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With state help, Dutchland Plastics will move local operation to bigger space in Canastota
CANASTOTA — The Village of Canastota will use a nearly $1.7 million Restore NY grant to help pay for the construction of a facility that will be the new home for Dutchland Plastics’ New York operations. “We are very excited to welcome Dutchland Plastics to the Village of Canastota. This Restore NY project is a […]
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CANASTOTA — The Village of Canastota will use a nearly $1.7 million Restore NY grant to help pay for the construction of a facility that will be the new home for Dutchland Plastics’ New York operations.
“We are very excited to welcome Dutchland Plastics to the Village of Canastota. This Restore NY project is a great example of remediating and revitalizing an abandoned industrial site and bringing it back to life as a value-added economic property in our community,” Carla DeShaw, mayor of the Village of Canastota, said in a news release that the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued Jan. 22.
The expansion will facilitate the creation of at least 42 new full-time jobs over the next two years in addition to the 23 positions that will be retained. The state expects construction on the new facility to finish by the end of 2019.
In order to encourage Oostburg, Wisconsin–based Dutchland Plastics to expand in Central New York, Empire State Development (ESD) has offered up to $475,000 in performance-based tax credits through its Excelsior Jobs program, which are tied to job-creation commitments, Cuomo’s office said.
Additionally, ESD has reallocated a nearly $1.7 million Restore NY grant to the Village of Canastota that will assist with construction of the new building.
The company will invest $2.6 million for capital equipment and to customize the new facility, which will sit along the Erie Canal, Cuomo’s office said.
Dutchland is the third largest contract rotational molder in the U.S., Cuomo’s office said. It described the firm as “country’s leading contract plastics rotomolded product manufacturer.”
“We are very excited about this expansion,” Randy Herman, CEO of Dutchland Plastics, said in Cuomo’s release. “This is a tremendous opportunity and I want to thank Gov. Cuomo, Madison County Industrial Development Agency Executive Director Kipp Hicks, and especially Canastota Mayor Carla DeShaw, who will be assigning resources to help the company recruit and train requisite new hires from the local community.”
As a custom plastics-products manufacturer, Dutchland Plastics services recreational, commercial, outdoor, food and beverage, furniture, and marine industries. The company manufactures products like Yeti coolers and NuCanoe boats, according to Cuomo’s office.

The Redhouse readies for move into City Center
SYRACUSE — The Redhouse performing-arts center is getting ready to move to its new home inside the building at 400 S. Salina St. in Syracuse now known as City Center. City Center was named to “reflect its place in the business and cultural center of Syracuse,” according to a news release from Cornerstone Real Estate
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SYRACUSE — The Redhouse performing-arts center is getting ready to move to its new home inside the building at 400 S. Salina St. in Syracuse now known as City Center.
City Center was named to “reflect its place in the business and cultural center of Syracuse,” according to a news release from Cornerstone Real Estate Opportunities of Syracuse.
In its history, the structure was once home to Sibley’s department store before it closed in the late 1980s.
“We’re hoping to move in by mid-February,” says William Hider, president of the board of trustees of the Redhouse, a nonprofit arts organization. “And we’re hoping to have our first production here in mid-March.” Hider spoke with CNYBJ inside City Center on Jan. 19.
The Redhouse will be a primary tenant in the building that’s under redevelopment to make it a mixed-use facility. The intention was to expand the Redhouse, according to Hider.
“[We] have a place to stay, a bigger place, and have some income coming in for an endowment so we don’t have to raise … as much money all the time,” says Hider. “This does both for us.”
The Redhouse has occupied its current location at 201 S. West St. in Syracuse since the mid-1980s, according to Hider.
Besides being a tenant, the Redhouse is also a part owner in the building to which it is moving. The Redhouse, along with Gary and Jeremy Thurston, co-own the nearly 250,000-square-foot structure at 400 S. Salina St.
The Thurstons, known locally for leading the Hayner Hoyt Corporation of Syracuse, are the majority owners in the partnership, says Hider.
Interior work
The work on the project started in the spring of 2017. The project is roughly $30 million “for everything,” according to Hider.
Its finish date “depends on when the tenants come,” he notes.
“The Redhouse portion and the garage portion will be done shortly. The building and the office part may be a year away,” says Hider.
Hayner Hoyt is the general contractor on the project, and Schopfer Architects LLP, also based in Syracuse, is handling the project design work.
The Redhouse plans to borrow money from a consortium of area banks including Pathfinder Bank (NASDAQ: PBHC), M&T Bank (NYSE: MTB), and NBT Bank (NASDAQ: NBTB) to help finance the project, according to Hider.
The Redhouse is using a $1.3 million grant from the Central New York regional economic-development council (REDC) for the renovation of its space in the building. The REDC also awarded grants of $1.6 million for the renovation work on the building’s parking garage and $2.5 million for the renovation work throughout the rest of the building beyond the space that the Redhouse will occupy, he adds.
“And we hope that this area … that this will spur the rest of Salina Street … down to the hotel … for future development,” says Hider.
Pursuit of tenants
Besides the Redhouse, the pursuit of tenants, such as a restaurant, continues, says Brian Rossi, who described himself as a project manager with Cornerstone Real Estate Opportunities. Rossi is also the chief operating officer of Bell Tenant Champions at 120 Walton St., a sister company to Cornerstone.
“[We’re] looking at colleges, obviously any of the SUNY programs are targets for us, local schools that have music, arts, [and] culinary institutes that have a shared ability to share some of the services and space that Redhouse has to offer,” says Rossi.
The tenants will also include a credit union or a bank, and another anchor tenant for the upper floor of the City Center.
Building history
City Center was the site of a famed Vaudeville theatre and opera house from 1920 until 1967, according to the Cornerstone news release.
Known for its Vaudeville acts and musical performances, RKO Keith’s was designed by Thomas Lamb who built the Syracuse Loew’s State Movie House right across the street, which is now known as the Landmark Theatre.
The Vaudeville theatre and most of the 400 block was demolished in 1967 to make way for the Sibley’s department store. Sibley’s occupied the space until closing its doors in 1988, according to the news release.
Since that time, various call centers and offices occupied the building, including National Government Services and Excellus BlueCross BlueShield.
Excellus moved out in 2013 and the building has been vacant since then.
Onondaga County hotel occupancy rate rises nearly 4 percent in December
Hotels in Onondaga County were fuller in December than in the year-ago month, according to a new report. The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county increased 3.5 percent to 39.8 percent in December from 38.5 percent a year prior, according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data
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Hotels in Onondaga County were fuller in December than in the year-ago month, according to a new report.
The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county increased 3.5 percent to 39.8 percent in December from 38.5 percent a year prior, according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data and analytics company. It was the third straight month in which Onondaga County’s occupancy rate rose compared to the year-earlier period. For all of 2017, the county’s occupancy rate was down 2.7 percent to 56.2 percent.
Revenue per available room (RevPar), a key industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, dipped 0.1 percent to $34.96 in December from $34.99 in December 2016. For the full year, Onondaga County’s RevPar was down 3.3 percent to $56.59.
Average daily rate (or ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, slipped 3.5 percent to $87.82 in December, compared to $90.99 a year earlier. For all of 2017, Onondaga County’s ADR was off 0.7 percent to $100.65, according to STR.
Buyer Be Wary of Academic Dunces
Have you ever wondered whether we should have a warning label on college courses? “Warning: this course is taught by a professor who has proven he is a dunce.” Your child can sign up for a course at Princeton with Professor Paul Krugman. He won a Nobel Prize in economics. He writes for the New
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Have you ever wondered whether we should have a warning label on college courses? “Warning: this course is taught by a professor who has proven he is a dunce.”
Your child can sign up for a course at Princeton with Professor Paul Krugman. He won a Nobel Prize in economics. He writes for the New York Times. And for many other papers via syndication.
Very often he writes and teaches garbage.
Your child might attend a course taught by Professor Paul Ehrlich at Stanford University. A course about population trends in the world. He is an expert in this field. He sold 3 million copies of his book on this subject. What he wrote and what he taught is garbage.
First, let’s discuss Krugman. Right after Donald Trump’s election he announced stock markets would plunge and never recover. He proclaimed the new president was irresponsible, ignorant, and has put all the wrong people in charge of the economy.
Krugman said we are probably looking at a global recession with no end in sight. “…a terrible thing just happened,” he proclaimed.
Who is irresponsible here? Krugman. He has probably millions of readers around the world. Serious people take him seriously. After all, he won a Nobel, and Princeton lets him teach. His opinions are so powerful in this world, they might easily start a few trembles in markets. Thereby affecting the wealth of hundreds of millions of people.
I am sure many investors took Krugman’s advice and dumped their stocks. Today, they look at how stocks (as measured by the S&P 500 index) have gained more than 35 percent since the 2016 election, while their money sat on the sidelines. Economies in most of the world are healthy.
Krugman was utterly, totally, completely wrong — on one of the most important questions of the day.
Fifty years ago, Professor Ehrlich scared the hell out of millions. He announced the battle to feed humanity was over. In the 1970s and 1980s, hundreds of millions would starve, he predicted. They would, no matter what crash programs we fired up. He told us nothing could prevent huge increases in the world’s death rate.
Ehrlich’s impact was powerful. Some claim it frightened India into forcing millions of women to be sterilized. He helped generate hysteria among those concerned with the environment. To this day, we hear some folks wail about how overpopulation will destroy us.
All of it was rot. He made numerous predictions of doom. In nearly all cases the very opposite came about. He was as good at predicting as was Krugman.
Suppose you are the top financial executive in a company. Suppose your projections are as far out from reality as those of these guys. You would get fired. And you would deserve it.
Did these guys get fired? Nah. They got promoted. They got protected with tenure. Did the New York Times decide that this guy, Krugman, maybe does not know what he writes about? Nope. The Times seems to love him.
Anybody can make mistakes, of course. But, how can Princeton take students’ money? For courses taught by a guy who predicts worldwide meltdown when the opposite happens? Krugman did a little mea culpa on television. He admitted he let his political biases color his thinking. How can Stanford allow someone to teach about population when he is 1,000 percent wrong in his big book?
Many academic experts also predicted we would be squeezing the last few drops of oil from the earth by now. They were utterly wrong. Worse, they influenced the writing of various policies. The policies look ridiculous today. Because they were based on the predictions from these academics.
Yet they continue to teach. They continue to win honors. Tenure is supposed to give academics freedom and protection. Is it supposed to protect them from being dismissed for fraud?
I truly do believe some universities deserve to be branded as purveyors of fraud.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home near Oneonta. Write Tom at tomasinmorgan@yahoo.com. Read more of his writing at tomasinmorgan.com
Cuomo Calls Federal Tax Law Economic Civil War but Fails to Show Facts
In his recent State of the State address, Gov. Cuomo called the recently passed federal tax reform bill “economic civil war” that will raise New Yorkers’ property taxes and income taxes. Unfortunately, no explanation for this statement was provided. Because of this type of overheated rhetoric coming from Cuomo and others, confusion continues to reign
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In his recent State of the State address, Gov. Cuomo called the recently passed federal tax reform bill “economic civil war” that will raise New Yorkers’ property taxes and income taxes. Unfortunately, no explanation for this statement was provided. Because of this type of overheated rhetoric coming from Cuomo and others, confusion continues to reign regarding what effect the new tax law will have on New York state.
It’s no secret that New York is a high-tax state. The non-partisan Tax Foundation each year ranks every state in terms of its tax burden and New York is always either the highest, or close to the highest, in almost all categories of taxes. Sadly, our property taxes and income taxes are no exception. Prior to the enactment of the federal tax bill, individuals were able to deduct their property taxes and state income taxes on their federal tax return. Accordingly, the impact of our high property and income taxes were relatively muted at least for those who itemize their deductions on their federal tax returns.
Under the new federal law, the deduction for state and local property and income taxes is capped at $10,000. Most New Yorkers will not be affected by this change because they do not itemize their deductions but rather take a standard deduction. In fact, most will enjoy a tax cut because the new tax bill increases the standard deduction for a single filer to $12,000 and increases it for joint filers to $24,000. The law also increases the child tax credit.
If most New Yorkers will benefit from the federal tax plan, why is the governor sounding the alarm of economic Armageddon. It’s because he is worried about tax migration — that is, wealthy people leaving New York state and moving to other states with lower taxes. This is already occurring and could accelerate with the new tax law. The new federal tax law negatively affects wealthy New Yorkers because they tend to itemize their deductions and the new higher standard deduction is not enough to cover what they pay in state and local taxes. Moreover, New York’s income tax is progressive, meaning those who earn the most income pay the most in state income taxes. If New York loses these wealthy citizens to other states, it will have a bigger direct impact on the state revenues than if middle class or low-income citizens left the state.
There is irony to the fact that many of those speaking the loudest against the federal tax cuts are the same people who, in the past, advocated for higher taxes on the rich. At that time, they claimed that taxation of the wealthy did not play a role in where they lived. But now that the federal government is doing the taxing, their tune has changed.
Ultimately, it’s too soon to know exactly what effect the new tax law will have on New York and the state budget. There are indications that the economy will grow stronger as a result of the tax cuts. For example, Apple announced that because of the federal tax cuts it would be investing $350 billion in the U.S. over the next five years and hiring an anticipated 20,000 workers. Hopefully, more businesses will be following Apple’s lead. If the economy takes off, and the stock market continues to grow, that could be very positive for New York’s economy — offsetting any lost revenue as a result of tax migration. However, New York could also work on lowering its tax burden and if we did, the issue of tax migration would be mitigated.
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.
Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs, LLC
ALONZO BERTRON and JACK HARMATUK, of Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs, LLC, have been named senior associates. Bertron has been promoted to senior associate in the Tax Department. He started with the firm as an associate in that department in 2016. Bertron received his bachelor’s degree in accounting from SUNY Geneseo. Harmatuk has
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ALONZO BERTRON and JACK HARMATUK, of Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs, LLC, have been named senior associates. Bertron has been promoted to senior associate in the Tax Department. He started with the firm as an associate in that department in 2016. Bertron received his bachelor’s degree in accounting from SUNY Geneseo.
Harmatuk has been promoted to senior associate in Dermody’s Auditing & Accounting Department. He joined the firm as an associate in that department in 2015. Harmatuk received a bachelor’s degree in business from Le Moyne College and a bachelor’s degree in accounting from SUNY Oswego. Harmatuk is working to complete the certification process to earn his designation as a CPA.
The Hayner Hoyt Corporation has promoted GUS HERNANDEZ to chief operating officer. He started with the company as an intern in 2005 and steadily worked his way up from a project engineer to a project manager in 2008. From there, Hernandez was promoted to project executive in 2013 and VP of operations in 2015. A
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The Hayner Hoyt Corporation has promoted GUS HERNANDEZ to chief operating officer. He started with the company as an intern in 2005 and steadily worked his way up from a project engineer to a project manager in 2008. From there, Hernandez was promoted to project executive in 2013 and VP of operations in 2015. A SUNY ESF construction management graduate, he is also a certified health-care constructor.
MIKE GEORGE has been named VP of field operations. He joined Hayner Hoyt 11 years ago and brings vast technical knowledge and expansive construction experience to this new role. George will be tasked with providing a renewed focus on safety, quality, productivity, and schedule performance in the field.
TIM DUNN has been promoted to VP of pre-construction, after 12 months as the director of pre-construction. Having previously owned and operated several small construction companies, he is “well-versed” in construction operations. Prior to joining Hayner Hoyt, Dunn worked as the director of project management for Ephesus Lighting/Eaton Corporation and as a business development consultant with a focus on private and government contracts. That contract work led him to earn his law degree from Syracuse University.
CHRISTINA FEARON, RN has joined the Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) Vascular Surgery Group. She previously worked as a registered nurse in the Special Care and Intensive Care Units at the St. Elizabeth Campus of MVHS. Fearon earned a master’s degree in family health at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse and a bachelor’s degree
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CHRISTINA FEARON, RN has joined the Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) Vascular Surgery Group. She previously worked as a registered nurse in the Special Care and Intensive Care Units at the St. Elizabeth Campus of MVHS. Fearon earned a master’s degree in family health at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse and a bachelor’s degree in nursing at Utica College of Syracuse University in Utica. She is certified in basic life support, advanced coronary life support, pediatric advanced life support, and the NIH Stroke Scale.
Cayuga Radio Group announced it has named MIKE KERR “MCCABE” as its new brand manager for Z95.5 in Ithaca. He is replacing Gabe Carrillo, who was promoted to the company’s Energy 106.9 station in Milwaukee. Kerr is a recent graduate of Elmira College, but has been doing radio work for more than seven years with
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Cayuga Radio Group announced it has named MIKE KERR “MCCABE” as its new brand manager for Z95.5 in Ithaca. He is replacing Gabe Carrillo, who was promoted to the company’s Energy 106.9 station in Milwaukee. Kerr is a recent graduate of Elmira College, but has been doing radio work for more than seven years with on-air and programming roles in Elmira, Rochester, and Buffalo. He is no stranger to the Ithaca market. Kerr has played roles for the last two years regularly on 103.7 Q Country (WQNY), Lite Rock 97.3 (WYXL), and 96.7 The Vine in addition to Z95.5.
Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company has hired JAMES J. DRISCOLL as an associate real-estate broker in its Syracuse office. He has been in the real-estate business as a licensed broker for more than 30 years as the president of Auburn Sherlock Homes Real Estate Inc. Driscoll’s focus with Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage will be in retail and
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Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company has hired JAMES J. DRISCOLL as an associate real-estate broker in its Syracuse office. He has been in the real-estate business as a licensed broker for more than 30 years as the president of Auburn Sherlock Homes Real Estate Inc. Driscoll’s focus with Cushman Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage will be in retail and office sales and leasing.
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