Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce
Founded | 1925 |
---|---|
Founder | George B. Robey |
Type | Advocacy group |
Focus | Business advocacy |
Location | |
Area served | Fairfax County, Virginia |
Method |
Business networking Media attention Programming Political lobbying |
Key people |
Jim Corcoran, President and CEO Joe Vidulich, Vice President of Government Relations |
Slogan | The Voice of Business in Northern VirginiaTM |
Website | Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce Official Website |
The Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce is the largest chamber of commerce in the Washington D.C. Metro area and in Fairfax County, Virginia. It represents 650+ businesses and 500,000 employees across the region. It is considered to be the most powerful business organization in the Northern Virginia region.[1]
The Fairfax Chamber provides the Northern Virginia business community with access to opportunities represented by the Chamber’s four foundational pillars: business development, thought leadership, strategic advocacy, and community partnerships.
Mission statement
"To develop, encourage and promote the economic vitality, quality of life and political interests of its members and the businesses of Northern Virginia for the benefit of the broader community"[2]
Board of directors
- Jim Corcoran, President and CEO
- Phil Panzarella, Chairman
- Mitch Weintraub, Vice Chairman
- Jennifer Aument, Secretary
- Dave Lundsten, Treasurer
- Scott Hommer, General Council
- Mark Moore, Past Chairman
Debates
The annual Fairfax County Chamber Debates are typically one of three statewide annual debates. The Chamber has been hosting their debate since 1989 when they hosted Democrat Douglas Wilder and Republican Marshall Coleman. Douglas Wilder won the election and became the first African American governor in the country. On September 19, 2008 the Fairfax Chamber hosted Democrat Mark Warner and Republican Jim Gilmore in a debate.[3]
References
- ↑ Washington Post, 8/21/2003
- ↑
- ↑ Craig, Tim and Anita Kumar (September 19, 2008). "Warner, Gilmore Spar On Taxes And Partisanship". Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
External links
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