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USDA awards Homer dairy farm more than $190K in grant funding
HOMER, N.Y. — Trinity Valley, LLC in Cortland County will use federal grant funding of more than $190,000 to expand the customer base for the
Town clerk in Thousand Islands region charged with stealing $36,000
ALEXANDRIA, N.Y. — The former town clerk in the town of Alexandria in Jefferson County is under arrest, accused of stealing more than $36,000 in
ConMed pays quarterly dividend of 20 cents
UTICA, N.Y. — ConMed Corp. (NASDAQ: CNMD), a Utica–based surgical-device maker, announced that its board of directors has declared a quarterly cash dividend of 20
Marriott Downtown Syracuse names McNeil as general manager
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Marriott Downtown Syracuse has announced Paul McNeil as the facility’s new general manager. The Marriott Downtown Syracuse, the new name of
Davidson Auto breaks ground on Ford dealership in Clay
CLAY, N.Y. — Davidson Automotive Group recently broke ground on a new Ford dealership on Route 31 in the town of Clay, the company announced.
New York manufacturing conditions stay weak for a fourth month in November
The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index registered a reading of -10.7 in November, the fourth straight month that it has been negative. The
State purchases former Oneida County Airport to develop first-responder training center
ORISKANY, N.Y. — New York has purchased the former Oneida County Airport for $10 million to “grow and enhance” first-responder training operations at the New York State Preparedness Training Center (SPTC). The New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services (DHSES) operates the (SPTC), which is located at the facility. Gov. Andrew Cuomo
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ORISKANY, N.Y. — New York has purchased the former Oneida County Airport for $10 million to “grow and enhance” first-responder training operations at the New York State Preparedness Training Center (SPTC).
The New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services (DHSES) operates the (SPTC), which is located at the facility.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo today announced an agreement to transfer the 1,120-acre property from Oneida County to the state.
“Our first responders routinely put their health and well-being at risk in order to keep their fellow New Yorkers safe,” Cuomo said in a news release his office issued on Friday. “This new facility will help ensure they have access to the latest and most up to date training and builds on our commitment to coordinate a more effective and streamlined emergency response at all levels of government. I thank our partners for working together to make this agreement possible.”
Members of the Cuomo’s Mohawk Valley working group joined RoAnn Destito, commissioner of the New York State Office of General Services; DHSES Commissioner John Melville; and Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente in Oriskany today to sign the agreement.
The Oneida County Board of Legislators this week voted to authorize Picente to sell the property, Cuomo’s office said.
“I am pleased Oneida County is able to play a role in providing our first responders with a top-notch facility to meet their vitally important training needs. We were excited when the State decided to locate the New York State Preparedness Training Center in the Mohawk Valley and are delighted with the commitment Governor Cuomo has made to train our emergency response teams,” said Picente.
The agreement requires “routine” approvals from the New York State Attorney General’s Office and Office of the State Comptroller before Oneida County can transfer the deed.
The commitment to purchase the land that houses the SPTC facility demonstrates Cuomo’s “commitment” to making New York the “most prepared state in the nation,” DHSES’s Melville said in the Cuomo news release.
“The SPTC is a world-class facility and is recognized as one of the premier training facilities for first responders and law enforcement personnel in the country,” said Melville.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
USDA awards Town of Mexico funding for new water district
MEXICO, N.Y. — The Town of Mexico will use more than $1.9 million in federal funding to design and cover the costs of a new
HUNT Real Estate acquires Rivet Realty in Old Forge
OLD FORGE, N.Y. — HUNT Real Estate ERA has expanded to the Adirondacks, acquiring Rivet Realty, a family-run real estate firm located in Old Forge.
Barclay Damon to become anchor tenant of Syracuse building that will bear its name
SYRACUSE — The former HSBC Tower in downtown Syracuse, now known as Onondaga Tower, will soon bear the name of a prominent Syracuse and upstate New York law firm. “It was an important [lease] term to entice us to [relocate],” says John Langan, managing partner of Barclay Damon, LLP. Barclay Damon’s Syracuse office
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SYRACUSE — The former HSBC Tower in downtown Syracuse, now known as Onondaga Tower, will soon bear the name of a prominent Syracuse and upstate New York law firm.
“It was an important [lease] term to entice us to [relocate],” says John Langan, managing partner of Barclay Damon, LLP.
Barclay Damon’s Syracuse office and its 158 employees will move from One Park Place at 300 State St. to its new home in what will become Barclay Damon Tower in July 2016, the Syracuse–based law firm announced on Nov. 9.
The former Hiscock & Barclay firm has operated for 170 years, says Langan, but took on its new name after announcing the combination with Buffalo–based Damon
Morey LLP on June 1.
Langan believes having the Barclay Damon name on the building will help in “connecting the dots” between the former name and the new name.
“It’s going to be on all four sides of the building at the top in lights … It’s going to be very prominent in the city,” he says.
Langan would have still sought the naming term, even if the firm still had the Hiscock & Barclay name, he notes.
“It just happens to be particularly helpful now with the combination,” says Langan.
The law firm’s planned move had been under consideration prior to its combination with the Damon Morley firm, he notes.
Langan spoke with CNYBJ while traveling on Nov. 10.
Onondaga Tower, located at the corner of East Jefferson and South Warren Streets, is known for being illuminated at night in different colors.
Barclay Damon will initially occupy 50,000 square feet in the building, with an additional 10,000 square feet scheduled for occupancy in the fall of 2017.
“Some of it is build-out related, and some of it is simply … logistics for us,” says Langan in explaining the reason behind the two-phase move.
“It’s a 15-year lease under terms that [both parties] view as favorable,” he says, declining to disclose the monthly lease payment.
Barclay Damon will be able to keep some of its administrative functions at One Park Place following the initial move next July.
Its lease expires at One Park Place in the fall of 2017, Langan says.
Syracuse–based Barclay Damon describes itself as a 275-attorney, “super-regional” law firm, making it the largest law firm in upstate New York.
It has offices with between 30 and 105 attorneys each in Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, and Albany. Barclay Damon also has growing offices in New York City, New Jersey, Boston, Toronto, New York’s Southern Tier, and Washington, D.C.
Including support staff, the firm employs about 460 people, says Langan.
The search
Barclay Damon has operated at One Park Place for about a decade and has two years remaining on its lease, says Langan. It conducted a search for a new Syracuse operating space, which included consideration of its present space at One Park Place, he says.
“We’re a 60,000-square-foot tenant, so we wanted to see what the market looked like,” he says.
The search started in the fall of 2014.
The company 360 Warren Associates, LLC, which owns Onondaga Tower, has already invested $9 million in the structure, with an additional $6 million planned to prepare the space for the Barclay Damon offices, according to the law firm.
360 Warren Associates includes the CBD Companies, a partnership involving developers Charles Sangster and Courtney Wilson, and Cadaret, Grant & Co., Inc., a Syracuse–based investment-brokerage firm.
Sangster helped the Hiscock & Barclay firm secure its space at One Park Place, says Langan. “He’s a personal friend. He’s very talented,” he adds.
Langan had congratulated Sangster on the work CBD had conducted at Onondaga Tower, and Sangster invited Langan for a cup of coffee and to take a look at the structure.
Langan mentioned the law firm was conducting a search, and Sangster suggested he “might have a crazy idea,” as Langan recalled it.
A few weeks later, Sangster contacted Langan, indicating he could possibly propose an option for new space.
Barclay Damon will initially occupy four floors of the 15-story tower and put signage at the top of the building.
“The building is virtually brand new, except for the original outside skin, and the space we are building for Barclay Damon is like nothing else we have seen in upstate New York,” Sangster and Wilson boasted in a news release.
The law firm’s new floor plan will include “large and less-formal” work areas, including a 3,400-square-foot, multi-media café designed to “spark greater collaboration.” It will also include more outdoor space, such as a 2,000-square-foot, 15th story, rooftop terrace.
The amenities also include a two-story reception atrium, flanked by glass conference rooms with views and natural light for client meetings and presentations.
King + King Architects, LLP is handling the renovation design with support from the Effects Group of Syracuse, Barclay Damon said.
Other tenants in the building include Ephesus Lighting, which handles the night-time illumination; along with Aspen Athletic Club, Jolime restaurant, and a number of other professional-service firms.
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