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Roanoke air traffic down on economy, holidays

From a Wednesday brief in The Roanoke Times by Jeff Sturgeon:

Passenger traffic dropped 15 percent during in April at Roanoke Regional Airport, when the figures are compared with those of a year ago.
Total passengers came in at 50,339 last month, down from 59,438 in April 2007, according to the airport’s monthly report released Tuesday.
Airport spokeswoman Sherry Wallace said it is possible economic conditions have reduced business travel.
But the other consideration is that April 2007 passenger traffic was abnormally high, she said. Both spring break and Easter fell in April 2007 while, this year, both fell in March. In addition, countless additional travelers used the airport in April 2007 due to the Virginia Tech shootings.
“We were expecting some drops, maybe not so much so soon,” Wallace said. “Aviation can be cyclical. Things do happen.”

Local home sales down

From a Wednesday story in The Roanoke Times by Jeff Sturgeon:

Sales of used homes in the Roanoke region fell to 337 units in April, down 23 percent from a year earlier.
The report by the Roanoke Valley Association of Realtors reflects continued market softness that began more than a year ago.
Monthly sales — measured by real estate closings of deals involving a real estate agent — have been off on a year-over-year basis for 14 months.
The average price of used homes sold stood at $199,350 in April, down from $204,218 a year ago.

New records for gas prices


After a week of laying low, and not setting any new records, gas prices in the Roanoke metro rose to another high on Thursday at $3.54 per gallon, according to AAA.

At the same time, a new record was set for gasoline prices at the national level. This is from the Associated Press:

Gas prices jumped nearly 3 cents overnight to a new national record of nearly $3.65 a gallon Thursday, while oil prices paused from their own climb to record highs and succumbed to mild profit-taking. At the pump, the average price of a gallon of regular gas nationwide rose 2.7 cents to a record $3.645, according to a survey of stations by AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Diesel prices also rose, adding 0.9 cent to match a record national average of $4.251 a gallon.

Busy week for local public companies

In the next seven days, two Roanoke-based publicly traded companies will announce financial results.

Luna Innovations will unveil its first-quarter earnings after the market closes today and will discuss the results with analysts via conference call at 5 p.m. The company's annual shareholders' meeting in next Thursday in D.C.

Advance Auto Parts, meanwhile, plans to have its annual shareholders meeting at the Hotel Roanoke and Conference Center next Thursday morning, and will release its first-quarter results on May 16.

FreightCar told to pay millions to settle claims

A manufacturer with a major Roanoke facility, FreightCar America, has been told to pay millions to the nearly 400 employees it laid off at a Pennsylvania facility. FreightCar moved production from the Johnstown plant to its facilities in Roanoke and Danville, Ill.

Here is more info from Reuters:

U.S. railroad car maker FreightCar America Inc said on Thursday that it would take a charge of $20 million to $24.5 million after an arbitrator ruled that it was liable for back pay and benefits to workers at a Johnstown, Pennsylvania, factory that it said in December 2007 it intends to close. It said the charge would reduce first-quarter results by $1.11 to $1.32 per share. The Chicago-based manufacturer earlier this month reported profit for that period of $1.1 million, or 10 cents per share. Workers at the factory represented by the United Steelworkers of America are covered by a collective bargaining agreement that runs through May 15. The ruling found FreightCar responsible for back pay and benefits to more than half of the workers at the plant, the company said. When FreightCar disclosed plans to close the 390-worker unionized facility, saying it would move functions performed at that factory to Danville, Illinois, and Roanoke, Virginia.

Local unemployment up in March

A timing oddity, the March employment figures were released this week from the state of Virginia, just as the numbers nationwide were reported for April.

The state's unemployment rose to 3.9 percent in March, up from 3.8 percent in February and 2.9 percent last March, according to the Virginia Employment Commission. State officials blamed the rise of the past year (which amounts to nearly 41,000 more unemployed statewide) to a drop in construction employment because of a slow housing market and labor unrest at Midwest factories that led to local layoffs at suppliers. The strike at the Volvo plant in Dublin did not affect the results, as state law prevents unemployment benefits going to striking workers.

Locally, unemployment in the Roanoke metro rose to 4 percent (from 3.9 in February and 3.0 in March 2007). A similar increase took place in the Christiansburg-Blacksburg-Radford metro, where unemployment rose to 4.5 percent (from 4.4 in February and 3.9 last March).

About this blog

Chris Winston

As the U.S. economy struggles to find its footing -- and experts debate daily whether or not we are in a recession, heading toward a recession or neither -- business editor Chris Winston writes this blog to provide local, state and national information to help you make heads or tails of the headlines.

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