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MMRI of Utica names Kontaridis first executive director
UTICA — A little more than two years after joining the organization as director of research, Maria Kontaridis is now the executive director of the Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) in Utica. Kontaridis assumed the top spot on May 6, MMRI said. She is the first person to hold the executive director position, the organization […]
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UTICA — A little more than two years after joining the organization as director of research, Maria Kontaridis is now the executive director of the Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) in Utica.
Kontaridis assumed the top spot on May 6, MMRI said. She is the first person to hold the executive director position, the organization tells CNYBJ.
At the same time, MMRI promoted Susan Bartkowiak to fill the permanent position of director of administration. She has been interim director of administration for the past year.
MMRI is a biomedical research institute founded by the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons in 1958, per its website.
MMRI contends it has “vastly grown” with Kontaridis serving as director of research. The organization increased its number of employees, transitioned from the moniker Masonic Medical Research Laboratory to MMRI, underwent rebranding, and diversified its research portfolio.
“We have been repeatedly impressed and made proud by our decision to hire Dr. Kontaridis. Her ambition is inspiring, and we are excited to bear witness to the growth of the MMRI in the coming months and years under her outstanding leadership,” Alvaro Quiroga, president of the MMRI board of directors, said in a statement.
MMRI said the restructuring of its leadership will increase the effectiveness of its expansion goals for the future as the institute continues to branch into new areas of research, attract more scientists, and increase laboratory space.
“As executive director, I look forward to the bright future of MMRI, knowing we have the ability and dedication to continue our expansion of research efforts towards life changing discoveries, treatments, and, hopefully, cures” Kontaridis said.

Two Utica accounting firms set to combine on July 1
Feldman & Company includes partners Alfred (Fred) Kupiec, Jr. and Ryan Siepiola along with four additional employees, according to Robert Ritz, managing partner of D’Arcangelo & Co. The firms did not provide any financial terms of their merger agreement. Kupiec has more than 30 years of experience overseeing audit, accounting, and tax services for clients
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Feldman & Company includes partners Alfred (Fred) Kupiec, Jr. and Ryan Siepiola along with four additional employees, according to Robert Ritz, managing partner of D’Arcangelo & Co.
The firms did not provide any financial terms of their merger agreement.
Kupiec has more than 30 years of experience overseeing audit, accounting, and tax services for clients that include individuals and privately held companies, per the Feldman website.
“It’s really a succession plan for Alfred,” says Ritz, who spoke with CNYBJ on June 23.
As Ritz explained it, the individual who preceded him as managing partner started the discussions a few years ago, but those talks did not generate an agreement.
“In the fall [of 2019], the talks started back up and that’s when we came to an agreement,” says Ritz.
The two accounting firms finalized the pact in the beginning of 2020, he adds.
The combined company will have 18 partners, a group that will include Feldman partners Kupiec and Siepiola. As of July 1, D’Arcangelo & Co. will have 80 employees, including the additions from the Feldman firm.
Kupiec, Siepiola, and the entire Feldman staff will work from D’Arcangelo’s Utica office. The Feldman firm currently operates at 246 Genesee St. in Utica.
The D’Arcangelo firm will continue conducting business as D’Arcangelo & Co., LLP with offices located in Utica, Rome, Oneida, and Syracuse.
Ritz calls the Feldman partners and employees a “great cultural fit” for the D’Arcangelo firm.
“I think both firms share the same vision, the same attitudes toward our clients, toward our employees,” says Ritz.
The D’Arcangelo firm’s services include auditing; tax preparation, both for businesses and individuals; business valuations; business consulting; and matters pertaining to estates and trusts, per its website.
The late Rick D’Arcangelo, a native of Rome, launched the firm in 1950 in New York City before returning to the Mohawk Valley to open an office under the same name, according to Ritz.

COVID-19 stabilization grants awarded to 31 Onondaga County small businesses
SYRACUSE — CenterState CEO has awarded $150,000 in stabilization-grant funding to a total of 31 small businesses in Onondaga County that were negatively impacted by the COVID-19 restrictions. Grants of up to $5,000 were distributed to businesses in health and wellness, service, hospitality, and lifestyle industries, prioritizing businesses that were ineligible for emergency-relief funding through
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SYRACUSE — CenterState CEO has awarded $150,000 in stabilization-grant funding to a total of 31 small businesses in Onondaga County that were negatively impacted by the COVID-19 restrictions.
Grants of up to $5,000 were distributed to businesses in health and wellness, service, hospitality, and lifestyle industries, prioritizing businesses that were ineligible for emergency-relief funding through the U.S. Small Business Administration, CenterState CEO announced on June 18.
The grants provided “immediate” cash to cover payroll and other expenses incurred during the pandemic. Besides the grant, businesses can also take advantage of technical assistance and one-on-one consultation.
KeyBank Business Boost & Build C.U.S.E. Collaborative is providing the technical assistance for all grant applicants. Those involved include CenterState CEO’s Up Start program, the South Side Innovation Center, WISE Women’s Business Center, and the Upstate Minority Economic Alliance.
“This fund was intended to fill identified gaps in available emergency relief funding. Many of these businesses were unable to access the Paycheck Protection Program and other federal relief funding sources,” Robert Simpson, president and CEO of CenterState CEO, said. “These grants provide businesses disproportionally hit by the public health and economic crisis with needed capital. We are also working with partners to secure funding for a second round of grants.”
Of the grant recipients, 74 percent are women-owned and 64 percent are minority-owned, CenterState CEO said.
“I was really excited when I found out I was awarded a grant. So many small businesses are struggling right now. This grant will help cover bills so that I can stay afloat, and I may actually be able to get ahead of the game,” said Wayne Wright of The Wright Cut Barbershop.
CenterState CEO’s Up Start program administered the fund. It was part of a plan to deploy $500,000 in relief funds to small-business communities throughout upstate New York in response to the economic hardship caused by the COVID-19 crisis.
The KeyBank Business Boost & Build Program, powered by Cleveland, Ohio–based JumpStart, provided the funding.
“As we reopen our economy, this crucial funding will help businesses challenged by COVID-19 rebound and sustain,” Stephen Fournier, KeyBank’s Central New York market president, said.
Grant recipients
CenterState CEO said the grant money went to the following 31 firms:
• A Taste of Philadelphia
• African & Caribbean Central Market
• All Money Spends
• All Times Promotional Products, dba Spinnaker Custom Products
• BulBul, LLC
• Cathy’s Cookie Kitchen
• CLLTVE
• CNY Latino
• Divine Destiny
• Guleyso Learning Childcare
• Half Moon Bakery & Bistro, LLC
• It Takes a Village Daycare
• Kin Architecture Studio, PLLC
• L Stacks Construction Co. LLC
• Mindbody Connection Massage and Fitness
• Miss Prissy’s
• Mixed Methods
• Mr. Biggs Restaurant LLC
• Mystic Side Gift and Book
• Pb&j’s Lunchbox, LLC
• Pearfect Productions
• R.H.Fire, LLC
• RAZZLE DAZZLE ITALIAN ICES
• Red Racer Auto Finishers, Inc., dba Grace Auto Body and Paint
• Plus Sign & Graphics
• Southside Fitness
• The Creators Lounge
• The Floral Gardens
• UniqueImpact, Inc.
• Volpe Nails of Cicero, LLC
• The Wright Cut Barbershop

New York, CNY home sales continue slide in May amid pandemic
ALBANY — New York realtors sold nearly 7,600 previously-owned homes in May, down about 34 percent from the almost 11,500 homes sold in May 2019 as the coronavirus pandemic continued to stifle the process of buying and selling homes. That’s according to the New York State Association of Realtors (NYSAR)’s May housing-market report issued June
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ALBANY — New York realtors sold nearly 7,600 previously-owned homes in May, down about 34 percent from the almost 11,500 homes sold in May 2019 as the coronavirus pandemic continued to stifle the process of buying and selling homes.
That’s according to the New York State Association of Realtors (NYSAR)’s May housing-market report issued June 22. The association said the inability to do in-person showings and other COVID-19-related restrictions dampened sales.
Sales data
Adhering to New York State guidance, realtors were only able to show houses virtually during May, resulting in a 44.5 percent decrease in new listings from 23,668 homes a year prior to 13,139 units this May. Pending sales declined 47.3 percent from 14,224 homes in May 2019 to 7,500 this May.
The number of homes for sale totaled 54,725 this May, a decrease of about 22 percent compared to a year ago.
The May 2020 statewide median sales price was $270,000, unchanged from the May 2019 median sales price, according to the NYSAR data.
The months’ supply of homes for sale at the end of May stood at 5.4 months, down nearly 12 percent from 6.1 months a year prior, per NYSAR’s report. A 6-month to 6.5-month supply is considered to be a balanced market.
Central New York data
Realtors in Onondaga County sold 308 previously owned homes in May, down 28 percent from 428 in the same month in 2019. The median sales price rose 3 percent to $160,000, up from $155,000 a year ago, according to the NYSAR report.
NYSAR also reports that realtors sold 124 homes in Oneida County in May, down about 29 percent from 175 in May 2019. The median sales price increased 10 percent to nearly $140,000 from more than $127,000 a year prior.
Realtors in Broome County sold 107 existing homes in May, down about 37 percent from 170 a year ago, according to the NYSAR report. The median sales price rose about 20 percent to $123,000 from over $102,000 a year ago.
In Jefferson County, realtors closed on 78 homes in May, down about 27 percent from 107 a year earlier, and the median sales price of more than $143,000 was up about 3 percent from $139,000 a year before, 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.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently wound down his daily COVID-19 briefings [the last regularly scheduled briefing was June 19]. At the end, he adopted a valedictory, mission-accomplished tone. He was thanking and congratulating staffers. He took to Twitter to proclaim that he has “the best team.” He thanked the media and anyone else who, in his
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Gov. Andrew Cuomo recently wound down his daily COVID-19 briefings [the last regularly scheduled briefing was June 19]. At the end, he adopted a valedictory, mission-accomplished tone. He was thanking and congratulating staffers. He took to Twitter to proclaim that he has “the best team.” He thanked the media and anyone else who, in his words, “crushed the curve.”
The governor seems to believe that by playing the role of the conquering hero in front of the cameras, he will convince New Yorkers that it’s time to move on. He’s hoping that his actions won’t undergo scrutiny. He’s hoping to evade real accountability for everything that has happened since March.
My message to my colleagues on both sides of the aisle couldn’t be clearer — we cannot let that happen. Fawning media coverage has convinced a lot of people that the governor delivered a master class in crisis management. The facts don’t back it up.
A recent, explosive report from The Wall Street Journal detailed how major policy mistakes, logistical errors, and communication problems between state and local governments caused needless harm and death in our hospitals. Competing directives from the state and city allowed dangerous, inappropriate patient transfers. The governor’s laser-focus on ventilators came at the expense of securing needed dialysis machines, oxygen supplies, and even basic vital-sign monitors. The governor’s laser-focus on creating hospital beds was undermined by staffing and PPE (personal protection equipment) shortfalls. Patients died because ventilators secured by the state were faulty, and others passed away because untrained workers were operating them when respiratory therapists weren’t available.
The situation in our nursing homes was even more dire. The Department of Health’s directive that nursing homes take back patients who were positive for the virus, and thus transmission risks, was disastrous — more than 5,800 lives were claimed. Nurses who tested positive for COVID-19 were allowed to continue working, further endangering a vulnerable population. The governor also shielded nursing-home operators from legal liability, stripping families of what little leverage they had to demand answers.
Additionally, the governor must answer for the dismal performance of his Department of Labor. Even in areas with low infection rates, small-business owners and workers embraced the shared sacrifice of protecting vulnerable people from the virus. They did what was asked. They closed their businesses and stopped working. They were told the Department of Labor would have their back. That was a lie. So many workers waited months and months to get so much as a phone call back. How could the governor justify keeping their economies locked down while infection rates were falling and his bureaucrats were failing his people?
“Even when the facts are discouraging, not knowing the facts is worse.” Those words are the governor’s and I agree with them. That’s why I am calling for bipartisan hearings in the Assembly to investigate our state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Brian M. Kolb (R,I,C–Canandaigua) represents the 131st Assembly District, which encompasses all of Ontario County and parts of Seneca County. Contact him at kolbb@nyassembly.gov
These are uncertain, divided times for our nation. Unemployment is at mind-boggling levels, a virus we still don’t fully understand is stifling the course of ordinary life, many businesses are struggling, nationwide protests continue against systemic and deep-seated racism, and local policy makers face rising questions about policing and public safety. It’s no surprise that this
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These are uncertain, divided times for our nation. Unemployment is at mind-boggling levels, a virus we still don’t fully understand is stifling the course of ordinary life, many businesses are struggling, nationwide protests continue against systemic and deep-seated racism, and local policy makers face rising questions about policing and public safety. It’s no surprise that this is one of those rare moments of national reflection about our future course.
It’s also a moment of great attention to our political system because that’s how we’re going to work these things out. For me, this raises a fundamental question: What are politics and government all about, and how do we use them to make progress on such fundamental issues?
At heart, I’d argue, our political and economic systems try to provide an environment that enhances each person’s quest for happiness and a good life. We lay the framework for this in part through government, and through the politics that determines who runs our government and what they do once in office.
We do this through a representative democracy, a system by which citizens elect men and women to represent them in a national or state legislature in order to make the laws of the country. It’s an elaborate, complex effort, especially in a country as diverse as ours. Disparate interests are rampant at every level, and in order for government to work you have to try to build a consensus among those groups — while seeking collective security, economic growth, and protection for individual rights and liberties. That’s because our democracy promotes the idea that individuals are equal before the law, and that the rights we have enshrined in the Bill of Rights need to be protected.
Representative democracy does not demand that its citizens participate, but it fails if enough of them don’t. It encourages civic engagement, community service, citizens living up to their obligations to their neighbors, and, of course, voting. It also makes room for all manner of communications, from letter-writing to participating in boycotts and protests. And it works best when people are well-informed and educated on the political issues. In this era especially, that places a burden on us all to find high-quality information and use it effectively and prudently.
The thing to remember about the system is that it encourages competition for political power among a wide range of groups and interests, and nothing is ever settled. If you lose, you’re given a chance to win in future elections. If finally, you win, you have the temporary power to achieve your legislative goals. But winning is never total. Congress and our legislatures represent the diversity of the population, and pretty much require cooperation and consensus-building to accomplish anything. This is both a weakness — it can be cumbersome — and a strength, since it allows for reasonable stability as all kinds of groups, including minorities of all sorts, strive to exert influence.
All of this creates a dynamic, energetic political sphere that challenges us. It’s remarkable, if you think about it: The system was crafted for a country of about 4 million. Here we are more than 200 years later, with 330 million people, with the same system helping to organize a country of enormous power, reach, and complexity.
It’s evolved over that time, thanks to constant tinkering, reform, and improvement, and those needs will never go away. That’s what our system does: It calls on citizens to make it work and to make it better. There is no doubt that we face great stresses, and while we may make progress in enhancing individuals’ pursuit of happiness, it’s rarely straight ahead. We take steps forward and then retreat; we celebrate victories and suffer setbacks. But overall, when citizens speak up and become involved, we progress.
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.

Herkimer County Community College has appointed MADELINE M. SNYDER as prevention coordinator for alcohol and substance abuse. She graduated from Virginia Wesleyan University in 2018 with a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and a master’s degree in criminal justice with a concentration in child protection and juvenile justice from Nova Southeastern University in 2020. Snyder
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Herkimer County Community College has appointed MADELINE M. SNYDER as prevention coordinator for alcohol and substance abuse. She graduated from Virginia Wesleyan University in 2018 with a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and a master’s degree in criminal justice with a concentration in child protection and juvenile justice from Nova Southeastern University in 2020. Snyder previously worked as a substance-use counselor at the Herkimer Beacon Center. In this role, she served as a case manager, providing individual counseling and facilitating recovery-focused group sessions. Snyder has also interned at NYC Relief and the Fulton County Domestic Violence Agency. In her role as Herkimer College’s prevention coordinator, she will oversee the Campus Community Coalition, guiding it to develop and implement strategies that will lead to long-term involvement of community institutions, organizations, and individuals in college regarding underage drinking and drug-abuse prevention.

JAMIE CYR is the new chief financial officer at SUNY Morrisville, beginning July 1. He brings extensive experience in financial planning and forecasting and leading complex auxiliary services organizations in hospitality and higher education industries. Cyr’s experience includes the fiscal management of operating and capital budgets of $150 million and strategic leadership of diverse teams
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JAMIE CYR is the new chief financial officer at SUNY Morrisville, beginning July 1. He brings extensive experience in financial planning and forecasting and leading complex auxiliary services organizations in hospitality and higher education industries. Cyr’s experience includes the fiscal management of operating and capital budgets of $150 million and strategic leadership of diverse teams of more than 2,000 employees. Most recently, he served as executive director and general manager of the Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel & Conference Center. His position included directing all operations for the Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel & Conference Center and related properties, including managing the operations at Drumlins Country Club and Minnowbrook Conference Center. Cyr also served as director of Auxiliary Services at Syracuse University for more than six years. He holds an MBA in management from Syracuse University and a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Le Moyne College.

McFarland Johnson has added two new employees to its Binghamton office. RICHARD TARNTINO, JR. joins the firm in the newly created position of digital design lead – transportation, where he will provide leadership and direction for MJ’s Digital Design Environment, including CADD platforms, BIM initiatives, Bluebeam development, and other related technology solutions. Tarntino has more
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McFarland Johnson has added two new employees to its Binghamton office.
RICHARD TARNTINO, JR. joins the firm in the newly created position of digital design lead – transportation, where he will provide leadership and direction for MJ’s Digital Design Environment, including CADD platforms, BIM initiatives, Bluebeam development, and other related technology solutions. Tarntino has more than 35 years of industry experience, including management and administration of Bentley Systems CADD technology platforms and configuration environments.
URIAH HUNT joins McFarland Johnson as a junior airport planner. He graduated from Binghamton University with his master’s degree in geography and concentration in urban and regional planning in December 2019. Hunt’s undergraduate degree was also in geography from Binghamton, with a concentration in computer applications in human-environmental analysis. He joins the firm from the City of Binghamton, where he worked as the program coordinator for the Planning, Housing, and Community Development Department.
Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh and Syracuse Chief of Fire Michael Monds have appointed DANIEL DOWNES as 1st deputy chief of the Syracuse Fire Department. Downes has dedicated more than 20 years to the City of Syracuse. He was appointed as a firefighter in 2000 and promoted to lieutenant in 2011. Downes has been assigned to
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Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh and Syracuse Chief of Fire Michael Monds have appointed DANIEL DOWNES as 1st deputy chief of the Syracuse Fire Department. Downes has dedicated more than 20 years to the City of Syracuse. He was appointed as a firefighter in 2000 and promoted to lieutenant in 2011. Downes has been assigned to Engine 8 and the Rescue Company for his entire career. He comes from a family of firefighters, which includes his brother, Tim Downes, who retired in 2006, and their father, Michael Downes, who retired as Chief of Fire in 1994. Downes is also a veteran of the United States Navy. He served on board the USS America (CV-66). Downes will be taking over for retiring 1st Deputy Chief Steven Evans. Chief Evans has dedicated more than 23 years to the City of Syracuse.
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