Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.
Mahoney, CSEA leadership reach contract agreement after both accept mediator report
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Onondaga County Executive Joanie Mahoney and the leadership of the Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) Local 834 union have accepted a mediator’s
Teenager’s t-shirt company to formally open Utica shop on Wednesday
UTICA, N.Y. — Custom clothing company Toast Tees is holding a ribbon-cutting ceremony next Wednesday to celebrate the formal opening of its new shop in
Cayuga Community College to offer event-management certificate this fall
AUBURN, N.Y. — Cayuga Community College is offering a new, one-year, event-management certificate beginning in the fall semester, which starts Aug. 31. The college has
Grow Broome Fund has up to $2M available for area small businesses
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — The Grow Broome Fund has up to $2 million available for lending to eligible small businesses in Broome County. Launched in January,
Nurse admits to stealing drugs from Horseheads nursing home
HORSEHEADS, N.Y. — A nurse has pleaded guilty to stealing nearly 200 pills from elderly patients at the Elcor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Horseheads.
Ascenzi named 2015 Greater Baldwinsville Chamber Business Person of the Year
BALDWINSVILLE, N.Y. — Donna T. Ascenzi, who operates an accounting firm in the village of Baldwinsville, has been named the 2015 Greater Baldwinsville Chamber of
Judge rejects challenge to Lago Resort & Casino license
TYRE, N.Y. — A New York State Supreme Court judge has rejected the Finger Lakes Racing Board’s challenge to the state selecting Lago Resort &
Upstate University Hospital to use $1.5M state grant to expand HIV treatment programs
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse will use a state grant of $1.5 million to develop and expand treatment programs for people infected
Associated Medical Professionals renovates primary clinical office
SYRACUSE — Associated Medical Professionals of NY, PLLC, is currently renovating part of its main clinical office in Syracuse, located at 1226 East Water St., after it freed up space by moving 45 administrative staff to a new corporate headquarters in the town of Salina earlier this summer. Its new headquarters is in an
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
SYRACUSE — Associated Medical Professionals of NY, PLLC, is currently renovating part of its main clinical office in Syracuse, located at 1226 East Water St., after it freed up space by moving 45 administrative staff to a new corporate headquarters in the town of Salina earlier this summer.
Its new headquarters is in an office building at 100 Metropolitan Park Drive, in a space topping 8,000 square feet, according to Christopher Williamson, chief operating officer at Associated Medical Professionals (AMP).
AMP is a multi-specialty medical practice. It was established when three practices — Syracuse Urology Associates, P.C., Associated Urologists of CNY, and Syracuse Radiation Oncology — merged in 2008, according to the AMP website. It has since merged with six additional practices, Williamson says in an email, and has 12 locations across Central New York.
Establishing a new corporate headquarters for administrative staff was necessary because the space in the Syracuse location, which spans 37,000 square feet and housed both clinical and administrative departments, was maxed out, according to Williamson. Parking at the Syracuse office, which previously served as headquarters, was also at capacity.
The departments that comprise AMP’s business center — such as administration, operations, billing, accounting, human resources, and compliance — were moved to the Salina office and centralized, says Williamson. The information technology and electronic medical records departments remain at the Syracuse office, he adds.
As a result of the space freed up in Syracuse, AMP has doubled the size of its clinical research department — comprised of six staff with 40 active clinical trials — and is currently working to expand its laboratory and pathology department, Williamson tells CNYBJ.
The medical practice hired Syracuse–based CBD Companies, located at 125 East Jefferson St., to handle the renovations, which are expected to be complete by Sept. 1, according to Williamson.
AMP also needs to grow its clinical space for the urology, radiation, and imaging departments, he adds. The practice plans to bring in some new employees for the research department in the coming months, he adds. He couldn’t specify the number.
AMP entered into a five-year lease agreement with 100 Metropolitan Park, LLC, which owns the Salina building, without the use of a broker. The contract includes renewal options, according to Williamson, who declines to disclose financial terms of the contract.
The administrative office space required minor work before it was ready to be occupied, such as the installation of walls and doors, and some fresh paint, which the owner quickly completed, Williamson says. He did not disclose the exact cost of the work, but says it is partly built into the lease, with the rest covered through a mix of cash and financing.
Williamson toured more than 25 buildings in recent years in search of a space to which to expand. AMP knew of the building in Salina, which is perfect for AMP’s needs, he says, adding that it is large enough to allow for continued administrative growth.
In 2010, AMP purchased a 17,000-square-foot building that had been adjacent to its Syracuse office at the time, and attached the two buildings, says Williamson.
Then, in 2011, AMP merged with four more practices (Urology Consultants of Syracuse, P.C., Urology Specialists of CNY, P.C., Mohawk Valley Urology, P.C., and Utica Urology Associates, P.C., according to the AMP website), which helped to quickly max out the additional space the medical practice had added the previous year, says Williamson.
AMP plans to recruit two or three new physicians in the next year to keep up with the aging population, says Williamson, but isn’t currently looking to acquire or merge with another practice.
“We don’t see that coming in the next five years because there are no other groups that we want to merge with at this point,” he told CNYBJ.
AMP is owned by 23 physician partners, and currently employs 250 people, according to Williamson. He declined to disclose revenue.
Williamson did say that the practice has steadily grown in volume and gross revenue, but cash collections haven’t always reflected that because its
reimbursements from Medicare, Medicaid, and other insurers have decreased every year since AMP was formed, partially offsetting the revenue gains.
Moving forward, Williamson says AMP will continue to be proactive and stay ahead of the curve in quality patient care.
Bartell Machinery unveils single-twist strander machine
ROME — On July 22, Bartell Machinery Systems, LLC unveiled a state-of-the-art, single-twist strander machine at its plant in Rome. The machine — which spans 78 feet in length, 20 feet in width, stands 17 feet high, and weighs 55,000 pounds (unloaded) — is capable of producing large, industrial, electrical-transmission cable for the power-utility
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
ROME — On July 22, Bartell Machinery Systems, LLC unveiled a state-of-the-art, single-twist strander machine at its plant in Rome.
The machine — which spans 78 feet in length, 20 feet in width, stands 17 feet high, and weighs 55,000 pounds (unloaded) — is capable of producing large, industrial, electrical-transmission cable for the power-utility industry. The wire strander is scheduled to ship in August to a customer in China.
“Bartell Machinery owns unique, roll-forming technology that shapes and pre-forms wire during the manufacturing process,” says Patrick J. Morocco, company president. “We had a dedicated team working on this project, which took a year to complete. The challenge was to design and build a structurally sound and perfectly balanced machine that can weigh up to 100,000 pounds [when loaded with copper wire] that rotates at up to 200 revolutions-per-minute and is operated by a programmable logic controller and a menu-driven touch screen.”
Bartell Machinery manufactures equipment for the tire and rubber, oil and gas, and wire and cable industries. The company employs 165 people, of whom 145 work at the Rome facility. The plant is located just north of the city on 17 acres and encompasses 170,000 square feet. The real estate is owned by the company.
The Business Journal estimates that Bartell’s annual revenue exceeds $50 million. In addition to the headquarters in the Mohawk Valley, Bartell has sales-and-service offices in the United Kingdom and Quingdao, China, and a sales office in Toronto.
Bartell Machinery, which is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, was founded in 1940 to service New York wire and cable customers. National Standard bought Bartell in 1969, and 20 years later sold it to Pettibone, which is owned by Heico, a conglomerate headquartered in Chicago.
Morocco notes that Bartell generates 60 percent of its revenue from the tire and rubber industry, 25 percent from oil and gas, and 15 percent from wire and cable.
The company has more than 8,500 machines in operation worldwide.
“All of our machines are highly engineered,” emphasizes Morocco. “Research and development is a key component of our success. The technical staff includes 40 engineers, all with engineering degrees, of whom 10 focus solely on R&D. We have devoted 5,500 [square] feet to an R&D lab, and we use the most advanced technology to design and develop innovative solutions.”
He continues, “Our ability to design, engineer, and manufacture advanced, industrial machinery that competes in the world market is a testament to our skilled work force and to the strong technical and manufacturing base we have right here in Central New York.”
Morocco was born in New Jersey and graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland in 1986 with a B.S. in engineering. He spent seven years in the Navy as an engineering officer, including a stint on an Aegis-class cruiser. Morocco joined the private sector in 1993 and held executive positions with Stewart & Stevenson Operations, Inc. In 1998, he joined Wartsila, a Finnish company, as the vice president of worldwide operations. Morocco moved to the Carrier Corp. in Syracuse in 2001 and to ECR International in Utica in 2004, before joining Bartell in April 2013. He resides in Marcellus with his wife Peggy, also a Naval Academy graduate from the class of 1986, and four children.
Heico Companies, LLC is a holding company that owns 35 manufacturing, construction, and industrial-services companies in 12 countries on four continents. The holding company is organized into four groups: Ancra, Heico Metal Processing, Heico Construction, and Pettibone.
Heico, which is privately owned, posts annual sales topping $2 billion. The holding company offers its properties financial, environmental, health-and-safety, legal, and risk-management resources. Heico also provides its constituent companies a worldwide supply chain for sourcing products and services.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.