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SUNY ESF launches $40 million campaign to support students, campus, research
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) on Wednesday launched the Campaign for ESF, describing it as the “most ambitious fundraising initiative in the College’s history.” The campaign seeks to raise $40 million — double the goal of the College’s last capital campaign — and has already secured $35 million […]
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) on Wednesday launched the Campaign for ESF, describing it as the “most ambitious fundraising initiative in the College’s history.”
The campaign seeks to raise $40 million — double the goal of the College’s last capital campaign — and has already secured $35 million in commitments. ESF officials announced the campaign during an event held at Palladian Hall in Syracuse.
The campaign focuses on three key priorities: expanding student access and success, transforming campus learning environments, and advancing critical research.
“As we embark on this campaign, I am incredibly grateful for the network of ESF alumni, advocates, and close friends who help to ensure we can best support our students — and our faculty and staff — so they can be successful,” ESF President Joanie Mahoney said in the announcement.
To date, ESF has raised more than $15 million to support academic-research programs and nearly $6 million to increase student support through scholarships and other initiatives. More than $7 million has been committed through planned gifts, with an additional $2 million in unrestricted support for the Annual Fund.
Nearly $5 million in other commitments brings the campaign’s total to date to $35 million, ESF said.

Utica to celebrate opening of Harbor Point on June 5
UTICA, N.Y. — The City of Utica and the Greater Utica Chamber of Commerce will celebrate the grand opening of Harbor Point on June 5

Syracuse airport to hold final master-plan update open house
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Syracuse Regional Airport Authority (SRAA) will hold its final master-plan update open house on Wednesday afternoon, May 21. The event is

Caring Gene to help eligible students in Le Moyne College’s FNP master’s program
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College says it’s working with the Caring Gene career pathways training program (CPT) to help students in its family nurse practitioner (FNP) master’s degree program. The partnership is meant to “address healthcare workforce shortages in the Central New York region,” per the Le Moyne announcement. The collaboration also seeks to
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College says it’s working with the Caring Gene career pathways training program (CPT) to help students in its family nurse practitioner (FNP) master’s degree program.
The partnership is meant to “address healthcare workforce shortages in the Central New York region,” per the Le Moyne announcement. The collaboration also seeks to reduce barriers to career advancement and support individuals seeking to become professionals in the health-care industry, the school added.
Caring Gene Healthcare Career Pathways Training Inc. — based in Clifton Park in Saratoga County — is a nonprofit organization and an affiliate of the Iroquois Healthcare Association. It is dedicated to helping people start and grow their health, behavioral health, and social-care careers in New York. This program is part of a collaboration with the New York State Medicaid program, per the Caring Gene website.
Through this partnership, eligible New York state residents and residents of certain bordering states receive full coverage of tuition, books, and academic fees while pursuing education in 13 health care, behavioral, and social-care fields. Those eligible include full-time students in Le Moyne’s MS FNP program, the college said.
The program — administered by the Iroquois Healthcare Association and funded by the New York State Department of Health — supports both new health-care workers and current professionals seeking career advancement. Upon graduation, FNP students who participated in the CPT program are required to make a three-year service commitment to Medicaid providers that serve at least 30 percent Medicaid members and/or uninsured individuals, Le Moyne said.
Due to grant-funds requirements, as of now, the program is only available to accepted students who are beginning classes as new students in the full-time M.S. FNP program in the fall 2025 semester at Le Moyne. Students must complete the FAFSA and TAP applications and accept all grants offered through those programs, the school noted. Students must be a U.S. citizen or an eligible non-citizen, and must reside in New York state. To submit an interest form and learn more about the eligibility for the funding, visit the Caring Gene website at www.CaringGene.org.
Le Moyne is accepting applications for admission to the full-time MS family nurse practitioner program this fall. The next admission deadline is June 15. Those interested can visit the program website to learn more about the curriculum and submit a free application for admission, the college said.

DASNY program to finance nearly $36 million in new medical equipment for Upstate Medical University
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY) on Friday announced the closing of $35.88 million in tax-exempt lease financing

FOCUS Greater Syracuse appoints new executive director
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The board of directors of FOCUS Greater Syracuse, Inc. has appointed Alicia Ernest as the organization’s new executive director. Ernest tells CNYBJ in an email that she started in her new role on May 9, succeeding Rita Reicher, who had served as acting executive director since 2020 while concurrently serving as president
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The board of directors of FOCUS Greater Syracuse, Inc. has appointed Alicia Ernest as the organization’s new executive director.
Ernest tells CNYBJ in an email that she started in her new role on May 9, succeeding Rita Reicher, who had served as acting executive director since 2020 while concurrently serving as president of the FOCUS Greater Syracuse board of directors. With a new executive director in place, Reicher continues serving as the board president, Ernest tells CNYBJ.
Ernest has been the FOCUS Greater Syracuse program director for the past two years. As executive director, she will guide strategic planning, oversee day-to-day operations, and champion the nonprofit’s mission to foster informed civic engagement.
Her priorities include strengthening program effectiveness, deepening community relationships, and increasing long-term organizational sustainability.
“Alicia is the perfect choice for Executive Director,” Reicher said in the announcement. “Over the last 2 years, Alicia has demonstrated her passion for our mission as well as the ability to juggle the many responsibilities that fall on staff of small organizations. Our Board unanimously and enthusiastically supports her appointment.”
“I’m honored to lead an organization that values community-based learning and collective action,” Ernest said in the announcement. “FOCUS is a space where people can come together around the issues that matter most to Central New Yorkers. “In a time when understanding and civic connection are more important than ever, I’m excited to enhance our capacity to carry out our mission with purpose and integrity.”
As executive director, Ernest plans to expand FOCUS’ community reach, grow its public programming, and strengthen the organization’s long-term sustainability through increased engagement and support.
In her previous role as program director, Ernest helped facilitate dozens of public forums, led the Citizens Academy, and worked to ensure that resident input “remained at the center” of FOCUS’ work.
With a background in nonprofit leadership and community collaboration, she is “well-positioned” to lead the organization into its next chapter, FOCUS Greater Syracuse said.
Founded in 1998, FOCUS Greater Syracuse describes itself as a nonpartisan, citizen-driven nonprofit that “connects people to information, ideas, and one another to strengthen Central New York.” Through free public forums and community-driven programs, FOCUS says it empowers residents to engage with local issues and take part in shaping the region’s future.

Cornhill Empowerment Center plans for June 18 formal opening
UTICA, N.Y. — The Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties, Mid-Utica Neighborhood Preservation Corporation (MUNPC), and the City of Utica will celebrate the opening

SUNY Poly and AIS expand research, innovation partnership
MARCY, N.Y. — SUNY Polytechnic Institute and Assured Information Security (AIS) have signed a memorandum of agreement (MOA) marking an expansion of their partnership to

Community Financial System Q1 profit rises more than 21%
DeWITT, N.Y. — Community Financial System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) — parent company of Community Bank, N.A. — recently reported net income of $49.6 million, or 93 cents per share, in the first quarter, up more than 21 percent from $40.9 million, or 76 cents, in the first quarter of 2024. Increases in net interest income
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DeWITT, N.Y. — Community Financial System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) — parent company of Community Bank, N.A. — recently reported net income of $49.6 million, or 93 cents per share, in the first quarter, up more than 21 percent from $40.9 million, or 76 cents, in the first quarter of 2024.
Increases in net interest income (up more than 12 percent) and noninterest revenue (up over 8 percent) helped drive the profit gain. Total revenue at Community Financial System increased nearly 11 percent to $196.25 million in this year’s first quarter from almost $177.3 million in the year-ago quarter.
“Our Company had very solid core operating performance for the first quarter with meaningful growth in net income, operating net income and operating pre-tax, pre-provision net revenue (PPNR) over the prior year’s first quarter,” Dimitar A. Karaivanov, president and CEO of Community Financial System, said in the company’s earnings report issued on April 29. “The Company continues to execute on its focus to deliver sustainable growth and above average returns with below average risk as evidenced by our operating return on assets of 1.28% in the quarter. All four of our businesses — banking, employee benefit services, insurance services and wealth management services — achieved increases in revenues and improvements in core operating performance compared to last year’s first quarter…”
Community Financial System is a diversified financial services company headquartered in DeWitt. Community Bank is among the nation’s 100 largest banks with more than $16 billion in assets and operates about 200 branches across upstate New York, northeastern Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Western Massachusetts. The company’s Benefit Plans Administrative Services, Inc. subsidiary is a provider of employee-benefits administration, trust services, collective investment-fund administration, and actuarial consulting services to customers nationally. The company’s OneGroup NY, Inc. subsidiary is a top 66 U.S. insurance agency. Community Financial also offers comprehensive financial planning, trust administration and wealth-management services through its Nottingham Financial Group operating unit.

Pathfinder Bancorp profit rises more than 40 percent in Q1
OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBHC), the holding company for Pathfinder Bank, reported net income of $3 million, or 41 cents a share, in the first quarter of this year, up nearly 43 percent from $2.1 million or 34 cents, in the first quarter of 2024. Pathfinder attributed the growth to improving operating
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OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBHC), the holding company for Pathfinder Bank, reported net income of $3 million, or 41 cents a share, in the first quarter of this year, up nearly 43 percent from $2.1 million or 34 cents, in the first quarter of 2024.
Pathfinder attributed the growth to improving operating efficiency and growth in net interest income, net interest margin, core deposits, and commercial loans.
“Pathfinder’s solid first quarter results reflect the strength of our balance sheet and our growing core deposit franchise. Our continued focus on disciplined loan and deposit pricing has helped expand net interest margin in a challenging economic environment while our efforts toward optimizing non-interest expenses have improved our efficiency measures,” James A. Dowd, president and CEO of Pathfinder Bancorp, said in the earnings report issued on April 30. “We remain deeply committed to strengthening our proactive credit risk management practices and view our current efforts as the beginning of a sustained, long-term strategy to enhance the quality of our loan portfolio.”
Oswego–based Pathfinder Bancorp, as of March 31, had total assets of $1.5 billion, loans of $912 million, and deposits of $1.26 billion. Pathfinder Bank has 11 full-service branches located in its market areas of Oswego and Onondaga counties and one limited-purpose office in Oneida County.
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