Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.

Citing virus concerns, SU pushes back spring- semester start to Feb. 8
SYRACUSE — The spring semester at Syracuse University won’t begin until Feb. 8, following a two-week delay over concerns about the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. The semester will continue through May 21, the school announced Jan. 4. The move-in period for campus residence halls is set for the week of Feb. 1. The university made its […]
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
SYRACUSE — The spring semester at Syracuse University won’t begin until Feb. 8, following a two-week delay over concerns about the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
The semester will continue through May 21, the school announced Jan. 4. The move-in period for campus residence halls is set for the week of Feb. 1.
The university made its decision in consultation with the Onondaga County Health Department.
“Over the holiday break, we have been closely monitoring developments with COVID-19. It has become increasingly clear that the next several weeks will likely be among the most difficult our country and Central New York will experience since the onset of the pandemic,” Syracuse University Chancellor Kent Syverud wrote in his update to students, families, faculty, and staff.
Starting the semester two weeks later “best positions” Syracuse to resume residential instruction “in a manner that safeguards” the health and safety of students, faculty, staff, and the Central New York community, per the Chancellor’s message.
First, it provides some distance between the expected post-holiday surge of cases and the return to campus, Syverud wrote. Secondly, it “increases the possibility” that some of the university’s frontline workers will be vaccinated prior to the start of the semester.
“This includes our health-care staff in the Barnes Center, who administer medical care to our students,” said Syverud. The delayed start also “gets us closer” to the time when vaccines will be more widely available across the country, he added.
Syracuse University in the coming days and weeks will announce further information on move-in logistics, testing and quarantine requirements, and other details as students prepare to return to campus.
Mask wearing, social distancing, reduced capacity, and other public-health precautions “will continue to be in place” when the semester begins next month.

Leadership Greater Syracuse unveils Class of 2021
DeWITT, N.Y. — Leadership Greater Syracuse (LGS), a nonprofit that offers a yearlong civic-leadership training program, recently announced its Class of 2021, the 31st class in the organization’s history. LGS teaches participants about community leadership, empowerment, group dynamics, and community volunteer opportunities. Participants will be briefed on trends in government, education, health, economic development, and
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
DeWITT, N.Y. — Leadership Greater Syracuse (LGS), a nonprofit that offers a yearlong civic-leadership training program, recently announced its Class of 2021, the 31st class in the organization’s history.
LGS teaches participants about community leadership, empowerment, group dynamics, and community volunteer opportunities. Participants will be briefed on trends in government, education, health, economic development, and diversity and inclusion.
“The 43 participants in the Class of 2021 will be immersed in the issues and achievements of our community — and through the yearlong program, they will be provided the tools and the connections they need to give back to CNY in a way that is significant to them,” Pam Brunet, LGS executive director, said in a news release.
A recent survey shows that 80 percent of all LGS graduates are still living in Central New York and have held more than 800 volunteer positions, according to Brunet.
“LGS has a 30-year track record of inspiring people to make a difference in the community where we live and work,” she said.
The participants (listed in the table) represent a cross-section of citizens who live in all communities within Central New York. “The LGS Class of 2021 is diverse in gender, age, race, ability, residence, profession, volunteer interest and type of employer,” said Brunet.
The Class of 2021 will kick off its program year with a retreat, which will be held virtually this year due to the coronavirus pandemic.
LGS Class of 2021
• Haji Adan, Refugee & Immigrant Self-Empowerment (RISE)
• Joseph Alfieri, Syracuse University
• Michael Becallo, MedConsult, LLC
• Alexander Behm, Clear Path for Veterans
• Thomas Bezigian Jr., Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC
• Charles Brooks, C&S Engineers
• Hillary Charton-Bartholomew, Cornell Cooperative Extension of Onondaga County
• Benjamin Conger, M&T Bank
• Gerianne Corradino, Central New York Community Foundation
• Calvin Corriders, CenterState CEO
• Angi Daiuto, 174th Attack Wing
• Christine Dillingham, Empower Federal Credit Union
• Michael Dunne, Empower Federal Credit Union
• El Hadji Fall, KeyBank
• Nicole Gumtow, North Eastern Rescue Vehicles
• Elizabeth Henderson, Advocates, Incorporated
• Cynthia Hernandez, VIP Structures
• Elizabeth Hradil, City of Syracuse
• Jerry Jean-Louis, Bristol Myers Squibb
• Ryan Kanavy, Loretto
• Shantina Hines Kyles, Community advocate
• Chelsey Lavere, Turning Stone Resort Casino
• Christopher Lindstrand, Mohawk Global
• Barbara MacDonald, Bristol Myers Squibb
• Kristin Mannion, The Alvina Group
• Breeana McDonald, 174 Attack Wing – Air National Guard
• Sarah Milligan, Pyramid Management Group
• Ashley Montanaro, Mower
• Brian Petranchuk, KeyBank
• Kraig Rando, SRCTec, LLC
• Joseph Rocco, Bowers & Company CPAs
• Jeannine Rogers, The Tech Garden
• Terri Rogers, Hematology Oncology Associates of CNY
• Stefanie Savory, AccessCNY
• Michelle Saya, SUNY Upstate Medical University
• Nicholas Sherwood, Dairy Farmers of America
• Sarah Shute, Onondaga Historical Association
• Stephanie Vavonese, SMV Recruiting
• Nichole Warner, Burns Bros Contractors, LLC
• Michael Watrous, Food Bank of Central New York
• Matt Wierbinski, Lockheed Martin
• Joshua Withrow, Lockheed Martin
• Henry Zachery, Syracuse City School District

Adirondack Railroad begins $30 million rail-line reconstruction project
UTICA, N.Y. — The Adirondack Railroad recently announced it has begun corridor reconstruction on rail lines from Snow Junction to the Tupper Lake station, a total of 84 miles of track. Tupper Lake will serve as the northern terminal, upgrading the existing railroad station, adding a yard to restore engines and locomotives, and building a
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
UTICA, N.Y. — The Adirondack Railroad recently announced it has begun corridor reconstruction on rail lines from Snow Junction to the Tupper Lake station, a total of 84 miles of track.
Tupper Lake will serve as the northern terminal, upgrading the existing railroad station, adding a yard to restore engines and locomotives, and building a modern turnaround track for the trains.
The entire project is estimated to cost $30 million with a completion date of November 2021, according to a news release from the Adirondack Railway Preservation Society, a Utica–based nonprofit organization that operates the Adirondack Railroad.
The Department of Transportation has awarded the rehabilitation-of-rails contract to Tartaglia Railroad Services, based in the Syracuse area.
The primary purpose of this effort is to provide enhanced tourism and economic stimulus to the entire region. Once the reconstruction is complete, the excursion from Utica to Tupper Lake will be among the longest tourist rail lines in the country at 108 miles, per the release. The construction project underway allows travel by train to the Adirondack High Peaks region.
The new railway is part of the 2020 Remsen-Lake Placid Travel Corridor Unit Management Plan, which aims to boost tourism and outdoor recreation along the 119-mile travel corridor. That corridor follows the path of a rail line that was built in 1892 and operated until 1972. New York State bought both the line and its right-of-way in 1974, according to the Adirondack Railway Preservation Society.

NORTH SYRACUSE, N.Y. — New York Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner RoAnn Destito recently announced that a business in North Syracuse has been certified as a service-disabled veteran-owned business (SDVOB). The New York OGS Division of Service-Disabled Veterans’ Business Development (DSDVBD) issued the certification to Patriot Sons USA LLC, which provides environmental-remediation services. Patriot
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
NORTH SYRACUSE, N.Y. — New York Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner RoAnn Destito recently announced that a business in North Syracuse has been certified as a service-disabled veteran-owned business (SDVOB).
The New York OGS Division of Service-Disabled Veterans’ Business Development (DSDVBD) issued the certification to Patriot Sons USA LLC, which provides environmental-remediation services. Patriot Sons USA is located at 100 Fergerson Park in the village of North Syracuse.
Patriot Sons USA was among five newly certified businesses announced by OGS on Dec. 23. The DSDVBD was created by Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2014 through enactment of the Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business Act. As of Dec. 23, a total of 853 businesses were certified in the state.
For a business to receive certification, one or more service-disabled veterans — with a service-connected disability rating of 10 percent or more from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (or from the New York State Division of Veterans’ Affairs for National Guard veterans) — must own at least 51 percent of the business. Other criteria include: the business must be independently owned and operated and have a significant business presence in New York, it must have conducted business for at least one year prior to the application date, and it must qualify as a small business under the New York State program. Several more requirements also need to be met.

NYS wraps up $19M in road projects in Onondaga, Oswego counties
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo last month announced the completion of $19 million in road resurfacing and intersection-improvement projects in Onondaga and Oswego counties. The projects included the resurfacing of nearly 38 lane miles of Interstate 81, the rehabilitation of portions of State Route 5 in the town of DeWitt and State Route 92 from DeWitt to the
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo last month announced the completion of $19 million in road resurfacing and intersection-improvement projects in Onondaga and Oswego counties.
The projects included the resurfacing of nearly 38 lane miles of Interstate 81, the rehabilitation of portions of State Route 5 in the town of DeWitt and State Route 92 from DeWitt to the village of Manlius, and an upgrade of the intersection of State Route 370 with John Glenn Boulevard between Baldwinsville and Liverpool.
Project details
• The resurfacing of Interstate 81’s northbound and southbound lanes from just north of State Route 31 in the town of Cicero in Onondaga County, to just south of State Route 49 in the town of Hastings in Oswego County. The $10.2 million project milled and paved the road surface and reconstructed pavement joints to improve travel conditions, the governor’s office said in a December news release.
• The rehabilitation of portions of State Route 5 from Edwards Drive to the Lyndon Golf Course in the town of DeWitt and State Route 92 from Edwards Drive in DeWitt to the village of Manlius in Onondaga County. The $5.7 million project resurfaced the roadways and made sidewalk and curb improvements along roadways that are widely used by commuters and are home to many business and retail establishments. Additional improvements included upgraded traffic and pedestrian signals and new signs, per the state.
• The reconstruction of the intersection of State Route 370 and John Glenn Boulevard, about halfway in between the villages of Baldwinsville and Liverpool. The $3.1 million project added new turning lanes, resurfaced the approaches, and upgraded the signals and signage. The intersection is a major crossroads for motorists commuting along the Interstate 690 corridor and provides access to Onondaga Lake Park in the village of Liverpool and nearby business districts in the village of Baldwinsville and along State Route 57, according to the state.
“These projects will ease the flow of people and commerce along some of the most vital roadways in Onondaga and Oswego counties…,” New York State Department of Transportation Commissioner Marie Therese Dominguez said in the release.

Oswego Health Foundation announces four new board members
OSWEGO — The Oswego Health Foundation, the fundraising arm of Oswego Health, recently announced four new board members. Tara FitzGibbons, Craig Fitzpatrick, John F. Sharkey IV, and Heather Sunser will each serve terms that will run through June 30, 2023. FitzGibbons is the business manager and group health administrator at FitzGibbons Agency, LLC in Oswego,
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
OSWEGO — The Oswego Health Foundation, the fundraising arm of Oswego Health, recently announced four new board members. Tara FitzGibbons, Craig Fitzpatrick, John F. Sharkey IV, and Heather Sunser will each serve terms that will run through June 30, 2023.
FitzGibbons is the business manager and group health administrator at FitzGibbons Agency, LLC in Oswego, an independent full-service insurance agency. She attended SUNY Oswego and earned her bachelor’s degree in 1994 and her master’s degree in organizational communication from SUNY Albany in 1996. FitzGibbons served as a board member/treasurer of the Friends of Oswego County Hospice board and served as an Oswego Hospital board member from 2009-2011.
Fitzpatrick is a financial advisor at Pathfinder Bank, which is headquartered in Oswego. He attended St. John Fisher College and earned his bachelor’s degree in 2006. Fitzpatrick serves on the board of directors of the Child Advocacy Center of Oswego County, Fulton Kiwanis Club, and has served on the Oswego Health golf tournament committee for the past five years.
Sharkey is president of Universal Metal Works, a metal-fabrication firm in Fulton. He attended St. Lawrence University, where he majored in both math and economics and graduated in 2005. Sharkey additionally earned an MBA in finance and entrepreneurship from Rochester Institute of Technology in 2007.
Sunser is a partner and financial services practice group leader at Barclay Damon, LLP in Syracuse. She primarily concentrates her practice on real-estate law, institutional lending, land use, and municipal compliance. Sunser attended SUNY Albany and earned her bachelor’s degree in 1996. She also received a master’s degree from SUNY Oswego and law degree from Syracuse University College of Law. Sunser volunteers at Vera House Legal Clinic, Habitat for Humanity, Volunteer Lawyer Project of Onondaga County, and serves on the board of trustees for Onondaga County Bar Foundation.
The 2020-21 Oswego Health Foundation board of directors is also comprised of: Ed Alberts, chair; Peter Cullinan, vice chair; Mark Slayton, treasurer; Katie Toomey, secretary; as well as members, Julia Burns, Rachael A. Dator, Mary Ann Drumm, and Michael Harlovic, president & CEO of Oswego Health.

Brown & Brown moves into new corporate headquarters in Jacksonville, Florida
Brown & Brown, Inc. (NYSE: bRO), the Florida–based parent of Syracuse–based Brown & Brown Empire State, recently announced that it has moved into its new corporate headquarters in Daytona Beach. Brown & Brown is an insurance-brokerage firm providing risk-management products and services to individuals and businesses. The new facility is part of an overall campus development that
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
Brown & Brown, Inc. (NYSE: bRO), the Florida–based parent of Syracuse–based Brown & Brown Empire State, recently announced that it has moved into its new corporate headquarters in Daytona Beach.
Brown & Brown is an insurance-brokerage firm providing risk-management products and services to individuals and businesses.
The new facility is part of an overall campus development that includes an 11-story building of 225,000 square feet on 15 acres of land, which will be home to four businesses and its corporate headquarters. The building will support up to 900 employees, once fully occupied, and is part of the company’s overall growth plans, which include adding at least 600 new jobs in Volusia County, according to a Brown & Brown news release. The building also contains multiple training rooms that will support Brown & Brown University, its employee-development platform. Employees were set to start the transition to working in the new building in early January.
The Brown & Brown Empire State subsidiary is headquartered at 500 Plum St. in Syracuse’s Franklin Square area. It also has offices in Vestal, Rome, and Clifton Park, according to the firm’s website.
CEO FOCUS: A Year of Resilience Ends with Hope for a Better Year Ahead
Without question, 2020 brought dramatic disruptions to how we live, work, and connect with one another. Too many of our family members and neighbors have been impacted by this [COVID-19] illness, and businesses that create our community’s unique vibrancy have been forced to close or lay off workers. Still, our community has shown incredible resilience in the
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
Without question, 2020 brought dramatic disruptions to how we live, work, and connect with one another. Too many of our family members and neighbors have been impacted by this [COVID-19] illness, and businesses that create our community’s unique vibrancy have been forced to close or lay off workers. Still, our community has shown incredible resilience in the face of such adversity.
As the year ended, I reflected with gratitude for how we came together for one another. When faced with seemingly insurmountable challenges and hardships, business and community leaders across Central New York responded with compassion and action. Businesses rapidly pivoted to provide critical resources — from hand sanitizer to rapid-testing solutions. Firms donated masks for frontline workers, small businesses adopted new operational models to continue serving customers and clients, and financial institutions and nonprofits developed grant programs to bridge funding gaps.
We were also called upon to face the glaring racial and socio-economic disparities and injustices that have divided us for too long. Business leaders rightfully came forward with words of solidarity and condemnation for acts of hate, discrimination, and injustice, but more importantly, with tangible acts of support. We have much more work to do to address these incredibly difficult issues. But with collective determination, leadership, and commitment to a shared vision for greater equity and prosperity for all, we can achieve our fullest potential as a community and region.
As we look to develop new strategies to rebuild and drive a more robust, inclusive, and resilient economy following last year’s unprecedented health, economic, and social-injustice crises, there is opportunity — even hope. Many projects seeded in recent years will be realized in 2021, including Amazon and the Salt City Market. Companies looking to grow, expand, and create jobs in Central New York have reached out for our assistance. We have seen significant interest from the business community in our new programming designed to provide resources, knowledge, and tools they need to actively drive diversity, equity, and inclusion in their workplaces.
There is even more reason for hope as the first vaccines have been delivered to our health-care professionals and most vulnerable populations. In the months ahead these vaccines, one of which was developed in part at Upstate Medical University, will help us return to the people, work, and activities we love and miss.
In the meantime, I urge you to support local businesses, practice safe social distancing, and seek ways to support one another. We may not know for sure how long this crisis will last, but I am confident better days are ahead. Until then, our resilience will enable us to overcome whatever challenges we face. It is that spirit that makes me proud to be a part of this community, and incredibly hopeful for our future.
Robert M. Simpson is president and CEO of CenterState CEO, the primary economic-development organization for Central New York. This viewpoint is drawn and edited from the “CEO Focus” email newsletter that the organization sent to members on Dec. 31.
VIEWPOINT: 5 New Year’s Resolutions to Make Your Business Culture a Winner
New Year’s resolutions are not only for individuals, but also for businesses. Company goals that leaders set for the year ahead are usually measured in data tied to categories like revenue production and expense reduction. After a difficult 2020 due to COVID-19, many enterprises’ bottom-line numbers will take on extra importance in 2021. And business culture
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
New Year’s resolutions are not only for individuals, but also for businesses. Company goals that leaders set for the year ahead are usually measured in data tied to categories like revenue production and expense reduction.
After a difficult 2020 due to COVID-19, many enterprises’ bottom-line numbers will take on extra importance in 2021. And business culture will be just as crucial. Any resolutions that company leaders make are an effective way to measure their work environment and help their teams to meet performance metrics.
Meeting individual, team, and company goals begin with employees and managers working well together in a vibrant environment. And given the changes and challenges of these times, culture and how leaders pay attention to it have never been more important.
The bottom line falls into place when everyone is on the same page. But even if leaders have established a strong culture, it bears constant vigilance to ensure everyone is rowing in the same direction, especially now when a volatile world can threaten to throw even the most solid companies off course.
Here are five business-culture resolutions for the New Year that leaders could consider.
• Focus on shared values. I think it’s misleading to frequently state that a “family atmosphere” exists in a company. The bigger a business gets or the more it grows in capability and value, the less it’s going to feel like a family. Creative friction and disagreement on processes and concepts are inevitable. Smart companies leverage broader, shared values as common ground on which workers can connect. I have found that one of the best places for doing that is through service to the community beyond company walls. If your culture encourages people to work together for some greater good, they will continue to appreciate each other as humans and fellow workers.
• Avoid prima donnas. Talented people are essential for a successful business, but don’t fall in love with gifted people if they are constantly letting you know how special they are. Watching them work can be breathtaking, but not when they’re the ones sucking the air out of the room.
• Double down on integrity. Large legacy companies are often loaded with people who are just taking up space and collecting a paycheck. It’s a significant issue, and it goes hand-in-hand with integrity. Effective workers know the difference between busywork and producing value. Everybody in the organization must be clear on what success looks like. The role of management is to be clear on objectives and then let people run.
• Don’t stop innovating. Many companies stagnate in this area and should learn how to expand their innovations while encouraging the cultivation of new ideas. Innovation is an amalgam of product marketing and product-management skills, of listening to the market, and of engineering people who can take a problem and figure out how to solve it. But innovation should apply in every direction — in how a company contracts, how it sells, and how it markets.
• Be the first to own mistakes. Anyone who has been involved in conflict directly knows there is always the sense that both parties have some responsibility. The sooner you own yours, the more likely the other person will own theirs — and the project can move forward.
New Year’s resolutions are often easily discarded because of a person’s lack of commitment. For business leaders and their workforce, they reflect company core values and can create or improve a culture that everyone will appreciate and aspire to uphold and deepen.
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.

New 3-D checkpoint scanner at Syracuse airport helping TSA better detect explosives
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse–based NUAIR describes its new president and CEO as a “well-known innovator and leader” within the unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) industry. The TSA has installed an advanced-technology computed-tomography checkpoint scanner (CT) that provides 3-D imaging at the regional airport. “The new checkpoint technology provides critical explosives detection capabilities and improves the capability
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse–based NUAIR describes its new president and CEO as a “well-known innovator and leader” within the unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) industry.
The TSA has installed an advanced-technology computed-tomography checkpoint scanner (CT) that provides 3-D imaging at the regional airport.
“The new checkpoint technology provides critical explosives detection capabilities and improves the capability for our TSA officers to determine whether an item inside a carry-on bag is a possible threat,” Bart Johnson, TSA’s federal security director for upstate New York, said in a news release.
The system applies “sophisticated” algorithms for the detection of explosives by creating a 3-D image that a TSA officer can view and rotate on three axes for “thorough” visual image analysis. If a bag requires further screening, TSA officers will inspect it to ensure that a threat item is not contained inside.
The 3-D imagery allows TSA officers to manipulate the image on screen to get a better view of a bag’s contents and often clear items without having to open a carry-on bag.
“Not only does this state-of-the art technology represent an improved security threat detection capability at the checkpoint, but it also reduces the need for pulling aside a bag to be opened, thus reducing a touchpoint during the pandemic,” Johnson said.
As TSA describes it, this equipment is similar to what is used to scan checked baggage for explosive devices and has been “sized” to fit at checkpoints to create such a clear image of a bag’s contents that the system can automatically detect explosives, including liquids. It shoots hundreds of images with an X-ray camera spinning around the conveyor belt to provide TSA officers with the 3-D views of the contents of a carry-on bag.
Checkpoint CT technology should result in fewer bag checks, the TSA said. Passengers using this machine at the Syracuse airport will be permitted to leave laptops and other electronic devices in their carry-on bags.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.