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Tompkins County Administrator Joe Mareane announces plan to retire in 2018
ITHACA, N.Y. — Tompkins County Administrator Joe Mareane has announced his plan to retire on Feb. 1, 2018. Mareane has served in the administrator’s
Oswego to use $10 million DRI award on a dozen projects
OSWEGO, N.Y. — The office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo has announced the 12 winning projects selected for the City of Oswego’s $10 million prize

Arc Herkimer: Transforming the nonprofit business model
Welcome change with open arms, but hang on to your basic values. — Dr. Spencer Johnson, author of “Who Moved My Cheese” HERKIMER — It’s 8:30 a.m. on June 17, and the new Mohawk Valley Region Accessible Park (Arc PARK) is officially open. The recreational park, a partnership between Arc Herkimer and the Village of Herkimer, is
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Welcome change with open arms, but hang on to your basic values. — Dr. Spencer Johnson, author of “Who Moved My Cheese”
HERKIMER — It’s 8:30 a.m. on June 17, and the new Mohawk Valley Region Accessible Park (Arc PARK) is officially open. The recreational park, a partnership between Arc Herkimer and the Village of Herkimer, is the only fully accessible recreation park in a nine-county area providing special playground equipment and surfaces, age-designated play areas, a bandstand, pavilion, fitness trail, concession stand, baseball field, and basketball court.
The park is the brainchild of Kevin Crosley, president/CEO of Arc Herkimer (formerly Herkimer Area Resource Center). The agency was incorporated in 1969 as the Herkimer chapter of New York State ARC, a 501(c)(3) entity.
“Our mission hasn’t changed,” notes Crosley. “Our goal is to empower people with developmental and other disabilities who live in Herkimer County and enrich the lives of others throughout the community. Arc Herkimer provides our constituents with support information and services, educational opportunities, the choice to live in their own homes, and work options. The park does both and more, since it is serving not just the 63,000 people living in Herkimer County, but also eight neighboring counties.”
He continues, “I started thinking about the park seven years ago: The original idea was to create a playground for the 2,900 kids in the region who couldn’t access the equipment typically found in a conventional playground. That idea morphed into creating a regional asset built for everybody.”
What also morphed is the price tag, which now exceeds $1.5 million. Crosley is still in the process of raising funds to cover the initial construction and wants to create a $250,000 endowment to support the park’s maintenance.
Arc PARK is just the latest change that has bubbled up from the organization since Crosley took the reins in September 2005. He stated his embrace of change in transforming the organization’s mindset in the organization’s 2005 annual report: “Change is difficult for many, but if executed properly, it is very rewarding and invigorating. One thing we know about change, it’s inevitable … [W]e need to provide outstanding programs and services to our consumers, while maintaining a healthy financial base. We need to be flexible … and dynamic in our approach to developing opportunities on the business side of our agency. We must maximize our existing funding streams and find new and creative ways to enable our consumers to live full and enriched lives. Diversification is critical to our long-term strategy … [We will] expand … [services while] generating revenue streams through non-traditional sources.” That year, the agency posted $15 million in revenue, of which more than 90 percent came from government payments, according to Crosley.
The Arc Herkimer president is a classic example of the social entrepreneur. He doesn’t call the organization a nonprofit entity — that’s just a tax designation. He operates with a for-profit mindset found in any high-performing organization. Crosley runs a social-impact organization that disrupts the status quo in order to improve the lives of its constituents. That means thinking big and employing robust marketing that builds brand awareness, generates support, and increases the flow of resources. It also means innovating.
“I always ask the staff, are we delivering on our promise? To do that, we can never stop innovating,” Crosley says. “We need to understand and respond to what is and isn’t working. And we need to think about the return on our investment from a long-term perspective … To have impact … [a social-impact] organization needs to focus on its purpose, employ talented people, and constantly innovate.”
And innovate he has. By the 40th anniversary of the organization in 2009, Arc Herkimer (then called Herkimer ARC) generated $20.6 million in revenue with a net surplus of $1.13 million; added 10 new site-based facilities; increased fundraising more than 300 percent; grew Herkimer Industries (HI), the vocational work center and sub-contracting division, 250 percent; and added 15 new programs. The next year, Crosley created a business park in a 120,000-square-foot building in Herkimer donated by a local family.
“I saw the building both as a new source of real-estate revenue and as a community resource for industrial and commercial use. It can be a springboard for community development, fostering new businesses, and helping to guarantee employment in the county. The building required a substantial investment to upgrade the facility, but today we lease space to 17 tenants and are transforming the industrial side of the building to accommodate the future relocation of HI’s industrial work center that will employ 100 individuals, most with disabilities.
“In addition, Arc Herkimer, in partnership with Herkimer College (formerly Herkimer County Community College), has reserved 15,000 square feet as a START-UP NY site.” In 2014, the Slocum-Dickson Foundation donated its property at Central Plaza in Ilion to the agency. Now dubbed the Arc Herkimer Mall, the building includes 70,000 square feet of office space currently housing five tenants. The current profit-and-loss statement projects income of about $500,000 from leases.
Changes in 2016
The pace of change at the agency hasn’t slowed. Last year, Crosley undertook a number of new initiatives. “September 28, 2016, was ‘B-Day’ (for branding) at Arc Herkimer,” asserts the indefatigable president. “The agency unveiled its new name and logo to 200 people at a picnic here in Herkimer, along with the new mission, vision statement, and tagline. The reason for the change was to show unity with 650 other Arcs across the country [that service those with disabilities]. The rebranding also serves to increase awareness of the agency’s mission, programs, and services. It’s an opportunity to strengthen relationships and develop new partnerships, open avenues for new-product and innovative-program development, and engage in contemporary promotional strategies. The new tagline sums up what we’re all about at Arc Herkimer — ‘building community.’”
In June, the agency also moved its Goodwill-Arc Herkimer Store and Donation Center to a new and expanded location on Caroline Street in Herkimer.
“Arc Herkimer and Goodwill Industries of Greater New York and Northern New Jersey opened our first joint venture, retail store back in 2008,” notes Crosley. “Our success at the old location prompted the move to the new location which has 8,000 square feet. Area residents donate items to the store, and the proceeds from the sales support our programming and services at the agency.”
Add a restructuring process to Arc Herkimer’s changes in 2016.
“The impact of New York State budget cuts to fund our programs and the fact that Medicaid payments were flat for the preceding seven years forced us to reevaluate how we delivered our services,” says Crosley. “Like every business, we focused on being more efficient and eliminating duplication of services. We also made a concerted effort to share best practices and technology between our programs. It was, in effect, a cultural shift that broke down traditional thinking. We integrated the residential group with the day-support group in order to consolidate responsibilities. This is a major change that will take some time to complete, but we’re already seeing dramatic changes in better communications and lower costs.”
Arc Herkimer also initiated “Project SEARCH,” a new program with Herkimer College to create a 40-week internship program for young adults with disabilities, ages 18-34. The objective is to prepare the interns for competitive employment and maximum independence. Interns participate in daily classroom instruction and gain hands-on experience while rotating among various sites at the college and in the community. Five interns graduated in May of this year. In addition, Arc Herkimer joined with other area organizations to form Center Information Services (CIS). CIS provides computing and information services to member organizations, who can’t afford to hire qualified IT professionals on their staffs. The year 2016 also included a decision to establish a satellite clinic in Herkimer administered by the Arc of Madison Cortland.
“New York State mandated that clinical services must be delivered at sites certified by OPWDD (Office for People with Developmental Disabilities),” avers Crosley. “It didn’t make sense to recruit a cadre of health professionals in order to provide a full spectrum of services when a neighboring agency was already well-positioned. So Arc Herkimer retained its nursing services for residential and day-support programs, psychiatry and psychology services, along with pre-school assessments. The Arc of Madison Cortland now provides services in clinical disciplines such as dietetics/nutrition, occupational therapy, podiatry, physical therapy, social work, and speech pathology. We think this arrangement better serves our clients and makes better use of our resources.”
Eleven years after Crosley joined the agency, Arc Herkimer posted $25 million in revenue in 2016, a $10 million increase since his arrival, despite cutbacks in state funding. The agency employs between 350 and 400 people serving 680 county residents and utilizes 375,000 square feet in 39 locations, most of which it owns. Arc Herkimer is the second-largest employer in the county. “When I arrived in 2005, we were more than 90 percent Medicaid [funding] dependent,” Crosley stresses. “Today the ratio is 69/31 [dependent]. By 2022, the goal is to reach a 50/50 ratio.”
Herkimer Industries
Much of Arc Herkimer’s success in weaning the organization off government support is due to the growth of Herkimer Industries (HI).
“HI is the vocational division of Arc Herkimer,” says Michael Lamb, VP of industrial operations. “We provide contract packaging, industrial sewing solutions, package and product-design services, ISO-compliant quality assurance, and worldwide distribution. HI also offers a full line of safety products, including law-enforcement and military supplies. We are an affiliate of the U.S. Ability One Program and a Preferred-Source Vendor for NYSID (New York Industries for the Disabled).
HI also supports a long list of commercial enterprises. “For the past four years, we have had a strong relationship with Walmart,” continues Lamb, “assembling and packaging displays for 700 stores from Maine to Virginia. Regionally, we provide services to customers such as Indium Corp., Otis Technology, PIP (Protective Industrial Products), Revision, Taylor Made Products, Cece’s Wool Products, and ZMedica. Currently, HI also has 350 products on state contract as a preferred source. We are partnering with Fiberdyne Energy in Frankfort to provide a wide range of LED solutions for their indoor and outdoor lighting needs. The vocational arm employs more than 150 workers, including individuals with disabilities. When I joined the agency in 2006, HI was generating $1.25 million [annually]. Last year, we posted $6.5 million in sales. Five years from now, the goal is to generate $10 million to $12 million.”
Crosley earned his bachelor’s degree in mass communications from Bloomsburg University (Pennsylvania) in 1981 and a master’s degree in sports management in 1982 from Ohio State University. From June 1984 through August 2005, he served as the VP of sales for the J. M. Murray Center in Cortland before assuming the role as president/CEO at Arc Herkimer in September 2005. Lamb is a 1989 graduate of Clarkson University with a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering. He worked at General Electric, Honeywell, and Park Electrochemical Corp. before joining Arc Herkimer in June 2006 as VP of industrial operations.
To quote the author of “Who Moved My Cheese,” Crosley welcomes change with open arms, but hangs on to his basic values. The fact that he has devoted his professional career to, and is passionate about, helping the disabled, their families, and the community is no impediment to running Arc Herkimer like a for-profit business. Arc Herkimer under Crosley keeps expanding its services to assist the developmentally disabled perform productive work, enhance day and clinical programs, and support residential alternatives by re-investing surpluses and thinking out of the box. It’s one thing to be creative; it’s another to create financial stability, confirmed by the agency’s $9.38 million in net assets through 2016.
Crosley’s tenure at Arc Herkimer has made the agency a business model for other social-impact organizations.
SDMI invests nearly $2M in tube laser for work on metal parts
MARATHON — Square Deal Machining, Inc. (SDMI), a Marathon–based manufacturer of precision parts, has purchased its first tube laser for engineering, designing, and producing custom metal parts. SDMI manufactures parts from carbon steel, stainless steel, or aluminum for original-equipment manufacturers, says Joseph (Joe) Morgan, CEO and sole owner of the company located in southern Cortland
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MARATHON — Square Deal Machining, Inc. (SDMI), a Marathon–based manufacturer of precision parts, has purchased its first tube laser for engineering, designing, and producing custom metal parts.
SDMI manufactures parts from carbon steel, stainless steel, or aluminum for original-equipment manufacturers, says Joseph (Joe) Morgan, CEO and sole owner of the company located in southern Cortland County.
“We provide fabrication, welding, machining, assembly, packaging, kitting … just-in-time delivery … direct shipping to their customers,” says Morgan. He spoke with CNYBJ on June 29.
Tube laser
A tube laser is a machine that can process round and square tubes up to 10 inches in diameter, as well as structural beams and other open profiles.
It allows the designer to construct in “multiple dimensions and planes,” the firm says.
“We decided to invest in a large tube laser, one that’s capable of going up to 10 inches in diameter to help us be more competitive in products that use tubing,” says Morgan.
The tube laser represented “pretty close” to a $2 million investment in a cash transaction, which included the installation process and the foundation underneath it, he says.
Morgan says “there are not very many” tube lasers in SDMI’s industry that can go up to 10 inches in diameter.
“That’s why we decided it was a good investment for us … both for current products that we manufacture and for development of future business,” he adds.
SDMI bought the tube laser last December from the German firm Trumpf, which makes fabrication equipment, according to Morgan. The company has an office in Farmington, Connecticut, according to its website.
How it helps
The technology, coupled with computer numerical control (CNC), is “expanding” the product and design possibilities for SDMI customers, the company says.
Most modern manufacturing in its industry is CNC-controlled, Morgan notes, with the “ability to work with … basically all the manufacturing software, so we can take a customer’s print and quickly turn it into a program and make the part,” says Morgan.
In addition to the product design and customization possibilities for clients, the new process has also streamlined operations at SDMI.
For example, Morgan and his employees discovered existing cut-and-form jobs that they could complete “in just one step” on the tube laser.
SDMI provides services for the military and defense, transportation, commercial and consumer, industrial, energy, and medical sectors.
“We cover pretty much every segment of the economy,” says Morgan.
SDMI’s services include CNC machining, CNC turning, grinding, cutting, punching, welding, and assembly, according to its website.
About SDMI
Square Deal Machining began as a one-room machine shop in Marathon, and has grown into a company that offers fabrication, machining, and welding capabilities.
Morgan purchased the business in 1998. Citing the company’s status as a private firm, he declined to provide any revenue information.
The company once had just seven workers, but now has grown to employ more than 300 people.
SDMI is headquartered in a 100,000-square-foot building at 98 U.S. Route 11 in Marathon.
The firm also operates an 85,000-square-foot facility at 496 U.S. Route 11 in Marathon, a 15,000-square-foot facility in Killawog, and a 20,000-square-foot location in the Hillcrest area of the town of Fenton, outside Binghamton, according to its website.
Career-development center trains employees for work at Dunkin’ Donuts
SYRACUSE — The Wolak Group designed its new career-development center to “provide a pathway to success” for all present and future employees at its Dunkin’ Donuts franchise restaurants in Central New York. That’s according to Ed Wolak, CEO of the Wolak Group, who spoke as his company formally opened the center on June 29. “I
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SYRACUSE — The Wolak Group designed its new career-development center to “provide a pathway to success” for all present and future employees at its Dunkin’ Donuts franchise restaurants in Central New York. That’s according to Ed Wolak, CEO of the Wolak Group, who spoke as his company formally opened the center on June 29.
“I am proud that the Wolak Group Career Development Center has come to fruition and will educate the next generation of managers. We are committed to ensure that every current or future associate can enjoy a successful and rewarding career that will provide them with the tools to achieve their aspirations,” he said.
The Wolak Group, headquartered in Falmouth, Maine, is an independent franchisee network that owns and operates more than 95 Dunkin’ Donuts restaurants in Central New York, Maine, and New Hampshire.
The 2,000-square-foot career-development center will train employees for work at Wolak’s Dunkin’ Donuts restaurants in Central New York.
The center is located next to the Dunkin’ Donuts restaurant at 2851 Erie Boulevard East in Syracuse.
When asked by CNYBJ how much it cost to create the career development center, the company replied: “It was a significant financial commitment by the Wolak Group. However, the [return on investment] will be several hundred times the cost.”
The company also noted that the space wasn’t originally built as a career-development center but was “significantly” modified for the center.
The center also serves as an education and mentorship center where current and prospective Dunkin’ Donuts franchised employees of the Wolak Group can pursue career opportunities within the organization.
The Wolak Group has a designated department that currently has five employees to handle the training, the company said. It plans to add one more employee to the department “in the near future and more as [it continues] to grow the network,” it added.
Kimberly Wolak, COO of the Wolak Group, called the Syracuse–based training facility “one of the first of its kind in this region.”
“The multi-week, management and leadership-training programs will enhance recruitment, training, development, and philanthropic efforts to ensure that the Wolak Group is looked upon as the employer of choice in this industry in this region,” she said in her remarks at the formal-opening event.
The Wolak Group employs nearly 2,000 Dunkin’ Donuts franchised workers across Central New York and throughout the Northeast.
Stardust Entrepreneurial Center launches new initiative to promote Finger Lakes business
Former State Senator Mike Nozzolio to lead the effort The Stardust Entrepreneurial Center of the Finger Lakes recently announced that it says is a major new initiative to promote the Finger Lakes region as a “great place for business enterprise.” The center has chosen former New York State Senator Mike Nozzolio to lead the effort.
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Former State Senator Mike Nozzolio to lead the effort
The Stardust Entrepreneurial Center of the Finger Lakes recently announced that it says is a major new initiative to promote the Finger Lakes region as a “great place for business enterprise.”
The center has chosen former New York State Senator Mike Nozzolio to lead the effort.
The Stardust Entrepreneurial Center said in a news release that with the region’s growing numbers of tourists and wine and craft-beverage enthusiasts, and growing national and international attention, now is the “ideal time to launch a promotional and collaborative effort to enhance business and career opportunities for present and future generations of the Finger Lakes region.”
The Stardust Initiative says it seeks to partner and collaborate with all of the Finger Lakes county and city IDAs, chambers of commerce, workforce-development boards, tourism boards, both four year and community colleges in the region, Finger Lakes BOCES and Cayuga BOCES, Cornell University, the Farm Bureau, wine trails, and all other business, labor, agricultural, tourism, and job-producing organizations.
“As the Finger Lakes tourism brand is growing, the time is ripe to further identify our region as the place to recruit new business ventures, as well as highlight our robust environment for innovation, business opportunity and entrepreneurship. The Finger Lakes region is not only a great place to visit, but a perfect location to create new business and career opportunities, live, work and raise your family” Jack Bisgrove, co-founder of the Stardust Entrepreneurial Center, said in the release.
The Stardust Finger Lakes Initiative is designed to assist the established economic-development initiatives across the Finger Lakes region by focusing “targeted attention” upon the region as a place to conduct business, as well as a great place to launch and grow a business.
The initiative, seeks to nurture job development in the region in not only the tourism business sector, but also in other industries.
“Our initiative does not seek to reinvent the wheel, but rather we want our efforts to help make the wheel turn faster to move the Finger Lakes economy forward,” Bisgrove said. “We want this Initiative to enhance collaboration and develop partnerships that will maximize the assets of our great region.”
Nozzolio was elected to represent this region for more than 34 years in the New York State Legislature, serving 10 years in the Assembly and 24 years in the State Senate. Prior to that service, he worked as a counsel for the House of Representatives in Washington D.C. While serving in the State Senate, he helped obtain funding for the Finger Lakes Institute, the Institute for Food Safety at Cornell, as well as the retention and recruitment of many important job-producing businesses in the Finger Lakes region, the release stated. He is a partner in the Harris Beach law firm.
“Our region has great job producing potential, but also faces significant challenges. It is my strong belief the Finger Lakes region can economically benefit from focused and targeted attention, and the Stardust Institute is to be commended for providing this essential branding of the Finger Lakes as an excellent place to grow business enterprise. This initiative will engage in extensive collaboration with all the Finger Lakes region’s numerous stakeholders who either contribute to or have the potential to assist in the targeted promotion of job development efforts for our region. The key is to provide assistance to their work by promoting our region’s significant assets,” said Nozzolio.
The initiative is planning to sponsor events, projects, and programs relating to job creation in the Finger Lakes region. Additionally, the initiative anticipates creating internships that will provide “practical hands-on” business experiences for students attending established business and entrepreneurship programs at area colleges and universities, the release stated.
The Stardust Entrepreneurial Center was co-founded by brothers Jack and Jerry Bisgrove, both originally from Auburn, as a “tribute to the region,” which gave birth to the Red Star Express Lines trucking company. The company began in 1932 as a family business in Auburn. Red Star’s founder, John Bisognano, later known as John Bisgrove, started the business by hauling sawdust in a horse and wagon to local meat markets. In time, he established Red Star Express Lines, a fleet of trucks serving businesses throughout the Finger Lakes region and the New York City market. The business grew into a large multi-state trucking company, employing over 3,000 people and hauling freight across the Northeastern United States and the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec.
DB&B’s Matticio elected NYSSCPA Syracuse chapter president
SYRACUSE — Karen Matticio recently began serving as president of the Syracuse chapter of the New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants (NYSSCPA). Matticio is a certified public accountant and a member/owner of Syracuse–based accounting firm Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs LLC (DB&B). Her one-year term began June 1, the firm said in a
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SYRACUSE — Karen Matticio recently began serving as president of the Syracuse chapter of the New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants (NYSSCPA).
Matticio is a certified public accountant and a member/owner of Syracuse–based accounting firm Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs LLC (DB&B).
Her one-year term began June 1, the firm said in a news release.
Prior to her installment as president, Matticio had served as secretary, treasurer, vice president, and president-elect of NYSSCPA’s Syracuse chapter.
The Syracuse chapter of the society includes Onondaga, Cayuga, Jefferson, Lewis, and Oswego counties, according to the NYSSCPA website.
Matticio joined the society in 1994 and is a member of its Syracuse chapter, DB&B said. She previously served as a member of the Syracuse chapter’s executive board and was co-chair of its budget committee.
Aside from her involvement with the NYSSCPA, Matticio leads Dermody, Burke & Brown’s physician and dental-practice groups, along with its business-valuation practice group.
She is also a member of the leadership council of the Women’s Fund of Central New York and is a sustaining member and past treasurer of the Junior League of Syracuse, according to DB&B.

Master Fisherman: Reuben & George Wood
Reuben Wood was an avid and excellent 19th century fisherman. He moved to Syracuse from the Albany area in 1850 and operated a confectionery and toy store, as well as a bait and tackle store. At Wood’s confectionery, he sold ice cream, baked goods, and soda water, as well as a variety of toys. The
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Reuben Wood was an avid and excellent 19th century fisherman. He moved to Syracuse from the Albany area in 1850 and operated a confectionery and toy store, as well as a bait and tackle store. At Wood’s confectionery, he sold ice cream, baked goods, and soda water, as well as a variety of toys. The bait and tackle store, known as Reuben Wood & Son, was located on South Clinton Street, and employed 38 clerks who made, sold, and shipped a variety of fishing supplies across the U.S.
Reuben frequently traveled around New York state and into Canada fishing for brook trout, or speckled beauties as he called them. He was a sought-after fishing guide who coordinated fishing parties of several men who usually caught between 100 and 200 lbs. of brook or lake trout on their excursions to the lakes in the Adirondacks.
Reuben also participated in distance fly-casting competitions. Frequently winning, he proudly displayed his prizes in his store’s windows. Wood could be seen practicing for the competitions as he cast his line into the Erie Canal in Clinton Square. Crowds would gather along the canal’s edge to watch “Uncle Reuben” as he gently landed his fly onto the water.
In 1863, Reuben Wood invented a liquid insect repellent, which he called Lollacapop, for fending off annoying black flies, biting gnats, and mosquitoes.
In June 1883, Professor Spencer Baird of the Smithsonian Institution appointed Reuben as a member of the American staff in charge of the Light Fishing Tackle of America exhibit at the International Fisheries Exhibition in London, England. While attending the exhibition, Wood competed in the International Anglers’ Tournament, held at Welch Warp just outside London. He took on the most skillful anglers of England and Scotland. The day was cold and damp, and the wind blew against the anglers’ backs, making it difficult to cast long and accurately. However, in the end, Reuben prevailed and took first prize in the salmon and trout casting competitions.
Reuben Wood died the following February at age 62. His many friends attending his funeral spoke only complimentary words. A beautiful and unusual floral arrangement of a large fish rested on his coffin. Wood was interred in Oakwood Cemetery.
Along with his businesses and love of fishing, Wood also was an active member of First Baptist Church and two military organizations — the Citizens Corps and the Sumner Corps.
In 1897, outdoor journalist, Fred Mather, described Reuben Wood as “a synonym for all that was honest and manly.” As a memorial to Wood, one of his loyal friends, Judge Irving Vann, had a huge boulder on the shore of Cranberry Lake in the Adirondack Park inscribed with the following sentiment: “In memory of/Reuben Wood/a genial gentleman and great fisherman/who was fond of these solicitudes.”
Reuben Wood’s son, George, followed in his father’s footsteps with his love of fishing and his business acumen for making and selling fishing products and supplies, including the famous Wood fishing flies. George inherited Reuben Wood & Son and operated the bait and tackle store for many years after his father’s death. Born in May 1853, George seldom left Syracuse for any reason other than to go fishing —excursions that took him to freshwater lakes and streams in Adirondack Park, Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Michigan, as well as to saltwater areas along the eastern seaboard.
George did not try to imitate his popular father’s competitive inclinations, but he did claim to be the “Champion Liar of America,” a title that could easily be defended when telling tall fish tales. George once declared to Joseph H. Adams, a nature columnist with the Syracuse Post-Standard newspaper that he caught a four-pound trout on a ¼” hook. The incredulous Adams wrote in his column, Rambling ‘Round the Woods, in 1932, that George’s assertion was analogous to “lowering a piano from the roof of the State Tower building on one of the weaker strands of a spider’s web.”
Another humorous fish tale that appeared in the Fishing Gazette in 1890 involved George Wood and a fish that he had supposedly caught:
“Mr. Geo B. Wood, of R. Wood’s Sons, Syracuse, N.Y., recently caught a fish that until lately has been a stranger to the local waters. One of its greatest characteristics is the wonderful tenacity with which it clings to life. The specimen secured by Mr. Wood was placed in an aquarium until he could find time to set it up as an addition to his collection of preserved fishes. It is known that these fish will live for several days without a change of water, and this one was no exception. There was only about a gallon of water in the aquarium and it had not been changed for a week. One Saturday night after the store was closed the fish was seen by a policeman to leap from the tank and start on a search for fresh water. He was found cold and limp Monday morning hanging on to the water cooler faucet. The porter supposed the fish was dead, so threw it out in the ash barrel, but when George arrived at the store he had it brought in and placed in a pail of water preparatory to preserving it. He was called away for a few minutes and when he returned, he found the fish alive and wagging its tail for joy. It was kept for a few days then neatly mounted on a board and hung on the wall. George tells us that the fish is not dead yet. Every time a fly alights on him he wiggles his tail or strikes at it with a fin. In doing the latter act one day, it fell to the floor and with human instinct squirmed along to a tub of Lollacapop, which was ready for boxing. Climbing into the tub, it rolled over in the grease until completely smeared. Since then it has enjoyed life, not a fly goes near it. This is a remarkable fish and it is expected the Smithsonian Institution will send for it.”
George also improved upon his father’s insect repellent, Lollacapop, by solidifying it. He renamed the solid repellent as Wood’s Improved Lollacapop and packed it in tin boxes, selling it to explorers, sportsmen, bicyclists, surveyors, and tourists. He also invented and marketed his own outdoor products: the Bagaloo for carrying grasshoppers, frogs, and other live bait; and the Mosquito Head Net, a type of portable screened porch. Wood promoted his product to outdoor enthusiasts as “a necessity, not a luxury.”
After many years of successfully operating Reuben Wood & Son and fishing around New York state, Canada, and the U.S., George Wood died at his home in Syracuse in 1933 at age 79. He was survived by his wife, Mrs. Alice L. Wood, a notable cooking expert, dietician, and food columnist for the Syracuse Herald newspaper. Mrs. Wood had also assumed responsibility for the business several years before her husband’s death. She operated the business until her death in 1943. The business’ fate is unknown after Mrs. Wood’s death.
Along with his business and fishing pursuits, George also found time to be a member of the New York National Guard, the Onondaga Anglers Association, the Onondaga Historical Association, and First Baptist Church. He also was a member of Syracuse Lodge 305, Free & Associated Masons. George Wood was well-known and well-liked in the community and was fondly remembered by many local citizens.
Reuben Wood’s legacy lives on at Onondaga Historical Association, which owns two portraits of him. The larger portrait (measuring 56” h. x 74” h.) is a rare composition because it was painted by three different and famous local artists: James Cantwell, Fernando Carter, and Henry Ward Ranger. The painting is on display in the sporting section of OHA’s exhibit, Onondaga County, The Heart of New York, a survey of Onondaga County’s history.
Thomas Hunter is the curator of museum collections at the Onondaga Historical Association (OHA) (www.cnyhistory.org), located at 321 Montgomery St. in Syracuse.

NYSERDA offers $4 million for pilot programs to match clean-tech startups, manufacturers
The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) says up to $4 million is available to help entities “bridge the gap” between startup companies focused on clean-energy technology hardware and manufacturers that can help bring their products to market. One of NYSERDA’s goals is to help bring “innovative” clean-tech products to the marketplace,
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The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) says up to $4 million is available to help entities “bridge the gap” between startup companies focused on clean-energy technology hardware and manufacturers that can help bring their products to market.
One of NYSERDA’s goals is to help bring “innovative” clean-tech products to the marketplace, the authority said in a news release issued June 29.
The funding will create the manufacturing corps (M-corps) pilot program that will pay for the development of strategies to accelerate the time-to-market for clean-tech products. The M-corps-funded entities will “accomplish this goal by removing barriers” between clean-energy technology startups and manufacturers in New York state.
NYSERDA will “competitively” select one or more contractors to run the M-corps pilot program by the fall and then launch the pilot later this year.
Once it awards funding, most of the pilot activities will focus on hardware startups that have a prototype and a validated market but need manufacturing assistance.
The goal is to “better prepare” hardware startup companies and manufacturers to work together as the state “continues to advance these industries.”
NYSERDA expects the pilot to last about two years. Based on the results, NYSERDA will issue another “competitive” solicitation to select one or more contractors to implement “the most promising lessons learned on a larger scale.”
NYSERDA will invest a total of $12 million in this initiative through the end of 2019.
The authority will conduct an informational webinar about the M-corps initiative on July 13 between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. and answer questions relating to possible projects, program applicability, selection criteria, and any other appropriate topics.
Funding is available through the state’s clean-energy fund.
More information about the webinar and funding is available on NYSERDA’s website: https://www.nyserda.ny.gov/All-Programs/Programs/Manufacturing-Corps-Pilot-Program.
Explaining rationale
NYSERDA also used its news release to explain why it believes such pilot programs are needed.
Bringing cleantech products to the marketplace is “vital” to the clean-climate careers initiative, a “multi-pronged strategy” to grow New York’s “emerging” clean-energy economy to make the state a “magnet” for energy-technology companies and create 40,000 new, “good-paying,” clean-energy jobs by 2020, NYSERDA said.
It’s also “vital” to supporting Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s reforming the energy vision (REV) effort, the authority added.
“Under Gov. Cuomo’s leadership, New York has made a significant investment in clean-tech startups and supporting entrepreneurs. Now, we are taking the next step — to bring them together with manufacturers that can move their products to the marketplace to help make New York’s environment cleaner and greener,” Alicia Barton, president and CEO of NYSERDA, said in the release.
NYSERDA is a public benefit corporation, started in 1975, that says it seeks to “advance innovative energy solutions in ways that improve New York’s economy and environment.” Its efforts include conducting energy research and analysis, attracting private-sector capital investment to help expand New York’s clean-energy economy, reducing barriers to using clean energy on a large-scale in the state, and promoting energy efficiency and use of renewable energy by New York communities and residents. NYSERDA is governed by a 13-member board of directors.
Central New York venture ecosystem builders to be honored in September
SYRACUSE — Upstate Venture Connect (UVC) recently announced that several community leaders from the Syracuse area have been nominated for 2017 Venture Ecosystem Awards. More than 120 submissions, across the five awards categories, were received. These nominations “represent the entrepreneurial leaders throughout Upstate who are transforming our region’s economy,” according to UVC. “We’re ready for
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SYRACUSE — Upstate Venture Connect (UVC) recently announced that several community leaders from the Syracuse area have been nominated for 2017 Venture Ecosystem Awards.
More than 120 submissions, across the five awards categories, were received. These nominations “represent the entrepreneurial leaders throughout Upstate who are transforming our region’s economy,” according to UVC.
“We’re ready for another year of connecting entrepreneurs to investors and community builders. We’ll showcase the top CEOs creating the future today, and celebrate those for their efforts in making Upstate the go-to destination for entrepreneurs,” UVC Co-founder Martin Babinec said in a news release.
Winners will be announced at an awards luncheon at the Marriott Syracuse Downtown on Sept. 19.
Here are the Central New York region leaders nominated by category:
Campus Connector — Honoring individuals affiliated with an educational institution (an administrator, student, alumnus, or faculty member) who are leveraging on- and off-campus resources and connections to spin out research startups and/or create opportunities to retain entrepreneurial students.
– Nasir Ali — CEO, co-founder of Upstate Venture Connect and managing director of the StartFast Venture Accelerator
– Terry Brown — executive director of the Falcone Center for Entrepreneurship at Syracuse University (SU)
– Linda Dickerson Hartsock — executive director, Blackstone LaunchPad at SU
– Michael D’Eredita — Co-founder, Mozzo Analytics, Veda Sport; professor of practice at SU
– Wills Hapworth — executive director, Thought Into Action Entrepreneurship Institute at Colgate University
– Jim Joseph — dean of Madden School of Business at Le Moyne; advisor, Oneida Group; member, UNY50
Magical Mentor — For individuals who have had a transformative impact on the trajectory of one or more startup companies.
– Lamont Mitchell — director of minority affairs/MWBE compliance officer, City of Syracuse
Community Catalyst — Honoring individuals who organize programs to bring together diverse-start ecosystem players in a local community and/or increase the amount of capital and number of active early stage investors in that community.
– Sean Branagan — Co-founder, Student EuroTech Cup; director of digital media entrepreneurship, Syracuse University’s Newhouse School; creator, Student Startup Madness; founder, Communigration
– Kathryn Cartini — CMO, UVC; associate partner, Chloe Capital; mentor StartFast, IgniteU NY
– Rick Clonan — VP of innovation & entrepreneurship, CenterState CEO/The Tech Garden
– Troy Evans — Co-founder, Syracuse CoWorks and Commonspace; founder, 16th Avenue, Inc.
– Chris Fowler — Founder/executive director, SyracuseFirst; board member, Syracuse Real Food Coop
– Martha Grabowski — professor/director at Le Moyne College
– Joanne Lenweaver — director of WISE Women’s Business Center
– Chuck Stormon — director, Advanced Tech, AIS; general partner/co-founder, StartFast, Member, UNY50
Ecosystem Champion — For individuals who are catalyzing and supporting startup activity across multiple upstate New York communities.
– Nasir Ali — CEO, co-founder of Upstate Venture Connect and managing director of the StartFast Venture Accelerator
– Kathryn Cartini — CMO, UVC; associate partner, Chloe Capital; mentor StartFast, IgniteU NY
– John Liddy — director, Student Sandbox; EIR, Tech Garden, MVCC, Le Moyne; e200 instructor, Interise
– Joan Powers — senior business advisor, Onondaga Community College / Small Business Development Center
– Randy Wolken — president of the Manufacturers Association & Manufacturers Alliance of New York
Deal of the Year — Honoring a company that has a successful exit, creating wealth for investors and founders/employees, as well as making the company a stronger contributor to the local economy. UVC said the finalists in this category will be announced later.
An independent panel of judges will review the nominations and determine the winners. For a complete list of nominees, visit UVC.org/Awards-Nominations-2017.
UVC says it is a 501(c)(3) public benefit nonprofit creating an entrepreneur-led startup ecosystem for upstate New York. Since 2010, it says it has helped launch six angel funds and three startup accelerators.
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