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New York egg production rises nearly 3 percent in April
New York farms produced 133.2 million eggs in April, up almost 3 percent from 129.5 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 nearly 5.37 million in April, down slightly from just over 5.37 million in the year-earlier month. April egg […]
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New York farms produced 133.2 million eggs in April, up almost 3 percent from 129.5 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 nearly 5.37 million in April, down slightly from just over 5.37 million in the year-earlier month. April egg production per 100 layers was 2,481 eggs, up nearly 3 percent from 2,410 eggs in April 2018.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, farmers produced 668.2 million eggs during April, down more than 3 percent from 691.6 million eggs a year prior.

Nearly $5 million solar project powers Anheuser-Busch brewery
VAN BUREN — A nearly $5 million solar project in the town of Van Buren is now providing energy for the nearby Anheuser-Busch brewery. Located six miles from the company’s brewery in the town of Lysander, the 2.76 megawatt array will produce more than 3 million kilowatt-hours annually. It is the equivalent of providing enough
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VAN BUREN — A nearly $5 million solar project in the town of Van Buren is now providing energy for the nearby Anheuser-Busch brewery.
Located six miles from the company’s brewery in the town of Lysander, the 2.76 megawatt array will produce more than 3 million kilowatt-hours annually.
It is the equivalent of providing enough energy to brew 3 million cases of beverages annually, according to the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), through the NY-Sun program, provided over $1.1 million in support for the array. It includes more than 8,300 solar panels, making it Anheuser-Busch’s largest off-site installation to date in the U.S., Cuomo’s office said.
The solar array is owned and operated by Boulder, Colorado–based AES Distributed Energy, Inc. and was developed to support Anheuser-Busch’s goal to purchase 100 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2025.
AES has also worked on solar projects for St. Lawrence University in Canton and for the City of Rochester, per the firm’s website.
Anheuser-Busch says it already secures 50 percent of its purchased electricity from wind power, “which is more than the amount of electricity required to brew Budweiser beer in the U.S. each year.”
“This significant solar project by Anheuser-Busch and AES Distributed Energy will use renewable energy sources and help reduce greenhouse-gas emissions,” Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a news release. “The investment, as part of NY-Sun, continues our efforts to attract and spur cutting-edge projects that save consumers money and advances New York’s nation-leading clean energy goals. The solar facility helps to protect the environment, creating job opportunities and growing the economy of Central New York.”
Hochul attended the May 15 event in Van Buren to announce the project’s completion and cut the ribbon.
The project complements “Central New York Rising,” the region’s strategy to generate economic growth and community development, per the release. It’s also part of Cuomo’s “Green New Deal,” which calls for 70 percent of the state’s electricity to come from renewable sources by 2030 and 6,000 megawatts of solar by 2025.
NY-Sun is Cuomo’s $1 billion initiative to advance the scale-up of solar and move the state closer to having a “sustainable, self-sufficient” solar industry. Since 2011, “solar in New York has increased more than 1,500 percent and leveraged nearly $3.5 billion in private investments,” Cuomo’s office said. These investments have supported nearly 12,000 people working in solar jobs across state.
Barton & Loguidice opens new Maryland office
Hires new senior managing engineer After the lease expired on its office in Lanham, Maryland, Salina–based engineering firm Barton & Loguidice, D.P.C. (B&L) is ready to begin operations in a new office in Annapolis, Maryland. At the same time, B&L has hired a new senior managing engineer for the office. Crews have been renovating the 2,600-square-foot
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Hires new senior managing engineer
After the lease expired on its office in Lanham, Maryland, Salina–based engineering firm Barton & Loguidice, D.P.C. (B&L) is ready to begin operations in a new office in Annapolis, Maryland.
At the same time, B&L has hired a new senior managing engineer for the office.
Crews have been renovating the 2,600-square-foot office, and B&L employees were scheduled to move in June 1, Jill Richmond, marketing communications manager at Barton & Loguidice, said in an email response to a CNYBJ inquiry.
With the Annapolis location, B&L operates two offices in Maryland. The company on March 28 announced it had acquired Eldersburg, Maryland–based Advanced Land and Water, Inc. (ALWI), which is located near Baltimore.
Barton & Loguidice is an engineering, planning, environmental, and landscape architecture firm that employs more than 270 people throughout the Northeast in offices in New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland.
New hire
The newly hired senior managing engineer, David Kerr, joined the firm in February, per Richmond’s email response. He is one of three employees in the Annapolis office and B&L plans to do additional hiring in that office, Richmond said.
Kerr joins the firm’s water/wastewater practice area, B&L said. He has 21 years of experience in hydraulic modeling, master planning, asset management, design, construction management, mentoring and business-development skills based on his work for firms in Maryland and New York.
He previously worked as an infrastructure-modeling manager, a role in which he managed and supported water and sewer hydraulic-modeling projects in the U.S. and Canada, including training for staff and clients.
Additionally, he has managed small and large projects in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions related to water distribution and sewer-collection systems, B&L said.
Kerr earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in civil engineering from Clarkson University.

State provides $28M to start transmission upgrade project in Mohawk Valley
Gov. Andrew Cuomo on May 21 announced $28 million in funding to begin work on a “major” new transmission upgrade project in the Mohawk Valley and Capital Region. The project stems from a proposal submitted by New York City–based LS Power Grid New York and the New York Power Authority to “improve reliability and provide better
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Gov. Andrew Cuomo on May 21 announced $28 million in funding to begin work on a “major” new transmission upgrade project in the Mohawk Valley and Capital Region.
The project stems from a proposal submitted by New York City–based LS Power Grid New York and the New York Power Authority to “improve reliability and provide better access” to renewable energy through a “key corridor” along New York’s transmission system, Cuomo’s office said in a news release.
NYPA’s board of trustees awarded its share of the initial funding for the project at its May 21 meeting. NYPA has a minority interest in the effort.
“These transmission upgrades are a vital piece of New York’s clean-energy future focused on a secure, clean and reliable energy infrastructure,” Cuomo said. “Climate change requires a coordinated approach toward achieving our clean energy goals and this investment will help keep our energy system secure for years to come.”
LS Power is planning to submit an application to construct the project to the New York Public Service Commission (PSC) in the second half of 2019.
Following a “full” PSC review and authorization — including numerous opportunities for additional public participation — the state expects the rebuilt transmission lines will be in service by the end of 2023.
Founded in 1990, LS Power is an employee-owned, independent power company with offices in New York, New Jersey, Missouri, California, and Texas. The firm describes itself as a “developer, owner, operator and investor in power generation and electric transmission infrastructure throughout the United States.”
The project
It’s known as LS Power Grid New York’s Marcy to New Scotland transmission upgrade project.
NYISO on April 8 selected the project in response to a “competitive solicitation process,” calling for transmission projects along this corridor that would “relieve transmission congestion and facilitate greater statewide access to renewable energy,” Cuomo’s office said.
“The NYPA board of trustees’ action is another step forward in realizing New York’s clean energy highway,” Gil Quiniones, president and CEO of NYPA, said in Cuomo’s release. “This transmission project is part of several other vital transmission upgrades taking place across New York State. Together, these projects will help ensure that energy from renewable-rich areas of Western and Northern New York will have a reliable path to consumers and help meet New York State’s aggressive clean-energy goals.”
The project involves upgrades along about 100 miles of transmission lines and the construction of two new substations between NYPA’s central transmission hub in Marcy and New Scotland in Albany County.
The project seeks to use existing electric-transmission corridors. Replacing “aging and outdated” transmission towers with the latest technologies will enable “more efficient energy flow while reducing the number of transmission structures,” the state said.
Some of the targeted transmission towers are “more than 60 years old,” Cuomo’s office noted.
The announced funding will cover NYPA’s share of the costs of permitting, licensing, engineering, property acquisition, and interconnection agreements.

Crews start work on SUNY’s first zero-net, carbon-certified residence hall
MARCY — Work has started on an upcoming residence hall at the Utica campus of SUNY Polytechnic Institute (SUNY Poly), a project that the state describes as the system’s first “zero-net, carbon-certified” residence hall. SUNY is working with the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY) on construction of the $33.5 million, 257-bed
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MARCY — Work has started on an upcoming residence hall at the Utica campus of SUNY Polytechnic Institute (SUNY Poly), a project that the state describes as the system’s first “zero-net, carbon-certified” residence hall.
SUNY is working with the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY) on construction of the $33.5 million, 257-bed residence hall project, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on May 9.
The state expects it will be available for student living by August 2020.
DASNY will contract with Syracuse–based Hueber-Breuer Construction Co. Inc. and use the design-build method. Both design and construction services are provided through a single contract to “expedite project delivery and provide savings,” Cuomo’s office said.
The state is financing the residence hall through DASNY’s SUNY dormitory facilities program, which issues low-cost, tax-exempt bonds supported by student residence-hall fees, per the release.
The building’s design will “revolve around sustainability and energy efficiency to save energy and improve the mental and physical health of its residents.”
The residence hall will include hotel-style student rooms with adjacent lounges, kitchens, study and laundry areas, as well as a multi-purpose room, game room and a bike storage area. It will also include many outdoor green spaces such as a courtyard and trellised area with outdoor grills, and incorporate a bioretention/rain garden to detain storm water runoff and remove contaminants from the water. In addition, the residence hall will include connections to a future photovoltaic/solar power system.
Energy-efficient design
Crews will build the residence hall as “zero-net, carbon certified,” meaning that “in addition to exceeding existing energy codes, the infrastructure to add future on-site renewable energy production systems will be in place.”
Once these systems are installed, the building will use “equal to or less than” the energy it can annually produce on-site through renewable resources, the state says.
The design-build team will pursue both zero energy building (ZEB) certification and zero carbon certification through the Seattle, Washington–based International Living Future Institute (ILFI). The building will be “ultra-energy efficient” with infrastructure and connections so that crews can install on-site renewable-energy systems in the future to secure ILFI’s ZEB certification.
The project coincides with SUNY Chancellor Kristina Johnson’s plan to “retrofit and renovate” SUNY’s 64-campus system to produce “greater energy savings.” The plan includes SUNY sourcing 100 percent of its electricity from zero-carbon sources, including renewables and energy storage. It required the design of all new SUNY buildings to produce zero-net carbon emissions.
By making the switch at SUNY’s 2,346 buildings, the state expects to reduce its carbon footprint by more than 400,000 tons of carbon dioxide equivalents per year.
SUNY’s 2,346 buildings represent 40 percent of the building infrastructure in New York, Cuomo’s office said.
5 Health Benefits of Our Green Spaces
Studies show that green space and landscaping contribute to health, happiness, and intellect. It’s natural to long for spring when it’s cold outside. But did you know there’s a good reason why you may pine for green? Living landscapes are an important part of the outdoor lifestyle that Americans enjoy, but the benefits go beyond
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Studies show that green space and landscaping contribute to health, happiness, and intellect.
It’s natural to long for spring when it’s cold outside. But did you know there’s a good reason why you may pine for green? Living landscapes are an important part of the outdoor lifestyle that Americans enjoy, but the benefits go beyond the barbeque and backyard baseball. Green spaces are necessary for your health.
The advantages of grass and landscaping surpass the usual physical benefits that result from outdoor activity. Numerous studies have found that people who spend more time outside or are exposed to living landscapes are happier, healthier, and smarter.
Researchers have studied the impact of nature on human well-being for years, but recent studies have found a more direct correlation between human health, particularly related to stress, and the importance of people’s access to nature and managed landscapes.
Getting dirty is actually good for you. Soil is the new Prozac, according to Dr. Christopher Lowry, a neuroscientist at the University of Bristol in England. Mycobacterium vaccae in soil mirrors the effect on neurons that Prozac provides. The bacterium stimulates serotonin production, which explains why people who spend time gardening and have direct contact with soil feel more relaxed and happier.
Children who are raised on farms in a “dirtier” environment than an urban setting not only have a stronger immune system but are also better able to manage social stress, according to the National Academy of Sciences.
Living near living landscapes can improve your mental health. Researchers in England found that people moving to greener areas experienced an immediate improvement in mental health that was sustained for at least three years after they moved. The study also showed that people relocating to a more developed area suffered a drop in mental health.
Greening of vacant urban areas in Philadelphia reduced feelings of depression by 41.5 percent and reduced poor mental health by 62.8 percent for those living near the vacant lots, according to a study by a research team.
Green spaces can make you healthier, too. People who live within a half mile of green space (such parks, public gardens, and greenways) were found to have a lower incidence of 15 diseases by Dutch researchers — including depression, anxiety, heart disease, diabetes, asthma and migraines.
A 2015 study found that people living on streets with more trees had a boost in heart and metabolic health. Studies show that tasks conducted under the calming influence of nature are performed better and with greater accuracy, yielding a higher-quality result. Spending time in gardens, for instance, can improve memory performance and attention span by 20 percent.
Living landscapes make you smarter. Children gain attention and working memory benefits when they are exposed to greenery, says a study led by Payam Dadvand of the Centre for Research in Environmental Epidemiology in Barcelona, Spain. In addition, exposure to natural settings may be widely effective in reducing attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms in children.
This applies to adults as well. Research has also shown that being around plants helps you concentrate better at home and at work. Charlie Hall, professor and Ellison Chair in international floriculture at Texas A&M University, believes that spending time in gardens can improve attention span and memory performance by as much as 20 percent.
A National Institutes of Health study found that adults demonstrate significant cognitive gains after going on a nature walk. In addition, a Stanford University study found that walking in nature, rather than a concrete-oriented, urban environment, resulted in decreased anxiety, rumination, and negative affect, and produced cognitive benefits, such as increased working-memory performance.
Living landscapes help you heal faster. Multiple studies have discovered that plants in hospital recovery rooms or views of aesthetically pleasing gardens help patients heal up to one day faster than those who are in more sterile or austere environments.
Physicians are now prescribing time outdoors for some patients, according to recent reports. Park Rx America is a nonprofit with a mission to encourage physicians to prescribe doses of nature.
All of these benefits reinforce the importance of maintaining our yards, parks, and other community green spaces. Trees, shrubs, grass, and flowering plants are integral to human health. Not only do they provide a place for kids and pets to play, they directly contribute to our mental and physical well-being.
Kris Kiser is president and CEO of the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute (OPEI), a trade group for power equipment, small engine, and UTV, golf car, and personal transport vehicle manufacturers and suppliers. This viewpoint is drawn from a news release the organization issued. More information can be found at www.SaveLivingLandscapes.com
Applications for State Regional Council Funding Now Open
Our Central New York region has had remarkable success through the Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) process, receiving the most funding to date out of all 10 council regions. This funding has advanced hundreds of projects and allowed businesses in our community to expand and create thousands of new jobs. Again this year, more than
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Our Central New York region has had remarkable success through the Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) process, receiving the most funding to date out of all 10 council regions. This funding has advanced hundreds of projects and allowed businesses in our community to expand and create thousands of new jobs.
Again this year, more than $750 million in in state economic-development resources will be distributed in Round IX of the REDC awards. This includes up to $150 million in capital grants and $75 million in Excelsior Tax Credits for projects statewide identified as regional priorities. Additionally, more than $525 million from state agency programs will be awarded through the CFA process.
I strongly encourage those considering an expansion project to review the application and funding opportunities and submit a Consolidated Funding Application (CFA) (https://apps.cio.ny.gov/apps/cfa/) by the July 26 deadline. You can also attend an upcoming informational workshop on June 21 in Auburn to learn more (https://regionalcouncils.ny.gov/central-new-york/events/central-new-york-cfa-workshop-auburn-jun-21-2019).
In this round, the CNY REDC will also develop strategies that: support community investment in placemaking and downtown revitalization; advance the state’s Workforce Development Initiative; identify and develop childcare solutions in collaboration with local businesses and communities; and develop an economic and environmental justice strategy for the region.
Additionally, one downtown in each of the state’s 10 regions will be awarded $10 million in the fourth round of the Downtown Revitalization Initiative (DRI), to execute downtown strategic investment plans that support the community’s vision for revitalization. Cortland, Oswego, and Auburn’s downtowns were prior DRI recipients.
I look forward to continuing the progress we have started and supporting CNY REDC co-chairs Randy Wolken, president and CEO of the Manufacturers Association of Central New York; and Deborah Stanley, president of SUNY Oswego, in this important work. Should you have any questions about the application process, please contact Andrew Fish, CenterState CEO’s senior VP of business development at afish@centerstateceo.com.
Robert M. (Rob) Simpson is president and CEO of CenterState CEO, the primary economic-development organization for Central New York. This viewpoint is drawn and edited from the “CEO Focus” email newsletter that the organization sent to members on May 23.

Average salaries higher at “fast-growing” Upstate companies, survey finds
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — “Fast-growing” companies across upstate New York have average salaries that are up to 60 percent higher than the average salary in a
College Admissions Scandal is More Than Just Crisis of Confidence
Across Central New York, thousands of graduating high-school seniors will soon begin preparing for the next chapter of their lives as incoming members of the college class of 2023. They enter a higher-education system that has been shaken to its core. Like peeling the layers of an onion, Los Angeles federal prosecutors in May announced
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Across Central New York, thousands of graduating high-school seniors will soon begin preparing for the next chapter of their lives as incoming members of the college class of 2023. They enter a higher-education system that has been shaken to its core.
Like peeling the layers of an onion, Los Angeles federal prosecutors in May announced criminal charges against a new set of parents for college-admissions fraud. This is in addition to the 33 parents who were charged in March for participating in a multimillion-dollar bribery scheme run by a Southern California–based consultant.
The origins of this ethical dilemma in college admissions have been evident for some time — they just weren’t apparent to everyone. Thanks to a few entitled celebrities and “Entertainment Tonight,” it’s on the forefront of everyone’s mind now. For colleges and universities, this is more than just a crisis of confidence, it’s a case for better managing risk.
According to Moody’s, at least 25 percent of private colleges are now running deficits. Even in a good economy, public college expenses generally outpace tuition revenue. And, to make matters worse, demographics are beginning to work against traditional colleges and universities. The pool of 18-year-olds in the Northeast continues to decline. Education Drive reported that 20 nonprofit public and private colleges closed from 2016–17 to 2017–18.
For many institutions, this is an unsustainable business model as they struggle to bring in enough revenue from a mixture of tuition, government funding, endowment returns, and donations. Reduced revenues give rise to staff consolidations and staff reductions. Less training happens. Less process is followed. Less oversight occurs. Yet, the pressure to raise money and fulfill enrollment quotas remains. This is where the crisis of confidence begins, and risk escalates.
As evidenced by the recent scandal, well-endowed private schools are not immune to having compromised admissions standards either. Their involvement perpetuates a related ethical dilemma — that elite colleges favor the elite. A recent USA Today/Suffolk University poll found that by more than three to one, those surveyed say college admissions favor the wealthy and well-connected in an unfair way. Fewer than one in five Americans say the admissions process is generally fair.
Colleges and universities have been known to give preference to legacy students. In these challenging times, it’s difficult for an institution to say no to a seven-figure gift, even if it is tied to the unspoken promise of an education for the offspring of the philanthropist. Colleges and universities, historically revered, have become a target of public disillusionment over decisions made with finances in mind.
Should we just accept this denigrated image of higher education? Most colleges and universities would say that their admission policies are fair, and that they strictly adhere to their approval processes. Now that the lurid details of the current admissions scandal have made it to grocery aisle tabloids, a skeptical public says otherwise.
To establish greater integrity in higher-education admissions, institutions must recommit to managing risk in four keys areas: better process, adherence to training, heightened oversight and accountability, and enhanced transparency.
Better process
Conducting an independent audit of current admissions policies and procedures, which includes staff interviews, can help identify opportunities to improve current processes and locate any gaps. Having a documented third-party review is also something credible that you can point to when prospective students, parents, the community, and your board ask questions about your admission processes. Not only will this provide peace of mind, but this is also a good way to mitigate risk.
Adherence to training
A recurring exercise to review training curriculum can assure that staff-development tools are the most up-to-date. It’s also important to review the training and continuing-education credentials of staff, including new hires. Sometimes, between new hires, staff transfers and staffing reductions, training cycles are missed by critical employees. Also, are requirements for ethics training in place? Some institutions are moving to annual ethics certification for all employees.
Heightened oversight and accountability
Decision makers in the admissions and fund-development offices should be required to complete conflict-of-interest statements. In addition, every college and university should have a whistleblower policy. Some institutions even have a hotline that encourages internal feedback.
Enhanced transparency
Colleges and universities should be completely upfront about their efforts to reduce exposure to fraud in their admissions processes. Given the notoriety of the current scandals and the high-profile nature of the institutions involved, having responsible and ethical admissions practices is expected behavior. This activity should be documented on school websites, annual reports, board presentations, brochures, and other marketing materials.
Regardless of what happens with the scandal, colleges and universities should see this as an opportunity to be proactive. It’s a chance to evaluate their risk and put the right controls in place so they can stand up and say, “This is what we do to maintain integrity in our admissions process.” That way, they’ll be able to answer the most important question before it is asked.
Jean Close, CPA, is a partner in The Bonadio Group’s Healthcare/Tax Exempt Division, specializing in providing financial audit, benchmarking, finance, and risk management consulting services to higher-education institutions.
Friends of the Rosamond Gifford Zoo names new board members
SYRACUSE — The Friends of the Rosamond Gifford Zoo has added Terry Hopkins of C&S Engineers, Kathy O’Connell of Radiant Abilities, and leadership coach Michael Sgro to its board of directors. The Friends of the Zoo is a nonprofit organization that supports the zoo and is overseen by a volunteer board whose members serve three-year
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SYRACUSE — The Friends of the Rosamond Gifford Zoo has added Terry Hopkins of C&S Engineers, Kathy O’Connell of Radiant Abilities, and leadership coach Michael Sgro to its board of directors.
The Friends of the Zoo is a nonprofit organization that supports the zoo and is overseen by a volunteer board whose members serve three-year terms.
Friends of the Zoo President and CEO Janet Agostini introduced the new board members at the Friends Annual Meeting in May.
Hopkins, community relations manager at C&S Engineers, has been with the firm since 1987. She holds a bachelor’s degree in business from SUNY College at Buffalo and also serves on the boards of Partners for Education, Business Inc., and the CNY Engineering Expo.
O’Connell is a mental-health counselor and director of Radiant Abilities. She has degrees from Le Moyne College and Syracuse University in rehabilitation counseling and inclusive education.
Sgro, certified professional coach, works with professionals around the country to improve their leadership skills, effectiveness, career readiness, and digital savvy. He holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Le Moyne College and is an active participant in the historic downtown Syracuse community.
The Friends also thanked outgoing board member Renee Lane, director of public relations and corporate communications at C&S Companies, for her six years of service on the board.
Friends of the Zoo supports the zoo by providing educational programs for zoo visitors and the community, operating the zoo’s Jungle Café and The Curious Cub Gift Shop, as well as the zoo’s special event venue, Catering at the Zoo. It also provides marketing, fundraising, and development activities for the zoo.
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