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SBA starts website, blog about health reform law
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) rolled out new online initiatives today in an attempt to help business owners learn about the 2010 federal health-care
New York strawberry production fell 11 percent in 2012
New York farmers produced 3.2 million pounds of strawberries in 2012, down 11 percent from 2011, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) New York field
Lockheed makes $500K gift to vets institute
SYRACUSE — The Institute For Veterans and Military Families at Syracuse University (SU) will use a $500,000 gift from Lockheed Martin to help its efforts
StartFast adds more expertise for 2013
SYRACUSE — The StartFast Venture Accelerator has added a second entrepreneur in residence to its team for the 2013 program. The accelerator announced last week
HANYS survey shows worsening physician shortage
Physician recruitment is not keeping pace with the number of doctors retiring or leaving New York, according to an annual survey from the Healthcare Association
SOHO show returns to calendar with April 2013 date
SYRACUSE — Now Central New York small businesses get their show in the spring. The Small Office Home Office (SOHO) small-business show is slated for April this year after holding down a fall spot on the calendar for 13 of its previous 14 iterations. It’s set for April 24 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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SYRACUSE — Now Central New York small businesses get their show in the spring.
The Small Office Home Office (SOHO) small-business show is slated for April this year after holding down a fall spot on the calendar for 13 of its previous 14 iterations. It’s set for April 24 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Nicholas J. Pirro Convention Center at the Oncenter in Syracuse.
In a way, rescheduling the show — which caters to new or existing businesses with 30 or fewer employees — brings it back to its roots. The first SOHO took place in April of 1998. Subsequent versions were held later in the year, including the most recent show in October 2011.
But SOHO didn’t go on in October 2012. Steve Becker, owner and president of Clay–based Premier Promotions and SOHO show producer, opted not to hold it that month.
Becker made that decision after learning that the Central New York economic-development organization CenterState CEO planned to move its own Business Showcase to October — about seven months later than that show’s traditional slot.
“It didn’t make sense for us to do the SOHO show two weeks before the chamber show,” Becker says. “When it was announced that the Business Showcase would go into the fall, I didn’t have enough time to do a show in spring 2012.”
Becker says he worked with Business Showcase partner Galaxy Events to help bring in exhibitors for CenterState’s rescheduled show. Then he turned his attention back to the SOHO show late in 2012, ultimately deciding to bring it back in the spring of 2013.
Although they’re best held at different times in the year, CenterState’s Business Showcase and SOHO fill distinct niches in Central New York, Becker says.
“There’s no competition here,” he says. “The other show is a much broader stroke. SOHO is a different show, because it’s more focused on small-business owners, managers, entrepreneurs. It’s a lot different if you’re dealing with a company with thousands of people than if you have a company with 10 people on your payroll.”
Becker isn’t yet sure how the new date will affect SOHO attendance. Past shows have averaged between 800 and 1,000 people passing through the gates, with another 500 to 700 people staffing display booths. Previous shows have been filled with between 125 and 170 of those booths. The most recent show in 2011 had more than 130 booths.
Attendance will be free for anyone who prints or orders tickets before the show from its website, http://www.sohosyracuse.com. They will cost $5 at the door on the day of the event.
In addition, Becker is currently recruiting exhibitors. A space measuring 10 feet by 10 feet costs $595, or $545 for nonprofit organizations. Exhibitors registering after March 24 will have to pay a $25 late fee. More information is available by visiting the show’s website or by contacting Becker directly at (315) 622-2249 or steve@premierpromo.com.
“The exhibitors we’re looking at would have products, services, resources that are going to be focused on small businesses,” Becker says. “We will have small, medium, and large companies exhibiting, but they want to connect with small businesses.”
Contact Seltzer at rseltzer@cnybj.com
CXtec plans to open sales office in Rochester
Company also expects to boost hiring in Syracuse area SALINA — CXtec is set to open a sales office in Rochester later this year to tap into the talent base in that market. CXtec, which sells new and used data networking and voice equipment and its own line of cabling, expects the Rochester office
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Company also expects to boost hiring in Syracuse area
SALINA — CXtec is set to open a sales office in Rochester later this year to tap into the talent base in that market.
CXtec, which sells new and used data networking and voice equipment and its own line of cabling, expects the Rochester office to house 12 to 15 people by the end of the year. That will include at least one employee of Teracai, a separate company spun off from CXtec in 2009.
Teracai focuses on sales of new and used Cisco products and offers services and support such as installation, network assessments, and project management.
CXtec, based in Salina, serves customer nationwide and finding top salespeople is a priority for the company, says Peter Belyea, president. The firm already has a regional sales manager based in Rochester who will lead the new office, he adds.
The company’s vice president of sales is also from that area, Belyea notes.
“People are really the key to our organization,” he says. “We see the opportunity to grow as being an opportunity to try to attract the best talent we can.”
For Teracai, the move into Rochester will also be a chance to generate more business there, Belyea adds.
Some current CXtec employees who live in the Rochester area will work from that office once it opens, but most of the staff there will be new hires.
Both Teracai and CXtec had strong years in 2012, Belyea says. The companies haven’t yet reported revenue for the year, but CXtec generated $62 million in 2011 and Teracai produced $40 million.
CXtec currently employs about 230 people and Teracai has 45 employees.
The firms are expecting more growth in 2013 as well. The strength made now a good time to open the Rochester office, Belyea says.
The location is scheduled to open March 1.
Belyea says success at CXtec has been driven by strong performance CABLExpress division, which focuses on cabling, and its equal2new business, which focuses on reclaiming old office equipment for resale.
An outgrowth of the equal2new business, LIFECYCLExpress, launched in 2010. That business is aimed at recycling old computers and other electronic equipment that can’t be resold. The addition allowed CXtec to serve as a single stop for customers looking to dispose of their e-waste.
Teracai, Belyea says, has grown to be one of the top Cisco resellers in the country. Both companies posted double-digit revenue growth in 2012, he adds.
And both companies expect hiring in 2013 outside of Rochester. The firms will probably add 20 to 25 people in the Syracuse area this year, Belyea says.
The hiring will come in areas including sales, warehousing, testing, and operations, he says.
CXtec could look to open additional satellite offices in the future as well, Belyea says. Belyea took over as president of CXtec and Teracai in 2011.
Contact Tampone at ktampone@cnybj.com
With Wellness: You Don’t Have to be a Big Business to Achieve Big Results
Wellness is a state of mind and body. It’s an individual thing. So, when it comes to employee participation, let’s not get lured into the misconception that wellness only works in large numbers, and therefore is more fitting for a sprawling Fortune 500 company than it is for a small business with 25 to 100
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Wellness is a state of mind and body. It’s an individual thing. So, when it comes to employee participation, let’s not get lured into the misconception that wellness only works in large numbers, and therefore is more fitting for a sprawling Fortune 500 company than it is for a small business with 25 to 100 employees.
Wellness today is for all employers and all of their employees. Even back in the 1980s when I was consulting with small businesses, some of them had a wellness program in place, and didn’t even realize it. When break time came, the employees of one particular small business would take a walk around the block. Walking together during business hours was built into this company’s culture. The only difference between then and now is today we would count the steps with a pedometer clipped to our belt and walk with iPod buds stuck in our ears as opposed to a Sony Walkman. But the results remain the same.
But when it comes to getting companies to implement a wellness program into their corporate culture, it all comes down to getting them to practice what you preach. And what I found to be effective is utilizing the old KISS system with a slight modification — Keep It Simple Sells.
This is not to suggest that a good insurance agent doesn’t know that having a solid health and wellness plan in place will benefit his/her client. But sometimes the litany of objections from the employers — “There’s nothing I can do about health-care costs going up,” “It’s too expensive,” “We don’t have the facilities for exercise,” “My employees won’t want to do it” — can be overwhelming.
John Basten of The Mid-State Group in Lynchburg, Va. says employers are frustrated with the ever-increasing cost of health premiums, and thus turn to brokers for solutions, which often include delivering “wellness” by implementing disincentives and benefit-design changes in an effort to change behavior. It’s a concept that Basten says doesn’t work.
“It’s only through education that you can guide employers to better understand the risks and obstacles they are facing,” he explains. “Essentially, step one is to help them identify the specific health factors within their company, because when real data drives the decision, one can plan for the expected results.”
York International, a large regional broker in Harrison, N.Y. derives about 25 percent of its $10 million in revenue from benefits serving the middle-market employer of 50-2,500 employees. For the past five years, York has been focusing on drawing employee benefits and wellness resources and capabilities from much larger businesses to bring to smaller firms.
“The Fortune 1000 or 5000 have been practicing engaging employees in health beyond the financing of sickness for many years and we think that there is a tremendous opportunity to continue to do that with these middle-market companies,” explains Mike Bodack of York International. “When our point of entry is who we call the ‘user buyer’ of insurance for their company, we try to engage the ‘economic buyer’ as well. It is not often the same person, but it does happen on occasion.”
“When we deal with that economic buyer, we find that it is easy to focus the conversation,” he adds. “Certainly, some folks will have their head in the sand. But the ones who are intelligent, rational human beings understand very quickly. Because in the end, it’s just a math problem.”
When employers perceive wellness as an added cost instead of an added benefit, bad things happen. Or nothing happens at all. Basten of the Mid-State Group has fought that battle for years.
“Employers are frustrated with the ever-increasing cost of health care and are looking for viable strategies to reverse the trend,” he says. “Many are looking for quick fixes which end in employers spending excessive funds in areas that don’t have long-lasting effects. Our specific focus is to educate the employer on how wellness should be defined as an employee benefit. We educate our clients that identifying the specific risk factors affecting their employee group is an essential and foundational step in creating an effective wellness program, starting with getting a minimum of 90 percent of their employees to complete a health-risk assessment without providing incentives.”
Getting the employees behind a wellness program can often be the fuel that jump-starts an employer’s decision-making process, as now he/she sees what was perceived as a potential expense reaping potential dividends in increased employee morale and decreased employee sick days.
As York International’s Bodack sees it, it’s all about the employee kick-off. “We’ve received tremendous response from our kickoff meetings,” he says. “The delivery of the health-risk assessment to an employee is a measure of control all by itself. When an employee takes the 10 minutes to read it, it may be more information than they get about their health from their own doctor. And, an annual health-risk assessment offers the employee a grand picture of his or her health, year after year.”
He adds, “When employees have something personalized, such as their HRA, and see directives they can look at year after year, it provides a tremendous level of control and a heightened awareness. We routinely reach 85 percent or 90 percent involvement from employees who review their Health Risk Assessments.”
One point that Bodack and Basten agree on as wellness experts is that employers should not rely on incentives for employee involvement in the program. And, conversely, neither should they be penalized for not participating.
“Employees are already struggling with family pressures and an uncertainty about the future,” says Basten. “The last thing employees need is a work environment where they are told what not to do and being penalized for doing so. This doesn’t create a thriving corporate culture. Wellness should be offered solely as a benefit and not as a ‘reward,’ and delivered to the employees as such. Only then will the employer get the proper participation they need for the program to be successful.”
Mark Nantz of Knapp Miller Brown Insurance Services in Salem, Ind. says a key component of a successful wellness program, which he has used many times, is the shared clinic model, a benefit which also includes wellness coaches. “The shared clinic model allows smaller employers to use the clinic model, as long as there is a larger employer to act as the anchor,” says Nantz. “Think of a shopping center with the large big box store as the anchor tenant. A large employer can have its own clinic and it can act as an anchor for surrounding companies to share its on-site clinic. On-site clinics can also pull out employees with chronic illnesses and focus on wellness initiatives for those folks.”
It has become increasingly clear that workers’ compensation, employee benefits, and wellness are the three faces of employee health, and the cost of that health means insurance producers must be equipped to bring a unified approach to employers. With the new health-care reform legislation, employers will have an enormous need for expert advice on benefits and wellness. The insurance agents of the future are quickly arming themselves with new ways to attack the true root causes that are driving up health-care costs. And if employers can make their employees healthier without cutting benefits or shifting more premium costs to their employees, where is the downside?
Preston Diamond is managing director and co-founder of the Institute of WorkComp Professionals (IWCP), based in Asheville, N.C. In 2010, IWCP created a sister organization, the Institute of Benefits & Wellness Advisors, that trains, tests, and certifies benefit and property & casualty insurance agents in wellness and employee benefits. Contact him at preston@workcompprofessionals.com
Mohawk Valley fiber-optics firm goes solar
KIRKLAND — Legacy Fiberoptics, Inc., a small business that manufactures and repairs fiber-optic test equipment, is banking on solar power to reduce its energy costs. Legacy Fiberoptics, headquartered in a 7,500-square-foot building at 7930 Limberblost Road in the town of Kirkland, recently had a solar-panel system installed that it expects to provide all its electricity.
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KIRKLAND — Legacy Fiberoptics, Inc., a small business that manufactures and repairs fiber-optic test equipment, is banking on solar power to reduce its energy costs.
Legacy Fiberoptics, headquartered in a 7,500-square-foot building at 7930 Limberblost Road in the town of Kirkland, recently had a solar-panel system installed that it expects to provide all its electricity.
Paradise Energy Solutions — a Pennsylvania–based firm with an office in Himrod, on the west shore of Seneca Lake — installed its 31 kW Ground Mount Solar system in a field outside Legacy’s facility.
Ken Stewart sole owner and president of Legacy Fiberoptics, which employs nine, says he decided to go solar after considering other alternative-energy options.
“I looked at wind energy. To be honest with you, there are very few locations in which to put in wind. We don’t have quite enough wind here. The tower would have to be real high,” says Stewart. “And for hydro power we would have to be next to a non-navigable river.”
The attractive combination of state grants and federal and state tax incentives for solar, including accelerated depreciation, led Stewart to seek out a photovoltaic-power system.
The system cost Legacy more than $100,000, but the business received a grant from NYSERDA for about $45,000. Stewart declined to disclose how he financed the rest of the costs.
With the energy-bill savings and tax incentives, the solar system should pay for itself in less than 6 ½ years, Paradise Energy estimates.
Paradise Energy has guaranteed Legacy Fiberoptics that the solar-panel array will generate a minimum of 35,000 kWh of power.
And if it doesn’t, “they will provide me with a check,” Stewart says. “They’re guaranteeing me a minimum power outage.”
As of press time, Stewart had still not received his first utility bill since going solar, but he says he expects the part of the bill for electricity usage to be zero, while still having to pay the usual energy service fees and taxes.
“My expectation is to never pay for another watt of power,” he says.
About Legacy Fiberoptics
Stewart founded his business in 2008, when he acquired the rights to service the discontinued NetTest, Laser Precision, and Corning optical product lines that had previously been manufactured at a plant in Utica that closed in 2006.
Legacy Fiberoptics consists of a group of former employees of Laser Precision, GN NetTest, and Anritsu (the last company to own the plant before it closed) who have more than 85 years of combined experience in the fiber-optics industry.
Legacy generated double-digit revenue growth in 2012, a year in which it boosted its employee count from seven to nine, Stewart says. He’s hoping for similar revenue growth this year and is looking to add an additional three or more employees.
The company has thousands of customers, ranging from one-person fiber-optic cable installation firms up to and including AT&T, Centurylink Qwest, Comcast, Cablevision, colleges and universities, and federal, state, and local government agencies, according to Stewart. The firm has customers all around the world, including Australia, Europe, Asia, and South America, he adds.
Contact Rombel at arombel@cnybj.com
Connective Corridor work to stretch into downtown Syracuse
SYRACUSE — The Connective Corridor project has punched its ticket for downtown Syracuse. Syracuse University (SU) and the city of Syracuse provided an update on their joint project in a public information session Jan. 23 at SU’s Warehouse at 350 W. Fayette St. That building is the endpoint of planned Connective Corridor infrastructure work —streetscape
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SYRACUSE — The Connective Corridor project has punched its ticket for downtown Syracuse.
Syracuse University (SU) and the city of Syracuse provided an update on their joint project in a public information session Jan. 23 at SU’s Warehouse at 350 W. Fayette St. That building is the endpoint of planned Connective Corridor infrastructure work —streetscape and public-transportation improvements designed to connect Syracuse University with the city’s downtown.
Economic development is a major goal of the work, according to Owen Kerney, deputy director of planning and sustainability for the city of Syracuse.
“By doing this we’re also bringing more people down to this corridor, using this corridor, and I would hope that they’re utilizing the businesses along the corridor,” he says. “I hope they’re using the services, the restaurants, the institutions, and other things that you find along the corridor.”
The Jan. 23 information session laid out a timeline for the corridor’s second and third phases. Work on its first phase, which included streetscape development stretching from University Avenue in front of SU’s Hall of Languages to Forman Park on East Genesee Street, started in 2011 and wrapped up in the fall of 2012. It cost $10 million and was funded by federal grants, the city of Syracuse, Onondaga County, and SU, according to Kerney.
Now the city and university are finalizing second- and third-phase plans to extend the streetscape work west on East Genesee Street. It will then jump to Fayette Street at Firefighter’s Memorial Park before continuing to SU’s Warehouse.
Designs are in the process of being finalized. The project’s second and third phases are scheduled to be ready for bids by June, and work is slated to begin later in the summer. Construction will continue through October before stopping for the winter and resuming in March or April 2014. It will again shut down for winter in October 2014 before resuming the next spring for a final estimated completion date of summer 2015.
Total project cost for the second and third phases is $14.8 million. A U.S. Department of Transportation TIGER grant makes up $10 million, with another $1 million coming from Onondaga County and $3.8 million from SU.
Salina–based Barton & Loguidice is the project’s engineering firm. No construction contractors are in place for its second and third phases, but Barrett Industries, which has a regional office in Clay, and Ballard Construction, Inc. of Solvay worked on its first phase, according to Kerney.
Planned corridor improvements include new sidewalks, snow storage areas, bicycle lanes, and vehicle travel lanes. And they include signage, landscaping, lighting, and bus pull-ups.
Linda Dickerson Hartsock, director of community engagement and economic development at SU, also spoke about planned improvements on what she called Syracuse’s “Civic Strip.” That strip is bordered by Water Street, State Street, Montgomery Street, and Adams Street. It includes Jefferson Street, a street that “UPSTATE: A Center for Design, Research, and Real Estate,” part of SU’s School of Architecture, wants to light.
“Jefferson Street is dark at night,” Hartsock said during the informational meeting. “So UPSTATE: is working with lighting designers and lighting technologists and National Grid and the city to look at a relatively unique and innovative overhead lighting treatment that would help draw people down Jefferson Street.”
A new round of façade-improvement grants will soon be available for buildings along the Connective Corridor, according to Hartsock. Empire State Development awarded $250,000 for façade improvements on the corridor as part of the state’s recent Regional Economic Development Council awards. Building owners will be able to start applying for chunks of that funding in February.
The façade improvements come after $625,000 in grants funded work at 40 buildings during the Connective Corridor’s first phase, Hartsock added.
Contact Seltzer at rseltzer@cnybj.com
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