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Work begins on Thruway bridge in the town of Schuyler
SCHUYLER, N.Y. — Work has started on a $4.7 million project to rehabilitate the New York State Thruway/I-90 eastbound and westbound bridges over Sterling Creek in the town of Schuyler, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced. The bridges — located at mileposts 227.4 and 227.41, just west of the Schuyler travel plaza — are part of the […]
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SCHUYLER, N.Y. — Work has started on a $4.7 million project to rehabilitate the New York State Thruway/I-90 eastbound and westbound bridges over Sterling Creek in the town of Schuyler, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced.
The bridges — located at mileposts 227.4 and 227.41, just west of the Schuyler travel plaza — are part of the original Thruway system. Built in 1954, they carry about 26,000 vehicles per day.
The project includes partial-depth concrete substructure repairs, installation of new bearings, construction of a new concrete deck, new guiderails, and new striping as well as paving 200 feet of approaches on both sides of the bridges.
All eastbound and westbound traffic on I-90 at the bridges will shift to the westbound lanes for work on the eastbound bridge.
Work on that bridge will wrap up this fall, when traffic will shift back to the original configuration for winter. In the spring of 2025, traffic will shift to the eastbound lanes so work on the westbound bridge can begin.
Winn Construction Corp. of Amsterdam is the project contractor, following a competitive bidding process. The state expects the project to end in the fall of 2025.
Since 2021, the Thruway Authority has allocated more than $182.5 million toward capital improvement projects in the Syracuse Division, which spans about 153 miles between Herkimer and Ontario counties. Over the next five years, the Thruway Authority’s capital program is projected to invest more than $395.5 million in Central New York.

FustCharles, a certified public accounting firm in Syracuse, has announced the transition of former senior audit associate Sandy Chen to the firm’s senior accountant position.

FustCharles, a certified public accounting firm in Syracuse, announced that Shaina Smith has joined the firm as an audit associate. Smith received her bachelor’s degree

NNY Community Foundation offers $30K grant for Food Bank of CNY distribution center expansion
WATERTOWN, N.Y. — The Northern New York (NNY) Community Foundation says it’s providing a $30,000 grant to the Food Bank of Central New York to help pay for the expansion of its distribution center on Interstate Island Road in Van Buren in northwest Onondaga County. The Food Bank of CNY has an 11-county service area,
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WATERTOWN, N.Y. — The Northern New York (NNY) Community Foundation says it’s providing a $30,000 grant to the Food Bank of Central New York to help pay for the expansion of its distribution center on Interstate Island Road in Van Buren in northwest Onondaga County.
The Food Bank of CNY has an 11-county service area, including parts of the North Country. In Jefferson, Lewis, and St. Lawrence counties, the Food Bank partners with 70 different food pantries, soup kitchens, backpack programs, and other organizations to provide nutritious foods below cost.
In turn, those organizations serve hundreds of North Country families, providing emergency food assistance to residents who couldn’t otherwise access nutritious foods, the Community Foundation said.
The Food Bank is a “longtime” Community Foundation partner. In 2017, officials opened a North Country office on the third floor of the Northern New York Philanthropy Center in Watertown. It also has a permanent endowment and charitable fund at the Community Foundation to support its work in the tri-county area.
“Each year, the Community Foundation and its donors help supply nearly every food program across Jefferson, Lewis, and St. Lawrence counties and each dollar goes further because of the efforts of the Food Bank of Central New York,” Rande Richardson, executive director of the Northern New York Community Foundation, said in the announcement. “As has been true before, we feel this additional investment in the Food Bank’s capacity will benefit the residents of Northern New York in important ways and strengthen local food pantries for years to come.”
“We are thankful to the Northern New York Community Foundation for its recent support of our 34,000-square-foot expansion of our distribution center. Every day, thousands of pounds of nutritious food is distributed throughout our 11-county service area which includes Central New York, the Mohawk Valley, and the North Country,” Karen Belcher, executive director of the Food Bank of Central New York, said in the announcement. “The decades-long partnership between our organizations has provided critical support of our work, and the work of our community partners, by helping to secure access to nutritious food.”
The Northern New York Community Foundation provides grant support annually to organizations that operate in partnership with the Food Bank, per the announcement. It cites the Food Bank as indicating one in eight people in Northern and Central New York are classified as “food insecure.” Each dollar that local food pantries and soup kitchens spend with the Food Bank can provide enough food for three meals.

MACNY, PEB honor achievement in workforce development at award ceremony
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — It was an event that included recognition for registered apprentices and those supporting STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) careers and education as well as scholarships for students. They were all part of the 2024 Workforce Development Awards that MACNY, The Manufacturers Association, and Partners for Education & Business, Inc. (PEB) hosted
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — It was an event that included recognition for registered apprentices and those supporting STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) careers and education as well as scholarships for students.
They were all part of the 2024 Workforce Development Awards that MACNY, The Manufacturers Association, and Partners for Education & Business, Inc. (PEB) hosted on Wednesday, June 12 at Le Moyne College. The nonprofit PEB is MACNY’s K-16 (education) arm, per the MACNY website.
The awards celebrated the accomplishments of students and registered apprentices pursuing an education or careers in manufacturing and other industries.
In addition, “as a testament to their commitment to upskill and bolster the talent-development pipeline,” MACNY concluded the program with a first-ever apprentice signing for four of its own employees to “signify the beginning of their apprenticeship journey.”
“This year was especially meaningful for MACNY because four of our own staff members signed their apprenticeship paperwork, demonstrating our belief in the effectiveness of the program and the value of building our workforce through upskilling,” Randy Wolken, president and CEO of DeWitt–based MACNY, said in a statement. “On behalf of the MACNY Board of Directors, staff, and the manufacturing community, we would like to extend our congratulations to all of those that were honored at this year’s event.”
The ceremony also recognized 29 registered apprentice graduates that earned their Journeyworker credential in 2023 from the New York State Department of Labor.
The companies that received recognition for expanding their registered-apprenticeship programs from January 2023 to April 2024 included 110 Metalworks Inc.; Allen Tool Phoenix, Inc.; Bausch + Lomb; Belden Inc.; Bush Industries; Consolidated Precision Products (CPP); EMCom, Inc.; Hardinge, Inc.; Hubbard Tool & Die Corp.; Indium Corporation; Knowles; North Country Dairy; Superior Metals Manufacturing; and Thompson & Johnson Equipment Co., Inc.
PEB also used the event to announce its 12th cohort of CNY STEM Scholars, which includes 11 Central New York students, each of whom had a company sponsor, MACNY said.

Meeting set for June 26 to discuss reuse of former St. Luke’s campus of MVHS
UTICA, N.Y. — The third community meeting for the redevelopment master plan regarding the former St. Luke’s Hospital Campus is set for Wednesday, June 26 at the MVHS Center for Rehabilitation and Continuing Care Services, 1650 Champlin Ave., Utica. The community visioning workshop will take place from 7-8:30 p.m. in the Soggs Room. The event
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UTICA, N.Y. — The third community meeting for the redevelopment master plan regarding the former St. Luke’s Hospital Campus is set for Wednesday, June 26 at the MVHS Center for Rehabilitation and Continuing Care Services, 1650 Champlin Ave., Utica.
The community visioning workshop will take place from 7-8:30 p.m. in the Soggs Room. The event is hosted by Oneida County, Mohawk Valley EDGE, Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS), and the town of New Hartford.
“Public participation in these forums has been great,” Oneida County Executive Anthony J. Picente Jr. said in a news release announcing the meeting. “We continue to receive extensive input and valuable feedback, and we want to see that momentum carry through to June 26. Having the public engage in this process is imperative to the future success of the site.”
Fu Wilmers Design, the firm selected to lead the master-plan effort, will be present to engage with the public. The meeting will give attendees the opportunity to review project research and site analyses conducted to date and help shape conceptual site-plan ideas emerging from the research and public input.
Organizers will also share a summary of the extensive responses received through the online Reimaging St. Luke’s visual preferences survey, which is still open and can be taken at www.surveymonkey.com/r/StLukesVisualSurvey.
The project partners held the first public-engagement meeting in February to introduce the project, identify challenges, craft a community vision, generate site alternatives, and help shape the overall campus reuse strategy. The meetings will conclude in September.
An advisory group comprised of community leaders, representatives from surrounding neighborhoods, community-service organizations, faith- based groups, small-business owners, housing organizations, and real-estate developers met prior to public meetings to provide input on the challenges and potential for the site as the project is developed.
A total of four advisory group and four community visioning workshops are planned. There will be three different concepts produced from the master-plan study.
A facilities study for the former hospital site, commissioned by the county, New Hartford, Mohawk Valley EDGE, and MVHS, runs concurrent with the master-plan study. Weston & Sampson is heading that study, which began last November and will help inform the master plan by looking at the present physical conditions of the facility and determining what portions of St. Luke’s can be reused or are not suitable for reuse.
Mohawk Valley EDGE is administering the contracts with the consultants on both projects while Oneida County provides the funding.
More information about the project is available at www.reimaginestlukes.com.
The St. Luke’s Hospital closed last October when MVHS moved its operations to the new Wynn Hospital in downtown Utica.

ANDRO lands $2 million contract for 5G test environment
ROME, N.Y. — ANDRO Computational Solutions, LLC has been awarded a $2 million Direct-to-Phase II contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in Washington, D.C. The pact will establish a federated fifth generation (5G) testbed ecosystem, called 5GTE, for advanced telecommunications experimentation, the company said. The award is highly competitive and part of
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ROME, N.Y. — ANDRO Computational Solutions, LLC has been awarded a $2 million Direct-to-Phase II contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in Washington, D.C.
The pact will establish a federated fifth generation (5G) testbed ecosystem, called 5GTE, for advanced telecommunications experimentation, the company said. The award is highly competitive and part of the multiphase Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contracting vehicle, which paves the way for additional funding.
The purpose of the 5GTE is to develop scalable, open-source Internet of Things (IoT) 5G test environment capability to support research and development of nascent 5G technologies and advanced telecommunications-use cases, both fixed and mobile. The focus is to provide an open-source, realistic 5G radio-access network (RAN) to enable rapid prototyping of wireless protocols and applications including, but not limited to, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence (AI), and multi-access-edge-computing.
The 5GTE will serve as an open-validation platform for government vendors, industries, and academia to validate their 5G solutions prior to commercial rollout.
The contract will help create up to 10 new jobs at ANDRO and lay the foundation for future growth, company officials said.
The 5GTE project will leverage ANDRO’s extensive research base in AI and wireless cybersecurity applications development for next generation 5G innovations. A key requirement is the ability to rapidly and accurately scale as new technologies and devices are introduced.
“The 5GTE must also provide remote access and device update capabilities,” ANDRO President Andrew Drozd said. “To broaden the range of supported devices and to facilitate development, 5GTE will have the ability to support different wireless communication technologies, for example 4G, wireless fidelity, and others.”
The award allows ANDRO to explore the boundaries of deploying AI models for enhancing security to infuse Zero-Trust principles within the open RAN architecture standards.
ANDRO’s Marconi-Rosenblatt AI Innovation Lab, led by Jithin Jagannath and Anu Jagannath, will spearhead the research effort with ANDRO’s academic partner, the Wireless Internet of Things Research Laboratory at Northeastern University, which has a wealth of 5G assets and related test resources. The team also includes ANDRO researchers Suhail Shaik and Mohammed Abu Zaid, residents and graduates of the University at Buffalo.
The company anticipates potential future funding would look to expand the 5GTE ecosystem participation, bringing greater 5G, Beyond 5G, and Future-G presence for commercialization and military transition benefit.
ANDRO provides research, engineering, and technical services to defense and commercial industries in advanced spectrum exploitation, secure wireless communications, software-based waveform development, cognitive software-defined radio networking, multi-sensor data fusion, and sensor-resource management.

Broome County IDA to host June 25 webinar on proposed technology park
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — The Broome County Industrial Development Agency (IDA) will hold an informational webinar on Tuesday, June 25, at 6 p.m., to provide the pubic with an overview of the State Environmental Quality Review (SEQRA) environmental-impact assessment process for the proposed Broome Technology Park in the towns of Maine and Union. The webinar will
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BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — The Broome County Industrial Development Agency (IDA) will hold an informational webinar on Tuesday, June 25, at 6 p.m., to provide the pubic with an overview of the State Environmental Quality Review (SEQRA) environmental-impact assessment process for the proposed Broome Technology Park in the towns of Maine and Union.
The webinar will cover why a general environmental impact statement (GEIS) is being prepared for the project and the steps involved in the process. Leaders from the IDA, along with subject-matter experts, will present information about the project’s objectives and explain how the environmental review and public engagement will shape the project’s future.
The webinar is part of the IDA’s strategy to engage the public, inform the community about the vision for the Broome Technology Park, and solicit input crucial to shaping the plan for a sustainably designed technology park.
As part of the SEQRA process, community members have an opportunity to provide formal comments on the scope of the draft GEIS and what potential environmental impacts the IDA should assess.
The IDA expects to release a draft scoping document for public review later this summer. Once public comments are received and a final scope is accepted, the IDA will prepare a draft GEIS. That draft will also be released for public comment before it is made final.
“We are dedicated to ensuring transparency and active community participation leading us to a Broome Technology Park that secures a brighter economic future for the county and the region,” Leadership Alliance CEO Stacey Duncan said in a press release. The Leadership Alliance is the strategic partnership between Broome County Industrial Development Agency/Local Development Corporation and the Greater Binghamton Chamber of Commerce. “We welcome the public’s input throughout the SEQRA review and believe that at the end of this process, we’ll be able to move ahead with a site that becomes a model for sustainable economic development statewide.”
The Broome Technology Park is a proposed 526-acre development aimed at creating a new sustainably focused technology park to attract businesses in advanced electronics, semiconductors, test packaging, and related supply chains as well as life sciences and agricultural processing.
If it comes to fruition, it will be the first new business park since the Broome Corporate Park site in Conklin opened in the mid-1980s. With that park nearly 100-percent occupied, the county lacks other sufficient space large enough to accommodate the needs of high-tech-related development.
The IDA’s vision for the project is a park that features facilities built with sustainable materials, has access to renewable-energy resources, utilizes green infrastructure, and incorporates amenities that benefit on-site workers and the community such as walking trails and public art.
More information about the project is available online at broometechpark.com.
Those interested in the webinar are asked to register in advance at: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_yO_swWi5SKqCFPqrF-Qj5g

Operation Oswego County annual meeting reviews 2023 projects, honors Onondaga SBDC
OSWEGO, N.Y. — Operation Oswego County (OOC) and the County of Oswego IDA (COIDA) in 2023 assisted on projects that resulted in the creation or retention of 630 jobs with more than $130 million in capital investment. The projects were associated with 33 new, expanded, or retained facilities in the targeted industry clusters of manufacturing,
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OSWEGO, N.Y. — Operation Oswego County (OOC) and the County of Oswego IDA (COIDA) in 2023 assisted on projects that resulted in the creation or retention of 630 jobs with more than $130 million in capital investment.
The projects were associated with 33 new, expanded, or retained facilities in the targeted industry clusters of manufacturing, health care, tourism and hospitality, agribusiness and energy, OOC said in its Thursday, June 13 announcement.
Austin Wheelock, executive director of OOC, reported the data during the annual meeting of OOC, noting that the projects were spread over 16 municipalities around Oswego County.
Operation Oswego County held its 72nd annual meeting on Thursday at the Lake Ontario Event and Conference Center in Oswego. Ellen Holst, president of the OOC board of directors, welcomed 170 representatives of businesses, government, education, labor, and other community organizations to the meeting.
The OOC also announced that its board of directors elected Pete Cullinan, who is retired from Exelon, to succeed Holst as the board president, although Holst was also reelected to serve as a board member.
In his remarks, Wheelock also reported on marketing highlights and collaborative initiatives with key stakeholders such as National Grid, Oswego County Tourism, SUNY Oswego, the Port of Oswego Authority, Oswego County Workforce New York, and the Greater Oswego Fulton Chamber of Commerce.
Joseph Pacher, senior VP of operations at Constellation Energy, was the annual meeting’s keynote speaker. In his remarks, Pacher discussed Constellation’s economic impact on Oswego County, how its plants help New York state to meet its clean-energy goals, and the firm’s plans to continue to invest in and relicense Nine Mile I, Nine Mile II, and the James A. FitzPatrick nuclear plants.
The annual meeting also included the announcement of several awards, including the Ally Award for 2024, which was presented to the Onondaga Small Business Development Center (SBDC) “in recognition and appreciation of the vision, commitment and leadership exhibited by the Onondaga [SBDC] to provide critical entrepreneurial training and technical assistance to the small businesses and entrepreneurs of Oswego County; and for being a vital and essential partner in economic development in Oswego County,” per the announcement.

AFRL Rome lab’s economic impact topped $509 million in 2023
ROME, N.Y. — The economic impact of the Air Force Research Laboratory Information Directorate (AFRL) in Rome has decreased slightly but remained significant at $509 million for fiscal year (FY) 2023, the AFRL announced. The impact is down $1.2 million, or 0.2 percent, from the previous year. Both the Utica–Rome metropolitan statistical area (MSA) and
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ROME, N.Y. — The economic impact of the Air Force Research Laboratory Information Directorate (AFRL) in Rome has decreased slightly but remained significant at $509 million for fiscal year (FY) 2023, the AFRL announced.
The impact is down $1.2 million, or 0.2 percent, from the previous year.
Both the Utica–Rome metropolitan statistical area (MSA) and Syracuse MSA, which include the counties of Herkimer, Madison, Oneida, Onondaga, and Oswego, are included in the impact statement.
In FY 2023, the AFRL Information Directorate allocated $230 million toward annual expenditures within the five-county region. The spending encompasses various contracts for local service and facility modernization along with research and development contracts awarded to contractors within the impact area.
The AFRL Information Directorate received funds totaling more than $1.4 billion in FY 2023. It had 861 military and civilian employees during the year and paid over $120 million for their combined annual salaries. About 93 percent of the civilian workforce lives in the five-county region.
During the year, 529 local contractors were under Air Force contracts with a combined annual payroll of nearly $83 million.
The Information Directorate estimates it was responsible for an additional 1,516 indirect jobs in the regional with an annual dollar value of $88 million for those jobs.
The comptroller of the AFRL Information Directorate collects information about the organization’s purchases, contracts, utilities, construction, personnel numbers, and their salaries from various sources. The data is then compiled and analyzed according to official Air Force directorates. Multipliers, such as the indirect-jobs multiplier, have been developed according to U.S. Department of Defense standards based on the employment base size for each region surrounding an installation and the mission set of the installation.
The Air Force Research Laboratory is the primary scientific research and development center for the Department of the Air Force and has more than 12,500 employees across nine technology areas and over 40 locations around the world. The Rome facility is located at the Griffiss Business and Technology Park at the Steven J. DiMeo Campus.
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