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People news: Cherney joins St. Joseph’s Health Cardiovascular Institute
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — St. Joseph’s Health announced that Anton L. Cherney, a cardiothoracic surgeon, has joined its Cardiovascular Institute. St. Joseph’s Health said in a

Oneida Indian Nation to expand Point Place Casino
SULLIVAN, N.Y. — The Oneida Indian Nation says crews have started construction on the first expansion of Point Place Casino, located in the Bridgeport area

Weitsman donates $100,000 to Rescue Mission project
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Rescue Mission Alliance will use a $100,000 donation to help renovate its Clarence L. Jordan Food Service and Culinary Education Center.

Oneida County solar project that will power Upstate Cerebral Palsy is complete
BARNEVELD, N.Y. — The Barneveld location of Upstate Cerebral Palsy is the “sole beneficiary” of a 1.4-megawatt solar project that is now finished and in

Tompkins County Legislature awards firm a nearly $600,000 contract for parking-lot paving project
ITHACA — The Tompkins County Legislature on Sept. 19 awarded Nelson & Streeter Construction Co., Inc. of Pine City in Chemung County the contract for paving parking lots at two Tompkins County facilities. The lots are located at two facilities at the county’s northeast campus — the Health Department and the Emergency Response Center. The
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ITHACA — The Tompkins County Legislature on Sept. 19 awarded Nelson & Streeter Construction Co., Inc. of Pine City in Chemung County the contract for paving parking lots at two Tompkins County facilities.
The lots are located at two facilities at the county’s northeast campus — the Health Department and the Emergency Response Center. The contract is for $574,100, the amount of the construction firm’s bid, submitted on Sept. 16.
The project will be completed in the spring of 2020, timing that enabled the project to “come in significantly under budget,” David McKenna, a Tompkins County legislator and chair of the legislature’s Facilities and Infrastructure Committee, noted in a legislature news release.
The Tompkins County Legislature approved the contract by a unanimous vote, with two legislators (Henry Granison and Leslyn McBean-Clairborne) excused from the vote.

Monroe Plan For Medical Care leases space
SALINA — Monroe Plan For Medical Care, Inc., a nonprofit health-care services organization headquartered near Rochester, recently leased nearly 6,400 square feet of space in the professional office building at 100 Elwood Davis Road in Salina. Cory LaDuke and John Manilla of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company represented the tenant in this lease transaction. Monroe
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SALINA — Monroe Plan For Medical Care, Inc., a nonprofit health-care services organization headquartered near Rochester, recently leased nearly 6,400 square feet of space in the professional office building at 100 Elwood Davis Road in Salina.
Cory LaDuke and John Manilla of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company represented the tenant in this lease transaction.
Monroe Plan For Medical Care says on its website that it has been serving low-income and government-sponsored populations in the Greater Buffalo and Rochester regions for nearly 50 years. Monroe Plan provides health home-care management services and other health-care services to individuals enrolled in Medicaid Managed Care and Fee for Service, Child Health Plus, and the Essential Plan, including Medicaid-eligible children and families.
New York grain-corn production fell an estimated 21 percent this year, USDA reports
New York farms produced an estimated 81.1 million bushels of corn for grain this year, down 21 percent from 102.6 million bushels in 2018, according to an Oct. 1 forecast from the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. New York farms harvested an estimated 530,000 acres of corn for grain in 2019, down 18 percent from
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New York farms produced an estimated 81.1 million bushels of corn for grain this year, down 21 percent from 102.6 million bushels in 2018, according to an Oct. 1 forecast from the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service.
New York farms harvested an estimated 530,000 acres of corn for grain in 2019, down 18 percent from 645,000 acres last year.
The total yield per acre in the Empire State was 153 bushels of corn this year, down nearly 4 percent from 159 bushels in 2018.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, production of corn for grain increased more than 15 percent to an estimated 153.6 million bushels in 2019 from 133 million bushels in the prior year, the USDA reported.
Nationally, U.S. farms produced an estimated 13.8 billion bushels of corn for grain this year, down more than 4 percent from 14.4 billion bushels in 2018, according to the USDA.
Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various small business, marketing, HR, and personal tips. SBA @SBAgovGet your #smallbusiness ready for launch with these resources — http://ow.ly/XuXY50wdXgS NFIB @NFIBCurrently 27% of #SmallBiz owners report finding qualified employees is their number one problem. Here’s how #SmallBiz owners are addressing this issue —
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Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various small business, marketing, HR, and personal tips.
SBA @SBAgov
Get your #smallbusiness ready for launch with these resources — http://ow.ly/XuXY50wdXgS
NFIB @NFIB
Currently 27% of #SmallBiz owners report finding qualified employees is their number one problem. Here’s how #SmallBiz owners are addressing this issue — https://www.nfib.com/content/news/california/infographic-the-challenges-of-employee-training/
SBA Mid-Atlantic @SBAmidatlantic
sbagov: How SBA is helping woman and minority-owned businesses thrive — http://ow.ly/oW5M50wG79a cc: @MediaplanetUSA
DMZ-Digital Marketing Zone @zone_dmz
The #Brand is no longer what you tell the consumer, it is what the #Consumers tell each other.
Jamatel marketing agency @JamatelA
Good #marketing makes the company look smart. Great marketing makes the #customers feel smart
MBudo @MBudo_you
Some #tips for #email success on Black Friday weekend! https://hubs.ly/H0lc9dh0 by @HubSpotAcademy
BambooHR @bamboohr
How many of these #HR horror stories have you experienced? https://www.bamboohr.com/blog/hr-horror-stories/?utm_source=OSo-Twttr-171016
Engagedly @engagedlyInc
How Continuous #PerformanceManagement Software Can Help Improve Performance #HR http://ow.ly/67bL30pJN5a
Sharlyn Lauby @sharlyn_lauby
Employee Retention – The Key is Providing Meaningful Work And Psychological Safety – #HR Bartender #leadership #Management https://hrbar.co/2BcfNoD
Syracuse Airport @SyracuseAirport
Are you or someone you know blind or low-vision? #SYR airport was the first in the region to introduce #free @airaio remote service in the terminal! It’s easy to use: get easy, step by step instructions on our website here: https://syrairport.org/syr-launches-aira-remote-service/
NY State Archives @nysarchives
Learn how to write your family’s history with found documents, images, and more! Join us Nov 7 for reception & program featuring Judith A. Herbert, certified genealogist. Co-sponsored by @WCNYCONNECTED, @nyfamilyhistory and the Archives Partnership Trust. http://bit.ly/nov7family
StrengthsFinder @StrengthsFinder
If you have #Positivity, you tend to be more enthusiastic and energetic than most people. When others become discouraged or are reluctant to take risks, your attitude will provide the impetus to keep them moving.
Mitch Mitchell
Why Your Dog Likes Sticking Its Head Out the Car Window: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/crux/2019/09/27/why-your-dog-likes-sticking-its-head-out-the-car-window/#.Xa4BQehKhpg
Yoga Articles @parvezbdjsr
Yoga Techniques for #studying. Here are several #Tips for practicing #yoga techniques for studying; they will enable you to help foster good study habits and achieve more at a given time. http://bit.ly/yoga-for-studying

Canal Side Café & Bistro is a story of perseverance & more
BALDWINSVILLE — Everyone has a past — some are good, and some are not as good. But whatever you’ve gone through, translating your background and experience to shape and position your business can be transformative. Eric Maliszewski was able to translate his skills and experience into ownership of the Canal Side Café & Bistro, located
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BALDWINSVILLE — Everyone has a past — some are good, and some are not as good. But whatever you’ve gone through, translating your background and experience to shape and position your business can be transformative.
Eric Maliszewski was able to translate his skills and experience into ownership of the Canal Side Café & Bistro, located at 23 Syracuse St. in the heart of the village of Baldwinsville. While Eric’s story may not be completely unique, it is a story about progression, perseverance, patience, and opportunity.
Entering the workforce can be challenging in any field but especially in one as competitive as the culinary world. Maliszewski dove in at a young age without any formal training. When he was just 14 years old, he began working with his father in the family restaurant in downtown Syracuse. At that time, his father owned the Trolley Stop Diner, which was adjacent to Syracuse City Hall. Eric worked diligently in learning the business beside his dad at the diner and with him in their food carts that provided food and beverages for many festivals in downtown Syracuse.
Over time, Eric honed his practical skills in the food industry as a banquet chef for 13 years at the Oncenter in downtown Syracuse and four years as the head chef at 916 Riverside (formerly known as Castaways) on the shores of Oneida Lake.
While Maliszewski has a great deal of experience in the food industry, he also has other talents. Eric has played bass guitar and been a part of the music and entertainment industry since 2003, which allowed him to travel across the country.
When opportunity knocked earlier this year, Maliszewski was ready, willing, and able to make his mark. He purchased and transformed the Canal Walk Café into the Canal Side Café & Bistro. Maliszewski has 17 employees that work for him in various capacities at the café.
Eric notes that he couldn’t accomplish this without the help of both his family and the Onondaga Small Business Development Center (SBDC).
“I needed help understanding my options as a business entity, business plan development, financial projections, and securing working capital for renovations and new equipment. Onondaga SBDC advisor Mark Pitonzo provided me with important insights and guidance overcoming hurdles, avoiding ‘speed bumps’ and helped show me the way toward pursuing my dream and securing my own business,” Maliszewski says.
He adds, “I’m just a local guy that wants to cook great food, provide great friendly service, and share it with the community.” Eric lives that mantra as he regularly donates food to Meals on Wheels of Baldwinsville.
During a recent visit to his café, laughter and pleasant conversation could be heard throughout the café. I spoke to several retired schoolteachers who were dining there one morning. They told me that the café is “a staple in the community, providing a friendly, wonderful atmosphere with great food that is reasonably priced.” They noted that the chefs at the café are very accommodating with personalized service. According to the sign on Maliszewski’s door, his café is open “Every Day, All Year Round” . . . and his customers couldn’t be more pleased.
For more information on the Canal Side Café & Bistro, visit its Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/CanalSideCB/.
Advisor Business Tip: Small-business success is often the result of hard work and establishing a business plan. Once you’ve made the decision to move forward with a business that you’re most passionate about, be sure to formalize it in a business plan. It will help you navigate through the process with more confidence and precision.
Mark Pitonzo is a business advisor at the Small Business Development Center’s Liverpool satellite office, located at Onondaga Community College @ Liverpool. Contact him at m.j.pitonzo2@sunyocc.edu.

JMA Wireless to create 100 jobs in Syracuse
SYRACUSE — JMA Wireless, a company that focuses on 4G and 5G software-based technology, plans to renovate the former Coyne Textile Services building into a high-tech manufacturing center and add jobs. JMA Wireless, located at 7645 Henry Clay Boulevard in Clay, has committed to move the manufacturing of 5G equipment from Texas to the Coyne
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SYRACUSE — JMA Wireless, a company that focuses on 4G and 5G software-based technology, plans to renovate the former Coyne Textile Services building into a high-tech manufacturing center and add jobs.
JMA Wireless, located at 7645 Henry Clay Boulevard in Clay, has committed to move the manufacturing of 5G equipment from Texas to the Coyne building, south of downtown Syracuse. The firm will also create 100 jobs.
“We strongly believe in the American entrepreneurial spirit and have confidence that U.S.-based engineering will make a difference in the race to 5G. We’re continuing investment in New York to set the pace for U.S.-driven 5G innovation, something we’ve been told too often must come from international providers,” John Mezzalingua, CEO of JMA, said in a news release.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo first announced the expansion during an Oct. 9 appearance at the Marriott Syracuse Downtown, the former Hotel Syracuse.
JMA will spend $25 million to create a 5G, high-tech manufacturing center in downtown Syracuse. JMA will renovate the former Coyne Textile building and others located at Cortland Ave. on the south end of Syracuse’s downtown. The 5G campus, spanning a city block, will manufacture the world’s first indoor 5G millimeter wave radio system and act as a showcase for 5G driven experiences.
The project “complements” efforts by the City of Syracuse and Onondaga County to develop a strong tech corridor from downtown into the South Side, “making Central New York a center for 5G and smart city development,” Cuomo’s office said.
The project will create 100 jobs in a “distressed” neighborhood adjacent to downtown, and the jobs will range from entry level to advanced engineering.
New York is providing a $5 million Upstate Revitalization Initiative grant to assist with this project, Cuomo’s office said.
Cuomo in 2017 announced that JMA would invest $34 million to expand operations in Onondaga County and relocate out-of-state operations to Clay. JMA has exceeded its hiring commitment of 145 jobs, creating more than 200 new jobs at its Clay location as well as meeting the investment commitment in half the expected time.
Over the last six years, JMA has invested more than $100 million in the Syracuse area and employs over 500 people locally, per Cuomo’s office.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.