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ELMIRA — Chemung Financial Corp. will pay a cash dividend of 25 cents per share on Oct. 1 to shareholders of record as of Sept.
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Catalina Aerospace seeks to fill charter-jet service void in Mohawk Valley
ROME — Starting in mid-September, area businesses and residents will have a local option for chartering a flight. Catalina Aerospace Corp., headquartered in Miami, Fla., is bringing one of its Learjet 31A planes to Griffiss International Airport to offer charter-jet services from Rome. Benjamin Nemser, owner, president, and director of operations at Catalina Aerospace, is
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ROME — Starting in mid-September, area businesses and residents will have a local option for chartering a flight.
Catalina Aerospace Corp., headquartered in Miami, Fla., is bringing one of its Learjet 31A planes to Griffiss International Airport to offer charter-jet services from Rome.
Benjamin Nemser, owner, president, and director of operations at Catalina Aerospace, is familiar with the area as his girlfriend is from the Mohawk Valley. After spending some time here, he says it was easy to see the need for Catalina’s services as the closest charter services are based in the Syracuse and Albany markets. Aviation Services Unlimited, located at Griffiss, provides helicopter services.
“We decided the Rome area needed air-charter service,” Nemser says.
Catalina Aerospace is bringing one of its eight-passenger Learjets to Rome for a five-month trial period and has hired two pilots to operate the plane. He plans to begin offering charter services Sept. 15, after his pilots complete the mandatory training they must take, he says.
“We’ll have a crew available seven days a week,” Nemser says, and Catalina is cleared to fly anywhere in the Western Hemisphere from Alaska to the tip of South America.
Nemser’s target audience is local businesses with executives who do a lot of business traveling. One example of an ideal client is ConMed Corp., which has locations in Mexico as well as Florida and California, he confirms.
Charter flights appeal to business people because they cut down on travel time, Nemser says. First, there is the time involved traveling to Syracuse or Albany, the area’s two closest major airports. Next, there is the time involved in the actual flight, which often includes a layover. Recently, Nemser took a non-direct flight — the only flight he could find — to get from Florida to Rome and it took him 11 hours. “This is a place that’s hard to get to,” he says of the Rome and Utica region.
Nemser could have made that same trip in a charter jet in about three hours, and that kind of time savings appeals to business executives, he notes.
“Their time is money,” he says. That’s why they are often willing to pay a bit more — which could range from a few hundred dollars to upwards of $1,000 — for the charter flights to save the time. Nemser did not provide a specific cost for charter flights, which he says vary depending on the destination and other factors.
The Learjet 31A has a cruising speed of 520 miles per hour and a nonstop range of more than 1,000 miles, putting cities like Boston, Washington D.C., and Toronto within 45 minutes of flying time.
Right now, Nemser says he has about half the flights booked that he needs to consider the trial period successful enough to make it permanent. He needs to add one to two more flights per week to hit his goal, he says.
To spread the word, Nemser is planning a mailing that will go out soon to key business executives in the area. He is also advertising with The Business Journals and plans to spend some time getting out in the community and networking. Once the planes are in the air, he expects to benefit from word of mouth.
Nemser declined to provide specific revenue figures, saying only that Catalina’s annual revenue is in the “several million” dollar range. He adds that he expects the Rome operation to contribute to growth in the 15 percent to 20 percent range for the company this year.
Catalina Aerospace is leasing hangar space at Griffiss, which is operated by Oneida County, and will provide service 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Based in Miami, Catalina (www.flycatalina.com) operates four planes with a staff of seven pilots. About half of the Federal Aviation Administration-licensed company’s flights are international. Nemser founded the company in 1999 and also employs a dispatcher, charter-sales manager, accounting manager, company mechanic, and director of maintenance.
Contact DeLore at tdelore@tmvbj.com
ConMed to acquire Viking to expand surgical-video offerings
UTICA — ConMed Corp. (NASDAQ: CNMD) announced Aug. 14 it will acquire Westborough, Mass.–based Viking Systems, Inc. (OTCBB: VKNG) for about $22.5 million in a
Utica Aud spruces up seats, lighting in nearly $800,000 renovation project
UTICA — Over the past several years, the Utica Memorial Auditorium (the Aud) has undergone a great deal of work behind the scenes including a new heating and air-conditioning system. Now, the Aud is getting a little more visible facelift with an almost $800,000 project to replace seats and swap out old lights for more
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UTICA — Over the past several years, the Utica Memorial Auditorium (the Aud) has undergone a great deal of work behind the scenes including a new heating and air-conditioning system.
Now, the Aud is getting a little more visible facelift with an almost $800,000 project to replace seats and swap out old lights for more energy-efficient ones.
The Aud is replacing the lower tier of seating, which is about 50 years old, General Manager Willard Berkheiser says. He can’t find parts for the broken ones anymore, and they are in poor shape, he adds. It takes a crew of several people up to eight hours to set up those seats when needed and just as long to put them away when an event requires extra floor space.
All of those old seats are being replaced with newer, lighter ones that take just one person 45 minutes to set up or break down, Berkheiser says. “The man-hours saved is just amazing,” and frees up time in the Aud’s schedule for more events now that the set-up time is so much shorter, he notes.
The Aud, which is owned and operated by the Upper Mohawk Valley Memorial Auditorium Authority, is spending $615,000 on the new seating, with all the money coming from the Aud’s cash on hand.
In addition, the Aud is spending another $180,000 to replace the old mercury vapor lights in the main arena with new T11 fluorescent, energy-efficient lights, Berkheiser says. The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) will provide some incentives, which often include rebates for part of the installation costs, once the lighting project is complete, he says.
Along with using about half the energy of the old lights, the new ones offer some features that just weren’t practical with the previous lights, he says. With the new lights, which run from a control panel, Berkheiser has the option of using one-third, two-thirds, or all the lights over the arena and similar options over the seating area. That may not sound like a big deal, but those options can help the Aud set the stage for particular events, he says. “For certain events, we want to mood-light it,” he says.
On top of those perks, the new lights are instant-on/instant-off lights — a big improvement over the 15 minutes it used to take the prior mercury-vapor lights to reach full intensity, Berkheiser says.
Work on the seats and the lights began in June, he says, and should provide those who attend the upcoming fall events with an enhanced experience, he says.
Over the past five years, the Aud has held pretty steady with about 130,000 people attending the variety of events it hosts throughout the year. Those events range from concerts like the upcoming All-American Rejects concert on Sept. 16 to area college graduations, Mohawk Valley Youth Hockey events, an annual cheerleading competition, a circus, the Harlem Globetrotters, and college sporting events.
“We do have a niche here,” Berkheiser says. And that array of events is what keeps the Aud not only going strong, but also profitable. Berkheiser declined to share revenue or profit figures, but indicated the Aud has been profitable each of the 15 years he has been at the helm.
Now, the seating and lighting upgrades should add to the Aud’s appeal to hopefully attract more events and more attendees, he says.
“I think once we start our season, people are going to notice it,” he says. He did not share projections on how much the new seats and lights might affect attendance and event numbers.
Located at 400 Oriskany St. W., the Utica Memorial Auditorium (www.uticaaud.org) has an audience capacity of 5,500. Four full-time officers and a crew that varies from about eight part-time employees in the summertime off-season to a full-time staff between 15 and 20 people during the winter season staff the facility. For events, the staff number can climb as high as 200 people, depending on the event.
Contact DeLore at tdelore@tmvbj.com
Griffiss utility launches plant retrofit project
ROME — A $20 million project to retrofit Griffiss Utility Services Corporation’s (GUSC) steam plant to burn wood chips in addition to its current natural gas and oil options should result in big savings for the utility provider and the Griffiss Business and Technology Park tenants it services, the utility says. GUSC Energy, Inc., a
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ROME — A $20 million project to retrofit Griffiss Utility Services Corporation’s (GUSC) steam plant to burn wood chips in addition to its current natural gas and oil options should result in big savings for the utility provider and the Griffiss Business and Technology Park tenants it services, the utility says.
GUSC Energy, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of GUSC, began construction in early August and hopes to have the retrofitted plant online in the fall of 2013. Once complete, the plant will have the flexibility to use the most economical option between wood, natural gas, or oil as a fuel source, says Daniel Maneen, president and CEO of GUSC.
While the project began in earnest early this year with planning and site preparation, Maneen says it has truly been in the
works for the 12 years he has headed up GUSC. Shortly after he joined GUSC in January 2001, natural gas went from its historically low prices of about $2 or $3 a dekatherm to about $10 a dekatherm at a time when GUSC did not have any natural-gas contract with which to lock in prices, he says.
“That’s when it occurred to me that we need to have a little more control over our destiny as far as fuel goes,” Maneen says. GUSC provides energy services and steam heat to tenants in the business park through 26 miles of steam pipe and more than 100 miles of electrical distribution cable.
Maneen began the process of looking for alternative fuel sources, preferably ones that were locally sourced, and settled on wood as the ideal option. Not only is wood a sulfur-free, renewable fuel, but it’s also plentiful in the region, he says. To ensure the GUSC plant’s needs wouldn’t interfere with local business needs for wood, the project was designed around using waste wood products such as tree tops that loggers don’t use for lumber and other wood scraps. Those scraps are chipped and then ready to burn at the plant, Maneen says.
The change should give GUSC the ability to better plan its fuel costs as it can easily switch between the three fuel options depending on which one is least expensive, Maneen says. Those savings will pass directly to park tenants, who will see savings on their steam-heating costs of as much as 10 percent to 20 percent, he says. Park tenants already save about 20 percent to 30 percent over utility costs outside the park, Maneen notes.
GUSC is investing about $8 million of its own money in the project and financing the remaining $12 million through Oneida Savings Bank. The Mohawk Valley Regional Economic Development Council awarded the project a $1.5 million grant, which Maneen says GUSC will use to shorten the term of its loan.
Bette & Cring Construction Group of Albany is the lead contractor on the project. Incorporated in 2002, Griffiss Utility Services Corporation (www.gusc.net) is a nonprofit utility regulated by the New York State Public Service Commission. GUSC employs 16 people and uses the existing infrastructure at Griffiss Business and Technology Park to provide the lowest cost utilities to tenants. Current park tenants include the Air Force Research Laboratory, Defense Finance Accounting Services, Griffiss International Airport, Cathedral Corporation, Rome Free Academy, Oneida Financial Corporation, and Assured Information Services.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.