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

Oneida County appoints new director of health
UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente, Jr. on Monday announced the appointment of Daniel Gilmore as the county’s new director of health. He

State Police arrest Ithaca-area man for car theft after traffic stop
ITHACA, N.Y. — New York State Police in Ithaca announced Friday that a recent traffic stop led them to arrest an area man for stealing

Viewpoint: Tips to help manage holiday stress during COVID-19
Feeling stressed? You’re not alone. Stress levels are rising due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the numerous disruptions in our daily lives. The American Psychological

MVHS CEO discusses staffing, PPE issues as COVID-19 cases rise
That’s according to a YouTube video from Darlene Stromstad that MVHS released on Wednesday, Dec. 9 to update the community on key issues related to

ALLEN EYE ASSOCIATESDR. MARK A. NELSON has joined Allen Eye Associates in Oneida. He attended Utica College, and earned a degree in biology with minors
Lockheed Martin Owego awarded a $12.3 million Navy contract modification
OWEGO, N.Y. — Lockheed Martin Corp.’s (NYSE: LMT) Owego plant has been awarded a more than $12.3 million contract modification to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price contract from the U.S. Navy. This modification adds scope to provide non-recurring engineering and obsolescence services in support of the Airborne Low Frequency Sonars integration into MH-60R production aircraft for
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.
OWEGO, N.Y. — Lockheed Martin Corp.’s (NYSE: LMT) Owego plant has been awarded a more than $12.3 million contract modification to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price contract from the U.S. Navy.
This modification adds scope to provide non-recurring engineering and obsolescence services in support of the Airborne Low Frequency Sonars integration into MH-60R production aircraft for the governments of India and Denmark, according to a Dec. 1 U.S. Defense Department contract announcement.
Work on this contract will be performed in Brest, France (58 percent) and Owego (42 percent), and is expected to be completed in October 2024.
Foreign-military sales funds in the amount of $12,350,767 will be obligated at time of award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year, according to the contract announcement.
The Naval Air Systems Command in Patuxent River, Maryland is the contracting authority.
Five Star Bank parent to pay quarterly dividend of 26 cents a share
WARSAW, N.Y. — Financial Institutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISI), parent of Five Star Bank, recently announced it will pay a quarterly cash dividend of 26 cents a share per common share outstanding for the fourth quarter. The dividend is payable on Jan. 4, to shareholders of record on Dec. 21. Five Star Bank, based in Warsaw
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.
WARSAW, N.Y. — Financial Institutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISI), parent of Five Star Bank, recently announced it will pay a quarterly cash dividend of 26 cents a share per common share outstanding for the fourth quarter.
The dividend is payable on Jan. 4, to shareholders of record on Dec. 21.
Five Star Bank, based in Warsaw in Wyoming County, has about 50 branches throughout Western and Central New York. Its CNY branches include offices in Auburn, Seneca Falls, Geneva, Ovid, Horseheads, and Elmira.
Financial Institutions and its subsidiaries employ about 630 people. The banking company generated $23.4 million in net income in the first nine months of 2020, down from nearly $34.7 million in the year-ago period.

Rome drone test site wraps up 2nd phase of pilot program
ROME, N.Y. — The second phase of the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) unmanned aircraft traffic management pilot program (UPP) at the New York UAS test site at Griffiss International Airport in Rome is complete. The second phase of UPP (called UPP2) included capabilities and services that will support safe, high-density, unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) operations,
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.
ROME, N.Y. — The second phase of the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) unmanned aircraft traffic management pilot program (UPP) at the New York UAS test site at Griffiss International Airport in Rome is complete.
The second phase of UPP (called UPP2) included capabilities and services that will support safe, high-density, unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) operations, NUAIR said in a news release.
A UAS includes a drone and equipment used to control its flight. A drone is also referred to in the industry as an unmanned aerial vehicle, or UAV.
Syracuse–based NUAIR is short for Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Research. The nonprofit focuses on UAS operations, aeronautical research, safety management, and consulting services.
The capabilities demonstrated included remote identification services that will allow observers to identify nearby UAS, detecting and avoiding technology to prevent collisions, and public-safety operations.
Virtual collaboration for the effort began in mid-April of this year with three weeks of live flights and component testing throughout November, NUAIR said.
About the program’s second phase
More than 40 people from 13 different organizations came together, both physically and virtually, to complete the work outlined in UPP2.
Tony Basile, COO of NUAIR, served as the air boss, overseeing safety protocols and flight paths, and instructing pilots and visual observers throughout the event. Mark Reilly of AX Enterprize LLC — which has offices at the Rome drone test site and in Yorkville — served as the test director and technical lead for operations, “directing the flow of each demonstration scenario and confirming all systems were functioning properly,” per the NUAIR release.
Three weeks of testing included more than 100 live and simulated flights of both manned and unmanned aircraft. The UPP2 team reached its goal of high-density urban drone operations, with a peak density of 18 aircraft (15 live and 3 simulations) in the air at the same time, within 0.2 square-miles of airspace over downtown Rome.
Interoperability, information sharing, and communication between UAS service suppliers (USS) were “critical functions” for the team to address in order to achieve these advanced, high-density operations. Drone operators have many UAS-service suppliers to choose from for their drone-operating needs, much like consumers have many cellular-service suppliers to pick from for their mobile-phone needs, NUAIR said.
To test this “real-world scenario,” where one pilot may prefer to use the AiRXOS USS, while another likes to use ANRA Technologies, the UPP2 team had to work together to make sure each system could communicate properly with the other. Each USS, four in total (AiRXOS, ANRA Technologies, AX Enterprize, OneSky), were responsible for submitting flight plans into the collaborative system.
“The NY UAS Test Site and UPP2 team did an amazing job. Prior to contract award and COVID impacts, I knew this would be a complex and logistically challenging effort,” Mark Reilly, UPP2 program manager from AX Enterprize, said. “The team had to push hard to accomplish what we needed to do. In the end, we exceeded everyone’s expectations with the most simultaneous live UAS operations that have ever been conducted at the Test Site, successful execution of all UPP2 use-cases, and the demonstration of many technological aviation advancements.”
Adoption of drone technology by public-safety organizations continues to grow. Sheriff’s departments from Oneida County, Albany County, and Washington County took part in UPP2 by flying their drones and testing the process for implementing restricted airspace, reserving it for emergency drone operations. This process creates a “no-fly” zone in a specific area, alerting non-authorized drones in the vicinity to exit the airspace so they don’t interfere with emergency drone operations like immediate medication or medical-equipment delivery.
“The collaborative effort between all of our partners and participating organizations in order to safely complete the task at hand, in the middle of a pandemic, was astounding,” Tony Basile, COO at NUAIR, said. “We had pilots come in from across the state including a pilot from Mohawk Valley Community College and multiple pilots from the sheriff offices of Oneida County, Albany County and Washington County. Without their support and participation, we wouldn’t have been able to get to the airspace density required for UPP2.”
CNY unemployment rates remain in single digits in October
Unemployment rates in the Syracuse, Utica–Rome, Watertown–Fort Drum, Binghamton, and Elmira regions remained in single-digit figures in October but were significantly higher than a year ago amid the COVID-19 pandemic’s negative effects on business. The figures are part of the latest New York State Department of Labor data released Nov. 24. On the job-growth front, 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.
Unemployment rates in the Syracuse, Utica–Rome, Watertown–Fort Drum, Binghamton, and Elmira regions remained in single-digit figures in October but were significantly higher than a year ago amid the COVID-19 pandemic’s negative effects on business.
The figures are part of the latest New York State Department of Labor data released Nov. 24.
On the job-growth front, the Syracuse region lost jobs in five-digit figures between October 2019 and this past October. The Utica–Rome, Binghamton, Watertown–Fort Drum, Ithaca, and Elmira areas shed jobs in four-digit figures in the same period.
That’s according to the latest monthly employment report that the New York State Department of Labor issued Nov. 19.
Regional unemployment rates
The jobless rate in the Syracuse area was 6.4 percent in October, up from 3.9 percent in October 2019.
The Utica–Rome region’s rate rose to 6.2 percent from 3.9 percent; the Watertown–Fort Drum area’s number hit 5.8 percent, up from 4.9 percent; the Binghamton region came in at 6.1 percent, up from 4.2 percent; the Ithaca area’s rate was 4.6 percent, up from 3.6 percent a year ago; and the Elmira region’s number rose to 6.5 percent in October from 4 percent in the same month a year ago, per the state Labor Department.
The local-unemployment data isn’t seasonally adjusted, meaning the figures don’t reflect seasonal influences such as holiday hires. The unemployment rates are calculated following procedures prescribed by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the state Labor Department said.
State unemployment rate
New York state’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate edged down from 9.7 percent in September to 9.6 percent in October but remained well above the 3.9 percent jobless rate in October 2019.
The 9.6 percent number was also higher than the U.S. unemployment rate of 6.9 percent in October.
The federal government calculates New York’s unemployment rate partly based upon the results of a monthly telephone survey of 3,100 state households that the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics conducts.
October jobs data
The Syracuse region lost nearly 35,000 jobs in the past year, a decline of 10.6 percent.
The Utica–Rome metro area lost more than 9,000 jobs, a decrease of about 7 percent; the Watertown–Fort Drum region shed more than 3,000 jobs, a decrease of about 9 percent; the Binghamton area lost 6,700 jobs, a decline of about 6 percent; the Ithaca region lost 2,500 jobs, a drop of 3.8 percent; and the Elmira area shed 1,500 jobs in the past year, a decrease of 4.0 percent.
New York state as a whole lost more than 1 million jobs, a decrease of 10 percent, in that 12-month period. The state economy gained more than 10,000 jobs, a 0.1 percent increase, from September to October of this year, the Labor Department said.

Cayuga County business receives service-disabled veteran-owned business certification
AURORA — New York Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner RoAnn Destito recently announced that a Cayuga County company 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 Wemoway Holdings LLC, of Aurora, which provides consulting services. Wemoway Holdings is
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.
AURORA — New York Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner RoAnn Destito recently announced that a Cayuga County company 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 Wemoway Holdings LLC, of Aurora, which provides consulting services. Wemoway Holdings is located at 3452 State Route 90 and the business owner is Mark Wilmot, according to the OGS website.
The firm was among nine newly certified businesses announced by OGS on Nov. 20. The DSDVBD was created by Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2014 through enactment of the Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business Act. As of Nov. 20, a total of 841 businesses were certified.
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. ν
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.