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Seneca Foods’ net sales slip 7 percent in latest quarter
FAIRPORT — Seneca Foods Corp. (NASDAQ: SENEA, SENEB) recently reported that its net sales for the quarter ending March 31 declined 7 percent to $308 million from $331.1 million in the same quarter a year prior. The company — a Finger Lakes–based provider of packaged fruits and vegetables, with facilities across the U.S., including Geneva […]
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FAIRPORT — Seneca Foods Corp. (NASDAQ: SENEA, SENEB) recently reported that its net sales for the quarter ending March 31 declined 7 percent to $308 million from $331.1 million in the same quarter a year prior.
The company — a Finger Lakes–based provider of packaged fruits and vegetables, with facilities across the U.S., including Geneva and Penn Yan — said the decline was primarily due to lower sales volumes, partially offset by higher selling prices.
Seneca Foods’ gross margin as a percentage of net sales was 6.7 percent for the three months ended March 31, an improvement from a gross margin of -4.3 percent in the comparable three-month period a year earlier.
Seneca Foods says it is one of North America’s leading providers of packaged fruits and vegetables. Its products are primarily sourced from more than 1,200 American farms and are distributed to about 55 countries. The firm’s corporate office is in Fairport, near Rochester. Seneca says it holds a large share of the market for retail private label, food service, restaurant chains, international, contracting packaging, industrial, chips, and cherry products. Products are also sold under the brands of Libby’s, Green Giant, Aunt Nellie’s, Green Valley, CherryMan, READ, and Seneca.

Mower CEO Crockett named Chair of 2024 Walk to End Alzheimer’s
SYRACUSE — The Central New York Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association recently named Stephanie Crockett as chair of the 2024 Syracuse Walk to End Alzheimer’s. Crockett is president and CEO of Mower, a full-service marketing, advertising, and public relations agency headquartered in Syracuse. The Syracuse Walk to End Alzheimer’s will be held on Sunday, Sept.
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SYRACUSE — The Central New York Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association recently named Stephanie Crockett as chair of the 2024 Syracuse Walk to End Alzheimer’s.
Crockett is president and CEO of Mower, a full-service marketing, advertising, and public relations agency headquartered in Syracuse.
The Syracuse Walk to End Alzheimer’s will be held on Sunday, Sept. 8, at Onondaga Community College in the town of Onondaga. Registration will begin at 9 a.m. with opening ceremonies and walk start at 10 a.m.
“My family wants to honor my Dad’s life and legacy through education, advocacy and support,” Crockett said in a news release issued by the association. “Together we can work toward finding a cure and ending Alzheimer’s and all other dementia, as well as providing services for caregivers and loved ones.”
In addition to her role at Mower, Crockett is active in a number of professional, business, and community organizations in the Syracuse area. She is currently a member of both the CenterState CEO and Loretto corporate boards of directors, as well as the global Women Presidents Organization. She previously served as president of the board of directors for United Way of Central New York, Meals on Wheels of Syracuse and Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare and president of the board of trustees for Landmark Theatre.
The Walk to End Alzheimer’s is the world’s largest event to raise awareness and funds for Alzheimer’s care, support, and research programs. The Alzheimer’s Association provides 24/7 care and support to those living with Alzheimer’s and their caregivers, and is accelerating critical research to combat this devastating disease.
To register and receive the latest updates on this year’s Syracuse Walk to End Alzheimer’s, visit: alz.org/CNYWalk.

Binghamton University’s Center for Civic Engagement announces grants for seven community projects
BINGHAMTON — The Stephen David Ross University and Community Projects fund has awarded $28,300 in grants to support initiatives of local nonprofit organizations and university partners, Binghamton University announced. The fund is administered through the Center for Civic Engagement at Binghamton University. Grants were awarded to the following seven projects, according to a university news
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BINGHAMTON — The Stephen David Ross University and Community Projects fund has awarded $28,300 in grants to support initiatives of local nonprofit organizations and university partners, Binghamton University announced.
The fund is administered through the Center for Civic Engagement at Binghamton University.
Grants were awarded to the following seven projects, according to a university news release:
• Binghamton Food Rescue will receive $5,821 for a partnership between NoMa and Sustainable Communities to provide rescued food from farmers’ markets and stores at no cost to individuals and organizations in need.
• Black Art @ BAUM will be allocated $4,115 for a partnership between the Binghamton University Art Museum and the Binghamton Philharmonic for a project that aims to expose 3,000 school children and their chaperones and 900 philharmonic patrons to works of art Black creators.
• Empowering Caregiver and Child Connections Through the Power of Play and Storytime will receive $3,000 for a partnership between the Division of Speech and Language Pathology and the Mothers & Babies Perinatal Network to provide training to parents and caregivers in the Mothers & Babies Parents as Leaders program.
• Evidence-Based Emergent Literacy Instruction: Teacher and Speech-Language Pathology will get $4,809 for a partnership between the Division of Speech and Language Pathology and Mom’s House of Endicott, to implement emergent literacy intervention.
• Greenhouse Project for CCNY will receive $2,571 for a partnership between Compassionate Care of Central NY and the student group NuRhoPsi to help Compassionate Care expand its services for people with traumatic brain injuries through a partnership with Binghamton University and Broome County.
• Happy Health Lives will be allocated $3,000 for a partnership between the Department of Social Work and the Rural Health Network of SCNY, Inc., to promote holistic wellbeing among rural older adults in northern Broome County.
• Language Chef will receive $4,984 for a partnership between the Division of Speech Language Pathology and Gigi’s Playhouse of the Southern Tier for a project to provide motivational, real-life-applicable learning experience to adults with intellectual disabilities.
Ross Fund grants are awarded based on promotion of collaboration and cooperation between the university and community groups; innovative use of talents and resources; demonstrated commitment to the use of existing funds or obtaining matching funds; and significant, enduring, and positive difference in the quality of life of the community, Binghamton University stated.

Lockheed Martin awarded nearly $30M modication to Navy contract
SALINA — The Lockheed Martin Corp. (NASDAQ: LMT) plant in suburban Syracuse has won a more than $29.8 million modification to a previously awarded contract to exercise an option for U.S. Navy equipment. Work will be performed in the town of Salina (67 percent) and Millersville, Maryland (33 percent), and is expected to be completed
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SALINA — The Lockheed Martin Corp. (NASDAQ: LMT) plant in suburban Syracuse has won a more than $29.8 million modification to a previously awarded contract to exercise an option for U.S. Navy equipment.
Work will be performed in the town of Salina (67 percent) and Millersville, Maryland (33 percent), and is expected to be completed by July 2026, according to a June 24 contract announcement from the U.S. Department of Defense.
Fiscal 2024 other procurement (Navy) funds totaling more than $7.6 million (26 percent); fiscal 2024 other procurement (Navy) – spares funds of $6.95 million (23 percent); fiscal 2023 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funds totaling nearly $11.5 million (38 percent); and fiscal 2022 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funds of more than $3.8 million (13 percent), will be obligated at time of award and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year, per the contract announcement. The Naval Sea Systems Command in Washington, D.C. is the contracting authority.

Federal funding will target redevelopment of public-housing units near I-81
SYRACUSE — Millions in federal-government funding will help pay for the redevelopment of more than 600 aging public-housing units into new, affordable, mixed-income housing units in the East Adams neighborhood near Interstate 81 (I-81) in the city’s 15th Ward. The Syracuse Housing Authority (SHA) and the City of Syracuse will use a $50 million federal
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SYRACUSE — Millions in federal-government funding will help pay for the redevelopment of more than 600 aging public-housing units into new, affordable, mixed-income housing units in the East Adams neighborhood near Interstate 81 (I-81) in the city’s 15th Ward.
The Syracuse Housing Authority (SHA) and the City of Syracuse will use a $50 million federal grant to improve the units.
This money comes through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Choice Neighborhoods Initiative program, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.) said in a joint announcement on July 12.
The lawmakers called the grant “one of the largest single federal housing investments in Syracuse’s history” resulting in what is referred to as the East Adams transformation plan.
The project also involves related community improvements, including enhancing green space, workforce training, the Children Rising Center, education opportunity, and business development.
“Today the federal government is making one of the single largest housing investments in Syracuse’s history. I am proud to deliver a whopping $50 million to create and preserve hundreds of units of much-needed affordable housing in Syracuse,” Schumer said in the announcement. “This isn’t just an investment in new affordable housing, it is a critical investment in our families via education, workforce training, and business development. An investment in building a vibrant Syracuse for when the walls of I-81 come down.”
Schumer’s office describes Syracuse’s East Adams neighborhood as bounded by I-81 to the east, East Adams Street to the north, Midland Avenue to the west, and Colvin Street to the south.
This federal funding will help increase the availability of quality housing by helping pay for the construction of a large, multi-generational, mixed-income community with “affordable, modern, accessible, high-quality, and energy-efficient housing,” per Schumer’s office.
More specifically, SHA will replace an estimated 672 units of distressed public housing at McKinney Manor and Pioneer Homes.
Additionally, SHA and partners will use the grant funding on services to ensure that all current residents of McKinney Manor and Pioneer Homes public-housing units will have first priority to return to the newly constructed units once complete.
In addition, the grant money will “enhance access to quality education” by helping pay for the Syracuse City School District’s efforts to improve student performance, building a pipeline of students for the new STEAM High School, and “fast-tracking” development of the Children’s Rising Center, an early learning and parental empowerment center that will address the lack of quality and affordable childcare in and around the East Adams neighborhood.
The grant funding will also help “accelerate economic opportunity” by expanding workforce training and small-business development in the East Adams neighborhood. More specifically, the plan aims to enhance workforce-development initiatives already underway at SUNY Educational Opportunity Centers with the creation of a new, SHA-managed East Adams Skill & Enrichment Academy, which will increase Section 3 job opportunities on major local projects like I-81.
Additionally, the plan seeks to create a new Black Indigenous People Of Color (BIPOC) real-estate development and entrepreneurship incubator in collaboration with CenterState CEO and other key workforce partners.
The grant funding also seeks to “expand neighborhood connectivity and visibility” by investing in new infrastructure along key travel corridors to make new connections between the East Adams neighborhood and opportunities across the city. The corridors include South Salina Street, East Adams Street, Montgomery Street, South Townsend Street, and I-81.
For example, the effort will include bolstering the Children Rising Center and plans for a new Linear Park connecting Wilson and Roesler parks, which will establish a neighborhood greenway and linkages to new amenities for SHA residents and visitors of the new East Adams neighborhood.
The initiative will also include placemaking efforts to celebrate the legacy of Syracuse’s 15th Ward neighborhood, including a new museum with exhibits honoring Pioneer Homes’ role in public housing.
Schumer and Gillibrand are also both currently pushing for further funding for the Children Rising Center and YMCA in the neighborhood, per the announcement.

N.Y. manufacturing index dips further into negative territory in July
The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index slipped less than a point to -6.6 in July. The general business-conditions index is the monthly gauge on New York’s manufacturing sector. Based on firms responding to the survey, the July reading indicates business activity “declined modestly” in New York State, the Federal Reserve Bank of New
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The Empire State Manufacturing Survey general business-conditions index slipped less than a point to -6.6 in July.
The general business-conditions index is the monthly gauge on New York’s manufacturing sector.
Based on firms responding to the survey, the July reading indicates business activity “declined modestly” in New York State, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said in its July 15 report.
A negative reading on the index indicates a decline in the sector, while a positive index number points to expansion or growth in manufacturing activity.
The survey found “new orders remained steady, while shipments inched just slightly higher,” the New York Fed said. It also found firms were “fairly optimistic” that conditions would improve in the months ahead.
The new-orders index was little changed at -0.6, suggesting that orders remained flat, and the shipments index ticked up to 3.9, pointing to a slight increase in shipments, the New York Fed said.
Unfilled orders declined. The inventories index fell to -6.1, indicating that inventories moved lower.
The delivery-times index remained below zero at -9.2, suggesting that delivery times shortened, while the supply availability index was zero, indicating that supply availability was “unchanged.”
The index for number of employees was measured at -7.9, pointing to another month of employment contraction, while the average-workweek index came in around zero, suggesting that hours worked “held steady.”
The prices-paid index edged up slightly to 26.5, indicating that input prices continued to rise modestly, while the prices-received index came in at 6.1, indicating that selling-price increases remained “quite minor,” the survey found.
Firms remained “fairly optimistic” about the outlook, the New York Fed said. After climbing sharply the prior month, the index for future business conditions was just slightly lower at 25.8, with 41 percent of respondents expecting conditions to improve over the next six months.
However, the outlook for employment growth “remained weak,” and capital-spending plans “remained sluggish.”
The New York Fed distributes the Empire State Manufacturing Survey on the first day of each month to the same pool of about 200 manufacturing executives in New York. On average, about 100 executives return responses.

New Syracuse men’s basketball general manager begins work
SYRACUSE — Syracuse University’s new men’s basketball general manager has started his duties in the newly created role. Alex Kline, who graduated from Syracuse University in 2016, joined the Syracuse basketball staff after four years as a scout with the New York Knicks NBA team, per the university’s June 28 announcement. He started the new
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SYRACUSE — Syracuse University’s new men’s basketball general manager has started his duties in the newly created role.
Alex Kline, who graduated from Syracuse University in 2016, joined the Syracuse basketball staff after four years as a scout with the New York Knicks NBA team, per the university’s June 28 announcement. He started the new job on July 1, Peter Moore, director of athletic communication at Syracuse University, tells CNYBJ in a June 28 email.
The general manager will support men’s basketball head coach Adrian Autry in managing various aspects of the Syracuse program. Kline’s primary responsibilities will include scouting and recruiting, former student-athlete engagement, Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) opportunities, transfer-portal management, and institutional fundraising in collaboration with University Advancement.
“As we look to compete at the highest levels, bringing in Alex as our General Manager position is critical,” Autry said in the Syracuse University announcement. “This move aligns with our goal of being at the forefront of player evaluation, development and retention, recruiting, and Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) in college basketball. It will help Syracuse compete at the national level.”
With the Knicks, Kline was a talent evaluator who helped the organization with the NBA Draft, the trade deadline and free agency, as well as special projects for the team president, VP, and assistant general manager, Syracuse University said.
Kline had earlier served as basketball-operations assistant with the New Orleans Pelicans of the NBA in 2016. The Knicks hired him as a scout in 2020.
His interest in recruiting started at a young age. Kline launched The Recruit Scoop in 2010, an online site devoted to publicizing high-school basketball players. “Rapidly growing interest” in the site led to affiliation with Yahoo! Sports and Rivals in 2012, while Kline was still in high school, Syracuse University said.
State pension fund posts 11.5 percent return in fiscal year
ALBANY — The New York State Common Retirement Fund produced a return of 11.55 percent for the state fiscal year ending March 31, 2024. That’s

LaFave appointed State Fair director as event approaches
GEDDES — Julie LaFave has spent much of 2024 serving as the interim director of the New York State Fair. She assumed the top leadership role after the state announced the departure of previous director Sean Hennessey back in February. On July 10, Gov. Kathy Hochul removed the interim tag. LaFave served as the State
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GEDDES — Julie LaFave has spent much of 2024 serving as the interim director of the New York State Fair.
She assumed the top leadership role after the state announced the departure of previous director Sean Hennessey back in February. On July 10, Gov. Kathy Hochul removed the interim tag.
LaFave served as the State Fair’s operations director in 2023, managing the day-to-day operations of the Fairgrounds, including the oversight of contracts, budgets, more than 50 buildings spread across 375 acres, and over 100 full and part-time staff.
Prior to joining the State Fair in 2023, LaFave was commissioner of the department of parks, recreation, and youth programs for the City of Syracuse
LaFave was selected for the position after a nationwide search that “attracted a diverse pool of highly qualified candidates,” Hochul’s office said.
“Julie’s experience as Operations Director and Interim Director, coupled with her creativity and knowledge, are incredible assets to the long-term growth and vitality of The Great New York State Fair,” Hochul said in the announcement. “I am proud to officially welcome her as the Director of one of our most beloved traditions, and look forward to working with her as we continue to invest in and grow this extraordinary showcase of New York’s farmers, products, culture, and diversity.”
As the interim director, LaFave has led the planning of the 2024 State Fair. The state contends her efforts will result in a Fair with “one of its most diverse, dynamic, and family-friendly entertainment lineups with shows ranging from acts geared toward children to Grammy winning artists and Rock-and-Roll Hall of Fame performers.”
Additionally, LaFave has worked to develop several attractions that demonstrate the importance of the state’s agricultural initiatives in boosting New York’s economy, tourism efforts, and educational endeavors, Hochul’s office said.
“I couldn’t be more excited to be named Director of The Great New York State Fair and play a role in growing a summer tradition that has captivated New Yorkers for over 175 years,” LaFave said. “I’m grateful to Governor Hochul for appointing me to this important role and to my team here at The Fair who are working tirelessly to ensure that fairgoers leave with the feeling that the 2024 Fair was one of the best yet.”
This year’s State Fair opens Aug. 21 and continues through Labor Day on Sept. 2. Admission, parking, and tickets to the Fair’s midway are now on sale and can be purchased by visiting the State Fair’s website.

Comptroller prompts Little Falls to adopt 2021 audit recommendations
LITTLE FALLS, N.Y. — New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli’s office is taking the City of Little Falls to task three years after it
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