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Bar, voting site are on Oneida County list of possible virus exposures
UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County officials reported Monday that the public may have been recently exposed to the coronavirus at the Black River Ale House

SUNY Cortland won’t resume in-person classes this semester, campus will remain open
CORTLAND, N.Y. — SUNY Cortland announced it will not resume in-person classes this semester and will continue conducting courses online amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Cree Mohawk Valley Fab site near Utica on track to begin production in 2022
MARCY, N.Y. — Construction remains on schedule for Cree Inc.’s Mohawk Valley Fab at the Marcy Nanocenter on the SUNY Polytechnic Institute campus near Utica.

Oneida County appoints Thompson as new mental-health commissioner
UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County Executive Anthony J. Picente, Jr. announced Thursday that he has appointed Ashlee Thompson as the county’s new commissioner of mental

Broome Tioga talent task force says pandemic will affect workforce development going forward
DICKINSON, N.Y. — Participants in the Broome Tioga talent task force say that the COVID-19 pandemic is having a lasting impact on workforce development in

Pawsitivitea CNY opens at CNY Regional Market in Syracuse
SYRACUSE — Central New Yorkers have a new spot to grab a coffee, a snack, and relax with a few furry, feline friends. Pawsitivitea CNY has opened in a 1,200-square-foot space at the CNY Regional Market at 2100 Park St., according to JF Real Estate, which helped arrange the transaction. Matt Funiciello and Alec Sessa
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SYRACUSE — Central New Yorkers have a new spot to grab a coffee, a snack, and relax with a few furry, feline friends.
Pawsitivitea CNY has opened in a 1,200-square-foot space at the CNY Regional Market at 2100 Park St., according to JF Real Estate, which helped arrange the transaction. Matt Funiciello and Alec Sessa were the agents.
The concept for the business is simple: coffee and tea, baked goods, and cats. Owner Alisha Reynolds said this is the first of two cat cafés planned for the Syracuse area.
The dining room and cat-lounge area will be separate. The café will serve as a satellite location for the CNY SPCA and Reynolds said she is also working with the CNY Cat Coalition and other organizations to provide the cats for the café. All the cats, about a dozen or so at a time, will be available for adoption.
Along with the regular café hours, Pawsitivitea CNY will host paint nights, movie nights, cat yoga, and other special events.
New York state’s organic-farm sales grew nearly 40 percent in last three years
Certified-organic farms in New York state sold a total of $298 million in organic products in 2019, up 38 percent from $216 million in 2016, according to a new report from the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). The Empire State had 1,321 certified organic farms last year. Nationally, 16,585 certified-organic farms sold a total
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Certified-organic farms in New York state sold a total of $298 million in organic products in 2019, up 38 percent from $216 million in 2016, according to a new report from the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). The Empire State had 1,321 certified organic farms last year.
Nationally, 16,585 certified-organic farms sold a total of $9.9 billion in organic products in 2019, up 31 percent from $7.6 billion in 2016, per the NASS report issued on Oct. 22. New York ranked in the top 10 in organic-product sales.

Ithaca firm wins $500K in 76West clean-energy contest
Combplex of Ithaca was one of the three companies winning $500,000 funding award in the 76West clean-energy competition during the Oct. 19 award announcement. A company from the Montreal, Quebec area captured the $1 million grand prize in this year’s contest, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a news release. Combplex works to create
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Combplex of Ithaca was one of the three companies winning $500,000 funding award in the 76West clean-energy competition during the Oct. 19 award announcement.
A company from the Montreal, Quebec area captured the $1 million grand prize in this year’s contest, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a news release.
Combplex works to create a “more resilient” farming ecosystem by eliminating pests that threaten the health of honeybee hives. The firm uses low-power laser technology and sensors to collect data, prioritize hive health, inform crop-yield forecasts, and identify intensive pesticide use, as a described in Cuomo’s release.
Finalists are required to move business operations to the area or establish direct connections with the Southern Tier economy, such as enhancing supply-chain opportunities, adding jobs, or establishing other strategic relationships, the state said.
Competition finalists also receive continued mentoring support for up to two years after the awards are made. If a company is already in the Southern Tier, it must “commit to substantially growing” the business and employment in the region.
The winners, along with 19 semifinalists, were paired with regional companies for mentorship and advisement as part of advancing through the competition. The semifinalists, selected from over 183 applicants worldwide, presented final project pitches of the competition to a panel of judges in August and were selected based on how their technology reduces carbon emissions, promotes renewable energy or energy efficiency.
2020 76West grand prize winner
The $1 million grand prize winner — ThermoAI of Montreal, Quebec — is utilizing artificial intelligence and its software helps industrial companies optimize combustion operations with the goal of decreasing greenhouse-gas emissions by up to 50 percent and increasing efficiency by up to 20 percent.
Other $500,000 winners
COI Energy Services of New York City offers an end-to-end product that helps utilities and businesses improve building-energy performance and grid optimization. The company has software that helps reduce grid constraints and improve capacity utilization while decreasing energy spending and increasing operational efficiency, the state said.
AGreatE of Carlsbad, California makes renewable energy, such as solar and wind, “more affordable and accessible to all people by developing and deploying a wide range of artificial intelligence-enabled, safe, and environmentally friendly battery-based energy storage systems.”

SUNY trying to prevent virus spread by requiring tests before students leave town
Campuses must develop schedules that conduct the test as close to a student’s departure date as possible, SUNY Chancellor Jim Malatras announced Oct. 27. In all, SUNY’s 64 colleges and universities will test about 140,000 students over a 10-day period preceding Thanksgiving break, SUNY said. SUNY contends that this testing requirement will help prevent community
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Campuses must develop schedules that conduct the test as close to a student’s departure date as possible, SUNY Chancellor Jim Malatras announced Oct. 27. In all, SUNY’s 64 colleges and universities will test about 140,000 students over a 10-day period preceding Thanksgiving break, SUNY said.
SUNY contends that this testing requirement will help prevent community spread as students return to their hometowns. Colleges and universities must submit a plan to test all of their on-campus students within that 10-day window no later than Nov. 5.
All students who are taking at least one class on campus; utilizing on-campus services such as the gym, library, or dining hall; or working on campus must test negative for COVID-19 within 10 days prior to their college closing on-campus instruction and services.
Antibody tests do not count toward this requirement, SUNY noted.
“As in-person classes and instruction come to a close [in late November], tens of thousands of students will travel across the state and country to be with their families and complete their fall courses remotely,” Malatras said in a statement. “By requiring all students to test negative before leaving, we are implementing a smart, sensible policy that protects students’ families and hometown communities and drastically reduces the chances of COVID-19 community spread. While we understand there is a lot of focus on plans for the spring semester, we must first finish this semester safely.”
Under previously approved, fall-semester plans, most SUNY colleges and universities are set to shift to 100 percent remote learning after Thanksgiving, with residential facilities shutting down, barring exceptions for students “with extenuating circumstances.”

New York home sales climbed 12 percent in September
Pending sales skyrocketed ALBANY, N.Y. — New York realtors closed on the sale of 13,322 previously-owned homes in September, up 12.2 percent from the 11,878 homes sold in September 2019, amid strong buyer interest as the market emerged from the worst effects of the pandemic. Pending home sales jumped 49.3 percent to 16,813 in September from
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Pending sales skyrocketed
ALBANY, N.Y. — New York realtors closed on the sale of 13,322 previously-owned homes in September, up 12.2 percent from the 11,878 homes sold in September 2019, amid strong buyer interest as the market emerged from the worst effects of the pandemic.
Pending home sales jumped 49.3 percent to 16,813 in September from 11,264 a year ago. That’s according to the New York State Association of Realtors (NYSAR)’s September housing-market report issued Oct. 22.
“As cooler weather approaches, the New York State real estate market continues to heat up with strong buyer activity amid continued low inventory,” NYSAR said in the report.
New listings increased as well, rising 13.6 percent from 18,542 homes a year ago to 21,062 this September.
As buyer demand rose amid limited inventory, it caused house prices to soar. The September 2020 statewide median sale price popped 17.5 percent to nearly $325,000 from over $276,000 in September 2019.
The months’ supply of homes for sale at the end of September stood at 4.5 months’ supply, down about 22 percent from 5.8 months a year ago, per NYSAR’s report.
A 6-month to 6.5-month supply is considered to be a balanced market, the association said.
The number of homes for sale fell 21.5 percent from 67,107 units in September 2019 to 52,687 homes this September.
Central New York data
Realtors in Onondaga County sold 481 previously owned homes in September, down 4 percent from the 501 homes sold in the year-ago month. The median sale price rose 16.7 percent to $178,000 from $152,500 a year prior, according to the NYSAR report.
The association also reports that realtors sold 195 homes in Oneida County in September, up 8.9 percent from the 179 homes sold during September 2019. The median sale price increased 14.4 percent to $152,950 from $133,700 a year ago.
Realtors in Broome County sold 189 existing homes in September, up 21.9 percent from 155 a year earlier, according to the NYSAR report. The median sale price rose 8.4 percent to $135,500 from $125,000 in September 2019.
In Jefferson County, realtors closed on the sale of 143 homes in September, up 32.4 percent from 108 a year ago. The median sale price rose 5.7 percent to $161,000 from $152,350 in September 2019, according to the NYSAR data.
All home-sales data is compiled from multiple-listing services in New York state and it includes townhomes and condominiums in addition to existing single-family homes, according to NYSAR.
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