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Rome, St. Regis Mohawk Tribe to use federal funding to clean up, assess contaminated sites
The City of Rome and the St. Regis Mohawk tribe in Franklin County will use federal funding to clean up brownfields. Brownfields are properties where contamination threatens environmental quality and public health and can interfere with productive re-use of the sites. The funding is part of $1.5 million for a total of six projects in […]
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The City of Rome and the St. Regis Mohawk tribe in Franklin County will use federal funding to clean up brownfields.
Brownfields are properties where contamination threatens environmental quality and public health and can interfere with productive re-use of the sites.
The funding is part of $1.5 million for a total of six projects in New York, U.S. Senators Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.) said in a recent news release issued by Gillibrand’s office.
Both Rome and the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe will each use $200,000 through the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) brownfields program, the lawmakers said.
Rome will allocate the federal funding to clean up the former Rome-Turney Radiator Company site at 109 Canal St.
A petroleum release from fuel-storage tanks contaminated the property’s soil and groundwater, the lawmakers said. The site has an estimated 2,000 tons of contaminated soil, which Rome will need to clean up to reuse the property.
The EPA is also awarding funds to the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe, which will use the money to conduct nine environmental assessments at former gasoline-station sites. It will also allocate funding to update a brownfields inventory, support community-involvement activities, and conduct cleanup planning, according to the release.
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Most everyone can agree that electricity is the lifeblood of our economy. Without it, nothing runs, nothing gets manufactured, and our health and safety are at risk. A quick look across the energy landscape shows we’re in a period of exciting innovation. How people think about and use electricity is changing as quickly as the
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Most everyone can agree that electricity is the lifeblood of our economy. Without it, nothing runs, nothing gets manufactured, and our health and safety are at risk.
A quick look across the energy landscape shows we’re in a period of exciting innovation. How people think about and use electricity is changing as quickly as the technology that generates and delivers it. Here in New York, the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO) is at the heart of those changes: meeting consumers’ power needs, addressing public policy goals, and sustaining electricity’s fundamental contributions to economic vitality.
As great as these recent changes have been, new challenges are emerging. Reliability needs of the electric system are growing increasingly complex. For example, while year-over-year growth in electricity usage is expected to flatten or decline through the next decade, the proliferation of renewables like solar and wind and other distributed energy resources will impact how we run and manage the grid.
This brings to light the reality of the aging transmission facilities that serve as the backbone of the grid. New York needs to invest in new transmission to meet the goals of a cleaner energy future and integrate renewable power from water, wind, and the sun.
New York’s proposed Clean Energy Standard will mandate that half of all electricity consumed in the state by 2030 come from clean and renewable-energy sources. But because New York has a geographic imbalance between where electricity is generated and where it is used, an upgraded and expanded transmission system is needed to efficiently move green power to high-demand regions of the state.
Two-thirds of New York’s electricity is used in Long Island, New York City, and the Lower Hudson Valley. However, most of our power is generated in the northern, central, and western regions of the state. What’s more, New York’s renewable energy opportunities are in those same upstate regions, as well as beyond our borders in Canada.
We estimate that expanding transmission capability by 2,000 megawatts would enable a 50 percent increase in power from wind and water resources. This could reduce annual carbon-dioxide emissions by 8 million tons — the equivalent of taking 1.5 million vehicles off the road annually.
Beyond the potential environmental benefits, New York must upgrade its aging infrastructure to sustain reliability and bolster market efficiency. More than 80 percent of New York’s high-voltage transmission lines went into service before 1980. Of the state’s approximately 11,000 circuit-miles of transmission lines, nearly 4,700 circuit-miles will require replacement within the next 30 years.
Changing trends in power generation also require our attention. Natural gas is expected to surpass coal as the nation’s primary fuel source for electricity in 2016. In New York, natural gas already fuels the largest portion of our generating fleet, and that share is growing due in large part to low natural-gas prices. Those low fuel costs helped drive New York’s 2015 wholesale electric energy prices to the lowest in the history of New York’s competitive markets.
While lower costs are good for businesses and consumers, this trend magnifies concerns about resource adequacy and fuel-source diversity. As older fossil fuel and nuclear power plants near retirement or suspension, New York’s set of energy resources becomes less diverse. The emissions-free attributes of nuclear power and the fast-starting capability of gas-fired turbines offer value in the transition to the expansion of cleaner, greener power resources.
Finally, smaller generation technologies, including solar photovoltaics, create both challenges and opportunities. These projects must be properly integrated with the central grid to provide electric-system resilience. On this front, more change is coming. New York’s Reforming the Energy Vision (REV) program is identifying regulatory changes and market developments intended to facilitate a larger role for distributed energy resources in the Empire State.
At the NYISO, we’re working every day to address the challenges and opportunities created by this shifting paradigm. Our competitive markets have a proven track record of helping the power grid adapt to changes in technology, demand, fuel supply economics, and public policy while providing real value to consumers and our economy.
Since opening in 1999, NYISO markets have saved consumers $7 billion through improved generation efficiency and lower reserve requirements, reduced carbon emissions by an amount equal to taking 4.8 million cars off the road, and integrated enough wind-powered generation to serve half-a-million homes.
Change is constant — that’s clear. And New York is on the cutting edge of this new energy future. The state is adapting to these changes while achieving its goals of cleaner energy, improved efficiency and economic development. Continuing our commitment to competitive markets will maintain the Empire State’s legacy of leadership in energy.
Bradley C. Jones is president and CEO of the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO), a private, not-for-profit entity that operates New York’s high-voltage power grid and manages competitive wholesale electricity markets.
A Message for New Grads: Go Forth and Fail!
‘Tis that time of year. Commencement speakers are in full bloom. They exhort the grads to march out and conquer the world. If you can dream it, you can do it, they tell the kids. Do you remember anything your commencement speakers said? Do you remember who spoke? I’m with you. Worse, I don’t even
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‘Tis that time of year. Commencement speakers are in full bloom. They exhort the grads to march out and conquer the world. If you can dream it, you can do it, they tell the kids.
Do you remember anything your commencement speakers said? Do you remember who spoke? I’m with you. Worse, I don’t even remember what I had to say at the many graduations where I spoke.
Not totally true. These days, my remarks are so brief that I can actually recall what I’ve said. And that is: Go forth and fall on your face.
Of course, the bluntness is meant to get the grads’ attention. Further, I suggest they remember only two words from the address. More on them later.
The basic message is that failure is good. They should hope to fail at many things. Because the most valuable things we learn come from failures of some sort.
You learned to walk because you failed at it a thousand times. Every time you tumbled, your brain and body learned something. You learned to handle knives with care, after you failed and sliced your fingers. You learned to walk down stairs, after running nearly broke your neck.
We learn from successes, yes. But we learn more from our failures. Failure teaches us to never try that again. Or to do it differently. It teaches us to work harder. Or to try another approach. Or to keep our noses and fingers out of those situations.
One of my favorite stories is of a famous man who built a huge insurance enterprise in Chicago. He loved to listen to updates from his top people. Often they reported problems. Or losses. Or failures. His reaction was always “Good, good! We won’t make that mistake again.” He knew that every failure contained valuable lessons. He delighted in those lessons.
I love the company of successful entrepreneurs. They all know failure. Many suffer bankruptcies. They are plagued with disappointments. Competitors outsmart them, customers desert them, promising products flop, investors pull out, friends cheat them, customers don’t pay.
Most successful entrepreneurs have a simple attitude. You cannot build a house without banging your fingers. And it is the banging of your fingers that teaches you how to succeed.
So go forth and fail. That is what I suggest to those kids with beaming faces. Those yearning to hear this guy finish. So they can get on with the photos with mom and dad, get out of the garb, and get on with the parties. You have so much to learn, I suggest. So go forth and fail! So long as you learn from your failures.
I ask the grads to remember but two words: Fear not.
Our fears bedevil us. They are the wet blankets that smother our dreams. Lots of wise people have warned us: All we have to fear is fear itself. Those who conquer fear conquer all. And all that.
Well, they are right. Caution, yes. Judgment, yes. Tread with care, yes. But fear? No. Confront your fears. Kick ‘em in the teeth when you can. Keep them from keeping you from having a go.
The more you loosen the grip of fear, the more adventures you will enjoy. And the more flops on your schnoz you will experience. The more flops, the more you will learn.
Study the great leaders — the most successful among us in every field. Look into their eyes. You won’t find fear in them.
Fear not. Go for it.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial and other subjects from his home near Oneonta. Several upstate radio stations carry his daily commentary, Tom Morgan’s Money Talk. Contact him at tomasinmorgan.com
State Spending and Economic- Development Programs Lack Oversight
Ethics probes continue in the State capitol, this time with federal prosecutor Preet Bharara investigating the Buffalo Billion, the governor’s pet economic-development project, and Attorney General Eric Schneiderman investigating the SUNY Polytechnic Institute development project. Two of the governor’s close aides, Joe Percocco and Todd Howe, are involved in the scandals. Bharara is targeting what
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Ethics probes continue in the State capitol, this time with federal prosecutor Preet Bharara investigating the Buffalo Billion, the governor’s pet economic-development project, and Attorney General Eric Schneiderman investigating the SUNY Polytechnic Institute development project. Two of the governor’s close aides, Joe Percocco and Todd Howe, are involved in the scandals. Bharara is targeting what he believes is a bid-rigging scheme and instances of improper lobbying. Even Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli is raising questions about the governor’s big spending projects.
Despite serious questions surrounding the Buffalo Billion project, the Public Authorities Control Board (PACB), which is stacked with Gov. Cuomo’s appointees, still rubberstamped $485.5 million for the project. My Assembly Republican Conference and I suggested the vote be delayed while the Buffalo Billion project is under investigation. This is, after all, nearly half a billion dollars in taxpayer money.
Let’s call a spade a spade: the governor’s “economic development” programs are “member-item spending.” He finances these programs within the state budget as large pots of money, but retains control over the fine details of their distribution. I think there is merit in investing in our economic future, but the governor’s programs seem to be little more than ways for him and his team to reward friends.
In light of the Buffalo Billion and SUNY Polytechnic, reporters are now looking into some of the larger redevelopment projects, like the rebuild of LaGuardia Airport in Queens, which also shows evidence of contracts awarded to large Cuomo donors. This bid rigging has allowed the governor to amass a sizeable campaign account.
Then there is START-UP NY, a tax-shelter program created by the governor. The zoned tax shelters were meant to generate job growth, but according to a 2014 report, only 75 jobs were created. We are still unsure of how the program is working, as Empire State Development missed its April 1 report deadline this year.
Our state, under the governor’s leadership, has delved deeper into crony capitalism, where pay-to-play and other questionable actions have dominated economic-development projects and state spending. Neck-deep in the midst of these developing scandals, the governor is now scrambling for campaign-finance reforms, including closing the LLC loophole. I’ve been urging the state to adopt real ethics reforms, including campaign-finance reform and stripping pensions from corrupt public officials, but the governor remains silent on these proposals, as well as the larger issue of state spending with little to no accountability.
I sponsor legislation that requires better oversight and more disclosure on conflicts of interest in state spending. The Truth in Spending Bill (A.9525) requires discretionary and legislative earmark spending to be thoroughly and publicly reported, with all parties, including legislators and recipients, signing disclosure statements. Additionally, I sponsor the Public Officers Accountability Act, which addresses many campaign-finance-related issues.
These matters of pay-to-play are classic Albany corruption, which needs to end now. New Yorkers want and deserve much better from their government.
Marc W. Butler (R,C,I–Newport) is a New York State Assemblyman for the 118th District, which encompasses parts of Oneida, Herkimer, and St. Lawrence counties, as well as all of Hamilton and Fulton counties. Contact him at butlerm@assembly.state.ny.us

Johnson Brothers Lumber completes expansion in Canastota
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Cornell elects new trustees to board
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ConMed to pay quarterly dividend of 20 cents in early July
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Governor announces that Terakeet and TCG Player will add 242 jobs
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PAR subsidiary wins new $1.8 million U.S. Navy contract in Africa
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Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.