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Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties names officers
Also appoints two new board members UTICA — The Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties recently announced its 2018-2019 board officers and two new members of the board of trustees. The 2018-2019 Community Foundation officers are: Eve Van de Wal — Chair Van de Wal is regional president of Excellus BlueCross BlueShield and has more […]
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Also appoints two new board members
UTICA — The Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties recently announced its 2018-2019 board officers and two new members of the board of trustees.
The 2018-2019 Community Foundation officers are:
Eve Van de Wal — Chair
Van de Wal is regional president of Excellus BlueCross BlueShield and has more than 30 years of experience in health-care delivery and health insurance. She serves on multiple community boards including Health Workforce New York, the United Way of the Valley and Greater Utica Area, Mohawk Valley EDGE, Adirondack Bank, and Utica First Insurance Company. Van de Wal received a bachelor’s degree in nursing from SUNY at Brockport and master’s degrees in health services management and business administration from SUNY Institute of Technology in Utica.
David Manzelmann — Chair-elect
Manzelmann is Utica market president and team lead for business and professional banking for M&T Bank. He serves on multiple boards including Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute and Mohawk Valley Health System Foundation, and is chair of the Mohawk Valley EDGE board and M&T Bank/Partners Trust Charitable Fund committee. Manzelmann previously worked at KeyBank and NBT Bank, and received a bachelor’s degree in business economics from the College of Wooster in Ohio.
L. Michael Fitzgerald — Secretary/Treasurer
Fitzgerald is a CPA at Fitzgerald, DePietro and Wojnas, CPAs. He holds a master’s degree in accounting from Northeastern University and a bachelor’s degree from St. Bonaventure.
The Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties also named the following two new board members.
Kirk Hinman
Hinman worked for nearly 40 years at Rome Steel Strip Company, serving as president from 1989 to 2015. As a CPA, Hinman previously worked for Coopers and Lybrand CPAs in Syracuse. He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and a bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College, and serves on multiple community boards, including Utica First Insurance Company, Rome Community Foundation, and Mohawk Valley EDGE.
James A. Wallace, Jr.
Wallace is the county administrator for Herkimer County and previously served as the county’s director of employment and training, as well as youth bureau director. He currently is working with county officials, the National Association of Counties, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to address poverty issues in Herkimer County. His community involvement includes work on multiple county initiatives, including prevention of domestic violence, suicide, and childhood lead poisoning. Wallace earned a bachelor’s degree from Alfred University.
The Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties says it has invested more than $70 million in Oneida and Herkimer counties since 1952.

Relo Solutions Group plans to double revenue, workforce by end of 2019
MANLIUS — A Manlius business that provides an online portal to track relocation and crating services is planning to double its revenue and number of employees by the end of next year. Relo Solutions Group, a third-party technology platform that can track crating and relocation service providers, will release a new software system in September,
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MANLIUS — A Manlius business that provides an online portal to track relocation and crating services is planning to double its revenue and number of employees by the end of next year.
Relo Solutions Group, a third-party technology platform that can track crating and relocation service providers, will release a new software system in September, after more than a year of development. The firm allows clients, such as corporations and individuals to request moving and crating services. Vendors, such as moving and crating companies, then are assigned the clients and fulfill those requests.
Relo Solutions Group president and owner Jim Walsh tells CNYBJ that Relo currently employs 10 full-time employees, including Walsh’s wife, Kathy in the finance department. Walsh says that the business is hiring and he plans to employ 20-25 full-time individuals by the end of 2019. He says Relo is a multimillion dollar company and growing revenue at “well over a 100 percent rate.” The firm generates revenue from both corporate clients and its service partners.
“Organizationally we have what we call a BHAG: A big, hairy, audacious goal. We want to grow this thing and grow it big,” Walsh says.
To facilitate growth, Relo has plans to launch new software in September, after more than a year of development. The software called Revision 2 or Rev2 until a formal name is decided offers an easy-access portal for clients to request and be assigned vendors for crating, relocation, renovation, and storage, Walsh says.
“Immediate plans are to complete and deploy our Rev2 Software platform that will be fairly revolutionary for the industry,” Walsh says. “That will enable us to do a lot more work a lot more efficiently.”
Rev2 will offer an integrated platform for vendors to check a mobile app and upload images, videos, and other relevant information about a site or project. Clients will be able to log on and receive estimates, check progress, and request other services, which are conveyed to the appropriate vendors.
The software, which is being developed in India, will be customized for Relo. Walsh says the company has invested nearly $100,000 into the software development.
Relo provides the third-party platform because Walsh says that many moving companies don’t have the needed workers or don’t want to face liability issues. Relo does background and quality checks on the independent contractors and then employs them to fulfill clients’ requests.
Walsh has worked in third-party relocation for nearly 20 years. He founded Relo in January 2017. He previously founded, owned, and operated a different company that provided a similar service until it was bought in 2010. He founded his original company, Alliance Relocation Services, in 1999 and sold it 11 years later to relocation company, Sirva Inc. for several million dollars, though he declined to provide an exact amount. Walsh says Alliance essentially does the same thing has Relo, but with less diversified markets.
Sirva, which acquired Alliance’s employees and client base in the deal, terminated many of the employees. Walsh remained president of Alliance for almost five years after the sale.
“I was effectively retired for a little over a year, but during that whole time I was literally working. I was buying real estate, renovating homes, just keeping myself busy,” Walsh tells CNYBJ. “I’m not one to play a lot of golf, I like to remain engaged in business.”
Walsh founded Relo less than a month after a non-compete agreement had expired with Sirva. Relo, which has been in business for about a year and a half, rehired many of the employees who were terminated when Walsh sold Alliance to Sirva.
“I feel like we haven’t even started yet in terms of what we’re going to be doing,” Walsh says. “It’s all about quality, so I’d rather keep the quality very high and keep the clients very happy while we continue to be financially successful and continue to build the appropriate infrastructure that’s necessary to retain the quality.”
Walsh says Relo currently provides relocation services primarily to corporations and the military, as it’s commonplace for Fortune 500 company employees and military members to relocate. All the work currently is domestic, based in the United States and some parts of Canada, but Walsh says he hopes to potentially expand globally eventually.
Other markets Relo will explore once the Rev2 software is deployed are hotels and hospitality and retail. He says there’s a need for companies like Relo with the opening and closing of retails stores and hotel renovations. Currently, he says it has about 75 clients.
“The moving and storage of corporate location space is a vertical. It’s very targeted. So we will do the same thing, targeted vertical niches, in hotel and hospitality and retail, those are the first two we’ll roll out,” Walsh said. “They’re very unrelated to moving and storage, but they definitely have a need for skilled craftsmen that can help with store closings, openings, store renovations.”
Walsh started Relo, using the same office space as Alliance, which he’s owned since 2003. The location, at 110 Limestone Plaza in Manlius encompasses about 3,300 square feet and has a modern industrial look, Walsh says. Salt Point Services Inc. designed the space. The desks are made of doors from Fayetteville–area homes, with piped legs and glass tops.
The HCP List: Medical-Equipment Providers
Click here to view the list ABOUT THE LISTInformation was provided by representatives of listed organizations and their websites. Other groups may have been
HEALTH-CARE CAREER NEWS-AUGUST 2018
MOHAWK VALLEY HEALTH SYSTEM PENNY SEYMOUR has been named talent-acquisition specialist for the Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS). She is responsible for the full life cycle

St. Joseph’s Health CEO Luke discusses new cardiovascular center
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Heart disease is responsible for “roughly” one-in-four deaths in the U.S. and is the second-leading cause of early death in New York,
Mohawk Valley Health Center in Ilion has new name, owner in acquisition deal
ILION — The Mohawk Valley Health Center in Ilion is now known as the Grand Rehabilitation & Nursing at Mohawk Valley after a New York

Oswego Health hosts MASH Camp to show students health-care careers
OSWEGO — Staff from Oswego Health shared their everyday skills, from suturing to CPR and life-saving techniques, with students entering the eighth and ninth grades as part of facility’s summertime MASH Camp. The camp, also known as Medical Academy of Science and Health, is a two-day experience that exposes the youths to careers in the
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OSWEGO — Staff from Oswego Health shared their everyday skills, from suturing to CPR and life-saving techniques, with students entering the eighth and ninth grades as part of facility’s summertime MASH Camp.
The camp, also known as Medical Academy of Science and Health, is a two-day experience that exposes the youths to careers in the health-care field, according to an Oswego Health news release. This year’s camp was held Aug. 1 and Aug. 2 with hands-on rotations in the Oswego Hospital laboratory and medical imaging department, as well as demonstrations by Menter Ambulance and Life Net of New York, which landed one of its helicopters near the Oswego state campus.
Ayla Cowley, of Mexico, said she enjoyed getting to know her fellow campers and having the opportunity to interact with Oswego Health physicians, per the release. Her career aspirations include becoming a pediatric oncologist.
Oswego Health’s Dawn Smith and Karen Divens coordinated this year’s MASH Camp program. “The kids were great this year, very interested in our rotations and I think they not only had fun, but learned a lot too,” Smith said in the release.
The Central New York Area Health Education Center (CNYAHEC) coordinated the MASH Camp and the Oswego Health Auxiliary provided funding for this year’s camp. Menter Ambulance and Oswego Health’s and Risk Management Department supported the purchase of the take-home CPR kits, allowing the students to teach family members and friends this important skill.
Two CNY businesses receive NYS service-disabled veteran-owned business certification
New York Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner JoAnn Destito recently announced that Little Jimmy’s Entertainment Inc., a Syracuse business that installs and services ATM machines, and Shamrock Portable Restrooms LLC, a Syracuse company that provides portable restroom rentals, have been certified as service-disabled veteran-owned businesses (SDVOBs). The New York OGS Division of Service-Disabled Veterans’
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New York Office of General Services (OGS) Commissioner JoAnn Destito recently announced that Little Jimmy’s Entertainment Inc., a Syracuse business that installs and services ATM machines, and Shamrock Portable Restrooms LLC, a Syracuse company that provides portable restroom rentals, have been certified as service-disabled veteran-owned businesses (SDVOBs).
The New York OGS Division of Service-Disabled Veterans’ Business Development (DSDVBD) issued the certification. The division was created by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, in 2014 through enactment of the Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Business Act. More than 520 businesses in the Empire State have been certified, according to the state OGS’s online directory of SDVOBs.
The law promotes and encourages participation of SDVOBs in New York State public procurements of public works, commodities, services, and technology to “foster and advance economic development” in the state.
For a business to receive certification, one or more service-disabled veterans — with a service-connected disability rating of 10 percent or more from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (or from the New York State Division of Veterans’ Affairs for National Guard veterans) — must own at least 51 percent of the business. Other criteria include: the business must be independently owned and operated and have a significant business presence in New York, it must have conducted business for at least one year prior to the application date, and it must qualify as a small business under the New York State program. Several more requirements also need to be met.
More information on the program and the certification process can be found at http://ogs.ny.gov/Core/SDVOBA.asp

Carrier Dome launches walkthrough metal detectors, clear-bag policy
SYRACUSE — Fans attending football, basketball, and other games at the Carrier Dome this upcoming season will enter the venue through walkthrough metal detectors and will need to observe Syracuse University’s clear-bag policy. The effort seeks to “provide a safer environment for the public and to expedite fan entry” into the venue, the university announced
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SYRACUSE — Fans attending football, basketball, and other games at the Carrier Dome this upcoming season will enter the venue through walkthrough metal detectors and will need to observe Syracuse University’s clear-bag policy.
The effort seeks to “provide a safer environment for the public and to expedite fan entry” into the venue, the university announced Aug. 9.
Walkthrough metal detectors will be in place at all Carrier Dome entry gates beginning with the first 2018 Orange football home game on Sept. 8. Fans will be asked to present cell phones, cameras, and other large metal objects to the Carrier Dome event staff as they approach the front of the line.
Fans will not need to remove keys, loose change, wallet, jackets, or belts.
“We are committed to providing a secure environment for our fans,” Syracuse University Director of Athletics John Wildhack said in a release. “The new clear-bag policy will enable us to deliver a better and quicker experience at the gates and also provide a safer environment. We appreciate our fans’ cooperation.”
Clear-bag policy
Syracuse’s clear-bag policy takes effect with the start of the upcoming football season. It limits the size and type of bags permitted inside the stadium. Clear bags are “easily searched and reduce faulty bag searches,” which makes bag checks “more efficient and effective,” the university contended.
The policy is “consistent” with all NFL stadiums and many ACC members, Syracuse said.
Syracuse University will provide an “educational period,” running through the first three home football games, for fans to learn about and adjust to the new clear-bag policy. The policy will be in effect for all Syracuse University athletics events and specified other special events at the Carrier Dome beginning Oct. 6.
Fans will be able to carry one of the following style and size bag at Carrier Dome gates:
Bags that are clear plastic, vinyl or PVC (a strong but lightweight plastic) and do not exceed 12” x 6” x 12”
— OR —
One-gallon, clear plastic freezer bag (Ziploc bag or similar).
In addition, small clutch bags for personal items, approximately the size of a hand (4.5” x 6.5”), with or without a handle or strap; diaper bags (with child), and medically necessary items may be carried into the stadium along with one of the clear bag options, “after proper inspection.”
Seat cushions and seat back chairs are permitted, but Syracuse says they can’t have pockets, zippers, or be in their own carrying bag.
Prohibited items include, but are not limited to: backpacks, binocular cases, briefcases, camera cases, cinch bags, computer bags, fanny packs, printed pattern plastic bags, tinted plastic bags, oversize totes, mesh bags, large purses, or any bag larger than the permissible size.
Prohibited items must be returned to the owner’s vehicle or discarded.
All season-ticket holders for football, men’s and women’s basketball, and men’s lacrosse will receive one approved clear plastic tote per two tickets. The season ticket holder bags are a partnership with Galaxy Communications. Approved clear tote bags will be available for purchase at all Syracuse University merchandise locations on the Shaw Quad and inside the Carrier Dome, as well as at the SU Bookstore for $3.
“We’ve done a considerable amount of research looking at collegiate, professional sports and other public event venues across the country. Clear bags and walkthrough metal detectors are common safety practices,” Pete Sala, Syracuse VP and chief facilities officer, said in the school’s news release. “We think after a relatively short period of adjustment, Dome visitors will embrace the use of the clear bags. And the metal detectors will be barely more noticeable than walking through a doorway.”
Working personnel, including media, will continue to enter the Carrier Dome through designated gates, where they will be subject to screening and bag inspections already in effect.
Endicott Fire Department to receive $16K in federal funding for equipment
ENDICOTT — U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand have announced $16,191 in federal funding for the Village of Endicott in Broome County. The funding was allocated through the Department of Homeland Security’s Assistance to Firefighters Grant (AFG) Program and will be used to purchase new equipment, including a gear-washer
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ENDICOTT — U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand have announced $16,191 in federal funding for the Village of Endicott in Broome County.
The funding was allocated through the Department of Homeland Security’s Assistance to Firefighters Grant (AFG) Program and will be used to purchase new equipment, including a gear-washer extractor, a gear dryer, and a self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) mask cleaner.
“This funding for new equipment will ensure that the health and safety of Endicott’s courageous firefighters are protected while responding to any and all emergencies,” Schumer said in a release.
The AFG program is administered by the Department of Homeland Security Federal Emergency Management Agency in cooperation with the department’s United States Fire Administration. The grants are awarded on a competitive basis to the applicants that most closely address the program’s priorities and demonstrate financial need, the release stated.
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