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CNY unemployment rates fall in September compared to a year ago
Unemployment rates in the Syracuse, Binghamton, Utica–Rome, and Ithaca metro areas fell in September, compared to a year ago, according to the latest New York State
Community Bank net income inches up in third quarter
DeWITT, N.Y. — Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) reported net income of $22.4 million, or 54 cents per share, during the third quarter that

Onondaga County Bar Association to honor Emil Rossi
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Onondaga County Bar Association (OCBA) expects more than 250 members at the Association’s 139th annual dinner on Thursday to recognize noted attorney Emil Rossi as its 2014

People news: SBA Syracuse office hires lender-relations specialist
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Grace H. Conners is the newest employee at the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Syracuse office. In her role as lender-relations specialist, she will
ESD awards COR Development, Oneida County organizations grant funding
COR Development Company, LLC will use a $3.6 million state grant for work on its Loguen Crossing project, a mixed-use commercial and residential-redevelopment project. That
The Bonadio Group, Orchard Park firm agree to merge
The Bonadio Group, a Rochester–based accounting firm with offices in Syracuse and Utica, has reached an agreement to merge with Bevilacqua & Co. in the
NBT Bank hires director of digital banking
NORWICH — NBT Bank Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer Joseph Stagliano announced that Nageshwara Ammiraju has joined NBT Bancorp as senior vice president and

Solar project provides living lab at Clarkson University
POTSDAM — A planned 2 megawatt solar array near Potsdam will do more than just provide nearly 10 percent of the power used at Clarkson University. It will also give students access to real-world data to use throughout their studies to better prepare them for the jobs awaiting them after graduation, the school says. On
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POTSDAM — A planned 2 megawatt solar array near Potsdam will do more than just provide nearly 10 percent of the power used at Clarkson University. It will also give students access to real-world data to use throughout their studies to better prepare them for the jobs awaiting them after graduation, the school says.
On Oct. 6, Clarkson announced it was partnering with Community Energy Solar of Radnor, Pa., which designed and will build the solar array on university property on Route 11 adjacent to Damon Field, Potsdam’s airport.
The 7,704 photovoltaic modules, situated on 12 acres, will generate about 2.8 million kilowatt hours per year, which is enough to power about 300 homes. It is also the equivalent of the power produced by burning 2,000 tons of coal or 4,500 barrels of oil. Making the switch to the sustainable power will cut the university’s carbon-dioxide emissions by 2,100 tons annually.
This ties in with the university’s promise to eliminate net greenhouse-gas emissions from certain campus operations and to promote the research and educational efforts to better equip society to re-stabilize the Earth’s climate. Those are promises Clarkson made when it signed on to the American College & University Presidents’ Climate Commitment, says Dr. Susan Powers, a professor in sustainable energy systems at Clarkson’s Institute for a Sustainable Environment.
“We have to be at the forefront of what we think the future is all about,” she says. Just as importantly, the university also has to teach its students with that future in mind. That’s why she’s so excited by the solar array, currently being installed and set to go online in November.
Community Energy will own and operate the array, selling the energy to Clarkson at approximately the same price Clarkson is currently paying for its power. Community Energy will also share classroom-friendly data with the university, Powers adds.
“We’re really excited about having the info and data,” she says. The solar array essentially provides a living laboratory on campus and will provide information that can be used in many courses of study. Classes from calculus to energy-related classes will be able to use the data in a variety of ways, Powers says.
Even better, the information is “real world” data, which will add another element to learning. “Real data is messy,” Powers says. “It’s missing values. It’s very, very different than textbook data.” And Clarkson students will have to learn how to work around those gaps, just as they would out in the “real world,” she says. “It adds to the relevance of what they’re studying.”
Over the past decade, Community Energy has partnered with about 50 colleges and universities to supply them with wind and solar energy, Community Energy Solar Vice President of Developmental Operations Thomas Tuffey said in a release announcing the Clarkson project. Support for the project came from the state’s NY-Sun initiative administered by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA). NY-Sun is a $1 billion initiative to advance solar energy in New York and move the state closer toward having a sustainable, self-sufficient solar industry. Funding for the Clarkson project was part of $54 million awarded under NY-Sun announced in July. The 79 projects funded will add 64 megawatts to the state’s solar capacity.
The solar array joins a number of sustainable practices at Clarkson including an integrated greenhouse to grow vegetables in cold climates, an anaerobic digester that coverts food waste to energy, and green building policies. Clarkson also offers two sustainability minors — sustainable-energy systems engineering and sustainable solutions for the developing world.
Clarkson’s Institute for a Sustainable Environment sponsors workshops, seminars, and a small grants program as well as undergraduate and graduate-level research experiences on renewable energy, clean water, and air-quality projects.
Contact The Business Journal News Network at news@cnybj.com
Five Star Urgent Care adds wait-time feature to website
Five Star Urgent Care, a provider of walk-in, urgent-care services, has launched a new website that enables patients to view current wait times for any of its six medical facilities directly on the home page. Five Star updates the wait times in real time, which it says enables patients to make more informed decisions regarding
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Five Star Urgent Care, a provider of walk-in, urgent-care services, has launched a new website that enables patients to view current wait times for any of its six medical facilities directly on the home page.
Five Star updates the wait times in real time, which it says enables patients to make more informed decisions regarding their health.
The urgent-care practice announced the new website feature in an Oct. 2 news release.
Five Star says it has “optimized” the new website (www.fivestaruc.com) for desktops, laptops, smartphones, and tablets so customers may access the wait times while they are at home or on the go, according to the release.
People don’t like to wait, Dr. John Radford, founder of Five Star Urgent Care, says in an interview.
“So we wanted to be transparent and let people know how long wait times would be,” he adds.
Some emergency rooms nationwide have started a similar practice, hoping to redirect traffic from emergency rooms for people minor ailments, according to Radford.
Five Star is aiming to give patients a “heads up” and choice if they’re traveling in an area within driving distance of two sites so the patient can decide which location would have the shortest wait for a visit.
“Our average in and out time is between 30 and 40 minutes, so there’s never really much of a wait time, but there are different peaks and spikes,” says Radford.
The wait-time feature is part of a revamped website for Five Star Urgent Care. Buffalo–based 19 Ideas, a marketing and communications agency, created and manages the Five Star site.
“So, this is like version two of our first website and we just integrated this new feature into it,” says Radford.
Five Star had been discussing and planning for the new site for about a year, he adds.
When asked if Five Star bases the wait times on the number of people in the waiting room or their ailments, Radford replied, “A little of both.”
“It’s primarily based on volume, but we also know that we could have three very simple things there [that] would take a short time to go through, and we may have one patient that would take longer than the time to [handle] the three,” he says.
Five Star adjusts the wait times at individual office locations based on algorithms that it assembled, assigning different time values, depending on the person’s ailment.
For example, Five Star will assign a different time value to a patient seeking treatment for a sore throat than to an individual who fell and needs an X-ray and a suture.
“The [employees] … right at the front desk … are on the front lines putting the times in and updating it … roughly between every 15 and 20 minutes,” says Radford.
Radford declined to disclose how much the new feature cost the company, saying it was part of the overall cost of the website upgrade.
Five Star on Sept. 4 opened a location in Fayetteville, representing its third office in the Syracuse area and sixth overall.
Earlier in the year, it opened a location at 3504 W. Genesee St. in the Fairmount area of Camillus.
Five Star first entered the Syracuse market in May 2013 when it opened a new facility on Route 11 in Cicero.
It also operates offices in Ithaca, Big Flats, and Jamestown.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com
EPA gives Onondaga County technical assistance, funding for stormwater project
SYRACUSE — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is providing technical assistance and funding to Onondaga County in planning stormwater and wastewater projects. The EPA is offering a total of $335,000 in assistance to Onondaga County and four other communities in Vermont, New Hampshire, California, and Missouri, the agency said in a news release. It
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SYRACUSE — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is providing technical assistance and funding to Onondaga County in planning stormwater and wastewater projects.
The EPA is offering a total of $335,000 in assistance to Onondaga County and four other communities in Vermont, New Hampshire, California, and Missouri, the agency said in a news release. It did not specify how much money each community would receive.
Specifically, the EPA will assist the Onondaga County Department of Water Environment Protection, which proposed to identify, evaluate, and select stormwater and wastewater projects.
The department, located at 650 Hiawatha Blvd. West in Syracuse, works to “protect and improve the water environment of Onondaga County in a cost-effective
manner,” according to its website.
The EPA in May requested letters of interest from communities that desired technical assistance with such projects. The agency said 28 communities responded.
The federal agency evaluated the requests based on several factors, including human health and water-quality challenges, innovative approaches, community and national impacts, and commitment to integrated planning.
Integrated planning allows communities to sequence projects so they can start those with the highest priority first, the agency contended. EPA technical assistance will help recipients meet Clean Water Act requirements for water management in a “cost-effective and environmentally beneficial way,” it added.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.