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ANCA clean-energy director named to NYS climate justice working group
SARANAC LAKE — An official with the Adirondack North Country Association (ANCA) has been named to New York’s climate justice working group. Jerrod Bley, ANCA’s clean-energy program director, is one of three individuals from rural communities to be named to the panel. The group will help guide the implementation of New York’s new Climate Leadership […]
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SARANAC LAKE — An official with the Adirondack North Country Association (ANCA) has been named to New York’s climate justice working group.
Jerrod Bley, ANCA’s clean-energy program director, is one of three individuals from rural communities to be named to the panel.
The group will help guide the implementation of New York’s new Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), ANCA said in an Aug. 5 news release.
As part of New York’s efforts to address environmental justice and support disadvantaged communities throughout its clean-energy transition process, the New York Department of Conservation (NYSDEC) has announced 13 members of the working group, which includes nine community representatives.
“I am honored and humbled to serve with this group of clean-energy experts and community leaders,” Bley said in the release. “I will do my best to represent the people who are touched by this complex and salient issue here in the North Country and throughout the state.”
Bley has worked in the energy industry for more than 15 years. He began his career with an engineering unit in the U.S. Marine Corps and gained experience installing solar photovoltaic (PV), solar thermal and small wind systems in Nebraska and Montana.
Prior to joining ANCA in July 2019, Bley served as a program coordinator and environmental health and safety instructor.
He credits much of his insight and appreciation for the challenges facing rural communities to his upbringing on a working farm in Ohio and his years working in the Montana Weatherization Assistance Program through Montana State University Extension, where he worked with low-to moderate-income and Indigenous communities.
Bley says he envisions a future structured on “safe, reliable” clean-energy generation that “benefits all sectors and populations,” per the ANCA release.
“This opportunity comes at a pivotal time and place, where we can shape a clean energy future that addresses the most pressing issues of our day,” Bley said. “We are currently facing multiple crises that must be considered in restructuring the energy sector. The COVID pandemic, racial inequity and global climate disruption all come with challenges that disproportionately affect disadvantaged communities. I look forward to working with other group members and State leaders to implement clean energy initiatives centered on diversity, equity, and inclusion.”
The working group will support the CLCPA’s New York State Climate Action Council, which is co-chaired by NYSDEC Commissioner Basil Seggos and Doreen Harris, acting president and CEO of the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), in implementing goals set forth through the 2019 climate act.
The CLCPA requires the state to establish a carbon-free electricity system by 2040 and reduce greenhouse-gas emissions 85 percent below 1990 levels by 2050. The new law will drive investment in clean-energy options such as wind, solar, energy efficiency, vehicle electrification, and energy storage, per ANCA.
ANCA says it is an independent nonprofit organization working to “build dynamic local economies that sustain thriving communities” in Northern New York. Since 1955, it has leveraged the investment of hundreds of millions of dollars into key sectors that drive sustainable local economic development.
Madison County seeks public input on updated solid-waste management plan
WAMPSVILLE — The Madison County Department of Solid Waste has released a draft of the updated local solid-waste management plan (SWMP) that will focus on the next 10 years (from 2021 through 2030) of solid-waste disposal and recycling in Madison County. In the past, Madison County has prepared SWMPs to “evaluate and execute an environmentally
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WAMPSVILLE — The Madison County Department of Solid Waste has released a draft of the updated local solid-waste management plan (SWMP) that will focus on the next 10 years (from 2021 through 2030) of solid-waste disposal and recycling in Madison County.
In the past, Madison County has prepared SWMPs to “evaluate and execute an environmentally sound and economically feasible” plan for handling solid waste generated within the county, per an Aug. 6 news release.
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) requires local planning units to update and modify solid waste and recycling efforts prior to their expiration date. The current SWMP is set to expire at the end of 2020.
Since the inception of the first plan in 1990, the county has “continued to meet the milestones” outlined in the plan and incorporate new components to expand recycling efforts and divert solid waste from going into the landfill.
The new solid-waste management plan focuses on the continuation of the main landfill-disposal system, improvement of current recycling efforts for materials such as paper and containers through educational programming, and the handling of other items such as electronics and household hazardous waste through special programs.
The county says it plans to expand on the past SWMP by concentrating on public education through targeted recycling campaigns, school presentations, and backyard composting workshops.
The Madison County Solid Waste Department held a virtual public information meeting on Aug. 27 to briefly summarize the plan and accept public comments.
Madison County residents and businesses are encouraged to review the plan and provide feedback. Public comments must be received by Sept. 20.
After the public-comment period ends, the Solid Waste Department will finalize the draft plan and then submit it to the New York DEC for review.
MACNY to honor Wall of Fame inductees on virtual event in September
DeWITT — MACNY, the Manufacturers Association, later this month plans to honor Kathleen Alaimo and Louis DeMent as the 2020 inductees for the Manufacturers Wall of Fame. The recognition is part of a two-week long virtual “Celebration of Manufacturing” event in September in place of its annual dinner, which is usually held in May. Due
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DeWITT — MACNY, the Manufacturers Association, later this month plans to honor Kathleen Alaimo and Louis DeMent as the 2020 inductees for the Manufacturers Wall of Fame.
The recognition is part of a two-week long virtual “Celebration of Manufacturing” event in September in place of its annual dinner, which is usually held in May.
Due to the coronavirus-pandemic restrictions, MACNY had originally rescheduled the May annual dinner to Sept. 23 but has now opted for the remote event.
Wall of Fame inductees
Alaimo is president of Syracuse Label & Surround Printing, and Louis DeMent is owner and CEO of Giovanni Food Co., Inc. They will be inducted and honored virtually on Sept. 28 during MACNY’s 107th annual “Celebration of Manufacturing.”
They will be commemorated with a plaque on the Manufacturers Wall of Fame at the MACNY headquarters. Alaimo and DeMent will also join MACNY and community members for a live Zoom session on Sept. 29.
“On behalf of MACNY, the Wall of Fame selection committee, and the entire manufacturing community, I would like to congratulate Kathy and Lou on their well-deserved inductions into the Manufacturers Wall of Fame,” Randy Wolken, president and CEO of MACNY, said in a statement. “We look forward to honoring their dedication to manufacturing and their achievements during MACNY’s 107th Annual Celebration of Manufacturing.”
Wolken went on to say, “Syracuse Label & Surround Printing and Giovanni Food Co., Inc., are vital Central New York manufacturers. These two leaders have successfully steered their organizations through change and challenges, positioning them for continued success in their industries. This is an impressive testament to their leadership skills.”
Other event plans
The Manufacturers Association sees the virtual event as a way to “break down geographical barriers and engage MACNY and community members throughout the entire State of New York,” per a news release.
Throughout the weeks of Sept. 21 and Sept. 28, MACNY plans to release a series of videos featuring its Innovator of the Year Award recipient; Wall of Fame inductees; and updates from Wolken on the “past, present, and future” of manufacturing in the state.
MACNY in early March had announced that it has selected Daniel Brown of SRC, Inc. as the 2020 Innovator of the Year.
In addition to the video series, MACNY plans to host live virtual events via Zoom to offer viewers a “greater look” at the current state of manufacturing, the future of manufacturing, and discussions with this year’s award recipients.
For additional event details, visit https://www.macny.org/107th-celebration-manufacturing/
EPA proposes cleanup plan for superfund site of former Sidney company
SIDNEY, N.Y. — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing a cleanup plan to address creosote contamination at the GCL Tie and Treating superfund site located in the village of Sidney in Delaware County. The location is a former wood-treating facility that was operated between the early 1950s and 1988 when the property was
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SIDNEY, N.Y. — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing a cleanup plan to address creosote contamination at the GCL Tie and Treating superfund site located in the village of Sidney in Delaware County.
The location is a former wood-treating facility that was operated between the early 1950s and 1988 when the property was “abandoned by the owners,” per the EPA website.
Creosote is an oily contaminant obtained from extracting coal tar at a high temperature and is commonly used as a wood preservative.
The EPA’s proposed plan addresses the portion of the site where creosote contamination is impacting groundwater and calls for heating the subsurface soil to reduce the thickness of the creosote non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) to the point that the NAPL can be better extracted through specialized extraction wells.
“EPA’s previous actions under the Superfund program significantly reduced the extensive creosote contamination impacting the soil and groundwater at the GCL Tie and Treating site,” said Pete Lopez, EPA regional administrator for Region II, which includes New York state. “Through this proposed plan, we are upholding our commitment to protect the environment for future generations by addressing the remaining creosote contamination in soil and bedrock at the site.”
Superfund is the informal name of a 1980 law allowing the EPA to clean up contaminated sites, per the EPA website. It also “forces the parties responsible for the contamination to either perform cleanups or reimburse the government for EPA-led cleanup work,” the agency says.
About the site
The GCL Tie and Treating property comprises 26 acres of the 60-acre superfund site in an industrial area of Sidney. The property formerly contained a sawmill, a wood-treating facility, and a light manufacturing company. It is bordered by commercial and industrial properties, a railroad line, and undeveloped federal- and state-regulated wetlands, as described in an Aug. 20 EPA news release.
The non-GCL properties at the site are those with contaminated soil, sediment, and groundwater originating from the GCL property.
Creosote contaminated several locations across the GCL property as a result of drip-drying creosote-soaked lumber without containment and “major documented spills,” the EPA said.
One major spill occurred when a pressurized treatment vessel used at the GCL property malfunctioned in 1986, causing an estimated 30,000-gallon release of creosote. GCL representatives excavated the contaminated surface soil and stockpiled it onsite. In 1991, EPA took early action and disposed of various wastes on the property including the removal of thousands of gallons of creosote from tanks, piping, floors, sumps, and other equipment.
The Sidney site was added to the superfund national priorities list of the country’s “highest priority” hazardous sites in May 1994.
EPA previously excavated and treated contaminated soil and sediments using thermal desorption and addressed groundwater contamination by installing a pump and treat system that brings contaminated groundwater to the surface where it is treated before it is discharged.
The primary groundwater contaminants at the site include polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) – naphthalene, benzene, toluene, and ethylbenzene – and xylene isomer (BTEX) compounds.
Contaminant concentrations have been “substantially” reduced since the groundwater treatment system began, but elevated levels of PAHs and BTEX continue to be detected in the groundwater in areas where pockets of creosote remain in fractured bedrock and soil that received the most significant direct discharges from site operations.
The EPA’s proposed cleanup plan addresses the remaining source of creosote contamination at the site that is continuing to contaminate groundwater.
The plan proposes to use in-situ (in place) thermal treatment. Thermal treatment works by applying very high temperatures directly underground to the contaminated area, which makes the creosote less viscous and enables it to move more easily through soil toward extraction wells where it is collected and piped to the surface to be treated.
It is anticipated that the creosote in the fractured bedrock would be extracted by injecting steam underground through wells drilled in the contaminated area and the creosote in targeted areas of soil would be extracted by using heaters placed in steel pipes underground. The heat can make the contaminated area hot enough to destroy some chemicals.
The estimated cost of this proposed plan is $25 million. With it, the EPA expects to address an ongoing source of groundwater contamination and help the aquifer to recover. A final action for the groundwater will be determined after this remedy is implemented.
Written comments on EPA’s proposed plan should be mailed or emailed to: Ashley Similo, remedial project manager, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 290 Broadway, 19th floor, New York, New York 10007-1866 or similo.ashley@epa.gov.
The agency will accept comments postmarked up until Sept. 21, the EPA said.
FDA approves Lansing firm’s product to disinfect N95 respirators
LANSING, N.Y. — NovaSterilis, a nearly two-decade old Ithaca–area company, says health-care workers can use one of its products to decontaminate “select” N95 respirators used as personal protective equipment (PPE) during the COVID-19 pandemic. The firm on Sept. 1 announced the emergency-use authorization by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration to use its Nova2200 system
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LANSING, N.Y. — NovaSterilis, a nearly two-decade old Ithaca–area company, says health-care workers can use one of its products to decontaminate “select” N95 respirators used as personal protective equipment (PPE) during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The firm on Sept. 1 announced the emergency-use authorization by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration to use its Nova2200 system to disinfect the PPE.
The Nova2200 platform runs the NovaClean process, which decontaminates N95 respirators for single-user reuse based on the “proven science of supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2),” as described in a NovaSterilis news release.
The firm also says the technology is “non-toxic,” has a low environmental impact, and has “broad material compatibility.” The process “penetrates deep” within materials, is minimally reactive, and “completely inactivates multiple types” of bacteria, fungi, and viruses, NovaSterilis contends.
“With the onset of the COVID-19 global pandemic, NovaSterilis recognized the potential for the Nova2200 to help address the extreme shortage of PPE for medical personnel by using our process to decontaminate N95 masks,” Tony Eisenhut, president and CEO of NovaSterilis, said. “The NovaClean process effectively kills the coronavirus, and provides added comfort for health-care personnel who receive their own N95 respirators back after decontamination, rather than someone else’s.”
The Nova2200 is deployed and operated at the point of use in the hospital setting, resulting in decreased turnaround time, and “increased” respirator availability to health-care personnel, the company contends.
Working with several partners, NovaSterilis demonstrated that the NovaClean process “rapidly and completely” inactivates human-coronavirus strains from N95 respirators, including SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.
The “rapid research” to demonstrate the effectiveness of the Nova2200 in the fight against SARS-CoV-2 was made possible by several collaborators, the firm said.
The partners included Cayuga Health Systems, which supplied respirators after NovaSterilis completed proof-of-concept testing, in addition to guidance and access to equipment that was used to determine the performance of N95 respirators in the workplace and shorten central sterile processing turnaround time.
In addition, Buffalo–based ZeptoMetrix Corporation tested the efficacy of the Nova2200 on viral samples, including SARS-CoV-2, in an “urgent manner” within its biosafety level 3 laboratory. The work helped prove that NovaSterilis’ technology “was effective” against the novel coronavirus.
The firm also worked with Cornell University, which supplied respirators and completed a preliminary coronavirus model study. It also collaborated with iFyber, LLC of Ithaca, a contract research organization. It led the regulatory-submission process, designed the necessary microbiology and material-compatibility testing, and performed sample preparation and decontamination testing.
NovaSterilis operates at 3109 N. Triphammer Road in Lansing. The firm employs six people, Eisenhut tells CNYBJ.
About NovaSterilis
Founded in 2001, NovaSterilis has developed and commercialized medical products based on the application of supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) with proprietary additives designed for specific use scenarios. The company’s scCO2 equipment platforms are currently being utilized for a variety of functions, ranging from sterilization of multiple biomaterials products, including allograft tissues used in orthopedic surgeries, to impregnation of bioactives into drug-delivery devices, and to industrial fiber cleaning.
Report outlines state agencies’ efforts in using sustainable practices
New York State agencies on Aug. 23 issued a report which documents how “innovative” energy efficiency and sustainability programs have “substantially reduced” energy use in state buildings, tripled the generation of solar energy over the past two years, and “significantly” curbed paper use. “Most significantly,” the 2018-19 Greening New York State Report also notes a 22.6
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New York State agencies on Aug. 23 issued a report which documents how “innovative” energy efficiency and sustainability programs have “substantially reduced” energy use in state buildings, tripled the generation of solar energy over the past two years, and “significantly” curbed paper use.
“Most significantly,” the 2018-19 Greening New York State Report also notes a 22.6 percent reduction in state agency energy use over the last decade — especially in large state buildings — through the New York Power Authority’s (NYPA) BuildSmart NY program.
The energy reduction exceeded Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s 2012 goal for cutting energy use by 20 percent by 2020, per a news release from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). State agencies also cut paper use in half over the last 10 years and doubled the composting of organic waste over the last five years.
Developed by the DEC, NYPA, Office of General Services (OGS), and New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), the report details progress on “key” green initiatives, many of which “save state resources or make operations more resilient, both crucial benefits during the state’s ongoing response to COVID-19 when it is imperative for agencies to work efficiently.”
In addition, the Cuomo administration launched the GreenNY Council, a multi-agency working group led by DEC, NYPA, OGS, and NYSERDA and charged it with helping agencies implement the state’s “lead-by-example” directives.
The GreenNY Council will also serve as a resource to support the state’s strategy for reducing agency greenhouse-gas emissions. Council members have been working together for more than a year to leverage resources, create guidance, “harmonize reporting, and make it easier for agencies to meet the state’s ambitious climate and sustainability goals.”
Report specifics
The report finds efforts to reduce energy use and waste result in “significant savings.” Under NYPA’s BuildSmart NY program, large state facilities have reduced source energy use intensity by 14.4 percent since 2010. Through the implementation of 158 energy-efficiency projects committed to by the end of 2019, those facilities will decrease energy use 22 percent, “achieving the [governor’s] goal of reducing such use 20 percent by 2020.”
In 2019 alone, energy-efficiency improvements saved New York an estimated $65 million and reduced carbon-dioxide emissions by more than 290,000 tons relative to the baseline of 2010, the report found.
In addition, the report says copy paper purchasing decreased 60 percent over the last decade, saving the state $64.1 million since reporting began, and more than $8 million in 2019 alone; and, “cumulatively,” these actions accounted for more than $73 million in savings in fiscal year 2018-19, per the DEC.
The report also found “virtual elimination” of the purchase of bottled water by New York State executive agencies — 73 percent of authorities have also eliminated or restricted use to “special circumstances,” such as soldiers and emergency response personnel.
Also described as “achievements” are the purchase of 100 percent post-consumer recycled content, processed chlorine-free copy paper doubling from 22 to 48 percent, a recycling rate of 66 percent — compared to 50 percent first measured in 2008 — and a doubling the number of agencies composting organic waste since 2012.
The report also found the state’s green-purchasing program investing $114 million on green products, up $7 million from the previous year, and earning a national award for the purchase of sustainable electronics in both 2018 and 2019, which will save taxpayer dollars over the lifetime of the equipment.
The report also cites the generation of nearly 10 million kilowatt hours of solar energy for agency use, a 10 percent increase from the previous year and triple the amount generated in 2016.
The full report is available online on the state’s “GreenNY” website, along with more details about New York’s efforts to green state purchasing and operations.
OPINION: Yes, Joe, you are a radical socialist who is soft on rioters
Joe Biden recently asked a simple question: “Do I look like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters?” The answer is yes. When Biden refused to condemn the violence that has gone on in Portland for almost three months, his silence was consent to that violence. So, Joe when you don’t come out
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Joe Biden recently asked a simple question: “Do I look like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters?”
The answer is yes. When Biden refused to condemn the violence that has gone on in Portland for almost three months, his silence was consent to that violence.
So, Joe when you don’t come out of your basement and denounce the rioting, burning, and violence in Minneapolis, Portland, Seattle, Chicago, and Washington, D.C., while allowing your surrogates to pretend that it wasn’t happening, you were complicit. Now you try to claim to be some kind of great moderate with the “you know me” line.
Joe, what we know is that your convention did not stand up to those who seek to destroy our country and the rule of law. Your convention did not stand up to those who would defund the police. Your running mate supported cutting $150 million from the LAPD. Your political party refused to allow U.S. Senator Tim Scott’s police-reform bill to come to the floor of the Senate and you said nothing.
Your silence on the riots makes you complicit in every store that has been burned, every law-enforcement officer who has been killed or injured, and every innocent bystander who has been attacked and, in some cases, killed. We know you Joe — you are the guy who is too scared to stand up for what is right and after the fact complains about those who did.
Yes, Joe, we know you. And we know that our president can’t hide in his basement in fear and remain silent as domestic terrorism grips our streets. It is because we know you, that America will not vote for you.
Rick Manning is president of Americans for Limited Government (ALG). The organization says it is a “non-partisan, nationwide network committed to advancing free-market reforms, private property rights, and core American liberties.” This op-ed is drawn from a release the ALG issued on Sept. 1.
OPINION: We’re All in This Together
OPINION We are a nation adrift. Even before the pandemic and George Floyd’s death, the U.S. was piling on problems with little sense that we had either the leadership or the political will to address them. The coronavirus and Black Lives Matter protests have amplified those challenges, throwing older ones into stark relief and adding new
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OPINION
We are a nation adrift. Even before the pandemic and George Floyd’s death, the U.S. was piling on problems with little sense that we had either the leadership or the political will to address them. The coronavirus and Black Lives Matter protests have amplified those challenges, throwing older ones into stark relief and adding new ones.
I am as convinced as ever that this country has the strength and ingenuity to find its way out. I don’t know about you, but I see rising out of the multiple crises besetting us a bedrock recognition that there is much work to do, which requires a new willingness to overcome the inertia of recent years.
Not that this will be easy: the scale of our problems is too immense to resolve them outright. The stark inequities in economic opportunity, policing, and criminal justice that have sparked ongoing protests are too deep-seated for quick fixes — though, hearteningly, there seems to be a widespread conviction among ordinary Americans that change is due. The economy in recent years has done just fine for a relatively small group of people at the top but has left too many Americans fearing that they won’t be able to fend for themselves or their families. These differences are even more glaring now: the pandemic is eviscerating small businesses and upending the lives of millions as larger companies and well-connected entrepreneurs position themselves to thrive. Digging out will be the work of years.
We face other immense issues that have been allowed to drift. People who are chronically sick today have their lives upended and often wind up in debt — yet much as we talk about health care being a human right, we don’t act that way. Many Americans worry that immigrants are taking jobs and reshaping the lives they know — yet our political system has been unable to move beyond either “fence them out” or “welcome them” to reckon with how we adjust creatively and humanely to demographic change. Our tax code is riddled with loopholes created for and exploited by people of higher income — yet those with the power to change it have refused to do so. We face an ever-rising national debt — with no political will to address it. We’re involved in countless conflicts overseas — with no strategic clarity or concerted effort to ask why and for what purpose.
So, what do we do? Obviously, there are specific policies we could pursue — on economic opportunity, for instance, some form of universal basic income or at least a rise in the federal minimum wage, which hasn’t budged from $7.25 an hour since 2009, would at least help workers save a little and reduce anxiety in times of uncertainty. But overall, how we set about fixing ourselves matters as much as the specifics of what we do.
For one thing, most of these problems can’t really be solved, only managed. Because of their scope and complexity, there is no single remedy. There are multiple things that need to be done, and the vital thing is to get started doing them and not be hamstrung by partisan differences.
Secondly, we are long past the point where one sector can afford to sit things out. We need government, the private sector, and not-for-profits to work together. The old saws that solutions lie chiefly with government or that government is useless long ago lost their relevance. When you’re dealing with problems of this magnitude, the answers lie with both the public and private sectors, and they need to focus together on the common good. Our federal system allows experimentation. Different approaches can be tried at local, regional, state, federal, and non-government sector levels.
Finally, we all have to recognize our stake as Americans in the problems that beset the country, not just the ones that concern us directly. Our society is ailing. We have the strength to rebuild, but not if we continue to withdraw to our little warring camps and lob insults at one another. Only if we make “we’re all in this together” more than just five empty words can we overcome the enmity, division, and harmful drift of the last few years.
Lee Hamilton, 89, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south central Indiana.
CHRIS KIM has joined Morgan Stanley’s Wealth Management office in Ithaca as a financial advisor. He previously was the chief investment officer at Tompkins Financial Advisors for eight years. Kim also taught at the Ithaca College for seven years. He holds an MBA degree from J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Business at Northwestern University and
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CHRIS KIM has joined Morgan Stanley’s Wealth Management office in Ithaca as a financial advisor. He previously was the chief investment officer at Tompkins Financial Advisors for eight years. Kim also taught at the Ithaca College for seven years. He holds an MBA degree from J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Business at Northwestern University and a bachelor’s degree from Michigan State University.
DR. DAVID ROSNER, a general surgeon, has returned to Carthage Area Hospital’s (CAH) medical staff effective Sept.1. He sees patients at the Carthage Surgical Clinic located at the hospital’s main campus in Carthage. Rosner joins CAH with more than 30 years of surgical experience. He previously worked at CAH from 1988-2010. The doctor specializes in
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DR. DAVID ROSNER, a general surgeon, has returned to Carthage Area Hospital’s (CAH) medical staff effective Sept.1. He sees patients at the Carthage Surgical Clinic located at the hospital’s main campus in Carthage. Rosner joins CAH with more than 30 years of surgical experience. He previously worked at CAH from 1988-2010. The doctor specializes in abdominal surgery. He practices upper and lower endoscopy and performs tonsillectomies and outpatient surgical procedures. Rosner is board-certified by the American Board of Abdominal Surgeons. He received his medical degree from the University of Guadalajara in Mexico and completed his residency at the New York Medical College, Lincoln Hospital, a level I trauma center in the Bronx. Rosner began his surgical work experience at Carthage Area Hospital & Lewis County General Hospital from 1988-2010 as a self-employed general surgeon in private practice. Following his work at Carthage, Rosner was appointed president of the medical staff at Lewis County General Hospital in 2010. He worked for Lewis County General Hospital from 2010-2017 as a general surgical attending physician. Leading up to his return to Carthage, Rosner worked at Canton-Potsdam Hospital from 2017-2020 where he was chief of surgery at Gouverneur Hospital from 2018-2020.
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