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DEC completes construction of new $622,000 Otisco Lake boat launch site
SPAFFORD — The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) recently announced that the new boat launch site on Otisco Lake is complete and open to the public. The boat launch is located at 1490 West Valley Road in the town of Spafford. The DEC funded the project with $599,740 through the Environmental Protection […]
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SPAFFORD — The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) recently announced that the new boat launch site on Otisco Lake is complete and open to the public.
The boat launch is located at 1490 West Valley Road in the town of Spafford.
The DEC funded the project with $599,740 through the Environmental Protection Fund and $22,260 through New York Works, for a total project cost of $622,000. The new launch site complements the DEC Otisco Lake fishing-access site at the causeway, located about 200 yards to the north.
Features of the new boat launch include:
• New concrete launch ramp and floating boarding dock to allow the launching of trailered motorboats even if water levels fluctuate
• Accessible-designated parking for one vehicle with trailer and one passenger vehicle
• Wheelchair-accessible portable toilet
• Solar-powered safety lighting, down-lit to minimize light pollution
• Invasive-species disposal bin
• Designated boat-preparation area
• Paved parking area with separate entrance and exit that accommodates 13 vehicles with trailers and 13 single vehicles.
Prior to the boat launch’s completion, Otisco Lake was the only one of the Finger Lakes without a public boat launch, the DEC says. With this facility, boaters will have a new option to explore the region and its fishing and boating-related recreational opportunities, the department said.
“This modern facility offers parking for boat trailers and passenger vehicles and provides safe and convenient features accessible to visitors of all abilities,” DEC Region 7 Director Matthew Marko said in a statement.
Town of Spafford Supervisor Christopher Kozub said, “I’m happy there will now be public boat access to Otisco. The new launch provides an opportunity for people to enjoy recreation on this beautiful lake and have more opportunities to take advantage of this top-notch fishery.”
Otisco Lake is the most easterly of the 11 Finger Lakes and is eighth in size, with a surface area of about 2,200 acres. It lies wholly within Onondaga County. The lake’s variety of fish species include tiger muskellunge, walleye, large and smallmouth bass, brown trout, bluegill, pumpkinseed, sunfish, black and white crappie, and yellow perch.

Morrisville College Foundation elects three new directors
MORRISVILLE — The Morrisville College Foundation announced it has elected three new directors to its 25-member board. The new members — Shirley Crawford of Canastota, Nancy Roberts of Saratoga Springs, and Rita Scharman of Sherrill — took office on July 1. Each will serve a three-year term. Crawford has served as a member of the
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MORRISVILLE — The Morrisville College Foundation announced it has elected three new directors to its 25-member board.
The new members — Shirley Crawford of Canastota, Nancy Roberts of Saratoga Springs, and Rita Scharman of Sherrill — took office on July 1. Each will serve a three-year term.
Crawford has served as a member of the biology faculty at SUNY Morrisville since 1973. As the longest-serving faculty member in Morrisville’s history, she has taught thousands of students during her tenure and is the faculty member most frequently credited by alumni as having impacted their education and future career, the college said. Crawford and her husband, Jack, have an extensive philanthropic history with the college through the Crawford Endowed Scholarship and Crawford Hall named in their honor. Crawford holds doctoral degrees from SUNY ESF and Syracuse University, a master’s degree from Rollins College in Florida, and a bachelor’s degree from Penn State University.
Roberts has been a professor at the University at Albany, teaching journalism and communication since 2004. An expert on the history of journalism and communication and on literary journalism, she has a special interest in the history of advocacy journalism. Roberts is the daughter of the late Art Roberts, “a beloved” SUNY Morrisville faculty member, and his wife, Doris, the college said. Roberts has been a long-time supporter of the Art & Doris Roberts Scholarship, named in her parents’ honor. She earned a bachelor’s degree in history from Swarthmore College, a master’s degree in American studies from Brown University, and a master’s and Ph.D. in mass communication from the University of Minnesota–Twin Cities.
Scharman is president of Scharman Propane Gas, Inc. After completing her accounting degree at Morrisville, she earned her bachelor’s degree at SUNY Polytechnic Institute. She worked as an auditor before taking over the family business, Scharman Propane Gas Inc., in 1988. A longtime lover of horses, Scharman has demonstrated her support for Morrisville’s equine program, setting up two scholarships and sponsoring critical equipment for the program. Recently, she funded the Division of Nursing Endowment, the first divisional endowed fund at Morrisville. The Rita L. Scharman ‘81 Equine Rehabilitation Center Swimming Pool and Scharman Arena at the college’s rehabilitation center are named in her honor.
The Morrisville College Foundation was founded in 1976 to serve as the fundraising arm for SUNY Morrisville. The foundation seeks and distributes charitable gifts from private sources to provide opportunities for students and the college that are not funded by state resources. All gifts to the foundation support SUNY Morrisville students through scholarships, academic enrichment, and co-curricular programming like intercollegiate athletics.
How to Keep Going When You Want It All to Go Away
How long will the Damocles Sword of the coronavirus pandemic hang over our heads? As the days drag on, will it threaten to upend us indefinitely? Even though we try to avoid thinking about the troubling possibilities, they keep creeping into our minds, creating more stress, clouding our ability to stay focused, and leaving us
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How long will the Damocles Sword of the coronavirus pandemic hang over our heads? As the days drag on, will it threaten to upend us indefinitely? Even though we try to avoid thinking about the troubling possibilities, they keep creeping into our minds, creating more stress, clouding our ability to stay focused, and leaving us irritable, angry, less effective, and tired.
It’s not a pretty picture — not one we could possibly imagine ever facing. So, when we’re confused and uncertain about the future, what are we to do? Here are some thoughts about that bothersome question.
1. Don’t listen to yourself
Why does it always happen when we are trying to get to sleep at night? But that’s the way it is. What’s so upsetting is that the person who causes the anxiety and does the damage is the one who lives inside our head. We are never our own best friend in the middle of the night.
So, stop listening to yourself. It’s time for a personal fact-checker, but neither Alexa nor Siri qualify. This is a job for someone you trust. Ask, “This is what’s concerning me. Am I on track or off the rails?”
2. Look for new possibilities
The good news is that life is not a matter of choosing the right fake Zoom background to convince ourselves (and others) that we’re more than just OK. It amounts to more than that.
Recently, an editor sent me one of my sales articles. He had kept it until he found the right place for it. Recognizing that it had been around for about a year, he asked if I would look it over to see if it needed updating. Well, my first reaction was less than positive. But, swallowing my pride, I read it and was shocked at what I found. In a relatively short time, the world changed dramatically and the article needed updating to reflect what had transpired.
People are no different, so it may be time to ask yourself a tough question, “Am I dated?” Think about it. What can you do to “update” yourself? Sure, you may know your job “backwards and forwards,” but that doesn’t count anymore. Focus on figuring out how to revise your performance. How can you make what you do more relevant? What can you do to enhance your value? Think about the possibilities.
3. Get better acquainted with yourself
If you really want to get to know yourself as you really are, you might want to spend time in Wyoming. But be prepared, Wyomingites aren’t subtle. They don’t tip-toe around; they’re not afraid to tell it like it is, no matter who you are. Having lived there, I speak from experience. For example, I recall the memorable words of a motorcycle-riding English professor from the UW: “If you can’t write it, you don’t know it.” Got it!
Here is the point. If you want to get better acquainted with yourself, jot down life experiences from your early memories to what is happening now. Don’t just remember them, get them on paper. Write them down as they come to mind. Ideas never come all at once. If you really want to know yourself, start writing. You may like what you discover.
4. Be ready for the unexpected
How many times in the last six months have you heard someone say, perhaps wistfully, “I’ll sure be glad when life gets back to the way it was.” Even though we may not have said it out loud, most everyone has harbored the thought more than a few times. It’s just too much to let ourselves think that going back is not an option.
If we have learned anything from the pandemic, it’s that we should learn to keep an eye out for surprises and the unexpected, or, as the slang would have it, they come from “out of left field.”
Even though we may not like to think that everything is up for grabs because of the pandemic, it is: the way we live, work, play, learn, shop, think, do business, and behave. It’s all changing and will surely continue to evolve. Keeping an eye out for the unpredictable will make living easier and more rewarding.
5. Change the picture of yourself
Add continuing uncertainty to the pervasive impact of COVID-19 and it’s more than enough to distort our picture of ourselves and crush our self-confidence. It’s too much to let ourselves think about what could possibly be coming next.
Perhaps not. How we happen to view ourselves is not a given or chiseled in stone, unless, we allow ourselves to look at it that way. In a wonderful essay, “Homo Sapiens: The Unfinished Animal,” physicist George Stanciu, Ph.D., writes, “Nature gives human beings no specific way of life — no fixed occupation, no fitting dress, no appropriate emotional profile. It’s as if nature grew tired when she fashioned Homo sapiens and left this one species unfinished.”
And that’s good news. In spite of everything, what we do with what we are given has not been written or handed to us. Our story is unfinished — and it’s in our hands.
John Graham of GrahamComm is a marketing and sales strategy consultant and business writer. He is the creator of “Magnet Marketing,” and publishes a free monthly eBulletin, “No Nonsense Marketing & Sales Ideas.” Contact him at jgraham@grahamcomm.com or visit: johnrgraham.com

Rome Memorial Hospital wins AHA award for life-saving heart care
ROME — Rome Memorial Hospital (RMH) announced it has received the Mission: Lifeline Gold Plus Referring Quality Achievement Award for implementing certain quality-improvement measures defined by the American Heart Association (AHA) for treatment of patients who suffer severe heart attacks. RMH says it’s the third year in a row that the hospital has been recognized
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ROME — Rome Memorial Hospital (RMH) announced it has received the Mission: Lifeline Gold Plus Referring Quality Achievement Award for implementing certain quality-improvement measures defined by the American Heart Association (AHA) for treatment of patients who suffer severe heart attacks.
RMH says it’s the third year in a row that the hospital has been recognized by AHA for saving lives.
Every year, more than 250,000 people experience an ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), the deadliest type of heart attack, caused by a blockage of blood flow to the heart that requires timely treatment, according to AHA. To prevent death, it’s vital to restore blood flow as rapidly as possible, either by mechanically opening the blocked vessel or by giving clot-busting medication.
AHA’s mission: Lifeline program’s goal is to reduce system barriers to prompt treatment for heart attacks, beginning with the 9-1-1 call, to EMS transport, and continuing through hospital treatment and discharge. The initiative offers tools, training, and other resources to support heart-attack care following protocols from the most recent evidence-based treatment guidelines.
RMH says it earned the award by meeting specific criteria and standards of performance for quick and appropriate treatment through emergency procedures to re-establish blood flow to blocked arteries in heart-attack patients coming into the hospital directly or by transfer from another facility.
“Every moment is vital in the event of a heart attack. Our team in the Emergency Department is trained to recognize the signs of a heart attack and implement the standards quickly,” Dr. Andrew Bushnell, medical director of emergency services at RMH, said in a statement. “Our collaboration with EMS providers and other area hospitals ensures that every step of the transfer process is done as efficiently as possible to save lives.”
Rome Memorial Hospital is a nonprofit health-care system providing services to patients throughout Central New York. It is an affiliate of St. Joseph’s Health and an affiliated clinical site of New York Medical College.

New York manufacturing index declines in August
Still indicates slight growth in manufacturing activity After increasing “significantly” in July for the first time since the pandemic began, manufacturing activity in New York state grew only “slightly” in August. The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index fell 14 points to 3.7 in August, “signaling a slower pace of growth than in
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Still indicates slight growth in manufacturing activity
After increasing “significantly” in July for the first time since the pandemic began, manufacturing activity in New York state grew only “slightly” in August.
The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index fell 14 points to 3.7 in August, “signaling a slower pace of growth than in July.”
The index had climbed 17 points in July to its first positive reading since February.
The August survey number — based on firms responding to the survey between Aug. 3 and Aug. 10 — indicates business activity edged “slightly higher” in New York, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said in its Aug. 17 news release.
A positive reading indicates expansion or growth in manufacturing activity, while a negative index number points to a decline in the sector.
The survey found 34 percent of respondents reported that conditions had improved over the month, while 30 percent said that conditions had worsened, the New York Fed said.
Survey details
The new-orders index fell 16 points to -1.7, indicating that orders “levelled off,” and the shipments index fell 12 points to 6.7, pointing to a “modest” increase in shipments.
Delivery times were steady. Unfilled orders and inventories declined.
The index for number of employees edged up to 2.4, indicating that employment levels inched “slightly higher.” The average-workweek index fell four points to -6.8, pointing to a decline in hours worked.
The prices-paid index was little changed at 16.0, signaling that input prices increased at about the same pace as last month. The prices-received index climbed above zero, indicating that selling prices increased for the first time since March.
The index for future business conditions moved down four points to 34.3, suggesting that firms remained optimistic about future conditions, though less so than the prior two months. The indexes for future new orders and future shipments posted similar readings, and firms expect to increase employment in the months ahead.
The capital-expenditures index came in at 6.0, a sign that firms, “on net, planned small increases” in capital spending.
The New York Fed distributes the Empire State Manufacturing Survey on the first day of each month to the same pool of about 200 manufacturing executives in New York. On average, about 100 executives return responses.
Opinion: Steps NYS can take to Combat the Return of COVID-19 in Assisted-Living Facilities
OPINION The COVID-19 pandemic brought unparalleled challenges and wreaked havoc on nearly every industry. Thousands of residents in assisted-living communities [across the state] experienced a sudden separation from their friends and families, while staff and management of these facilities struggled to keep up with demand for personal protective equipment (PPE) as they implemented rigid, enhanced
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OPINION
The COVID-19 pandemic brought unparalleled challenges and wreaked havoc on nearly every industry.
Thousands of residents in assisted-living communities [across the state] experienced a sudden separation from their friends and families, while staff and management of these facilities struggled to keep up with demand for personal protective equipment (PPE) as they implemented rigid, enhanced health-screening protocols to prevent virus spread internally.
Although nursing homes and assisted-living communities operate under very different conditions, they both serve a growing population of elderly New Yorkers. New York’s more than 500 licensed adult-care facility/assisted-living providers serve seniors who need ongoing supervision and assistance with activities of daily living such as bathing, dressing, and taking medications, but in general do not require round-the-clock skilled nursing care like that provided in a nursing home. It’s largely for this this reason that assisted-living communities experienced a far lower rate of COVID cases or fatalities than did nursing homes.
New York bravely stood at the forefront of the COVID outbreak and the lessons learned during this spring will help better prepare us for the likely resurgence this fall and winter. But it behooves the state now to recognize the operational distinctions between nursing homes and assisted-living/adult-care facilities and provide support to these communities and their hardworking, devoted staff just as Newsday’s August 9 editorial (“Rising heat on nursing homes) recommends for nursing homes. Here is what the state can do to help assisted-living communities:
Prioritize assisted-living communities for distribution of PPE: The state needs to acquire a stockpile of PPE supplies in advance of a possible resurgence — and needs to make assisted-living communities a priority for distribution. This past spring, assisted-living providers spent weeks pleading for scarce PPE supplies desperately needed to keep residents and staff safe, and this equipment, combined with strong infection control and cleaning measures, is needed to minimize risk of infection within the community.
Provide adequate access to affordable testing with quick turnaround time to receive results: New York needs to provide assisted-living providers with affordable and rapid testing capacity. Assisted-living communities must test their staff and other personnel that come on premises weekly. The tests average $100 and the state has imposed all the cost on the assisted-living provider — putting some in financial distress. And, because of the [late June and July] surge in cases nationwide, the turnaround time for results has increased to a level where testing cannot provide adequate protection for residents and staff.
Change the rules for family visitation: Newsday’s editorial outlined the problem well: one positive resident or staff case shuts down the entire family visitation program down for 28 days. The Department of Health needs to revisit this policy and revise it to make it more flexible. One approach is to make the rule consistent with the current staff return-to-work policy when a positive-testing person is furloughed for 14 days and then can return to work if they test negative after the 14th day. Families and residents have been kept apart for far too long.
COVID-related policy for assisted-living communities should be driven by the operational facts related to this model of long-term care and be distinct from nursing-home requirements. ESAAL and its members stand ready to work with the NYS Department of Health to develop policy that ensures residents’ and staff’s well-being and safety as we continue to navigate through this dreadful and challenging time.
Lisa Newcomb is executive director of the Empire State Association of Assisted Living (ESAAL), representing more than 500 licensed adult-care and assisted-living providers.
Opinion: The Faith We Place in Our Elections
I have lost track of the times over the years I have heard a politician say, “This is the most important election of my lifetime.” In fact, I have said it myself. And I’m sure we all believed it at the time. But in my case, at least, I know I was wrong in the past.
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I have lost track of the times over the years I have heard a politician say, “This is the most important election of my lifetime.” In fact, I have said it myself. And I’m sure we all believed it at the time. But in my case, at least, I know I was wrong in the past. Because this year’s election is the most important of my lifetime.
Elections are the crown jewel of a representative democracy. We do at least three things when we vote. First, and most obviously, we vote for our preferred candidates. Second, by doing so we vote to direct policy and to give the party we favor more control over the levers of power. Third, and possibly most important, by voting we place our stamp of approval on the system — we participate in it, reinforce it, and trust it to carry our voice. Then, whatever the result, we accept it.
This is actually one of the remarkable things about the American political system — the degree to which Americans over the centuries have placed their faith in election results, win or lose. Occasionally, there are charges of voter fraud, but overwhelmingly we accept the results and express confidence in the fairness, transparency, and integrity of the election process. It’s been a vitally important part of our system that we have taken too much for granted.
This allegiance to the idea that the process matters more than personal conviction has come even from politicians who had a right to object. The most obvious recent example is Al Gore in 2000, after votes left uncounted because of the Supreme Court cost him the election. Bitter supporters urged him not to accept the result and to challenge the legitimacy of the process. Instead, in his concession speech, Gore said, “Other disputes have dragged on for weeks before reaching resolution. And each time, both the victor and the vanquished have accepted the result peacefully and in the spirit of reconciliation…. [O]ur disappointment must be overcome by our love of country.”
That was a bare 20 years ago and look how far we have strayed. This year, it’s fair to say, Americans’ trust in the election process is at best unsettled. Many are worried about foreign meddling. But that’s nothing compared to the undermining coming from the very top: A sitting president who refuses, so far at least, to say whether he will accept the results of the election, who floats the idea of postponing it, who questions the validity of the venerable absentee ballot, and who talks constantly about “corrupt” elections. In fact, Susan Glasser writes in The New Yorker, since 2012 Donald Trump has “questioned voting or suggested that an election would be rigged, unfair, or otherwise compromised” 712 times. This year alone, he was closing in on 100 times when her article was published. No wonder a lot of Americans of both parties worry about the legitimacy of the results in November.
Now, it’s not uncommon to hear charges of voter fraud, but study after study has found that actual voter fraud in the U.S. is rare. It’s possible in a city or town, but if you think about how our national elections are run — in 50 states, each with its own rules, and each locality controlling the electoral process — it’s hard to see how fraud could take place on any sizable scale.
Which is not to say there aren’t problems. Chicanery from politicians bent on disenfranchising voters whose politics they don’t like and decades of underfunding the actual machinery of elections give us plenty to be concerned about.
But here’s the thing. We have over 200 years of success at transferring power peacefully, often between political leaders who disagreed vehemently with one another. That has been one of the keys to American success. I’m not alone in thinking of this year’s vote as the most important of my lifetime, and woe betide us if our confidence in the result — which will play a big part in our willingness to accept the result — is betrayed by politicians seeking to game the system or by elections officials who don’t live up to the trust Americans place in them to get it right.
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.
Viewpoint: Leaders Are Readers
When I went to grade school in the 1970s, the curriculum was still based on “The 3 R’s” of Readin’, wRitin’ and ‘Rithmatic.” These cornerstone fundamentals of education were not my favorite and of the three, I gravitated the most to reading. Like so many others, I enjoyed the adventure of new places, people, and
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When I went to grade school in the 1970s, the curriculum was still based on “The 3 R’s” of Readin’, wRitin’ and ‘Rithmatic.” These cornerstone fundamentals of education were not my favorite and of the three, I gravitated the most to reading. Like so many others, I enjoyed the adventure of new places, people, and ideas unfolding before me page after page. That was much more attractive than figuring out multiplication tables.
Today, I find reading an essential discovery tool for my work as a consultant, coach, and trainer. However, it’s the power of story that is the real gift of reading and the occasional movie or documentary — and speaking of documentaries, my wife and I recently watched the 2010’s “Wasteland” together. The documentary has been described on theater websites such as Moviefone as follows:
“Located just outside Rio de Janeiro, Jardim Gramacho, Brazil, is the world’s largest garbage landfill. Modern artist Vik Muniz works with the so-called catadores, the men and women who pick through the refuse, to create art out of recycled materials. Muniz selects six of the garbage pickers to pose as subjects in a series of photographs mimicking famous paintings. In his desire to assist the catadores and change their lives, Muniz finds himself changed as well.”
We learned that the class system in Brazil is significant. Muniz suggests that people in higher classes truly believe they are better than those in lower classes. The garbage pickers are considered one of the lowest classes in Brazilian society, with only prostitutes and thieves being lower.
A small but significant detail in the film that struck me was that one of the most prized items the pickers would find in the garbage heaps was books. Occasionally they would find intact books among the garbage, and instead of selling them with the recyclables that paid their wages, they retained, cleaned, and dried these books to become part of the collection in their self-made library.
The catadores valued these books and the ability to read. They taught one another to read, they read to one another, and they read independently. They read to learn. They read as a way to express some independence. They read to grow as people and to escape their very challenging realities. They read to virtually travel, to understand foreign perspectives, and to challenge their current ways of thinking. This defines the garbage pickers as high-class in my book — no pun intended.
Our clients often ask for a recommended reading list of leadership, organizational effectiveness, and personal-development books, and we are quick to answer with long lists of well-written books, white papers, and the occasional TED Talk or other video or documentary. I would add “Wasteland” to that list.
As leadership and executive coaches, we believe leaders are readers — and here is why:
Unlike the pickers of the Brazilian landfill, and despite most of our ample means and experience in traveling, reading provides exposure to new ways of thinking, cultures, and ideas like no other media can. In fact, what Mark Twain said about travel — “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime” — clearly also applies to reading.
Another great benefit of reading, especially for leaders, is that language and vocabulary are enhanced and improved. The spoken word, literacy, and the understanding of concepts through language and vocabulary are all exercised and improved through reading, equipping us to be more agile and effective communicators.
Consider the literacy model known as the ladder of abstraction. It’s a model to describe structure or a hierarchy of language. Simply explained, lower rungs on the ladder are more commonly understood while higher rungs may be more sophisticated or elite. Be thoughtful of the audience you wish to connect to and speak or write from their rung, not a higher one to seem more impressive or intelligent, effectively losing some of your connection. Also be mindful of not over-simplifying your language too. Match the rung and you will connect more and better.
We are fortunate in the U.S. compared to some people and cultures elsewhere in the world, where reading materials are highly censored and scrutinized to the point of being unavailable or illegal. Exercise that freedom by reading diverse and even controversial materials. Challenge your own biases by reading materials you would otherwise judge negatively, and you will develop greater self-awareness as an individual and as a leader of others.
Leaders are influencers. The more tools and approaches we have to authentically utilize make us, as leaders, potentially more influential to larger and more diverse populations. Ultimately, reading is especially important for leaders because leaders are people who have a desire to influence others to purposeful action. Reading increases our capacity and ability to influence more effectively. Reading will only enhance every leader’s ability!
—A person who won’t read has no advantage over one who can’t read. — Mark Twain
Bill Berthel is a partner with Emergent, L.L.C., a provider of executive coaching and leadership training, based in Syracuse. Contact him at Bill@GetEmergent.com
Piaker and Lyons P.C. has promoted four staff members in its Binghamton office. JONATHON SHATTUCK has been promoted to manager; BETHANY STEWART has been elevated to senior accountant; CHRISTOPHER PARSONS has been promoted to senior accountant; and KATIE KIRK has been promoted to manager. Shattuck, Stewart, and Kirk have earned their certified public accountant (CPA)
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Piaker and Lyons P.C. has promoted four staff members in its Binghamton office. JONATHON SHATTUCK has been promoted to manager; BETHANY STEWART has been elevated to senior accountant; CHRISTOPHER PARSONS has been promoted to senior accountant; and KATIE KIRK has been promoted to manager. Shattuck, Stewart, and Kirk have earned their certified public accountant (CPA) designations.

NBT Bank has hired JOSEPH ONDESKO as assistant treasurer. He has 15 years of financial and accounting experience, most recently serving as chief financial officer/chief investment officer/head of information technology at the Bank of Akron. Ondesko holds an MBA in finance and a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Canisius College.
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NBT Bank has hired JOSEPH ONDESKO as assistant treasurer. He has 15 years of financial and accounting experience, most recently serving as chief financial officer/chief investment officer/head of information technology at the Bank of Akron. Ondesko holds an MBA in finance and a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Canisius College.
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