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Accounting firm renamed after co-owner’s retirement
Former Port & Company is now Ranucci, Dalton & Schenk, CPAs, P.C. DeWITT, N.Y. — The firm formerly known as Port & Company, CPAs is now operating as Ranucci, Dalton & Schenk, CPAs, P.C., a change that became effective Jan. 1. Ranucci, Dalton & Schenk, CPAs — which operates at 5730 Commons Park […]
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Former Port & Company is now Ranucci, Dalton & Schenk, CPAs, P.C.
DeWITT, N.Y. — The firm formerly known as Port & Company, CPAs is now operating as Ranucci, Dalton & Schenk, CPAs, P.C., a change that became effective Jan. 1.
Ranucci, Dalton & Schenk, CPAs — which operates at 5730 Commons Park Drive in DeWitt — is a firm of certified public accountants (CPAs), certified valuation analysts (CVAs), and advisors.
Long-time partner Howard Port had retired on Dec. 31, 2020, says Richard Ranucci, the firm’s partner in charge of valuation and litigation services. Ranucci spoke with CNYBJ on Feb. 23.
Ranucci, who is both a CPA and a CVA, has worked for the firm since 1978. Ranucci and Port had co-owned Port & Company, CPAs. Port’s father, Irving Port, had started the firm in the 1930s, according to Ranucci.
When asked if the situation represented a succession plan for Howard Port, Ranucci replied, “absolutely.” Port is also an attorney, so he still comes to the office occasionally to focus on his legal work that is still pending.
Following Port’s retirement, Ranucci elevated two long-time colleagues, Kari Dalton and Ann Schenk, to new partners after purchasing Port’s share of the firm. Ranucci, Dalton, and Schenk are the firm’s three partners, Ranucci tells CNYBJ.
Schenk and Dalton “have responsibility for a lot of clients. Ann is heading up our tax and accounting services and Kari and I focus primarily in the litigation support, business valuation, and forensic-accounting area,” says Ranucci.
The company currently has 10 employees and will look to grow that figure as time goes on in 2021, Ranucci notes.
“Slowly, we’d like to probably grow by at least 50 percent,” he added. “We just need to grow our staff to be able to support the additional needs of our clients.”
Any new hiring won’t happen until after the firm finishes its work focusing on the current tax season, he adds.
Besides the three partners, the firm also has two additional CPAs and one other CVA.
When asked about the role of a CVA, Ranucci explains it like this: “We’re certified to do business valuations.” CVAs handle business valuations for matters that include divorce cases, mergers and acquisitions, state and gift-tax planning.
Ranucci, Dalton & Schenk, CPAs works with clients from Binghamton to Watertown, east to Utica, and west to Rochester.
The firm is also planning to do some renovation work on its building in the spring, which it acquired in the deal involving Port’s retirement.
“We’re planning to do renovations after tax season … and once those renovations are done, we’ll have more offices and more room to add some more people,” he says.
The firm operates in a building that covers about 6,500 square feet. The structure is also home to another tenant, according to Ranucci.

State tax revenues run nearly $2 billion below last fiscal year
tate operating funds spending through the first 10 months of the fiscal year totaled $69.8 billion, which was $9.9 billion, or 12.4 percent, lower than last year. The lower figure is “largely due” to higher federal reimbursement for Medicaid spending, as well as the withholding of certain payments. As of Jan. 31, the general fund
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tate operating funds spending through the first 10 months of the fiscal year totaled $69.8 billion, which was $9.9 billion, or 12.4 percent, lower than last year. The lower figure is “largely due” to higher federal reimbursement for Medicaid spending, as well as the withholding of certain payments.
As of Jan. 31, the general fund held a balance of $19.3 billion, which is $2.2 billion higher than DOB projections, and $8.5 billion higher than last year at the same time.
The higher balance is “driven partly” by withheld payments as well as receipts from short-term borrowing that DOB anticipates repaying before the end of the fiscal year.
The state has repaid $1 billion of that borrowing, with the remaining $3.4 billion due by March 31, DiNapoli’s office said.
VIEWPOINT: What Employers Should Know About Minority Unions
Lessons from Google It is no secret that private-sector union membership has dramatically decreased over the past several decades. This reality has forced labor organizers to get creative with their efforts. Perhaps this is one reason why stories of a union presence at tech industry giant, Google, have recently gained so much attention. Reports of a “minority
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Lessons from Google
It is no secret that private-sector union membership has dramatically decreased over the past several decades. This reality has forced labor organizers to get creative with their efforts. Perhaps this is one reason why stories of a union presence at tech industry giant, Google, have recently gained so much attention. Reports of a “minority union” at Google began to swirl earlier this year after a group of several hundred Google employees announced their creation of the “Alphabet Workers Union.” Named for Google’s parent, Alphabet, Inc., the Alphabet Workers Union was supported by, and now affiliated with, the Communication Workers of America. The union claimed its membership quickly grew to more than 800 members.
Unlike the agendas of many traditional labor unions, improving wages and benefits do not appear to be among the Alphabet Workers Union’s top concerns. Instead, it claims to be largely focused on issues such as creating an inclusive workplace, promoting diversity, and rejecting harassment, discrimination, and retaliation. Further distinguishing it from the prototypical union is the fact that the Alphabet Workers Union is operating as a minority union. This designation has significant consequences on whether the employer has a duty to recognize and/or bargain with the union. The situation at Google poses the questions for other private-sector employers in industries where unionization is not common: what is a minority union; and how could it impact my company?
Under Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), employees have the right to self-organize and bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing. Section 7 gives employees the right to join a union. Typically, through a National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) election proceeding, if a majority of employees in a defined bargaining unit vote for a union, the union becomes the exclusive representative of all unit employees and a statutory duty is imposed upon the employer to bargain with the union on behalf of all unit workers. Though this is an oversimplification of the certification and election process, it is fundamental to labor relations in the United States.
A minority union is a union that does not have the support of a majority of bargaining-unit employees. Unlike a union that enjoys majority support, a minority union represents only those employees who affirmatively choose to join it. There is no formal election process, no NLRB proceeding, and no formal recognition procedure.
While an employer may choose to recognize and bargain with a minority union on behalf of its members, it has no legal duty to do so. This means an employer does not have to bargain with minority unions over the wages, working conditions, discipline, or discharge of the union’s members. An employer also has no obligation to furnish requested information to a minority union or provide the union access to its facilities. This stands in stark contrast to an employer’s duty to bargain with an NLRB certified union.
Traditionally, collective-bargaining agreements are a cornerstone of the company-union relationship, but an employer has no obligation to negotiate or reach an agreement with a minority union. Even if an employer consents to bargain, the scope of any such relationship with a minority union must be limited to those employees who have consented to the union’s representation. In fact, it is unlawful for an employer to extend exclusive status to, or negotiate an agreement covering all unit employees with, a minority union. Over the objection of minority unions, the NLRB and courts have also consistently held that an employer has no statutory duty to bargain with a minority union even on a members-only basis.
Though there is no obligation to recognize or bargain with minority unions, employers should take care to remember that the NLRA more broadly protects collective action. It is undeniable that employee support for a minority union is activity protected under Section 7. Therefore, an employer cannot take adverse action against employees for joining or supporting a minority union.
Much of a minority union’s impact will be determined by the employer’s response to it. That there is no NLRB certification and that employers have no legal obligation to recognize or negotiate with a minority union potentially stymies much of the bargaining power traditional unions can leverage. Though minority unions cannot force employers to sit at the bargaining table, they can use other strategies such as social media, political pressure, and traditional media attention to influence managerial decisions and advance the interests of their members. As is the case with the Alphabet Workers Union, minority unions may be more interested in furthering equity issues and drawing attention to employer conduct and policies, rather than addressing wages and benefits. In the current social and political climate, these efforts can be effective. Even still, employers must be careful to not submit to the demands of a few at the expense of the majority of employees who do not support the minority union.
Finally, whether the Alphabet Workers Union becomes a trend-setter, or an isolated case remains to be seen. The fact that the Communication Workers of America is supporting this initiative suggests minority unions may be a future concern, particularly for employers and industries in which a majority of employees prefer to remain union free.
Thomas G. Eron is a member (partner) of Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC. Located in its Syracuse office, he is chair of the firm’s labor and employment law department and a member of its management committee. Contact Eron at teron@bsk.com. Hannah K. Redmond is an associate attorney in Bond’s Syracuse office. She focuses her practice on representing employers in labor and employment-law matters. Contact Redmond at hredmond@bsk.com

Katko helps push bill to protect pregnant workers from workplace discrimination
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act as a proposed law that would protect pregnant employees from workplace discrimination. U.S. Representative John Katko (R–Camillus) on Feb. 18 announced the reintroduction of the bill along with U.S. Reps. Jerrold Nadler (D–NY), Lucy McBath (D–Georgia), Jaime Herrera Beutler (R–Washington), and Bobby Scott (D–Virginia). The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act would address legal
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The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act as a proposed law that would protect pregnant employees from workplace discrimination.
U.S. Representative John Katko (R–Camillus) on Feb. 18 announced the reintroduction of the bill along with U.S. Reps. Jerrold Nadler (D–NY), Lucy McBath (D–Georgia), Jaime Herrera Beutler (R–Washington), and Bobby Scott (D–Virginia).
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act would address legal “ambiguities” and help ensure that pregnant women are treated fairly on the job, per Katko’s office. The legislation — which is “closely modeled” after the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) — would require employers to make “reasonable” accommodations, such as a minor job modification, that would allow pregnant workers to continue working and prevent their companies from forcing them to go on leave or quit their jobs.
The bill would also prohibit employers from denying employment opportunities to women based on their need for “reasonable” accommodations related to pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions.
“Simply put, no mother or mother-to-be in this country should have to choose between being a parent and keeping their job. Unfortunately, current federal law lacks adequate protections to ensure pregnant workers are able to remain healthy in the workplace,” Katko said. “This bipartisan effort puts in place a uniform, fair and familiar framework for employers and will enable women to keep working safely and provide for their families throughout pregnancy.”
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act has “broad support” from more than 200 worker advocacy, civil rights, and business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Katko’s office said.
Other proposal provisions
The bill also stipulates that private-sector employers with more than 15 employees as well as public-sector employers must make “reasonable accommodations” for pregnant workers (employees and job applicants with known limitations related to pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions).
Like the Americans with Disabilities Act, employers are not required to make an accommodation if it imposes an undue hardship on an employer’s business, per Katko’s office.
In addition, pregnant workers cannot be denied employment opportunities; retaliated against for requesting a reasonable accommodation, or forced to take paid or unpaid leave if another reasonable accommodation is available.
Workers denied a reasonable accommodation under the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act would have the same rights and remedies as those established under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
These include lost pay, compensatory damages, and reasonable attorneys’ fees. Public-sector employees have similar relief available under the Congressional Accountability Act, Title V of the United States Code, and the Government Employee Rights Act of 1991, Katko’s office said.
VIEWPOINT: 3 ways today’s health-care CFO is no longer a traditional CFO
Though health-care chief financial officers (CFOs) still occupy a traditional role in many organizations, the role has significantly expanded in recent years. No longer can a CFO of a major health-care system simply focus on cash flow, financial planning, and balancing the books. Today, the role must be more strategic and visible — both inside and outside
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Though health-care chief financial officers (CFOs) still occupy a traditional role in many organizations, the role has significantly expanded in recent years. No longer can a CFO of a major health-care system simply focus on cash flow, financial planning, and balancing the books. Today, the role must be more strategic and visible — both inside and outside the organization.
Here are three ways a modern health-care CFO can add more value to his or her organization.
1. Be more visible
Visibility within the organization is critical. Today’s CFO can’t be holed up in her office. She must be more visible, walking the hallways, meeting people, and taking her leadership outside of the finance department. From physician-network teams and registration/scheduling to telemedicine and population health departments, the CFO must take an active role to ensure she has her pulse on what is going on — always with an eye to ensuring that patients have access to quality, affordable care throughout the system. Health care today is broader than the four walls of the hospital. Its reach includes the emergency room, the physician’s office, the home, and the community. Because the CFO often weighs in on where money is best spent, this leader needs to have visibility to every aspect of the system. The CFO can play a critical role in helping deliver the best health-care experience for a health system’s patient population.
2. Focus on community health
Health systems are a community asset and sometimes even the crown jewel of the community. A dynamic CFO works with community leaders to ensure that the health-care needs of the community are being met. Much work has been done around the social determinants of health, so we know that where people live, learn, work, and play affects a wide range of health and quality-of-life risks and outcomes. Being ever-present and building strong bridges to the community can preserve or even grow market share. But most of all, it can lead to better clinical outcomes, with happier and healthier patients. Community involvement allows people to have frequent positive experiences with their local health-care system, which ultimately supports the system’s success and competitive advantage.
3. Build relationships with local employers and their employees
It’s important that the CFO develop relationships with local employers and employees as these groups fund the lion’s share of health care today. When employers pay more than $20,000 per year for their employees’ family premium, the CFO should understand that these local employers want value for their money and that the health system, in part, is responsible for that. The Employer’s Guide to Financial Wellness 2019 Report from Salary Finance states that “a majority of employees feel financial stress, with 56 percent of employees considering themselves financially unwell.” When the average out-of-pocket expense on a health plan is $8,000 and the average patient has about $400 in savings for emergencies, CFOs will need to explore and welcome new financial-security programs that help their patients accept care when they need it. Times are changing and innovative financing models are starting to spring up to replace traditional revenue-cycle solutions. Becoming familiar with them and how local employers are looking to use them to help put confidence back behind that insurance card creates a win-win for all parties.
For today’s CFOs, it’s no longer just about the internal workings of the finance department or the health system that employs them. It’s about collaborating with the entire health-care ecosystem, including the payer, employer/patient, and the provider. Developing and maintaining partnerships across the system, the community, and with local employers has never been more important to a CFOs success.
Tim Susterich is chief provider network strategy & contracting officer at HealthBridge Financial, Inc. (www.myhealthbridge.com). He has more than 30 years of financial, business development, and operations experience in the health-care industry, including serving as a hospital CFO.

Chemung Financial to pay dividend of 26 cents on April 1
ELMIRA, N.Y. — Chemung Financial Corp. (NASDAQ: CHMG) recently announced that its board of directors has approved a quarterly cash dividend of 26 cents a share for the first quarter. The dividend is payable on April 1, to common stock shareholders of record as of the close of business on March 18. At the banking
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ELMIRA, N.Y. — Chemung Financial Corp. (NASDAQ: CHMG) recently announced that its board of directors has approved a quarterly cash dividend of 26 cents a share for the first quarter.
The dividend is payable on April 1, to common stock shareholders of record as of the close of business on March 18.
At the banking company’s current stock price, the dividend yields about 2.9 percent annually.
Elmira–based Chemung Financial is a $2.3 billion financial-services holding company that operates 30 branches through its main subsidiary, Chemung Canal Trust Company, a full-service community bank with full trust powers.
Established in 1833, Chemung Canal Trust says it is the oldest locally owned and managed community bank in New York state. Chemung Financial is also the parent of CFS Group, Inc., a financial-services subsidiary offering mutual funds, annuities, brokerage services, tax-preparation services, and insurance, as well as Chemung Risk Management, Inc., an insurance company based in Nevada
VIEWPOINT: What’s Next for Qualified Opportunity Zones?
During these times of unprecedented uncertainty, many Americans believe that President Joe Biden’s administration will introduce sweeping changes to our country’s tax code. After all, every president since Bill Clinton has signed into law a new tax bill within 12 months of the beginning of their first term. One area that many taxpayers and practitioners alike are
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During these times of unprecedented uncertainty, many Americans believe that President Joe Biden’s administration will introduce sweeping changes to our country’s tax code. After all, every president since Bill Clinton has signed into law a new tax bill within 12 months of the beginning of their first term.
One area that many taxpayers and practitioners alike are keeping their eye on is the qualified opportunity zone (QOZ) incentive, which was part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of December 2017. The concept of QOZs was very much a bipartisan idea even before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, but over time, the qualified opportunity zones’ incentive has been viewed by many as a Republican tax policy and has received more than its share of negative press as the incentive has unfolded over the past couple of years.
There a few areas in particular that QOZ stakeholders are focusing on when it comes to the potential for new tax-law changes.
Potential increase in capital-gains tax rate
For an investor to take advantage of the QOZ incentives, one must have realized a capital gain that is eligible to be contributed into a qualified opportunity fund. By doing so, you can avoid having to pay tax on that capital gain until as late as 2026. But if we see an increase in the tax rates that apply to capital gains, what rate must be used when computing the tax owed on those gains in a future year?
In a perfect world, the equitable answer would be for those investors to recognize their capital gains at the same tax rate that was in place at the time they deferred such gains into a qualified opportunity fund. However, there is currently no such provision in the tax code.
On the other hand, if the capital-gains tax rates happen to increase in future years, the rate rise may serve as a catalyst for increased investment into QOZs, since taxpayers would be able to defer larger amounts of capital gains as a result. However, even if a QOZ project has investors deferring substantial capital gains into a qualified opportunity fund, other incentives and sources of capital — bank financing, New Markets Tax Credits, Historic Tax Credits, etc. — will still be necessary in order to make these projects possible.
Potential for residential rental real estate to not qualify as a QOZ trade or business
In the previous session of Congress, Senator Ron Wyden (D–Oregon) had introduced the Opportunity Zone Reporting and Reform Act in the Senate as a proposed bill (S. 2787). The bill was never voted on in that session of Congress, but if it had been enacted as written, residential rental real estate would not qualify as eligible QOZ property unless a minimum of 50 percent of the units available for rent are rent-restricted and occupied by lower-income individuals. In addition, self-storage properties and stadiums would have also become ineligible QOZ property.
Since the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the vast majority of qualified-opportunity-zone businesses we have seen have been residential rental real-estate projects. If specific types of businesses were to no longer be eligible QOZ businesses, further guidance would be needed for not only businesses, but investors as well.
Increased reporting requirements
We have seen bipartisan support for more robust reporting requirements for qualified opportunity funds. In addition, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) recently issued a report indicating the need for additional oversight of the QOZ tax incentive. Such oversight would be accomplished in part by collecting data from qualified opportunity funds on an annual basis, by filing Form 8996 with their annual income-tax return. Some of these additional reporting requirements could include, but not be limited to, the following criteria:
• Number of jobs created
• Dollar amount of capital gains invested
• Dollar amount of improvements made to property
• Number of residential rental units available
If these reporting requirements were to be enacted as written, significant penalties could apply for noncompliance with these rules.
COVID-19 Opportunity Zone relief
In addition to the potential changes described above, QOZ stakeholders should also take note of the changes being made due to impacts of the pandemic. On Jan. 19, 2021, the IRS issued Notice 2021-10 to provide additional relief for qualified opportunity funds, as well as their investors and other stakeholders. Key provisions of Notice 2021-10 include:
• More time to defer capital gains: The deadline to re-invest certain eligible capital gains into a qualified opportunity fund is extended to March 31, 2021. This applies to eligible capital gains where the 180-day deadline to defer the gain ends on or after April 1, 2020 and before March 31, 2021
• Additional relief from 30-month substantial improvement period: The period from April 1, 2020 through March 31, 2021 is automatically disregarded for purposes of measuring the time in which property must be substantially improved.
• Additional relief from 90 percent asset test for qualified opportunity funds: To the extent any semi-annual testing date falls on or after April 1, 2020 and through June 30, 2021, any failure by a qualified opportunity fund to meet the 90 percent asset test during 2020 or 2021 is automatically deemed to be a result of reasonable cause, and the penalty for such failure will be $0.
• Additional time for working-capital safe harbor: QOZ businesses are allowed a 24-month extension of the original 31-month working-capital safe-harbor period if they have working-capital assets whose safe-harbor period ends prior to June 30, 2021.
• Additional time for reinvestment period: a qualified opportunity fund that has an interim sale of qualified opportunity-zone property receives an additional 12 months to reinvest the proceeds from such sale into other qualified opportunity-zone property, as long as the original 12-month reinvestment period includes June 30, 2020.
There is still untapped opportunity in opportunity zones
When considering what the future may bring, investors and business owners should not overlook the many unique opportunities created by the QOZ incentive. The rules and regulations promulgated under the previous presidential administration have made it progressively less cumbersome for businesses and investors to use the QOZ incentive as a catalyst to spur additional economic development in many different communities that have not seen any meaningful economic investment in decades.
While real-estate projects have dominated the conversation when it comes to qualified opportunity zones, careful planning can allow operating businesses, such as manufacturers, to see much greater after-tax returns on investment than can be achieved through investments in real estate alone. In addition, operating businesses will spur the creation of jobs and otherwise help promote positive social change within their respective communities.
While the QOZ incentive is certainly a once-in-a-generation opportunity afforded by the tax code, stakeholders should remember that the QOZ incentive will not magically make a bad project successful. Rather, it can potentially provide another source of funds to make a sound investment opportunity even more attractive.
Joseph Wutz is a principal with The Bonadio Group. He is a member of the accounting firm’s real estate and construction teams and spends most of his time overseeing tax consulting and tax-compliance projects for businesses in these industries. Contact Wutz at jwutz@bonadio.com.
VIEWPOINT: Did Your Employees Grow Apart in a Difficult 2020?
5 Tips for a Better Culture Given the uncertainty businesses pace in 2021 as the COVID-19 pandemic continues, company leaders are looking at every phase of their operation to determine ways they can improve. Company culture is one area commanding attention. As the virus caused business limitations and forced many companies to go fully remote in 2020,
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5 Tips for a Better Culture
Given the uncertainty businesses pace in 2021 as the COVID-19 pandemic continues, company leaders are looking at every phase of their operation to determine ways they can improve.
Company culture is one area commanding attention. As the virus caused business limitations and forced many companies to go fully remote in 2020, workplace culture was challenged in new ways. This was a reminder to company leaders to make this a priority, forcing them to find ways to strengthen it in the new year.
Businesses are increasingly starting to understand that they need to show employees that they value them as whole people.
If you respect your employees, value them, and treat them as professionals, they will go through walls for you. If you don’t, if you create an environment where the very thought of coming to work creates anxiety, then they are going to look for employment elsewhere.
Issues within the workplace culture can fester and eventually lead to toxic relationships, lower productivity, and higher turnover. As companies try to balance remote working with a return to the office, it’s critical that culture problems be diagnosed and addressed.
But too often, leaders don’t have the time to dig into the root problems or don’t know how to really reach their people and devise solutions.
Here are tips for management to build a better workplace culture in 2021.
• Make the health and well-being of your employees the first priority. Putting your employees first makes them far more likely to be good producers for your company. With the ongoing pandemic and 2021 bringing much uncertainty, it’s the right time to review workplace safety, collect employees’ thoughts on working remotely compared to coming back to the office, look at internal communications, and analyze management practices to make sure you’re addressing employees’ needs and concerns. Circulate employee surveys to get helpful feedback.
• Hire people who are culture fits. Some people are very capable, but they happen to be jerks. No matter how smart such a person might be, the negatives will eventually outweigh the positives. At the same time, you don’t want to hire people who are really nice but not terribly competent.
• Beware of fake culture. Some businesses create what I call pseudo cultures, which are thinly veiled come-ons where companies offer massages, free beer, or other perks to attract employees. Eventually, people figure out that a cool employee lounge with a ping-pong table does not make for a successful business. Real organizational cultures are reflections of how companies treat people and create useful products.
• Increase employee engagement. Leaders should take extra steps to get to know their employees, which will be a big help in keeping them engaged. It can be tougher initially to spot people who are not fully engaged. The gut feeling leaders need in that regard develops over time with the determination to know your people as individuals. Not all managers are willing to do that, and that’s a mistake. Showing genuine concern can uncover issues that can steer employees to the help they need.
• Promote a work-life balance. It’s nice to have ultra-motivated climbers, and it’s essential for a forward-moving company to demand a lot of its people. But that should not come at the expense of burning them out, messing up their health, and hurting their family relationships. That’s going to hurt the business in the long run as well.
Nurturing your internal culture enables people and business to thrive. It’s never been more important than now after a year of chaos and with more uncertainty ahead.
Mark McClain (www.markmcclain.me), is author of “Joy and Success at Work: Building Organizations that Don’t Suck (the Life Out of People)” and CEO of SailPoint, a company in the enterprise identity management industry.
OPINION: Cuomo’s Call to Focus on Facts & Data are Hypocritical
He disregards both For months, we listened to Gov. Andrew Cuomo laud the importance of fact-based decision making and proclaim the values of objectivity and science. But “do as I say, not as I do” has always been a hallmark of this governor’s administration. So, it should not be too surprising he willfully disregarded the
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He disregards both
For months, we listened to Gov. Andrew Cuomo laud the importance of fact-based decision making and proclaim the values of objectivity and science. But “do as I say, not as I do” has always been a hallmark of this governor’s administration. So, it should not be too surprising he willfully disregarded the above in lieu of his own politically convenient narrative of the past year.
The FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office are now investigating the state’s handling of nursing homes during the COVID-19 pandemic. And there is no shortage of irony of a man spending every day for the better part of a year telling people to follow the “facts” and the “data” as they grappled with the spread of the virus only to then hide the same facts and data despite countless requests. As federal authorities pursue their investigations, the state legislature has a responsibility to act decisively as well. I recently joined colleagues in the Assembly Minority Conference to call for a bipartisan Impeachment Commission in order to gather facts, information, and uncover answers with an eye toward accountability. There are many things we still do not know about the state’s response to COVID-19 and its impact on nursing homes. In fact, we may not even know all the things we do not know, as this administration’s constant refusal to be transparent is so strong that it is hard to make heads or tails of anything it has said in these past few months. What is fact, and what is fiction? What are we supposed to believe?
We now know the governor hid the true number of deaths in state nursing homes and long-term care facilities by 50 percent; the total number of nursing-home residents who died is more than 15,000. We also know information was censored as the governor’s team “froze” while coming up with a game plan to avoid federal investigation. And we also know many of the things the governor has said since the state attorney general investigated these misrepresentations have made little sense.
A review of the timeline of the events leading to that investigation is nothing short of alarming. In August, the New York State Department of Health (DOH) said it needed until November to answer a Freedom of Information Law request from the Empire Center aimed at uncovering the true nature of what was going on in state-run facilities. Then, in November, the DOH said it needed until January to look for exemptions to the law. Shortly after that, Gov. Cuomo was awarded an Emmy for his “masterful” COVID-19 television briefings. The request had still not been filled.
At the same time, the continued underreporting of statistics related to those deaths also drastically impacted the state’s nursing-home mortality rate, which the governor had previously claimed was among the best in the nation. Using New York Attorney General Letitia James’ numbers, New York was actually one of the worst. Somewhere along the way, Cuomo wrote a book about leadership and how well he was doing.
“Nature abhors a vacuum so does the political system,” the governor said in a recent Q&A, where he claimed the “void” his administration created by not releasing these numbers sooner was filled with “skepticism, and cynicism, and conspiracy theories which furthered the confusion.” Perhaps, that is because this administration has cultivated an atmosphere of “skepticism, cynicism and conspiracy.” I have a suggestion: instead of creating vacuums and voids in the first place, answer the people when they demand honesty, clarity, and accuracy. That is what they deserve and that is what you are tasked with doing as a public servant.
The perils of the COVID-19 outbreak are too numerous to count; it is a public health crisis and an economic crisis. It has wreaked havoc on our education, quality of life, and work routines. The only way to confront these challenges is head on, with a concerted effort from government and health officials and competent leadership from those in positions of authority. At some point, integrity and credibility got lost along the way.
As a legislative leader, I will continue to press this administration for every available piece of information related to the state’s pandemic response — nothing like this can ever happen again.
William (Will) A. Barclay, Republican, is the New York Assembly Minority Leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. Contact Barclay at barclaw@assembly.state.ny.us.
CEO FOCUS: A New Future for I-81 and Central New York
Large-scale infrastructure projects are gaining national attention for their opportunity to spark growth and create jobs as the country seeks to recover from the economic crisis caused by COVID-19. This creates an important opportunity in our own community, which is why CenterState CEO is advocating for a “record of decision” on the redevelopment of Interstate-81 (I-81) as
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Large-scale infrastructure projects are gaining national attention for their opportunity to spark growth and create jobs as the country seeks to recover from the economic crisis caused by COVID-19. This creates an important opportunity in our own community, which is why CenterState CEO is advocating for a “record of decision” on the redevelopment of Interstate-81 (I-81) as one of its top five 2021 policy priorities. Having been the subject of research, modeling, and debate for years, it is time for the project to move forward, as it is critical to safe and efficient transportation for Central New York. Additionally, the Community Grid option and its community-driven priorities stands to serve as a model for other regions embarking on infrastructure projects seeking to achieve more than just transportation solutions.
There are signs of progress as Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced in his State of the State address that he expects the project to break ground next year. Also, in February, Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh discussed the project with members of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg’s staff. I am hopeful that these conversations will result in the necessary federal funding needed to complete the $2 billion project.
While these conversations move forward, it is imperative that we shift our collective focus to maximizing this opportunity to ensure that the people in this community that need jobs have a clear pathway to those created by this project, particularly women and minorities. To prepare the local labor force and contractors so they are well-positioned to participate on this project, CenterState CEO is working with Mayor Walsh and Onondaga County Executive McMahon to develop and launch Syracuse Build. This workforce initiative is dedicated to developing career opportunities in construction-related fields for Syracuse residents, particularly from low-income communities and communities of color. As the economy begins to pick back up, and with work on I-81 on the horizon, Syracuse Build will produce a pipeline of qualified local workers.
This project, and the jobs and new investments it stands to bring, provide hope for a stronger more equitable future for our community. To learn more about Syracuse Build, contact Dominic Robinson, VP of economic inclusion at drobinson@centerstateceo.com.
Robert M. Simpson is president and CEO of CenterState CEO, the primary economic-development organization for Central New York. This article is drawn and edited from the “CEO Focus” email newsletter that the organization sent to members on Feb. 18.
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