Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.

Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties awards over $1.1M in grants
UTICA — The Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties announced that in this year’s second quarter it awarded grants totaling more than $507,000 to 22 nonprofit organizations through its competitive grants process. In addition to competitive grants, the foundation’s donor-advised funds awarded 98 grants in the second quarter totaling nearly $633,000 to 72 organizations. […]
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
UTICA — The Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties announced that in this year’s second quarter it awarded grants totaling more than $507,000 to 22 nonprofit organizations through its competitive grants process.
In addition to competitive grants, the foundation’s donor-advised funds awarded 98 grants in the second quarter totaling nearly $633,000 to 72 organizations. So, the total amount awarded from both grant programs exceeded $1.1 million.
Competitive grants are awarded to local nonprofits to support projects and initiatives, primarily within the foundation’s strategic investment areas of education, economic development, health and wellness, and arts and culture.
The following organizations were awarded competitive grants:
• American Youth Soccer Organization (AYSO) – Utica Region — $2,500 to replace soccer goals and nets
• City of Little Falls — $6,000 for new playground equipment for the city pool playground
• City of Rome — $100,000 to support paving expenses associated with the downtown pedestrian art plaza construction
• City of Sherrill — $5,000 to install a new multi-function scoreboard at Noyes Park
• Dolgeville Forward — $10,000 for improvements and upgrades to a basketball court
• Erwin Library and Institute — a $2,300 emergency grant for building maintenance
• Handshake.City — $15,000 for purchase of a portable stage and inflatable bandshell
• Herkimer County Historical Society — a $2,350 emergency grant for roof repairs
• Jordanville Public Library — $10,000 for building-rehabilitation projects
• Oneida Chapter National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (NSDAR) — $930 to restore an antique curio cabinet
• On Point for College — $20,000 to expand outreach efforts
• Project Fibonacci Foundation — $25,000 to fund scholarships for students to attend Project Fibonacci STEAM Leadership events
• Resource Center for Independent Living (RCIL) — $150,000 to assist with renovations to RCIL’s new location
• Rising Stars Soccer Club of CNY — $5,000 to purchase new soccer and lacrosse goals
• Rome Baseball Association — $2,000 for the addition of protective dugout netting
• Rust2Green — $79,400 to advance place-making projects in downtown Utica
• The New York Community Trust — $10,000 to support the New York State Census Equity Fund’s efforts to ensure an accurate 2020 Census count
• Utica Curling Club — $15,000 for expenses related to paving the curling club parking area
• Utica Monday Nite Corporation — $25,000 to support the 2019 Levitt AMP Utica concerts, park improvements, and place-making activities
• Waterville Historical Society — an $850 emergency grant for furnace repairs
• Woods Valley Alpine Ski Racing Foundation — $6,500 for the purchase of a race-timing system
• YMCA of the Greater Tri-Valley — $15,000 to fund development and design services for its new facility
The Community Foundation’s donor-advised funds awarded 98 grants in the quarter to 72 organizations. Some of the area groups receiving funding included:
American Cancer Society, Central Association for the Blind & Visually Impaired (CABVI), Central New York Conservancy, Chamber Music Society of Utica, Clinton Youth Foundation, Freedom Guide Dogs for the Blind, Glimmerglass Opera, Hamilton College, Herkimer County Humane Society, Hospice & Palliative Care, Humane Society of Rome, ICAN (formerly Kids Oneida), Landmarks Society of Greater Utica, Madison-Oneida BOCES, Mohawk Valley Frontiers Club, Mohawk Valley Resource Center for Refugees, Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, On Point For College, Oneida County History Center, Oneida-Herkimer-Madison BOCES, Rescue Mission of Utica, Resource Center for Independent Living (RCIL), Stanley Center for the Arts, The House of the Good Shepherd, Tug Hill Tomorrow Land Trust, Utica College, Utica Monday Nite Corporation, Utica Public Library, Utica Zoological Society, Women’s Fund of Herkimer & Oneida Counties, and the YWCA of the Mohawk Valley.
Rome Hospital Foundation says it provides “vital philanthropic support” to the hospital. The foundation is a separate 501 (c) (3) not-for-profit that accepts gifts on behalf of Rome Memorial Hospital and works to fund both present and future equipment and program needs.
Rome Memorial Hospital provides care to more than 100,000 residents of the community.
ν

Law firm Hancock Daniel moves to new DeWitt office
DeWITT — The Virginia–based law firm of Hancock, Daniel & Johnson, P.C. has moved its CNY office to a bigger location in DeWitt and is opening an office in Saratoga Springs. The law firm — which is located north of Richmond, Virginia — markets itself as Hancock Daniel. It acquired Syracuse–based Centolella Green Law in
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
DeWITT — The Virginia–based law firm of Hancock, Daniel & Johnson, P.C. has moved its CNY office to a bigger location in DeWitt and is opening an office in Saratoga Springs.
The law firm — which is located north of Richmond, Virginia — markets itself as Hancock Daniel. It acquired Syracuse–based Centolella Green Law in early 2018.
The law firm focuses on legal matters pertaining to health care, business, and taxes.
It now operates in space at 5793 Widewaters Parkway. It previously was situated in a 1,500-square-foot office in the Hamilton White House at 307 S. Townsend St. in Syracuse. It also previously operated in a 1,500-square-foot office at 6832 E. Genesee St. in DeWitt.
With the new Widewaters Parkway office, Hancock Daniel has ceased operations in its Syracuse and previous DeWitt locations.
New DeWitt office
Those in the local office wanted more space than they were able to have at the East Genesee Street location, so the attorneys pursued other options, says Jason Centolella, director and attorney with Hancock Daniel.
“Given the parking and the easy access from [Interstates] 690 and 481 and people’s familiarity with the business park made a lot of sense for us,” he says.
It was late 2018 when the attorneys in the local office decided they needed to pursue additional space. They started operating in the new office on July 1 of this year.
“It was available. I liked the location. I liked the building,” Centolella says.
Centolella describes Jeff Foster, who he says manages the property, as a “good friend of mine.” Foster is the executive VP of brokerage at Summit Commercial Real Estate Group.
Hancock Daniel has six employees in the DeWitt office, including five attorneys.
More staff additions may happen in the future.
“Given the volume of our work, we could probably bring somebody else on as well,” Centolella says. “If the right candidate came along, we would.”
In addition, colleagues from Hancock Daniel who are normally based in Richmond, Virginia will work on client matters in the Central New York office “at least twice a month,” according to Centolella. For example, James Daniel, a senior partner and founder of the Hancock Daniel firm, spends time in the DeWitt location “two or three times a month,” he notes.
“Typically, I fly,” says Daniel “I travel a lot in my practice, so I’m often not coming from Richmond.”
Both Centolella and Daniel spoke to CNYBJ on Aug. 2 at the new DeWitt office.
Saratoga Springs office
Besides the new office in DeWitt, Hancock Daniel has also secured new space in Saratoga Springs. The firm plans to start using that location in October following a buildout of the space.
“We are doing more and more work in the Capital Region. Clients want us to have a presence out there,” Centolella says in explaining the purpose behind the new office.
The firm has been examining the Capital Region for a “long time,” he says, noting it’s where the New York State Department of Health operates.
“A lot of health care has regulatory issues that take you through the state capital, so it’s never bad to have a presence in that region,” Daniel adds.
A Hancock Daniel client in Saratoga Springs had some extra space and asked if the law firm wanted to use it. Centolella couldn’t disclose the name of the client that offered Hancock Daniel space, but notes the client is not part of the health-care sector.
Centolella declined to disclose how much the preparation work is costing the firm.
Hancock Daniel hopes to have permanent staffing in the Saratoga Springs office, but initially, lawyers in the Syracuse office will rotate through the Capital Region “as necessary,” along with other Hancock Daniel attorneys, according to Centolella.
As of Aug. 2, Hancock Daniel services 10 clients in the greater Albany area. The firm also has clients in the North Country and “a lot” of clients in Central New York, defined as the region between Syracuse and Utica and from the Canadian border to Binghamton.
Through the upstate New York region, Hancock Daniel has clients from Rochester to Albany and from the Canadian border to Binghamton, according to Centolella. He declined to name any of the firm’s clients.
The types of clients include hospitals, health systems, large and small medical groups, individual physicians, ambulatory surgery centers, and accountable-care organizations.
Oneida County seeks proposals to develop Railway Express Agency Wing
UTICA — Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente, Jr. on Aug. 5 announced that Oneida County is accepting requests for expressions of interest (RFEI) in developing the second floor of the Railway Express Agency (REA) Wing at Union Station. The 4,200-square-foot space is located above the county-owned REA Wing, which houses the Oneida County Public Market,
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
UTICA — Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente, Jr. on Aug. 5 announced that Oneida County is accepting requests for expressions of interest (RFEI) in developing the second floor of the Railway Express Agency (REA) Wing at Union Station.
The 4,200-square-foot space is located above the county-owned REA Wing, which houses the Oneida County Public Market, adjacent to Union Station at 321 Main St. in Utica, per an Aug. 5 news release.
Picente first announced the plan to seek development proposals for the space during his State of the County address in March.
“This unique space is ripe for development and I look forward to seeing creative ideas come in as a result of this search,” Picente said in the release. “I believe with the right vision and execution it can really turn into something special and further expand upon the revitalization of Bagg’s Square and downtown Utica.”
Submissions
Respondents to the RFEI must submit a proposal that includes a respondent description with contact information, background information on organizational structure, and the proposed development team.
It must also include a project description. The development plan should include all proposed improvements and uses and their viability, development schedule, employment-generation projections, and applicable tourism impacts.
The proposal also needs to include financial information. The financial data and pro-forma statements should offer a construction budget; sources and uses of project funds; operating cash flows; and a 10-year forecast of project income/funding expenses, capital improvement reserves and any debt-service payments.
The criteria that Oneida County will consider in selecting a proposal will include the “completeness” and quality of overall response, financial and schedule feasibility, respondent qualifications and experience, and economic impact.
Respondents may participate in an optional site visit scheduled for Aug. 15, Picente’s office said.
Those who wish to attend should RSVP to Mark Laramie, deputy commissioner of engineering, by email at mlaramie@ocgov.net by Aug. 13.
Proposals must be submitted to Regina Venettozzi in the Oneida County Department of Planning by Sept. 12.
Those interested can review the REA Wing RFEI by visiting the following website: https://ocgov.net/purchase/availableRFPs.
Operation Oswego County honors Oswego contractor for downtown revitalization efforts
OSWEGO — Operation Oswego County (OOC) announced that it recently honored Anthony M. Pauldine with the 2019 Dee Heckethorn Entrepreneur Award in recognition of “exceptional entrepreneurial spirit, creativity, and dedication to revitalizing the City of Oswego’s downtown.” Pauldine restored the 191-year-old former fish market that is on the National Register of Historic Places, Cahill Landing,
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
OSWEGO — Operation Oswego County (OOC) announced that it recently honored Anthony M. Pauldine with the 2019 Dee Heckethorn Entrepreneur Award in recognition of “exceptional entrepreneurial spirit, creativity, and dedication to revitalizing the City of Oswego’s downtown.”
Pauldine restored the 191-year-old former fish market that is on the National Register of Historic Places, Cahill Landing, into seven upscale apartments. It was recognized by the Preservation League of New York State with a 2019 Excellence in Historic Preservation Award, the OOC said in a news release.
He also transformed the former YMCA building into a mixed-use development with 10 loft apartments and 5,500 square feet of commercial space, restored the historic Buckhout-Jones building that is now home to the Children’s Museum of Oswego, and developed the Canal Commons that offers shopping in the heart of downtown Oswego with over a dozen shops and The Lofts at Canal Commons that features 11 luxury apartments.
Pauldine has operated a general contracting business, Anthony M. Pauldine General Contractor, Inc., for more than 30 years. The business is located at 190 5th Ave. in Oswego.

The Westwood’s developers bank on downtown Utica’s revival
UTICA — With a love of rehabbing old buildings combined with nostalgia of downtown Utica remembered from childhood, a two-woman team tackled the renovation and restoration of a six-story Genesee Street building. Now the duo hopes the proposed downtown MVHS hospital combined with other business growth will help further the revitalization of the downtown area
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
UTICA — With a love of rehabbing old buildings combined with nostalgia of downtown Utica remembered from childhood, a two-woman team tackled the renovation and restoration of a six-story Genesee Street building.
Now the duo hopes the proposed downtown MVHS hospital combined with other business growth will help further the revitalization of the downtown area and help make their building a success.
Christine Martin and Enessa Carbone partnered to purchase the abandoned and boarded-up building from the city of Utica’s Urban Renewal Agency for $20,000 in March 2016 with a plan to renovate a few of the floors, create some apartments, and maybe add some retail space. Ultimately, the project, which started with demolition during the winter of 2016-2017 and construction in April 2017, morphed into The Westwood at 167 Genesee St. (www.thewestwoodutica.com).
The Westwood, named after Westwood Lane in New Hartford where both women live, features retail space on the first floor with current tenants Jimmy John’s Gourmet Sandwiches and Street Corner Urban Market. The 2nd through 5th floors contain 22 apartments, a laundry room, a fitness center, and a lounge for tenant use. The building offers tenant storage in the basement and work is underway to create a storage facility that others can lease space from, Martin says.
The apartments range from efficiencies that rent for $850 a month to a two-story loft that rents for $2,100 a month. The average rent is about $1,400, says Martin, and that includes utilities except electric. The women designed the project themselves and worked with Alesia & Crewell Architects, P.C. of New Hartford on mechanical and code issues.
The renovations, which included replacing electrical and plumbing, cost about $5.5 million, minus grants. The women received a $400,000 Empire State Development grant, a $200,000 National Grid brownfield grant, and a $22,500 façade improvement grant from the city of Utica.
Carbone financed the project with help from a line of credit from Adirondack Bank to bridge the gap until the grant money arrived.

The two women are already successful in their fields. Martin is president of FosterMartin Interactive Marketing in Utica. Carbone is VP at Carbone Auto Group, owned by Lithia Motors Inc. She also serves on Carbone’s legal and acquisitions team. So, why did they decide to take on the rehabilitation of a six-story abandoned building in the heart of downtown Utica?
“There are no reasonable housing options,” Carbone says. Apartments in the Landmarc building or the former Doyle’s Hardware building have higher rents and are a little more of a reach for young professionals starting out.
Attending a block party a few years ago helped spark Carbone’s interest in the project. “It was a really fun day and it reminded me of what Utica used to be when I was growing up,” she says.
Both women wanted their children to stay in the area and say housing options are a crucial component of attracting young residents to urban areas. Both of their sons, in fact, are tenants at the Westwood.
Martin had rehabbed buildings before, including the building next door at 171 Genesee St. “I started buying distressed properties, rehabbing and renting,” she says. She partnered with C. Edward Schmidt on that project, which opened in 2018. Tenants include Character Coffee and Christine’s Cookie Shoppe on the first floor and 171 Events on the 2nd through 5th floors.
“I had a really great experience with that,” Martin says of that project. It made her eager to take on another project.
The Westwood’s first tenants moved in on Jan. 1 of this year. Tenants rented all but three of the pet-friendly units within a month. Only one unit remained available as of press time.
Carbone’s husband Sal Raspante operates the Jimmy John’s franchise restaurant. He also owns a Jimmy John’s in New Hartford. Carbone runs the Street Corner Urban Market, which has a selection of grocery products that include local products.
Carbone says having a grocery store in the building is a vital service not only to the tenants of the building, but also to the downtown area. While she was willing to take on the project, she wasn’t as willing to tackle learning the grocery business from scratch. Instead, she became a Street Corner franchisee. Including the initial $24,900 franchise fee, the total build-out for the store cost about $500,000 Carbone says. Street Corner, which has corporate offices in Poughkeepsie as well as Topeka, Kansas, charges a 4.95 percent royalty fee.
Downtown developments
Happenings such as the Resource Center for Independent Living’s recent move into the old Boston Store location in downtown are a good start, Carbone says. The downtown hospital project coming to fruition and progress on the city’s downtown revitalization initiative will be the keys to their success at The Westwood, the women say.
“Downtown needs to continue to aggressively move forward, “Carbone says. The building can stay afloat a year or two without any further downtown development, she says, but ultimately it needs downtown revitalization to survive.
“We need the hospital to bring jobs downtown,” Martin says. “We need more people living here to support the businesses.”
If the project is profitable, both women say they’d be willing to take on more rehabilitation projects. They are proud when they look at The Westwood, knowing that just three years ago that block of Genesee Street had Freeman & Foote Jewelers on one corner, Adirondack Bank on the other corner, and a bunch of vacant buildings in between.
“We’ve made a big difference in a short period of time,” Carbone contends.

Crew building 3-tenant shopping center in Salina
SALINA — The construction crew continues its work on a new 12,700-square-foot, three-tenant shopping center at 111-117 Elwood Davis Road in the town of Salina. The work continues on a property situated next to Burger King between Elwood Davis Road and 7th North Street. “Dollar Tree is going to be the main tenant,” says Carmen
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
SALINA — The construction crew continues its work on a new 12,700-square-foot, three-tenant shopping center at 111-117 Elwood Davis Road in the town of Salina.
The work continues on a property situated next to Burger King between Elwood Davis Road and 7th North Street.
“Dollar Tree is going to be the main tenant,” says Carmen Emmi, Jr., a partner at Emmi Commerce Park Development Co. “They’re taking up the majority of the space.” He spoke with CNYBJ on Aug. 6.
Dollar Tree will lease the space. Other potential tenants have indicated “a lot of interest” in the remaining space, Emmi adds. He says he cannot discuss any of the other potential tenants.
Emmi declines to disclose the project cost, citing ongoing negotiations with additional tenants.
The construction started back in May. The construction crew had to deal with many rainy days. “That put us behind almost three weeks on the project. We’re trying to make up that time now,” he notes.
The crew hopes to hand the building over to the retailer in mid-September. Chesapeake, Virginia–based Dollar Tree (NASDAQ: DLTR) will handle its own internal space preparation, Emmi adds.
“They came to us about a year-and-a-half ago,” says Emmi. “It took four or five months to negotiate through the lease.”
The construction crew still needs to finish the structure’s exterior, install some lighting, and pave the parking lot before Dollar Tree begins its internal work.
Lena DT, LLC, a sister company to Emmi Commerce Park Development Co., is the entity that owns the building. JW Construction Services Inc. of Syracuse is handling the construction work. Mussachio Architects of the Buffalo suburb of Williamsville designed the building.

Anchor QEA takes more space at Thruway Office Building
SALINA — Anchor QEA, LLC, an environmental and engineering-consulting firm, has recently enlarged its space at the Thruway Office Building in the town of Salina. Anchor QEA renewed and expanded its lease at the building at 290 Elwood Davis Road (just off 7th North Street) — now taking 18,167 square feet of professional space on
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
SALINA — Anchor QEA, LLC, an environmental and engineering-consulting firm, has recently enlarged its space at the Thruway Office Building in the town of Salina.
Anchor QEA renewed and expanded its lease at the building at 290 Elwood Davis Road (just off 7th North Street) — now taking 18,167 square feet of professional space on a long-term basis, according to a news release from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company.
John L. Clark and Cory LaDuke of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage
represented Anchor QEA and negotiated the new lease on its behalf.
The release didn’t disclose the square footage of Anchor QEA’s prior space at the Thruway Office Building. In February 2010, Anchor expanded into an 11,000-square-foot space in the building, more than double the size of its prior office space in that structure, according to a June 2010 CNYBJ story.
Anchor QEA says it provides a full range of science and engineering services for public agencies and private industry. Its services include engineering, environmental sciences, and planning & restoration, according to its website. Its projects have included work to aid environmental-cleanup efforts at Onondaga Lake and the Seneca River in the Central New York area, as well as the Hudson River in the Capital region.
Anchor QEA is headquartered in Seattle, Washington and has 26 offices across the country. In New York state, it has an office in Saratoga Springs in addition to the Salina location. The firm employs more than 360 people nationally, per its LinkedIn profile.

Regal remodel plan targets theatres at Destiny USA, other New York venues
SYRACUSE — The company that operates the movie theatres at Destiny USA has announced plans to remodel the venues. Regal on July 22 said the project is part of a $20 million effort at Pyramid’s three properties in New York state. A more specific cost breakdown for the Destiny USA project wasn’t available, Nikita Jankowski,
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
SYRACUSE — The company that operates the movie theatres at Destiny USA has announced plans to remodel the venues.
Regal on July 22 said the project is part of a $20 million effort at Pyramid’s three properties in New York state.
A more specific cost breakdown for the Destiny USA project wasn’t available, Nikita Jankowski, director of market at Destiny USA, told CNYBJ in an email message.
Besides Destiny USA, Syracuse–based Pyramid Management Group also operates the Walden Galleria near Buffalo and Crossgates in Albany, which are also scheduled for theatre remodels.
The Destiny USA work is part of a “significant, multi-center investment” to renovate multiple theatres across the Pyramid portfolio, Destiny USA said in a news release.
The more than $20 million in projects in the Pyramid theatres are part of Regal’s strategy to commit $1 billion over five years to build new cinemas and renovate existing ones, per the release.
The renovations include new seating, including a VIP section with luxury recliners at select locations; cafés with food and expanded drink offerings; and 4DX and ScreenX technology to “deliver an immersive cinema experience.”
Regal — a subsidiary of the London, England–based Cineworld Group — operates “one of the largest and most geographically diverse” theatre circuits in the U.S., which includes 7,210 screens in 550 theatres in 43 states along with American Samoa, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Saipan as of Feb. 28, per its website.

DEC wraps up $450,000 in upgrades to Mud Lock boat launch site
AURELIUS — The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) recently announced the completion of $450,000 in upgrades to the Mud Lock boat launch located at the north end of Cayuga Lake in the town of Aurelius in Cayuga County. Funding for the project came from Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s Adventure NY initiative to
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
AURELIUS — The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) recently announced the completion of $450,000 in upgrades to the Mud Lock boat launch located at the north end of Cayuga Lake in the town of Aurelius in Cayuga County.
Funding for the project came from Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s Adventure NY initiative to “connect more New Yorkers with nature,” according to a DEC news release.
The site upgrades will reduce congestion and improve the safety of boaters using the site to launch and retrieve boats, the department contends. Enhancements include:
• Construction of a new concrete launch ramp and floating boarding docks to allow launching under lower lake levels;
• Redesign and paving of the launch access and boat preparation area to seek to make launching safer and more efficient; and
• Paving and striping of the parking lot to accommodate 21 vehicles with trailers and seven single vehicles, including accessible parking.
“The north end of Cayuga Lake offers a diverse array of scenery, wildlife, and fish for outdoor enthusiasts to explore, observe, and pursue,” DEC Region 7 Director Matthew Marko said in the release. “The recent improvements to Mud Lock will provide a safer and more convenient launching experience for all visitors.”
Cayuga Lake is the second largest of the 11 Finger Lakes and offers an abundance of largemouth bass, chain pickerel, northern pike, crappie, yellow perch, sunfish, gar, and bowfin, per the DEC.
The launch will remain open late into the season for use by waterfowl hunters. The DEC operates the launch in conjunction with the Town of Aurelius and New York State Canal Corporation. It is located off Route 90 on River Road — three miles north of the village of Cayuga, and near the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge.
The Adventure NY initiative is supporting 75 projects over three years with “many more to come, ranging from improvements to youth camps and environmental education centers to new boat launches, duck blinds, and hiking trails,” the DEC said.

OCRRA appoints Bianchetti to board of directors
The Onondaga County Resource Recovery Agency (OCRRA) recently announced the appointment of Alberto Bianchetti of Baldwinsville to its board of directors. Bianchetti has more than 28 years of experience in the utility sector. He currently is the CNY regional director of customer and community management at National Grid. He also serves on the board of directors
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
The Onondaga County Resource Recovery Agency (OCRRA) recently announced the appointment of Alberto Bianchetti of Baldwinsville to its board of directors.
Bianchetti has more than 28 years of experience in the utility sector. He currently is the CNY regional director of customer and community management at National Grid.
He also serves on the board of directors of the Downtown Committee of Syracuse and the Manufacturers Association of Central New York.
OCRRA is a not-for-profit public benefit corporation created by the New York State Legislature in 1990 to deliver a solid-waste management and resource-recovery system to Onondaga County residents.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.