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New Upstate Caring Partners name better reflects agency’s work and mission
UTICA — Upstate Caring Partners (UCP) has gone through several changes in recent years, from a change in leadership to its change to the Upstate Caring Partners name earlier this year. The new name reflects the growing role the organization plays in caring for the community it serves. The agency began in 1950, started by […]
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UTICA — Upstate Caring Partners (UCP) has gone through several changes in recent years, from a change in leadership to its change to the Upstate Caring Partners name earlier this year. The new name reflects the growing role the organization plays in caring for the community it serves.
The agency began in 1950, started by a group of grandparents and parents whose children had cerebral palsy. Then known as United Cerebral Palsy, the organization initially served seven children from the basement of Kernan Elementary School in Utica. Around 2010, the agency changed its name to Upstate Cerebral Palsy. Louis Tehan joined the organization in 1979 and led as its CEO until he retired in 2018.
Today, the nonprofit’s scope goes well beyond just serving those with cerebral palsy. UCP says it is now a leader in special education, residential and community services, as well as a provider of behavioral-health services to people in the Mohawk Valley and beyond.
“Our name had become a misnomer,” UCP Executive Director Geno DeCondo says. The agency’s services have grown and diversified so much that it was a disservice to have cerebral palsy in the name. The former name ignored the services UCP provides in the areas of substance-abuse and mental-health treatment, as well as its work with autism patients. In fact, he says, autism is now the leading diagnosis the agency sees.
That’s why the nonprofit started off this year with the new name. “The caring partners piece really resonated with us as it’s really what we see our role as,” DeCondo says.
UCP is also changing more than just its name, he notes. It’s working hard on implementing a new clinical model in its educational, residential, and community programs in an effort to achieve better outcomes for the people it serves.
“We went out and consulted with some of what we consider the best experts in the field,” DeCondo says, and developed a model that works to understand physical health and how it impacts behavioral health.
Previously, a lot of time was spent managing behavior and just trying to get through the behavior, he says. “We said, ‘There’s got to be more here.’”
Under the new model, understanding physical-health factors that lead to behavioral-health issues has made a huge difference. For many of UCP’s clients, things such as an inability to communicate or chronic pain influence behavior. Mitigating those factors often results in a rapid improvement in behavior, and that’s where the magic happens, DeCondo says. “This puts people in a position where they can build skills and learn,” he adds.
The change has had such positive results that UCP hired a doctorate-level researcher to collect and share data with other organizations to help them.
The new model has also attracted some top-notch talent to UCP, which has gone from having just one or two behavioral analysts to now boasting about 20.
UCP is also expanding and improving its behavioral-health model, primarily through its new Giotto Center Community Health and Behavioral Services facility. The agency celebrated the grand opening in May.
The new center is the culmination of three years of work, says Jenni Barlow-Gagnon, EVP of behavioral health services at UCP. Previously, services were provided at three separate locations, which created barriers for those seeking help.
The new 17,000-square-foot space brings behavioral services together under one roof at 1002 Oswego St. in Utica. Not only is the new location conveniently located along public transit routes, but it’s also right next door to Upstate Family Health Center, a longtime partner of UCP, to provide primary and pharmacy care.
UCP provides a wide array of additional services including early intervention, pre-school, the Tradewinds Education Center for students ages 5 to 21 with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities, residential programs for those unable to live at home, respite/self-direction/community/day habilitation programs to provide relief to caregivers, employment/vocational services, and the Technology Related Assistance for Individuals with Disabilities assistive-technology program.
With an annual budget of nearly $110 million, Upstate Caring Partners operates 74 locations and serves more than 7,000 individuals annually with a staff of more than 1,600 employees.
VIEWPOINT: Changing the narrative on manufacturing jobs
It’s key to developing the next generation of manufacturing workers I recently asked a roomful of eighth graders, “Close your eyes and picture yourself walking down a street. You come across a manufacturing plant. What do you see?” They imagined broken sidewalks, weeds, tall fences, and ugly brick buildings emitting thick, black smoke. Their responses
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It’s key to developing the next generation of manufacturing workers
I recently asked a roomful of eighth graders, “Close your eyes and picture yourself walking down a street. You come across a manufacturing plant. What do you see?”
They imagined broken sidewalks, weeds, tall fences, and ugly brick buildings emitting thick, black smoke. Their responses were familiar — I’d heard them before in other classrooms. They were repeating negative stereotypes that have dominated the storyline about manufacturing jobs for decades.
This representation couldn’t be further from the truth. But its long-term impact on recruitment is very real. It’s time to change the narrative.
There’s a major disconnect between students’ perceptions and the reality of advanced manufacturing in New York state. We should open young people’s eyes to industries such as microelectronics and semiconductors, whose workers are in brand new, state-of-the-art facilities with multimillion-dollar equipment. It’s a high-tech, fast-moving environment with well-paying jobs.
Many of these skilled jobs are going unfilled, contributing to a workforce shortage that, if unaddressed, could hamper New York state’s ability to take advantage of increasing demand for advanced manufacturing production.
At the Advanced Institute for Manufacturing (AIM) — the Mohawk Valley region’s center for the New York Manufacturing Extension Partnership working with Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC) — we hear these concerns frequently. Across the board, small- to mid-sized enterprises in our geographic footprint struggle to fill open positions as baby boomers retire and the next generations of talented men and women overlook the manufacturing sector.
Addressing these labor shortages means pushing back against misperceptions, showcasing start-of-the-art facilities, and demonstrating that advanced manufacturing is an industry suited to build an interesting and stimulating career.
At AIM and MVCC, we manage two programs for companies to help them build their workforce: the SUNY Apprenticeship Program (SAP) and the New York College Apprenticeship Network (NYCAN). Both involve an earn-and-learn model, where companies give their employees flexibility both to work and attend related instruction at local community colleges. The program, which covers tuition costs, allows companies to fill high-skill and high-demand positions while offering new employees a path to earning those advanced qualifications.
Along with cultivating the talent already within a company’s ranks, the apprenticeship programs serve as a recruitment tool for new hires. Younger generations want to work someplace where they feel valued. They want to feel like they’re making an impact by contributing to their organization. Formal participation in apprenticeship programs demonstrates to potential workers a company’s commitment to employee growth and wellbeing — attributes that attract Gen Z applicants.
But formal apprenticeship programs are just one piece of the puzzle. Manufacturers that have successfully addressed workforce issues employ an ongoing, multi-layered approach. In addition to apprenticeships, they connect with community colleges, high schools, and BOCES programs. They participate in school visits known as “Manufacturing Days” and attend career fairs, speaking directly to students to change their perspectives on career opportunities available in advanced manufacturing.
They connect with regional New York Manufacturing Extension Partnership centers, like AIM, which are teaming with experts available to help guide and support small to mid-sized manufacturing companies.
In other words, these employers are showing young people what manufacturing in New York state is all about — exposing them to facilities and careers that capture the imagination. To hear it from someone like me, in a classroom, is one thing; to experience it is another.
It takes time to change perceptions, but companies investing in all the pieces — from SUNY Apprenticeship Programs to getting in front of the next generation of employees — will help manufacturing write a new story, one that is more reflective of the advanced nature of the work and more enticing to a younger workforce.
Cory Albrecht is the director of the Advanced Institute for Manufacturing (AIM) at Mohawk Valley Community College.

Utica Public Library plans exterior improvements
UTICA — After investing almost $1 million into the interior of the building, the Utica Public Library is now turning its sights toward sprucing up the outside of the building that opened in 1904. The library will use a combination of $101,900 in state Downtown Revitalization Initiative funding, plus a $22,300 Community Development Block Grant
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UTICA — After investing almost $1 million into the interior of the building, the Utica Public Library is now turning its sights toward sprucing up the outside of the building that opened in 1904.
The library will use a combination of $101,900 in state Downtown Revitalization Initiative funding, plus a $22,300 Community Development Block Grant to spruce up the front of the library, which faces Genesee Street.
“We’re replacing a semi-arch walkway that leads to the front of the building,” says Chris Sagaas, library director. Several bluestone pillars will also receive some work. “We anticipate this will happen in late summer or fall,” he adds.
The Utica Public Library, along with Munson and the Thea Bowman House, serves as a quality-of-life anchor along Utica’s Genesee Street, Sagaas says, and the goal for the area is to improve quality of life, make it more walkable, and improve traffic conditions for safety.
“This is one step in what we hope to be a continuing revitalization and reinvestment in the area,” he says of all the work the library has planned.

Beyond fixing up the walkway and pillars, the library is also preparing to oversee the community garden space it offers on its one-plus-acre campus
“We expect we’ll be jumping further into that as August approaches,” Sagaas says of the garden space. The library is working to coordinate various volunteers from colleges or community organizations to help “remodel” the space with new garden beds.
In September, the Utica Public Library will keep to a garden theme as it hosts the District V of the Federated Garden Clubs of New York State annual flower show. This is the third time hosting for the library, and it’s just one of many events and activities the library offers throughout the year.
Today’s library is about so much more than checking out a book to read, Sagaas notes. The library serves as an important resource for many, especially those who don’t have reliable access to the internet at home due to financial constraints or lack of availability.
For those who do have technology available, the library is continually growing its collection of e-content, he adds. “Fifty percent of our materials budget goes to e-content now,” Sagaas says. That includes access to things like the New York Times, a comics database, and even Wi-Fi expanders to boost the internet range into the surrounding neighborhood.
The Utica Public Library is also working more closely with organizations like the Greater Utica Chamber of Commerce, Sagaas says. The library’s goal is to work with local vendors whenever it can, especially since there is state construction funding for libraries to use with local contractors and businesses. That makes libraries drivers of the local economy, he adds.
“We support local as much as possible,” Sagaas says. As part of its interior upgrades, the library purchased two desks from Utica company Hale Manufacturing for a cost of about $40,000.
The Utica Public Library is working with Utica costume and puppet company, Geppetto Studios, Inc., along with the Players of Utica’s local actors and storytellers, to host Professor Lalli’s Library of Curiosities. The library received $5,000 in funding from CNY Art’s community regrants program for the event.
The walk-through scary experience, geared toward adults, is just another way the library adds to the area’s entertainment and quality of life, Sagaas says.
“More people are coming back to use us,” he says, so it’s important the library offers something for everybody.
AmeriCU appoints small-business relationship manager for Mohawk Valley region
ROME, N.Y. — AmeriCU Credit Union has created a new role of small business-relationship manager of the Mohawk Valley to help support the growth and success of local small businesses and has promoted Michael Cook to fill the role. Cook will provide tailored guidance and assistance to help businesses achieve their financial goals. AmeriCU contends
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ROME, N.Y. — AmeriCU Credit Union has created a new role of small business-relationship manager of the Mohawk Valley to help support the growth and success of local small businesses and has promoted Michael Cook to fill the role.
Cook will provide tailored guidance and assistance to help businesses achieve their financial goals. AmeriCU contends that the new position will foster growth, sustainability, and success for the Mohawk Valley.
Cook brings more than 23 years of financial experience to the role, including 15 years as manager of AmeriCU’s Herkimer financial center.
“I am excited about establishing connections with local small businesses,” Cook said in a release. “Throughout the last 15 years, I have provided assistance to our Herkimer members, and now I am eager to extend the same support to our business members.”
Cook received an associate degree in business from Herkimer County Community College.
Rome–based AmeriCU Credit Union is a member-owned, nonprofit financial institution with total assets of $2.7 billion. It serves more than 160,000 members with 20 locations around central and northern New York.

Micron buys Clay property to provide on-site employee daycare
CLAY, N.Y. — Micron Technology Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) on Wednesday said it bought a parcel of land on Caughdenoy Road in the town of Clay

Syracuse University selects new dean of Falk College
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse University has selected the next dean of the David B. Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics. The university describes Jeremy

UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Health System’s (MVHS) St. Elizabeth Medical Campus is now home to a new daVinci XI robot, at least for now.

Syracuse, Rochester–based firms partner to acquire Great Northern Mall property
HLC and Conifer Realty bought the property for about $9 million, according to Hart. The acquisition closed on July 28, Lara Schwager, executive vice president

State awards REDC capital funding and tax credits for shovel-ready projects
The governor highlighted several projects from this round of funding including: Lowville Producers Dairy Cooperative, Inc., which received a $1.3 million ESD grant and a

ConnextCare to use $40K Delta Dental grant for equipment upgrades
ConnextCare provides health-care services to northern Oswego County. Delta Dental Community Care Foundation is the philanthropic arm of Delta Dental of California. The funding —
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