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DR. NICOLE GRASSI has joined Advanced Dental Arts (ADA) as an associate. She earned her DDS degree from SUNY Buffalo School of Dental Medicine, and completed an oral and maxillofacial fellowship/internship at the Montefiore Medical Center. In addition to general dentistry, Grassi is proficient at treating patients for crowns, bridges, veneers, inlays, onlays, surgical extraction, […]
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DR. NICOLE GRASSI has joined Advanced Dental Arts (ADA) as an associate. She earned her DDS degree from SUNY Buffalo School of Dental Medicine, and completed an oral and maxillofacial fellowship/internship at the Montefiore Medical Center. In addition to general dentistry, Grassi is proficient at treating patients for crowns, bridges, veneers, inlays, onlays, surgical extraction, root canals and implant placement. She is also Invisalign certified.

JOHN D. CLOPPER has joined Bond, Schoeneck & King’s Syracuse office as senior counsel in its litigation practice. He will advise clients on commercial and tort litigation, regulatory issues, and cybersecurity and privacy law. Clopper has worked on a variety of matters. Prior to joining Bond, he was an assistant U.S. attorney in the U.S.
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JOHN D. CLOPPER has joined Bond, Schoeneck & King’s Syracuse office as senior counsel in its litigation practice. He will advise clients on commercial and tort litigation, regulatory issues, and cybersecurity and privacy law. Clopper has worked on a variety of matters. Prior to joining Bond, he was an assistant U.S. attorney in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, representing the federal government in civil litigation and investigations. Clopper is a certified information privacy professional/United States (CIPP/US). He is a graduate of The George Washington University Law School and Connecticut College.

JILLIAN DILAURA MCGUIRE has been elected to the partnership at Mackenzie Hughes LLP. Since joining the firm in 2013, her practice has focused primarily on family and matrimonial law. McGuire received her juris doctorate from Washington and Lee University School of Law in Virginia and a bachelor’s degree from the College of the Holy Cross
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JILLIAN DILAURA MCGUIRE has been elected to the partnership at Mackenzie Hughes LLP. Since joining the firm in 2013, her practice has focused primarily on family and matrimonial law. McGuire received her juris doctorate from Washington and Lee University School of Law in Virginia and a bachelor’s degree from the College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts.

The Legal Aid Society of Mid New York, Inc. has hired ALEX SIMON as director of development and communication, a new position at the organization. Simon heads the Legal Aid Society’s fundraising and comes to the organization after a nearly 10-year career in which he has served in fundraising and communication roles at colleges and
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The Legal Aid Society of Mid New York, Inc. has hired ALEX SIMON as director of development and communication, a new position at the organization. Simon heads the Legal Aid Society’s fundraising and comes to the organization after a nearly 10-year career in which he has served in fundraising and communication roles at colleges and universities across upstate New York. Simon has been a part of fundraising teams at Cazenovia College, Union College, SUNY Polytechnic Institute, and the Masonic Medical Research Institute.

MELANIE SARAFIN has recently been promoted to director of affiliate relations at Upstate Caring Partners, Inc. She previously served as assistant to the president and CEO since the organization’s inception in 2010. Sarafin also previously was assistant to the executive director of Upstate Cerebral Palsy for 15 years.
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MELANIE SARAFIN has recently been promoted to director of affiliate relations at Upstate Caring Partners, Inc. She previously served as assistant to the president and CEO since the organization’s inception in 2010. Sarafin also previously was assistant to the executive director of Upstate Cerebral Palsy for 15 years.

Chemung Financial to pay dividend of 26 cents per share on April 1
ELMIRA — Chemung Financial Corp. (NASDAQ: CHMG) recently announced that its board of directors has approved a quarterly cash dividend of 26 cents a share. The dividend is payable on April 1, to common stock shareholders of record as of the close of business on March 18. At the banking company’s current stock price, the
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ELMIRA — Chemung Financial Corp. (NASDAQ: CHMG) recently announced that its board of directors has approved a quarterly cash dividend of 26 cents a share.
The dividend is payable on April 1, to common stock shareholders of record as of the close of business on March 18.
At the banking company’s current stock price, the dividend yields about 2.65 percent annually.
Elmira–based Chemung Financial is a $1.8 billion financial services holding company that operates 33 branches through its main subsidiary, Chemung Canal Trust Company, a full-service community bank with full trust powers.
Established in 1833, Chemung Canal Trust says it is the oldest locally owned and managed community bank in New York state. Chemung Financial is also the parent of CFS Group, Inc., a financial-services subsidiary offering mutual funds, annuities, brokerage services, tax-preparation services and insurance, as well as Chemung Risk Management, Inc., an insurance company based in Nevada.

YMCA of Ithaca and Tompkins County announces new board of directors
ITHACA — The YMCA of Ithaca and Tompkins County announced it has recently appointed four new board members for 2020: Christopher Kusznir, Candace Maxian, Christopher Mott, and Vicki Taylor Brous. Kusznir is a real-estate broker at Key Brokers. He has worked as a business professional in the Ithaca–Tompkins County area since 2005. Kusznir currently provides
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ITHACA — The YMCA of Ithaca and Tompkins County announced it has recently appointed four new board members for 2020: Christopher Kusznir, Candace Maxian, Christopher Mott, and Vicki Taylor Brous.
Kusznir is a real-estate broker at Key Brokers. He has worked as a business professional in the Ithaca–Tompkins County area since 2005. Kusznir currently provides oversight for his three businesses while pursuing his career in real estate. He serves on the Commons Advisory Board and the Commons Client Committee.
Maxian is associate director for external relations, public engagement & corporate class projects at the Cornell University SC Johnson College of Business. She is in her 12th year at Cornell and has founded the partnership between Cornell SC Johnson College of Business and the City of Ithaca, providing a free professional-development series for the City of Ithaca, Tompkins County, and nonprofit employees. Maxian and her husband, Mark, own a 50-acre horse farm.
Mott is a CPA at Sciarabba Walker, where he has worked since 2011. He is currently the head of the firm’s audit department, specializing in governmental and nonprofit audits.
Brous is owner of Flair Strategic Communications. She has 20-plus years of experience working in events and marketing, including at the Downtown Ithaca Alliance, the Ithaca Festival, in production and operations for Farm Aid, and in various positions from local to international nonprofit organizations. She started Brous Consulting in 2013, now renamed Ithaca Flair, to help businesses and nonprofits with their marketing, business development, and public relations.

Oswego Hospital expects surgical-unit renovation to wrap up by year-end
OSWEGO — Construction crews have started work on a $7.6 million project to renovate Oswego Hospital’s surgical unit, an effort that the hospital projects will finish before the end of the year. The project involves three phases and targets the facility’s third and fourth floors, Oswego Health announced. Hayner Hoyt Corporation of Syracuse is doing
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OSWEGO — Construction crews have started work on a $7.6 million project to renovate Oswego Hospital’s surgical unit, an effort that the hospital projects will finish before the end of the year.
The project involves three phases and targets the facility’s third and fourth floors, Oswego Health announced.
Hayner Hoyt Corporation of Syracuse is doing the renovation work, and King + King Architects, also of Syracuse, handled the design work, Jamie Leszczynski, senior director of communications at Oswego Health, tells CNYBJ in an email.
The project includes the restructuring of all patient rooms to allow for more privacy and accommodation necessary for clinical support and diagnostic equipment.
Once finished, the unit will have a total of 40 private rooms and four semi-private rooms, Oswego Health said.
The project also includes the relocation of the nurses’ station on both floors, allowing for “more immediate access” to the care staff.
Crews will also install a new heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning filtration system in each patient room. The hospital contends the equipment — purchased from Pulaski–based HealthWay Home Products — will “greatly improve” the indoor air quality within the patient rooms.
In addition, the hospital will install Indigo-Clean, a new light technology, in each patient bathroom to “continuously disinfect” the surfaces within the bathroom area. The technology is known to reduce pathogens by nearly 99 percent, “creating a greatly reduced chance” of hospital-acquired infection and better patient outcomes.
The work also involves waiting areas for family members to gather on each floor, Oswego Health said.

Former U.S. AG Lynch to lead independent review of SU’s Department of Public Safety
SYRACUSE — A former U.S. Attorney General (AG) will lead an independent review of Syracuse University’s Department of Public Safety (DPS) in the wake of the department’s interactions with students protesting the university’s handling of racist incidents on campus. Syracuse University has hired Loretta Lynch, who was the nation’s 83rd AG — serving from April
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SYRACUSE — A former U.S. Attorney General (AG) will lead an independent review of Syracuse University’s Department of Public Safety (DPS) in the wake of the department’s interactions with students protesting the university’s handling of racist incidents on campus.
Syracuse University has hired Loretta Lynch, who was the nation’s 83rd AG — serving from April 2015 to January 2017 under President Barack Obama.
Lynch has been known throughout her career for her work in the area of police-community relations, Syracuse University Chancellor Kent Syverud said in a statement that the school posted Feb. 24 on its news website.
Lynch is now working for the Washington, D.C.–based law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP.
“I believe this review is necessary given that concerns have been raised through several channels about how DPS engages with our community and how it has managed various interactions with students, including protestors. Our DPS officers work very hard every day and night to protect our students and our community. Our community expectations and our needs have evolved, and this review will result in recommendations on how DPS can best meet today’s community’s needs going forward,” per Syverud’s statement.
The chancellor issued the statement following a week in which students protested inside Crouse-Hinds Hall, the university’s administration building, complaining about how Syracuse University leaders have handled racial-bias incidents on campus, including racist graffiti and phone messages.
Additional actions
Hiring Lynch was among three specific areas for which Syverud “directed that we take immediate action.” The chancellor’s statement followed his conversations with many students, deans and faculty, Syracuse said.
He also received feedback from “early engagement sessions” conducted by a special committee of the school’s board of trustees and an independent advisory panel of experts, per the statement.
Besides the hiring of Lynch, Syverud figures that in the future, Syracuse faculty and deans “must have greater involvement, oversight and authority” on how the school handles protests.
Syverud wants interim provost John Liu to work with the deans, faculty and administrators to develop protocols to “achieve this mandate.”
The chancellor also directed an independent review of Syracuse’s “Student Experience function.”
“I am concerned that our students’ needs have evolved and changed, and that our team must be able to effectively execute on these needs, even in rapidly developing circumstances like the protests this week. We will announce the leader of this effort soon,” per Syverud’s statement.
Syverud concluded his statement noting that he believes these steps are “needed now for the sake of our students and university.”
“There will be more steps to come, including from the continuing work of the Special Committee and Independent Panel. Our university is making progress on many fronts —including on the many Campus Commitments, and in identifying, and holding responsible, three students for hateful acts so far,” said Syverud.

State awards Syracuse nearly $1M grant for housing, code-enforcement programs
SYRACUSE — The City of Syracuse will use a $965,000 grant from the Cities for Responsible Investment and Strategic Enforcement (Cities RISE) program. The initiative provides municipalities the funding to launch programs related to housing and “strategic” code enforcement. Cities RISE seeks to “innovatively address and transform blighted, vacant, or poorly maintained” problem properties through
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SYRACUSE — The City of Syracuse will use a $965,000 grant from the Cities for Responsible Investment and Strategic Enforcement (Cities RISE) program.
The initiative provides municipalities the funding to launch programs related to housing and “strategic” code enforcement.
Cities RISE seeks to “innovatively address and transform blighted, vacant, or poorly maintained” problem properties through the use of housing and community data from various state agencies, according to the office of New York State Attorney General Letitia (Tish) James. She announced the grant during a Feb. 20 appearance at City Hall Commons at 201 E. Washington St. in Syracuse.
The City of Syracuse will use the grant to establish a community-ambassador program that pays and trains residents to serve in a leadership capacity in their neighborhoods for code enforcement and housing-related issues. The city will also “pioneer” a student legal partnership with Syracuse University to “increase the capacity of code enforcement to more efficiently resolve cases.”
“This funding could not come at a better time to help us build our collective capacity to improve our neighborhoods and improve the lives of those that we serve,” Walsh said in his remarks. “I think what this funding and this third round of Cities RISE funding supports is really a creative and grassroots, bottoms-up approach to code enforcement,” Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh said in his remarks at the Feb. 20 event.
James earlier in the day had announced more than $1.5 million in grants for the Cities of Elmira and Binghamton as part of the same program during a visit to Elmira.
“This program was conceived to provide local governments with innovative technology to address and transform problem properties, otherwise known as zombie properties that fall into despair during the foreclosure crisis,” James said in her remarks in announcing the grant. “Zombie properties dot the landscape all over the state of New York. They bring down property values. They attract a criminal element. And they decrease the … tax revenues, not only here in Syracuse but all across the state of New York.”
About Cities RISE
Launched in April 2017, Cities RISE “advances” the office of the attorney general’s strategy for helping New York families and communities rebuild from the housing crisis, James’ office said.
In the program’s first phase, 16 municipalities received a two-year subscription to a data platform designed to integrate and analyze data such as code-enforcement records, tax liens, and fire and police data to innovatively address and transform blighted, vacant, or poorly maintained problem properties.
Ten of the original 16 grantees were selected for phase two of the program, which began in November 2018.
Phase two of the program provided cities with technical assistance to analyze city data as well as assisted the cities with community engagement to develop program ideas for their grant application. Over the last year, these municipalities have worked with Cities RISE program partners to improve their code-enforcement strategies and develop new strategic programs.
The cities involved received expert support from the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, along with Boston, Massachusetts–based Tolemi, a social enterprise that created the BuildingBlocks platform used by all Cities RISE participants.
“The cities didn’t just ask for a million dollars. They thoughtfully and intentionally built innovation strategies to address distressed properties and abandonment in their communities with a deliberate attempt to insure efficient, effective, and equitable outcomes for residents so we really want to congratulate the City of Syracuse as well as our nine other cities throughout this process,” Lindsay Woodson, program manager for innovation field lab New York, at Harvard’s Ash Center, said in her remarks at City Hall Commons.
Harvard and Tolemi helped municipalities leverage data and evidence in operational work and policymaking. Additionally, last May, the mayors of the municipalities attended an executive education program at Harvard. They also worked with New York City–based Hester Street, an urban planning, design, and development nonprofit to develop and launch a community-engagement process.
In phase three of the program, 10 cities, including the City of Syracuse, were able to apply for a grant of up to $1 million to implement innovative and strategic programs related to code enforcement.
Enterprise Community Partners — a Maryland–based nonprofit that works as a community development intermediary specializing in affordable housing — is overseeing the initiative.
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