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Clayton/1000 Islands region to host Empire State Tourism Conference in early May
CLAYTON — The New York State Tourism Industry Association (NYSTIA) will host the 2016 Empire State Tourism Conference, along with I Love NY, on May 2-4 at the 1000 Islands Harbor Hotel in Clayton. “It is an honor for the 1000 Islands region to serve as host of this prestigious conference which will draw tourism […]
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CLAYTON — The New York State Tourism Industry Association (NYSTIA) will host the 2016 Empire State Tourism Conference, along with I Love NY, on May 2-4 at the 1000 Islands Harbor Hotel in Clayton.
“It is an honor for the 1000 Islands region to serve as host of this prestigious conference which will draw tourism professionals from all corners of this great state,” Michael Folsom, conference chairman, said in a news release. “By being in Clayton, this conference provides an ideal opportunity for the region to shine and share with fellow NY tourist destinations that the 1000 Islands is an extraordinary place everyone should experience and enjoy.”
The theme of this year’s conference is “The Future is Now.” The event will feature a number of breakout sessions and panel discussions on topics ranging from social media to audience targeting. Barbara Wold, an internationally known speaker and authority to the retail, consumer, hospitality, and tourism industries with more than 40 years of firsthand experience in management and marketing, will serve as keynote speaker, as will Michael Johnson, dean of Cornell University’s School of Hotel Administration, according to the release.
“NYSTIA is looking forward to highlighting the tremendous assets of the 1000 Islands Vacation Region during our annual conference,” Jill Delaney, president and CEO of NYSTIA, said. “As New York State’s 4th largest employer, tourism continues to drive the state’s economy, and our conference is sure to further support that momentum with cutting-edge educational programming and collaboration opportunities.”
For more information about the conference, visit www.nystia.org/estc.
New director leading CITEC Business Solutions in Potsdam
POTSDAM — A man who has worked as a business advisor at CITEC Business Solutions since February 2013 is now the organization’s executive director. CITEC’s board of directors has appointed Reg Carter as the nonprofit’s new executive director. Carter started his work as executive director on Feb. 10, the organization said in a news release
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POTSDAM — A man who has worked as a business advisor at CITEC Business Solutions since February 2013 is now the organization’s executive director.
CITEC’s board of directors has appointed Reg Carter as the nonprofit’s new executive director.
Carter started his work as executive director on Feb. 10, the organization said in a news release issued Feb. 28.
He replaces William Murray, who resigned at the end of 2015 to pursue personal interests, a CITEC spokesperson said in an email response to a BJNN inquiry.
CITEC operates at the Clarkson University small-business incubator in Potsdam.
“We received some exceptional résumés from extremely well-qualified candidates,” John Chatterton, CITEC board president and search committee member, said in the release. “After balancing the future needs of the organization along with the critical opportunities CITEC is in the midst of, we felt strongly that transitioning an existing employee with Reg’s qualifications was the ideal path forward.”
Carter has worked as a senior level executive with companies that include Fairfield, Connecticut–based General Electric (NYSE: GE); Stockholm, Sweden–based AB Electrolux; and Merrillville, Indiana–based utility NiSource (NYSE: NI), according to CITEC.
“With our recent contract approval by Empire State Development extending our funding for the next five years, I am excited about our opportunities to bring the experts, programs and resources to the small- and medium-sized firms in our North Country region,” Carter said in the release.
Since joining CITEC, Carter has worked with the leaders of North Country organizations in the areas of strategic planning, business assessments, succession planning, and executive coaching.
Carter will continue providing those services to clients, but his daily activities will “shift to spend more of his time on his leadership role for CITEC,” the nonprofit said.
CITEC describes itself as a nonprofit business-consulting organization that works to “help the small- and medium-sized enterprises in northern New York to thrive, rather than just survive,” according to its release.
It offers clients a consulting team and a “nationwide network” of resources so businesses can “grow strategically, improve profitability and create the competitive advantages they need.”
As a member of the federal and state Manufacturing Extension Partnership program, an independent third party surveys CITEC clients upon project completion. Those clients have reported more than $335 million in results, so far, the nonprofit said.
On average, working with CITEC provides a return of $120 for every $1 of project cost, it contends in the release.
CITEC is the organization’s formal name. It was originally short for Council for International Trade, Technology, Education and Communication.

KeyBank to invest $16.5 billion in its markets to address acquisition concerns
CLEVELAND, Ohio — KeyBank has plans to invest $16.5 billion over the next five years in the communities it serves under its “national community-benefits plan.”
Some politicians cannot understand why so many folks hate politicians. To help them understand, I suggest they simply listen to themselves. Let’s take the battle over the vacancy on the Supreme Court following Justice Antonin Scalia’s death. President Obama has declared he will nominate someone to replace Scalia (He may even have already done so
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Some politicians cannot understand why so many folks hate politicians.
To help them understand, I suggest they simply listen to themselves.
Let’s take the battle over the vacancy on the Supreme Court following Justice Antonin Scalia’s death. President Obama has declared he will nominate someone to replace Scalia (He may even have already done so by the time you read this column). The Republicans say they won’t consider any nomination — because it is an election year. From what I can read, there is not much in our Constitution that says whether this is right or wrong.
The president tells us this is wrong. He calls the Republicans a lot of names over this plan. Vice President Biden says the same. He demands that the Senate should deliberate over the nominee, immediately.
Our Senator Chuck Schumer also scolds the Republicans for their intransigence. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid echoes those sentiments. In other words, election year be damned. They claim the Republicans are playing politics, throwing sand in the gears of the machine we use to appoint justices.
As mentioned, the Constitution offers no guidance. So these are merely opinions.
Here is why politicians are about as popular as last week’s lunch served for tonight’s dinner. A few years ago, these guys all said the opposite.
In 1992, then-Senator Joe Biden was head of the committee that vetted justices. He proclaimed that nominating judges to the Supreme Court in an election year was wrong. He told us earlier presidents refrained. And President George Bush should follow their example. This is the very opposite of what Biden says now.
In 2007, Senator Schumer said the Democrats should not allow President George W. Bush to fill a Supreme Court vacancy. Bush still had seven months left in office. This is the opposite of what he says now.
Harry Reid has flip-flopped several times on the issue of how the Senate should deal with nominees from the president. And President Obama — when he was a senator — joined in a filibuster on a nominee. In other words, he helped toss sand into procedural gears. His spokesman says the president now regrets that move.
Is this the politicians’ version of the game: “All Change”?
Suppose your friend tells you that such and such is absolutely wrong. A year later he tells you the same such and such is right. After the flip-flop do you take him seriously any more?
Can we take our politicians seriously? This is a pretty big issue. They did not make their remarks casually. They were not caught off-guard in a flippant response. They carefully prepared their remarks. When it helped their cause one year, they said X. When it helped their cause another year, they said Y.
So, were they lying then? Are they lying now? Did they believe what they said then? Do they believe what they say now? Do they believe anything?
Is this indeed just a game to them? A game in which words mean nothing? A game in which they can feed us anything? And we are supposed to swallow it? We, the rubes and patsies?
A child specialist told me once that parents can screw up their kids by doing just this. Kids hate it when parents say something one week and say the opposite the next week. They figure that in one of those weeks the parents lied to them.
This can cause confusion, resentment, and anger.
I wonder if politicians cause the same feelings with voters. By saying what we hear them say over this vacancy — versus what they said before.
Cynics say politicians talk out of both sides of their mouths. They say politicians have no beliefs. And that they will say whatever works for the political moment.
Sometimes the cynics ain’t so cynical. Sometimes they tell it like it is.
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, called Tom Morgan’s Money Talk. Contact him at tomasinmorgan@yahoo.com
The Missing Half of Congress’s Job
Every now and then, I’m asked if I miss Congress. My stock answer is that no, I don’t really miss it, but there are definitely times when I’d like to jump into a policy debate or call congressional hearings. This is one of those times. Over the last few weeks, several media outlets have reported
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Every now and then, I’m asked if I miss Congress. My stock answer is that no, I don’t really miss it, but there are definitely times when I’d like to jump into a policy debate or call congressional hearings.
This is one of those times.
Over the last few weeks, several media outlets have reported that U.S. military commanders want more American troops on the ground in places like Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, and, most recently, Libya. This ought to have Congress working overtime to prepare for these requests. The military faces serious security challenges in the Middle East, but one can be sympathetic and at the same time skeptical, or at least probing.
Congress should push hard to get answers to some very tough questions. Where are we headed with these proposed troop increases? If they don’t work, what’s next? What’s our exit strategy? What are the prospects for negotiations? We insist that we’re going to destroy ISIS, but no other country in the international coalition fighting the Islamic State seems willing to put forces on the ground. Are we going to be the only one? And just how does the administration propose to destroy ISIS?
Congress has two key functions in our system of government: legislation and oversight. Most public attention — and certainly most media attention — focuses on policy-making and legislative maneuvering. But Capitol Hill’s role in overseeing the executive branch is just as important.
That’s because in seeking answers, Congress can force the President and his top advisers to articulate and defend their policies, their objectives, the steps they’re taking to implement those objectives, and the impact they expect. They need to explain the resources needed to obtain their objectives: in this case, how many troops, how much money, what are the risks to American lives and interests?
Simply put, government functions better when Congress pursues robust oversight. It sharpens objectives, improves government performance, makes the bureaucracy more responsive, and curtails wasteful spending.
Sadly, this key responsibility has fallen into disrepair. Really tough overseers of the administration’s policies — lawmakers interested in government performance, not political one-upmanship — have grown scarce on Capitol Hill. If we want to restore the vigor of the Congress, getting it to look into every nook and cranny of government is vital. The military’s pursuit of growing troop strength and new strategies in the Middle East would be a good place to start.
Lee Hamilton is director of the Center on Congress (www.centeroncongress.org) at Indiana University (IU), distinguished scholar at the IU School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years, representing a district in south central Indiana.
Bowers & Company CPAs has merged with Caswell & Associates, and BRIAN A. CASWELL has joined Bowers as of counsel. In addition to building a successful local CPA firm, Caswell is highly regarded in the accounting industry in the areas of ethics and governance, Bowers contends. Caswell currently serves on the International Standards Board for
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Bowers & Company CPAs has merged with Caswell & Associates, and BRIAN A. CASWELL has joined Bowers as of counsel. In addition to building a successful local CPA firm, Caswell is highly regarded in the accounting industry in the areas of ethics and governance, Bowers contends. Caswell currently serves on the International Standards Board for Accountants, where he is one of only 18 voting members. This committee develops the “Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants,” and for multinational engagements. Caswell is a graduate of Hamilton College (bachelor’s degree), Le Moyne College (accounting post-graduate program), and Syracuse University (MBA).
Firley, Moran, Freer & Eassa, CPA, P.C.
RICHARD SMITH and MARISSA DILAURA have joined Firley, Moran, Freer & Eassa, CPA, P.C. Smith is a senior manager in the tax department with more than 14 years of experience in public accounting, including 10 years working at a “Big 4” firm. He received his bachelor’s degree in accounting and MBA from SUNY Oswego and
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RICHARD SMITH and MARISSA DILAURA have joined Firley, Moran, Freer & Eassa, CPA, P.C. Smith is a senior manager in the tax department with more than 14 years of experience in public accounting, including 10 years working at a “Big 4” firm. He received his bachelor’s degree in accounting and MBA from SUNY Oswego and is a CPA. DiLaura is an in-charge accountant with three years of federal and multi-state tax accounting experience. She is a CPA and received her bachelor’s degree in accounting and MBA from St. Bonaventure University and started her career at RSM US LLP in Boston.

MOLLY MULVIHILL has joined Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Business Banking team in Syracuse as a VP and relationship manager. With more than 12 years of financial and business banking experience, she held positions at Smith Barney and Merrill Lynch before joining Bank of America Merrill Lynch as a VP and banking advisor in 2009.
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MOLLY MULVIHILL has joined Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Business Banking team in Syracuse as a VP and relationship manager. With more than 12 years of financial and business banking experience, she held positions at Smith Barney and Merrill Lynch before joining Bank of America Merrill Lynch as a VP and banking advisor in 2009. Mulvihill earned her bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan.

MICHELLE M. KLEIN has been hired as an account manager at Scalzo, Zogby & Wittig, Inc. She began as a student intern at the insurance agency in February 2015 and was hired upon completion of her internship. Klein holds an associate degree from MVCC and will earn her bachelor’s degree in risk management & insurance
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MICHELLE M. KLEIN has been hired as an account manager at Scalzo, Zogby & Wittig, Inc. She began as a student intern at the insurance agency in February 2015 and was hired upon completion of her internship. Klein holds an associate degree from MVCC and will earn her bachelor’s degree in risk management & insurance from Utica College in December.

Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC announced that MATTHEW N. WELLS, a member in the firm’s Syracuse office, has been named chair of its public finance practice. In addition, he is chair of the firm’s securities law practice. Wells is a business law attorney and has also served as bond counsel to public agencies, municipalities and
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Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC announced that MATTHEW N. WELLS, a member in the firm’s Syracuse office, has been named chair of its public finance practice. In addition, he is chair of the firm’s securities law practice. Wells is a business law attorney and has also served as bond counsel to public agencies, municipalities and school districts, as counsel to municipal-bond underwriters, borrower’s counsel and trustee’s counsel for a variety of tax-exempt and taxable bond financings and project financings.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.