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SUNY Poly completes steps to transfer nano college back to SUNY Albany
MARCY, N.Y. — SUNY Polytechnic Institute announced on its website it has completed, in cooperation with SUNY Albany and SUNY System Administration, all necessary steps

Boonville woman busted for stealing 77 items from Rome Walmart
ROME, N.Y. — The New York State Police in Sylvan Beach have arrested a Boonville woman for allegedly seeking to walk out of the Rome

Kelberman names chief financial officer
UTICA, N.Y. — Kelberman — a provider of autism services for children, adults, and families in the Mohawk Valley and Central New York — recently

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College is now the 10th member of the Griffiss Institute’s Innovare Alliance as both organizations seek to “foster collaborative talent

Union for Tops Markets workers to use $764 million in ARPA funding for pensions
Employees of Tops Markets are among the more than 19,000 workers of United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local One that will receive a $764

People news: AmeriCU names new manager for Utica financial center
UTICA, N.Y. — AmeriCU Credit Union announced it has appointed Kevin Dzwonkowski as the new financial center manager for the credit union’s Utica location. As
VIEWPOINT: The Mohawk Valley in Motion
The Mohawk Valley region’s economic landscape has undergone a dramatic change that has turned pessimism and cynicism into confidence and progress, with more than $2 billion in public and private investment already committed to revitalizing the area. Several new development initiatives recently announced or started within the last year are adding to the region’s continued
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The Mohawk Valley region’s economic landscape has undergone a dramatic change that has turned pessimism and cynicism into confidence and progress, with more than $2 billion in public and private investment already committed to revitalizing the area.
Several new development initiatives recently announced or started within the last year are adding to the region’s continued economic vitality, which reaffirms the region’s sustained economic momentum.
The Mohawk Valley has moved forward through gut-wrenching economic challenges. Now, the region’s community and overarching economic revitalization continues.
Site Development: Marcy Nanocenter
In 2001, Mohawk Valley EDGE reported on the zoning, and partnerships between local, state, and federal agencies to pre-permit the site and attract the chip fab industry, stating that the industry’s potential to strengthen the area “cannot be understated.” Promises of more than $2 billion of private investment, jobs, and spin-off benefits for future growth and stabilization of property values were set forth. After two decades plus of commitment, these efforts have transformed the Mohawk Valley.
In April 2022, Wolfspeed commenced operations of its state-of-the-art 200 mm SiC Mohawk Valley fab. Now, they are shipping SiC semiconductor products to customers. In 2022, Wolfspeed announced agreements with Lucid Motors, Jaguar Land Rover, and Mercedes-Benz — fueling electric vehicles from race-car drivers to commuters, alike. This work continues. As the industry emerges and expands, Wolfspeed plans to increase its investment at its Mohawk Valley Fab with additional tooling that would maximize production output, enabling the company to meet growing customer demand for 200 mm SiC semiconductors technology. The company anticipates that its total investment in the Mohawk Valley Fab will increase from $1 billion to about $2 billion as it increases production output from Marcy.
This past February, Park Grove Realty secured site plan and SEQRA (State Environmental Quality Review Act) approvals from the Town of Marcy Planning Board for the Tech Barn project. Park Grove intends to build 182 market-rate apartments and 50 townhomes, planning for 40,000 square feet of commercial space and lifestyle amenities on a 33-acre site along the Marcy SUNY Parkway. This year, the New York Upstate Chapter of the American Planning Association recognized Mohawk Valley EDGE and Environmental Design and Research (EDR) with the 2022 Best Practice Award for master planning of Tech Barn. This award, and the overall planning process, highlight how innovative and state-of-the-art planning methods and practices help to create communities of lasting value.
At SUNY Poly, Semikron Danfoss has more than 200 employees at its power module factory and produces products for the automotive industry and other customers. The company views its SUNY Poly production facility as a “key growth center” for its North American operations and is looking at additional expansion opportunities, reinforcing the workforce pipeline and future opportunities for the region.
Catalysts for Investment: Downtown Utica
In Utica, Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) is nearing completion of the state-of-the-art Wynn Hospital that is expected to open this October. The new downtown hospital enhances health-care delivery services in the Mohawk Valley and has been a major catalyst in the revitalization of downtown Utica.
This 10-story, 700,000-square-foot facility has changed downtown Utica’s skyline, with more changes to come. Construction continues at the 1,350-vehicle downtown parking garage next to Wynn Hospital that is slated to open by the middle of the first quarter of 2024. Construction on the 94,000-square-foot physician medical office complex is progressing. It’s a site that will include an ambulatory surgery center, as well as other medical services critical to Wynn Hospital and the region’s health-care services.
At a total cost of $64 million, the Nexus Center opened last December. Nexus has had an immediate economic impact in drawing major tournaments and sporting events that are proving to be a major tourism and entertainment draw for the region that is generating increased sales tax and bed-tax revenue for Oneida County. Earlier this year, Nexus was rebranded as the Utica University Nexus Center. In 2024, The facility will host the IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championship and the World Lacrosse Box Championships.
In the last decade, there has been over $1 billion of public and private investment within a mile radius of Hotel Street, a block of historic buildings that will soon undergo multiple changes, bringing new market-rate apartments and several ground-floor commercial units to the table.
Growing Developments: Shovel-Ready Sites
Advancement continues in key regionally significant industries, in step with ongoing state-based initiatives.
Last year, Gov. Kathy Hochul unveiled the FAST NY Program to increase the inventory of shovel-ready sites that could be marketed to strategic industries of statewide importance, “supercharging” New York state’s economy. Mohawk Valley EDGE is actively seeking to utilize FAST NY funding to advance two key development sites in Oneida County.
In coordination with Oneida County Airport and Economic Development staff, C&S Companies is finalizing the remaining scope and permitting items for 280 acres at the Griffiss International Airport’s “Triangle Parcel.” In addition to potential aeronautical use, the Griffiss Triangle site is well suited to capture supply chain growth resulting from Micron’s mega memory semiconductor project in Clay.
Additionally, EDGE has applied to Empire State Development to advance the shovel-ready status of the remaining acreage at the Marcy Nanocenter Campus. EDGE will work with key partners to relocate electrical infrastructure, develop a supply chain facility that will support the region’s high-tech manufacturing growth, and complete advanced site work at Parcel #2, capable of supporting an additional 1 million square feet of cleanroom space and additional support facilities.
These FAST NY funds will be sought to fund the critical site and infrastructure improvements to bring each site to the market at new heights, furthering economic potential.
Restoring Vibrant Communities
In 2022, Mohawk Valley EDGE secured two EPA grants: one for brownfield assessments and $1 million for a Brownfield Revolving Loan Fund. These EPA grants are enhancing the region’s ability to promote the repurposing of key vacant and underutilized buildings, including properties that have uncertain environmental issues requiring further study and potential environmental remediation. In the village of Oriskany, the former Waterbury Felt Mill site is set amidst an ongoing transition with EDGE and other community partners.
The Mohawk Valley region continues to successfully build vibrant urban centers by pumping life into new buildings. Redevelopment of the Commercial Travelers Building — located at 70 Genesee St., with 32 market-rate apartments, and commercial space — and the former Utica Steam Cotton Building — located at 600 State State St., with 64 market-rate apartments and commercial amenities, including Brooklyn Pickle — are two excellent examples in downtown Utica. Both projects are adding to the allure of downtown Utica as a 24/7 neighborhood.
This community-based positive impact is being noticed. The Mohawk Valley has gained major traction in securing project funding and attracting developer commitments for several key vacant and underutilized properties. Key sites poised for redevelopment include the former Duofold building in the village of Ilion; the Mayro Building at the corner of Genesee Street and Bank Place in Utica; and, a new exterior building façade, roof and, mechanical improvements for the second and third floors of 131 Boston Place in Utica. Also in the works are the repurposing of vacant buildings on Hotel Street in the Lower Bagg’s Square Historic District; demolition of the former Columbus School site in the City of Rome; and selected demolition and repurposing of the former Waterbury Felt Mill site in the village of Oriskany.
Projects & Impacts
In 2022, Mohawk Valley EDGE helped attract nearly $1.3 million in grants and equipment financing for small businesses. The Oneida County Industrial Development Agency (OCIDA) approved $123.8 million in tax benefits for eligible projects, and over the past five years, it has induced and closed on projects with around $1.6 billion in public and private investment.
Annually, Griffiss Business and Technology Park generates about $4.3 million in PILOT payments and property taxes that are distributed pro-rata to the City of Rome, Oneida County, and Rome City School District.
Griffiss Business and Technology Park has emerged as a major catalyst in the economic resurgence of the region’s economy, driven by employers related to the region’s strengths in semiconductors, cybersecurity, and uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS).
The UAS test site continues to grow. Last October, FAA designated and certified the 50-mile (Beyond Visual Line of Site (BVLOS) drone corridor from Griffiss to Syracuse. Last summer, SkyDome, the nation’s largest indoor UAS testing center was dedicated and firmly established New York’s leadership position in the growth and integration of UAS technologies into the nation’s commercial air space. At Air City Lofts, Bonacio Construction, Inc. has built an additional 100 units of market-rate apartments. Kris-Tech Wire has commenced construction of a 75,000-square-foot expansion to its Griffiss-based specialty wire operation.
What’s Next?
The Mohawk Valley region has established an aggressive agenda to attract population additions, new investments, and attract job investments. EDGE’s priorities for 2023 are centered around strategic site development, repurposing key buildings and sites, and leveraging opportunities to attract additional semiconductor, UAS, and advanced manufacturing opportunities to continue the region’s upward economic trajectory.
Key challenges for the region are ensuring opportunities for traditionally underserved populations, strategic partnerships to increase training and workforce development pipelines — including greater emphasis on STEM education and reducing barriers that diminish labor-force participation.
The region’s portfolio of projects and opportunities, coupled with Micron’s mega semiconductor project in Central New York, is creating opportunities for the Mohawk Valley that have not been seen since industry build-up during WWII, or the original conception of the Erie Canal. These opportunities hold the promise of attracting the population and changing the underlying dynamics of the region over the next 10 to 20 years, furthering a future rooted in growth and success. We are looking forward to what comes next.
Steve DiMeo is president of Mohawk Valley EDGE, a not-for-profit corporation dedicated to strengthening and growing the economy of the Mohawk Valley.

Rome Health continues facilities transformation
ROME — Transformation continues to be on the agenda at Rome Health, which will kick off a $30 million project this fall to build four new operating rooms. That comes in the wake of renovating the Rome Health Medical Center last year and the grand opening of a new women’s surgical suite earlier this year.
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ROME — Transformation continues to be on the agenda at Rome Health, which will kick off a $30 million project this fall to build four new operating rooms.
That comes in the wake of renovating the Rome Health Medical Center last year and the grand opening of a new women’s surgical suite earlier this year.
“We’re working through the final stages of the really specific design,” for the new operating rooms, says Rome Health COO Ryan Thompson. “We’re working toward getting a shovel in the ground this year.”
The four new operating rooms will replace ones in use for nearly 60 years and will be larger with all the necessary systems to power current surgical technology, Thompson says. Rome Health received $26 million in state health care facility transformation grant funds for the project.
All the work is part of a continuing quest to provide the best services possible to the community, he says. That even carries over to patient technology with a newly redesigned website that is mobile friendly.
Between the construction projects and Rome Health’s employees, the health-care system remains a robust contributor to the area’s economy, Thompson notes.

“At nearly 1,000 employees, that’s significant workforce generation in the community,” he says. “I like to say that jobs bring more jobs.”
According to a recent economic-impact analysis, Rome Health contributes more than $158 million to the local economy. That includes more than $16 million in tax dollars, according to a Healthcare Association of New York State, Inc., analysis.
The majority of Rome Health’s funding comes from Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance, and each dollar received generates about $1.60 in economic benefit to the community. “Those dollars are really well spent,” Thompson contends.
The various construction projects have created numerous jobs, and the recent state news that the COVID-19 vaccine mandate for employees would no longer be enforced as the state Department of Health works to sunset the regulation means overall employment at Rome Health may increase as well.
“This just helps us open up more opportunity to get good colleagues here at Rome Health,” Thompson says.
Rome Health has been busy reaching out to those employees who left due to the mandate and inviting them to return, he notes. “In health care, every staff member counts.” The organization currently has about 70 job titles open, with some titles offering multiple job openings.
Along with the new medical center and women’s surgical suite, Rome Health also added a community pharmacy in the 31,000-square-foot medical center.
A nonprofit health-care organization, Rome Health serves the greater Rome community with services ranging from primary care to specialty care. It’s an affiliate of St. Joseph’s Health and an affiliated clinical site of New York Medical College.

Danfoss to power all North America facilities with solar energy by 2025
Danfoss North America recently signed a power-purchase agreement with CIG Capital, a U.S.–based project financing firm, to purchase about 75 megawatts (MW) of solar power from a solar farm in Texas, starting in 2025. The initial agreement term is 12 years, allowing Danfoss to fully replace its annual electricity usage in North America with green energy
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Danfoss North America recently signed a power-purchase agreement with CIG Capital, a U.S.–based project financing firm, to purchase about 75 megawatts (MW) of solar power from a solar farm in Texas, starting in 2025.
The initial agreement term is 12 years, allowing Danfoss to fully replace its annual electricity usage in North America with green energy through at least 2037, the firm said in a May 1 announcement on its website.
Danfoss North America said it made the agreement with an eye toward achieving its global decarbonization goals.
Danfoss Silicon Power is located at 330 Technology Drive in Marcy with operations in the Computer Chip Commercialization Center (Quad-C). The Quad-C facility is part of the SUNY Polytechnic Institute’s campus in Marcy.
The new agreement will provide Danfoss with green certificates, signifying that it is supplying the North American electrical grid with the full amount of green electricity needed to power all 24 factories and 36 locations in North America, and will reduce Danfoss’ carbon footprint in the region by 75 percent.
“As part of our ESG goals, Danfoss has committed to achieving carbon neutrality across our global operations by 2030,” Soren Revsbech Dam, head of ESG and Decarbonization, Global Services Real Estate at Danfoss, said in the announcement. ESG is short for environmental, social, and governance.
“This agreement to secure green energy for our North America operations will reduce our global emissions by 21%. This is not only a significant step in our journey to becoming carbon neutral, but it also demonstrates that we are serious about putting sustainability at the heart of our business.”
CIG Capital will be building the 6-square-mile farm in the panhandle region of Texas. Groundbreaking is scheduled for November 2023, with the farm becoming fully operational by the spring of 2025. The solar-farm capacity is projected to be 509 MW of solar power, of which Danfoss will utilize 15 percent, the company said.
The next focus for Danfoss in its decarbonization efforts will be on reducing and reusing energy across its North America locations, employing various Danfoss technologies, such as oil-free, variable-speed compressors and other heating and cooling solutions that support heat recovery and energy efficiency.
As part of the science-based targets initiative (SBTi), Danfoss wants to become carbon neutral in its global operations (scope 1 & 2) by 2030 and says it will reduce its value-chain emissions (scope 3) by 15 percent by 2030. This commitment is included in the targets of Danfoss’ three step-change initiatives on decarbonization, circularity, and diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Danfoss says it has already seen progress in decoupling environmental impact from business growth by delivering 7 percent decrease in scope 1 and 2 emissions while growing 15 percent organically in 2022.
Additionally, the Danfoss headquarters campus site in Denmark became carbon neutral in 2022. The firm reached carbon neutrality through energy-saving projects, utilization of excess heat from processes and data centers, sourcing of green energy, and offsetting residual emissions.

It’s a Utica Thing offers a new vibe with an old Utica feel
UTICA — Charles Digristina has been in the restaurant business for more than 30 years, starting with his first pizzeria that he opened when he was just 19. One pizzeria eventually turned into three, and then in 2014, he opened a food truck. Digristina named the food truck business “It’s a Utica Thing” after an
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UTICA — Charles Digristina has been in the restaurant business for more than 30 years, starting with his first pizzeria that he opened when he was just 19.
One pizzeria eventually turned into three, and then in 2014, he opened a food truck. Digristina named the food truck business “It’s a Utica Thing” after an encounter with a volunteer at a festival in 2013. He gave the volunteer some tomatoes so she could make some sauce. When she wanted to pay, Digristina told her no, just share some sauce with him when it was done.
“That’s what we do in Utica,” he recalls telling her. “It’s a Utica thing.” Digristina’s wife told him to put that slogan on a shirt.
“So, I actually did put it on a shirt, then a hat,” he says. “Then the side of a food truck, and now on a new restaurant.”
That’s how Charlie’s Pizza in North Utica became It’s a Utica Thing Kitchen & Bar, which celebrated its grand opening in June.
“This brand is really important,” Digristina says. “This brand is about [Thruway] exit 31. This brand is about the city of Utica.”
He credits his sons Vincenzo and Charlie with convincing him to reimagine his pizzeria into a full-service restaurant.
Leading up to the remodel, Digristina sold his New Hartford pizzeria to several employees and his Syracuse location to a relative. He closed the North Utica location on New Year’s Eve, and the work began.

“We gutted and emptied the entire restaurant,” Digristina says. Work included a complete overhaul of the kitchen, custom booths, creation of a community area, new tables, and more. “We started at one corner, and we just didn’t stop.”
Digristina worked with Mark Barbado of Marand Builders and Renovators LLC on the project, which cost about $400,000 in total. The project allowed the restaurant to expand back into space it had used before the pandemic, bringing the square footage from 2,400 square feet to nearly 4,000. The restaurant now seats 100 with space for 20 at the bar and employs between 30 and 40 people.
With old pictures of Utica on the walls and a menu that combines Utica favorites with new dishes created by Vincenzo Digristina, the restaurant has an old-school look with a new vibe, Charles Digristina says.
Vincenzo is a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America and spent time training and working in Tuscany. From pizza made from dough kneaded by hand to fresh-made pasta, Vincenzo says he wanted to share those flavors with Utica.
Charles Digristina’s two sons manage the day-to-day running of the restaurant. He has hopes that his third son, Rosario, might eventually join the family business as well.
While his sons run the restaurant, Digristina stays busy running the food truck and catering side of things. The family also bottles and sells a line of sauces under the “It’s a Utica Thing” brand that are available at grocery stores including Hannaford’s, Wegman’s, Tops, and several independent grocers.
After the busy summer food truck and catering season winds down, Digristina hopes to expand hours at the restaurant. Right now it’s open only for dinners, but he hopes to add lunch hours as well.
“I do feel reborn,” Digristina says. “Although I’ve been in the business for over 30 years, this is absolutely a fresh start. The big question is where we are going to go next.”
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.