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Crews finish work on Oswego Industries renovation project
FULTON — Oswego Industries says the renovation project on its 85,000-square-foot location in Fulton is complete. The project at 7 Morrill Place targeted improvements throughout the facility to “promote the safety and well-being of both staff and individuals,” Oswego Industries said in a news release. The work included roof repairs; the replacement of aging doors, […]
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FULTON — Oswego Industries says the renovation project on its 85,000-square-foot location in Fulton is complete.
The project at 7 Morrill Place targeted improvements throughout the facility to “promote the safety and well-being of both staff and individuals,” Oswego Industries said in a news release.
The work included roof repairs; the replacement of aging doors, dock seals and canopies; and the addition of control systems to secure the facility. The project also reorganized program locations throughout the building to increase access for individuals with limited mobility and to streamline operations, “which ultimately increased productivity.”
Gov. Cuomo’s office in December 2016 called Laurie Davis, executive director of Oswego Industries, saying the agency had been awarded a grant of more than $800,000 to make “significant improvements” to its Fulton facility. The funding came from the Dormitory Authority of New York State’s Nonprofit Infrastructure Capital Investment Program (NICIP). The work took about two years to complete, with the last of the funding being disbursed in 2019.
“The NICIP grant represents a significant investment … not just in Oswego Industries, but in our community as a whole,” Davis said.
The total cost of the project was about $821,000, Rebekkah Frisch, marketing & communications associate for Oswego Industries, tells CNYBJ in an email.
The agency then hired six local contractors, including Rowlee Construction. The contractors also included Volney Multiplex Inc. The firm installs and services fire-alarm systems, security systems, video-surveillance systems, per its website.
The grant funding also allowed crews to make improvements to the agency’s production department that manufactures items such as belts, hospital gowns, scrubs and coveralls. The department employs a workforce of about 90 developmentally disabled adults.
Most of the products are manufactured under federal contracts through SourceAmerica and New York State Industries for the Disabled (NYSID) but orders for local or domestic customers also accounts for a “large percentage of its work.”
The improvements and expanded space for production “will create more jobs and provide additional revenue for Oswego Industries,” per the release.
About Oswego Industries
For more than 50 years, Oswego Industries has provided services and support for adults with disabilities while partnering with local businesses to deliver production and workforce services.
Services at Oswego Industries include pre-vocational and vocational training, supported employment, day habilitation programs, and Medicaid-service coordination.
Its sister agency, the Arc of Oswego County, provides services to children and seniors with disabilities.
Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various small business, tech, HR, and career tips. SBA @SBAgovWant to increase business sales? Get to know your customers — http://ow.ly/b1Gt50vyOAW Small Business Expo @SmallBizExpoChoose the Best Small Business Loan for your Needs: http://twib.in/l/9MAMBKqXbRbd Talkroute @Talkroute10 Signs That You’re a Smart Business Owner: http://bit.ly/2WNcIE5
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Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various small business, tech, HR, and career tips.
SBA @SBAgov
Want to increase business sales? Get to know your customers — http://ow.ly/b1Gt50vyOAW
Small Business Expo @SmallBizExpo
Choose the Best Small Business Loan for your Needs: http://twib.in/l/9MAMBKqXbRbd
Talkroute @Talkroute
10 Signs That You’re a Smart Business Owner: http://bit.ly/2WNcIE5
Strategic Watch @Strategic_Watch
How To Get Your Business Acquired – http://dlvr.it/RBHXLq #GrowthHacking #SmallBusiness #Entrepreneur
Mitch Mitchell @Mitch_M
#LinkedIn Posts Experiment; What I Learned… http://imjustsharing.com/linkedin-posts-experiment/
Small Business Expo @SmallBizExpo
If You Have to Ask How Much a Data Breach Costs, You Can’t Afford One http://twib.in/l/7jrjKyqKkeMB
Bonadio Group @bonadiogroup
On July 25, NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the Stop Hacks and Improve Electronic Data Security, or “SHIELD Act.” What does this mean for you & your business? Carl Cadregari, CISA, CCSFP, CTPRP weighs in: https://www.foxpointesolutions.com/foxpointe-security-hub/what-every-new-yorker-and-every-business-owner-needs-to-know-about-the-new-data-breach-legislation
eXo Platform @eXoPlatform
Why Businesses Aren’t Handing HR Over to AI? – https://www.cmswire.com/digital-workplace/before-you-hand-human-resources-over-to-ai-/
Deloitte Digital @DeloitteDigital
Even as HR leaders are stepping into a new world and embracing a new future of #HR, change won’t happen if an org’s culture isn’t ready for it. So how can you measure and lead culture change to support HR’s bold new role within the broader enterprise? https://deloi.tt/2Z0TYl6
Paychex @Paychex
87% of #HR leaders say technology strengthens their contribution to corporate success. Learn about the tools they use in our new Pulse of #HR Survey: https://paychex.com/secure/whitepapers/hr-pulse-2019
Mark C. Crowley @MarkCCrowley
You never know when you might end up working with the same people (or boss) again so always quit a job with the highest professionalism. Give 2 weeks notice, ensure your boss is the first to know. And even if that boss treated you badly, leave on the best terms possible.
Dr N S Rajan @RajanNS
Some bosses do work hard; just to make their team work so much harder.
Angel Biz Advisors @AngelBiz
Surprising Reasons Why Your Employees Are Not Motivated: http://ow.ly/WbCr30pmgiZ #HR #smallbiz
Hannah Morgan @careersherpa
The Best LinkedIn Profiles for Job Seekers Rock These 10 Fields (according to a recruiter) by @DonnaSvei – https://buff.ly/30fD1Fj #LinkedIn #profile #jobsearchtips
New York milk production edges up in June
New York dairy farmers produced 1.279 billion pounds of milk in June, up 0.2 percent from 1.277 billion pounds in the year-ago period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported. Production per cow in the state averaged 2,040 pounds in June, down 0.5 percent from 2,050 pounds a year earlier. The number of
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New York dairy farmers produced 1.279 billion pounds of milk in June, up 0.2 percent from 1.277 billion pounds in the year-ago period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported.
Production per cow in the state averaged 2,040 pounds in June, down 0.5 percent from 2,050 pounds a year earlier.
The number of milk cows on farms in New York state totaled 627,000 head in June, up 0.6 percent from 623,000 head in June 2018, NASS reported.
On the milk price front, New York farmers in May were paid an average of $18.40 per hundredweight, up 20 cents from April, and up $2 from May 2018.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, dairy farms produced 838 million pounds of milk in June, down 6.5 percent from 896 million pounds a year prior, according to the USDA.
New York egg production rises 2 percent in June
New York farms produced 138.2 million eggs in June, up 2 percent from 135.5 million eggs in the year-ago period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported. The number of layers in the Empire State averaged 5.64 million in June, up 1.1 percent from 5.58 million layers in the year-prior month. June egg
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New York farms produced 138.2 million eggs in June, up 2 percent from 135.5 million eggs in the year-ago period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported.
The number of layers in the Empire State averaged 5.64 million in June, up 1.1 percent from 5.58 million layers in the year-prior month. June egg production per 100 layers totaled 2,449 eggs, up 0.9 percent from 2,428 eggs in June 2018.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, farms produced 692.7 million eggs during June, up 1.6 percent from 681.5 million eggs a year earlier.
U.S. egg production totaled 9.16 billion eggs in June, 2.2 percent higher than the 8.97 billion eggs produced a year ago.
Broome County hotel occupancy rate falls almost 2 percent in June
BINGHAMTON — Hotels in Broome County were less full in June than in the year-earlier month, according to a recent report. The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county slipped 1.7 percent to 65.3 percent in June from 66.5 percent a year ago according to STR, a Tennessee–based
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BINGHAMTON — Hotels in Broome County were less full in June than in the year-earlier month, according to a recent report.
The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county slipped 1.7 percent to 65.3 percent in June from 66.5 percent a year ago according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data and analytics company. Year to date, the county’s occupancy rate was up 1.6 percent to 55.6 percent.
Broome County’s revenue per available room (RevPar), a key industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, fell 2 percent to $60.18 in June from $61.39 in June 2018. Through the first six months of the year, the county’s RevPar was up 2.9 percent to $50.50.
Average daily rate (or ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, dipped 0.3 percent to $92.14 in June from $92.37 a year prior. Year to date, Broome County’s ADR was up 1.3 percent to $90.88.
Onondaga County hotel occupancy rate falls more than 14 percent in June
SYRACUSE — Hotels in Onondaga County welcomed substantially fewer guests in June than in the year-ago month, according to a recent report. The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county plummeted 14.2 percent to 63.4 percent in June from 74 percent a year earlier, according to STR, a
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SYRACUSE — Hotels in Onondaga County welcomed substantially fewer guests in June than in the year-ago month, according to a recent report.
The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county plummeted 14.2 percent to 63.4 percent in June from 74 percent a year earlier, according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data and analytics company. It was the ninth straight month in which Onondaga County’s occupancy rate declined compared to the year-earlier period. Year to date, hotel occupancy in the county was down 8.9 percent to 53.2 percent.
To be sure, Onondaga County last year hosted the U.S. Bowling Congress — at the Oncenter in Syracuse — from late March through early July. That pumped an estimated more than 40,000 hotel room night stays into the market. No similar event is taking place this year, making it difficult to match last year’s hotel occupancy numbers.
Revenue per available room (RevPar), a key industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, declined 16.5 percent to $64.19 in June from $76.89 in June 2018. Through the first six months of the year, the county’s RevPar declined 8.2 percent to $53.90.
Average daily rate (or ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, slipped 2.7 percent to $101.19 in June from $103.95 a year prior. Year to date, Onondaga County’s ADR was up 0.7 percent to $101.30.

Empire State manufacturing index remains steady in August
The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index rose half a point to 4.8 in August, pointing to “two months of modest growth” after a brief decline in manufacturing activity in June. In July, the index jumped 13 points to 4.3 to “climb out of negative territory” after plummeting 26 points to -8.6 in June,
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The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index rose half a point to 4.8 in August, pointing to “two months of modest growth” after a brief decline in manufacturing activity in June.
In July, the index jumped 13 points to 4.3 to “climb out of negative territory” after plummeting 26 points to -8.6 in June, representing its “largest monthly decline on record.”
The August reading of 4.8 beat economists’ expectations for an index number of 0.5, according to a Dow Jones survey.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said in its Aug. 15 report that the latest results indicate “business activity increased modestly in New York.” A positive index number indicates expansion or growth in manufacturing activity, while a negative reading points to a decline in the sector.
The August survey found that 27 percent of respondents reported that conditions had improved over the month, while 22 percent reported that conditions had worsened, the New York Fed said.
Survey details
The new-orders index climbed above zero, and at 6.7, indicated that orders increased. Unfilled orders declined for a third consecutive month.
Delivery times were “steady,” and inventories rose for the first time since April. Meanwhile, the shipments index moved slightly higher to 9.3, pointing to an increase in shipments, the New York Fed said.
The index for number of employees held below zero for a third consecutive month, coming in at -1.6, and the average workweek index was at -1.3, pointing to “ongoing sluggishness” in employment levels and hours worked.
The prices-paid index edged down 2 points to 23.2, “suggesting a slightly slower” pace of input-price increases than in July.
The prices-received index was little changed at 4.5, with selling-price increases maintaining a modest pace.
Indexes assessing the six-month outlook suggested that firms were “somewhat less optimistic” about future conditions than they were the prior month.
The index for future business conditions fell 5 points to 25.7, and the index for future new orders also moved lower. Firms expected increases in employment levels but no change in the average workweek in the months ahead.
The capital expenditures index rose 4 points to 23.2, and the technology spending index moved up to 17.4.
The New York Fed distributes the Empire State Manufacturing Survey on the first day of each month to the same pool of about 200 manufacturing executives in New York. On average, about 100 executives return responses.

NIH awards Cornell $17.4 million for CHESS sub-facility
ITHACA — The National Institutes of Health has awarded Cornell University $17.4 million for ongoing biomedical research at its MacCHESS sub-facility of its Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source (CHESS) — a national research facility, the university announced. MacCHESS is short for Macromolecular X-ray science at the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source. Cornell, in an Aug.
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ITHACA — The National Institutes of Health has awarded Cornell University $17.4 million for ongoing biomedical research at its MacCHESS sub-facility of its Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source (CHESS) — a national research facility, the university announced.
MacCHESS is short for Macromolecular X-ray science at the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source. Cornell, in an Aug. 15 news release, said MacCHESS “attracts hundreds of biomedical researchers each year.”
As part of its Empire State Development Division of Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR) program to promote jobs in the state, New York State will supplement the award with up to $2.5 million over the next five years.
With this grant, the Bethesda, Maryland–based NIH joins the National Science Foundation (NSF) as a “major contributing partner” for user operations at CHESS. The NSF is funding the Center for High-Energy X-Ray Sciences at CHESS, or CHEXS, which consists of four beamlines and staff to support high-energy X-ray science user operations, X-ray technology research and development, and CHEXS leadership.
The research
Cornell says a single human cell contains thousands of proteins that perform a vast array of functions, from fighting off viruses to transcribing DNA. By understanding the structure of these proteins, researchers can interpret their functions and develop methods for turning them on and off.
To understand these biological processes, researchers have been using the high-energy X-rays at the CHESS. These intense beams of light are critical to solving the structure of these proteins. The NIH funding will “help ensure that this research continues,” the release stated.
By using the X-rays and emerging technology at MacCHESS, researchers are able to observe cellular functions and analyze molecular interactions, yielding important insights into the “most fundamental” biological processes. This research is “critical” to understanding antibiotic-resistant bacteria and the development of cancer-fighting drugs, for example.
“MacCHESS provides cutting-edge instrumentation and techniques to some of the most challenging questions confronting structural biologists,” Rick Cerione, principal investigator for MacCHESS, said in the release. “We are excited about working at the frontiers of structural biology to develop new technology that will provide long-term benefits to the biomedical research community as a whole.”
NIH funding use
The NIH funding supports two experiment stations at MacCHESS: the flexible protein crystallography beamline (FlexX); and the biological small angle X-ray solution scattering and high-pressure biology beamline (BioSAXS/HP-Bio).
Researchers at the FlexX beamline will broadly focus on macromolecular crystallography (MX) and related methods that help determine the structures of proteins, viruses and nucleic acids, offering high-resolution 3D imaging that is needed for applications such as drug design.
The BioSAXS/HP-Bio beamline will support researchers studying biomolecular structures in solution; high-pressure studies in biophysics; the structural biology of organisms living under high pressure and temperature (known as “deep life”); and food science. This beamline also will help researchers working on improved sterilization and processing methods in the food and pharmaceutical industries, Cornell said.
NSF funding to CHESS
Cornell on July 22 announced that its CHESS facility will receive $54 million in NSF funding over the next five years for a research and education sub-facility at Wilson Laboratory, the home of CHESS.
The NSF funding will be provided by its Division of Materials Research, the Directorate of Biological Sciences, and the Directorate of Engineering.
CHESS annually attracts more than 1,200 users, who conduct X-ray analysis and collect data for research in materials, biomedical and other science fields, the university said in a July 22 release.
The newly funded NSF portion of the facility will be known as the Center for High-Energy X-ray Sciences at CHESS (CHEXS @ CHESS). It will include four beamlines and staff to support high-energy X-ray science user operations, X-ray technology research and development, and CHEXS leadership, Cornell said. In addition to research, CHEXS will support education and training, particularly of researchers in biological sciences, engineering, and materials research.
“The renewal of NSF funding for CHESS will ensure America and Cornell University remain at the cutting edge of innovation in high-energy X-ray applications,” U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) said in the Cornell release. “CHESS is a unique training ground for the scientific workforce we need to keep the U.S. competitive, and is part of the lifeblood of our scientific community, enabling researchers to make advancements in everything from clean energy technologies to stronger, more resilient infrastructure.”
CHESS’s most recent grant renewal from the NSF came in 2014.
The NSF is the largest source of funding for CHESS. Until this spring, CHESS had been funded exclusively by this science agency since its commissioning in 1980. That changed in April, when Cornell transitioned to “a new funding model in which multiple partners will steward facilities at CHESS,” per the release.
CHESS recently completed a $15 million upgrade, which was funded by New York State. That project improved the infrastructure of the storage ring and CHESS’s X-ray beamlines.

Computer and electronic product manufacturing jobs decline in Binghamton MSA
The number of computer and electronic product manufacturing jobs in the Binghamton metropolitan statistical area (MSA) dropped by 200 positions, or 3.4 percent, in July 2019 from the year-ago period, according to statistics released by the New York State Department of Labor this month. The figures showed a net loss of 100 jobs (-0.2 percent) in
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The number of computer and electronic product manufacturing jobs in the Binghamton metropolitan statistical area (MSA) dropped by 200 positions, or 3.4 percent, in July 2019 from the year-ago period, according to statistics released by the New York State Department of Labor this month.
The figures showed a net loss of 100 jobs (-0.2 percent) in the subsector statewide.
The computer and electronic product manufacturing industry subsector includes “establishments that manufacture computers, computer peripherals, communications equipment, and similar electronic products, and establishments that manufacture components for such products,” according to the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
The Binghamton MSA is composed of Broome and Tioga counties. Data for the subsector is not available for the Elmira or Ithaca areas, the other MSAs in the Southern Tier region.
The Department of Labor indicated that the jobs data is not seasonally adjusted, noting, “non-seasonally adjusted data are valuable in year-to-year comparisons of the same month.”

Schumer urges banks to lend to industrial-hemp businesses
U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) wants banks and other financial institutions to realize that the industrial-hemp industry is now legal and needs services “to better help it seed and grow across upstate New York.” Schumer explained that without access to traditional financial services, the industrial-hemp industry Upstate and in Cortland County is being
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U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) wants banks and other financial institutions to realize that the industrial-hemp industry is now legal and needs services “to better help it seed and grow across upstate New York.”
Schumer explained that without access to traditional financial services, the industrial-hemp industry Upstate and in Cortland County is being “unfairly restricted, preventing further economic growth and the creation of good-paying jobs.”
Industrial hemp is from the plant species Cannabis sativa and has been used worldwide to produce a variety of industrial and consumer products., per the website of the Agricultural Marketing Resource Center (AgMRC). Ames, Iowa–based AgMRC provides “unbiased, science-based marketing information for U.S. farmers and ranchers,” its website says.
The 2018 Farm Bill legalized the production and sale of industrial hemp, removing it from the Controlled Substances Act, Schumer’s office said.
Standing at Main Street Farms in Cortlandville with growers, producers, and industry experts, Schumer discussed an effort to “iron out a thorny issue for the burgeoning industrial-hemp industry” in the region, his office said in an Aug. 12 news release.
Allan Gandelman, owner of Main Street Farms, joined Schumer for the senator’s remarks.
To address this issue, Schumer requested that the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issue “expedient” guidance to financial institutions confirming the legality of providing services to the industrial-hemp industry.
Even though the 2018 Farm Bill — including Schumer’s Hemp Farming Act of 2018 — legalized the production and sale of industrial hemp, financial institutions have “continued to question” whether they can extend their services and products to industrial-hemp oriented businesses.
“The industrial hemp industry is seeding and growing all over upstate New York, with new businesses like Main Street Farms popping up left and right, which is why I fought so hard to strip the burdensome and outdated federal regulations from it by passing the Hemp Farming Act of 2018. However, if these businesses aren’t able to get financing from a bank or find a credit-card processor that doesn’t charge them an arm and a leg, none of that matters all that much,” Schumer said. “If the financial institutions aren’t given updated guidance by the major federal financial regulators clarifying the legality of industrial hemp, the industry in Central New York and producers like Main Street Farms will continue being tightly bound, prevented from growing and creating the good-paying jobs they’d otherwise be able to. That’s why I’m urging the FDIC, Federal Reserve, and OCC to issue updated guidance to the financial institutions looking to provide services to industrial hemp-oriented businesses as soon as possible, to help growers, producers and industry harvest the massive potential of this versatile crop.”
Since the 2018 Farm Bill removed the federal regulatory “shackles” from industrial-hemp production, manufacturing, and selling, Schumer noted that New York’s industrial-hemp industry has started to grow “significantly, with new farms and businesses emerging and existing ones expanding operations,” his office said.
It has resulted in “considerably more good-paying jobs and revenue” to upstate New York, making industrial hemp a “critical new part” of the state’s agricultural future.
For example, Canopy Growth recently held a groundbreaking event for its new industrial hemp industrial park in Broome County, which will bring 400 new jobs to the region, “with the potential for many more” industrial hemp-oriented businesses to locate to the region.
Main Street Farms
Schumer pointed to Main Street Farms as the “perfect example” of an industrial-hemp business “brimming with potential that’s being tightly bound by the lack of regulatory clarity.” Main Street Farms has a 100-acre industrial-hemp farm in the town of Cortlandville, and just recently announced plans to open up a processing facility in the city of Cortland.
Main Street Farms says the two operations expect to employ a combined 80 people, Schumer’s office said. However, Schumer noted that Main Street Farms went to five different banks to get financing after the passage of the 2018 Farm Bill and was turned down by all five, due to its association with industrial hemp.
The company eventually found a local credit union willing to offer its services, but the inconsistent access to financial services made launching the business “challenging.” Main Street Farms also had to pull numerous products off its website, as those products prevented credit-card processors from working with the company.
A couple of credit-card processors will work with Main Street Farms and similar industrial hemp-oriented businesses, but they charge “well above” average rates, Schumer’s office said. Additionally, the lack of access to financial products not only affects the hemp businesses, but its employees as well. Schumer said his office has heard stories from employees of hemp businesses being unable to access private loans due to the nature of their jobs.
Schumer explained that “in order to alleviate these concerns,” updated guidance would better help financial institutions assess risk and make available a wider range of financial products to industrial hemp cultivators and manufacturers.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
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