark Lee Hearp

Beaver Courie Hearp Broadfoot & Quantock, Raeford

Joshua B. Howard

Gammon Howard Zeszotarski PLLC, Raleigh

59 JANUARY 2023

EMPLOYMENT

PRACTICED LAW: 23 years

HOMETOWN: Drexel. After law school and clerking at the N.C. Court of Appeals in Raleigh, I have lived in Greensboro for 22 years.

FAMILY: I have been married to my husband, Chris, for more than 23 years. We have two daughters, Reece,16, and Riley, 13. They are superstar swimmers and constantly inspire me with their drive and hard work. We have two Aussiedoodles, Finn and Missy, who are brother and sister. They add chaos and love to our lives.

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Basketball was my true love and focus. I played on the varsity team for three years. I also played on an AAU basketball team in Hickory. After basketball season ended, I enjoyed playing softball on the high school team and summer recreation teams. My senior year, I received the superlative for most athletic female. I identified most with the athletes.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Baby back ribs with mashed potatoes, cream-style corn, and French or sourdough bread.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: Visit Hawaii.

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: In September 2020, in the middle of the pandemic, Alex Maultsby and I left a large national firm to launch our own law firm. There was such uncertainty with everything at that time but we strongly believed that creating a different structure would allow us to better serve our clients. Although this was a huge step for us, we had support from the N.C. Bar Association’s Center for Practice Management and amazing clients who continued to partner with us.

MOST USED EMOJI: I rarely use emojis and tend to text in complete sentences. With my daughters, however, I often use the winky-kissy face throwing a kiss emoji.

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: I rarely watch TV shows. My husband and I, however, anxiously religiously watch the “Chicago PD,” “Chicago Fire,” and “Chicago Med” shows.

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Attending our daughters’ swim meets and cheering them on, along with their friends.

FAVORITE SNACK: For a healthy snack, trail mix. For an unhealthy one, chips with French onion dip.

UNDERGRADUATE: NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY | LAW: WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW PATTI W. RAMSEUR Ramseur Maultsby, Greensboro

Banks Hudson Huntley

Law O ces Of Banks Huntley PLLC, Charlotte

Mark Steven Jetton Jr.

Jetton Meredith PLLC, Charlotte

Mark Andrew Jones

Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

George V. Laughrun III

Goodman Carr Laughrun Levine & Greene PLLC, Charlotte

Aaron Raymond Lee

Lee & Lee Law Firm PLLC, Huntersville

Thomas Courtenay Leitner Jr.

Leitner Bragg & Gri n PLLC, Monroe

Thomas K. Maher

Law O ces of Amos Tyndall PLLC, Carrboro

Thomas Courtland Manning

Manning Law Firm PLLC, Raleigh

Duncan A. McMillan

McMillan & Smith, Raleigh

Joel Hart Miles Jr.

Cheshire Parker Schneider PLLC, Raleigh

Patrick Melton Mincey

Cran ll Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Carole Melissa Owen

Tin Fulton Walker & Owen PLLC, Charlotte

Corey Vaughn Parton

Parton Law PLLC, Charlotte

Wayne James Payne

W. James Payne Attorney at Law, Shallotte

Caitlin McLaughlin Poe

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

Bill Powers

Powers Law Firm PA, Charlotte

Emily Jones Queen

Burney & Jones PLLC, Wilmington

Eben Turner Rawls III

Rawls Scheer Clary & Mingo PLLC, Charlotte

Edd K. Roberts III

Roberts Law O ce PA, Raleigh

Daniel Powers Roberts

Goodman Carr Laughrun Levine & Greene PLLC, Charlotte

James F. Rutherford

James Rutherford Attorney At Law, Wilmington

Ronald James Shook II

e Law O ces of Ronald J Shook, Gastonia Miriam M. Thompson

Miriam M. ompson PLLC, Wilmington

Noell P. Tin

Tin Fulton Walker & Owen PLLC, Charlotte

Amos G. Tyndall

Law O ces Of Amos Tyndall PLLC, Carrboro

Nancy E. Walker

Tin Fulton Walker & Owen PLLC, Charlotte

Thomas G. Walker

Alston Bird, Charlotte

Ryan Michael Watson

e Law O ce Of Ryan M Watson PLLC, Charlotte

Aaron Bader Wellman

Ivey McClellan Siegmund Brumbaugh & McDonough LLP, Greensboro

Brett Thomas Wentz

Wentz Law PLLC, Wilmington

Edwin L. West III

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Wilmington

Joseph E. Zeszotarski Jr. Gammon Howard Zeszotarski PLLC, Raleigh

HALL OF FAME: Wade M. Smith, arrington Smith LLP, Raleigh (2004); James F. Wyatt III, Wyatt & Blake LLP, Charlotte (2005); David Freedman, White and Crumpler, Winston-Salem (2006); Joseph B. Cheshire V, Cheshire, Parker, Schneider, Bryan & Vitale, Raleigh (2007); James P. Cooney III, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice PLLC, Charlotte (2008); Stephen T. Smith, McMillan, Smith & Plyler, Raleigh (2009); T. Patrick Matus II, Essex Richards PA, Charlotte (2010); David S. Rudolf, Rudolf, Widenhouse & Fialko, Charlotte (2011); Locke T. Cli ord, Cli ord Clendenin & O’Hale LLP, Greensboro (2012); Peter C. Anderson, Beveridge & Diamond PC, Charlotte (2013); Michael J. Greene, Goodman, Carr, Laughrun, Levine & Greene PLLC, Charlotte (2014); Robert K. Corbett III, e Law O ces of Harold Cogdell Jr. PC, Charlotte (2015); Ryan T. Smith, RTS Law Group, Charlotte (2016); George V. Laughrun II, Goodman, Carr, Laughrun, Levine & Greene PA, Charlotte (2017); Les Robinson, e Robinson Law Firm PA, Greenville (2018); Wes J. Camden, Ward and Smith PA, Raleigh (2019); Kearns Davis, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro (2020); Cristopher L. Oring, Oring Law Firm PLLC, Wilmington (2021); Elliot Abrams, Cheshire Parker Schneider PLLC, Raleigh (2022)

EMPLOYMENT

PATTI W. RAMSEUR

Ramseur Maultsby LLP, Greensboro

G. Bryan Adams III

Van Hoy Reutlinger Adams Pierce PLLC, Charlotte

Heather Bell Adams

Parry Law PLLC, Chapel Hill

Erin Jones Adams

Spilman omas & Battle PLLC, Winston-Salem

Zebulon D. Anderson

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Hannah Auckland

Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

Patricia T. Bartis

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Raleigh

Norwood P. Blanchard III

Crossley McIntosh Collier Hanley & Edes PLLC, Wilmington

Kenneth P. Carlson Jr. Constangy Brooks Smith Prophete LLP, Winston-Salem

Connie E. Carrigan

Smith Debnam Narron Drake Saintsing & Myers LLP, Raleigh William S. Cherry III Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Jonathan Tristram Coffin Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Leto Copeley

White Stradley PLLC, Raleigh Cate Edwards

Edwards Beightol LLC, Raleigh Brodie Davis Erwin Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, Raleigh

Jeremy Michael Falcone Ellis & Winters LLP, Greensboro

Ashley Louise Felton Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, Raleigh

Patrick H. Flanagan Cran ll Sumner LLP, Raleigh

Jared Edgar Gardner Gardner Skelton PLLC, Charlotte

Patricia W. Goodson

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

Matthew Justin Gray Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Marc E. Gustafson Bell Davis Pitt PA, Charlotte

Holly Elizabeth-Ross Hammer Hammer Law PLLC, Raleigh

Michael Clyde Harman Harman Law, Huntersville

Sean Franklin Herrmann Herrmann Murphy PLLC, Charlotte Elizabeth Binion Hilker Smith Law Firm PC, Charlotte

Paul Siegfried Holscher

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC, Raleigh Susan Miller Huber

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Tamara Lynn Huckert Strianese Huckert LLP, Charlotte

John C. Hunter

John C Hunter Attorney at Law, Asheville

Charles E. Johnson

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Lori P. Jones

Jordan Price Wall Gray Jones Carlton PLLC, Raleigh

Kevin S. Joyner

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC, Raleigh

Patrick E. Kelly Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Susan Raphaela Russo Klein Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

Michael A. Kornbluthz Kornbluth Ginsberg Law Group PA, Durham

Dena Beth Langley

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Matthew E. Lee

Whit eld Bryson LLP, Raleigh

Gwendolyn Williams Lewis Lincoln Derr PLLC, Charlotte

Micheal Leray Littlejohn

Littlejohn Law PLLC, Charlotte

Michael C. Lord

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

Kathleen K. Lucchesi Jackson Lewis PC, Charlotte

Margaret B. Maloney Maloney Law Associates PLLC, Charlotte

Alexander L. Maultsby

Ramseur Maultsby LLP, Greensboro

Christine Fernicola Mayhew

Anderson Jones PLLC, Raleigh

Karin M. McGinnis

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Michael Douglas McKnight

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC, Raleigh

Andrew K. McVey

Murchison Taylor & Gibson PLLC, Wilmington

Michael Murchison

Murchison Taylor & Gibson PLLC, Wilmington

Kevin Patrick Murphy

Herrmann Murphy PLLC, Charlotte

Paul M. Navarro

McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Sarah Hayward Negus Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Laura Lee Noble e Noble Law Firm PLLC, Charlotte

William Augustus Oden III Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Grant B. Osborne Ward and Smith PA, Asheville

Annemarie Pantazis

Wilder Pantazis Law Group, Charlotte

Linda Nicole Patino

Law O ces of L Nicole Patino PLLC, Greensboro

Paul Javier Peralta Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

J. Heydt Philbeck

Bailey Dixon LLP, Raleigh

Charles Grainger Pierce Jr. Van Hoy Reutlinger Adams Pierce PLLC, Charlotte

Donna R. Rascoe

Cran ll Sumner LLP, Raleigh

Dawn Dillon Raynor

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Alyssa Michelle Riggins

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Sabrina P. Rockoff

McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Robert A. Sar

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC, Raleigh

Jeremy Regan Sayre Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh

Karen McKeithen Schaede

Schaede Attorney at Law PLLC, Greensboro

Sandra Woods Schilder

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

61 JANUARY 2023

ENVIRONMENTAL

AMY RICKERS Johnston Allison &

PRACTICED LAW: 23 years

HOMETOWN: Lincoln, Nebraska

FAMILY: Husband, Jon; Three sons, Jacob, Caleb and Eli HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: I was more of a nomad, floating between my eclectic friend groups.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Eggplant Parmesan. I can almost convince myself it is healthy.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: I have always wanted to travel to Australia for an extended visit.

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: Moving our family overseas while our children were young was risky. Living in a foreign country with three children under the age of 11 and without speaking the native language was difficult.

I learned we are resilient. It also provided an amazing opportunity to see other parts of the world in a unique way, which has impacted our children greatly and will serve them well as they grow older.

MOST USED EMOJI: The classic, universally understood, thumbs up and thumbs down emojis are my go-tos. They are the easiest and fastest way to respond to the many texts from our children. It doesn’t leave them wondering if I really meant to choose that emoji or if I even really understand what it means

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Snow skiing, preferably on fresh powder.

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: I define my own success, which is a work in progress, as finding a balance between a fulfilling career where I am able to do my best for the client and attend to each matter thoroughly and maintain a strong, connected family life.

While we may all be running in different directions, we are happiest when we are all sitting around together.

UNDERGRADUATE: TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY | LAW: UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA COLLEGE OF LAW Hord, Charlotte

Kerry A. Shad

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Jenny L. Sharpe e Sharpe Law O ce, Charlotte

Robin E. Shea

Constangy Brooks Smith Prophete LLP, Winston-Salem

Ann Herlocker Smith Jackson Lewis PC, Raleigh

Mimi Soule

Soule Employment Law, Raleigh Phillip John Strach

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Christopher Robert Strianese Strianese Huckert LLP, Charlotte

Jill Susanne Stricklin

Constangy Brooks Smith Prophete LLP, Winston-Salem

Michael Todd Sullivan

Fitzgerald Hanna & Sullivan PLLC, Raleigh

Mark T. Sumwalt

Sumwalt Anderson, Charlotte

Jessica Beauvais Thaller-Moran

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

Frederick M. Thurman Jr. Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte Linda D. Tindall

Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh

Benton Louis Toups

Cran ll Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Joshua Reed Van Kampen Van Kampen Law, Charlotte

Angelique Regail

Vincent-Hamacher

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Jennifer Vuillermet

Soule Employment Law, Chapel Hill

Hayley Roper Wells Ward and Smith PA, Asheville

Laura J. Wetsch

Winslow Wetsch PLLC, Raleigh

Devon Diane Williams Ward and Smith PA, Raleigh

Danielle Barbour Wilson e Banks Law Firm PA, Durham

Charlot F. Wood Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Jonathan W. Yarbrough

Constangy Brooks Smith Prophete LLP, Asheville

John A. Zaloom

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: Philip M. Van Hoy, Van Hoy, Reutlinger, Adams & Dunn, Charlotte (2002); George J. Oliver, Smith Moore LLP, Raleigh (2003); Penni Pearson Bradshaw, Constangy, Brooks & Smith LLP, Winston-Salem (2004); Jonathan R. Harkavy, Patterson Harkavy LLP, Greensboro (2005); Patricia L. Holland, Jackson Lewis PC, Cary (2006); Louis L. Lesesne Jr., Essex Richards PA, Charlotte (2007); Robert M. Elliot, Elliot Pishko Morgan PA, WinstonSalem (2008); Sarah J. Kromer, Sara J.

Kromer PLLC, Charlotte (2009); Susan Brown Grady, SPX Corp., Charlotte (2010); Lisa Grafstein, Disability Rights North Carolina, Raleigh (2011); N. Renee Hughes, Essex Richards PA, Charlotte (2012); W. Randall Lo is Jr., Constangy, Brooks & Smith LLP, Winston-Salem (2013); Amie F. Carmack, Morningstar Law Group, Morrisville (2014); Nicole Gardner, Gardner Skelton PLLC, Charlotte (2015); Mike Okun, Patterson Harkavy LLP, Chapel Hill (2016); Bryan L. Tyson, Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte (2017); Susie Gibbons, Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh (2018); Denise Smith Cline, Law O ces of Denise Smith Cline PLLC, Raleigh (2019); Kyle R. Still, Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh (2020); David C. Lindsay, K&L Gates LLP, Charlotte (2021); Meredith Je ries, Alexander Ricks PLLC, Charlotte (2022)

ENVIRONMENTAL

AMY RICKERS

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Stanford D. Baird K L Gates LLP, Raleigh

F. Bryan Brice Jr. e Law O ces of F Bryan Brice Jr., Raleigh

Billy Clarke

Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

James L. Conner II

Calhoun Bhella & Sechrest LLP, Durham Boyd Alexander Correll Jr. Caudle and Spears PA, Charlotte

Richard Steven Degeorge Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Alexander Elkan

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

John M. Flynn

Carruthers & Roth PA, Greensboro

David A. Franchina McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Steven J. Levitas

Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, Raleigh

Peter J. McGrath Jr. Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Joseph Andrew Ponzi

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Natalie Dawn Potter

Essex Richards PA, Charlotte

Lisa K. Rushton

Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Raleigh

Emily Sabrina Sherlock

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

V. Randall Tinsley

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Mona Lisa Wallace Wallace & Graham, Salisbury

Steven D. Weber

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Charlotte

Noelle E. Wooten

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: Charles D. Case, Hunton & Williams, Raleigh (2002; 2003); H. Glenn Dunn, Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh (2004); George W. House, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro (2005); William D. Dannelly, Hunton & Williams LLP, Raleigh (2006); Benne C. Hutson, Helms Mulliss & Wicker PLLC, Charlotte, (2007); Amos C. Dawson III, Williams Mullen,Raleigh (2008); Richard C. Gaskins Jr., Catawba Riverkeeper Foundation Inc., Charlotte (2009); Stephen W. Earp, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, Greensboro (2010); Ramona Cunningham O’Bryant, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, Greensboro (2011); William Clarke, Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville (2012); Grady L. Shields, Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh (2013); Craig A. Bromby, Hunton & Williams LLP, Raleigh (2014); Garry S. Rice, Duke Energy Corp., Charlotte (2015); Sean M. Sullivan, Troutman Sanders LLP, Raleigh (2016); Carol Jones Van Buren, Van Buren Law PLLC, Charlotte (2017); Steve Berlin, Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, Winston-Salem (2018); Keith Johnson, Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh (2019); Amy Wang, Ward and Smith PA, New Bern (2020); Susan H. Cooper, Womble Bond Dickinson, Charlotte (2021); Mary Katherine Stukes, Moore & Van Allen PLLC, Charlotte (2022)

FAMILY

KETAN P. SONI Soni Brendle PLLC, Charlotte

Carole R. Albright Law Firm Carolinas, Greensboro

Janet Haney Amburgey GHMA Law, Asheville

Lisa M. Angel

e Rosen Law Firm, Raleigh

Erika Nicole Angles

Jetton Meredith PLLC, Charlotte

Marcia H. Armstrong e Armstrong Law Firm PA, Smith eld

Sarah Bennett

Sodoma Law PC, Charlotte

Shelby D. Benton

Benton Family Law, Goldsboro

Heidi C. Bloom

Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh

Kim R. Bonuomo

Allman Spry Davis Leggett & Crumpler PA, Winston-Salem

Andrea Bosquez-Porter Bosquez Porter Family Law PLLC, Raleigh

Jennifer M. Bradley Triangle Smart Divorce, Cary Andrew Steven Brendle Soni Brendle PLLC, Winston-Salem

Amy Lynn Britt

Parker Bryan Family Law, Raleigh

Chad M. Buckingham

Regent Law, Charlotte

Holden Blake Clark

Hometown Counsel, Gastonia

James A. Clyburn

J. Albert Clyburn PLLC, Wilmington

Charles W. Coltrane

Coltrane & Over eld PLLC, Greensboro

Samuel Thomas Currin II Rik Lovett & Associates, Raleigh

Nicholas Lee Cushing

Miller Bowles Cushing PLLC, Charlotte

Lindsey Sink Dasher

Dasher Law PLLC, Matthews

Joslin Davis

Allman Spry Davis Leggett & Crumpler PA, Winston-Salem

Kavita Christina Desai

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Lindsey Ann Easterling

Easterling Law PLLC, Matthews

Steven Bruce Epstein

Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh

Candace Strickland Faircloth

Collins Family Law Group, Monroe

Christine R. Farrell

Mulligan Epstein PLLC, Wilmington

Jonathan Daniel Feit

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Marilyn Feuchs-Marker

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Joshua Finney

e Law O ce of Tamela T Wallace PA, Charlotte

Katherine Ann Frye

Frye Law O ce PA, Raleigh

Maren Tallent Funk

Godley Glazer & Funk PLLC, Mooresville

Chelsea Elise Gajewski

Sodoma Law PC, Charlotte

Janet L. Gemmell

Cape Fear Family Law, Wilmington

Katie Walsh Gilbert

Rech Law PC, Charlotte

Nancy L. Grace

Wake Family Law Group, Raleigh

C. Ray Grantham Jr.

Robinson Lawing LLP, Winston-Salem

Kelly L. Greene

Greene Wilson PA, New Bern

Jordan Marie Griffin

Leitner Bragg & Gri n PLLC, Monroe

Monica R. Guy

Kurtz Evans Whitley Guy Simos PLLC, Winston-Salem

Rachel Dawsey Rogers Hamrick

Tom Bush Law Group, Charlotte

Tara Austin Harrawood

Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

Michael S. Harrell

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

James Gregory Hatcher

Hatcher Law Group PC, Charlotte

Jessica Burgess Heffner

Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh

Penelope Lazarou Hefner

Sodoma Law PC, Charlotte

63 JANUARY 2023

FAMILY

KETAN P. SONI

PRACTICED LAW: 22 years

FAMILY: Married with children

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Nerds KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Ice Ice Baby” by Vanilla Ice.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Portillo’s hot dogs. I was born in Charlotte, but I moved to Chicago when I was about two and a half years old. It’s the best hot dog ever. The waffle fries are unmatched. I have never found a better hot dog in nearly 50 years of life. That’s the first stop I make after leaving the airport when visiting friends or family in Chicago. If you’re there, you have to get the Jumbo with everything.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: Visiting Antarctica with my dad. We lost my mom 18 years ago when she was about to retire at age 57. She and my dad had put off major traveling until after her retirement. We told my dad to never wait to see the world again. Since then, he’s basically visited two to three different countries each year. By 2018, he had visited a ton of different countries on every continent, except Antarctica. He insisted he would go there, but only if my sister and I joined him because it was a threeweek cruise across the Drake Passage, which can be dangerous. At the time, my wife and I had a three-year-old daughter and had been going through lots of fertility to have another child. We gave up and were then in the middle of adoption proceedings in late 2017 and early 2018. Then, my wife got pregnant without any fertility help. The day before I left for Antarctica, we went to her 12-week appointment and the baby was viable. The morning after I returned three weeks later, I attended her next appointment. It’s a memorable trip in that I went with my dad to visit his last continent, and it codifies the struggle and reward my wife went through to have our second child, who is now four.

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: Starting my own law practice.

MOST USED EMOJI: Thumbs up in brown color

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Cobra Kai” MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “Tron”

FAVORITE SNACK: Twix

Soni Brendle, Charlotte HOMETOWN: CHARLOTTE | UNDERGRADUATE: UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS | LAW: WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW

David Christopher Herring

e Law Firm of David Christopher

Herring PLLC, Charlotte

David Eric Holm

Parker Bryan Family Law, Holly Springs

Beth Tate Hondros

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Paul Doughton Horton Sodoma Law PC, Charlotte

Evan Bonder Horwitz arrington Smith LLP, Raleigh

Lindsey Ann Houk Waple Houk PLLC, Charlotte

Clara Ann Ignich Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Paige Elizabeth Inman Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Jill Schnabel Jackson Jackson Family Law, Raleigh

Elizabeth Johnstone James O t Kurman Attorneys at Law, Charlotte

Jonathan Mack Jerkins Jerkins Family Law, Raleigh

Irene Patrice King

King Collaborative Family Law, Charlotte

Katherine Hardersen King Wake Family Law Group, Raleigh

Julia Anne Kirby

Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

George R. Kornegay III

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Carolyn Lovejoy Krueger-Andes

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Jon B. Kurtz

Kurtz Evans Whitley Guy Simos PLLC, Winston-Salem

Dara Duncan Larson Duncan Law PLLC, Charlotte James W. Lea III

e Lea Schultz Law Firm, Wilmington

Kyle Wesley Leblanc

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Anna Gray Leblanc

O t Kurman Attorneys at Law, Charlotte

Lisa Lefante

Triangle Smart Divorce, Apex

Alyssa Michelle Levine

Charlotte Collaborative Divorce, Charlotte

Lauren Vaughn Lewis Essex Richards PA, Charlotte

James F. Lovett Jr. Rik Lovett & Associates, Raleigh

John M. Martin Ward and Smith PA, Winterville

Brandon Timothy McCarthy

Tom Bush Law Group, Charlotte

Laura Anderson McCoy Howard McCoy & Bolton LLP, Raleigh

Dustin Spencer McCrary

e Law O ce of Dustin S McCrary PLLC, Statesville

Patrick S. McCroskey

GHMA Law, Asheville

Joy Gragg McIver

Montford Family Law, Asheville

John Edward McKnight McKnight Law, Raleigh

Jonathan Stephen Melton

Gailor Hunt Jenkins Davis Taylor PLLC, Raleigh

Eric Steven Meredith

Jetton Meredith PLLC, Charlotte

Jaye Meyer

arrington Smith LLP, Raleigh

Ashley N. Michael Michael & Russell PLLC, Wilmington

John G. Miskey IV

Bagwell Holt Smith PA, Chapel Hill

Caroline Trapeni Mitchell

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Jennifer Paternostro Moore Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

Barbara R. Morgenstern

Morgenstern Associates PLLC, Greensboro

Gena G. Morris

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Henry D. Niblock

Craige Brawley Liipfert & Walker LLP, Winston-Salem

Steven Blaine Ockerman

Epperson Law Group PLLC, Charlotte

Marion Kathleen Parsons Parsons Law, Asheville

Manisha Pravinchandra Patel Law O ce of Manisha P. Patel PLLC, Greensboro

M. Catherine Crowell Pavur Law O ces of Catherine Pavur, Durham

Chelsea Anderson Peele

Cordell & Cordell, Greensboro

Lauren Taylor Quinn Ward and Smith PA, New Bern

Katherine Adkins Rech Rech Law PC, Charlotte

Eric A. Richardson Richardson Law PLLC, Greensboro

Mark D. Riopel

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Stephen Edward Robertson Law O ce of Stephen E. Robertson PLLC, Greensboro

Barbara Jane Rynne

Goodman Carr Laughrun Levine & Greene PLLC, Charlotte

Claire Joanne Samuels

Claire Samuels Law PLLC, Charlotte

Linda B. Sayed

Block Crouch Keeter Behm & Sayed LLP, Wilmington

Ryan Binderup Schultz

e Lea Schultz Law Firm, Wilmington

David Kenneth Self

David Self Law PLLC, Cornelius

Jim Siemens

Siemens Family Law Group, Asheville

Susan Sullivan Simos

Kurtz Evans Whitley Guy Simos PLLC, Winston-Salem

Mary Celeste Skinner McKnight Law, Raleigh

Courtney Hamer Smith

Tin Fulton Walker & Owen PLLC, Charlotte

Michele G. Smith Hill Evans Jordan Beatty PLLC, Greensboro

Tonya Graser Smith

Grasersmith PLLC, Charlotte

Megan Elizabeth Spidell Spidell Family Law, Greensboro

Dale Virginia Stephenson Ward Family Law Group, Cary

Robin J. Stinson Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Caroline Wingate Strauss Powers Law Firm PA, Charlotte

Alice C. Stubbs

arrington Smith LLP, Raleigh

Eric Carl Trosch

Conrad Trosch & Kemmy PA, Charlotte

John Paul Tsahakis James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte Shannan Barclay Tuorto Tuorto Family Law, Asheville Meghan A. Van Vynckt Cordes Law PLLC, Charlotte

Theresa Eileen Viera Modern Legal, Charlotte

Danielle Jessica Walle Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte Linda K. Ward Ward Family Law Group, Cary Angela Marie Watkins Leitner Bragg & Gri n Law, Monroe Elise Morgan Whitley Kurtz Evans Whitley Guy Simos PLLC, Winston-Salem

Mallory Ann Willink Conrad Trosch & Kemmy PA, Charlotte Lindsay Woodard Willis Rosen Law Firm, Raleigh

Melissa Davis Wright Block Crouch Keeter Behm & Sayed LLP, Wilmington Kathryn E. Yates Easterling Law PLLC, Matthews

HALL OF FAME: John H. Parker, Cheshire, Parker, Schneider, Bryan & Vitale, Raleigh (2007); Carlyn Poole (retired), arrington Smith LLP, Raleigh (2008); Richard D. Stephens, Dozier, Miller, Pollard & Murphy LLP, Charlotte (2009); Lana S. Warlick, Law O ce of Lana S. Warlick, Jacksonville (2010); Michael F. Schilawski, Wake Family Law Group, Raleigh (2011); D. Caldwell Barefoot Jr., Barefoot Family Law, Raleigh (2012); Stan Brown, Hamilton Stephens Steele & Martin PLLC, Charlotte (2013); Lori M. Vitale, Vitale Family Law, Raleigh (2014); Kimberly Bryan, Cheshire Parker Schneider & Bryan PLLC, Raleigh (2015); Rob Blair, Essex Richards PA, Charlotte (2016); A S. Johnson-Parris, Ward Black Law, Greensboro (2017); Chris Eatmon, Eatmon Law Firm PC, Wake Forest (2018); Kristin M. Hampson, Hampson Family Law, Raleigh (2019); Mariana Godwin, Barefoot Family Law, Raleigh (2020); Cary Close, Close Smith Family Law, Raleigh (2021); Richard Gantt, Gantt Family Law, Raleigh (2022)

BENJAMIN A. SNYDER

Chiesa Shahinian & Giantomasi PC, Charlotte

Jorgelina E. Araneda

Araneda Law Firm PC, Raleigh

Laura D. Burton

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Paul Mercer Cauley

Cauley Forsythe Immigration, Charlotte

Rosa Maria Corriveau

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC, Raleigh

Amanda Carrano Franklin

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Steven H. Garfinkel

Gar nkel Immigration Law Firm, Charlotte

Lindsey Taylor Goehring

Charlotte Immigration Law Firm, Charlotte

Vanessa Ann Gonzalez

e Law O ce of Vanessa A Gonzalez, Wilmington

Alan S. Gordon

Alan Gordon Immigration Law, Charlotte

Jordan Forsythe Greer

Cauley Forsythe Immigration, Charlotte

Stephen M. Hader

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Hannah Faith Little

Gar nkel Immigration Law Firm, Charlotte

Jeremy L. McKinney

McKinney Immigration Law, Greensboro

George N. Miller

Dozier Miller Law Group, Charlotte Colleen Forcina Molner

Gar nkel Immigration Law Firm, Charlotte

Jorge Ivan Pardo Pardo Law Firm PLLC, Charlotte

Helen Louise Parsonage

Elliot Morgan Parsonage PLLC, Winston-Salem

Susan Waller Ramos

Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Charlotte

Emily Elizabeth Scotton

Elliot Morgan Parsonage PLLC, Winston-Salem

Stephen Hugh Smalley

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC, Raleigh

Zachary Richard Snyder

Law O ce of Zach R Snyder, Concord

Julie Christine Spahn

Spahn Law Firm PLLC, Charlotte

Helen Laura Tarokic

Helen Tarokic Law PLLC, Wilmington

Douglas Bradley Thie Clawson and Staubes LLC, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: Laura Edgerton, Edgerton Immigration Law, Raleigh (2018); Gerard M. “Gerry” Chapman, Chapman Law Firm, Greensboro (2019); Murali Bashyam, Bashyam Shah LLP, Raleigh (2020); Gigi Gardner, Gardner Gordon, Charlotte, Raleigh (2021); Devon Senges, Dummit Fradin, Attorneys at Law, Greensboro (2022)

65 JANUARY 2023
IMMIGRATION

IMMIGRATION

A. SNYDER

PRACTICED LAW: 10 years

FAMILY: Wife and one daughter.

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Musicians. I was in a couple of rock bands in high school.

KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Total Eclipse of the Heart” by Bonnie Tyler. It’s a total jam and one that everyone goes “Oh yeah, I remember that song.” People just love it. It’s a very dynamic song that shifts in mood and melody throughout. My vocal range is suited perfectly for it.

RANDOM IMPULSE BUY: Clothes from Glory Days Apparel in Charlotte.

MOST USED EMOJI: Thumbs up LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Severance”

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Staying inside and waiting for spring.

FAVORITE SNACK: Pork rinds

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Reputation for honesty and respect among peers.

HOMETOWN: CHARLOTTE | UNDERGRADUATE: GUILFORD COLLEGE | LAW: ELON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW BENJAMIN Chiesa Shahinian & Giantomasi, Charlotte

KIMBERLY BULLOCK GATLING

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Ani Agrawal

NK Patent Law PLLC, Charlotte

Stephen Smith Ashley Jr. Ashley Law Firm PC, Charlotte

Karen Schuller Boardman Ascension Law, Charlotte

Bernard Andrew Brown II Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, Raleigh

Scott Kenyon Burger Allen Stahl + Kilbourne, Winston-Salem

Carla Hermida Clements Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Charlotte

Kathryn Gusmer Cole Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Ticora Elaine Davis

e Creator’s Law Firm, Charlotte

Arthur J. Debaugh

Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Angela Powers Doughty Ward and Smith PA, New Bern

Eva Gullick Frongello

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

William Lyle Gravatt

Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, Durham

Jeffrey Richard Gray Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Jonathan M. Hines

Trego Hines Ladenheim PLLC, Huntersville

Seth Lee Hudson

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Charlotte

Blake Patrick Hurt

Tuggle Duggins PA, Greensboro

John Timothy Kivus

Morningstar Law Group, Raleigh

Shawna Cannon Lemon

Stanek Lemon, Raleigh

Richard Thomas Matthews

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

Douglas William Meier

NK Patent Law PLLC, Raleigh

Justin Robert Nifong

NK Patent Law PLLC, Raleigh

Russell D. Nugent

e Humphries Law Firm PC, Wilmington

William Kevin Ransom Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Ray Wallace M. Rayburn Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

David W. Sar

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Trevor P. Schmidt Hutchison PLLC, Raleigh

Jeffrey J. Schwartz Schwartz Law Firm PC, Charlotte

Ryan Kirby Simmons Ward and Smith PA, New Bern

Elizabeth Ann Stanek

Stanek Lemon, Raleigh

Steven N. Terranova

Withrow Terranova PLLC, Cary

Christina Davidson Trimmer

Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte

Robert Charles Van Arnam

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

Thomas Glenn Varnum

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Wilmington

Henry B. Ward III Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Franklin Emmett Weindruch Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Lance S. White

Apollo Sports & Entertainment Law Group, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: Mitchell S. Bigel, Myers Bigel Sibley & Sajovec PA, Raleigh (2002; 2003); Kenneth D. Sibley, Myers Bigel Sibley & Sajovec PA, Raleigh (2004); Wesley addeus Adams III, Adams Evans PA, Charlotte (2005); J. Scott Evans, Yahoo! Inc., Charlotte (2006); Philip Summa, Summa, Allan & Additon PA, Charlotte (2007); Susan Freya Olive, Olive & Olive PA, Durham (2008); David M. Carter, Carter & Schnedler PA, Asheville (2009); David M. Krasnow, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, Raleigh (2010); William J. Mason, MacCord Mason PLLC, Wilmington

(2011); E. Eric Mills, Ward and Smith PA, New Bern (2012); Anthony Biller, Coats & Bennett PLLC, Cary (2013); Larry L. Coats, Coats & Bennett PLLC, Cary (2014); Sarah E. Nagae, e Nagae Law Firm PLLC dba Triangle Trademarks, Raleigh (2015); Maury M. Tepper III, Tepper & Eyster PLLC, Raleigh (2016); John C. Nipp, Additon, Higgins & Pendleton PA, Charlotte (2017); Matthew Ladenheim, Trego, Hines & Ladenheim PLLC, Charlotte (2018); Julie H. Richardson, Myers Bigel PA, Raleigh (2019); Russ Racine, Cran ll Sumner LLP, Charlotte (2020); Rick McDermott, McDermott IP Law, Charlotte (2021); Rebecca Crandall, McGuire Wood & Bissette PA, Asheville (2022)

LITIGATION

ROSS FULTON

Rayburn Cooper & Durham PA, Charlotte

Noah Breen Abrams

Abrams & Abrams PA, Raleigh

James C. Adams II

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Derek Paul Adler

DeVore Acton & Sta ord PA, Charlotte W. Sidney Aldridge

Nicholls & Crampton PA, Raleigh

67 JANUARY 2023
INTELLECTUAL

INTELLECTUAL

KIMBERLY BULLOCK GATLING

PRACTICED LAW: 23 years

HOMETOWN: Hampton, Virginia. I have lived in Greensboro for more than 25 years.

FAMILY: Husband, LaDaniel Gatling II; Children, LaDaniel III, Jordan and Fletcher.

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Cheerleaders and student government.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Fish & grits

BUCKET LIST ITEM: Visit Dubai.

MOST USED EMOJI: Face palm emoji.

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Handmaid’s Tale”

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “Coming to America”

FAVORITE SNACK: Popcorn DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Happiness, peace and balance.

UNDERGRADUATE: N.C. A&T STATE UNIVERSITY | LAW: THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL Fox Rothschild, Greensboro

Derek J. Allen

Allen Stahl + Kilbourne, Asheville

David Neal Allen

Allen Chesson & Grimes PLLC, Charlotte

Philip A. Baddour Jr.

Baddour Parker Hine & Hale PC, Goldsboro

John P. Barringer

McAngus Goudelock & Courie LLC, Charlotte

Allison Becker

Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani LLP, Raleigh

Jonathan A. Berkelhammer Ellis & Winters LLP, Greensboro

Brian O. Beverly

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Robert C. Bowers

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Martha Sharpe Bradley

Law Office of Martha Sharpe Bradley PLLC, Waynesville

Ellen Anne Bragg

Leitner Bragg & Griffin PLLC, Monroe

John E. Branch III

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Ashley Kamphaus Brathwaite Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

Walter E. Brock Jr.

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Matthew William Buckmiller

Buckmiller Boyette Frost PLLC, Raleigh

John R. Buric

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Seth Peter Buskirk

Clark Newton Evans PA, Wilmington

Anthony T. Capitano

Erwin Capitano Moss PA, Charlotte

Bo Brandon Caudill

Villmer Caudill, Charlotte

Karen Harris Chapman

Poyner Spruill LLP, Charlotte

Charles E. Coble

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

Edward Eugene Coleman III

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Heather Graham Connor

McAngus Goudelock & Courie LLC, Charlotte

Steven Dennis Corriveau

Martin & Jones PLLC, Raleigh

Richard A. Coughlin

Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Meredith Lyn Cushing

McAngus Goudelock & Courie, Charlotte

Richard S. Daniels

Patla Straus Robinson Moore PA, Asheville

Eric M. David

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

Alexandra Shae Davidson

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Charlotte

Cary Baxter Davis

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Edward Bilbro Davis

Bell Davis Pitt PA, Charlotte

Tricia M. Derr

Lincoln Derr PLLC, Charlotte

Pamela S. Duffy

Sharpless McClearn Lester Duffy PA, Graham

69 JANUARY 2023

LITIGATION

ROSS FULTON

PRACTICED LAW: 20 years

HOMETOWN: Clifton Park, New York

FAMILY: Married to wife, Marni, for 18 years.

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Funny kids? Or at least we thought we were funny…

KARAOKE NIGHT SONG: “Total Eclipse of the Heart”

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Pizza. I’ll eat anything and the more toppings the better. I either make it at home or we get it from Bird Pizzeria in Optimist Park.

RANDOM IMPULSE BUY: Just about every new electronic trinket when it first comes out — Alexa, Apple Watch, etc.

MOST USED EMOJI: The bumblebee, which my wife and I use to communicate our progress on the New York Times spelling bee each day.

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Cobra Kai.” It’s a fun show. I think it’s okay to bask in mindless nostalgia once in a while.

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “The Princess Bride”

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Watching movies inside.

UNDERGRADUATE: STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK, GENESEO | LAW: COLLEGE OF WILLIAM & MARY SCHOOL OF LAW Rayburn Cooper & Durham, Charlotte

David M. Duke

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Alan W. Duncan

Mullins Duncan Harrell Russell PLLC, Greensboro

Joshua B. Durham Bell Davis Pitt PA, Charlotte

J. Nicholas Ellis

Poyner Spruill LLP, Rocky Mount

Mary E. Euler

McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Henry Lee Evans Jr. Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Lynwood P. Evans Ward and Smith PA, Winterville

James Robert Faucher

Brown Faucher Peraldo Benson PLLC, Greensboro

Daniel James Finegan

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Mark A. Finkelstein

Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh

Andrew Larry Fitzgerald

Fitzgerald Litigation, Winston-Salem

Paul T. Flick

Miller Monroe Plyler PLLC, Raleigh

Deedee Rouse Gasch

Cranfill Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Charles George

Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh

Tikkun A. S. Gottschalk Deutsch Gottschalk PA, Asheville

Christopher T. Graebe

Morningstar Law Group, Raleigh

Christopher Andrew Gray Burns Gray & Gray, Monroe

Alex J. Hagan

Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

Jonathan E. Hall

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Raleigh

Robert E. Harrington

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

James McKinley Hash

Everett Gaskins Hancock LLP, Raleigh

John Alexander Heroy

James McElroy Diehl PA, Charlotte

Marcus C. Hewitt

Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh

Mark Alexander Hiller

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Raleigh

Dana H. Hoffman

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Chip Holmes

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Charlotte

Ann Patton Hornthal

Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

Matthew Thomas Houston

K L Gates LLP, Raleigh

George D. Humphrey III

Allman Spry Davis Leggett & Crumpler PA, Winston-Salem

John N. Hutson Jr.

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Phillip T. Jackson

Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

Christopher Ward Jackson

Ellis & Winters LLP, Greensboro

Jason Burke James JD Law Carolinas, Charlotte

Melody Jewell Jolly

Cranfill Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Amanda Patricia Just

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Lori R. Keeton

Law Offices of Lori Keeton, Charlotte

Charles Bailey King Jr.

Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Charlotte

Kimberly Jill Kirk

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Heryka Rodriguez Knoespel McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Mark Raymond Kutny

Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte

Gilbert C. Laite III

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

Christopher Carlisle Lam

Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Charlotte

Joshua D. Lanning Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Kenneth T. Lautenschlager

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Jodie Herrmann Lawson McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Sara R. Lincoln

Lincoln Derr PLLC, Charlotte

Trey Lindley Lindley Law PLLC, Charlotte

Harrison A. Lord Lord Law Firm PLLC, Charlotte

Lesley Skye Macleod

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Jennifer D. Maldonado

Yates McLamb & Weyher LLP, Raleigh

J. Michael Malone

Hendren Redwine & Malone PLLC, Raleigh

John P. Marshall White Allen PA, Kinston

John D. Martin

Cranfill Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Dennis Lee Martin Jr. Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

John M. McCabe

The Law Offices of John M McCabe PA, Cary

Valecia M. McDowell

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

James P. McLoughlin Jr.

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Thomas Richmond

McPherson III

McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Roy H. Michaux Jr.

Alexander Ricks PLLC, Charlotte

Jason Andrew Miller

Miller Monroe Plyler PLLC, Raleigh

Kimberly Turner Miller

Owens Miller PLLC, Raleigh

Mike Mitchell

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Mark Andrew Nebrig

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Lauren Oriana Newton Tin Fulton Walker & Owen PLLC, Charlotte

Douglas David Noreen Howard Stallings, Raleigh

Leslie C. Packer

Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

Paige Loralea Pahlke Pahlke Law PLLC, Charlotte

Alan Parry

Parry Law PLLC, Chapel Hill

Joel R. Rhine Rhine Law Firm PC, Wilmington

Amy E. Richardson

Harris Wiltshire & Grannis LLP, Raleigh

William C. Robinson

Robinson Elliott & Smith, Charlotte Morgan Hunter Rogers Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Charlotte

Erik M. Rosenwood

Rosenwood Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte

William Kirk Sanders

Hendrick Bryant Nerhood Sanders Otis LLP, Winston-Salem

Nicole Rochelle Scallon Henson Talley & Scallon LLP, Greensboro

Steven Andrew Scoggan Ellis & Winters LLP, Greensboro

Thomas Hamilton Segars Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh Colleen Shea Cranfill Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Timothy Alfred Sheriff Crumley Roberts LLP, Charlotte Ben E. Shook Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte Grant Sigmon Sigmon Klein PLLC, Greensboro Hayden J. Silver III Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Raleigh

Theodore B. Smyth Cranfill Sumner LLP, Raleigh

Jeffrey Scott Southerland Tuggle Duggins PA, Greensboro Luther D. Starling Jr. Daughtry Woodard Lawrence & Starling, Smithfield

James B. Stephenson II Stephenson Law LLP, Cary Wyatt S. Stevens Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville Colin R. Stockton Regent Law, Charlotte Walter L. Tippett Jr.

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

B. Elizabeth Todd

The Law Office of B Elizabeth Todd PLLC, Charlotte

Christopher Donald Tomlinson Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Allen Nelson Trask III Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Anna Claire Turpin

Whitley Law Firm, Raleigh

Jason Nolan Tuttle

Everett Gaskins Hancock LLP, Raleigh

Jennifer K. Van Zant

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

K. Matthew Vaughn

Stevens Martin Vaughn & Tadych PLLC, Raleigh

Jessica Blair Vickers

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Matthew M. Villmer

Villmer Caudill PLLC, Charlotte

John Bowen Walker

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Suzanne Renfrow Walker

Yates McLamb & Weyher LLP, Raleigh

Zachary D. Walton

McAngus Goudelock & Courie LLC, Charlotte

Mary McHugh Webb

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Camden R. Webb

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

Dixie T. Wells

Ellis & Winters LLP, Greensboro

Kevin G. Williams

Bell Davis Pitt PA, Winston-Salem

Jeremy M. Wilson

Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

HALL OF FAME: James T. Williams Jr., Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro (2002; 2003); Clarence W. Walker, Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman LLP, Charlotte (2004); Gary S. Parsons, Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh (2005); William K. Davis, Bell, Davis & Pitt PA, Winston-Salem (2006); Dan J. McLamb, Yates, McLamb & Weyher LLP, Raleigh (2007); Robert D. Walker, Walker, Allen, Grice, Ammons & Foy LLP, Goldsboro (2008); J. Donald Cowan Jr., Ellis & Winters LLP, Greensboro (2009); G. Gray Wilson, Wilson, Helms and Cartledge, Winston-Salem (2010); James H. Kelly Jr., Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, Winston-Salem (2011); Daniel L. Brawley, Williams Mullen, Wilmington (2012); Lee M. Whitman, Wyrick

Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh (2013); Michael J. Byrne, Byrne Law PC, Raleigh (2014); Jonathan D. Sasser, Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh (2015); Jean Sutton Martin, Law Office of Jean Sutton Martin PLLC, Wilmington (2016); Greg Merritt, Harris, Creech, Ward & Blackerby, New Bern (2017); Ward Davis, Bell, Davis & Pitt PA, Charlotte (2018); Elizabeth Scott, Williams Mullen, Raleigh (2019); Clay A. Campbell, Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte (2020); Kristen L. Beightol, Edwards Kirby LLP, Raleigh (2021); Fred W. DeVore III, DeVore, Acton & Stafford PA, Charlotte (2022)

71 JANUARY 2023

REAL ESTATE

PRACTICED

LAW: Five months as a law clerk and 14 years in private practice.

FAMILY: My husband and I have two children. My parents, brother and two sisters all live in Asheville, as well.

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: I didn’t really have a specific clique or group — I remember getting along with everyone. I was close with my three siblings, had supportive parents and a great group of friends, and loved my teachers. Mom used to let us bake after dinner and take snacks in to school to pass out to friends, which must have contributed to me being named Miss Congeniality 1999 at A.C. Reynolds High.

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Anything that includes potatoes.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: I have many. The most difficult one to pull off is to have dinner with Jay-Z, Beyoncé, and Dave Chappelle, at my parents’ house. Mom is an amazing cook. They would rave about her food while I masked being starstruck.

BIGGEST RISK TAKEN: I tell myself that my job is to avoid risks for myself and my clients.

RANDOM IMPULSE BUY: Law school. I did not know how to narrow down my many interests or what direction to take for graduate school. I went to law school because I knew I wouldn’t have to decide exactly what I wanted to do until I actually earned the degree.

MOST USED EMOJI: Crying laughing face

LAST SHOW BINGE-WATCHED: “Chef’s Table.” I don’t watch much TV but when I do, it is something food related. I could watch Barefoot Contessa make meals that I’ll never actually cook myself for hours.

FAVORITE WINTER ACTIVITY: Holiday parties and post-holiday dinner parties to get through the February seasonal slump.

FAVORITE SNACK: I make a pretty amazing chocolate walnut cookie.

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: Raising children who know they are loved and capable, spending quality time with family and friends, and being a contributing member to my community and colleagues.

HOMETOWN: ASHEVILLE | UNDERGRADUATE: UNC CHAPEL HILL | LAW: QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW

JOANNE BADR MORGAN

Ward and Smith PA, Asheville

Kenneth J. Abner

Bishop Dulaney Joyner Abner PA, Charlotte

Calvin Grant Armstrong Norwood Armstrong & Stokes PLLC, Charlotte

Mary Burgett Ashley Ashley Law Firm PC, Charlotte

Anthony J. Barwick

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

Evan Michael Bass Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Ashleigh Elizabeth Black

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Jonathan Matthew Bogues Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, Raleigh

James Drake Brinkley Ward and Smith PA, Winterville

Jefferson W. Brown Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

John R. Buben Jr.

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Margaret S. Burnham

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Greensboro

Alison R. Cayton

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Barbara R. Christy

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

Gordon L. Cory Jr.

Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, Charlotte

Katherine Marie Dowell

Raleigh Real Estate Law, Raleigh

Hunter Sutton Edwards Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Charlotte

James Scott Efird St Amand & E rd PLLC, Charlotte

Susan Y. Ellinger

Ellinger & Carr PLLC, Raleigh

Jessica Lynn Elliott

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Andrew Davis Evans Capital City Law, Raleigh

Randall Wayne Faircloth

Regent Law, Charlotte

Samuel Benjamin Franck Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Michael Robert Frongello

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Nancy M. Guyton Law Firm Carolinas, Wilmington

Jonathan Robert Hankin Hankin Law PLLC, Charlotte

Brett T. Hanna

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Robert Charles Lawson

Williams Mullen, Raleigh

William N. Harris McGuire Woods LLP, Charlotte

Mark Spence Hartman

Davis Hartman Wright Attorneys LLP, New Bern

James Bryant Haynes Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Michael Philip Hebert Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

David Layne Hillman Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

Thomas Patrick Hockman Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

Janeen Miller Hogue e Miller-Hogue Law Firm PC, Charlotte

Scott Thomas Horn

Allman Spry Davis Leggett & Crumpler PA, Winston-Salem

Susan K. Irvin

Irvin Law Group, Cornelius Kent D. Jones

Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Charlotte

Tonu Thomas Kangur Jr. Kangur Porter LLP, Winston-Salem

Peter U. Kanipe

McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Jeffrey P. Keeter

Block Crouch Keeter Behm & Sayed LLP, Wilmington

Michael F. King

K L Gates LLP, Raleigh

John W. King Jr.

John W King PLLC, New Bern

William B. Kirk Jr. Kirk Palmer & igpen PA, Charlotte

Meredith Jo Kittrell

Getter Law O ce PA, Raleigh

Benjamin R. Kuhn

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Amy C. Lanning

Blanco Tackabery & Matamoros PA, Winston-Salem

Sarah Beth Lauterbach Robinson and Lauterbach PLLC, Gastonia

Robert George Lindauer Jr. Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Patrick Shuler Lineberry

Tuggle Duggins PA, Greensboro

John Charles Livingston

Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, Raleigh

Nicole Sabourin Loeffler

Weatherspoon And Voltz LLP, Raleigh

David G. Martin

Murchison Taylor Gibson PLLC, Wilmington

Andrew Martin McCullough Venn Law Group, Charlotte

Gary Thomas

McDermott, McDermott Law PLLC, Waxhaw

73 JANUARY 2023
ESTATE
REAL

YOUNG GUNS

PRACTICED LAW: 3 years

FAMILY: Father, John; mother, Volinda; brother, Kevin; fiancé, Taylor Ruff

HIGH SCHOOL GROUP: Athletes

ONE MEAL TO EAT FOREVER: Chick-fil-A sandwich combo with french fries and Coke Zero.

BUCKET LIST ITEM: Play golf at each location of PGA Major Tournaments.

RANDOM IMPULSE BUY: I’m a sucker for suits, ties and golf equipment.

MOVIE YOU COULD QUOTE BY HEART: “Wedding Crashers”

DEFINITION OF SUCCESS: One of my favorite quotes regarding success is from Colin Powell, who said, “Success is the result of perfection, hard work, learning from failure, loyalty and persistence.” Oftentimes, success is viewed as something that is determined by results but I believe it is better defined by preparation, determination and how one handles adversity.

HOMETOWN: GARNER | UNDERGRADUATE: CAMPBELL UNIVERSITY | LAW: CAMPBELL UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW KEITH BOYETTE North Carolina Healthcare Association, Raleigh

Heather Dawn McDowell

Ellinger & Carr PLLC, Raleigh

Daniel Adam Merlin

Alexander Ricks PLLC, Charlotte

Peter F. Morgan

Peter F Morgan PLLC, Charlotte

Erin Cowan Mosley

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Greensboro

David William Murray e Odom Firm PLLC, Charlotte

David J. Neill

Fox Rothschild LLP, Raleigh

Thomas Lawson Newton

Craige Brawley Liipfert & Walker LLP, Winston-Salem

Robbie Brice Parker

Lee Kaess PLLC, Wilmington

Clifford P. Parson

Ward and Smith PA, New Bern

Jeffrey W. Porter

Law O ce of Je rey W Porter PC, Wilmington

Tonya B. Powell

Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Raleigh

Samuel S. Price

StephensonLaw LLP, Cary

David T. Pryzwansky

e Pryzwansky Law Firm PA, Raleigh

Robert J. Ramseur Jr.

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Ashley H. Ray

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Holden Reaves

Reaves Law PLLC, Fayetteville

John F. Renger III

Renger Reynolds PLLC, Charlotte

Julian P. Robb

Craige Brawley Liipfert & Walker LLP, Winston-Salem

John R. Rose

Goosmann Rose Colvard Cramer PA, Asheville

Harvey Lee Rouse

Lancaster Trotter & Poe PLLC, Charlotte

Brian J. Schoeck

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Lawrence Joseph Shaheen Jr. e McIntosh Law Firm, Davidson

Douglas John Short

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Robert C. Sink

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Kyle Abraham Smalling

Capital City Law, Wake Forest

Eric R. Spence

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Gary W. Swindell

Swindell & Visalli PLLC, Charlotte

Anna Hartzog Tison

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Raleigh

John M. Tyson

Judge John M Tyson, Fayetteville

Nikhil Pankaj Vyas Vyas Realty Law, Raleigh

William Thomas Wallace

McMillan Psaroudis Markey PA, Charlotte William B. Wallace

e Law O ces of Jason E Taylor PC, Charlotte

Cameron Todd Ware

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Walter Samuel Weathers W. Samuel Weathers Attorney PLLC, Raleigh

HALL OF FAME: Alfred Adams, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice PLLC, Winston-Salem (2004); Barry D. Mann, Manning, Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh (2005); Brent A. Torstrick, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2006); Samuel T. Oliver Jr., Manning, Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh (2007); Charles Gordon Brown, Brown & Bunch PLLC, Chapel Hill (2008); C. Steven Mason, Smith, Anderson, Blount, Dorsett, Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh (2009); Timothy G. Sellers, Sellers, Hinshaw, Ayers, Dortch & Lyons PA, Charlotte (2010); Frank M. Bell Jr., Bell, Davis & Pitt PA, Winston-Salem (2011); George W. Sistrunk III, Hamilton Stephens Steele & Martin PLLC Charlotte (2012); Robert Charles Lawson, Williams Mullen, Raleigh (2013); Michael G. Winters, Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh (2014); Holly H. Alderman, Schell Bray PLLC, Chapel Hill (2015); Brian

W. Byrd, Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, Greensboro (2016); Anna P. McLamb, Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh (2017); Beth Voltz, Weatherspoon & Voltz LLP, Raleigh (2018); Annika M. Brock, e Brock Law Firm PLLC, Asheville (2019); Allen York, Smith, Anderson, Blount, Dorsett, Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh (2020); Diana R. Palecek, Fox Rothschild LLP, Charlotte (2021); Philip Hackley, Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh (2022)

MICHAEL CORY HOWES

Strauss Attorneys PLLC, Raleigh

Abby Lund Adams

Kohut Adams PA, Wilmington

S.

Kyle Agee

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

David Eric Anderson

David E Anderson PLLC, Wilmington

Andrew D. Atherton

McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Erin Vocke Bailey

Tuggle Duggins PA, Greensboro

75 JANUARY 2023
TAX & ESTATE PLANNING

Jackie W. Bedard

Bedard Law PLLC, Cary

Everett McMillan Bolton Howard McCoy & Bolton LLP, Raleigh

Elizabeth W. Bowen

Bowen Law Firm PC, Cary

Julie Marion Bradlow

Darrow Everett LLP, Charlotte

R. Daniel Brady

Brady Cobin Law Group PLLC, Raleigh

Gwendolyn C. Brooks

Kennon Craver PLLC, Durham

Andrew Miles Brower Law Firm Carolinas, Greensboro

Stephen Aaron Brown Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

John R. Cella Jr.

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Ansley Chapman Cella

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Lynn F. Chandler

Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte

Christian P. Cherry

Crisp Cherry McCraw PLLC, Charlotte

Eugene William Chianelli Jr. Howard Stallings, Raleigh

Andrea Christina Chomakos McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Sandra M. Clark

Manning Fulton & Skinner PA, Raleigh

Charles M. Crisp

Crisp Cherry McCraw PLLC, Charlotte

Stephanie Camp Daniel Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP, Charlotte

Roy W. Davis III

R. Walton Davis III, Black Mountain

Charlie Davis

Poyner Spruill LLP, Raleigh

Cristine Rose Dixon

Craige Brawley Liipfert & Walker LLP, Winston-Salem

Megan W. Dunham

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Charlotte

Robert Andrew Fisher Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Kara O’Conner Gansmann Cran ll Sumner LLP, Wilmington

Stanton Paul Geller

Culp Elliott & Carpenter PLLC, Charlotte

Kimberly A. Gossage

Garrity & Gossage, Matthews

Edward Weede Griggs

Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Winston-Salem

Susan Heather Haberberger

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Hailey Erin Hawkins

Stott Hollowell Windham & Stancil

PLLC, Mount Holly

John Randolph Hemphill Hemphill Gelder PC, Raleigh

Reed J. Hollander

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

Mark R.A. Horn

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Timothy William Jones Jones Branz Whitaker LLP, Raleigh

Christopher JC Jones

Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Jill Lynn Peters Kaess Lee Kaess PLLC, Wilmington

Matthew Robert Kain Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Gregory Michael Katzman

Davis Hartman Wright Attorneys LLP, Wilmington

John G. Kelso

e Van Winkle Law Firm, Asheville

Amy Hulsey Kincaid

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

Meghan Naomi Knight Lynch & Eatman LLP, Raleigh

Jennifer L J Koenig

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

Helayne Barrie Levy Payne

Elder Law & Life Care Planning Center, Shallotte

David Tyler Lewis

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Harris M. Livingstain

McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Paul H. Livingston Jr.

Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro

Steven B. Long Ward and Smith PA, Raleigh

Robert D. Lyerly Jr. Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Charlotte

Linda Marie Baugher Malone

Howard Stallings, New Bern

Lauren Campbell Maxie NC Planning, Cary

William Thomas McCuiston Jr. McCuiston Law O ces PLLC, Cary

Chadwick Ian McCullen

Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Charles H. Mercer Jr.

Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh

William Lee Mills IV Culp Elliott & Carpenter PLLC, Charlotte

Jared Daniel Mobley K L Gates LLP, Charlotte

Robert E. Monroe

Monroe Wallace Morden & Sherrill PA, Raleigh

Christopher Scott Morden

Monroe Wallace Morden & Sherrill PA, Raleigh

Brian Gene Morrison

Murchison Taylor & Gibson PLLC, Wilmington

Mitchell Kemp Mosley

Narron Wenzel PA, Raleigh

Marcus L. Moxley

Edwards Craver Veach PLLC, Winston-Salem

Lawrence Moye IV

Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Raleigh

Caroline Corry Munroe

Blanco Tackabery & Matamoros PA, Winston-Salem

Michael Christian Murray

Murray Moyer PLLC, Raleigh

Andrew Lamberson Nesbitt Nesbitt Law PLLC, Charlotte

Anthony D. Nicholson

McPherson Rocamora Nicholson Wilson & Hinkle PLLC, Durham

Jennifer Carney Noble Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Holly Berry Harris Norvell Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Jason R. Page

Ason R Page PLLC, Wilson

Erin Bray Patterson Erin Patterson Law PLLC, Charlotte

Gregory T. Peacock Ward and Smith PA, New Bern Christian L. Perrin Perrin Legal, Charlotte Galina Petrova Petrova Petrova Law PLLC, Greensboro

Virginia Scales Pleasants

Michael Best & Friedrich LLP, Winston-Salem

Susan Taylor Rash Patla Straus Robinson Moore PA, Asheville

Thomas J. Rhodes Jr. Narron Holdford PA, Wilson Larry H. Rocamora McPherson Rocamora Nicholson Wilson & Hinkle PLLC, Durham

Jennifer Marshall Roden Craige & Fox PLLC, Wilmington

Lisa Michele Rothman McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Heidi Elizabeth Royal Heidi E. Royal Law PLLC, Charlotte Maria Magdalena Satterfield Satter eld Legal PLLC, Charlotte Rebecca Lane Smitherman

Craige Brawley Liipfert & Walker LLP, Winston-Salem

Herman Spence III Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Kimberly H. Stogner Womble Bond Dickinson LLP, Winston-Salem

Kimberly Q. Swintosky

Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mitchell & Jernigan LLP, Raleigh

Adam Patrick McInnis Tarleton

Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Matthew W. Thompson Ward and Smith PA, Wilmington

Bradley T. Van Hoy Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

David R. Vines

O t Kurman Attorneys at Law, Rock Hill

Robert Hammock Wall Akerman LLP, Winston-Salem

Carter Bentley Webb

Strauss Attorneys PLLC, Asheville

Eric Clifton Williams

Allen Stahl + Kilbourne, Asheville Catherine Loden Wilson McPherson Rocamora Nicholson Wilson & Hinkle PLLC, Durham

James Michael Wilson Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Charlotte

Louis E. Wooten III Nichols and Crampton, Raleigh Paul Anthony Yokabitus Cary Estate Planning, Cary

HALL OF FAME: Robert C. Vaughn Jr., Vaughn Perkinson Ehlinger Moxley & Stogner, Winston-Salem (2002; 2003); W. Curtis Elliott Jr., Culp Elliott & Carpenter PLLC, Charlotte (2004); Ray S. Farris, Johnston, Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte (2005); Elizabeth L. Quick, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice PLLC, Winston-Salem (2006); James W. Narron, Narron, O’Hale & Whittington PA, Smith eld (2007); E. William Kratt, Herring Mills & Kratt PLLC, Raleigh (2008); Christy Eve Reid (died May 8, 2014), Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2009); Michael H. Godwin, Schell Bray Aycock Abel & Livingston PLLC, Greensboro (2010); Maria M. Lynch, Lynch & Eatman LLP, Raleigh (2011); Graham D. Holding Jr., Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2012); Andrew H. Veach, Edwards Craver Veach PLLC, Winston-Salem (2013); Robert H. Haggard, e Van Winkle Law Firm, Asheville (2014); Michael A. Colombo, Colombo, Kitchin, Dunn, Ball & Porter LLP, Greenville (2015); Jason Walls, e Walls Law Firm PLLC, Apex (2016); Debra L. Foster, Foster Royal PA, Charlotte (2017); Elizabeth “Liz” K. Arias, Womble Bond Dickinson, Raleigh (2018); Jean Gordon Carter, McGuireWoods LLP, Raleigh (2019); Rudy Ogburn, Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh (2020); Jessica Mering Hardin, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte (2021); Brooks Ja a, Cranford, Buckley Schultze, Tomchin, Allen & Buie PA, Charlotte (2022)

YOUNG GUNS

KEITH BOYETTE

Director of State Government Relations, North Carolina Healthcare Association, Raleigh

Elliot Sol Abrams

Cheshire Parker Schneider PLLC, Raleigh

Lisa Williford Arthur Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Lillie Seifart Ashworth

Marshall & Taylor PLLC, Raleigh

Helen Somerville Baddour

Johnson & Groninger PLLC, Charlotte

Demi Lorant Bostian

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Chapel Hill

John Gray Brotherton

Knox Law Center, Charlotte

Katie Burchette

Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

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Caitlin B. Birckhead

Tharrington Smith LLP, Raleigh

Louis Penn Clarke

Longleaf Law Partners, Raleigh

Kevin Cline

Kevin Cline Law, PLLC, Raleigh

Carter B. Cole

Envisage Law, Raleigh

Chamberlain Elizabeth Collier McAngus Goudelock & Courie LLC, Raleigh

Payton Rose Collier Ward and Smith PA, Raleigh

Brittany Nichole Conner DeVore Acton & Stafford PA, Charlotte

Kellie Marie Corbett

Carolina Family Estate Planning, Cary

Christy Cochran Dunn Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh

Joseph Porter Durham III

McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

John Michael Durnovich

Poyner Spruill LLP, Charlotte

Mollie Schrull Ellis

Godley Glazer & Funk PLLC, Charlotte

Alan Buford Felts

Tuggle Duggins PA, Greensboro

Murphy Horne Fletcher McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Vanessa Nicole Garrido

Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak & Stewart PC, Raleigh

Jonah Aaron Garson Parry Law PLLC, Chapel Hill

Ashleigh Monique Greene Nexsen Pruet PLLC, Greensboro

Stephen Arnott Guardipee

Hatcher Law Group PC, Charlotte

Brian Donald Gulden

The Van Winkle Law Firm, Asheville

Ross Tanner Hardeman

Sumrell Sugg PA, New Bern

Kathryn Joy Hesman Holland & Knight LLP, Charlotte

Travis Styres Hinman

Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Charlotte

Anna-Bryce Hobson

Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Charlotte

Corri Ann Hopkins

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Raleigh

Caitlin Nobles Horne Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Michael James Hutcherson

Ragsdale Liggett PLLC, Raleigh

Max Edward Isaacson

Longleaf Law Partners, Raleigh

Brooks Foste Jaffa

Cranford Buckley Schultze, Charlotte

Emily Catherine Jeske

Bosquez Porter Family Law PLLC, Raleigh

Hillary Margaret Kies

Turning Point Litigation, Greensboro

Katherine Anne King

Everett Gaskins Hancock LLP, Raleigh

Kristen Marie Kirby

McGuireWoods LLP, Raleigh

Lesley Attkisson Lewis Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Kyle Joseph Luebke McGuireWoods LLP, Charlotte

Courtney Elizabeth Mann

The Law Office Of W Daniel Grist PLLC, Charlotte Andria Dayna Marquez Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte

Kevin Anthony Marshall Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte

Emily Kate Mather KL Gates LLP, Raleigh

Joseph Walton Milam III

Rosenwood Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte

Kelly Nash Dozier Miller Law Group, Charlotte

John David Noor Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

Nishma Patel

McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville Madeleine Michelle Pfefferle Ellis & Winters LLP, Raleigh

Nader Saeed Raja Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte Preetha Suresh Rini Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson PA, Raleigh

Kathleen Rose Rodberg McGuire Wood Bissette PA, Asheville

Sarah Mokhtar Rozek Fox Rothschild LLP, Greensboro

Sarah Margaret Saint Brooks Pierce McLendon Humphrey & Leonard LLP, Greensboro

Joseph Robert Shealy Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP, Charlotte

Nickolas Blake Sherrill

Monroe Wallace Morden & Sherrill PA, Raleigh

Olivia Smith Wallace & Graham, Salisbury

Audrey Zopp Snyder Ward Black Law, Greensboro

Kendra Nicole Stark

Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani LLP, Raleigh

Andrew David Steffensen Schell Bray PLLC, Greensboro Sheldon McCurry Stokes Johnston Allison & Hord PA, Charlotte Tory Ian Summey Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, Charlotte

Isla N. Tabrizi

Collins Family Law Group, Monroe

Philip Ryan Thomas North Carolina Republican Party, Raleigh

Samuel Wesley Tripp III Roberts & Stevens PA, Asheville

Patrick Taylor Vander Jeugdt Young Moore and Henderson PA, Raleigh Kathryn Gillespie Wellman Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte

Edward Benton Woodall Venn Law Group, Charlotte

HALL OF FAME: J. Christian Stevenson, Kirk Palmer & Thigpen PA, Charlotte (2012); George Mason Oliver, Oliver Friesen Cheek PLLC, New Bern (2013); Michael F. Easley Jr., McGuireWoods LLP, Raleigh (2014); Alvaro R. De La Calle, Calle Law PLLC, Greensboro (2015); Aaron Lay, Hamilton Stephens Steele + Martin PLLC, Charlotte (2016); Elie Foy, Wyrick Robbins

Yates & Ponton LLP, Raleigh (2017); Matthew T. Marcellino, Marcellino & Tyson PLLC, Charlotte (2018); Nancy S. Litwak, Rosenwood, Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte (2019); Antonia A. “Toni” Peck, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Raleigh (2020); Holden B. Clark, Holden B. Clark, Attorney at Law PLLC, Gastonia (2021); Carl Burchette, Rosenwood, Rose & Litwak PLLC, Charlotte (2022) ■

77 JANUARY 2023
BEHIND THE SCENES Thank you to our photographer, Bryan Regan, for his willingness to set up wherever necessary to get the best picture.
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79 JANUARY 2023

CULTURE OF INNOVATION

Forsyth County, Winston-Salem are hub for medical marvels, high-tech, research and entrepreneurs.

When Dr. Anthony Atala moved from Boston to Forsyth County 17 years ago, downtown Winston-Salem’s main landmark was two tall smokestacks marked “R.J.R. TOB. Co.” overlooking vacant historic buildings and warehouses.

That downtown plot has since transformed to the Innovation Quarter, 330-plus acres of mixeduse space filled with 90 companies pursuing biomedical science, information technology, clinical services and businesses that impact the regenerative medicine field. The community also includes residential development and retail. Education that aids business and research is also a major component with the presence of Wake Forest University’s School of Arts and Science’s biomedical graduate programs and a branch of Forsyth Technical Community College.

And more is coming. The Innovation Quarter’s Phase Two with 2.4 million square feet is in the works.

“It was abandoned, old factories, and that is what really attracted us as we were moving here to start the institutes. We saw the way this park had been laid out, and we knew this was an area that could focus on technology,” says Atala, founder and director of the Wake Forest Institute of Regenerative Medicine [WFIRM]. “There was this very strong medical school, and the hospital, and the cancer center all in one central space. To have everything together is really essential. The state and the city and the institution, they’re all aligned, and that’s what makes it special.”

“We’re in this bubble,” says Nick Gonzalez, a partner and broker in the commercial real estate firm Linville Team Partners, which serves Winston-Salem, Greensboro

and High Point. “And it’s a good bubble. … The medical community of Winston-Salem is somewhat famous.” Since 2014, his company has done more than $150 million in transactions in downtown WinstonSalem. He went on to discuss how the varied features of the community must be assembled the right way.

“A lot of our clients are developers that have invested heavily in downtown. When you’re doing something downtown, it’s almost like you have a curated vision of how it’s all going to fit together with the other puzzle pieces,” Gonzalez says. “It’s like there’s an ecosystem that’s working, and you’re disrupting the ecosystem for the better. Adding something to that vibrancy, like an apartment complex, or retail, or renovating an existing property, there has to be a sensitivity to that, that doesn’t apply to other areas.

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You’re fitting into the ecosystem that’s already there.”

Along with a variety of purposes, the variety of employees in WinstonSalem and the Innovation Quarter make them distinctive.

“The town has an amazing environment, because you have the combination of academia and graduate schools, undergraduate students, and the Innovation Quarter has been totally revitalized with a lot of young scientists and engineers,” says Atala, who also is a multipleaward-recipient professor and the Chair of the Department of Urology at Wake Forest. “You have … entrepreneurs and start-ups who are building the next generation of products in technology, ” he adds.

“The entire innovation ecosystem that exists within the city of WinstonSalem and Forsyth County have rallied to place a specific emphasis on fulfilling our mission of being the City of Arts and Innovation,” says James Patterson, Innovation Quarter director of marketing and communications. “That means investment in initiatives and infrastructure that create an inviting atmosphere for research and innovation.”

The city’s population of 250,320 has grown by 16,500 people in the last decade and by almost 50,000 since 2000. Its hub of research, technology and education overflows beyond city limits.

Allegacy Federal Credit Union is an example of a Forsyth County institution with deep roots in WinstonSalem that’s continually evolving as the county grows. It started in 1967 as Reynolds Carolina Credit Union for employees of the tobacco company in a makeshift office in the RJR building downtown. In 2001 the credit union changed its name to combine “allegiance” and “legacy” and become Allegacy. It now has 200 employees, 170,000 members or account holders and 18 branches

in six counties. It’s opened two in Charlotte since June. Yet, Allegacy stays close to those early RJR roots with a location in the Biotech Place at the Innovation Quarter.

“All kinds of people are moving to Winston to work there. …. They are coming from all over the world,” said Lindsay Coppley, Allegacy communications specialist. “We want to introduce ourselves and pay homage to our roots in the Reynolds building. It’s amazing what’s happening (in the iQ) and we want to be an integral part of that.”

Forsyth County is definitely a melting pot for longtime residents and businesses as well as newcomers and innovation.

“Forsyth County has a robust pipeline of project interest both through local expansion and external relocation,”

says Mark Owens, president and CEO of Greater Winston-Salem, Inc. “Our region is in play for a third of projects currently under consideration through the Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina. Since the start of 2021, Greater WinstonSalem, Inc. has facilitated projects generating 600 new jobs with $301 million in investment, and there is more on the way.”

The new Winston-Salem Partners Roundtable or WSPR Fund is made up of more than 70 investors that provide investment capital and business support. It has invested $1.5 million in six startup companies and helps lure entrepreneurs and startups.

“Within the past year, we have worked with the city and county to identify more than 750 developable acres to bring to our commercial

81 JANUARY 2023
PHOTOS COURTESY OF INNOVATION QUARTER AND WHITAKER PARK
A view of Innovation Quarter (top) and Whitaker Park (bottom) in Winston-Salem.

FORSYTH COUNTY

real estate market,” Owens says. “Investments by developers have resulted in build-to-suit projects in 220-acre Whitaker Park, ( two miles north of downtown) and Union Cross (in the southeastern section of the county.) Other industrial centers are ready for tenants.

“While Whitaker Park has had great success with investors, there is still great opportunity for tenants and companies to locate there with roughly 240,000 square feet still available,” Owens adds.

In November, Ziehl-Abegg, a German manufacturer of ventilation systems and generators, announced it will invest more than $100 million to establish its North American headquarters in Union Cross. The facility will be in a 500,000-squarefoot build-to-suit property. The company says it will move its Guilford County operations to the new site and offer relocation to Guilford’s 200 employees along with creating 300 new jobs.

“We are excited to welcome a global leader in advanced manufacturing to Forsyth County,” Owens said. “This location decision underscores the advantages that manufacturers have in this area –from infrastructure and logistics, to availability of talent to a supportive business climate.”

INNOVATION QUARTER

“The Innovation Quarter, while managed under the auspices of Wake Forest University School of Medicine, exists as a driver within the Winston-Salem and Forsyth County innovation ecosystem,” Patterson says. “We regularly work with partners from across our region and even the state and globe to make sure we are providing the right kind of environment to help collaboration thrive. For example, our participation as one of the founding members of the Global Institute on Innovation Districts, is a signal that we are open

to and benefit from collaboration with partners from all over.”

Groundbreaking of infrastructure for the second phase of the Innovation Quarter should begin in early 2023.

“The Innovation Quarter is the largest technical medical park in the southeast,” Gonzalez says, “The master plan is around 10 million square feet. … We’re really lucky that we have a lot of private and public investment in small business incubators.” He cites the following examples.

• Winston Starts which provides mentors, coaching and resources to entrepreneurs.

• Flywheel Coworking rents work space, private offices to desks, on a weekly and daily basis in its downtown location.

• Sparkq in the iQ’s Bailey Power Plant, offers membership packages for co-working space and conference rooms.

“That power plant was repurposed and has a brewery, a restaurant and a gym. A lot of people live in the apartment next door,” Gonzalez says. “You probably wouldn’t have a development like the power plant if it were in the suburbs.”

Five academic institutions with 3,600 workers and 1,800 students have a place in the iQ. These folks as well as the quarter’s other employees and clients dine at more than 115 restaurants within a mile of the quarter, according to its website. It encompasses eight apartment complexes, including Piedmont Leaf Lofts, repurposed from two 1890s historic buildings, and Winston Factory Lofts, created from a 1920s industrial building.

Retail includes Bailey South, a 33,000-square-foot building next to Bailey’s Power Plant and Biotech Place.

A 1.7-mile greenway, Long Beach Trail, runs the length of Innovation Quarter and connects to downtown Winston-Salem, creating a 20-mile loop for pedestrians and cyclists.

REGENMED HUB AND LIFE SCIENCES

North Carolina has 790 life sciences companies and 2,500 companies supporting those primary life science companies that account for 70,000 jobs, according to the 2022 NCBiotech Company Directory.

TEConomy Partners, a research and strategy firm for economic development, reports that life sciences account for $84 billion in total annual economic activity and branch out to include 224,000 total jobs. With an average salary of $97,000 [in 2020], life sciences’ payroll statewide totaled $7.7 billion.

Wake Forest, which has one of five medical schools in North Carolina and one of three comprehensive cancer centers in the state, accounts for many of these life science jobs.

“The RegenMed Hub, located within the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, is opening up access to the field of regenerative medicine for which Winston-Salem has become a national leader with over 25 related companies located in the Innovation Accelerator,” Owens says. The recently launched

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PHOTO COURTSEY OF WFIRM. WFIRM lab techs work on a 3DHistech Pannoramic 1000 slide digitalization system.

Innovation Accelerator is an ecosystem for regenerative medicine focused entities and draws on the resources and talent within the Innovation Quarter.

“Regenerative medicine,” Atala says, “has the potential to change health care. We are working on technologies that can affect patients. We can take a small piece of tissue in the patients and grow new cells and replace deceased organs. It’s a lot of work, and it took a lot of years to make it happen.”

Some of the areas of research include 3D bioprinting of reproducible human tissue and whole organs, devices that accelerate healing and tissue restoration, protein-based therapeutics administered through an IV and donated organs.

REAL ESTATE GROWTH

“Our downtown, specifically with Wake Forest and their medical school, is developing so you have this new ecosystem of gyms and bars and restaurants, where you can walk to work and socialize with people in your network,” Gonzalez says. “With our downtown, we’ve seen an explosion in growth with hotels and apartments and employers.”

A key ingredient, he says, is employee attraction and retention.

“Our recent migration numbers show that about 110,000 people have moved to North Carolina in the last 12 months,” Gonzalez says. “So we’re competing for those good employees and competing with other cities in the South that have great downtowns and cultural stimulus. A lot of our growth has been in

employee attraction and retention, and Winston-Salem has turned into a really cool place to start a career and a family.

“If people go away to college, they come back because the quality of life is so great. Small and mediumsized businesses are trying to emulate the cool, engaging, flexible modern workplace, and that’s hard to do if you’re not surrounded by a lot of restaurants, bars and breweries.”

Regions outside of Winston-Salem throughout Forsyth County have their own draws for new residents and employees.

“Job growth has been incredibly healthy, so we’ve seen a lot of growth in housing and investments in the schools and infrastructure,” Gonzalez continues. “There’s a lot of uncertainty as to what the economy will have

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in the next year, but we’re kind of insulated here from the national headlines because we’re seeing interest from people who know we have an affordable cost of living, and excellent quality of life. You see that in Clemmons, you see it in Kernersville. They’re really booming.”

Frank L. Blum Construction Co., which has built many of the key buildings in Winston-Salem, is part of the city’s latest activity in the Innovation Quarter and downtown. It’s currently upfitting an old Reynolds Tobacco building for Wake Forest that will include classrooms, teaching labs and research labs. Blum also renovated the 500 West Fifth building that houses Winston Starts.

The company turns 100 in 2023. With a contractor’s license number of “18,” it’s one of earliest and

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Bailey Park in Innovation Quarter. PHOTO CREDIT: JAY CUTT

continuously active builders across the state. Blum has constructed more than 100 buildings for Wake Forest, starting with a women’s dormitory in 1955. Other new and renovation projects include Wake Forest’s Deacon Tower, Graylyn, Reynolda House, Atrium Health’s Birth Center and the Forsyth County Central Library.

As part of its 100th anniversary next year, Blum is dedicating 100 hours a week to community service in 2023. “This is a challenge to our company as a whole and to the individuals that make up the Blum Family to find important ways to make an impact in the communities in which we live and work,” said Sidney Hunter, marketing director.

HIGHER EDUCATION SPOTLIGHT

Forsyth Technical Community College is just one of the seven colleges and universities in the county. Its Innovation Quarter location across town from the main college campus, houses the Small Business Center, National Center for the Biotechnology

Workforce and the school’s Business & Industry Services.

“I think we at Forsyth Tech are kind of in the heart of the entrepreneurial ecosystem here, and it’s a great location to serve our local clients, especially with the Small Business Center,” says Jennifer Coulombe, assistant vice president of Business Partnerships & Process Improvement.

Health care is FTCC’s most popular subject area, followed by advanced manufacturing and IT. “Healthcare is a huge piece of what we do in that we’re contributing to the local workforce so we work closely with our major employers in the area,” she says. “Students expand into greater workforce exposures like internship training and apprenticeships, and that’s where our bigger opportunities lie, in connecting employers to the student pipeline early in their education,” she says.

FTCC’s business and industry leadership team engages with the local workforce and designs and refines curricula so students learn what potential employers need.

The college’s Learn and Earn

Apprenticeship Program [LEAP] is an adult apprenticeship route that lets people earn a degree while working in their chosen industry. “Our students graduate debt-free with impactful wages that can change the lives of their families,” Coulombe says.

With eight locations in Forsyth County and one in Stokes County, FTCC offers 69 associates degrees and has 21 online programs.

VISIONS

“I see continued growth,” Gonzalez says, of his outlook for the next several years. “I think we’re in a really well-positioned market that’s going to be insulated from a lot of headwinds, and I don’t see anything slowing us down. I don’t see the enthusiasm surrounding the Carolinas waning at all. I’m very optimistic.”

At FTCC, Coulombe says, “I think in the past we’ve been known as a two-year transfer opportunity, but we’re helping people know now that they can immediately go into the workforce and, more importantly, that financial barriers need not stop someone from pursuing

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their education or their training in whatever they want to do.

“We are not training students to be competitors with their next-door neighbors. We’re training students to be global competitors,” she says.

And the ecosystem will continue to accommodate many players and purposes.

“In 10 years we believe WinstonSalem, the Innovation Quarter and RegenMed Hub will be seen as the premiere destination for research and technology development in the field of regenerative medicine, with companies either locating here or directly partnering with the companies and institutions to take their ideas to the next level,” Patterson says. “We believe Winston-Salem and the Innovation

Quarter will play a major role in that coming to pass.

“Winston-Salem is quickly refining its identity as a city where truly groundbreaking research and technology development is happening.”

“We set aside space for the regeneration accelerators, and within three months it was gone,” Atala says, “so we added more space, and it was gone. All around us, technology will keep growing, and the good news is that we have land for further development. We aren’t limited like other cities. We can put a lot more buildings in this area.” ■

— Kathy Blake is a writer from eastern North Carolina.

87 JANUARY 2023
WAKE DOWNTOWN PHOTO
AUDREY KNAACK
CREDIT:

ROBESON REBOOT

The story of the Carolina Civic Center in downtown Lumberton has had several chapters over the past century, from silent- lm house to vacant building to born-again theater space.

Its latest chapter will begin this spring with construction of a planned $3 million annex that can host business conferences, weddings, dinner theater and more. e project is at the forefront of the Robeson County city’s e orts to revitalize its downtown district.

“Every time somebody goes to the civic center that’s not from Lumberton and they’ve never seen it, they’re like, ‘We had no idea that Lumberton had anything like this,’” says Sarah Beth Ward, the downtown development coordinator for the city of 19,000.

e Carolina Civic Center, which opened in 1928 and is on the National Register of Historic Places, draws between 12,000 and 13,000 visitors a year to concerts, theatrical productions and other events, says Executive Director Richard Sceiford. He hopes to triple that number in the next few years.

Ward and Sceiford hope investors and property owners will take note and help breathe new life into historic downtown Lumberton, which spans several city blocks. With promises of property tax breaks, the goal is to attract retail stores, co ee shops and restaurants.

Downtown has two big assets: its proximity to Interstate 95 and the Lumber River.

Fast-food restaurants and gas stations along I-95 are already popular pit stops for travelers on the major East Coast thoroughfare that runs from Canada to Miami. Downtown Lumberton is only about a mile o the highway.

e Lumber River, designated by Congress as one of ve “wild and scenic” rivers in North Carolina, meanders along the west side of downtown and presents opportunities for recreation in a more urban setting. Ward envisions kayakers and canoers paddling south from the

James L. Stephens Memorial Park to downtown, where they could get ice cream or drink a beer.

“We’re sitting on a gold mine,” says Ward.

Like many towns across North Carolina hoping to capitalize on renewed interest in downtown living and shopping, Lumberton faces challenges. Many businesses le downtown decades ago for Biggs Park Mall, about a mile away. Many buildings are in disrepair, and about 40% of downtown spaces are vacant, Ward says.

A few new businesses have opened downtown recently, including the popular bakery Sugar Savage, which sells custom cakes and other treats. Owner Ernest Strickland has appeared on three nationally televised baking competitions on the Food Network, including Holiday Gingerbread Showdown e city paid a local artist to paint a mural, and UNC Pembroke created a public art class to paint another.

A third mural, which says “Lumberton,” appears at the site of a building that burned years ago. e owner donated the property to the city. at mural, along with a newly completed small “pocket park” with a tent, concrete and grass, will be next to the civic center annex on North Chestnut Street.

With the civic center as a cultural hub, Ward says the city wants to focus on art downtown. e Lumbee Native American tribe, which has its headquarters in Robeson County, takes great pride in its artisans and cra smen.

“We have so much culture and diversity,” she says. “We want to be all-inclusive in downtown Lumberton.” ■

is article rst appeared in the Border Belt Independent. Read more of the nonpro t newsroom’s coverage of Robeson, Bladen, Columbus and Scotland counties at borderbelt.org.

88 BUSINESS NORTH CAROLINA GREEN SHOOTS Revitalizing rural N.C.
PHOTO COURTESY: MAIN STREET LUMBERTON
A $3 million civic center expansion could rejuvenate downtown Lumberton.

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