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Craft beer industry in New York state is booming
The craft beer industry in New York atate and Central New York is growing and making a big impact on area economies, thanks to consumer demand for craft brews like IPAs and state legislative and regulatory changes that have boosted sales. A new study funded by the New York State Brewers Association (NYSBA) found that […]
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The craft beer industry in New York atate and Central New York is growing and making a big impact on area economies, thanks to consumer demand for craft brews like IPAs and state legislative and regulatory changes that have boosted sales.
A new study funded by the New York State Brewers Association (NYSBA) found that the state’s craft beer industry generated $5.4 billion in economic impact in 2018. That’s up from roughly $2.5 billion in 2013, the last time the association did the study.
Paul Leone, executive director of Rochester–based NYSBA, says New York legislators have been receptive to making legislative changes that make it easier for craft brewers to grow.
The legislation included creating the farm brewery license in 2013, which allows craft brewers that use products grown in New York to operate similarly to farm wineries. The legislation allows farm brewers to open restaurants, conduct tastings of all farm produced beverages, and allows them to open five no-fee, off-site branch stores anywhere in the state, according to the governor’s office. Another law in 2016 expanded sales by the glass at breweries’ production facilities or off-site stores.
New York state now has 434 craft breweries, which is more than double from five to six years ago, according to the state. Leone says about one new craft brewery is licensed each week in the state.
“It is a business that feeds off itself. It does really well when multiple breweries open. The customer wants to try different craft beers. When you have multiple breweries in an area, that area becomes a destination,” he says. This is what has happened in Onondaga County, which now has 21 breweries.
The NYSBA report measured the number of jobs, wages paid to employees, and total output of New York’s 434 craft breweries. It documents the direct and ripple effects of the craft-beer industry in the Empire State and found the following:
• Total economic impact: $5.4B
o The combination of direct economic, supplier, and indirect economic impact.
• Direct economic impact: $3.5B
o The impact of the industry’s three segments: brewing, wholesaling, and retailing, in addition to the tourism impact of visitors to breweries and tap rooms.
• Supplier impact: $1.1B
o The production and sale of goods and services across a multitude of sectors, such as purchasing equipment and bottles, banking and marketing services, and government jobs for the regulation of craft beer-related businesses.
• Indirect economic impact: $771M
o The spending of wages earned by employees in the direct and supplier sectors, including dining at restaurants.
• Employment: 19,918 jobs
o The total number of jobs supported by direct, supplier, and indirect impact. New York’s craft-beer industry directly created 10,627 jobs, generating $722 million in wages.
• State and federal taxes: $545M
o The taxes paid by the businesses and their employees, as well as the excise and sales-tax revenues of in-state consumption.
• Licensed breweries: 434 breweries
o The number of craft breweries in New York state, which produced 2 million barrels of beer.
• Visitors: 48.6 million
o The number of customers served at New York state craft breweries, of which 8.9 million were tourists.
The New York State Brewers Association website (https://newyorkcraftbeer.com) details the economic impact by New York counties and by legislative district. Onondaga County has 21 breweries, 268 brewer jobs, 649 total jobs, $40.4 million total wages, and $144.4 million total output, per the study.
“I was really blown away by the results of this study,” Chris Ericson, president of NYSBA, said in an association news release. He is the owner of Lake Placid Pub & Brewery and Big Slide Brewery & Public House. “These numbers validate that New York state brewers have a substantial impact on the lives of residents. We are providing excellent careers for thousands of New Yorkers in every corner of the state,” he added.
The 2018 Economic Impact Study of the New York Craft Beer Industry was prepared by John Dunham & Associates (JDA). The NYSBA paid JDA $30,000 to produce the report, Leone says.
Founded in 2003, the New York State Brewers Association promotes New York state breweries. Leone is the first executive director of the trade group and was hired in 2013. He says his background is in TV production.
The membership fee to belong to NYSBA is about $250 per year, Leone says. Member dues are used to cover costs such as the study.

Bond, Schoeneck & King elects Eron and Galbato to management committee
Eron, a graduate of Cornell University (1982) and University of Chicago Law School (1987), is chair of Bond’s labor and employment law department. He exclusively represents private and public-sector management in labor relations, collective bargaining, employment law, and immigration matters. Eron supports his clients with employment-law counseling, training, and litigation-avoidance strategies in partnership with
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Eron, a graduate of Cornell University (1982) and University of Chicago Law School (1987), is chair of Bond’s labor and employment law department. He exclusively represents private and public-sector management in labor relations, collective bargaining, employment law, and immigration matters. Eron supports his clients with employment-law counseling, training, and litigation-avoidance strategies in partnership with their human-resource managers, executives, and general counsel, according to a Bond news release. He also works with employers on labor-agreement negotiations and contract grievance and arbitration proceedings. Eron is additionally an adjunct professor of labor law at Syracuse University’s College of Law.

Galbato, a graduate of Harvard University (1995) and Syracuse University College of Law (1998), is a litigation attorney who handles litigation throughout New York state courts and in federal courts across the country, including multidistrict and class-action litigation. She counsels and represents a variety of clients, including individuals, manufacturers, media companies, pharmaceutical companies, insurance firms, financial institutions, municipalities, not-for-profit organizations, small-business owners, school districts, and universities. Galbato is also co-deputy chair of Bond’s litigation department.

Oswego County nonprofits receive $270K in Shineman Foundation grants
OSWEGO — The Richard S. Shineman Foundation announced that it recently awarded 11 Central New York not-for-profit organizations serving Oswego County with $270,000 in awards in its first grant round of 2019. The awarded projects cover a wide range of focus areas, including community revitalization and preservation, education, health and human services, and arts and
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OSWEGO — The Richard S. Shineman Foundation announced that it recently awarded 11 Central New York not-for-profit organizations serving Oswego County with $270,000 in awards in its first grant round of 2019.
The awarded projects cover a wide range of focus areas, including community revitalization and preservation, education, health and human services, and arts and culture.
The funded projects will benefit Oswego County in a number of areas. The largest award, $150,000, was given to the Oswego Renaissance Association (ORA) representing the foundation’s continued commitment to assist the ORA in its sixth year of helping with reinvestment and improvement of city of Oswego neighborhoods, according to a Shineman Foundation news release.
Shineman provided other community revitalization grants to Fulton’s CNY Arts Center to assist with completion of final Phase 2 renovations, the Greater Oswego-Fulton Chamber of Commerce for revitalizing the Oswego and Fulton Farmers Markets, and the Sunrise Rotary Club of Oswego for its Leotta Park Pavilion project. Friends of Mexico Point Park also received a grant to help with the restoration of historic Casey’s Cottage.
In education, the Shineman Foundation awarded a grant to the H. Lee White Maritime Museum to assist with its multi-year capacity building project. The Children’s Board of Oswego received a grant for its Keepers of the Lighthouse event this July, which is a collaboration among numerous community organizations, the release stated.
The foundation also provided funding to Friends of Oswego County Hospice to promote its 30th anniversary of work in health and human services.
The Shineman Foundation also awarded arts and culture grants to the Art Association of Oswego for its 2019 Art Outreach program, the Oswego Players to build the capacity of its year-round Theater Arts Youth Academy, and to the Research Foundation for SUNY Art Department’s My Home Town project in collaboration with the city of Oswego and the Oswego City school district’s art teachers.

Bigham starts as CFO of Five Star Bank parent company
WARSAW, N.Y. — Financial Institutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISI), parent company of Five Star Bank, recently announced that it has named Justin K. Bigham executive VP, chief financial officer, and treasurer. Kevin B. Klotzbach, former company CFO and treasurer, was named executive VP, senior financial advisor, according to a Financial Institutions news release issued April 1.
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WARSAW, N.Y. — Financial Institutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISI), parent company of Five Star Bank, recently announced that it has named Justin K. Bigham executive VP, chief financial officer, and treasurer.
Kevin B. Klotzbach, former company CFO and treasurer, was named executive VP, senior financial advisor, according to a Financial Institutions news release issued April 1. Klotzbach will stay with the company through the end of 2019 to help with the transition. He has been with Financial Institutions since 2001, when he joined as treasurer. Klotzbach was named CFO and treasurer in 2013.
“Today’s announcement is the culmination of a successful succession plan for the key CFO role. In March of last year, we communicated Kevin’s intent to retire in 2019. Following a national search, Justin joined us in October and was named EVP and Deputy CFO, reporting to Kevin,” Martin K. Birmingham, president and CEO of Financial Institutions, explained in the release.
Bigham has led the company’s finance and treasury operations over the past five months and was involved in its 2019 planning process, Birmingham added.
Bigham joined Financial Institutions from HealthNow New York, where he served as director of financial planning and treasury. Before that, he spent six years in senior positions at First Niagara Bank in both finance and business-line roles, following seven years within the finance division at M&T Bank.
Bigham earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from St. Bonaventure University and is a certified public accountant.
Five Star Bank, based in Warsaw in Wyoming County, has more than 50 branches throughout Western and Central New York. Its CNY branches include offices in Auburn, Geneva (2), Seneca Falls, Elmira (2), and Horseheads.
MVCC’s Broadhurst named to NJCAA Foundation board of directors
UTICA — Gary Broadhurst, Mohawk Valley Community College’s associate dean of athletics (the college’s athletics director), was recently named to the newly formed National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Foundation board of directors. The foundation was formed to support the mission and initiatives of the NJCAA, the governing body of two-year college athletics based in
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UTICA — Gary Broadhurst, Mohawk Valley Community College’s associate dean of athletics (the college’s athletics director), was recently named to the newly formed National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Foundation board of directors.
The foundation was formed to support the mission and initiatives of the NJCAA, the governing body of two-year college athletics based in Charlotte, North Carolina. As the fundraising body for the association, the foundation seeks to enable additional opportunities for student-athletes and member colleges through scholarships, community service projects, and new initiatives.
The board of directors has 30 members who will serve a “vital role” in the financial support of the foundation and its long-term planning, oversight, and direction, according to a MVCC news release. Broadhurst is the only sitting athletics director selected to serve on the board.
In his 40th year at MVCC, Broadhurst directs its intercollegiate athletics programs. Under his leadership, the Hawks have captured 24 NJCAA national championships while finishing second another 18 times.
Broadhurst has received numerous awards during his career, including winning four “athletics director of the year” honors.
New York milk production rises nearly 3 percent in February
New York dairy farmers produced 1.16 billion pounds of milk in February, up 2.8 percent from 1.128 billion pounds in the year-ago period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported. Production per cow in the state averaged 1,850 pounds in February, up 2.5 percent from 1,805 pounds a year prior. The number of milk
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New York dairy farmers produced 1.16 billion pounds of milk in February, up 2.8 percent from 1.128 billion pounds in the year-ago period, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported.
Production per cow in the state averaged 1,850 pounds in February, up 2.5 percent from 1,805 pounds a year prior.
The number of milk cows on farms in New York state totaled 627,000 head in February, up from 625,000 head in February 2018, NASS reported.
New York dairy farmers received an average milk price of $17.70 per hundredweight in February, up 20 cents from January and up $2.10 from February 2018.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, dairy farms produced 805 million pounds of milk in February, down 6 percent from 856 million pounds a year earlier, according to the USDA.
In assessing America, should we focus on the mud or the stars?
Was America ever great? Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder poses the question: “Exactly when did you think America was great?” He competes with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, as Cuomo once told us: “We’re not going to make America great again. It was never that great.” Let’s review that question. But first, let’s admit
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Was America ever great?
Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder poses the question: “Exactly when did you think America was great?”
He competes with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, as Cuomo once told us: “We’re not going to make America great again. It was never that great.”
Let’s review that question. But first, let’s admit these politicians are simply trying to dilute the impact of “Make America Great Again” (MAGA), because President Trump wields that slogan at the moment (Presidents Clinton and Reagan did before.)
Holder tells us Trump’s supporters yearn for the 1800s — when African-Americans and women could not own property or vote. That seems a stretch to me. But, hey, you can say anything in politics.
Cuomo says MAGA ignores the pain people endured in our past. He points to the eras of slavery, discrimination, segregation, and sexism. He is right that these were painful times for millions.
But all great questions have at least two sides. Was America great when it allowed slavery? Of course not. Was it great when it ended it? And then engaged in civil war over the issue? Yes.
Was America great when it allowed decades of vicious discrimination against African-Americans. Of course not. Was it great when it tackled the discrimination head on? When it did battle to end segregation? When it forged civil rights legislation? Yes, that seems like a period of greatness for the country.
Was America up to great things when Washington attacked the devastation of the Great Depression? When government threw measure after measure against this monster? Yes, I think it was a great and noble effort.
Was the country great when it created our Social Security system? It seems so to me.
Was America great when it welcomed millions of immigrants over many years? When it spent millions to help them assimilate?
Was America great when it sent its young men and women to Europe to help conquer the Nazis? To free the French, Dutch, Belgians? To rescue the British from Hitler’s threats? We did not have to do this. That we did was in many ways great.
Was America great to create the G.I. Bill — to reward its soldiers and their families? Was it great to help rescue post-war Europeans from despair with the Marshall Plan?
Was it a great epoch in our history to leave soldiers in Europe after WWII? To protect Europeans from invasion by the ravenous USSR?
Was America great to lead the way in forming the UN? And NATO? Was it great to try to keep Cuba from poisoning the Caribbean and Latin America with more communism? Many feel it was. Count me among them.
Was it great of America to wage the Cold War against the oppression of international communism? I hate to imagine how many people would live under the despicable rule of communists today. Had America not been willing to fight them on various fronts.
Was America great to help Israel from its founding to today? Given the world’s history of butchering Jews, I would say yes. This is a morally great effort.
Was America ever great? Is the proverbial glass half-empty or half-full? What lenses are best to peer through, to view this country’s history? Which end of the telescope should we press our eye to? To evaluate America?
Dale Carnegie wrote “Two men looked out from prison bars. One saw the mud, the other saw stars.”
They are both out there. We can be aware of both but favor the stars. Or we can focus most of our attention on the mud.
It is your choice. As for me, I’ve always loved stars.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home in upstate New York. Contact him at tomasinmorgan@yahoo.com, read more of his writing at tomasinmorgan.com, or find him on Facebook.
2019-20 Budget Prioritizes New York City Interests
Sometimes being an elected official can be challenging because you are forced to make difficult decisions. At times, I have had to vote on legislation that if enacted would have both a positive and negative effect on my district and the constituents I represent. In the past, voting on the state budget often created this
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Sometimes being an elected official can be challenging because you are forced to make difficult decisions. At times, I have had to vote on legislation that if enacted would have both a positive and negative effect on my district and the constituents I represent. In the past, voting on the state budget often created this dilemma because different policies frequently were included in a single budget bill. For example, school-aid increases were often placed in a revenue bill that increased taxes. This year’s state budget, however, created no such dilemma for me. It was, for the most part, awful and therefore an easy no vote.
The $175 billion state budget that was passed early in the morning of April 1 could appropriately be described as the NYC/Cuomo budget because all of the major initiatives contained in the budget were the priorities of Gov. Andrew Cuomo and New York City Democrats. Not only did it contain questionable policy initiatives, this year’s budget also continues New York’s long tradition of taxing and spending — the same policy that has caused millions of people to move out of our state over the last decade. On top of all that, there was little to nothing in the budget for upstate New York.
Gov. Cuomo calls this year’s budget the most liberal budget he’s done. Few, with the exception of the recently-elected self-described Socialist, would disagree. First, this budget includes $1.2 billion in taxes that will increase to $4.4 billion by 2020. These taxes are broad-based and include additional sales tax on internet sales, an increase of the auto-rental tax, a tax on vapor products, and the extension of the millionaire’s tax among others. While these taxes are substantial, they pale in comparison to the fees that will be imposed to bail-out the NYC transportation authority, a subsidiary of the MTA. While not necessarily directly affecting Upstate, the governor successfully advocated for NYC congestion pricing in the budget which would impose a toll on any person who drives into Manhattan below 61st Street. While the amount of the fee is currently unknown, the congestion pricing plan will need to raise enough revenue to fund $15 billion for MTA capital projects.
The budget also included other policies that have been championed by Cuomo and NYC liberals such as: expanding the state’s tuition assistance program, otherwise known as TAP, to illegal immigrants; implementing a ban on single-use plastic bags and allowing counties and cities to opt into a 5-cent fee on paper bags; laying the groundwork for public campaign financing; and, mandating that all workers get three hours of paid time off to vote on Election Day. The Governor and his allies in the legislature also included a number of so-called criminal-justice reforms in this year’s budget which might prove the most dangerous of all the policies included in this year’s budget.
While this budget will be remembered for what is in it, we also must recognize what was left out — and unfortunately what was left out were policy priorities for upstate New York. This year’s budget cut Aid and Incentives for Municipalities by $59 million and instead mandated counties to restore that funding; provides no year-to-year library aid increase; offers no broad-based mandate relief; provides no base increase to the Consolidated Highway Improvement Program and also cuts the Extreme Winter Recovery program by $65 million; provides no tax cuts for small businesses; and fails to offer any additional oversight of our state economic-development programs.
Opening the budget process up so that lawmakers from Upstate could have made their case for these programs may have resulted in a better budget for Upstate but the 3-people-in-a-room rule prevailed and all 3 had NYC interests in mind. My colleagues and I will continue to press back and remind them that there are more than 8 million New Yorkers north and west of Westchester County and that we deserve better.
William (Will) A. Barclay is the Republican representative of the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. Contact him at barclaw@assembly.state.ny.us or (315) 598-5185.
CRAIG POLHAMUS has joined Zausmer-Frisch, Scruton & Aggarwal. He previously operated his own firm, Craig Polhamus Architect for 25 years and has been involved with more than 500 projects throughout the Central New York area. In his new role, Polhamus will contribute his experience in commercial design and computer visualization services.
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CRAIG POLHAMUS has joined Zausmer-Frisch, Scruton & Aggarwal. He previously operated his own firm, Craig Polhamus Architect for 25 years and has been involved with more than 500 projects throughout the Central New York area. In his new role, Polhamus will contribute his experience in commercial design and computer visualization services.
TRICIA BUSHEE has been promoted to Mohawk Valley territory manager for NBT Bank. Bushee joined NBT in 2017 as branch manager of the bank’s New Hartford office. She has more than a decade of banking experience. The Mohawk Valley territory that she will manage includes branches in Oneida, Herkimer, and Madison counties.
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TRICIA BUSHEE has been promoted to Mohawk Valley territory manager for NBT Bank. Bushee joined NBT in 2017 as branch manager of the bank’s New Hartford office. She has more than a decade of banking experience. The Mohawk Valley territory that she will manage includes branches in Oneida, Herkimer, and Madison counties.
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