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Stanley Law Offices merges with Fallon, Fallon & Bigsby
SYRACUSE — Stanley Law Offices, LLP has merged with fellow Syracuse–based law firm of Fallon, Fallon & Bigsby, a firm that serviced clients in workers’-compensation matters. Stanley Law, headquartered at 215 Burnett Ave., focuses on personal injury law, workers’ compensation, and accident-related law. The deal became official in mid-July, says Joe Stanley, attorney and the […]
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SYRACUSE — Stanley Law Offices, LLP has merged with fellow Syracuse–based law firm of Fallon, Fallon & Bigsby, a firm that serviced clients in workers’-compensation matters.
Stanley Law, headquartered at 215 Burnett Ave., focuses on personal injury law, workers’ compensation, and accident-related law.
The deal became official in mid-July, says Joe Stanley, attorney and the firm’s managing partner.
“They are now part of Stanley Law Offices,” he states in a CNYBJ interview on Oct. 17.
The Stanley Law Offices didn’t release any terms of the agreement, but Stanley says that the merger did not involve a financial transaction.
Attorneys Sheila Fallon, Megan Fallon, and Arthur Bigsby did not become partners in the Stanley Law Offices, Stanley adds.
The new Stanley Law Offices attorneys will continue using the office at 501 E. Washington St. in Syracuse that they operated from as Fallon, Fallon & Bigsby.
The Stanley Law office on Burnett Avenue doesn’t have the room to accommodate the additional attorneys and four support-staff members, according to Stanley.
“Long time” relationship
Sheila Fallon and Megan Fallon are sisters, while Arthur Bigsby is their brother-in-law, according to Stanley.
Their father, the late attorney William Fallon, and Joe Stanley’s father went to college together, says Stanley.
Stanley says he has known the Fallons “for a long time.”
That relationship would help to fill a need at the Stanley Law Offices.
Stanley Law had to replace a lawyer who was operating its workers’-compensation department, according to Stanley. The person left the firm earlier this year to become a federal administrative law judge.
“We had discussions about [Fallon, Fallon, and Bigsby] coming in and being the Stanley Law Offices workers’-compensation department, and after discussions, that’s what we did,” says Stanley.
He called the addition of the three lawyers a “perfect fit” to fill a need in servicing the firm’s workers’-compensation clients.
The firm’s “core business,” Stanley says, is personal-injury clients, many of whom are injured in work accidents.
“It’s a fabulous opportunity for the clients that are going to have very experienced, very well-respected workers’-compensation attorneys handling their files … It’s a tough business and you really need to have somebody who’s good at it,” he says.
In a company news release, Stanley described the workers’-compensation legal area as one that is “highly detailed and requires intensive focus and energy to execute well.”
Attorneys working in that practice area “pursue appropriate compensation for injured workers, such as lost wages and off-work benefits,” according to the firm.
Stanley Law Offices, LLP has five offices located in upstate New York and northern Pennsylvania, including Syracuse, Binghamton, Watertown, and Rochester, and Montrose, Pennsylvania. The law firm is a staple on local broadcast TV stations with its commercials featuring Joe Stanley.
Besides Stanley, attorney Robert Quattrocci is another partner in the firm. It employs 31 people, including 10 lawyers, according to Stanley.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com

Central New York jobs picture mixed in latest state report
The Syracuse, Binghamton, and Utica–Rome regions lost jobs in the past 12 months, while the Ithaca and Watertown–Fort Drum regions gained jobs in the same

New North Country Crime Analysis Center seeks to better coordinate law- enforcement efforts
MALONE — New York State on Oct. 12 formally opened the North Country Crime Analysis Center at the Franklin County Public Safety Building in Malone. The facility will serve five North Country counties and expand the state’s network of intelligence and data-sharing centers to the Canadian and Vermont borders, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo
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MALONE — New York State on Oct. 12 formally opened the North Country Crime Analysis Center at the Franklin County Public Safety Building in Malone.
The facility will serve five North Country counties and expand the state’s network of intelligence and data-sharing centers to the Canadian and Vermont borders, the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a news release.
The center is a joint venture between the state and 12 law-enforcement agencies in Jefferson, St. Lawrence, Clinton, Essex, and Franklin counties.
It’s the newest of seven centers that the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services supports in partnership with police agencies and prosecutors’ offices in 13 counties, the office added.
Other centers are located in Onondaga, Broome, Erie, Monroe, Niagara, and Albany counties.
The state says it spends about $5.5 million annually on personnel and technology to support the crime-analysis center network.
The North Country Crime Analysis Center serves an area of more than 9,400 square miles that borders Canada.
It includes the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation, which straddles Northeastern New York’s border with Quebec and Ontario.
The center provides data and intelligence to law-enforcement agencies so they can “better secure” the border.
It also seeks to “improve cross-jurisdictional cooperation and information sharing” with federal, state, local, and tribal agencies handling criminal investigations, including cases involving contraband smuggling, terrorism, and drug and human trafficking.
The North Country center’s staff uses advanced technology to access and synthesize data and information.
It includes reported crimes, arrest information, and parole and probation records to provide that intelligence to officers and investigators in the field to solve crime.
The center’s staff can also map crime “hot spots” so law-enforcement agencies can “more effectively” deploy staff and assist prosecutors who are preparing for trial, according to the release.
The New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services is a “multi-function,” criminal-justice support agency with a variety of responsibilities.
They include law-enforcement training; collection and analysis of statewide crime data; maintenance of criminal-history information and fingerprint files; administrative oversight of the state’s DNA databank, in partnership with the New York State Police; funding and oversight of probation and community-correction programs; administration of federal and state criminal-justice funds; support of criminal justice-related agencies across the state; and administration of the state’s sex-offender registry.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com

Onondaga Tower formally becomes Barclay Damon Tower as law firm moves in
SYRACUSE — Onondaga Tower, located at 125 E. Jefferson St. in Syracuse, officially became Barclay Damon Tower on Oct. 17 when Barclay Damon, LLP, a Syracuse–based law firm, moved its headquarters and more than 150 employees into the newly renovated building. Barclay Damon will occupy five floors in the 15-story building. The building is located
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SYRACUSE — Onondaga Tower, located at 125 E. Jefferson St. in Syracuse, officially became Barclay Damon Tower on Oct. 17 when Barclay Damon, LLP, a Syracuse–based law firm, moved its headquarters and more than 150 employees into the newly renovated building.
Barclay Damon will occupy five floors in the 15-story building.
The building is located at the corner of East Jefferson and South Warren Streets in downtown Syracuse.
It’s the downtown building that is illuminated in a different color during the evening hours. Building tenant Ephesus Lighting added 22 light-emitting diode (LED) fixtures to the exterior of the building in 2014, which light up the structure.
The illuminated Barclay Damon signage on all four sides of the building made its debut on Aug. 9.
The Barclay Damon firm resulted from last year’s combination of Syracuse–based Hiscock & Barclay, LLP and Buffalo–based Damon Morey LLP. It established a 275-attorney, “super-regional” law firm.
CBD Companies, which owns the building, invested $6 million to prepare the space for the Barclay Damon offices, according to the law firm.
The local developer had previously invested $9 million in the structure prior to the work preparing the space for Barclay Damon’s move.
CBD Companies is a partnership involving developers Charles Sangster, Courtney Wilson, and Cadaret, Grant & Co., Inc., a Syracuse–based investment-brokerage firm.
It has offices throughout the major cities of New York state, along with Toronto, Boston, Washington, D.C., and Newark, New Jersey.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
Estate Planning Involves Much More than Signing a Will
In the age of the Internet, there is a growing trend among Americans who need a will to avoid the cost of a lawyer and use a legal-services website like Legal Zoom or use some “free will form” they found on the web. However, there are many dynamics that go into estate planning beyond executing
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In the age of the Internet, there is a growing trend among Americans who need a will to avoid the cost of a lawyer and use a legal-services website like Legal Zoom or use some “free will form” they found on the web.
However, there are many dynamics that go into estate planning beyond executing a “simple” will. First, you may have family dynamics or complex assets such as a closely held business that require something more than a “simple” will. In fact, a will may not even be the best vehicle to address some of these issues, and you may need to consider a prenuptial agreement or a revocable living trust. Also, various assets are generally not governed by the terms of a will at all, such as life insurance, joint bank accounts, and retirement accounts. Your do-it-yourself (DIY) will form may be perfect in every respect, but it generally has no authority over these types of assets.
Moreover, estate planning generally involves not only planning for death but also planning for incapacity. The documents used to address incapacity are commonly referred to as advance directives, which generally include a power of attorney, a health-care proxy and a living will. These are also popular with the DIY form websites, but you may need an attorney to explain to you the legal significance and consequences of signing these types of documents.
Another dynamic to estate planning is exploring whether you may need to do some elder law/disability planning, which entails not only wills, trusts, and advance directives, but also considering long-term care insurance and/or Medicaid eligibility and planning.
The purpose of this column is not to convince the reader to avoid using DIY websites such as Legal Zoom. What you should consider, however, is whether your particular personal and financial situation is complex enough to require consulting with a lawyer. This is really no different than any other decisions we all make in life — I do not go to the doctor every time I have a simple common cold but I certainly go to the doctor if I break my arm. I can change the oil on my automobile, but I prefer the auto shop to do it because it has better tools than I do and I am reasonably certain it will do it correctly.
So if you come to the decision that you need a “simple” will, you should also seriously consider if your particular situation is really all that simple before you attempt to do it yourself or use a DIY legal-services website.
Ryan Emery is an attorney with Mackenzie Hughes LLP in Syracuse. He is a member of the firm’s estates department. Emery focuses his practice in the areas of estate planning and trust and estate administration in both New York and Florida. This viewpoint article was drawn from the Mackenzie Hughes blog, called “Plain Talk.” Contact Emery at (315) 233-8368 or email: remery@mackenziehughes.com
Make Your Giving Count: Now and in the Future
In the next few years, $22 billion is expected to transfer from one generation to the next in Central New York. Over the next 50 years, the expected transfer of wealth for our region is estimated at $240 billion. This is according to a study commissioned by the Central New York Community Foundation and conducted by
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In the next few years, $22 billion is expected to transfer from one generation to the next in Central New York. Over the next 50 years, the expected transfer of wealth for our region is estimated at $240 billion. This is according to a study commissioned by the Central New York Community Foundation and conducted by the RUPRI Center for Rural Entrepreneurship.
As you evaluate how you will approach your own charitable giving and asset-transfer strategies, consider the following questions for yourself, your friends, or your business clients:
A variety of planned-giving options, ranging from simple to complex, can be customized to meet each unique situation. For example, establishing a charitable bequest through a will is a simple way to reduce estate taxes. Establishing a charitable trust, while more complex, can provide flexibility and a life income. Gifts through retirement-plan beneficiary designations are simple and can be highly tax efficient.
These and many other giving tools provide great options to get started. However, updating beneficiary designations, changing title of assets, or creating a trust document is only the beginning. What happens if the nonprofit you designated to be supported today is gone tomorrow? What if you created a private foundation and the trustee passes away? Even the best plans can’t anticipate the full range of what the future may bring, but there are ways to protect your or your clients’ interests.
Today, people expect more than just a solid plan — they expect stewardship. They want to know that their intentions for charitable gifts won’t be lost over time. The best practice for philanthropic planning provides individuals with the opportunity to extend their generosity beyond their lifetimes, and provides an assurance that their gifts will be safeguarded. If crafted carefully, a charitable plan can offer more than just money to worthy causes; it can provide a way for someone to be remembered and to have their personal stories live on in the community.
As you consider a structure for your plans, you can take steps to determine not only the right type of gift, but also create a legacy plan that documents wishes for the future use of the charitable dollars you’ll leave to benefit the community. For some families, a facilitated discussion about the meaning behind philanthropic intentions and an individual’s history of community engagement can be a valuable exercise.
Lastly, when assessing your charitable plans, consider structures that allow for both resiliency over time as community needs and organizations change, while making it easy to change the plan when the need arises.
Thomas Griffith is director of gift planning at the Central New York Community Foundation. Contact him at tgriffith@cnycf.org or (315) 422-9538.
Governor Andrew M. Cuomo recently announced that the New York State Board for Historic Preservation has recommended the addition of 22 properties, resources and districts to the State and National Registers of Historic Places. They include three properties in Syracuse. The State and National Registers are the official lists of buildings, structures, districts, landscapes, objects
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Governor Andrew M. Cuomo recently announced that the New York State Board for Historic Preservation has recommended the addition of 22 properties, resources and districts to the State and National Registers of Historic Places. They include three properties in Syracuse.
The State and National Registers are the official lists of buildings, structures, districts, landscapes, objects and sites significant in the history, architecture, archeology and culture of New York State and the nation, according to a news release from Cuomo’s office. More than 120,000 historic buildings, structures and sites throughout the state are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, individually or as components of historic districts. Property owners, municipalities and organizations from communities throughout the state sponsored the nominations.
The three recommended Central New York sites are:
“New York’s history is this country’s history, and with the nomination of these landmarks and sites we will help ensure these parts of this state’s rich heritage are maintained and preserved for generations to come,” Cuomo said in the release. “Listing these assets on the State and National Registers of Historic Places will pay homage to historic figures and events that helped shape New York into the great state it is today, while advancing efforts to support heritage tourism statewide.”State and National Registers listings can help property owners in revitalizing buildings, making them eligible for various public preservation programs and services, such as matching state grants and state and federal historic rehabilitation tax credits, the state says. Spurred by the credits administered by the State Historic Preservation Office, developers invested $550 million statewide in 2015 to revitalize properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places, while homeowners invested more than $12 million statewide on home improvements to help revitalize historic neighborhoods, according to the release.
Once the recommendations are approved by the state historic preservation officer, the properties are listed on the New York State Register of Historic Places and then nominated to the National Register of Historic Places, where they are reviewed and, once approved, entered on the National Register.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
St. Lawrence County town-court clerk accused of “pocketing” thousands
NORFOLK, N.Y. — A former town-court clerk in St. Lawrence County is under arrest after she “misappropriated” nearly $10,000 in court fees that defendants paid. Lisa Dillon is the former clerk for the Town of Norfolk justice court. The St. Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office had conducted the investigation, the office of New York State Comptroller
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NORFOLK, N.Y. — A former town-court clerk in St. Lawrence County is under arrest after she “misappropriated” nearly $10,000 in court fees that defendants paid.
Lisa Dillon is the former clerk for the Town of Norfolk justice court.
The St. Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office had conducted the investigation, the office of New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli said in a news release.
Dillon, 36, was charged with felony counts of third-degree grand larceny, third-degree corrupting the government, and first-degree tampering with public records. She is also charged with a felony count of offering a false instrument for filing and public corruption.
“Ms. Dillon was entrusted with collecting the fines and surcharges imposed on defendants by the court for a variety of cases; instead she abused that trust by pocketing thousands of those dollars and falsifying records in a vain attempt to conceal her crimes,” DiNapoli said. “The St. Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office was instrumental in helping my staff bring this individual to justice. We will continue to work with law enforcement across the state to protect taxpayers’ money.”
As a court clerk, Dillon was responsible for collecting court fines and surcharges and recording the receipts in the court’s official paper and electronic-record systems.
She also prepared deposits for the justices, reported applicable court transactions to the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles, and prepared monthly justice-court fund reports, which are submitted to the comptroller’s office.
The investigation revealed that money was collected but never deposited and that court records had been “altered to hide the missing funds,” DiNapoli’s office said.
Dillon, an employee at the justice court since August 2013, admitted some of her wrongdoing and resigned earlier this year on Jan. 11, after two judges confronted her about the fund shortfalls.
The St. Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office referred the matter to DiNapoli’s division of investigations after the justices reported their findings.
DiNapoli’s office discovered “several thousands of additional misappropriated dollars” as well as Dillon’s falsification of various court records, according to the release.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
New York manufacturing index hits lowest point since May
The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index slid further into negative territory in October, hitting its lowest level since May. The index fell 5 points to -6.8 in October as manufacturing conditions weakened for a third straight month. It’s the index’s weakest reading since the -9.0 level it reached five months ago. The results
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The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index slid further into negative territory in October, hitting its lowest level since May.
The index fell 5 points to -6.8 in October as manufacturing conditions weakened for a third straight month.
It’s the index’s weakest reading since the -9.0 level it reached five months ago.
The results of the October survey indicate that business activity “continued to decline” for New York manufacturers, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said in a news release issued Oct. 17.
The October reading of -6.8 followed index levels of -2.0 in September, -4.2 in August, and 0.6 in July.
A negative reading indicates a decline in manufacturing activity, while a positive number on the index indicates expansion or growth in the sector.
The survey found 27 percent of New York manufacturer respondents reported that conditions had improved over the month, while 33 percent said that conditions had worsened.
Manufacturers in New York and across the U.S. have been buffeted by some strong headwinds of late. An Associated Press article stated manufacturers have been “struggling” with a strong dollar, which makes their goods more expensive abroad, and “weak investment in machinery by businesses cautious” about the global economic outlook.
Inside the survey
The new-orders index increased “slightly” but remained negative at -5.6, indicating that orders “continued to decline,” and the shipments index rose 9 points to -0.6, evidence that shipments were “essentially flat,” the New York Fed said.
The unfilled-orders index was little changed at -10.4, and the delivery-time index fell to -11.3, signaling shorter delivery times.
The inventories index held at -12.3, suggesting that inventory levels declined at roughly the same pace as last month.
After reaching their lowest levels of the year last month, both labor-market indexes rose, but remained negative.
The employment index increased 10 points to -4.7 and the average-workweek index edged up 1 point to -10.4, indicating that employment counts and hours worked “continued to decline.”
The prices-paid index increased 6 points to 22.6, suggesting that input prices continued to rise at a moderate pace, and the prices-received index increased 3 points to 4.7, pointing to a “slight upturn” in selling prices, according to the New York Fed.
Indexes for the six-month outlook indicated that respondents were more optimistic about future conditions than in September.
The index for future business conditions increased 2 points to 36.0.
In addition, the index for future new orders rose 7 points to 39.0 and the index for future shipments jumped 15 points to 36.5, indicating that manufacturing firms anticipated a “significant increase in activity.”
In a sign that firms looked to expand employment in the months ahead, the index for future employment moved further into positive territory.
Indexes for future prices suggested that companies expected both input prices and selling prices to increase over the next six months.
The capital-expenditures index rose modestly to 13.2, while the technology-spending index edged back to 8.5.
The New York Fed distributes the Empire State Manufacturing Survey on the first day of each month to the same pool of about 200 manufacturing executives in New York state. On average, about 100 executives return responses.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
Siena survey director “surprised” at latest consumer-sentiment readings
LOUDONVILLE — Siena College’s survey director says he was a “little bit surprised” at the figures in the latest quarterly measurement of Upstate and statewide consumer sentiment. Consumer sentiment in upstate New York was measured at 84.9 in September, down 0.3 points from the last measurement in June. That’s according to the latest quarterly survey
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LOUDONVILLE — Siena College’s survey director says he was a “little bit surprised” at the figures in the latest quarterly measurement of Upstate and statewide consumer sentiment.
Consumer sentiment in upstate New York was measured at 84.9 in September, down 0.3 points from the last measurement in June.
That’s according to the latest quarterly survey the Siena (College) Research Institute (SRI) released on Oct. 6.
Douglas Lonnstrom, professor of statistics and finance at Siena College and SRI founding director, says he was surprised at the survey’s sentiment numbers “because of all the negative world news and the negative political campaign.”
“I thought that might be wearing on consumers, and I thought confidence might go down a little bit, and it really didn’t,” says Lonnstrom.
The June measurement of 85.2 was up 3.4 points from the previous measurement in March of 81.8.
Upstate’s overall-sentiment index of 84.9 is a combination of the current sentiment and future-sentiment components. Upstate’s current-sentiment index of 92.8 (96.2) increased 3.4 points in the quarter, while the future-sentiment level rose 1.7 points to 79.8, according to the SRI data.
Upstate’s overall sentiment was 3.7 below the statewide consumer-sentiment level of 88.6, which rose 0.6 points compared to June.
The figure was 2.6 points lower than the September reading of 91.2 for the entire nation, which fell 2.3 points from June, as measured by the University of Michigan’s consumer-sentiment index.
In September, buying plans were up 0.5 points since the June 2016 measurement to 18.1 percent for cars and trucks; up 4.5 points to 47.6 percent for consumer electronics; and up 0.7 points to 9.1 percent for homes. Buying plans were down 3.5 points to 31 percent for furniture; and down 5.8 points to 16.1 percent for major home improvements.
Lonnstrom was also surprised by respondents who had plans to buy consumer electronics.
“We’re talking about TVs, tablets, the high-tech stuff … up almost 50 percent heading into the holiday season, so I think that bodes well for those products,” he adds.
Gas and food prices
In SRI’s quarterly analysis of gas and food prices, 30 percent of upstate respondents said the price of gas was having a serious impact on their monthly budgets, down from 36 percent in June and the same as the measurement in March.
In addition, 29 percent of statewide respondents said the price of gas was having a serious impact on their monthly spending plans, down from 33 percent in June but up from 27 percent in March.
“Gas prices have stayed fairly stable. We’re down in the low 2-dollar [range per gallon]. People are feeling much, much better about those gas prices right now,” says Lonnstrom.
When asked about food prices, 59 percent of upstate respondents indicated the price of groceries was having a serious impact on their finances, down from 61 percent in June and the same as the measurement in March.
At the same time, 63 percent of statewide respondents indicated the price of food was having a serious effect on their monthly finances, up from 61 percent in June and 60 percent in March.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
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