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VIPAA and Minnesota firm to design new HQ façade
SYRACUSE — A Minnesota firm will work with VIP Architectural Associates (VIPAA) on the new design of the façade at the Post-Standard building. VIPAA has selected Minneapolis, Minnesota–based Snow Kreilich Architects for the work, the local firm recently announced. VIP Architectural Associates is part of Syracuse–based VIP Structures, which has announced plans that include their […]
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SYRACUSE — A Minnesota firm will work with VIP Architectural Associates (VIPAA) on the new design of the façade at the Post-Standard building.
VIPAA has selected Minneapolis, Minnesota–based Snow Kreilich Architects for the work, the local firm recently announced.
VIP Architectural Associates is part of Syracuse–based VIP Structures, which has announced plans that include their new corporate headquarters on the first floor of the structure that faces Clinton Square.
VIPAA describes Snow Kreilich Architects as a “nationally recognized and award-winning architectural firm that recently received the highest honor bestowed by the American Institute of Architecture (AIA), the 2018 AIA Architecture Firm Award.”
Design principals Julie Snow and Matthew Kreilich lead the firm. Both Snow and Kreilich have a connection to the area as they were visiting professors at Syracuse University’s School of Architecture in 2011, VIPAA said.
“VIP Architectural Associates has collaborated with national firms on high-profile projects in the past, including the redevelopment of the Dunk & Bright warehouse, known today as the Nancy Cantor Warehouse. Our team is looking forward to collaborating with Snow Kreilich, as a world-renowned façade specialist, to bring a fresh eye to this project that is rich in history and a cornerstone of downtown Syracuse,” David Nutting, chairman & CEO of VIP Structures, said in a news release.
The 275,000-square-foot building is located at 1 Clinton Square in Syracuse. VIP Structures — an architecture, engineering, construction and development firm — is currently headquartered at One Webster’s Landing in Syracuse.
About the project
New York State has awarded VIP Structures of Syracuse a $1.5 million REDC grant for its work to renovate the Post-Standard building into its new headquarters.
State officials on Dec. 13 announced the funding during the regional economic-development council (REDC) awards in Albany.
VIP will use the entire $1.5 million in funding to refurbish the existing structure for commercial use by VIP, the Herald Publishing Company, LLC, and other tenants.
Besides its new headquarters, VIP plans to lease the second floor, which includes roughly 50,000 square feet, as additional office space.
VIP is also planning a three-story addition consisting of 25,000 square feet of commercial leased space on the third floor, and residential units overlooking Clinton Square on floors four and five.

Carthage Area Hospital awaits word on state funding for proposed consolidated medical campus
CARTHAGE — The CEO of Carthage Area Hospital anticipates the organization should find out “sometime in July” if the state approves funding to help pay for a consolidated medical campus. Hospital officials recently announced they are considering a plan that would consolidate the 53-year-old hospital, two of its outpatient-clinic facilities, and administration building on a
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CARTHAGE — The CEO of Carthage Area Hospital anticipates the organization should find out “sometime in July” if the state approves funding to help pay for a consolidated medical campus.
Hospital officials recently announced they are considering a plan that would consolidate the 53-year-old hospital, two of its outpatient-clinic facilities, and administration building on a new medical campus.
The organization is pursuing $25 million in funding from the New York State Department of Health’s statewide health-care facility transformation program, it said in a June 1 news release.
That funding would cover a portion of the total project cost, says Richard Duvall, CEO of Carthage Area Hospital, who spoke with CNYBJ on June 4.
The construction cost for a new building is about $49 million. “In addition to that, there’s about $15 million of other costs for furniture, fixtures, and equipment,” Duvall adds.
When asked how the organization would finance the project outside the state funding, Duvall replies that the “vast majority” would be through commercial lending. “We would also do a capital campaign through our foundation,” he adds.
Carthage Area Hospital will use a request-for-proposal process to select an architect, a contractor, and a lender for the project, according to Duvall.
Meanwhile, the hospital’s board of directors is still reviewing the project and the hospital’s conversations with local, regional and state leaders also continue.
Deciding to pursue project
The proposal calls for construction of a replacement hospital and an attached rural health center. Hospital officials are evaluating the “best possible site” for the campus, according to the release.
The plan follows a review of current hospital facilities that began in 2016 at the request of the hospital’s board of directors.
While examining options to renovate the hospital, board members and leadership quickly realized that it “wasn’t the most sustainable path to take,” the release stated.
Renovations would cost $44 million, the hospital said. The work would include service-line disruption over a phased, 10-year timeline, which would “jeopardize patient care and risk the loss of much-needed revenues to maintain [operations].”
After considering all the facts and the $44 million renovation cost versus the $49 million new construction cost, Carthage Area Hospital opted to pursue the new building.
In the release, Duvall pointed to a 2016 presentation by Stroudwater Associates that hospital leaders heard during the National Rural Health Conference in Kansas City, Missouri.
Portland, Maine–based Stroudwater Associates is the same consultant that the New York State Office of Rural Health retains, the hospital notes.
Its presentation outlined the “impressive results achieved” by 172 “new build” critical-access hospitals across the country. Duvall called the presentation “the most convincing evidence” for pursuing the new building.
Carthage Area Hospital “would be the first New York State critical-access hospital to follow this proven replacement model,” the organization said.
MSA challenge
One challenge that hospital officials face while evaluating locations for a new campus is a “newly defined,” federally designated metropolitan statistical area (MSA), “which exists from Watertown to Carthage and Fort Drum,” the organization said.
An online document by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis lists the area as the Watertown–Fort Drum MSA. The MSA’s 2016 population was 114,006, which ranked 336th in the U.S.
As Duvall explains it, an organization can’t have a rural health clinic designation if it’s located within an MSA.
“We’re looking to get our primary-care clinics designated as rural health clinics, which [allows for] enhanced reimbursement methodology. But you can’t do that if you’re inside of an MSA,” says Duvall.
So, Carthage Area Hospital will look for a 12-15 acre site outside the MSA, he adds.
Aging systems
Many of the organization’s “major” physical-plant systems are “either at or past end of effective use and need costly overhaul and attention.”
The systems include electrical; heating, ventilation, and air conditioning, and water and sewer, the hospital said.
In addition, as the hospital has expanded services across the twin villages to operate in four different buildings, it has had “inefficiencies that a consolidated medical campus would correct.”
A modern facility would employ highly efficient building design and technology that would improve patient care and flow.
About the hospital
Carthage Area Hospital was established as a nonprofit rural community hospital in 1965. It operates today as a 25-bed, critical access hospital, serving about 83,000 residents in Jefferson, northern Lewis, and southern St. Lawrence counties. The hospital formed a clinical affiliation with Crouse Health in Syracuse in 2017.
The hospital also operates a network of community-based clinics, including its Philadelphia Medical Center, Family Health Center, Pediatric Clinic, and Women’s Way to Wellness, per its release.

Crews to renovate upper floors in Axa Tower I for Hancock Estabrook move
SYRACUSE — Crews are preparing to renovate the top three floors in Axa Tower I in downtown Syracuse where Hancock Estabrook, LLP will operate once the work is complete. The law firm has signed a 13-year extension of its current lease in the building, Hancock Estabrook recently announced. Hancock Estabrook, which currently occupies floors 13
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SYRACUSE — Crews are preparing to renovate the top three floors in Axa Tower I in downtown Syracuse where Hancock Estabrook, LLP will operate once the work is complete.
The law firm has signed a 13-year extension of its current lease in the building, Hancock Estabrook recently announced.
Hancock Estabrook, which currently occupies floors 13 through 15 in AXA Tower I, will move to floors 17 through 19 once crews complete what the firm described in a news release as “extensive” renovations. The law firm declined to disclose the cost of the project.
CBD Companies, which manages the Axa Towers, will provide construction-management services.
Hancock Estabrook expects the work to begin this month and expects to move to the renovated space near the end of the year, Renee Benda, marketing director at Hancock Estabrook, tells CNYBJ.
“They’re in the final process right now of getting the building permit from the City [of Syracuse], so we’re hoping that the demolition is going to start within a few weeks [in June],” says Janet Callahan, managing partner at Hancock Estabrook, who spoke with CNYBJ on May 31.
Callahan notes that part of the firm’s intent renovating its space is to “attract and retain” younger attorneys. “It’s a reflection of the way they want their work space to be,” she says.
The new office will have 36,000 square feet of space with features that King + King Architects designed, Hancock Estabrook said. The design incorporates “open, collaborative” spaces, natural interior light, and video conferencing and training facilities.
Rochester–based Bergmann, which operates an office in Syracuse, consulted on the mechanical design of the space.
Deciding on space
Hancock Estabrook’s lease with AmTrust Realty Corp. was set to expire at the end of 2018, says Callahan. New York City–based AmTrust Realty Corp. owns the Axa Towers.
Hancock Estabrook in 2016 started looking at other available space and considering whether it should stay in the city or move out of the downtown area. The law firm looked at five other sites, which Callahan declined to name.
The firm’s employees also completed a survey to “take their pulse” on what they preferred in a space and location.
CBD Companies proposed the idea of moving within the building. The other alternative would have been for Hancock Estabrook to remain in the firm’s current location and renovate one floor at a time, moving employees during the renovation work, and then moving them back to their respective floor.
“We decided this option, moving the whole office up to three higher floors after the whole renovation project is completed, would be much less disruptive,” says Callahan.
Law offices getting less formal
Hancock Estabrook recognizes that the “nature of law firms is changing,” Callahan says. She notes that law offices nowadays are designed so that offices are the same size and constructed to get people out of their offices and into “collaborative spaces where people can work together and share ideas.”
“Law offices now are less formal than they used to be,” Callahan says.
The new Hancock Estabrook space will include design elements that are “intended to create comfortable and collaborative” spaces for the firm’s 57 attorneys and 56 staff members.
The elements include a two-floor, open reception area with a “panoramic” view of downtown Syracuse and a media room that will accommodate large groups and seminars and small-seating areas for informal meetings.
The newly designed office will also have “built-in, stand-up” work spaces for administrative staff and a break room with kitchen facilities and charging stations for laptops.
We are all sitting ringside to a brawl in its early stages
You are ringside to one of the greatest political brawls in the history of this country. And chances are that we are only in its early rounds. You will likely witness more bruisings, knockdowns, and perhaps a knockout. Of course, I refer to the current Washington, D.C. slugfest over President Donald Trump. In Rounds 1
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You are ringside to one of the greatest political brawls in the history of this country. And chances are that we are only in its early rounds. You will likely witness more bruisings, knockdowns, and perhaps a knockout.
Of course, I refer to the current Washington, D.C. slugfest over President Donald Trump. In Rounds 1 and 2, the Trump haters roared out of their corner. They challenged the 2016 election. They accused him of colluding with Russians. They thwarted the president’s every move. They led to the appointment of Robert Mueller as special counsel. They leaked, and they threatened impeachment if they regained control of the House. Still do.
The Trump haters struck some solid blows: a guilty plea from Michael Flynn, indictments of several Russians, and a few low-level guys who worked on the Trump campaign. Also, James Comey’s claims and accusations galore.
Trump played rope-a-dope. Then, he and his supporters counter-punched. Highlighted conflicts of interest within Mueller’s team. Uncovered what sure looks like a plot to stop or thwart Trump — by top guys at the FBI and other intelligence agencies. Also, revealed what looks like a go-soft project to protect candidate Hillary from her email mess.
You are marking your own scorecard. Maybe you watch and believe CNN. If so, your card shows the Trump haters have won most of the rounds. You see Trump on the ropes. You expect huge revelations — haymakers — to deck him any day now. One of his guys will flip and destroy him, for sure.
If you watch and believe Fox News, your scorecard has Trump trouncing his opponents. Wait until the inspector general’s report pummels the FBI, you say. Wait ‘til the agencies cough up those incriminating emails. Wait ‘til Trump declassifies the emails the agencies have been secreting. Wait until we get special prosecutors to dig into the corruption of the Swamp.
Maybe you read stuff from the Left. If so, you figure Trump’s lies will doom him. You read that his actions are destroying our country. You know his impeachment is only one mid-term election away.
Maybe you read stuff from the Right. If so, you may feel this is the greatest scandal in the country’s history. (As Newt Gingrich and Trump do.) You may suspect the Obama White House ordered intelligence agencies to spy on Trump’s campaign. Or knew about it. You may believe top Obama officials colluded to keep Hillary Clinton from being charged.
Whichever side you are on, you might admit you love this brawl. For selfish reasons. You love slugfests and murky intrigues. You get to watch this one, with its assorted villains, for free. Every day you get to scream at your television or laptop. “Did you see what these SOBs are claiming now? Low blow. Those guys should be in orange jumpsuits!”
You might even love this battle for a reason to do with pride of country. You see, this is a very American fight.
Here, the fighters wield subpoenas. They force documents to the surface via the Freedom of Information Act. They pry admissions from witnesses before Congress. Their media dig, reveal, uncover, and embarrass. America’s massive legal-political-propaganda-media machine lurches and grinds and digests. Little by little, swamped with spin, it coughs up something resembling the truth.
In most countries all this would never happen. Governments would never give up the emails. Agencies would rub out squealers. They would shut down media that revealed too much. Our government has inflicted nasty things upon Michael Flynn and other people caught up in this. But they are paddy-cake compared with what many other governments do to people in similar situations.
This fight will continue for many more rounds. It may be a few years before the judges make their decision. I have a feeling this ain’t gonna be a draw.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home near Oneonta. You can write to Tom at tomasinmorgan@yahoo.com. Read more of his writing at tomasinmorgan.com
State Must Focus on Ending Economic-Development Spending Corruption
The economic-development programs touted by Gov. Andrew Cuomo have been vehicles of corruption, with certain individuals gaming the system to make a buck on the public dime. Such is the case with one of Cuomo’s former top aides, Joe Percoco, who was found guilty of accepting bribes, and Alain Kaloyeros, who will face trial for
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The economic-development programs touted by Gov. Andrew Cuomo have been vehicles of corruption, with certain individuals gaming the system to make a buck on the public dime. Such is the case with one of Cuomo’s former top aides, Joe Percoco, who was found guilty of accepting bribes, and Alain Kaloyeros, who will face trial for bid-rigging in relation to the Buffalo Billion economic-development initiative. Adding insult to injury is that none of the programs Cuomo put forward delivered on the promised job or economic growth. Not even close.
I am not here to say that economic-development funding, tax breaks, or programs are bad. Our region, which is full of potential due to skilled laborers, abundant resources and the real estate to grow and develop, would benefit greatly from a little additional attention and investment from the state. However, between corruption and lack of accountability, our public dollars have been watered down in their effectiveness and haven’t been focused on needed areas.
One of the most important things we could accomplish for New York is to pass legislation to put in place good practices to stop wasteful economic-development spending, thus ensuring public funds are going where they are needed most.
I, along with some of my Assembly Republican colleagues, sponsor legislation (Bill A.5657-A), which would put in place these badly needed reforms to create better oversight and transparency regarding state economic-development programs and spending.
Our bill would do the following:
• Establish a three-person oversight committee, including the comptroller, the attorney general, and the director of the Division of Budget to evaluate state lump-sum spending of $1 million or more and determine any conflicts of interest;
• Require such spending to be lined out in detail and require a vote by the state legislature;
• Prohibit political contributions by those overseeing such funds;
• Extend oversight to lump-sum funds spent by public authorities;
• Withhold salaries of the governor, agency commissioner, and deputy commissioner for failures to submit reports required on lump-sum spending, such as in the START-UP NY program;
• Prohibit the use of state-affiliated not-for-profits, such as Fort Schuyler and Fuller Road, unless permitted by law or authorized by the state comptroller; and
• Require lump-sum spending by the SUNY Research Foundation to also be under the review of the three-person oversight committee.
We also must keep in mind that an unstable and corruption-filled government makes private businesses and investors leery of wanting to do business in New York in the first place. The longer New York’s economic-development programs are allowed to run without any checks of the governor’s power or oversight, the further the state jeopardizes its reputation among potential and existing job creators.
Marc W. Butler (R,C,I, Ref–Newport) is a New York State Assemblyman for the 118th District, which encompasses parts of Oneida, Herkimer, and St. Lawrence counties, as well as all of Hamilton and Fulton counties. Contact him at butlerm@nyassembly.gov
HCR Home Care has added the following employees to its Central New York operations: ALLISON BARLETTA, RN case manager in Madison County; JOYCE KAPRAL, RN assessment nurse in Madison County; LISA WOLFE, patient-services coordinator in Onondaga County; KEIRUKA NWUGWO, RN case manager in Onondaga County; and REGINA REID, patient-services coordinator in Onondaga County.
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HCR Home Care has added the following employees to its Central New York operations: ALLISON BARLETTA, RN case manager in Madison County; JOYCE KAPRAL, RN assessment nurse in Madison County; LISA WOLFE, patient-services coordinator in Onondaga County; KEIRUKA NWUGWO, RN case manager in Onondaga County; and REGINA REID, patient-services coordinator in Onondaga County.
EVAN MOORE has joined the Syracuse branch of AXA Advisors, LLC. He has a bachelor’s degree in finance from SUNY Oswego and holds life, health, Series 7, and Series 63 licenses. ANNA BRISTOL has come aboard the Syracuse office of AXA Advisors. She holds a bachelor’s degree in finance from Le Moyne College, as well
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EVAN MOORE has joined the Syracuse branch of AXA Advisors, LLC. He has a bachelor’s degree in finance from SUNY Oswego and holds life, health, Series 7, and Series 63 licenses. ANNA BRISTOL has come aboard the Syracuse office of AXA Advisors. She holds a bachelor’s degree in finance from Le Moyne College, as well as life, health, Series 6, and Series 63 licenses. JOHN NANOSKY has also joined the Syracuse branch. He has a bachelor’s degree in business communications from Arizona State University and holds life, health, Series 6, and Series 63 licenses. SAMUEL REILLY has joined the AXA Advisors team in Syracuse. He has a bachelor’s degree in economics with a minor in policy studies from Syracuse University, and has earned his life, health, Series 7, and Series 63 licenses. MARCUS MCFEE-WALTERS, a graduate of SUNY Oswego with a bachelor’s degree in finance, has also joined the AXA Advisors Syracuse branch. He has earned life, health, Series 6, and Series 63 licenses.
RYAN O’CONNOR is the new managing partner at the LongHorn Steakhouse on Route 31 in Clay. He started his career with LongHorn Steakhouse in 2012 in Greensburg, Pennsylvania as a bar manager. O’Connor has been in the industry for 17 years, previously working in mom and pop shops in his hometown of Pittsburgh. He graduated
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RYAN O’CONNOR is the new managing partner at the LongHorn Steakhouse on Route 31 in Clay. He started his career with LongHorn Steakhouse in 2012 in Greensburg, Pennsylvania as a bar manager. O’Connor has been in the industry for 17 years, previously working in mom and pop shops in his hometown of Pittsburgh. He graduated from Indiana University of Pennsylvania in 2012 with a degree in hotel and restaurant management and economics.
Tioga Downs, Meadowlands reach sports-betting deal with Betfair
NICHOLS, N.Y. — Tioga Downs is getting ready for the legalization of sports betting in New York state. The race track and casino has reached

Chiropractor faked exams for state workers, inspector general says
“These charges allege a sham medical mill run by a practitioner whose brazen malpractice on New York’s taxpayers enabled state employees to feign injuries and
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