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New York employers report need for skilled labor; apprentice programs help fill gaps
A recent report published by the New York State Department of Labor indicates that employers are facing labor shortages as they seek workers to fill skilled trade jobs. The report states that these shortages are mainly due to baby boomers retiring. The demand for skilled labor represents a good opportunity for high-school graduates and individuals […]
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A recent report published by the New York State Department of Labor indicates that employers are facing labor shortages as they seek workers to fill skilled trade jobs. The report states that these shortages are mainly due to baby boomers retiring. The demand for skilled labor represents a good opportunity for high-school graduates and individuals seeking a career change to enter these fields and train for what are often high-paying jobs.
Skilled trades pay above-average wages. The Department of Labor estimates that the overall median annual wage for skilled labor workers is $45,830. This is about $3,500 more than the median annual wage for all occupations in New York, which is $42,340. Currently, skilled trade jobs make up about 7 percent of the state’s workforce, or about 607,000 workers. Steel and construction workers, masons, plumbers, steamfitters, electricians, carpenters, legal secretaries, medical and dental assistants are all considered skilled labor. Some occupations such as electricians, report a median annual wage of $68,770. Others, such as iron or steel workers, report $90,810 as the median annual wage.
Often, it is not necessary for those entering jobs in skilled labor to obtain a traditional four-year college degree before earning a salary. In many cases, employers provide on-the-job training and pay for additional off-site training. Employers may also opt to offer an apprenticeship program in partnership with the Department of Labor. With an apprenticeship, there is a written contract between the apprentice and the employer that acknowledges their shared commitment to the training process. This agreement is approved by and registered with the New York State Department of Labor.
The Department of Labor’s website lists the apprenticeships available in different regions of the state. The site also lists a standard training outline each apprentice needs for his/her specific occupation. This ensures that apprentices across the state have the same set of skills. Apprentices work under the guidance of experienced craft workers called journey workers. Classroom-related instruction is often part of the apprenticeship. This instruction can be fulfilled through a trade school, local college or through a BOCES program. Upon successful completion, the Department of Labor awards the apprentice with a “certificate of completion.” This is a nationally recognized credential.
A limited amount of apprenticeships are awarded but many organizations or businesses maintain open recruitment events throughout the year. In fact, the Department of Labor’s website lists several announcements with details of organizations or businesses that maintain ongoing recruitment. The site also details what is involved with becoming a skilled laborer for several occupations. For example, some require as many as 6,000 hours of on-the-job training before certificates can be issued. Others require far fewer hours. Our talented, skilled workforce is an asset to our region. Occupations found within the skilled-labor workforce provide long careers for many residents locally, and many are high-paying jobs that support a whole family. To find more information about these jobs and the apprenticeship program, visit https://labor.ny.gov/apprenticeship/appindex.shtm or call the Department of Labor’s Syracuse office at (315) 479-3228. The department also offers information to businesses on how to become part of the apprenticeship program.
Finally, a program called Helmets to Hardhats connects veterans and transitioning active-duty military members with employment opportunities within the construction industry. To learn more about this program, visit www.helmetstohardhats.org.
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.
Post-Trump win, GOP economic confidence jumps, Democrats deflated in N.Y. consumer-sentiment survey
Consumer sentiment among New York Republicans surged in November following the election of Donald Trump as the next President of the United States. But the
The U.S. Economic Outlook & the Implications for Monetary Policy
The U.S. economy — supported by solid gains in household spending has expanded at a moderate rate in 2016. Job gains have been sturdy, and we have seen some firming in wage growth as the labor market has continued to tighten. Moreover, as the effects of earlier declines in energy prices have dissipated, the overall inflation
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The U.S. economy — supported by solid gains in household spending has expanded at a moderate rate in 2016. Job gains have been sturdy, and we have seen some firming in wage growth as the labor market has continued to tighten. Moreover, as the effects of earlier declines in energy prices have dissipated, the overall inflation rate has begun to move up closer to our 2 percent objective. As a consequence, economic conditions are not far from the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate of maximum sustainable employment and price stability. And, I expect that we will make further progress toward these goals in 2017. So, from a cyclical perspective, the economy is in reasonably good shape.
Over the longer term, however, the U.S. economy faces significant challenges. On the positive side, economic expansions don’t die of old age, and there appear to be few imbalances in the economy that could lead to the current expansion ending. But, for this to remain the case, it is important that fiscal policy and monetary policy are well-aligned going forward.
It is also important that the U.S. retains sufficient fiscal capacity so that fiscal policy can support the economy when the next cyclical downturn does occur. If fiscal policy can play a greater role in promoting macroeconomic stability, it would likely reduce the need for monetary authorities to take extraordinary actions to support economic activity.
There are other structural issues worth noting. Productivity growth has been anemic over the past few years, while income inequality has increased and income mobility remains low. Consequently, the gains in living standards generated by the current business expansion have been modest compared to previous expansions, and these gains have not been widely shared. Much more could be done both locally and nationally to increase the economy’s potential to perform better for a broader array of our citizens.
The outlook for growth and inflation
The U.S. economy has been expanding at a moderate rate. Growth has averaged about 1.8 percent this year and seems likely to continue at or slightly above this pace in 2017. The main driver of growth in 2016 has been the consumer, as real personal-consumption expenditures have increased at a 2.9 percent annual rate during the first three quarters. This solid consumption growth has been supported by sturdy job gains and rising nominal wages. Payroll gains have averaged about 180,000 per month this year. While this is down somewhat from 2015’s monthly pace of nearly 230,000, it is still considerably higher than the 75,000 to 110,000 monthly pace consistent with the likely long-term growth in the labor force. And wage gains, while still relatively muted, have begun to rise more rapidly as the labor market has continued to tighten.
Another positive factor for the economy is that household finances generally are in good shape. The household savings rate is 5.9 percent, which is a bit higher than one would expect based on historical relationships between household net worth and disposable income. And, after a long period of deleveraging, household debt has been growing, but very slowly. Over the last four quarters, household debt has risen by 2.4 percent. This slow pace, combined with low borrowing rates and an improving labor market, has pushed down the ratio of household debt service to income close to its lowest level since at least 1980. This suggests that households have the financial capacity to sustain their spending.
In contrast to consumer spending, many other areas of the economy have been considerably softer. Residential investment, after experiencing strong gains in 2015 and in the first quarter of 2016, fell during the past two quarters. However, increases in single-family housing starts and permits in October suggest that we are likely to see a reversal of this trend in the fourth quarter and into next year.
Business fixed investment has also been weak for some time. Part of this weakness reflects the collapse in oil and gas drilling activity following the plunge in crude oil prices during the second half of 2014. This adjustment now appears to be over, as oil and gas prices have recovered somewhat. But, even outside of this area, business fixed investment has been disappointing. Several factors may be at play here, including earlier uncertainty surrounding the presidential-election outcome and the fact that capacity-utilization rates remain unusually low at this point in the economic business cycle. While the election uncertainty has been resolved, I would expect business fixed investment to only rise slowly in the year ahead.
In contrast, the trade sector has performed surprisingly well in 2016. This sector had to contend with headwinds created by weak growth in final demand by our major foreign trading partners, as well as the impact of earlier dollar strength on the nation’s export competitiveness. However, I’m not sure that I would take much signal from this performance. The improvement in trade seems to have been driven mainly by weakness in imports, particularly for capital goods, and by some one-off factors, such as the surge in soybean exports last quarter — both of which are unlikely to continue.
On inflation, we are making progress in pushing toward our 2 percent objective. Headline inflation has risen this year as the earlier declines in energy prices have dropped out of the year-over-year figures. And, core inflation has remained broadly steady, running at 1.7 percent over the past year — as measured by the personal consumption expenditures deflator that excludes food and energy. This stability is noteworthy, because one might have anticipated that lower energy prices and a firmer dollar would have pushed core inflation a bit lower. Also, household inflation expectations — which at times in 2015 appeared to be at risk of becoming unanchored to the downside — have been broadly stable. The University of Michigan long-term inflation expectations measure has generally remained in the 2.5 to 2.8 percent range of recent years. In addition, the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations measure of 3-year median inflation expectations has stabilized in 2016 in a range of 2.5 to 2.8 percent, after declining modestly over the course of 2014 and 2015.
Implications for monetary policy
If the economy grows at a pace slightly above its sustainable long-term rate, as I expect, the labor market should gradually tighten further, and the resulting pressure on resources should help push inflation toward our 2 percent objective over the next year or two. Assuming the economy stays on this trajectory, I would favor making monetary policy somewhat less accommodative over time by gradually pushing up the level of short-term interest rates.
Following this year’s election, we have seen relatively large movements in financial asset prices. The stock market has firmed, bond yields have risen, and the dollar has appreciated. On balance, it appears that financial market conditions have tightened modestly. My personal interpretation of these developments is that market participants now anticipate that fiscal policy will turn more expansionary and that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will likely respond by tightening monetary policy a bit more quickly than previously anticipated. Assuming this expectation is realized, the recent modest tightening in financial-market conditions seems broadly appropriate.
Let me emphasize here that I do not view the recent shift in financial-market conditions as one that should prompt great concern. It is important to distinguish between a tightening of financial conditions that is driven by an increase in risk aversion from one that is driven by a greater likelihood of stronger near-term aggregate demand and less downside risk to the growth outlook. We experienced the former at the beginning of 2016, while the latter reflects current expectations of greater fiscal-policy stimulus.
Obviously, there is still considerable uncertainty about how fiscal policy will evolve over the next few years. At this juncture, it is premature to reach firm conclusions about what will likely occur. As we get greater clarity over the coming year, I will update my assessment of the economic outlook and, with that, my views about the appropriate stance of monetary policy.
William C. Dudley is president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. This viewpoint is an excerpt from his speech remarks, as prepared for delivery, at the Dec. 5 Association for a Better New York (ABNY) Breakfast at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City. He said the remarks express his own views and not necessarily those of the FOMC or the Federal Reserve System. Jonathan McCarthy, Paolo Pesenti, and Joseph Tracy assisted in preparing these remarks.
Community Bank to expand retirement-plan administration business with $140M acquisition
DeWITT, N.Y. — Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) on Dec. 5 announced it will acquire Northeast Retirement Services, Inc. (NRS) — a privately held, Woburn, Massachusetts–based retirement-plan administrative services firm — for about $140 million in cash and stock. After the deal closes, NRS will become a subsidiary of Benefit Plans Administrative Services, Inc. (BPAS),
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DeWITT, N.Y. — Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) on Dec. 5 announced it will acquire Northeast Retirement Services, Inc. (NRS) — a privately held, Woburn, Massachusetts–based retirement-plan administrative services firm — for about $140 million in cash and stock.
After the deal closes, NRS will become a subsidiary of Benefit Plans Administrative Services, Inc. (BPAS), a wholly owned subsidiary of Community Bank System.
NRS provides plan accounting, transfer agency, fund administration, trust, and retirement plan services. BPAS is a national provider of employee-benefit related services, including defined contribution, actuarial and pension services, and collective investment fund, and institutional trust services, Community Bank said.
The combination of NRS and BPAS will create an organization with more than $80 million in annual revenue, over $50 billion in trust assets, and 3,800 retirement and other employee-benefit plan administration clients throughout the U.S. and Puerto Rico, according to Community Bank.
The acquisition is expected to close in the first quarter of 2017, subject to certain shareholder and regulatory approvals. The boards of directors of both companies unanimously approved the deal.
“We are very excited to be partnering with NRS, a respected and growing provider of customized institutional trust services,” Mark E. Tryniski, Community Bank System president and CEO, said in a news release. “The transaction will strengthen and complement our existing BPAS businesses, and represents an attractive and balanced utilization of our strong currency and existing surplus capital.”
Tryniski’s mention of “strong currency” is undoubtedly a reference to Community Bank’s stock, which has rocketed up 47 percent year to date through Dec. 7. That makes an acquisition using stock more attractive.
Under the terms of the agreement, Community Bank System will pay NRS shareholders about $70 million worth of its common stock and $70 million in cash.
Community Bank System expects that excluding acquisition-related expenses, the deal will add 4 cents to its GAAP earnings per share in its first full year and add about 5 cents a share in the second year. Community Bank System expects that the transaction will add about 16 cents to its cash earnings per share in the first full year, excluding acquisition-related expenses, and add 17 cents a share in the second year.
Raymond James & Associates — headquartered in St. Petersburg, Florida — acted as exclusive financial advisor (investment bank) to Community Bank System in the acquisition, and New York City–based Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP was its legal advisor. Loomis & Co., based in Latham (near Albany), acted as exclusive financial advisor to NRS, and Nutter McClennen & Fish LLP, a Boston–based law firm, was its legal advisor.
This acquisition is the second one Community Bank System has announced in the last six weeks. The banking company on Oct. 24 said that it will acquire Merchants Bancshares, Inc. (NASDAQ: MBVT), the largest statewide independent bank in Vermont, in a cash and stock transaction worth about $304 million. That deal will be about 70 percent stock and 30 percent cash, and is expected to close in the second quarter of 2017.
Upon completion of that transaction, Community Bank will cross the $10 billion threshold for total assets, which increases its regulatory requirements and costs as it complies with the Dodd-Frank Act and the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Contact Rombel at arombel@cnybj.com

Electronics recycling firm Sunnking moves into new HQ facility
BROCKPORT — Sunnking, Inc., an electronics recycling firm, recently completed its move into a new, 204,000-square foot office and processing facility in its home of Brockport. The new plant is nearly double the size of Sunnking’s previous location. The company, which also has locations in Buffalo and Syracuse, has more than doubled its recycling volume
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BROCKPORT — Sunnking, Inc., an electronics recycling firm, recently completed its move into a new, 204,000-square foot office and processing facility in its home of Brockport. The new plant is nearly double the size of Sunnking’s previous location.
The company, which also has locations in Buffalo and Syracuse, has more than doubled its recycling volume over the past five years. In 2011, the firm recycled nearly 11.4 million pounds, while in 2016 it projects it will recycle 24.7 million pounds, Melissa Richter, Sunnking’s brand and marketing manager, tells CNYBJ.
“With our growth in volume, we simply needed more room and have been looking for a larger facility for the past few years,” Sunnking CEO Duane Beckett said in a news release.
Sunnking, founded in 2000, says it specializes in collecting, refurbishing, reselling, and recycling electronic products from residential, commercial, and municipal customers.
The new facility has provided Sunnking the space needed for new processing equipment and additional labor to increase processing speeds. Since completing the move on Nov. 1, the company has hired an additional 40 employees and added a second shift to process material.
The new pieces of equipment the firm added at the plant include a heavy-duty Shred-Tech shredder used to separate and process commodities to maximize recovery. The shredder will also allow Sunnking to perform hard-drive shredding at its headquarters.The facility features 13 new offices for management and personnel and a 10,000-square-foot inventory production area for the refurbishing team. As a Microsoft-certified refurbisher, Sunnking says it is looking to continue to grow the asset management and value-added reseller segment of its business to maximize the “most efficient” form of recycling: reuse.
“We want to provide a better work environment for our current and future employees at Sunnking. I think this facility really reflects our commitment to them and the future growth of the company,” Adam Shine, VP, said in the release. “We will continue to re-invest in the business.”
Sunnking’s new facility is in the northwest corner of the Allied Business Complex at 4 Owens Road in Brockport.
Syracuse operation
Sunnking has a facility at 838 Erie Blvd. W in Syracuse that it uses as a transfer station.
“Between our business customers and collection events we have shipped over 2.5 million pounds from that facility to either our main processing facility or direct to an end market,” says Richter.
Sunnking has 10,000 square feet of flex space that it can expand out to 35,000 square feet as needed, she says. It is currently sharing up to 5 employees with the company from which it leases the space.
Richter says Sunnking acquired its Syracuse operation from Coast to Coast Recycling, Inc. in 2015, and the firm hopes to continue expanding in the market and further west.
Contact Rombel at arombel@cnybj.com

Sale of FitzPatrick nuclear plant to Exelon gets the OK from State PSC
SCRIBA — The New York State Public Service Commission (PSC) last month approved the sale of the James A. FitzPatrick nuclear power plant in Scriba to Exelon Corp. (NYSE: EXC). The agreement to continue operation of the plant will save about 600 jobs, according to the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Under the deal totaling
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SCRIBA — The New York State Public Service Commission (PSC) last month approved the sale of the James A. FitzPatrick nuclear power plant in Scriba to Exelon Corp. (NYSE: EXC).
The agreement to continue operation of the plant will save about 600 jobs, according to the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
Under the deal totaling $110 million, New Orleans, Louisiana–based Entergy Corp. (NYSE: ETR) will transfer FitzPatrick’s operating license to Chicago, Illinois–based Exelon, which describes itself as the “owner of the nation’s largest nuclear fleet.”
“Our finding today is that the public will be well-served by the transfer of ownership of FitzPatrick,” Audrey Zibelman, PSC chairperson, said in the commission’s Nov. 17 news release. “Exelon has an excellent track record as the owner of nuclear power plants, and we fully expect it will operate FitzPatrick in a safe and reliable fashion.”
Final transaction closure is dependent upon regulatory review and approval by federal agencies, including the U.S. Department of Justice, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter of 2017, the PSC said.
The companies credited Cuomo with helping to facilitate the transaction. The governor had asked the PSC to adopt a clean-energy standard (CES), which will provide hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies, funded by utility customers, to help keep nuclear-power plants open in upstate New York.
The PSC on Aug. 1 approved New York’s clean-energy standard.
As a result of the CES, Exelon will reinvest “millions” back into the nuclear units, including upwards of $500 million in operations, integration and refueling expenditures for the upstate plants in spring of 2017, “all of which will have a positive impact across the state,” the PSC contends.
Exelon has committed to refueling FitzPatrick in January 2017.
Exelon operates two other nuclear-energy facilities in upstate New York, including Nine Mile Point, located near FitzPatrick. Its other plant, R.E. Ginna, is in the town of Ontario in Wayne County.
Together, Exelon’s two Upstate plants provide “carbon-free” electricity for more than 2.5 million homes and businesses while employing more than 1,500 full-time staff, the PSC said.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
New York submits documents to participate in federal offshore wind auction
The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) announced on Nov. 30 that it is on track to become the first state entity in the nation to participate in a federal auction for an offshore wind site. NYSERDA said it submitted the required documentation and a bid deposit to the U.S. Department of
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The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) announced on Nov. 30 that it is on track to become the first state entity in the nation to participate in a federal auction for an offshore wind site.
NYSERDA said it submitted the required documentation and a bid deposit to the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to take part in an auction for a 79,350-acre wind-energy area located 12 miles off the Long Island coast.
The Authority submitted qualifications and bidder’s financial forms for the Dec. 15 auction, which is a blind, ascending bid, online auction with the asking prices set by BOEM.
BOEM is offering a 10 percent non-monetary credit to qualified bidders who meet the definition of a “government authority” and NYSERDA has submitted the required documentation and requested this 10 percent credit.
The Authority says offshore wind supports Governor Andrew Cuomo’s “Reforming the Energy Vision” strategy to build a “clean, resilient and affordable energy system for all New Yorkers.” The state intends to use offshore wind to help meet its goal to secure 50 percent of the state’s electricity from renewable sources by 2030.
NYSERDA contends that if it wins the auction, its approach to the development of the wind-energy area will provide developers and consumers with “greater certainty, fewer risks, and lower costs.”
“Offshore wind is crucial to meeting New York’s ambitious energy goals under Governor Cuomo,” John B. Rhodes, president and CEO of NYSERDA, said in a news release. “If NYSERDA is successful in the bidding, we will engage all involved stakeholders and ensure that offshore wind in New York is developed responsibly and in a way that balances the needs of all constituents, including coastal communities and the fishing and maritime industries. We will also ensure that the site will be developed competitively …”
NYSERDA said it has developed an “Offshore Wind Blueprint” that creates a framework for the “responsible development” of wind-energy generation off the coast of New York and has launched several site assessment and characterization studies, with plans to initiate more over the coming months. These activities will provide information to the state’s comprehensive “Offshore Wind Master Plan,” originally announced by Governor Cuomo in his 2016 State of the State address.
The updated master plan, to be released in 2017, will identify additional offshore wind sites beyond the current BOEM area being auctioned and will also set targets for capacity and commercial operation dates for each site, NYSERDA said. After acquiring the new sites, NYSERDA will bundle site assessment and characterization-study results with financeable offtake agreements for the purchase of the electricity produced by the turbines, and hold competitive solicitations for each site for companies interested in developing projects.
NYSERDA is participating in the BOEM auction so it can create competition “when it counts” — after considering stakeholder input regarding how the site is developed, completing studies and bundling the site with an offtake agreement, reducing risks, and allowing developers to reduce margins for unknowns, the Authority said.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
Cuomo announces funding to help farms join New York State Grown & Certified program
Gov. Andrew Cuomo has announced funding to help New York fruit and vegetable farmers join the New York State Grown & Certified program. Through the state’s Environmental Protection Fund, $1.5 million is available to assist farms in implementing an agricultural environmental-management plan. A reimbursement of up to $1,000 is available for growers who participate in
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Gov. Andrew Cuomo has announced funding to help New York fruit and vegetable farmers join the New York State Grown & Certified program.
Through the state’s Environmental Protection Fund, $1.5 million is available to assist farms in implementing an agricultural environmental-management plan. A reimbursement of up to $1,000 is available for growers who participate in a third-party audit of safe food-handling practices, the governor’s office said.
Farmers must participate in programs supporting good agricultural practices and environmental management to be eligible for the New York State Grown & Certified program, and this funding will help more farms join the certification program, the governor contends.
“New York farms produce world-renowned, high-quality food, and the New York State Grown & Certified program strengthens the link between producers and consumers and promotes environmentally sustainable and safe practices,” Gov. Cuomo said in a news release. “This funding will help more farmers certify their products to these higher standards and access the many opportunities offered by New York State Grown & Certified.”
Launched in August, the New York State Grown & Certified program seeks to assure consumers that the food they are buying is “local and produced to a higher standard” by requiring participating producers to adopt good agricultural practices and enroll in an environmental-management program.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com

SUNY Oswego’s Scales Hall to undergo “sustainable” renovation for use next fall
OSWEGO — Scales Hall at SUNY Oswego will undergo a $13.1 million renovation, which is scheduled to begin Dec. 19. General contractor PAC Associates of Oswego Inc. will handle the work on the project, which should be complete by July 1, ahead of the next academic year. Besides the sustainable elements involved, the completed renovation
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OSWEGO — Scales Hall at SUNY Oswego will undergo a $13.1 million renovation, which is scheduled to begin Dec. 19.
General contractor PAC Associates of Oswego Inc. will handle the work on the project, which should be complete by July 1, ahead of the next academic year.
Besides the sustainable elements involved, the completed renovation will increase Scales’ capacity to house students from about 200 to approximately 210, SUNY Oswego said in a news release issued Nov. 21.
The work schedule is “aggressive” but a demand for on-campus housing is driving the need, says Mitch Fields, associate VP for facilities at SUNY Oswego.
“If we didn’t have these [beds available], we’d have to turn away 200-plus students as we have nowhere to house them,” says Fields, who spoke with CNYBJ on Dec. 5.
The renovation work will focus on new doors, windows, and roof. The contractor will renovate all the rooms.
“All the restrooms will be reconstructed. All the mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems will be reconstructed,” says Fields.
The building will have a new main entrance “that will allow us to add a couple more beds,” he adds. The work will also target the student lounge, game rooms, and kitchen area.
The work will also include “substantial” exterior construction done for Americans with Disabilities Act-mandated accessibility at the main entrances.
The effort will also target roof drainage and erosion controls, according to Fields.
Similar to “twin”
The project contractor, PAC Associates, also renovated the school’s Waterbury Hall in 2014 and 2015.
Fields described Waterbury as Scales’ “twin.”
The upgraded Scales Hall will feature a contemporary design similar to that of Waterbury, SUNY Oswego said.
Syracuse–based King + King Architects, the same architectural firm that designed Waterbury, also designed Scales’ “modernization,” the school added.
Scales will have pod-style bathrooms providing privacy for toilets and showers, as well as new furniture, a kitchen on every floor, new lounges on the second and third floors and a new computer lab, Myles Clendenin, director of Scales Hall, said in the release.
The renovation will include many updates to comply with the SUNY policy that requires all new buildings and renovations to comply with the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Silver certification.
As SUNY Oswego noted in its release, the school pursues a “higher goal” for all campus buildings: LEED Gold certification.
“That’s a pretty consistent approach for us and we do that on all our buildings,” adds Fields.
A passive-cooling system will reduce costs by pulling in the cool air over Lake Ontario to circulate throughout Scales Hall. The air over the lake is typically 10 degrees cooler than the air on land, according to Fields.
Crews will use recycled materials throughout the project, such as repurposed wood for the exterior, he says. They’ll also put energy-efficient mechanical systems in place in the main boiler room.
Once the renovation work is complete, the LEED-certification verification process can last between 18 months and two years.
“You actually have to prove that the building functions as it was intended. You’re just not getting an award for good intentions. You have to have follow through,” says Fields.
Scales Hall, which opened in 1961, is the last of four SUNY Oswego residence halls built on the campus’s lakeside area.
With the completion of Scales, all four lakeside residence halls will have been renovated in the last 14 years. Johnson Hall was renovated in 2003 and Riggs Hall done in 2007.
Moving students
The students who currently live in Scales will have to move out of the building in December, though about 70 are leaving campus.
Clendenin said the university’s Residence Life and Housing department tried to place students who would not be returning to campus for the spring semester into
Scales. The 130 students who will remain on campus were given a first-preference survey to choose a new hall in which to live.
Once Residence Life and Housing determines how many rooms will be vacant for the spring semester, it will begin placing the Scales residents.
SUNY Oswego has hired a moving company to help students move their belongings to their new rooms over winter break, Clendenin said.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com

State announces winners of 76West clean-energy competition in the Southern Tier
VESTAL — Six companies won prize money in the 76West Clean Energy business competition in the Southern Tier. The office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo described it as “one of the largest competitions in the country that focuses on supporting and growing clean-energy businesses” in a news release issued Nov. 30. Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul announced
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VESTAL — Six companies won prize money in the 76West Clean Energy business competition in the Southern Tier.
The office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo described it as “one of the largest competitions in the country that focuses on supporting and growing clean-energy businesses” in a news release issued Nov. 30.
Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul announced the winners that day at an awards ceremony at Binghamton University. The event also kicked off the second round of the 76West competition.
Micatu, an optical-sensor company from Horseheads in Chemung County, won the $1 million grand prize.
The competition also awarded one $500,000 prize and four $250,000 prizes to businesses for their use of “innovative” technologies that have the potential to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, and make clean energy “more affordable.”
The competition is part of the state’s effort to generate 50 percent of its electricity from renewable-energy sources by 2030 under Cuomo’s clean-energy standard.
The judges chose the six winners after a contest included multiple pitch sessions to judges and mentoring by local experts.
Finalists vied for a $1 million grand prize, a $500,000 award and four $250,000 awards. In total, the state awarded $2.5 million.
Prize winners
Micatu of Horseheads captured the $1 million grand prize. The firm makes an optical sensor that gives “highly accurate” voltage readings so utilities can reduce energy use, thereby reducing greenhouse-gas emissions.
Charge CCCV (C4V) of Binghamton earned the $500,000 cash award. The company produces energy-storage batteries that can be used for telecommunications systems and other industries that need storage with longer lifetimes so they reduce overall costs.
ChromaNanoTech, another firm from Binghamton, won a $250,000 prize. The company produces a dye that keeps windows transparent but blocks ultraviolet radiation, so buildings stay cooler and air- conditioning loads are reduced.
The remaining $250,000 winners include DatArcs of New York City, which provides server software that reduces the energy consumption of data centers while maintaining system performance.
Global Thermostat, also of New York City, captures carbon dioxide out of the air, thereby reducing greenhouse gases, then purifies it, and sells it to industrial companies that need it for their manufacturing purposes.
In addition, Besstech of Troy captured a $250,000 prize. It manufactures silicon components that make energy storage batteries less expensive, fast charging, and more environmentally friendly, per the state.
Applications
New York State started accepting applications for the second round of the 76West competition Dec. 1 and the deadline for submission is March 13, 2017.
The response to the most recent 76West competition demonstrated New York’s “growing presence as a clean-tech leader on the national and international stage,” the state contended in the release.
The competition attracted 175 applications in the first round from across the state, the U.S., and around the world.
A total of 71 applications, or 40 percent, were from businesses located in the Southern Tier; 70 from other regions of New York; 23 from other states including California, Massachusetts, Texas and Nevada; and 11 from international applicants from nations such as Turkey, Spain, and Israel.
Of the 175 applicants, 24 were chosen as semifinalists who underwent a week of mentoring in May.
At the end of that week, semifinalists pitched their proposals to judges, who chose the six finalists based on criteria including technical merit, likelihood of business growth, job potential, and benefit to the Southern Tier.
Over the summer, the six finalists once again pitched their proposals to judges who then recommended the final award winners.
Harvey Stenger, president of Binghamton University, and Tom Tranter, president of Corning Enterprises, serve as co-chairs of the Southern Tier regional economic-development council and commented in the Cuomo news release.
“The Southern Tier’s focus on supporting clean-tech industries and fostering innovative business models has set the stage for a cleaner, greener, thriving economy for future generations … Through 76West, we look forward to showing the winners all that our region has to offer as we continue to spur job creation and economic growth through the Governor’s clean energy initiatives.”
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
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