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Oneida County hotel occupancy rate rises more than 7 percent in July
UTICA — Hotels in Oneida County welcomed substantially more guests in July than in the year-prior month, according to a recent report. The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county rose 7.1 percent to 76.7 percent in July from 71.6 percent a year ago, according to STR, a […]
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UTICA — Hotels in Oneida County welcomed substantially more guests in July than in the year-prior month, according to a recent report.
The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county rose 7.1 percent to 76.7 percent in July from 71.6 percent a year ago, according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data and analytics company. Year to date, the county’s occupancy was up 1.8 percent to 55.9 percent.
Revenue per available room (RevPar), a key industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, climbed 8 percent to $101.82 in July from $94.25 in July 2018. In the first seven months of 2019, Oneida County’s RevPar rose 2.2 percent to $62.71.
Average daily rate (or ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, edged up 0.9 percent to $132.73 in July from $131.61 a year prior. Year to date, ADR was up 0.4 percent to $112.20.
Jefferson County hotel occupancy rate jumps in July
WATERTOWN — Hotels in Jefferson County were significantly fuller in July than in the year-ago month, according to a new report. The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county increased 8 percent to 74.2 percent in July from 68.7 percent a year prior, according to STR, a Tennessee–based
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WATERTOWN — Hotels in Jefferson County were significantly fuller in July than in the year-ago month, according to a new report.
The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county increased 8 percent to 74.2 percent in July from 68.7 percent a year prior, according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data and analytics company. That followed a nearly 10 percent increase in occupancy in June. Year to date, hotel occupancy in the county was up 0.9 percent to 51.7 percent.
Revenue per available room (RevPar), a key industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, soared 11.4 percent to $87.35 in July from $78.43 in July 2018. Through the first seven months of the year, the county’s RevPar increased 5 percent to $51.36.
Average daily rate (or ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, gained 3.1 percent to $117.69 in July from $114.13 a year before. Year to date, Jefferson County’s ADR was up 4.1 percent to $99.42

Aster Weddings & Events: A Marriage of Small Biz & Family Ownership
Have you ever thought of doing something that feeds your soul, allowing you to live the life you’ve always dreamed of? The owners of Aster Weddings & Events sought to create that kind of ideal lifestyle for themselves when they started to build their small business. Shannon Pratten dreamed of working with brides and their families during
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Have you ever thought of doing something that feeds your soul, allowing you to live the life you’ve always dreamed of? The owners of Aster Weddings & Events sought to create that kind of ideal lifestyle for themselves when they started to build their small business.
Shannon Pratten dreamed of working with brides and their families during what she recalls as “the happiest time of her life.” Her sister, Jessica Nagy, wanted to give couples the opportunity to create a personalized outdoor experience for a day that they would always cherish. Together, they knew that they had to make their business showcase the beauty that Skaneateles and the surrounding area had to offer.
With the support of Richard Pratten and Steven Nagy, (their husbands, business partners, and carpenters) the sisters started to plan the overall look of their event space. But they soon hit a roadblock. Although Shannon and Jessica had dedication and vision, they needed funding to get their small business off the ground.
In September 2017, they turned to the Onondaga Small Business Development Center (SBDC) for assistance. While working with me, they were able to create a business plan that clearly defined their business’s vision. From there, they created an action plan with specific strategies, market research, statistics, and financial projections. With their plan in place, Shannon and Jessica finally started to see that their daydreams were going to become a profitable reality.
With a creative combination of funding (including personal investment, loans, and credit cards) they were able to develop a breathtaking, one of a kind, outdoor seasonal event center.
Aster Weddings & Events is appropriately named after a wildflower that blooms in late-summer and early-fall, as their first wedding in the space was held in September 2018. And business keeps booming and blooming. It is completely booked for the upcoming season, and now booking into 2021, which represents a 400-percent growth rate.
This venue is situated on 3.7 acres of land, just four miles outside of the village of Skaneateles, at 2595 Benson Road. The business owners take pride in supporting the Skaneateles community as a small, family owned business. While they currently have no employees, many local vendors have profited from collaboration with the unique event location.

At Aster Weddings & Events , clients have the freedom to choose their own vendors and create the event that they have always dreamed of hosting. Aster is a blank slate. Whether clients want simple elegance, natural garden, artsy bohemian, or chic rustic, Aster is the space for any event. The business owners and their husbands work just as hard to make their clients’ dreams come true as they did for their own. After all, they are in the business of creating memories that last a lifetime.
Advisor Tip: Financing a startup may mean pulling money from multiple resources, including your own assets and personal credit resources. Be prepared to have 10-20 percent of the money you ask a lender for coming from your personal resources.
Keyona Kelly is a certified business advisor at the SBDC, located at Onondaga Community College. Contact her at k.r.kelly@sunyocc.edu

Utica law firm, Passalacqua & Associates, readies Syracuse office
SYRACUSE — The Utica–based law firm Passalacqua & Associates, LLC is opening a Syracuse office in the former Lakeland Boat Works building. The office, located at 499 S. Warren St., will help the firm handle its growing Syracuse–area caseload, says Managing Attorney Nicholas Passalacqua. He spoke with CNYBJ on Aug. 22. Online marketing efforts in
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SYRACUSE — The Utica–based law firm Passalacqua & Associates, LLC is opening a Syracuse office in the former Lakeland Boat Works building.
The office, located at 499 S. Warren St., will help the firm handle its growing Syracuse–area caseload, says Managing Attorney Nicholas Passalacqua. He spoke with CNYBJ on Aug. 22. Online marketing efforts in recent months have helped the firm grow, he says, and the next logical step was to set up a physical presence in the Salt City.
Passalacqua & Associates (www.cnytriallaw.com) focuses on litigation and trial work, primarily personal injury, criminal defense, and DWI defense work.
Passalacqua says that when he began looking at properties nothing felt like quite the right fit. “The more I looked at space in downtown Syracuse, the more I realized we’d be nothing more than a name on a directory,” he says.
Passalacqua wanted a building that gave the firm some prominent exposure. “I remember seeing this Lakeland Boat Works [property] as vacant a number of times,” he says. The building, at the corner of South Warren and East Onondaga streets provided just what he was looking for — a prime spot on a busy corner with plenty of foot and vehicle traffic. In addition, the building is within walking distance of the courts.
An entity called 499 Syracuse City Centre, LLC, based in Brooklyn, owns the property. Passalacqua declined to disclose the specifics, but says he was able to negotiate a favorable lease for just over 4,300 square feet of ground floor, corner space.
“I love the exposure,” he says. He’s already installed some signage and plans to add more. The site is still under construction with Diesel Construction of Utica as the general contractor. Passalacqua has invested about $40,000 in renovations including dividing the space into two conference rooms, three offices, and a reception area. With a bit more work to go, he hopes to open the office in early September.
Passalacqua hired one full-time receptionist/paralegal and plans to add more staff as the practice grows. He declined to provide revenue figures, but says the firm has grown 100 percent year-over-year from when he founded it in May 2013 through 2018.
Ultimately, Passalacqua sees a roster of 10 attorneys for the firm, with primary markets in Utica, Syracuse, and Albany.
Passalacqua says the firm is already marketing online in the Albany area. He plans to have at least a rented conference room and a post office box in the Albany area within the next year, as a precursor to opening a full-service office there.
Currently, the firm has three attorneys, including Passalacqua, and three support staff at its 5,000-square-foot Utica office at 612 Charlotte St.
Prior to founding his firm, Passalacqua was an attorney at Getnick, Livingston, Atkinson & Priore, LLP in Utica. His practice areas at the firm include criminal defense, DWI defense, and personal-injury law. In addition, he is a licensed real-estate broker and property/casualty insurance broker.
Christopher Hameline joined Passalacqua & Associates, LLC in July 2017. His practice areas include criminal defense, DWI defense, and Department of Motor Vehicle hearings.
The firm’s third attorney, Mark Chieco, came on board in January 2018. His practice areas include personal injury law, civil litigation, medical malpractice, and DWI defense.
The firm’s three lawyers have more than 30 years of combined experience.

Fed report finds nonemployer small businesses struggle with profitability
Just over half of the nation’s nonemployer firms were either unprofitable or broke even in 2017, with a majority also reporting rising costs, according to a new report. Nonemployer firms are those without employees on the payroll. The report also finds racial disparities in reported access to funding and highlights financing challenges faced by firms
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Just over half of the nation’s nonemployer firms were either unprofitable or broke even in 2017, with a majority also reporting rising costs, according to a new report.
Nonemployer firms are those without employees on the payroll.
The report also finds racial disparities in reported access to funding and highlights financing challenges faced by firms looking to hire employees in the near future.
That’s according to the 2019 “Small Business Credit Survey Report on Nonemployer Firms,” which the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (New York Fed) issued on Aug. 14.
It examines the business conditions and the credit environment of small businesses with no employees other than the business’s owners.
The report is based on the Small Business Credit Survey that was fielded in 2018. It offers a “deep dive” into the characteristics, performance, prospects and challenges of nonemployer firms nationwide, the New York Fed said.
Nonemployer firms can include gig workers, startups that are planning to hire employees, and mature businesses that rely on contract workers as their workforce, among others.
“Nonemployer firms — which represent 81 percent of all small businesses — are an increasingly important part of our economy, and [the] report highlights how their performance has a real impact on American households,” Claire Kramer Mills, assistant VP at the New York Fed, said. “A majority of these firms struggle with making a profit, facing both rising costs and limits in passing on those costs to consumers. The data also underscore financing challenges for non-white business owners, echoing similar findings for employer firms.”
Findings
The report found 34 percent of nonemployers operated at a loss at the end of 2017. Firms with non-Hispanic, black ownership were more likely to report losses.
In addition, a majority of nonemployers reported an increase in their input costs over the prior 12 months. However, only 34 percent of nonemployers increased the prices they charged, “suggesting challenges” with passing on these heightened costs, the New York Fed said.
The report also found that nearly three-quarters of nonemployers (72 percent) earn $100,000 or less in annual revenue. Lower annual revenues were more common among firms with younger decision-makers, firms with non-Hispanic, black owners, and women-owned firms.
At the same time, 15 percent of nonemployers leverage an app or online marketplace for the majority of their sales. This is more common among firms with younger decision-makers (18 percent) than with older decision-makers (13 percent)
The report found that nearly two-thirds of nonemployers reported having financial challenges in the prior 12 months. This was more common for firms with non-Hispanic, black ownership (76 percent).
In addition, 39 percent of all nonemployer firms reported their funding needs met, but only 17 percent of firms with non-Hispanic, black owners reported their funding needs were satisfied.
About the report
The Small Business Credit Survey, a national collaboration of the 12 Federal Reserve banks, provides an “in-depth look” at the revenue and profitability of these firms and their owners, including financing needs, decisions, and overall success, per the report.
Fielded in the third and fourth quarters of 2018, the survey yielded 5,841 responses from nonemployer firms, which are defined as businesses in the 50 states and the District of Columbia that have no full- or part-time employees.

Express Computer Service moves to Fayetteville Commons
FAYETTEVILLE — Express Computer Service recently moved to the Fayetteville Commons shopping center at 511 East Genesee St. in the village of Fayetteville, from its prior location at 301 E. Seneca St. in the village of Manlius. Express Computer Service leased about 1,100 square feet of retail space at Fayetteville Commons, according to a news
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FAYETTEVILLE — Express Computer Service recently moved to the Fayetteville Commons shopping center at 511 East Genesee St. in the village of Fayetteville, from its prior location at 301 E. Seneca St. in the village of Manlius.
Express Computer Service leased about 1,100 square feet of retail space at Fayetteville Commons, according to a news release from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company. It is located in Suite 8A. William Evertz and Christopher Savage of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage exclusively marketed the property and facilitated the lease. An entity called Fayetteville Commons LLC owns the property — encompassing 23,500 square feet of buildings on just over two acres — according to Onondaga County’s online property records.
Express Computer Service, founded in 2005, says it offers businesses and residential customers an array of services to assist them with their IT needs from basic technical support to full server rollouts and maintenance plans. Specifically, its business services include network security, managed services, website development, and on-site service, according to the company’s website.

Ezra’s Energy formally opens in downtown Utica
UTICA — Ezra’s Energy Metaphysical Crystal Shop formally opened in downtown Utica’s Franklin Square area on the afternoon of Aug. 23 with a ribbon-cutting event with the Greater Utica Chamber of Commerce. Ezra’s Energy is a gift shop that says it focuses on the metaphysical healing energies, and tries to bring that to life with
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UTICA — Ezra’s Energy Metaphysical Crystal Shop formally opened in downtown Utica’s Franklin Square area on the afternoon of Aug. 23 with a ribbon-cutting event with the Greater Utica Chamber of Commerce.
Ezra’s Energy is a gift shop that says it focuses on the metaphysical healing energies, and tries to bring that to life with its collection of crystals of many different varieties, sizes, shapes, and prices. The store opened to customers on June 7, according to the Ezra’s Energy Facebook profile.
Although crystals are the shop’s main focus, it also offers many minerals, gems, fossils, jewelry, tapestries, tarot cards, sage, homemade soap, and many more products involving the metaphysical world.
“We also love to work with local artists, and businesses, and always have at least one local artist’s art available to view and purchase. Our main goal is to create a welcoming space that makes you feel at peace,” the business said in a Greater Utica Chamber news release.
The chamber added that Ezra’s Energy “is bringing a new kind of fun, unique energy to Utica.”

NFIB: new state law prohibiting salary history question will hurt small firms
The New York office of the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) is concerned about the new state law that forbids employers from asking prospective employees about their salary history. The new law, which Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed July 10, expands equal-pay laws to “prohibit unequal pay on the basis of a protected class for
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The New York office of the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) is concerned about the new state law that forbids employers from asking prospective employees about their salary history.
The new law, which Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed July 10, expands equal-pay laws to “prohibit unequal pay on the basis of a protected class for all substantially similar work,” Cuomo’s office said.
Supporters argue that the measure will benefit the push for pay equality, the NFIB noted. But the organization is against the new law, saying small-business owners “will likely face” the financial burden.
“It’s just another administrative mandate complete with additional frictional costs that will make it that much more difficult for small businesses to hire the talent they need,” Greg Biryla, NFIB’s New York State director, said in a July 16 statement posted on the organization’s website.
The new law takes effect in early 2020, the NFIB added.
Cuomo signed the law, “a key component of his “2019 women’s justice agenda,” at the ticker-tape parade celebrating the World Cup champion U.S. women’s soccer team.
The legislation prohibits all employers, public and private, who do business in New York state, from asking prospective employees about their salary history and compensation, and expands the definition of “equal pay for equal work.”
The state law builds on two executive orders that Cuomo signed last year to eliminate the wage gap by prohibiting state entities from evaluating candidates based on wage history and requiring state contractors to disclose data on the gender, race and ethnicity of employees, “leveraging taxpayer dollars to drive transparency and advance pay equity statewide,” Cuomo’s office said.
Cuomo in 2017 directed the New York State Department of Labor to issue a report on the gender pay gap in New York and provide recommendations to “break the cycle of unfair, unequal compensation.”
After holding pay equity hearings across the state, the state Labor Department released its report last spring, Cuomo’s office said.

NY House of Hair formally opens in New Hartford following renovations
NEW HARTFORD — NY House of Hair formally opened its “new and improved” salon in New Hartford on Aug. 17 with a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening event with the New Hartford Chamber of Commerce The salon, located at 8469 Seneca Turnpike, offers a full line of hair, skincare, nail, and eyelash and eyebrow services, according to
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NEW HARTFORD — NY House of Hair formally opened its “new and improved” salon in New Hartford on Aug. 17 with a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening event with the New Hartford Chamber of Commerce
The salon, located at 8469 Seneca Turnpike, offers a full line of hair, skincare, nail, and eyelash and eyebrow services, according to its website.
NY House of Hair underwent renovations earlier this summer, according to its Facebook page. It was closed June 26 to July 7.
Melisa Kudic is the owner and founder of NY House of Hair. She started her beauty career at age 16 and opened her first salon at 21, according to the salon website. She became a 3D eyebrow-embroidery specialist and lash-extension expert with a business degree. Kudic says she has clients across the east coast. ν
New York milk production inches higher in July
New York dairy farmers produced 1.288 billion pounds of milk in July, up 0.3 percent from 1.284 billion pounds in the year-earlier period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported. Production per cow in the state averaged 2,055 pounds in July, down 0.5 percent from 2,065 pounds a year prior. The number of
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New York dairy farmers produced 1.288 billion pounds of milk in July, up 0.3 percent from 1.284 billion pounds in the year-earlier period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported.
Production per cow in the state averaged 2,055 pounds in July, down 0.5 percent from 2,065 pounds a year prior.
The number of milk cows on farms in New York state totaled 627,000 head in July, up 0.8 percent from 622,000 head in July 2018, NASS reported.
On the milk price front, New York farmers in June were paid an average of $18.60 per hundredweight, up 20 cents from May, and up $1.70 from June 2018.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, dairy farms produced 832 million pounds of milk in July, down 7.6 percent from 900 million pounds a year ago, according to the USDA.
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