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

State approves reduced rate increases for Excellus, MVP Health Plan, other health insurers
ALBANY, N.Y. — New York has approved a 0.9 percent rate increase for Excellus BlueCross BlueShield in the small-group market; a 1.2 percent rise for
Here are some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering small business, COVID-19, HR, and leadership tips. SBA @SBAgovAre you interested in taking export training workshops but can’t afford it? SBA’s State Trade Expansion Program can help! Learn more at http://sba.gov/step Jumbiz @JumbizNews6 Easy Ways Your Small Business Can Save Money This
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Here are some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering small business, COVID-19, HR, and leadership tips.
SBA @SBAgov
Are you interested in taking export training workshops but can’t afford it? SBA’s State Trade Expansion Program can help! Learn more at http://sba.gov/step
Jumbiz @JumbizNews
6 Easy Ways Your Small Business Can Save Money This Summer http://dlvr.it/RcpWtp
Opus Virtual Offices @OpusVO
5 Secrets to Building a Successful Consumer App https://entrepreneur.com/article/354233 via @opusvo #smallbiz
Business Club @Business__Club
This Business Show Host Shares 5 Must-Do’s To Help You Profit During A Recession http://dlvr.it/RczZLv #Entrepreneur #SmallBiz
Entrepreneur @Entrepreneur
How to Establish an Entrepreneurial Edge After the Great Shutdown: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/351099
Bond Schoeneck King @BondLawFirm
Just posted: Occupancy Limitation Update: Clarification from New York State Regarding Reopening Restrictions. Learn more here: https://bit.ly/3fAmnH1. #COVID19
HR Dive @hrdive
Data from a recent survey shows that caregiving responsibilities have pressured workers into quitting their jobs and applying for unemployment benefits. https://www.hrdive.com/news/caregiving-prevents-workforce-re-entry-study-finds/582688/
Talent Management @MSITalent
Key #Tax Considerations For Cos. With Remote Employees #HR #Relocation https://msi.media/30oJRL4
Mark C. Crowley @MarkCCrowley
Bad News: #COVID Isn’t Going Away Soon, Leaving People Weary. So how do we build our team’s #resilience? Ask your employees what plans they have in place for working remotely longer than anticipated. They’ll weather this better just by asking.
Monica Prieto L @MonicaPrietoL2
Introducing the Hierarchy of Needs for #HR During a Crisis. Get the details via @OracleHCM: https://bit.ly/30CZvme
Lolly Daskal @LollyDaskal
7 Reasons Your People Are Frustrated with Your Leadership — @LollyDaskal http://bit.ly/2ZqjDVG
Small Business Expo @SmallBizExpo
3 Leadership Lessons From Microsoft’s Delicate Dance With TikTok http://twib.in/l/ALbkrdLEzzok
Tom Peters @tom_peters
Perhaps my favorite leadership quote, from Oscar winning director Robert Altman: “The role of the director is to create a space where actors and actresses can become more than they have ever been before, more than they have ever dreamed of being.”
Anton Kogan @AntonKogan_
To get ahead in trying times, empathetic #leadership and a growth mindset are key https://buff.ly/30dYa3L @Entrepreneur

MVCC Center for Leadership Excellence still accepting applications for fall group
UTICA, N.Y. — The Center for Leadership Excellence (CLE) is still accepting applications for cohorts in its flagship programs this fall, including Leadership Mohawk Valley,

Onondaga County’s 2020 budget deficit exceeds $26 million
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Onondaga County this week received a sales-tax payment of more than $5 million, leaving the sales-tax deficit in the county’s 2020 budget

State announces public auction for waterfront property in Ithaca
ITHACA, N.Y. — New York will hold a public auction in Ithaca for state-owned land soon to be vacated by the New York State Department

Helio Health to use more than $400K in federal funding to expand behavioral-health training
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Helio Health, Inc. will use a federal grant of more than $414,000 to improve its Join It, Live It, Be It program.

Aquatrol Technologies leases office in DeWitt
DeWITT — Aquatrol Technologies, Inc., a water-management services and energy consulting firm, recently leased 2,600 square feet of office-service space at 14 Corporate Circle in DeWitt. Gary Cottet of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company represented the tenant in this lease transaction. Lease terms were not disclosed. Aquatrol’s space is part of a one-story, 27,000-square-foot building
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DeWITT — Aquatrol Technologies, Inc., a water-management services and energy consulting firm, recently leased 2,600 square feet of office-service space at 14 Corporate Circle in DeWitt.
Gary Cottet of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company represented the tenant in this lease transaction. Lease terms were not disclosed.
Aquatrol’s space is part of a one-story, 27,000-square-foot building at 14 Corporate Circle, located on 2.07 acres, according to Onondaga County’s online property records. Oliva Holding Co. is the owner of the property, which is assessed at $811,000 for 2020 and located in the East Syracuse-Minoa School District.
Aquatrol Technologies says its products and services include bioaugmentation and bioremediation, water hygiene and disinfection, cooling-water treatment, green chemistry, equipment technology, dust-control treatment, fuel-oil additives, heat-transfer thermal fluids, waste and process-water treatment, steam-plant operation, and seminars and training.

Syracuse law firm opens second office in Cortland
CORTLAND — Josephine Yang-Patyi in May expanded her four-year-old Syracuse law firm to a second office in Cortland. With the addition of the Cortland office — which is located in the McNeil Building at 17-29 Main St. — the Yang-Patyi Law Firm has added attorney Scott Leuenberger as of counsel. Both attorneys are concentrating on
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CORTLAND — Josephine Yang-Patyi in May expanded her four-year-old Syracuse law firm to a second office in Cortland.
With the addition of the Cortland office — which is located in the McNeil Building at 17-29 Main St. — the Yang-Patyi Law Firm has added attorney Scott Leuenberger as of counsel. Both attorneys are concentrating on serving business communities outside the larger upstate New York cities.
Yang-Patyi moved from New York City to Syracuse in 1999, with a focus on representing small businesses and continuing-care service providers, hospitals, and health-care providers in their asset recovery and collection efforts.
Yang-Patyi, principal attorney, is a commercial litigation lawyer with extensive experience in asset recovery and financial restructuring. She represents continuing-care service providers, hospitals, and health-care providers in collection, asset recovery, and compliance matters in Supreme Court, Surrogate’s Court, Bankruptcy Court, and before administrative agencies. Yang-Patyi regularly handles litigation in cases involving creditor’s rights, commercial/business disputes, contract disputes, fraudulent conveyances, fraud, estate administration, employment discrimination, non-compete and unfair competition matters, and construction matters. She has successfully conducted non-jury trials and administrative hearings and handled appeals in state and bankruptcy courts and before administrative agencies throughout New York state for more than 20 years.
Leuenberger is a business law attorney with extensive experience in a wide range of commercial matters, including entity formation, drafting of contracts and agreements, and closely-held and family-business succession planning.
The Yang-Patyi Law Firm’s main office is at 2700 Court St. in the town of Salina, near the Syracuse city line.

Little Falls Hospital adds Powers to board of trustees
LITTLE FALLS — Little Falls Hospital (LFH) announced it has appointed Laura Powers as a new member of the LFH Board of Trustees. Her three-year term began on July 27. Powers is a financial advisor at Strategic Financial Services, Inc. in Utica and has been with the company for 16 years. “My goal of being
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LITTLE FALLS — Little Falls Hospital (LFH) announced it has appointed Laura Powers as a new member of the LFH Board of Trustees. Her three-year term began on July 27.
Powers is a financial advisor at Strategic Financial Services, Inc. in Utica and has been with the company for 16 years.
“My goal of being appointed as a board member of LFH, is to serve the organization with a duty of obedience, loyalty, and care,” Powers said in a news release issued by the hospital.
“Laura’s lively exuberance combined with her community service within the region and her professional expertise will bring additional depth to our board and enhance LFH’s commitment to our mission to better serve our employees, patients, and community,” said Michael Ogden, president of LFH.
In her other community activities, Powers is a board member for the Urban Renewal Agency of Little Falls, member of the tourism committee for Little Falls, member of Think Local Little Falls, and member of the Little Falls Ad-Hoc DRI committee. She also lends social-media management and promotional support to several other nonprofits and events, the hospital said.

New York Forward Loan Fund is still accepting applications
ALBANY — Businesses from qualifying industries can still apply for assistance from the New York Forward Loan Fund for COVID-19-related costs and expenses. Those qualifying industries include agriculture, construction, food services, retail, education services, manufacturing, and transportation, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on Aug. 4. Cuomo has announced that more than $2.3 million
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ALBANY — Businesses from qualifying industries can still apply for assistance from the New York Forward Loan Fund for COVID-19-related costs and expenses.
Those qualifying industries include agriculture, construction, food services, retail, education services, manufacturing, and transportation, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on Aug. 4.
Cuomo has announced that more than $2.3 million has been awarded to support 61 businesses and residential landlords through the New York Forward Loan Fund.
Of the 61 loans, 54 were provided to minority- and women-owned businesses (MWBEs), 10 loans were offered to residential landlords, two loans were awarded to veteran-owned businesses, and one loan supported a nonprofit organization.
About the fund
The New York Forward Loan Fund was created to provide working capital loans to small businesses. It focuses on MWBEs, small residential landlords, and nonprofit organizations that did not receive funding from the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program and Economic Injury Disaster Loans.
The fund continues to accept and process applications; to date, more than 9,300 eligible applications have been received, and more than 60 percent which were from MWBEs.
Eligible small businesses and small residential landlords can apply for a 60-month, no-fee loan with a 3 percent fixed interest rate; while eligible nonprofits can apply for a 60-month, no-fee loan at 2 percent fixed interest. The maximum loan amount is $100,000. Loan funds can be used for working capital including payroll, operating and emergency maintenance, property taxes, utilities, and costs associated with refitting physical space to follow social-distancing guidelines.
More information is available online at nyloanfund.com.
Seven banks have pledged support for the New York Forward Loan Fund, including Buffalo–based M&T Bank (NYSE: MTB); London, England–based HSBC; New York City–based Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), and San Francisco, California–based Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC). Additionally, the fund has received philanthropic commitments from the BlackRock Charitable Fund; Citi Foundation; Ford Foundation; and the Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. Foundation.
The New York Forward Loan Fund was established with support from Bethesda, Maryland–based Calvert Impact Capital. The New York City–based Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) is administering the fund, and Connect2Capital, which is headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, is hosting applications.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.