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Ask Rusty: Why is Social Security Withholding My Monthly Payments?
I have been working since I started collecting Social Security (SS) when I turned 62. Last year, I was apparently overpaid because of my job. I made $37,000 and now the Social Security Administration (SSA) says I owe it $8,800 because I made too much, and it has withheld my $2,000 monthly SS payment. I […]
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I have been working since I started collecting Social Security (SS) when I turned 62. Last year, I was apparently overpaid because of my job. I made $37,000 and now the Social Security Administration (SSA) says I owe it $8,800 because I made too much, and it has withheld my $2,000 monthly SS payment. I am close to the maximum allowable again already this year. So, I am looking at quitting my job so I don’t go over, but the SSA is holding my payments so then I would have no money. Any help would be appreciated.
Signed: Frustrated by Social Security
Dear Frustrated: You are being affected by Social Security’s “earnings test” which applies to everyone who collects early Social Security and also works before reaching their full retirement age (FRA). If your earned income exceeds the annual limit (which was $19,560 for 2022), Social Security will withhold $1 in benefits for every $2 you are over the limit. If you earned $37,000 in 2022 you were more than $17,000 over the limit and owe half of that back to the SSA. It usually recovers what you owe by withholding your future benefit payments, so the SSA won’t pay you benefits until it has recovered that $8,800, after which your benefits will resume — but only for a while.
If you are working full time and also collecting early Social Security benefits, the earnings test lasts until you reach your FRA, which for you is 66 years and 8 months. The earnings limit goes up a bit each year — for 2023 it is $21,240 — but if you continue to work full time, you’ll receive another overpayment notice and have more benefits withheld. A better approach might be to contact the SSA in advance and tell it what your 2023 earnings are expected to be, thus permitting the agency to suspend your benefits in advance and avoid overpaying you. I’m afraid there is no way around this — collecting early benefits while working full time means the “earnings test” will affect your benefit payments.
The “good news” in all of this is that when you reach your full retirement age, you will get time-credit for all months your benefits were withheld. By that I mean the SSA will, at your FRA, recalculate your benefit entitlement as though you had claimed later (later by the number of months you had benefits withheld), which will result in a higher monthly payment after your FRA. In that way, you may eventually recover some or all of the benefits withheld by receiving a higher monthly amount for the rest of your life, starting at your full retirement age.
I suggest you contact Social Security at (800) 772-1213 (or at your local office) and tell the agency you want to provide it with an estimate of your 2023 earnings because you are working and collecting early Social Security benefits. The SSA will work with you to suspend your benefits for an appropriate number of (additional) months to avoid another overpayment situation. Note: you’ll likely need to do this each year you continue to work full time, until the year you reach your FRA when the earnings limit more than doubles. The earnings limit goes away when you reach your FRA.
Russell Gloor is a national Social Security advisor at the AMAC Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC). The 2.4-million-member AMAC says it is a senior advocacy organization. Send your questions to: ssadvisor@amacfoundation.org.
Author’s note: This article is intended for information purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association (NSSA). The NSSA and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity.
VIEWPOINT: How to track, update assets during a business rebrand
Your brand is more important than ever, especially for an organization seeking to be recognized over an expanding number of marketing platforms and sales channels. Shifts in the market, mergers and acquisitions, and other company changes also drive brand updates. It’s why 75 percent of companies have undergone a rebrand since 2020. The reasons why
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Your brand is more important than ever, especially for an organization seeking to be recognized over an expanding number of marketing platforms and sales channels. Shifts in the market, mergers and acquisitions, and other company changes also drive brand updates. It’s why 75 percent of companies have undergone a rebrand since 2020.
The reasons why a business may choose to rebrand vary. Maybe it needs to evolve and shift to drive growth. Maybe the organization’s leaders want to reposition their brand within their current market, or to expand into a new space. A recent merger or acquisition might also force a company to rebrand. In this scenario, the acquired business needs to adopt the brand of the company that acquired it. This can sometimes be more challenging if rebranding takes place when employees are getting up to speed with their new organization’s brand and culture. Regardless of the reasons, the rebranding strategy needs to be developed upfront so all stakeholders can have a strong plan for success.
Formulating this strategy is only the first step in a long process. Once the financial analysis, planning, and logistics of the rebrand are complete, you will invariably need help implementing the new brand. A dedicated team can ensure quality control across multiple media in an efficient and cost-effective manner.
There are hundreds, sometimes thousands, of assets to track and update. Think pitch decks, training guides, sell sheets, marketing brochures, email templates for newsletters or executive communications, deal-announcement templates, and product or technique guides ― any assets typically owned in large quantities. A meticulous, thorough approach will be needed to ensure these assets conform to the new brand style.
Along the way, effective project management and clear communication are critical to keep your rebrand on schedule. No organization wants to outsource this work, only to be left with a ton of “homework” and other major time commitments. A thorough implementation process that keeps everything on track will include organization, prep, production, review and approval.
Know before you rebrand
When rebranding, it’s not unusual to be up against some kind of deadline for mergers and acquisitions and any associated regulations. That’s why developing and signing off on a realistic timetable is a crucial first step. Few people are qualified to plot the course for such a massive undertaking, because not many will experience one in their careers. Where to begin?
Start by taking inventory. Inventoried assets can be grouped together by audience, use case, and/or sub-brand. Once groups have been established, these assets can be further sub-grouped by type and relative similarity. A thorough review of each marketing asset is conducted to ensure assets aren’t duplicated or rendered unnecessary by updates to systems or processes.
At this critical first step, try to maximize efficiencies in scale. There are often ways to group materials that allow one set of decisions to apply to a body of work. If you dive in right away without doing the legwork first, you will lose that efficiency.
At this point you can assign each group an implementation roadmap, including timing for checkpoints and reviews. Stakeholders involved with each group should meet to review and approve your production plans, timing, and estimates.
Prepare your assets by creating a project brief for each. Be sure to include details like:
• End-use of the asset. For example, does it need to be printed or output as a pdf?
• Imagery directives/guidelines (i.e., should the assets match existing pieces?).
• Update any content that may be outdated (old images, copy, contact info, or urls).
• Additional branding information beyond what is in the brand guidelines.
Stakeholders may need to approve individual project briefs before production can begin. By this point, you will have an appreciation for the power of effective communication during the rebranding process. Working on such a large project means the client and agency will need to get on the same page quickly, be open and honest, and communicate freely. Consider the cadence of live check-ins, and which communication channels work best. If these are expected, predictable, and reliable, it’s easy to establish trust and a work rhythm to support efficiency.
Asset production
Once the assets and project briefs have been approved, production can begin. Each asset and brand update must be scheduled and tracked internally. What’s the status of every piece of inventory? Where are they in the stage of updating or review, and what is coming next? What dependencies or contingencies do we need to keep our eyes on? These are the questions that should guide the production stage of the rebranding process.
For each asset group, consider a weekly status call with client stakeholders and other agency partners. Share a status-tracker document for visibility to all active and upcoming assets. Provide a written weekly progress update, identifying any risks or needs. Schedule ad-hoc meetings to address issues outside of the status calls. Keep the brand-management team on call to ensure proper interpretation and application of the brand.
It’s typical to have a lot of balls in the air at the same time. One batch of assets might be with the legal team while the design team is tackling another batch. Another batch might get sent back to the product team based on feedback. Organization is key to keep each of these balls in the air.
Asset approval
After all assets have been approved by the appropriate stakeholders, the rebranding agency should collect and deliver the final files exactly how and when you agreed. A few keys to keep in mind at this stage are the following:
• Digital file and folder-naming conventions should follow the approved structure
• Files should be provided based on end-use needs (e.g., print-ready .pdfs or digital .pdfs)
• Store a second copy of all files on a secure server as a backup
Once a phase of assets is completed, the same process can be used for any future phases. By now, you should be able to answer “yes” to the following questions: Is our brand ready to activate? Have we finished more than just a logo, font, and basic color palette? Have we ensured quality and consistency?
No one wants to complete a big chunk of work only to get blasted by a brand panel or legal team. Thinking through this extra step can prevent later rounds of edits or having to start over altogether.
Launching a brand is not an easy undertaking. Significant effort and resources go into rebranding. In fact, so much energy goes into this effort that many companies lose steam while building the asset-update plan. Creating a solid launch plan will ensure that the work that went into creating the new brand won’t fall flat once it hits the market.
Brian Bekins is the creative director at ddm marketing + communications, a marketing agency for highly complex and highly regulated industries.

New York’s first utility-scale energy-storage system is operational in North Country
CHATEAUGAY, N.Y. — New York’s first state-owned, utility-scale battery-energy storage project is now operating in Chateaugay in Frankin County. The 20-megawatt (MW) facility connects into the state’s electric grid. The New York Power Authority (NYPA) installed and operates the system. It seeks to help “relieve transmission congestion and pave the way for the utility industry
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CHATEAUGAY, N.Y. — New York’s first state-owned, utility-scale battery-energy storage project is now operating in Chateaugay in Frankin County.
The 20-megawatt (MW) facility connects into the state’s electric grid. The New York Power Authority (NYPA) installed and operates the system.
It seeks to help “relieve transmission congestion and pave the way for the utility industry and the private sector to better understand how to integrate more clean energy into the power system, especially during times of peak demand,” the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Aug. 25.
Dubbed the Northern New York Energy Storage Project (NNYESP), it will “serve as a model” for future storage systems and “create a more reliable and resilient” power supply in a region heavily powered by renewable energy, Hochul’s office contended.
The project also will help meet the state’s target to install 6,000 MW of energy storage by 2030, it added.
The project is NYPA’s first utility-scale battery project and the first one built by New York State, per Hochul’s office. The facility includes five 53-foot walk-in enclosures, each with more than 19,500 batteries grouped in modules and stacked in racks. Each container pulls in and can disperse 4 MW of power, enough to power roughly 3,000 homes.
The St. Lawrence-Franklin D. Roosevelt Power Project maintains and operates the facility, Hochul’s office said.
The Northern New York Energy Storage Project is located in a region that generates more than 80 percent of its electricity supply from renewable resources, including the NYPA’s St. Lawrence-Franklin D. Roosevelt Power Project. That project produces more than 800 MW of hydropower and more than 650 MW of wind generation, Hochul’s office said.
How NNYESP works
As the state explains it, the energy-storage facility balances power demand by capturing any excess generation, storing it, and discharging it into the grid during times of peak demand, typically on hot summer days or cold winter nights. The energy-storage system will supply the New York wholesale energy and ancillary-service markets and will contribute to more economical and reliable electric power in New York, the state stipulates.
Due to the intermittent nature of wind generation, the excess energy needs to be captured when the wind is blowing so it can be dispersed “when there is no generation,” Hochul’s office said. Having the capability to store renewable energy for delivery during times of high demand will help eliminate the transmission constraints that often prevent the energy from being distributed throughout the statewide grid.
The system also includes inverters, transformers, a control house, and back-up generator, all connected to the Willis substation, located north of the project. The project, which provides 20 MW of power utilizing a lithium-ion battery system, was constructed by O’Connell Electric Company, Inc. of Victor in Ontario County.
NYPA’s engineers were involved with the planning, development, and permitting of the project and the project team met with local fire departments for training on the battery-storage technology used at the facility. NYPA’s engineers have ensured that the Northern New York Energy Storage Project met all fire safety and permitting requirements. NYPA is also testing other types of battery technology, such as advanced lithium-ion and zinc-air technologies, that demonstrate a reduction in the potential for thermal runaway, the most common cause of energy storage fires.

FLLT to convert former golf course to expand Cayuga Lake conservation area
LANSING, N.Y. — The Finger Lakes Land Trust (FLLT) announced it has acquired 110 acres of woodlands and meadows in the town of Lansing in Tompkins County. The recent acquisition overlooks the eastern shore of Cayuga Lake and includes the Cedar View Golf Course. The golf course was operated by the Larsen family for more
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LANSING, N.Y. — The Finger Lakes Land Trust (FLLT) announced it has acquired 110 acres of woodlands and meadows in the town of Lansing in Tompkins County.
The recent acquisition overlooks the eastern shore of Cayuga Lake and includes the Cedar View Golf Course. The golf course was operated by the Larsen family for more than 50 years before it ceased operation in 2021, FLLT said in its Aug. 22 announcement.
The property is located just north of the Bell Station parcel which the FLLT acquired in 2022 from New York State Electric & Gas (NYSEG).
The FLLT’s latest land acquisition involves a partnership with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). The nonprofit intends to sell the property to the DEC, along with the lakeshore portion of Bell Station, for management as a public wildlife-management area.
The new management area will include about 3,600 feet of lakeshore and more than 400 acres of diverse wildlife habitat.
“We were thrilled to have the opportunity to work with the Larsen family to conserve this special property,” Andrew Zepp, executive director of the Finger Lakes Land Trust, said in a release. “Together with Bell Station, this site is large enough to have special significance as habitat for fish and wildlife while also providing outstanding opportunities for outdoor recreation.”
Once part of a dairy farm, the property includes lakeshore woodlands that feature several seasonal tributaries to Cayuga Lake. The former 9-hole golf course provides scenic views of the lake and is lined with native Eastern red-cedar trees that took root when the site was used as a pasture.
Prior to conveying the land to the DEC, the FLLT will partner with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service to expand meadows on the former golf course to enhance grassland habitat for migratory songbirds such as Bobolinks, Savannah Sparrows, and Eastern Meadowlarks.
Those involved will remove a number of trees to expand habitat for these “at risk” bird species and they’ll maintain meadows through periodic mowing, FLLT noted.
The Cedar View Golf Course property will remain closed to the public until habitat improvements are completed, but the adjacent Bell Station property is currently open for hiking and wildlife observation, FLLT said.
The purchase was made possible by the FLLT’s Opportunity Fund, an internal revolving loan fund that the organization uses for “time-sensitive” acquisitions. It’s then replenished either through fundraising or the sale of land to a public conservation agency.
About the FLLT
Based in Ithaca, the Finger Lakes Land Trust says it focuses on protecting “critical” habitat for fish and wildlife, conserving lands that are important for water quality, connecting existing conservation lands, and keeping prime farmland in agriculture.
The nonprofit also provides programs to educate local governments, landowners, and residents about conservation and the region’s unique natural resources.
By working cooperatively with landowners and local communities, the FLLT says it has protected more than 30,000 acres of the region’s undeveloped lakeshore, rugged gorges, rolling forest, and scenic farmland. The FLLT owns and manages a network of more than 45 nature preserves that are open to the public and holds perpetual conservation easements on 179 properties that remain in private ownership.

Micron applies for federal aid for Clay semiconductor campus
CLAY — Micron Technology Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) is formally seeking federal assistance for its effort to build a semiconductor campus in the town of Clay. The Boise, Idaho–based Micron has submitted its application for U.S. government aid through the CHIPS & Science Act, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) said in an Aug. 21
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CLAY — Micron Technology Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) is formally seeking federal assistance for its effort to build a semiconductor campus in the town of Clay.
The Boise, Idaho–based Micron has submitted its application for U.S. government aid through the CHIPS & Science Act, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) said in an Aug. 21 statement, which did not list a dollar amount for the aid.
In an Aug. 21 Form 8-K filing with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission, Micron Technology said that on Aug. 18, two subsidiaries of Micron — Micron New York Semiconductor Manufacturing LLC and Micron Idaho Semiconductor Manufacturing (Triton) LLC — each submitted full applications to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s CHIPS Program Office (CPO) in response to the CPO’s Notice of Funding Opportunity for semiconductor manufacturing under the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. Micron Idaho Semiconductor Manufacturing (Triton) LLC submitted a full application for federal funding for the development of a memory manufacturing fab in Boise, Idaho. Micron New York Semiconductor Manufacturing LLC presented the other full application for federal funding “to build a DRAM manufacturing megafab in Clay.” In these applications, Micron said it asked for federal support “in the form of grants, which combined with investment tax credits, are necessary to enable proceeding with both projects.” The company’s filing did not specify how much money the support would cost.
Micron on Oct. 4. 2022 announced plans to invest up to $100 billion over the next 20-plus years on a semiconductor manufacturing campus at the White Pine Commerce Park in Clay.
“With my CHIPS & Science Act as the fuse, Micron chose to make Central NY the home of its unprecedented $100 billion megafab, bringing with it nearly 50,000 good paying jobs to fundamentally transform Central NY’s role in the global tech economy. Now, with Micron having officially submitted for the historic investments I created, the project is one step closer to becoming a reality, one step closer to a better future for our children and our grandchildren, one step closer to shovels hitting the ground,” Schumer said in his Aug. 21 statement.
The CHIPS & Science Act includes $39 billion for the CHIPS for America Fund to provide federal incentives to build, expand, or modernize domestic facilities and equipment for semiconductor fabrication, assembly, testing, advanced packaging, or research and development, per Schumer’s office.
“The CHIPS and Science Act is playing a critical role in driving U.S. innovation and competitiveness – and the economic benefits to our nation are only beginning. This historic legislation paved the way for Micron, the only U.S. manufacturer of memory, to announce our intent to bring industry-leading memory to the U.S. as we invest up to $100 billion over the next 20-plus years to construct a new megafab in Clay, New York — which will be the engine that drives a lasting semiconductor ecosystem here in the United States due to memory’s outsized scale.” Sanjay Mehrotra, president and CEO of Micron Technology, said in Schumer’s Aug. 9 news release, marking the one-year anniversary of U.S. President Joe Biden signing the CHIPS & Science Act.

L3Harris wins $39M Navy contract modification
L3Harris Technologies was recently awarded a $39.3 million adjustment to a previously awarded U.S. Navy contract to exercise options for the procurement of production hardware in support of new construction and in-service class submarines. Work on this cost-plus-incentive-fee and firm-fixed-price modification will be performed in Northampton, Massachusetts (72 percent) and Syracuse (28 percent). It is
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L3Harris Technologies was recently awarded a $39.3 million adjustment to a previously awarded U.S. Navy contract to exercise options for the procurement of production hardware in support of new construction and in-service class submarines.
Work on this cost-plus-incentive-fee and firm-fixed-price modification will be performed in Northampton, Massachusetts (72 percent) and Syracuse (28 percent). It is expected to be completed by July 2027, according to an Aug. 21 contract announcement from the U.S. Department of Defense.
Fiscal 2022 other procurement, Navy funds of more than $861,000 (2 percent); fiscal 2023 other procurement, Navy funds totaling almost $22.8 million (58 percent); and fiscal 2023 shipbuilding and conversion, Navy funds of nearly $15.7 million (40 percent), will be obligated at time of award and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Sea Systems Command in Washington, D.C. is the contracting authority.
L3Harris is a global aerospace and defense technology company with more than $17 billion in annual revenue and over 50,000 employees.

CNY, Southern Tier manufacturing projects to use FuzeHub grants
ALBANY, N.Y. — Manufacturing projects based in both Central New York and the Southern Tier will use grant funding from FuzeHub and the Jeff Lawrence Innovation Fund. The Albany–based nonprofit FuzeHub provides small- to mid-sized manufacturers with “guided access to an extensive network of industry experts, programs, and resources to solve business growth challenges,” per
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ALBANY, N.Y. — Manufacturing projects based in both Central New York and the Southern Tier will use grant funding from FuzeHub and the Jeff Lawrence Innovation Fund.
The Albany–based nonprofit FuzeHub provides small- to mid-sized manufacturers with “guided access to an extensive network of industry experts, programs, and resources to solve business growth challenges,” per its announcement.
With the fund, FuzeHub offers manufacturing grants to New York nonprofits — including higher-education institutions — that propose innovative projects in partnership with a New York state small- to mid-sized manufacturer.
Project categories cover adoption of new technology to enhance a process and/or product, prototype development, design for manufacturing, proof-of-concept manufacturing, certain equipment purchases, manufacturing scale-up, and other projects to advance manufacturing capabilities.
The Innovation Fund, consisting of more than $1 million annually, supports a set of activities designed to spur technology development and commercialization across New York. It’s made possible through funding and support from Empire State Development’s Division of Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR) and the U.S. Economic Development Administration (EDA), FuzeHub said.
“Prior to every Jeff Lawrence Innovation Fund grant opportunity round, our team revisits our processes in order to better achieve our goal, which is to award the most innovative projects that come to us,” Elena Garuc, executive director at FuzeHub, said in an Aug. 16 release. “You can see the wide span of ideas in this list, and we are eager to take them to market and show New York State’s strength, from advanced materials to clean tech and beyond.”
The projects
FuzeHub awarded $50,000 grants to each of the following projects:
• Upstate Medical University’s CNY Biotech Accelerator in Syracuse and CathBuddy, Inc. will use their funding to support testing required for their product submission to the U.S. Food & Drug Administration, “ultimately leading to their ability to enter the Aurie reusable catheter system into the catheter market,” FuzeHub said. “Hundreds of thousands of individuals in the United States suffer from neurogenic bladder and may use 4-6 intermittent single-use catheters a day for the duration of their lives. The Aurie System will provide patients with a catheter system that is both safe and affordable, through the development of a reusable catheterization system to make catheterization more cost-effective, sustainable, and healthier.”
• Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute is partnering with Douglas Outdoors, a fishing-rod manufacturer in Phoenix in Oswego County, on a 12-month project that involves prototyping a fishing rod made of thermoplastic composites, “a first of its kind in the recreational fishing market, using a novel manufacturing process called Hot Roll Wrapping,” per the FuzeHub announcement. “The new material and process will (1) improve rod performance and durability and (2) significantly reduce manufacturing time and cost as compared to the current thermoset composite materials used.”
• Binghamton University’s Northeast Center for Chemical and Energy Storage (NECCES)/ Dynami Battery Corp are working on a microstructured lithium battery manufacturing validation project.
• Koffman Southern Tier Incubator/ LiBAMA Power Corporation are working on a project that targets manufacturing development of advanced 3D anodes for lithium batteries. “LiBAMA Power will optimize and scale the production of its patented Advanced Metal Anode technology designed to reduce the size, time required to charge, and cost of today’s Lithium-Ion batteries while improving overall battery safety. LiBAMA Power is headquartered at the Koffman Southern Tier Incubator where it plans to grow operations.”
• Binghamton University’s Integrated Electronics Engineering Center (IEEC) and Opal Wearables, Inc. of New York City are partnering to develop a “thoughtfully designed smart ring that provides discreet safety and protection.” The device can silently send requests for help to 911 or emergency contacts with the user’s GPS location and information.
Job fair, summit focus on the Binghamton area’s clean-energy sector
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — The Greater Binghamton Clean Energy Careers Summit and Job Fair is about much more than helping people find jobs in the clean-energy sector — although organizers hope that happens, too. The event is really about bringing stakeholders together to learn about the Southern Tier’s clean-energy industries and to talk about both the
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BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — The Greater Binghamton Clean Energy Careers Summit and Job Fair is about much more than helping people find jobs in the clean-energy sector — although organizers hope that happens, too.
The event is really about bringing stakeholders together to learn about the Southern Tier’s clean-energy industries and to talk about both the challenges and the opportunities ahead.
The summit is set for Sept. 27 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Binghamton at 225 Water St. The event runs from 11 a.m.-3:30 p.m., followed by the job fair and networking reception from 4-6:30 p.m. While there is a fee for the summit portion, the job fair is free and open to everyone.
“There are huge opportunities for job seekers and employers, alike, but very few people are aware of that,” says Adam Flint, director of clean energy programs at Network for a Sustainable Tomorrow (NEST), one of the event organizers.
Through the event, Flint is hoping to get the word out about job opportunities, but he also hopes the summit is the steppingstone to more action in the Southern Tier to build the region’s clean-energy ecosystem.
The Southern Tier is already home to some players in the clean-energy field — from lithium-ion battery manufacturer iM3NY in Endicott to The Raymond Corporation, which produces electric-powered lift trucks at its plant in Greene, in Chenango County.
Through the summit, Flint hopes to link those companies to many others — job seekers, government officials, other companies, educational institutions, labor leaders, state agencies, and more — through the summit and career fair.
Jennifer de Souza, VP for energy solutions, supply chain, and leasing at Raymond, is the keynote speaker for the summit portion of the event.
Clean energy can often be a source of political argument, she notes, but the reality is that clean-energy solutions will continue to expand into more areas of our lives, whether its energy from clean sources to power our homes or electric vehicles on our streets, she says.
Almost all of those sources of clean energy need to utilize batteries, which are already being produced in the Southern Tier, she adds.
“The Binghamton area has always been known as the valley of opportunity,” de Souza says. “Clean energy is presenting an opportunity to us.”
At the summit, de Souza hopes she can bring some new insight to those in attendance about what manufacturing in the clean-energy industry is really like.
“People have a perception of manufacturing that needs to change,” she says. It’s not the dirty, grimy job of decades ago — and there are growing opportunities in the field.
She says there are more than 1,000 jobs currently available in the Southern Tier’s clean-energy industry, and that number is only growing. Over the next decade, that figure could grow to more than 10,000 de Souza says.
Ebony Hattoh, associate director of equity and justice at Binghamton University’s New Energy New York workforce-development program, says her organization will be on hand at the Clean Energy Careers Summit and Job Fair to help people interested in clean-energy jobs overcome barriers to that employment.
Those barriers can include things like transportation, childcare, or even preconceived notions. “You don’t have to have a Ph.D. in physics to get into this industry,” Hattoh says.
She hopes people attend the summit and job fair, even if they aren’t looking for a job, to learn more. “Just see what the landscape looks like, so you can be aware,” she says.
For more information or to register to attend the Greater Binghamton Clean Energy Careers Summit and Job Fair, visit greaterbinghamtongreenjobs.org.
OPINION: NYS Parole Board Must Consider Victims Ahead of Criminals
The New York State Board of Parole will be deciding two important matters in the coming weeks, and I want to be clear how fervently the Assembly Minority Conference stands with the families of the victims of these heinous crimes. The two killers, Juan Peinado, who brutally murdered a 12-year-old boy in 1996, and George
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The New York State Board of Parole will be deciding two important matters in the coming weeks, and I want to be clear how fervently the Assembly Minority Conference stands with the families of the victims of these heinous crimes. The two killers, Juan Peinado, who brutally murdered a 12-year-old boy in 1996, and George Acosta, who killed a police officer while out on parole, deserve to be locked up forever — plain and simple.
Peinado, who killed Danny Meyer as he was heading to his all-star baseball game, was already denied parole in 2021 after a massive public-outreach campaign to keep him in prison. Unfortunately, Meyer’s family has to relive the pain of his murder again just two years after having to fight to keep their son’s killer behind bars. I encourage anyone who believes Peinado should stay in prison to sign the recently launched petition by Assemblyman Brian Maher (R,C–Walden).
Additionally, the fact that George Acosta is also up for parole is equally troubling. This is a career criminal who was in prison for killing a 16-year-old, released on parole and then shot three police officers and killed one of them. He has no business being anywhere other than behind bars, and I implore the parole board to take the risk he poses to the public seriously.
To that end, our Assembly Minority Conference has offered a number of legislative solutions aimed at protecting victims and their families. Assemblyman Maher sponsored legislation (A.4041) to ensure those who murder children under 13 years old will receive a mandatory life sentence with no opportunity for parole and I have sponsored legislation (A.5225) to reform the composition of the parole board and require a unanimous determination from the board members before an inmate be released.
Second chances are an important part of our criminal-justice system, and I believe there are many instances where individuals should be presented with an opportunity to make amends. Unfortunately, not everyone deserves such latitude, and in instances where the public is in danger, we must take every possible measure to ensure the most serious offenders are not given the wrong type of second chance — a second chance to take another life. Releasing these individuals is a mistake, and I sincerely hope the board decides to put the families of these victims and the public ahead of criminals.
William (Will) A. Barclay, 54, Republican, is the New York Assembly minority leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses all of Oswego County, as well as parts of Jefferson and Cayuga counties.
OPINION: It’s Not Just a Buzzword: Why Civility Matters in Congress
Given everything that’s been taking place on Capitol Hill, I’d guess you missed the announcement a few months back that the House Civility Caucus has been revived. It would be hard to call this earth-shattering news — but in our current political climate, it’s a notable measure of hope. The House Civility Caucus first came
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Given everything that’s been taking place on Capitol Hill, I’d guess you missed the announcement a few months back that the House Civility Caucus has been revived. It would be hard to call this earth-shattering news — but in our current political climate, it’s a notable measure of hope.
The House Civility Caucus first came into being in 2018, when two members of Congress from Columbus, Ohio — Democrat Joyce Beatty and Republican Steve Stivers — launched the group with the idea that disagreement is inevitable in politics, but being disagreeable about it doesn’t have to be. It helped that the two had been friends for decades, ever since Beatty, then a state representative, confronted Stivers, a banker, about his bank’s practice of charging check-cashing fees for child-support checks. He’d agreed that, as he later told a reporter, “we needed to take responsibility and fix what we had done.” In Congress, the caucus attracted a handful of Democrat-Republican pairs from other states but folded after Stivers left Congress.
This spring, however, Beatty and Stivers’ Republican successor, Mike Carey — the two are also friends — decided it was time to resuscitate the civility effort. In a talk not long afterward, Beatty noted that they have significant political differences. “But we have a secret weapon,” she said. “We actually like each other, and that makes a huge difference. We have a friendship beyond the House floor. We’ve also figured out how to have a friendship on the House floor — which, unfortunately in today’s times, might seem kind of rare.” The Congressional Civility and Respect Caucus, to give it its formal name, has several dozen members — split evenly between Democrats and Republicans, since anyone who wants to be part of it has to find a partner from the other party to join with them.
It might seem a sad commentary on the state of American politics that you need a formal caucus to promote civility, but I prefer to look at the other side of the coin. The fact that the caucus has been able to form and grow is a hopeful sign that even in that most partisan and divided of legislative bodies, the U.S. House, a significant number of politicians want to chart a better way forward.
This matters because civil political debate actually stands at the core of our representative democracy. Our system was constructed as a way to manage disagreement — sometimes heart-felt, impassioned disagreement — without coming to blows or rioting or launching a civil war. People who don’t agree can still weigh issues carefully and, if they’re sincere, find common ground. Our founders did not count on all Americans becoming friends, but they did believe that we could be respectful and civil toward one another, and that by doing so, we could wrestle with and resolve the challenges facing our nation.
And let’s be clear: Incivility is a problem. We don’t send our representatives to Congress or the 50 state capitals to yell at one another or refuse to cooperate with each other. We send them there to get things done, to confront the tough issues our communities, states, and nation face and to hammer out policies that make the lives of ordinary Americans better. In a country as ideologically and demographically diverse as ours, this cannot happen unless people who come from dramatically different points of view figure out how to work together. People who are rude and disagreeable — who play to their followers’ worst instincts, damn the consequences — just get in the way.
We’ve had a lot of that in Washington and elsewhere over the last decade or so, and my sense is that Americans have grown tired of it. So what may be most interesting about this problem is that we don’t have to change any laws or create new regulations in order to address it. It’s as simple as encouraging respectful behavior, one person at a time.
That’s why the Congressional Civility and Respect Caucus is a hopeful sign. The few dozen House members who have joined up so far are like a down payment, a small knot of legislators who know in their bones that there’s a better way and are determined to find it. Here’s hoping their influence grows.
Lee Hamilton, 92, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at the IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south-central Indiana.
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