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FuzeHub awards Clarkson University, Alfred University $50K grants for work with manufacturing firms
ALBANY, N.Y. — Clarkson University and Alfred University will use separate $50,000 grants for their work with manufacturing firms. FuzeHub, an Albany–based nonprofit, awarded the

NUAIR Alliance, European firm partner on drone-research work
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Research Alliance (NUAIR Alliance) and Griffiss International Airport on Tuesday announced a new partnership with Unifly as

KeyBank donates $100K to Jubilee Homes’ Build to Work program
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — KeyBank (NYSE: KEY) has donated $100,000 to Jubilee Homes of Syracuse Inc.’s (JHS) Build to Work program. The funding from the KeyBank

Dannible & McKee announces new partners
Brian J. Potter has been promoted to tax partner. He started with the firm in 2006, has experience in all areas of income taxation, and
Delta Engineers to open new office in Schenectady
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. — Delta Engineers, Architects and Land Surveyors, DPC announced that it plans to open a new office at Mohawk Harbor in Schenectady. Mohawk

Schumer seeks federal inspection of Syracuse elevated rail line, more inspectors in U.S.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) on Monday said the federal government should increase the number of federal railroad bridge-safety specialists

Dannible & McKee names Reilly new managing partner
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Dannible & McKee, LLP announced that Michael J. Reilly has been elected as the firm’s new managing partner. Reilly, whose term began
Binghamton University, partners receive $30M NIST grant
VESTAL — The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has awarded a five-year, $30 million grant to Binghamton University, Johns Hopkins University, and Morgan State University. The grant will be a chance for Binghamton University to partner with NIST, a non-regulatory agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the two other universities involved
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VESTAL — The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has awarded a five-year, $30 million grant to Binghamton University, Johns Hopkins University, and Morgan State University.
The grant will be a chance for Binghamton University to partner with NIST, a non-regulatory agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the two other universities involved to develop standards for regenerative medicine and biomaterial manufacturing.
The professional research experience program (PREP) grant award will allow Binghamton University to send students, postdoctoral fellows, and faculty to train at NIST, the university announced Aug. 9. Johns Hopkins University is the lead institution on the grant, Binghamton University said.
Every year for the next five years, Binghamton University’s department of biomedical engineering will be able to send faculty, postdoctoral fellows, graduate, and undergraduate students to NIST to conduct collaborative research in standard development.
“This exciting program will enable Binghamton students, postdocs and faculty researchers to gain vital laboratory experience and play a role in advancing the field of biomedical engineering,” Bahgat Sammakia, VP for research at Binghamton University, said in a release. “Collaboration is a vital part of any researcher’s career, and it’s fantastic to see a program that puts our students and scholars in a position to work on projects of national significance.”
Professor Kaiming Ye from the school’s biomedical-engineering department is Binghamton University’s principal investigator on the initiative. Ye will be working with a $5 million portion of the NIST grant.
Ye is also the director of Binghamton University’s Center of Biomanufacturing for Regenerative Medicine (CBRM).
“This program is a natural fit for what we’ve been doing in CBRM,” said Ye. “The center was established to identify and define standards for cell biomanufacturing and tissue biofabrication, and has been working with the scientists at Biosystems and Biomaterials Division of NIST to accomplish this.”
The three universities will also help the researchers who are trained through the grant to connect with each other in order to further advance the field.
“The grant will provide a learning opportunity, a way to network with fellow researchers and a chance to better define the standards that all researchers will use in regenerative medicine and biomaterial manufacturing. It’s important that Binghamton University gets to be a part of that,” Ye said.
Broome County hotel occupancy dips in June, after rising for 13 months
BINGHAMTON — Hotels in Broome County were ever so slightly less full in June compared to a year ago, breaking a long string of monthly occupancy increases, according to a recent report. The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county fell 0.2 percent to 66.5 percent in June
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BINGHAMTON — Hotels in Broome County were ever so slightly less full in June compared to a year ago, breaking a long string of monthly occupancy increases, according to a recent report.
The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county fell 0.2 percent to 66.5 percent in June from 66.6 percent in the year-prior month, according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data and analytics company. Broome County’s occupancy rate had increased for 13 straight months from May 2017 through May 2018. Despite the latest monthly dip, the occupancy rate through the first six months of 2018, was up 5.4 percent to 54.7 percent.
Revenue per available room (RevPAR), a key industry indicator that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, edged up 0.6 percent to $61.39 in June from $61.03 in June 2017. Broome County’s RevPAR has gained 11 months in a row. Year to date through June, the county’s RevPAR was up 7.4 percent to 49.06.
Average daily rate (or ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, inched up 0.8 percent to $92.37 in June from $91.65 a year earlier, per STR. Broome County’s ADR was up 1.9 percent in the first half of the year to $89.72.
Campaign seeks to update narrative: the area has jobs
BINGHAMTON — What you think you know about the Southern Tier’s economy may be wrong — or at least not up to date. There are thousands of job openings in the region. More than 4,000 in fact, says Stacey Duncan, deputy director of community and economic development for The Agency, Broome County’s industrial development agency.
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BINGHAMTON — What you think you know about the Southern Tier’s economy may be wrong — or at least not up to date.
There are thousands of job openings in the region. More than 4,000 in fact, says Stacey Duncan, deputy director of community and economic development for The Agency, Broome County’s industrial development agency.
“It’s been an eye-opening experience for us,” she says of discovering just how high is the demand for workers in the region.”
The new knowledge prompted the development of a public-awareness campaign, called “Jobs. Broome. Now.”
“If we didn’t know this then certainly the public isn’t as aware,” Duncan says. The new campaign, which includes a website, commercials and other outreach, builds on the “Broome is Good” campaign that stressed the quality of life available in the region.
“It was building pride of place,” Duncan says of the program that began in the fall of 2016.
As part of its efforts, the Agency reached out to area employers, creating the Broome Talent Task Force. What employers said was consistent, Duncan recounts: “I could grow. I just can’t find the people.”
That task force, with 30 employers from different industries and institutions, identified a need to develop the region’s future workforce. Part of that meant letting people know there were jobs available in the Southern Tier.
Duncan recounts that the idea that there were no jobs grew over time as the large firms that once dominated the landscape closed or moved away. Over time, the idea that “there are no jobs, slowly became the narrative” in the Southern Tier.
That story drove people to assume they had to move to succeed. Parents even developed a “tendency to encourage children to go elsewhere,” Duncan says.
The new campaign is part of an effort to change that narrative, change the perception about the region so young people recognize they don’t have to move away to have a good life.
“We’re saying to people, this is a place of opportunity,” Duncan notes. “We’re going from ‘there are no jobs’ to ‘there are jobs — consider them.’ “
School districts are involved in the effort, Duncan says, as educators and as employers. One of the messages that she says needs to be communicated is that students can graduate high school and walk into good careers in manufacturing or skilled trades.
For others, there are training programs to prepare them for the jobs that are in demand now, she says. One program trains workers for warehouse jobs and comes with a guarantee of employment for graduates.
The website, www.broomeisgood.com, contains links to aggregated job listings. A quick search under “construction,” finds more than 20 openings. “Software” yields nearly twice as many available positions. Another 20 job listings appear in a search under “manufacturing,” with some of the jobs listed just days before.
Targeting young workers and high-school students who may join the workforce shortly, the “Jobs. Broome. Now.” campaign is utilizing social media — targeting younger people on Instagram and their parents on Facebook.
“We know it’s important to hit a very specific age group,” Duncan says.
The need to do that is heightened by the expected shift in demographics, she adds. “About 30 percent of the workforce will be aging out in the next five to eight years — that’s what our data analysis says.”
It’s not news to businesses that have been trying to find workers. “I think everyone is cognizant of the workforce situation,” Duncan says, “but they are still looking to expand.”
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