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Bartell Machinery Systems names Lunduski VP of operations
ROME, N.Y. — Bartell Machinery Systems, LLC, based in Rome, announced that Ben Lunduski has assumed the role of vice president of operations, effective June

Carbone Auto Group to formally open new collision center Wednesday
UTICA, N.Y. — Carbone Auto Group announced that it will celebrate the formal opening of its new collision center and commercial fleet division building on
Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various small business, marketing, social media, HR, career, and personal tips. SBA @SBAgovStart or grow your #smallbiz with SBA resources — http://ow.ly/sC0k30karH0 FBI @FBI#FBI recommends any owner of small office & home office routers reboot the devices to temporarily disrupt the malware of infected
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Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various small business, marketing, social media, HR, career, and personal tips.
SBA @SBAgov
Start or grow your #smallbiz with SBA resources — http://ow.ly/sC0k30karH0
FBI @FBI
#FBI recommends any owner of small office & home office routers reboot the devices to temporarily disrupt the malware of infected devices https://www.ic3.gov/media/2018/180525.aspx …
NFIB @NFIB
The Tax Cuts & Jobs Act brought important #taxreform for #smallbiz owners – and our latest survey found that 76% of them now see the current business environment heading in a positive direction: https://www.nfib.com/surveys/tax-survey/
Mitch Mitchell @Mitch_M
RT @Virtual_Bren 10 Tips for Better, More Effective Marketing Writing http://goo.gl/SXEmeq via @Holly_Hanna
Crowd Centaurs @CentaursCrowd
Best #Tips to become a Youtube #Influencer http://bit.ly/2IVwCKO
Ronald van Loon @Ronald_vanLoon
The CEO guide to #customerexperience by @McKinsey — Read more at https://mck.co/2s2ZwgO
Dave Ulrich @dave_ulrich
A positive work environment is shaped by leaders who intentionally and thoughtfully build both value and values. #HR
Association of Corporate Counsel @ACCinhouse
Public speaking is a great way to enhance your #career and build a reputation. @ACCDocket Career & Technology Columnist @OlgaVMack shares three major ways #publicspeaking can benefit your career. http://bit.ly/2L6iriz
C# Corner @CsharpCorner
What is more important, imagination or #knowledge https://goo.gl/jINJNB #Career
Mark C. Crowley @MarkCCrowley
Think about people who’ve taught you, coached you, encouraged you, challenged you & otherwise helped you become the person you are today. Now take a moment to thank them some way — with a note or a call. It might be the most satisfying thing you do all day.
Hannah Morgan @careersherpa
|How To Market Your Retirement Reinvention featuring insight from @RobinRyanCareer http://ow.ly/3Clu30khNTo #career
Bonadio Group @bonadiogroup
|More people are saving $1 million in their 401(k)s. Here’s how you can too: https://cnnmon.ie/2J7O0fu
Pyramid Brokerage @PyramidBrkg
Any new commercial #realestate #investor can utilize these creative tactics to find their first or latest real estate deal: https://bit.ly/2Jh6pWr
Young Adult Hacks @youngadulthacks
Don’t feel guilty about turning your phone off or not responding to texts

AX Enterprize wins Small Business Excellence award
YORKVILLE — AX Enterprize, LLC — a Yorkville company specializing in hardware, software and systems engineering, and light electro-mechanical manufacturing — was recently honored with a 2018 Small Business Excellence Award. The business was recognized during National Small Business Week at the U.S. Small Business Administration’s (SBA) 20th Annual Small Business Excellence Awards luncheon in
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YORKVILLE — AX Enterprize, LLC — a Yorkville company specializing in hardware, software and systems engineering, and light electro-mechanical manufacturing — was recently honored with a 2018 Small Business Excellence Award.
The business was recognized during National Small Business Week at the U.S. Small Business Administration’s (SBA) 20th Annual Small Business Excellence Awards luncheon in Syracuse on May 2. Small businesses are selected for the Excellence Awards based on their company’s longevity, innovation, sales growth, increased employment, ability to overcome adversity, or community contributions, according to an SBA news release.
From starting as a two-person operation in 2011, AX Enterprize has grown to include several divisions with 26 employees.
AX Enterprize owners Mary Carol Chruscicki and Patricia Baskinger are recognized as “national leaders in cyber and information technology research,” the SBA said in its release. The company conducts research and development of advanced communications, signal processing, networking and information technology, along with cybersecurity research and development for the U.S. Armed Forces and commercial clients. As the lead developer and maintainer of the New York unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) test site in Rome, AX Enterprize works closely with Griffiss International Airport and the NUAIR Alliance to support NASA.
“We are pleased the SBA has recognized AX Enterprize for their extraordinary efforts in business, as well as contributions to the community,” Mohawk Valley SBDC Director Roxanne Mutchler said in the release. “Their hard work and dedication helped them achieve success and accomplish their goals, while at the same time making a positive impact in our region.”
Sutton Real Estate’s Fournier appointed receiver of Cortland hotels
CORTLAND — Sutton Real Estate Co. announced that Louis Fournier, company president, was appointed by the state Supreme Court in Cortland County earlier this year to be the receiver for the Ramada Inn and Red Roof Inn in Cortland. The two hotels have a total of 150 rooms. The property containing the hotels had fallen
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CORTLAND — Sutton Real Estate Co. announced that Louis Fournier, company president, was appointed by the state Supreme Court in Cortland County earlier this year to be the receiver for the Ramada Inn and Red Roof Inn in Cortland. The two hotels have a total of 150 rooms.
The property containing the hotels had fallen into disrepair in recent years, according to Syracuse–based Sutton Real Estate, and 40 of the 150 rooms in the Ramada Inn were closed due to water damage from a leaking roof. The occupancy and the overall condition of both properties was negatively impacted as a result.
Sutton says it has started renovating the 40 rooms that were out of commission and began reintroducing the property to the Cortland market under the new management of Gulph Creek Hotels, which has been hired to manage the hotel during the receivership.
New York egg production falls nearly 10 percent in April
New York farms produced 126 million eggs in April, down almost 10 percent from 139.9 million eggs in the year-ago period, the USDA recently reported. The total number of layers in the Empire State fell more than 7 percent to 5.23 million in April from 5.63 million a year prior. New York egg production per
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New York farms produced 126 million eggs in April, down almost 10 percent from 139.9 million eggs in the year-ago period, the USDA recently reported.
The total number of layers in the Empire State fell more than 7 percent to 5.23 million in April from 5.63 million a year prior.
New York egg production per 100 layers totaled 2,409 eggs in April, off 3 percent from 2,484 eggs in April 2017, per the USDA data.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, egg production increased almost 1 percent to 680.5 million eggs in April, from 675.2 million eggs a year before.
U.S. egg production totaled 8.79 billion during April, up 1 percent from a year prior, the USDA reported.

Local anchors, away for years, return to cable news station
SYRACUSE — Central New York’s largest cable-television provider has returned local anchors to its news channel. Spectrum, the company created when Charter Communications purchased Time Warner Cable in 2016, is reversing a move made by Time Warner in 2005. Then, Time Warner moved anchoring operations to its station in Albany. (At the same time, it
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SYRACUSE — Central New York’s largest cable-television provider has returned local anchors to its news channel.
Spectrum, the company created when Charter Communications purchased Time Warner Cable in 2016, is reversing a move made by Time Warner in 2005. Then, Time Warner moved anchoring operations to its station in Albany. (At the same time, it moved its meteorologists to Syracuse.)
From that point, local news broadcasts were anchored from Albany with reporters based in Central New York doing the newsgathering.
“It was done to make all our stations more efficient,” says Ron Lombard, news director for Spectrum Networks in Central New York, Northern New York, and the Southern Tier. “It’s a very efficient model.”
However, by 2017, Lombard and his fellow news directors in Buffalo, Rochester, and Albany proposed bringing back a locally anchored news show. The idea got the OK from Spectrum management and starting in March 2017, Iris St. Meran began anchoring a 4:30 newscast from Spectrum’s facility on Erie Boulevard East in Syracuse.
“That was just an experiment,” Lombard says. “The workflow worked out very well.”
So starting May 29, the day after Memorial Day, Central New Yorkers began seeing locally anchored newscasts from midday until 5 a.m.
To meet the expanded hours, Lombard brought in Tammy Palmer, a veteran newscaster who was with what is now Spectrum News — then News 10 Now — as it was just getting on the air. She was the reporter who delivered the first story on the fledgling channel.
“It was about a woman who was missing,” she recalls, 15 years later. She remembers the woman’s name and that after days of searching, the woman was found alive.
Palmer rose to an anchor position and was one of those transferred to Albany.
A native of Central New York, she graduated from Fulton High School and SUNY Oswego and traces her ancestry to some of the first settlers in Lysander — Palmer was offered a job in 2011 by WSYR, Channel 9. She moved back and worked at the station until this spring.
At Spectrum News, she is returning to the same studio and the same anchor desk she left 13 years ago to go to Albany.
As for her work desk, Lombard explained that Palmer is working at the desk at which Bill Carey had worked for years. Carey, a legend in local broadcast news, died in 2015. Since that time, his desk had been left vacant out of respect.
Lombard decided that it was time for the desk to be put back to work and that Palmer was the right person to sit at it.
While ownership has changed, much has remained the same at the station, Palmer says. “There are quite a few charter members,” she says of staffers who have been with the station since the beginning — including Lombard. “It’s a little like stepping back in time.”
Some things have changed, like some of the computer equipment. And, Palmer notices, “people are a little younger across the board.”
Lombard agrees, adding that news people are younger and “are able to move up more quickly than in years past.”
Another change Lombard and Palmer note, is that social media plays a much larger role today. “Social media changed the way we gather news,” Lombard says.
Both Palmer and St. Meran celebrated the return of local anchors with posts on social media. One, from St. Meran, noted, “You may have noticed something different today about @SPECNewsCNY & @SPECNewsSTier. I’ll be on for longer than the 4:30 show. Happy to share I’ll be the midday anchor. That’s not all, I get to share the desk w/ @TammyPalmerNews. It’s a homecoming as she helped launch the channel!”
In addition, Palmer has been finding a lot of warm reaction on social media. She said the “supportive feedback and well wishes,” help her feel she had made the correct move. “This is right. This is how it was meant to be,” Palmer says.
Palmer will be seen on Spectrum News from late afternoons until 5 a.m., Lombard says, with the newscasts in the wee hours being pre-recorded — except when news is breaking. St. Meran has the midday newscasts and, Lombard says, another person will join the staff to anchor local newscasts in the morning.
Lombard declined to say who the morning anchor would be, but expected the person to be at the anchor desk before the State Fair starts.
Having local anchors allows them to focus more on local issues, Palmer says. As an example she points to local elections as an subject that benefits from local focus.
Likewise, she says that being a local anchor gives her more opportunities to take part in events in the region, something that was difficult when she had to drive the more than two hours from Albany.
Plus, viewers like it. “They seem genuinely happy for us,” Lombard says.
“Everybody likes to see more local reporters and anchors on the ground,” Palmer says.

Levine lands new investors, including Boeheim, for Galaxy
SYRACUSE — Galaxy Communications has a new name and new investors. CEO Ed Levine says the company is now Galaxy Media and is bringing aboard up to 10 new investors to buy out the shares that had been owned by a private investment firm and help the company reduce debt. Those investors are local people,
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SYRACUSE — Galaxy Communications has a new name and new investors.
CEO Ed Levine says the company is now Galaxy Media and is bringing aboard up to 10 new investors to buy out the shares that had been owned by a private investment firm and help the company reduce debt. Those investors are local people, Levine says, including his long-time friend Syracuse University basketball coach Jim Boeheim.
“We’re thrilled to have Coach Boeheim as a part of the team,” Levine tells CNYBJ in a phone interview, noting the two have done business together since the late 1990s and are personal friends.
Boeheim is one of seven investors who are buying the portion of Galaxy Media that had been owned by Atalaya Capital Management, Levine notes. As many as three more individuals may join them.
Levine has used private investments in his company to build it from a single station in Utica in 1990, to 14 stations around Central New York today, as well as an events-management business that operates around the state and recently began providing services in North Carolina and South Carolina.
In addition to the investors, Levine says he secured a 10-year Small Business Administration-backed loan. When that loan is paid off, the company will have no senior debt, he says. “At that point the company functions as an annuity,” he says.
Regardless of whether he ends up with seven or 10 new investors, Levine says he intends to keep for himself ownership of the lion’s share of the company, at least 73 percent. Investors will get preferred equity, he says, meaning they get paid even before he does.
Reflecting on his career in radio, first as a disc jockey whose dream was to one day manage a major-market station or, “maybe own a single station – so I could work for myself,” Levine says he never saw himself in the position he is today.
Galaxy Media has 100 employees. “I’ve got 100 families that are depending on me to make the right decisions,” he says.
The events business
One decision that has worked out is Galaxy’s push into events and promotions. The company’s events division is growing rapidly. Levine’s wife, Pam, is the division’s CEO. It runs several marquee events in Central New York, including Taste of Syracuse, Lights on the Lake, and the Leon Festival.
Galaxy runs events around New York state and recently expanded into the Carolinas where it is working on events in Myrtle Beach and Columbia, South Carolina as well as Raleigh, North Carolina. “The economy down there is very robust,” Levine notes.
Levine says events make up a growing piece of the company’s revenue. “Events are about 40 percent of overall cash flow. Once we get the Carolinas going, they could be more than 50 percent of cash flow,” he estimates.
Having worked with angel investors, private-equity firms, and individual investors, Levine has seen the radio industry gyrate through economic cycles and business fads — competitor Cumulus Media emerged from bankruptcy just last week. Levine says that the SBA loan and local investors represent a return to something like normalcy.
“We’re going old school and running it like a real business,” he says. “To me that’s the best bet on the next 10 years.”
Modular Comfort Systems buys Syracuse building for $350,000
SYRACUSE — Modular Comfort Systems, a local heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) contractor, recently purchased the 6,180-square-foot industrial building located at 1836 W. Fayette St. on the westside of Syracuse for $350,000. Patrick Hillery, of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company, exclusively marketed the property and facilitated the sale on behalf of the seller, Community
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SYRACUSE — Modular Comfort Systems, a local heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) contractor, recently purchased the 6,180-square-foot industrial building located at 1836 W. Fayette St. on the westside of Syracuse for $350,000.
Patrick Hillery, of Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company, exclusively marketed the property and facilitated the sale on behalf of the seller, Community Resources for Justice, Inc. of Boston. That organization had purchased the 0.84 acre property in October 2015 for $425,000, according to Onondaga County’s online property records.
Modular Comfort Systems says it specializes in energy-conservation HVAC systems for commercial, institutional, and industrial customers. With offices in the Syracuse and Rochester areas, the company has been in business for more than 40 years.

Romeo tapped as HealthlinkNY executive director
After having served in an interim role since the start of the year, HealthlinkNY has appointed Staci Romeo as the organization’s permanent executive director. She most recently served as HealthlinkNY’s senior VP and had previously worked as its comptroller, the organization said in a May 31 news release. HealthlinkNY operates the health-information exchange (HIE) connecting
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After having served in an interim role since the start of the year, HealthlinkNY has appointed Staci Romeo as the organization’s permanent executive director.
She most recently served as HealthlinkNY’s senior VP and had previously worked as its comptroller, the organization said in a May 31 news release.
HealthlinkNY operates the health-information exchange (HIE) connecting providers and patients in 13 counties in the Southern Tier, Hudson Valley, and Catskills regions of New York. It has offices in Binghamton and Hopewell Junction in Dutchess County, according to its website.
Romeo replaces Christina Galanis, who had served as president and CEO of HealthlinkNY. Galanis departed the organization in December to become president of an organization called WOMBA in New York City.
“Staci stepped in to ensure that HealthlinkNY did not miss a beat after the change in leadership, and then quickly executed several initiatives that have led to rapid growth of our health-information exchange,” Dr. Rajesh Davé, chairman of the HealthlinkNY board of directors, said. “She developed a vision for this organization’s future, and a solid plan to get us there.”
Under Romeo’s leadership, HealthlinkNY renewed its focus on the “customer,” or the providers who use the HIE to view their patients’ medical histories. Through the HIE, they can connect to their patients’ other health-care providers.
To make the HIE more “provider-friendly,” Romeo reorganized staff to create a unit dedicated to serving existing provider users; expanded the group dedicated to adding new providers; and moved HealthlinkNY’s help-desk group so the chief-information officer can supervise it. HealthlinkNY has also started offering providers “generous incentives to connect and contribute data,” per the release.
“We want providers to sign up and use the HIE,” Romeo said. “The underlying mission of HealthlinkNY is to make people and communities healthier. When providers can see their patient’s complete health picture, and when they can have quick, easy, and secure access to the health records they need from the patient’s other providers, then health-care quality is improved, health-care costs are reduced, and the patient receives the best treatment possible. That’s what makes this job so fulfilling.”
About the HealthlinkNY HIE
The HealthlinkNY HIE offers electronic access to patients’ community-wide health records and serves as the region’s access point to the Statewide Health Information Network of New York (SHIN-NY), “supporting collaboration” between health-care providers across the state.
The SHIN-NY connects eight regional networks, “or qualified entities (QEs), which allow participating health-care professionals, with patient consent, to quickly access electronic-health information and securely exchange data with any other participant in the state,” according to the website of the New York City–based New York eHealth Collaborative (NYeC).
HealthlinkNY is funded by the nonprofit NYeC (pronounced “nice”).
NYeC works with the New York State Department of Health to “improve health care by collaboratively leading, connecting, and integrating health information exchange (HIE) across the state,” according to its website.
Statistics
HealthlinkNY says it has added 53 new provider organizations to the HIE since the beginning of the year, bringing its total number of participating provider organizations to 341.
Romeo also noted that in the year’s first five months, HealthlinkNY already has “exceeded or nearly met” participation goals set by NYeC for all of 2018.
Providers are using the HIE more too, HealthlinkNY contends. Since the beginning of the year, providers have pulled records for 377,175 patients for the first five months of 2018, compared to 239,311 for the same period a year earlier. The 2018 figure represents a 57.6 percent increase over last year.
HealthlinkNY is working with providers to collect consent forms from patients, who can choose to allow, not allow, or allow only in emergencies access to their HIE records.
As of May 24, HealthlinkNY had collected 1,540,864 total patient consents, a figure that includes patients who live in HealthlinkNY’s 13-county service area in the Hudson Valley, Catskills, and Southern Tier, as well as other New York counties.
“The more provider organizations that participate, the more patients who consent, and the more times the HIE is used, the more valuable the HIE becomes,” Romeo said.
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