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Gourmet sandwich shop, Ballister’s Bistro formally opens in Rome
ROME, N.Y. — A new gourmet sandwich shop called Ballister’s Bistro, situated at 307 North James St. in the city of Rome, formally opened Friday with a grand-opening event. The eatery offers sandwiches, called grandwiches, as well as salads, desserts, bagels, coffee, and catering services, according to a news release issued Wednesday. The bistro first […]
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ROME, N.Y. — A new gourmet sandwich shop called Ballister’s Bistro, situated at 307 North James St. in the city of Rome, formally opened Friday with a grand-opening event.
The eatery offers sandwiches, called grandwiches, as well as salads, desserts, bagels, coffee, and catering services, according to a news release issued Wednesday.
The bistro first opened to customers on June 21, according to its Facebook page. It said it attracted hundreds of customers in its first week of business.
Ballister’s Bistro is open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. seven days a week. This weekend, Aug. 1-2, it will be open until 8 p.m. and giving out prizes to people who come though the doors, the release said.
The shop is owned by Dan Ballister. His brother, Robert Ballister, is the general manager.
Contact Nick Kapteyn at nkapteyn@cnybj.com
HealthlinkNY set to unveil new Binghamton office
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — HealthlinkNY — a nonprofit, regional health-information organization for an 11-county area of southern New York — is holding a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening ceremony Aug. 7 to formally open its western office in the city of Binghamton, at 49 Court St. The organization is moving into this new, larger 9,500-square-foot space because of
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BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — HealthlinkNY — a nonprofit, regional health-information organization for an 11-county area of southern New York — is holding a ribbon-cutting and grand-opening ceremony Aug. 7 to formally open its western office in the city of Binghamton, at 49 Court St.
The organization is moving into this new, larger 9,500-square-foot space because of growth in its workforce and its workload in the Southern Tier region, the nonprofit said in a news release. HealthlinkNY has 21 full-time employees working from its Binghamton office.
In 2005, then operating under the moniker Southern Tier HealthLink, it had just nine employees, according to HealthlinkNY’s marketing & relations coordinator, Brandi Devine.
The move from the previous 4,000-square-foot office on 45 Lewis St. was scheduled to take place Thursday and Friday (July 30, 31). The staff’s first day in the new office will be Monday, Aug. 3.
Devine says the organization currently plans to hire “a few more” employees in the coming months, but does not have an established timeline.
The ceremony, set for 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. next Friday, will give attendees the chance to learn about the nonprofit and its services, and tour the new office, HealthlinkNY says. Appetizers and refreshments will be available, and a raffle will be held.
HealthlinkNY offers a health-information exchange for the region spanning the Hudson Valley, Catskills, and Southern Tier of New York. It was formed by the collaboration between Southern Tier HealthLink (STHL) and Taconic Health Information Network and Community (or THINC).
Binghamton–based United Health Services, Lourdes Hospital of Binghamton, and other stakeholders established STHL in 2005.
HealthlinkNY encompasses 11 counties: Broome, Tioga, Chenango, Delaware, Sullivan, Ulster, Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, and Westchester, according to the nonprofit’s website.
Its eastern office is located in Fishkill in Dutchess County.
Contact Nick Kapteyn at nkapteyn@cnybj.com
PHOTO CAPTION: The new western office for HealthlinkNY, opening next week in Binghamton.
PHOTO CREDIT: HealthlinkNY website
Work begins on $18M student-housing project near Syracuse University campus
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Construction crews have started work on #BLVD404 at 404 University Ave., a student-housing project near the Syracuse University campus. Jared Hutter, managing
MVCC, groSolar sign deal for solar power
ROME, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC) has inked a deal with Global Resource Options Inc. to develop a “large-scale” solar project for power
Citizens Bank rolls out fingerprint authentication for mobile-banking app
Citizens Bank, which operates more than 20 branch offices in the 16-county Central New York market, on Wednesday, announced it has introduced Touch ID authentication
Miranda Lambert set to be first act at Onondaga Lake amphitheater
GEDDES, N.Y. — Country music recording artist Miranda Lambert will be the first act to perform at the Lakeview Amphitheater on the shore of Onondaga
Van Cott Jewelers set to unveil renovated Vestal store
VESTAL, N.Y. — Van Cott Jewelers will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony Wednesday, July 29 at its Vestal store to formally unveil the recently completed renovations.
Former Loretto employee accused of stealing from resident trust account
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A former finance associate at Loretto is under arrest for allegedly stealing from a trust account established for residents’ funds. New York
PAR Technology names Bartusek as new CFO
NEW HARTFORD, N.Y. — PAR Technology Corp. (NYSE: PAR) has appointed Michael Bartusek as the company’s new vice president and CFO, effective immediately. Bartusek fills
Meyda Lighting transitions to the third generation
YORKVILLE — “This July 11, you can meet the fabulous Beekman Boys at the Old Forge Home Show,” Max Cohen, event impresario, said in a recent YouTube video. The Beekman Boys, who bought a mansion in Sharon Springs where they became farmers and launched their lifestyle brand with goat-milk soups and cheeses, created a reality-television
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YORKVILLE — “This July 11, you can meet the fabulous Beekman Boys at the Old Forge Home Show,” Max Cohen, event impresario, said in a recent YouTube video. The Beekman Boys, who bought a mansion in Sharon Springs where they became farmers and launched their lifestyle brand with goat-milk soups and cheeses, created a reality-television show that runs on the Cooking Channel.
“The Old Forge Home Show is just one of 10 trade shows I attend annually,” notes Cohen, a nine-year employee of Meyda Lighting (pronounce MY-DA), a Yorkville–based manufacturer and retailer of custom and decorative lighting. His grandfather Meyer launched the business as a hobby in 1974. “My primary role at the company is sales and design,” Cohen stresses. “This keeps me on the road six months out of the year to brand the uniqueness of a four-decades-old design tradition inspired by artists such as Tiffany and Stickley. The goal is to promote national recognition of our brand.”
Max Cohen, 28, is not the only third-generation scion in the family business. His older brother Chester (Chet) Cohen, 29, a five-year employee, focuses on manufacturing operations. “We’re passing up business,” opines Chet. “Our current lead time of eight weeks (from a signature on a drawing) is too long for some customers, who simply won’t consider us [as a vendor]. We need to add a few engineers, fabricators, and wiring specialists now to reduce the production time to four weeks. But finding the right help is not easy for our facility here in Utica.”
The two brothers work with their father, Robert (Bob) Cohen, the company president and a 40-year employee who is active in the business. “Meyda is a complicated business,” opines the president, “that deals with a lot of market segments including Internet dealers, brick-and-mortar dealers, designers, customers who buy directly at our retail outlets, and buyers in industries such as hospitality and restaurants … Recently we added another market segment — restoration. The chandelier we built for the recently refurbished Stanley Theater in downtown Utica was 35 feet wide, 11 feet high, and weighed 6,000 pounds. Meyda Lighting is currently bidding on lighting in the Hotel Syracuse’s restored grand lobby and the Persian Terrace [part of a $60 million renovation].
What further complicates the business is keeping track of 15,000 [discrete] items in our catalog; a growing manufacturing operation that produces unique lighting; and the fact that our products include aluminum, bronze, brass, copper, textiles, acrylics, and wood.” Bob Cohen later added stone as another material when he showed this reporter a new fixture made of translucent stone from India. Meyda calls the line “Opykta,” the Greek word for stone. The company is not only a manufacturer and retailer but also an importer, designer, and distributor.
The start
“As Max says, we didn’t start out as a business,” remembers Bob Cohen. “My mother [Ida] was tired of looking at ‘vintage cars’ in our backyard, which my father [Meyer] said he would restore one day. She asked him to install a stained-glass window to block the view. Since Meyer was retired and a master tinkerer, he and my mother took a course in making stained-glass windows … That was in 1974. My parents had fun making windows, terrariums, lamps, and planters in our basement and sold them at area craft shows. Business was slow; the door usually opened only when the wind blew. In 1980, a local Methodist Church ordered four stained-glass windows. Then, I started to think of my parents’ hobby as a business.”
Bob Cohen joined his parents in 1975 while still a teenager. “I helped out at the craft shows and watched the business begin to grow,” posits the company president. “Our growth was spurred by an interest in Tiffany designs that swept the country in the 1980s and 1990s. In 1995, we bought the Quality Bent Glass Co., which created original lighting fixtures, including the famous Coca-Cola chandeliers supplied in the early 1900s to Louis Comfort Tiffany’s studio in New York City. In the late 1990s, we bought Mecco Art, a metal-art studio, and in 2009, Meyda acquired 2nd Ave Lighting to expand our metal-lighting sales both on the commercial and residential side of the business. Our development has been a combination of organic growth and acquisitions.”
To Bob Cohen, Meyda Lighting is still a hobby. But he and his sons recognize that it’s also a business, which currently employs 75 people at the plant and retail store in Yorkville. The facility encompasses 170,000 square feet of manufacturing, inventory, retail, and distribution space sited on 8.5 acres. Meyda also leases 1,600 square feet in Old Forge for a retail outlet.
The company stock is held by the family. The Business Journal estimates Meyda Lighting’s annual revenue is between $12 million and $15 million.
Since 1989, Meyda has contracted with manufacturers in China to produce some of their lamps. The plant operates one shift, five-days a week.
Meyda Lighting’s corporate mission statement is simple. “We’re here to say yes,” says Max Cohen, “and make it happen,” quips his father. “Designers and customers are always sending us sketches and asking whether we can produce the design,” continues the younger son. “Sometimes the sketch is just a scrap of paper and sometimes it’s a verbal idea of what a product should look like. We pass on the ideas to our engineers, who [uncannily] turn the concept into reality. Meyda’s growth is also based on new-product development. A few years ago, we created a lighting innovation by integrating lighting fixtures and fan mechanisms. The new collection takes a lighting fixture and inserts a fan mechanism inside the fixture. We call the line ‘Chandel-Airs’ and offer them in any size or color combination. This really is a creative business.”
Meyda Lighting started in the Cohens’ residence in Old Forge. On June 7 of this year, the family dedicated a new “Creative Arts Wing” at View, a nonprofit visual and performing-arts center in Old Forge. The wing houses a pottery studio, stained-glass and fused-glass stations, woodworking area, and culinary-arts teaching kitchen. “The wing is the result of a challenge grant by Bob Cohen,” says Kevin Jost, a longtime friend and volunteer fundraiser for View. “Old Forge has had a robust arts community going back to the 1950s. It was natural to turn to those families with a long association with the area. Bob and his sons are artists, and the wing was a perfect match with Meyda’s mission.” Bob Cohen’s response: “This was just a nice way to say thank you to the community which has supported us [for decades].”
Third generation
Meyda Lighting’s transition to the third generation is an ongoing process. “There are a lot of moving parts to this business,” observes Chet Cohen. “Also, my dad has 40 years of knowledge and long-term relationships with customers. Max and I are slowly absorbing the knowledge, much of which is in his head, and building relationships with his customers. We have a strong brand and want to build on our reputation. The business is growing, but it’s a daily challenge to create unique products, price them properly, and produce them efficiently.”
Family-business experts tell us that 40 percent of businesses are passed to the second generation and only 13 percent to the third generation. These companies need to be nimble and build a consensus around change, according to Craig Aronoff, co-founder and principal consultant at the Family Business Consulting Group in Chicago.
Bob Cohen, his wife Ellie (who has the corporate moniker: director of visual merchandising), Chet, and Max are steering Meyda Lighting successfully as the company transitions to the third generation. The spark of entrepreneurship is also alive in the Cohens’ youngest son Ben, who runs a business in Old Forge, and in Bob’s mother Ida, who at 95, still manages the Nutty Putty Miniature Golf course in Old Forge.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.