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Manufacturers are Open Safely, and Ready to Spur Our Economic Revival
Essential manufacturers have been open safely since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. How? They have used their innate skills for quick process change and adaptation to create safe work environments in a rapidly changing and challenging environment. It’s time we both recognize this and learn from this as a nation. Manufacturing is vital for […]
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Essential manufacturers have been open safely since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. How? They have used their innate skills for quick process change and adaptation to create safe work environments in a rapidly changing and challenging environment. It’s time we both recognize this and learn from this as a nation.
Manufacturing is vital for our recovery on two levels. Manufacturers can lead the way to our safe reopening. And, more important in the long term, they must lead the way to a robust and sustainable economic revival.
First, let us acknowledge they are on the frontlines of keeping our communities moving forward. They have risked much to stay open safely — in many cases, completely revamping their operations to protect their workers. They have lived the credo that people come first while they make essential products. They have done so quietly, without fanfare. It’s time we applaud them. It’s also time we learn from them.
MACNY has been working with an innovative subgroup of manufacturers in the Mohawk Valley and in Central New York to help form the “Keeping People Safe and Factories Running” program. This state-of-the-art approach is now available to any manufacturer in our region — and soon throughout New York state. It is built on solid safety procedures, process change, and an employer pledge that links innovative manufacturers together to both learn and implement best practices to keep their people safe and run their operations. I am convinced that this complex problem needs an integrated solution. We now can offer that to you and those in our state and our country. I have to thank many individuals who made this happen — too many to mention here — but they were tremendous in making this effort a reality. You can learn more at https://www.macny.org/keep-people-safe-and-factories-running/
Manufacturing is more than safe. We have learned it is more vital than ever to our nation’s economy and security. How is it possible that we let vital products like pharmaceuticals, personal protective equipment (or PPE), vital technologies, and our food supply move to other countries when we need them to be produced here? When we needed masks, they were being produced in China — ironically, in the very province where COVID-19 first started its dangerous spread to the entire world. We need to make many more things in our country. We need it for our security during this time of pandemics. We need to do so to put millions of people back to work. We need it because it is both sustainable and environmentally conscious to shrink supply chains and ensure they are of the highest quality. I am sorry it took a pandemic to tell us these things. However, we must learn our lesson and never let this happen again.
It’s time to honor our manufacturing heroes. And, it is time to put Americans back to work in our factories using the newest technologies and best people from all walks of life. Manufacturing has never stopped being the backbone of our country. However, our nation has forgotten that we are only great if we make and grow things. Let’s get back to work safely.
Randy Wolken is president and CEO of MACNY, The Manufacturers Association, a not-for-profit 501(c)(6) association representing more than 300 businesses and organizations across Central and Upstate New York.
Knowing When You Can (or Should) Do Market Research In-House
As your organization works to recover and grow in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis, it is likely that the need for market-research data will arise. Market research is an essential part of creating a marketing plan in the best of times, and in the current economic climate it has never been more important. Unfortunately, the
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As your organization works to recover and grow in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis, it is likely that the need for market-research data will arise. Market research is an essential part of creating a marketing plan in the best of times, and in the current economic climate it has never been more important. Unfortunately, the current economic climate has also made resources scarce and limited marketing budgets.
To save money, you may decide to do the research in-house rather than use a market-research firm. Sometimes this is a good option, but sometimes it is a bad idea. My career in research has been fairly evenly split between being employed at a market-research firm and working as an in-house researcher for a variety of organizations. Based on that experience, I have a feel for the types of market research a company can usually undertake on its own and situations when they should seek outside help from a dedicated market-research agency or consultant. The determination can be made by answering a few key questions.
Is there secondary/syndicated research available that addresses your needs? This is a question that should be asked anytime the need for research comes up. It’s not always necessary to conduct your own original research to answer the questions at hand. Oftentimes, relevant data has already been collected on the subject by government agencies, trade organizations, nonprofit groups, academia, or syndicated research companies. This type of data is what researchers call secondary research and you can often access it for a low cost or, in some cases, even for free. It’s always worth searching around for secondary data and reviewing it before you undertake any research project, as it can save a lot of time and money.
Do you have the time and staff resources needed for the project? Research takes time. Depending on the scope of the project, it might take weeks or even months to plan, prepare the appropriate materials, collect data, analyze the data, prepare a report, and present the findings to stakeholders. That can be a big undertaking as a side-project on top of your staff’s normal work duties. If there are staff resources for a dedicated point person to manage the project, it can work. However, unless it’s a fairly small project, it is unlikely to get done in spare moments here and there. At the outset of your proposed project, put together a realistic (not optimistic) assessment about the amount of staff hours required and decide if that is feasible.
In addition to time, you will need to determine if your staff has the necessary collection of skills and experience to conduct the research properly. For example, you may want to conduct a survey. There are a lot of free or low-cost tools like SurveyMonkey that make it quite easy for anyone to create a survey on their own. But writing a good survey requires a variety of learned skills. There are nuances to wording questions the right way to eliminate bias or confusion. It’s important to know the right format of a question to use to obtain certain types of information. The question order and flow of the survey matter. These are not especially hard skills to master, but you develop them through practice. If you don’t have someone on staff with some experience in survey research or the time to learn, you run the risk of composing a survey script that won’t help you collect the data you need.
Once you have data, somebody will need to analyze it. If it is survey data, that requires a basic working knowledge of statistics and comfort level with crunching numbers in a spreadsheet to process the findings and make sense of them. That is well within the skill set of many non-researchers, but it again comes back to determining if someone in your company has the time to do it.
Do you have access to representative samples? You might have the ability to write a great survey and the time to administer it and analyze findings, but can you get it in front of the right group of potential respondents? If you need insights from your own customers, that shouldn’t be an issue; they’re right there in your CRM database. But if you want to know more about competitors’ customers, non-users of the category, or potential customers for a product that might not exist yet, finding an appropriate sample source on your own can be a tough task. Market-research firms will know how to identify and find the appropriate representative sample for those types of projects and turning to one for help may be the best way to avoid asking the right questions to the wrong people.
Can you be objective? I will answer this one for you: probably not. It is incredibly difficult for any of us to be objective about our own business or place of employment. We are just too emotionally invested and too close to the small details to see the situation with the fresh eyes of an outsider.
A better question would be: Is the research required of a nature that your inevitable subjectivity can be overcome? If the research is something straightforward, like reviewing findings from secondary sources or quantitative analysis of existing data, that is pretty safe to do in-house. On the other hand, any kind of qualitative research like focus groups or in-depth customer interviews, where a researcher is required to moderate or guide open-ended feedback, should usually be left to a third party to minimize the effects of researcher bias.
Will you be sharing the findings with a stakeholder that might prefer a third party be involved? In-house research might satisfy in-house needs, but stakeholders outside your organization are likely to be more comfortable with data collected by a third party. Regardless of the reputation of your organization, information from a third-party researcher will be viewed by outsiders as more credible in matters where your firm has a vested interest. This applies to research-based claims in advertising, industry-wide measures, or customer-satisfaction ratings. If you are seeking financing for a new business or initiative, the financing source may actually require third-party research in support of the concept.
Have you fully explored the costs of going with an outside firm? If you have not already solicited pricing information from multiple independent market-research firms, don’t automatically assume that the costs are prohibitive. Some agencies are open to conducting individual components of a larger project to help keep your costs down. For example, a market-research consultant might write a survey script and administer it for you, then provide a raw-data file for you to do the analysis and reporting in-house. Some firms will be more amenable to this type of arrangement than others, but it’s worth exploring.
Also consider that pricing structures may have changed since the pandemic. A firm that was too expensive for your budget a year ago might be more flexible in negotiation now as businesses everywhere seek to maintain cashflow and rebuild their client bases.
If you go through the questions above and are confident that you can do research in-house that will result in good data, that will be a great boost to your marketing and strategic planning. But it’s never worth taking on a project beyond your capabilities to do properly just because that was the affordable option. Bad data is worse than no data at all. In some cases, it’s better to wait until you have the budget for outside help.
Vance Marriner is research director at the Central New York Business Journal and a part-time instructor of marketing at SUNY Oswego’s School of Business.
How COVID-19 is Reshaping Corporate Culture
The outbreak of COVID-19 is radically changing how many U.S. companies operate. Public-safety measures have closed physical offices and made remote working the norm. Travel restrictions have heightened the importance of efficient technology, communication, and collaboration. Executives have had to pivot quickly — reorganizing and rallying their workforce to push forward in an unprecedented time. Some
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The outbreak of COVID-19 is radically changing how many U.S. companies operate.
Public-safety measures have closed physical offices and made remote working the norm. Travel restrictions have heightened the importance of efficient technology, communication, and collaboration. Executives have had to pivot quickly — reorganizing and rallying their workforce to push forward in an unprecedented time.
Some business leaders think COVID-19 marks a permanent turning point. And at the center of the seismic change is the reshaping of corporate culture — the beliefs and behaviors that influence how a company’s employees and management interact.
The pandemic unquestionably will have lasting effects on corporate cultures. There is a growing sense it’s a fundamental shift, a new normal.
It starts with empathy. Company leaders are seeing they need to listen more to their employees’ concerns, which are really everybody’s concerns right now. Many people feel fear and uncertainty. It’s an opportunity to be more understanding and build relationships with the people you work with, and from there as a company, being better able to work in new and more collaborative ways.
Here are the ways corporate culture will be reshaped in the wake of COVID-19 and how leaders can influence those positive changes.
Providing emotional support along with technical support. While technology is the key to keeping a remote workforce functioning at a high level, how leaders create a culture of mutual support will be a big factor in company culture and the employee experience. You want to get people helping and looking out for each other. Not every Google Chat, call, or email has to be business-related.
More, and better, communication. Working remotely, with managers and employees at different locations, places an emphasis on focused and more precise communication — even over-communication if necessary — to keep operations flowing. The use of video conferencing is very effective, keeping everyone connected and agendas targeted. It increases responsiveness, attention span, and strengthens collaboration.
More of a family feeling. Working from home personalizes the workplace, partly because you are working from your personal space, and the imaginary line between family and work is basically gone. People are out of their shell now, more relatable. Colleagues and clients are happy to share a screen with their kids or pets in the background. There is a blending of the personal and professional, and it’s liberating.
Better collaboration. Your relationship with your teammates will improve. Fighting a common enemy, the coronavirus, creates bonds in relationships. Everyone being in this together brings new levels of connection with colleagues and clients. You’re happy to see each other on screen during this period of physical isolation, and that feeling can be brought forward when things settle down. The bond strengthens with teammates also by having worked together to solve problems and be proactive during difficult times. That means better collaboration and more enthusiasm for teamwork and shared success.
This crisis has challenged us in seemingly every way. It’s been sudden, profound, and life-changing. Companies have been forced to make major changes, and in the process, they are seeing the workplace and the world differently. It’s a great opportunity for growth and positive, permanent change.
Chuck Crumpton (www.chuckcrumpton.com) is founder and CEO of Medpoint, LLC, a global consulting firm serving medical device and pharmaceutical companies in the U.S., Europe, Asia, and Latin America. He is author of “The Jagged Journey: A Raw & Real Memoir about the Non-Perfect Path of Life & Business.”
Opportunities in Estate Planning During the COVID-19 Crisis
In the last several weeks, we have seen the drastic impact of the COVID-19 crisis on our health, way of living, and the economy. While these times may feel uncertain, there are still many factors in your control and even opportunities for those who seek them out. This is especially true regarding your estate plan. The
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In the last several weeks, we have seen the drastic impact of the COVID-19 crisis on our health, way of living, and the economy. While these times may feel uncertain, there are still many factors in your control and even opportunities for those who seek them out. This is especially true regarding your estate plan.
The current environment of low-interest rates and depressed asset values presents several unique estate-planning opportunities for individuals to make the most of their hard-hit assets and leverage the transfer of wealth and business interests.
Federal Gift-Tax Exemption & Annual Exclusion
In 2020, the federal gift and estate tax lifetime exemption amount is $11.58 million per individual, and the annual exclusion for gifts is $15,000 per recipient per year.
These figures will remain in effect until 2026, when the lifetime exemption will “sunset” and revert back to about $5 million (as adjusted for inflation), barring any intervening legislation before then. The IRS has also clarified that individuals making gifts prior to 2026 can do so without concern that they will lose the tax benefit of the higher-exclusion level if the current law sunsets.
Depressed Asset Values = Opportunity for Tax-Advantaged Transfers
Whether you want to leverage your annual exclusions, preserve your federal exemption, or limit your gift-tax exposure, the depressed asset values and business interests provide an opportunity to make tax-advantaged transfers to other individuals or trusts and allow any future growth to occur outside of your estate.
While outright gifts are certainly an option, the transfer of appreciable assets and interests to certain trusts can provide additional benefits and tax advantages that are intensified under the current depressed-value conditions.
Trust instruments, such as Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts (GRAT), Charitable Lead Annuity Trusts (CLAT). and Intentionally Defective Grantor Trusts (IDGT), are just a few examples of low-risk vehicles that facilitate tax-advantaged transfers of appreciable assets while reducing your taxable estate. The advantages of these options are further amplified when the interest rates used in determining the taxability of such transfers are lower.
Low Interest Rates = More Efficient Tax-Advantaged Transfers
In response to the slowed economy, we have seen various interest rates being lowered to stimulate economic growth and to encourage borrowing and investment. This includes reductions in interest rates like the IRS § 7520 Rate and Applicable Federal Rates (AFR) that directly affect the taxability of transferring wealth and business interests.
Historically low IRS § 7520 Rate: The IRS § 7520 Rate — a rate used to determine the gift-tax consequences of transfers to trusts like GRATs and CLATs — has reached a historic low of 0.8 percent in May 2020. This is down from 2.8 percent in May 2019, and 3.2 percent in May 2018.
Simply stated, the current § 7520 Rate presents an opportunity to make larger gift-tax-advantaged transfers to your beneficiaries.
Low applicable federal rates: We have also seen drastic reductions in the Applicable Federal Rates (AFR), which are used to determine interest charged on below-market value loans and promissory notes.
May 2019 Annual AFR
• Short-Term: 2.39%
• Mid-Term: 2.37%
• Long-Term: 2.74%
May 2020 Annual AFR
• Short-Term: 0.25%
• Mid-Term: 2.37%
• Long-Term: 1.15%
Low AFR makes this a good time to consider issuing or restructuring loans to family members while also reducing your taxable estate. This method of transfer is most successful if the assets appreciate over the course of the loan in excess of the applicable AFR.
For owners of closely-held businesses, it may also be a good time to consider transferring your closely-held business interests to your family members or successors. Tax-advantaged transfers of business interests can be accomplished by strategic gifting plans or by a series of sales. While circumstances will vary for each individual and his or her business, in many cases, low AFR will permit larger tax-advantaged transfers.
Higher Deductions for Charitable Giving
The recently enacted Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) encourages individuals and corporations to “give more” by increasing tax deductions for charitable donations.
For individuals who itemize deductions on their income-tax returns, the Act suspends the adjusted gross income (AGI) deduction limitation, allowing individuals to receive a charitable deduction of up to 100 percent of their AGI. For corporations, the limitation on deduction has been increased from 10 percent to 25 percent of taxable income.
Non-itemizing individuals are not left out, as the CARES Act permits an above-the-line deduction for up to $300 in charitable donations made in 2020 by individuals.
Opportunity for Roth IRA Conversions at Reduced Cost
In addition to the strategies above, depressed asset values have made Roth IRA conversions an effective strategy for both estate reduction and wealth transfer at a lower cost to your beneficiaries. This may be something you have already considered in light of the SECURE Act, which became effective on Jan. 1, 2020. (Read more on the SECURE Act at: https://www.bsk.com/news-insights/the-secure-act-of-2019).
Depressed market values reduce the amount of taxable income that would be recognized as part of the conversion, along with the added benefit of allowing depressed assets to grow and/or regain their values tax free.
Samantha E. Grossmann is an associate attorney at Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC in Syracuse, in the firm’s Trust and Estate practice area. Contact her at sgrossmann@bsk.com. Matthew W. Taylor is an associate attorney in Bond’s Rochester office, also in the firm’s Trust and Estate practice area. Contact him at mtaylor@bsk.com
Teachers Are Doing Incredible Work In These Difficult Times
They deserve our praise These last few months have been challenging for most everyone. Our normal routines and activities that previously provided structure have been turned upside down. The state’s educational system has faced sweeping changes and has been forced to dramatically adjust the ways in which teachers connect to their students. New York’s educators
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They deserve our praise
These last few months have been challenging for most everyone. Our normal routines and activities that previously provided structure have been turned upside down. The state’s educational system has faced sweeping changes and has been forced to dramatically adjust the ways in which teachers connect to their students. New York’s educators and administrators have put in an incredible amount of work to make the most of a difficult situation.
We recently celebrated Teacher Appreciation Week, and I cannot think of a better example of all the work these incredible people do than what we have seen this academic year. Their ability to adapt during this unprecedented educational upheaval is remarkable. Teachers’ dedication to students, willingness to go above, and beyond and their daily professionalism deserves our recognition. We are fortunate that our youngest New Yorkers are in the hands of teachers who care so deeply and compassionately about them.
As educators rise to the occasion, they regularly deal with the challenges their students face in a new and unfamiliar environment. Children have not been able to see their friends and classmates each day and are missing the benefits of in-class instruction time. It is through innovation and creativity that schools and teachers are finding new ways to connect and improve students’ ability to work independently and with focus.
Recently, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has made plans about “reimagining” education on the other side of this health crisis. He questioned the need for the traditional classroom model and announced that he would partner with Microsoft founder Bill Gates on advancing the use of technology in the education. For parents and teachers who lived through previous forays of the Gates Foundation into New York’s educational system, this is hardly welcome news. There may be a number of ways technology can, and will, offer new educational opportunities. But, right now our focus must be on eradicating this terrible virus, reopening society, and getting children back in classrooms with their peers as soon as possible.
These are uncertain times, especially considering the enormous budgetary shortfalls we are expecting in the next few years. Now is not the time add even greater uncertainty into an education sector facing tremendous pressures. Now is the time for damage control; it is the time to offer any protections we can to our most important institutions. Our children need socialization, interaction, and togetherness. This must be the priority of any plans for our state’s education system.
Ultimately, we are going to be OK. New York, especially, has always rallied in times of crisis and our capacity for kindness and compassion is unrivaled. We are strong. For now, keep doing the best you can and take care of each other; that is all we really can do right now.
William (Will) A. Barclay, Republican, is the New York Assembly Minority Leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. Contact Barclay at barclaw@assembly.state.ny.us or (315) 598-5185.
Governor’s Misguided Education Comments Send the Wrong Message
During a recent press conference, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that he is enlisting the help of Bill and Melinda Gates in an effort to “reimagine” the state’s education system. The governor seems to be considering some radical proposals. He dismissively referred to the idea of students sitting in a classroom and learning from a teacher
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During a recent press conference, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that he is enlisting the help of Bill and Melinda Gates in an effort to “reimagine” the state’s education system. The governor seems to be considering some radical proposals. He dismissively referred to the idea of students sitting in a classroom and learning from a teacher standing in the front of the class as the “old model.”
“Why? With all the technology you have?” he asked.
For many teachers, administrators, parents, and students, this would amount to a historic bait and switch. Closing schools was one of the many emergency orders the governor sold to the public as a temporary sacrifice to mitigate an unprecedented crisis. And while teachers and administrators should be commended for their efforts to implement distance learning on the fly, education advocates have been quick to point out its limitations in the wake of the governor’s comments.
“Since the schools were shut down in mid-March, our understanding of the profound deficiencies of screen-based instruction has only grown. The use of education tech has its place, but only as an ancillary to in-person learning, not as its replacement.” That is what the NYS Allies for Public Education, Class Size Matters, and the Parents Coalition for Student Privacy said in a letter to the governor. New York State United Teachers were even more direct in saying, “Remote learning, in any form, will never replace the important personal connection between teachers and their students.”
The approach isn’t just flawed. It’s also inaccessible for far too many children. Too many families in rural areas cannot access a reliable internet connection. Far too many families in poverty across the state simply do not have the technology to provide their children with an effective workspace for digital learning.
As government officials, we need to do what is best for our children. Children belong in school. It’s where they form lasting bonds and friendships and it’s where they learn how to work together. They learn trade skills and life skills at school. They join sports teams, theatrical productions, and volunteer groups there. School is where our students with special needs receive the services they deserve. Instead of leaning on a celebrity who has championed his share of failed education initiatives, the governor should be working with our teachers, administrators, and parents to meet the needs of every child in this state.
We aren’t going to move our education system forward by permanently emptying our classrooms.
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
New York cheese and butter production rose last year
New York plants produced 832.2 million pounds of cheese (excluding cottage cheese) in 2019, up nearly 4 percent from almost 802.3 million pounds in 2018, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service recently reported. The state had 65 cheese-production plants last year, up from 62 in 2018. New York plants produced nearly 26.5 million pounds of
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New York plants produced 832.2 million pounds of cheese (excluding cottage cheese) in 2019, up nearly 4 percent from almost 802.3 million pounds in 2018, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service recently reported.
The state had 65 cheese-production plants last year, up from 62 in 2018.
New York plants produced nearly 26.5 million pounds of butter in 2019, up more than 7 percent from nearly 24.7 million pounds the year before.
The Empire State had nine butter-production plants last year, down from 11 in 2018.

DACHENG REN, Ph.D., has been named interim associate dean for research and graduate programs in the College of Engineering and Computer Science at Syracuse University. He is the Stevenson Endowed Professor in the Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering and director of the Syracuse Biomaterials Institute. Ren received an early career translational research award in
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DACHENG REN, Ph.D., has been named interim associate dean for research and graduate programs in the College of Engineering and Computer Science at Syracuse University. He is the Stevenson Endowed Professor in the Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering and director of the Syracuse Biomaterials Institute. Ren received an early career translational research award in biomedical engineering from the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation in 2009 and a National Science Foundation (NSF) career award in 2011. He was named the College Technology Educator of the Year by the Technology Alliance of Central New York in 2010. At Syracuse, Ren was a recipient of the Faculty Excellence Award from the College of Engineering and Computer Science in 2014 and the Chancellor’s Citation for Faculty Excellence and Scholarly Distinction in 2018. Ren’s research has been supported by the NSF, National Institutes of Health, Environmental Protection Agency, Wallace H. Coulter Foundation, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and industrial sponsors. He received his Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Connecticut in 2003. After finishing postdoctoral training at Cornell University, he joined Syracuse University in 2006.

Loretto has promoted COURTNEY LYON to administrator for Loretto Health & Rehabilitation in Syracuse. Formerly the assistant administrator of Loretto Health & Rehabilitation, Lyon holds a bachelor’s degree of biological science from Le Moyne College and a master’s degree in health-care administration from Utica College. She has been with Loretto since 2015, with roles in
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Loretto has promoted COURTNEY LYON to administrator for Loretto Health & Rehabilitation in Syracuse. Formerly the assistant administrator of Loretto Health & Rehabilitation, Lyon holds a bachelor’s degree of biological science from Le Moyne College and a master’s degree in health-care administration from Utica College. She has been with Loretto since 2015, with roles in finance, operations, and most recently the assistant administrator at Loretto Health & Rehabilitation.
JACK PEASE, former administrator of Loretto Health & Rehabilitation, was appointed administrator for the Nottingham Residential Health Care Facility in Jamesville. He has served as administrator for several Loretto locations since 2012. Pease is a certified nursing home administrator and American College of Health Care Administrators fellow, with a bachelor’s degree in economics and a master’s degree in health-care administration from SUNY Brockport.

Preferred Mutual Insurance Company
Preferred Mutual Insurance Company has appointed HEIDI HOELLER, retired partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), to its board of directors. She spent more than 25 years at PwC, working with global and regional property and casualty insurance clients on regulatory and compliance reporting and audits. Hoeller is a CPA, and also a champion of diversity and inclusion
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Preferred Mutual Insurance Company has appointed HEIDI HOELLER, retired partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), to its board of directors. She spent more than 25 years at PwC, working with global and regional property and casualty insurance clients on regulatory and compliance reporting and audits. Hoeller is a CPA, and also a champion of diversity and inclusion in the workplace. She will serve on the board’s audit and risk committee.
MICHAEL HAYDUK, deputy director of the information directorate at the Air Force Research Laboratory in Rome, has also joined the Preferred Mutual board. He will serve on the board’s compensation committee. Hayduk has spent almost 30 years with the Air Force Research Laboratory, and has held many positions while honing his engineering, networking, and communication technologies expertise. Hayduk also has significant research and development experience in advanced computing technologies, such as nanocomputing, quantum computing, optical computing, and computational intelligence.
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