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Oneida County hotels post slight rise in guests in September
UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County’s hotel-occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) edged up 1.1 percent to 67.1 percent in September from the year-prior month. That’s according to a recent report from STR, a Tennessee–based hotel-market data and analytics company. Year to date through September, occupancy was up 1.5 percent to 61.8 […]
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UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County’s hotel-occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) edged up 1.1 percent to 67.1 percent in September from the year-prior month.
That’s according to a recent report from STR, a Tennessee–based hotel-market data and analytics company. Year to date through September, occupancy was up 1.5 percent to 61.8 percent.
Revenue per available room (RevPar), a key industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, moved higher by 3.4 percent to $93.34 this September in the Mohawk Valley’s largest county, compared to September 2022. Through the first nine months of this year, RevPar was up 7.2 percent to $82.92
Average daily rate (ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, went up 2.2 percent to $139.03 in Oneida County in the ninth month of 2023, versus the same month a year earlier. Year to date, ADR was higher by 5.6 percent to $134.08.

Turning Stone closes out successful golf season
VERONA, N.Y. — As Turning Stone Resort Casino ramps up a $370 million project to renovate and expand the resort, it closes out the 2023 golf season with double-digit increases in the number of overnight golf guests and number of rounds played on its three 18-hole golf courses. The resort says it saw a 40
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VERONA, N.Y. — As Turning Stone Resort Casino ramps up a $370 million project to renovate and expand the resort, it closes out the 2023 golf season with double-digit increases in the number of overnight golf guests and number of rounds played on its three 18-hole golf courses.
The resort says it saw a 40 percent increase in overnight golfing trips this year with golfers traveling to the area from 44 different states and several countries including Australia, England, Japan, and Spain.
The number of rounds played at the Atunyote, Kaluhyat, and Shenendoah golf courses increased by more than 15 percent. The resort also includes two nine-hole courses, Pleasant Knolls and Sandstone Hollow.
Turning Stone’s expansion project will add a Robert Trent Jones, Jr.-designed golf-practice area near the Shenendoah Clubhouse. It will include a 300-yard driving range, featuring five target greens with bunkers that replicate shots golfers take on the course.
The practice area, slated to open for the 2024 season, will also include a short-game area with a large putting green, a chipping area, and a bunker.
Turning Stone opened its first 18-hole golf course, Shenendoah, more than 20 years ago. Today, the resort has 70 golf employees, five golf courses, a golf dome with indoor short-game practice facilities, and its Golf Superstore.
Other work planned at Turning Stone includes a new sports lounge, a conference center that will expand existing convention and meeting spaces, a new 250-room hotel called The Crescent, and a new seafood restaurant.
Turning Stone Resort Casino, an enterprise of the Oneida Indian Nation, includes five hotels, two spas, more than 20 dining options, a 125,000-square-foot gaming floor, two event venues, and several nightlife spots.

Delta flights from Syracuse to Minneapolis resume next June
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Hancock International Airport (SYR) and Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL) are looking ahead to late spring of 2024 when Delta plans to relaunch daily, year-round, nonstop flights from SYR to Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport (MSP). The daily direct flights between SYR and MSP are scheduled to restart June 7, 2024, providing Central
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SYRACUSE — Syracuse Hancock International Airport (SYR) and Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL) are looking ahead to late spring of 2024 when Delta plans to relaunch daily, year-round, nonstop flights from SYR to Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport (MSP).
The daily direct flights between SYR and MSP are scheduled to restart June 7, 2024, providing Central New York air travelers with more options, the Syracuse Regional Airport Authority (SRAA) announced on Nov. 6.
Atlanta, Georgia–based Delta Air Lines last offered this route in March 2020, the SRAA noted in a news release.
Nonstop flights from Syracuse to Minneapolis–St. Paul are scheduled to depart Syracuse at about 6:45 a.m. with an estimated arrival time into MSP at 8:15 am (central time).
Delta’s Airbus 319 aircraft with 132 seats in a three-class configuration will service the route, per the announcement.
This air service will provide “convenient connections to key” western markets, including San Francisco and San Jose in California, as well as Boise, Idaho, where Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) is headquartered, SRAA noted.
Micron Technology plans to build a massive semiconductor campus at the White Pine Commerce Park in the town of Clay.
The flights will also provide “convenient” connectivity to Delta’s MSP – Tokyo, Japan route, which SRAA contends will be additionally beneficial to Micron “and other members of our Central New York business community.”
“The resumption of daily, year-round, nonstop service from Syracuse to MSP is a huge win for both our business and leisure travelers,” Jason Terreri, SRAA executive director, said in the release. “Central New York’s travel demand — especially westward — continues to soar and the addition of this daily service helps meet that demand.”
Flights on the resumed route went on sale over the weekend and can be viewed, along with specific inbound and outbound schedules, at Delta.com, SRAA said.
“Delta’s new service from Syracuse to our Minneapolis hub next summer is only the latest proof point of our commitment to the state of New York,” Chuck Imhof, Delta’s VP of New York sales, said in the SRAA release. “With the addition of this nonstop service to MSP, Delta will operate 16 daily flights from Syracuse to our hubs across the East Coast in summer 2024, connecting customers in Central New York with hundreds of destinations around the world.”
The announcement of the resumed Delta flights to Minneapolis–St. Paul came about three weeks after the SRAA announced that low-cost carrier Sun Country Airlines plans to launch twice-weekly seasonal flights from Syracuse to the Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport, starting next June 6 and running through Sept. 1.
SRAA also noted that Central New York travelers can fly directly to 30 destinations via nonstop flights with nine airlines now operating regularly scheduled flights at SYR.

Syracuse apartment rent prices for one-bedroom units rise in October
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The median rental price for most apartments in the Syracuse metro area rose 1 percent in October from the previous month and increased more than 4 percent from a year earlier. That’s according to the latest Zumper National Rent Report, issued on Oct. 25. The median rental price of one-bedroom apartments in
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The median rental price for most apartments in the Syracuse metro area rose 1 percent in October from the previous month and increased more than 4 percent from a year earlier.
That’s according to the latest Zumper National Rent Report, issued on Oct. 25.
The median rental price of one-bedroom apartments in the Syracuse region was $970 in October, up 1 percent from $960 in September, but was up 4.3 percent from the $930 median price seen in October 2022, according to Zumper, an apartment rental-listings website.
The median rental rate for two-bedroom units in the Syracuse area was $1,230 in October, unchanged from September, but up 0.8 percent from $1,220 in the year-prior month.
Syracuse now ranks as tied for the 83rd most expensive rental market (or tied for 17th least expensive) among the top 100 metro areas by population, according to the report.
The Zumper National Rent Report analyzes rental data from more than 1 million active listings across the U.S. The company aggregates the data monthly to calculate median asking rents for the top 100 metro areas.
CNY region jobless rates rise in September versus a year ago
Unemployment rates are rising slightly from low levels in all six Central New York sub-regions, according to a recent state report. The jobless rates in the Syracuse, Utica–Rome, Watertown–Fort Drum, Binghamton, Ithaca, and Elmira areas were all higher in September compared to September 2022. The non-seasonally adjusted figures are part of the latest New York
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Unemployment rates are rising slightly from low levels in all six Central New York sub-regions, according to a recent state report.
The jobless rates in the Syracuse, Utica–Rome, Watertown–Fort Drum, Binghamton, Ithaca, and Elmira areas were all higher in September compared to September 2022.
The non-seasonally adjusted figures are part of the latest New York State Department of Labor (NYSDOL) data released Oct. 24.
Regional unemployment rates
The unemployment rate in the Syracuse region rose to 3.2 percent this September from the 3 percent a year earlier.
Around the 16-county Central New York region, the Utica–Rome area’s jobless number increased to 3.3 percent from 3.2 percent in the same period; the Watertown–Fort Drum area’s rate edged up to 3.4 percent from 3.3 percent; the Binghamton region’s jobless number hit 3.3 percent, up from 3.1 percent; the Ithaca area unemployment rate increased to 2.8 percent from 2.6 percent; and the Elmira region’s jobless number rose to 3.5 percent in September from 3.4 percent in the same month a year prior.
The local-unemployment data does not reflect seasonal influences such as holiday hires. The unemployment rates are calculated following procedures prescribed by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the state Labor Department said.
New York state’s unemployment
rate was 4.0 percent in September, up from 3.9 percent in August, but unchanged from 4.0 percent in September 2022.

Viewpoint: Clinton native serves with a Navy tilt-rotor aircraft squadron
Lt. j.g. Ian Foxton, a native of Clinton, in Oneida County, serves the U.S. Navy as a member of Fleet Logistics Multi-Mission Squadron (VRM) 30 located in San Diego, California. Foxton joined the Navy four years ago. Today, Foxton serves as a naval aviator at Fleet Logistics Multi-Mission Squadron 30. “I joined the Navy because
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Lt. j.g. Ian Foxton, a native of Clinton, in Oneida County, serves the U.S. Navy as a member of Fleet Logistics Multi-Mission Squadron (VRM) 30 located in San Diego, California.
Foxton joined the Navy four years ago. Today, Foxton serves as a naval aviator at Fleet Logistics Multi-Mission Squadron 30.
“I joined the Navy because I wanted to do something cool and meaningful,” says Foxton.
Growing up in Clinton, Foxton attended Clinton High School and graduated in 2014. Foxton is also a 2019 graduate of Binghamton University.
Today, Foxton relies upon skills and values similar to those found in Clinton to succeed in the military.
“Growing up, there was a small-town sense of community,” he says. “It’s the same thing in the Navy. It’s similar to a sports team in high school.”
These lessons have helped Foxton while serving aboard Fleet Logistics Multi-Mission Squadron 30.
The CMV-22B is the Navy’s version of the U.S. Marines’ V-22 Osprey. It is designed to replace the C-2A Greyhound, which has provided logistical support to aircraft carriers for four decades. CMV-22Bs are vertical takeoff and landing tilt-rotor aircraft, which have an increased operational range, faster cargo loading/unloading, increased survivability and enhanced communications compared to the C-2A Greyhound. According to Navy officials, the mission of the CMV-22B is to provide timely, persistent air logistics for sustained carrier strike group lethality, anywhere in the world.
As a member of the Navy, Foxton is part of a world-class organization focused on maintaining maritime dominance, strengthening partnerships, increasing competitive warfighting capabilities and sustaining combat-ready forces in support of the National Defense Strategy.
“The United States is separated from our adversaries by bodies of water and the Navy is our first line of defense,” says Foxton. “The Navy also keeps commercial trade routes open and safe.”
Foxton has many opportunities to achieve accomplishments during military service.
“I’m proud of getting my wings, for sure,” he says. “It takes a lot of time and effort. Flight school takes two to three years to complete. It’s physically and mentally challenging, and only about 60 percent of people who start the program make it through.”
As Foxton and other sailors continue to perform missions, they take pride in serving their country in the U.S. Navy.
“Serving in the Navy means a lot to me because it’s a family tradition for me,” says Foxton. “Both my grandparents and my dad served in the military.”
Foxton is grateful to others for helping make a Navy career possible. “I want to definitely thank my wife, my parents and my grandma,” he says.

Meier’s Creek Brewing to develop Le Moyne College-themed beer
SYRACUSE — Meier’s Creek Brewing Company of Cazenovia will be developing a Le Moyne College-themed beer that will be a fundraiser for the school. The Cazenovia–based brewery will develop the beer that will be available for sale beginning in the first quarter of 2024. Under the agreement, Le Moyne will receive proceeds from 20 percent
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SYRACUSE — Meier’s Creek Brewing Company of Cazenovia will be developing a Le Moyne College-themed beer that will be a fundraiser for the school.
The Cazenovia–based brewery will develop the beer that will be available for sale beginning in the first quarter of 2024.
Under the agreement, Le Moyne will receive proceeds from 20 percent of all sales, which will go to the Le Moyne College Fund and be allocated toward the school’s wellness initiatives and student scholarship to help offset the cost of attendance, according to a Le Moyne news release.
The partnership was first announced at Le Moyne’s Founders’ Day Gala on Oct. 20, the college noted. The effort to bring the new beverage to market will unfold over the next several months, with a goal of premiering the brew through a series of alumni and donor-focused events. That includes Le Moyne in New York, a gala event scheduled to take place in New York City in March 2024.
Meier’s Creek Brewing was established in 2019, when its parent company, Feldmeier Equipment Co., purchased the Empire Farm Brewery in Cazenovia.
The Meier’s Creek taproom on Route 13 in Cazenovia opened in 2020 and has since upgraded the outdoor and indoor space at that location. In 2021, the business announced a second location, at the Inner Harbor in Syracuse, with that space opening in January 2022.
Crystal Paolelli, director of marketing at Meier’s Creek Brewing Company, said in the Le Moyne release, that the business and Le Moyne have developed a “unique approach” to their partnership that will grow to include “students as we move through the various stages to provide hands-on experience and alumni involvement with the product development.”
Over the next several months, Le Moyne student members of Heights Global Marketing, the in-house student marketing firm for the Madden College of Business and Economics, will lead a number of focus groups to explore options for type (IPA, lager, etc.) and name of the beer, labeling, packaging, and pricing.
Members of the Le Moyne community and the general public will have a chance to suggest a name for the new beer.
All research initiatives will be conducted “in the context of the latest craft-beer industry trends, informed by Meier’s Creek’s extensive experience in that retail space,” Le Moyne College noted.
“I’m excited about this partnership and the many ways it will benefit both Le Moyne College and Meier’s Creek Brewing,” Jim Joseph, Le Moyne’s VP for advancement and innovation and dean of the Madden College of Business and Economics, said. “Several Le Moyne alumni serving in leadership roles at the company and there is a strong alignment of values and innovation between the two organizations that will only grow as we continue to collaborate.”

Excellus awards Health Equity Innovation funding to seven CNY nonprofits
DeWITT — The Upstate Foundation Inc, Cayuga Counseling Services, and Le Moyne College are among seven Central New York organizations awarded funding in Excellus BlueCross BlueShield’s Health Equity Innovation Awards. Excellus, Central New York’s largest health insurer, awarded the CNY organizations $162,500, which is part of a total of more than $520,000 in financial support
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DeWITT — The Upstate Foundation Inc, Cayuga Counseling Services, and Le Moyne College are among seven Central New York organizations awarded funding in Excellus BlueCross BlueShield’s Health Equity Innovation Awards.
Excellus, Central New York’s largest health insurer, awarded the CNY organizations $162,500, which is part of a total of more than $520,000 in financial support for community programs that address racial and ethnic health disparities across the health plan’s upstate New York service area.
Excellus grants will support 20 nonprofits across the Central New York, Rochester, Utica/North Country, and Southern Tier regions.
With more than 180 applicants, the review process included input from individuals with “diverse backgrounds and experiences to assess each proposal.” Funding recipients were selected based on “clear, defined goals and measurable results for reducing health disparities and improving health equity,” the health system said.

“At Excellus BlueCross BlueShield, our mission is to help people lead heathier more secure lives through access to high-quality, affordable health care,” Simone Edwards, VP of health equity and community investments at Excellus, said in a news release. “We’re committed to community partnerships and using our resources to support initiatives that directly target health disparities, promote access to care, and address the underlying social determinants of health, to help ensure everyone can reach their full potential.”
Central New York funding recipients
Below is a description of the the funding recipients and the programs they are implementing, as described in the Excellus release.
• Le Moyne College — Dolphins Spreading Healthy Optimistic Positive Experience (HOPE). The program will utilize a peer-based, health-promotion approach to reach high-school students who are at risk for mental-health issues and suicide.
• Cayuga Counseling Services, Inc. — Its program will expand the community’s comprehensive collaborative efforts and create an online database that includes the Child Advocacy Center, the Rape-Crisis Center, the Sexual and Physical Abuse MDT, the Child Fatality Review Team and Runaway/Homeless Youth Taskforce, and the Cayuga County Dually Diagnosed Taskforce.
• Suicide Prevention & Crisis Service (SPCS) of Tompkins County — LGBTQIA+ Crisis Line. The program will support increasing outreach to those in the LGBTQIA+ community and will formalize training for crisis counselors, ensuring they are best equipped to support those in need.
• The Upstate Foundation, Inc. — Native American Preterm program. It will support the implementation of a culturally competent approach to decrease the high preterm-birth rate in Native American women in Central New York by increasing access to early and sustained prenatal care, with an emphasis on cultural awareness and sensitivity.
• On Point for College — Creating Safe Spaces. The program will support On Point’s Creating Safe Spaces project that will facilitate a culture/environment of openness, inclusion, and affirmation, regardless of a student’s race, gender, sexual orientation, or mental-health status.
• Joseph’s House for Women, Inc. — A Home for a Healthier Future. The initiative will support Joseph House enhanced programming in case management, a life-skills program, counseling, childcare, and 24-hour staffing.
• Seven Valleys Health Coalition —Postpartum doula support in rural communities. The program will support postpartum doula program research and development, the training of local postpartum doulas, and doula reimbursement for community members. Postpartum doulas will provide support and knowledge, not only to those recently pregnant, but also their families — helping to work through the new season of life that comes with the birth of a child.

New SUNY Poly president outlines plans for college
MARCY, N.Y. — He may be nervous about his upcoming first Mohawk Valley winter, but Winston Oluwole Soboyejo is anything but anxious about his new role as SUNY Polytechnic Institute’s seventh president. Soboyejo began in the post on Oct. 2, succeeding Officer-in-Charge Andrew Russell. After serving as a professor at Princeton University for about 17
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MARCY, N.Y. — He may be nervous about his upcoming first Mohawk Valley winter, but Winston Oluwole Soboyejo is anything but anxious about his new role as SUNY Polytechnic Institute’s seventh president.
Soboyejo began in the post on Oct. 2, succeeding Officer-in-Charge Andrew Russell.
After serving as a professor at Princeton University for about 17 years and leading Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) as interim president for the past year, there were several things that really appealed to Soboyejo about SUNY Poly and led to him applying for the president’s role.
First was the surrounding community, which he describes as welcoming. It’s a place where he could see himself working, living, and playing.
Soboyejo also sees the start of a renaissance happening in the region, and that appeals to him as well. “I see just tremendous opportunity to be part of this ecosystem,” and help to produce the workforce of today and tomorrow, he says.
Soboyejo was able to play a part in the renaissance of the Worcester, Massachusetts community while serving at WPI, so it’s a role he’s both familiar with and eager to fill again.
“There have been lots of efforts going on in this region,” Soboyejo says. He envisions a future where the region becomes the east coast counterpart of the Silicon Valley.
“Most importantly is the idea of building community,” he says of how SUNY Poly joins the renaissance. Building community encompasses many things, from forging partnerships with other institutions and businesses, to creating different pathways to attract people to STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) programs.

Those programs play a key role in driving the economy of Central New York today and well into the future, he says, with companies like Wolfspeed right next door to SUNY Poly and Micron Technology coming to the Syracuse area. It’s SUNY Poly’s job to deliver work-ready STEM graduates to those and other companies, Soboyejo stipulates.
To do that, SUNY Poly will step up its programming game with investments in things like and other programs in hopes of increasing interest in STEM degrees across diverse communities, he says.
This is also where collaboration with other institutions will be key, he says. “We can only fill all those positions when we work collaboratively.”
Doubling down on STEM just makes sense, Soboyejo says, especially after the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE) reunified on the University at Albany campus after the college was split for almost a decade between Albany and SUNY Poly’s Marcy campus.
SUNY Poly lost about 120 of its approximately 3,000 students and some faculty during this process earlier this year, Soboyejo says, but the important thing now is to focus on what is left. From artificial intelligence to smart technology, “what’s left is really a tremendous resource for the region,” he contends.
Soboyejo is already working to maximize that, including an initiative to partner with the Air Force Research Laboratory, Griffiss Institute, and other local universities to build a strong group focused on additive manufacturing. The process builds three-dimensional objects by layering. It’s used in numerous industries including automotive, medical, and aerospace.
SUNY Poly is also in talks with Mohawk Valley Health System and other health-care stakeholders so the school can build on its existing strengths in health sciences and explore biomedical engineering programs, Soboyejo says.
“This is a massive opportunity for us,” he says of SUNY Poly’s future.
Soboyejo holds a bachelor’s degree in engineering from King’s College in London and a Ph.D. in materials science and metallurgy from the University of Cambridge. He was a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Princeton University for about 17 years. He started at Worcester Polytechnic Institute as dean of engineering and engineering leadership and also served as interim provost before he was named provost and senior VP in 2019. He also served as president and provost of the African University of Science and Technology in Abuja, Nigeria.
His research focuses on biomaterials and the use of nanoparticles for the detection and treatment of disease, the mechanical properties of materials, and the use of materials science to promote global development.
In 2021, Soboyejo was elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering for his contributions to understanding the dynamic behavior of materials and for leadership in STEM outreach in Africa.

East Syracuse, Binghamton firms win funding in FuzeHub contest
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. — Startups from Binghamton and East Syracuse won funding investments during the FuzeHub commercialization competition held on Oct. 16-17 in Saratoga Springs. The event was part of this year’s New York State Innovation Summit. Ashlawn Energy, LLC, which operates at the Koffman Southern Tier Incubator in Binghamton, won the top prize of
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SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. — Startups from Binghamton and East Syracuse won funding investments during the FuzeHub commercialization competition held on Oct. 16-17 in Saratoga Springs.
The event was part of this year’s New York State Innovation Summit.
Ashlawn Energy, LLC, which operates at the Koffman Southern Tier Incubator in Binghamton, won the top prize of $150,000 in the competition. DUB Biologics Inc. of East Syracuse was among six finalists that secured a $50,000 investment.
Startups from Schenectady, Rochester, New York City, and two from Brooklyn were also awarded $50,000 in funding. FuzeHub awarded a total of $450,000 to seven startups during its commercialization competition.
Albany–based FuzeHub is a nonprofit that connects New York’s small-sized and mid-sized manufacturing companies to the resources, programs, and expertise they need for technology commercialization, innovation, and business growth.
FuzeHub is the statewide New York Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program (MEP) center, supported by Empire State Development’s Division of Science, Technology & Innovation (NYSTAR).
“We are proud to work alongside these entrepreneurs and continually support them as they progress on their journeys,” Elena Garuc, executive director of FuzeHub, said in the organization’s news release. “It is so gratifying to see them grow. We are fostering relationships and strengthening the community of people actively pursuing new ways to solve modern problems.”
About the firms’ products
Ashlawn Energy will use its $150,000 as it works to commercialize its VanCharg vanadium flow battery-energy storage system, per FuzeHub.
VanCharg is a rechargeable-battery system that stores power off-peak and uses power at peak times, “reducing energy consumption during peak periods.” This system is described as “safer, [with] a longer life, and a lower cost of ownership than current alternatives.”
The project will implement Ashlawn Energy’s in-house battery stack assembly in Binghamton to boost Ashlawn Energy’s economics, profitability, and “create a key competitive price advantage over other battery technologies, reduce assembly cycle time from one week to one day, and create manufacturing jobs,” the release stated.
DUB Biologics Inc. of East Syracuse will use its $50,000 investment to help commercialize the anti-fibrotic self-delivering siRNAS.
As described in the FuzeHub release, the fundamental underpinning to one-in-three fatalities in the world is fibrosis. DUB Biologics is developing a therapeutic that helps reduce fibrosis, which is also known as scarring. Tissue function is impaired by scarring. For example, scars in the eye contribute to vision loss. DUB Biologics’ therapeutic aims to “return function to functional tissues.”
Besides the FuzeHub funding, DUB Biologics also won the top prize of $50,000 at the SUNY Start Up Summer School (S4) Demo Day, per an Aug. 16 news release on the website of Upstate Medical University. In that announcement, DUB Biologics is also described as an Upstate Medical University–based startup.
Headed by co-founders Audrey Bernstein, a professor at Upstate Medical, and Research Associate Tere Williams, DUB Biologics is creating a siRNA therapeutic that could prevent corneal scarring and inflammation and revolutionize the treatment of corneal injuries, per Upstate.
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