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People news: BeerBoard hires sales-development executive
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — BeerBoard — a Syracuse–based provider of technology solutions and alcohol management to restaurants, bars, and beer companies — announced it has appointed

MVHS residency program graduates 11 doctors, with five of them staying in the area to work
UTICA, N.Y. — Eleven doctors graduated on June 30 from the St. Elizabeth Family Medicine Residency Program, bringing the total number of family physicians completing the three-year, post-doctoral training program to 327. The program is an affiliate of Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS). Program participants trained and provided care at the St. Elizabeth campus of
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UTICA, N.Y. — Eleven doctors graduated on June 30 from the St. Elizabeth Family Medicine Residency Program, bringing the total number of family physicians completing the three-year, post-doctoral training program to 327. The program is an affiliate of Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS).
Program participants trained and provided care at the St. Elizabeth campus of MVHS, the Sister Rose Vincent Family Medicine Center on Hobart Street, the Women’s Health Center, and at the Faxton and St. Luke’s campuses as affiliates of MVHS, according to Residency Program Director T. Eric Schackow.
Five of this year’s graduates will stay in the area to work, with four of those joining MVHS primary-care practices. Historically, half of the program’s graduates have settled in the upstate region to practice, adding to the primary-care workforce and helping to alleviate the area’s physician shortage.
The graduates are: Kwadwo Ansong, Victor Avila Macias, Jessica S. Baik, Mary Juliana Bapana, Benjamin Flinn, Pete Htwe, Angelina M. Nitto, Priscilla Merli Palomar, Ronald Siregar, Phyu Phyu Thwe, and Sun Koo Yoo.
Macias will work as an inpatient hospitalist for MVHS, Bapana will work in the MVHS Washington Mills Medical Office, Htwe will work in the MVHS East Utica Medical Office, and Thwe will practice primary care at MVHS Medical Group’s North Utica office. Meanwhile, Nitto will work in outpatient and school-based health in Oneonta.
A graduation ceremony and dinner were held at Hart’s Hill Inn in Whitesboro and several awards were presented.
The St. Elizabeth Family Medicine Residency Program started in 1975, is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and by the American Osteopathic Association. It is affiliated with SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse; University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine in Biddeford, Maine; and Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine in Erie, Pennsylvania.

Schuyler Health Foundation names two new board members, three officers
MONTOUR FALLS, N.Y. — The Schuyler Health Foundation recently welcomed new board members, Dr. Joseph Mannino and Kathie Notarfonzo. Dr. Mannino recently retired from orthopedics medicine. He cared for Cayuga Health patients for more than 20 years. During his tenure, he took a strategic role in the early affiliation process as he cared for patients
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MONTOUR FALLS, N.Y. — The Schuyler Health Foundation recently welcomed new board members, Dr. Joseph Mannino and Kathie Notarfonzo.
Dr. Mannino recently retired from orthopedics medicine. He cared for Cayuga Health patients for more than 20 years. During his tenure, he took a strategic role in the early affiliation process as he cared for patients at Schuyler Hospital, as well as Cayuga Medical Center. Born and raised in Brooklyn and Queens, Mannino is a member of the Trumansburg community. He recently demonstrated his life-long commitment to service by signing up for the Army Reserve Corps.

Notarfonzo has been in the Watkins Glen area since the age of 11 and is a local business owner of Inner Peace Floats and Exercise Enterprise. Working for the NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation for 37 years, she is currently assistant regional director. Notarfonzo also serves on the Advisory Council for Catholic Charities, volunteers for M.R. Hess Homeworks, and participates in many local community fundraisers.
The Schuyler Health Foundation also appointed the following board officers: Brenda Warren-Fitch, as chair; Tom Phillips, as vice-chair; and Jerry Mickelson, as secretary/treasurer.
The Schuyler Health Foundation says its mission is to inspire philanthropy in its communities to support the highest quality and equitable health-care services at Schuyler Hospital and Seneca View Skilled Nursing Facility.
Schuyler Hospital, part of Ithaca–based Cayuga Health, is a 16-bed critical access hospital, with a 120-bed skilled nursing facility attached. Schuyler Hospital’s main campus — overlooking Seneca Lake — is located in Montour Falls.
For more than 100 years, Schuyler Hospital has been the primary health-care provider in and around Schuyler County. It has evolved over the years into a network of providers, programs, and services that reaches throughout Schuyler County and into neighboring counties to meet the health-care needs of a population of over 32,000 residents.

CNY Community Foundation names two new board members
SYRACUSE — The Central New York Community Foundation board of directors recently elected two new board members. Warren Hilton, president of Onondaga Community College (OCC), and Leyla Z. Morgillo, a financial planner at Madison Financial Planning Group, were both appointed to serve their first three-year term. Before becoming OCC president, Hilton served as the VP
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SYRACUSE — The Central New York Community Foundation board of directors recently elected two new board members.
Warren Hilton, president of Onondaga Community College (OCC), and Leyla Z. Morgillo, a financial planner at Madison Financial Planning Group, were both appointed to serve their first three-year term.
Before becoming OCC president, Hilton served as the VP of enrollment management and student affairs at Kutztown University. He earned his doctorate degree in education from Drexel University, a master’s degree in student affairs in higher education and a bachelor’s degree in computer science from Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Hilton is the immediate past board chair of the HealthSpark Foundation, and previously served on the board of the Lehigh Valley Red Cross and as a member of the Minsi Trail Boy Scouts Urban Scouting initiative.

Morgillo has more than 15 years of experience in the financial-services industry. She received bachelor’s degrees in economics and international relations from Syracuse University. Morgillo holds the certified financial planner (CFP) certification and is treasurer of the Financial Planning Association of Central New York, having recently finished her term as president.
The CNY Community Foundation is a public charity founded in 1927. It receives contributions from donors, manages them to grow over time, and then distributes funding to address the region’s greatest needs. The foundation says it has invested more than
$270 million in community projects that benefit Central New York.
New York corn planted area jumps 10 percent in 2023
New York farms planted corn for all purposes on an estimated 1.13 million acres this year, up 10 percent from the 2022 planted area of 1.03 million acres, according to the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) New York field office. The 2023 total is the highest in a decade. Empire State growers expect to
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New York farms planted corn for all purposes on an estimated 1.13 million acres this year, up 10 percent from the 2022 planted area of 1.03 million acres, according to the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) New York field office. The 2023 total is the highest in a decade.
Empire State growers expect to harvest 650,000 acres for corn for grain in 2023, up 13 percent from 575,000 acres last year.
This year’s U.S. corn planted area for all purposes is estimated at 94.1 million acres, up 6.2 percent from 88.6 million acres in 2022, according to the USDA. Growers expect to harvest 86.3 million acres for corn for grain in 2023, up 9 percent from 79.2 million acres a year ago.

WCNY to use nearly $500K state grant for film industry workforce development
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The WCNY Entertainment Academy is coming this fall with the goal of workforce development for the film industry. WCNY in Syracuse will use a state grant of nearly $500,000 for the effort. The funding comes from the state’s grant program targeting entertainment workforce diversity, Empire State Development (ESD) said in a news
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The WCNY Entertainment Academy is coming this fall with the goal of workforce development for the film industry.
WCNY in Syracuse will use a state grant of nearly $500,000 for the effort. The funding comes from the state’s grant program targeting entertainment workforce diversity, Empire State Development (ESD) said in a news release about the grant funding.
The academy will train the next generation of television and film-production engineers, electricians, set designers, sound mixers, and camera operators to help support the growing entertainment industry in Central New York, ESD said.
To apply for the WCNY Entertainment Academy, visit WCNY.org/academy.
WCNY is a public-communications organization located at 415 W. Fayette St. in Syracuse.
The WCNY Entertainment Academy, which is scheduled to open this fall, will train a diverse group of people ages 25 to 39 in one of three annual 14-week training sessions with about 16 trainees per session, ESD said.
The curriculum will be taught by local union representatives, experienced staff at WCNY, and adjunct faculty members and guest lecturers from across the entertainment industry.
Graduates will earn certifications and will develop relationships that may lead to union membership and job placements.
They will also have the chance to gain professional and life skills in areas focused on television and film-production roles.
I.A.T.S.E. Local 52 will collaborate with WCNY to provide instructors for the program and offer a “real-world baseline of knowledge” and specific skills in grip, electric, video, sound, and shopcraft, which are necessary for graduates to be “job-ready” upon completion.
“This initiative fits the goals we have for WCNY to provide education, create economic opportunity, and enhance quality of life,” Mitch Gelman, president and CEO of WCNY, said in the ESD release. “The Academy builds on the education services WCNY offers and will give us the opportunity to expand our commitment to help further workforce development.”
The funding award comes from the “first-in-the-nation” grant program targeting entertainment workforce diversity, ESD said. The program helps pay for job training and workforce development across the state’s entertainment industry.
It is financed by a percentage from the state’s film tax-credit program.
The program is designed to “further diversify” the industry by targeting residents of economically distressed areas of the state and “creating a pathway” to permanent jobs in film and television production, ESD said. The grant will complement more than $300,000 that WCNY will contribute to launching the Entertainment Academy, it added.

OCC to use $50K Amazon donation to support its student-success coaches
ONONDAGA — Onondaga Community College (OCC) will use an Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) donation of $50,000 to support student-success coaches at the college. The Seattle, Washington–based e-commerce giant operates a massive fulfillment center at 7211 Morgan Road in Clay and a delivery station at 6834 Kirkville Road in DeWitt. In October 2022, Amazon chose OCC to
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ONONDAGA — Onondaga Community College (OCC) will use an Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) donation of $50,000 to support student-success coaches at the college.
The Seattle, Washington–based e-commerce giant operates a massive fulfillment center at 7211 Morgan Road in Clay and a delivery station at 6834 Kirkville Road in DeWitt.
In October 2022, Amazon chose OCC to be its partner in the Career Choice program. Career Choice provides Amazon’s hourly employees the opportunity to take classes at OCC at Amazon’s expense, the school said. Employees can focus on the academic programs of their choosing and learn new skills for career success at Amazon or elsewhere.
During the spring 2023 semester nearly two dozen Amazon employees took advantage of Career Choice, OCC noted.
“We are grateful to Amazon for their partnership with us at Onondaga Community College. From the Career Choice program, which is already changing lives, to today’s support of our Student Success Coaches, Amazon is truly making a difference,” Warren Hilton, president of OCC, said in a release. “Their transformational support is paying dividends today and will continue to do so in the future.”
The responsibilities of student-success coaches include monitoring student academic progress and providing “proactive and just-in-time” guidance and support.
They also include providing a “sense of community” by organizing educational and social events for students in their respective school; guiding students through the higher-education landscape and managing competing demands from school, family, and work; and collaborating with colleagues and departments across the institution to provide “holistic support and meet the unique needs of individual students.”
“We know that OCC’s Student Success Coaches program is a critical resource for supporting students as they achieve their education goals,” Carley Graham Garcia, Amazon’s head of community affairs in New York, said “It’s also a great way to support Amazonians who are taking advantage of Career Choice and all the benefits it has to offer them and other employer-sponsored students.”

Stevens named construction president at VIP Structures
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — After serving in the role on an interim basis since November 2021, Christine Stevens was recently formally promoted to president of construction at VIP Structures. The role is a natural evolution for her, Stevens says. She joined VIP just over seven years ago after an eight-year career working for a real-estate developer.
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — After serving in the role on an interim basis since November 2021, Christine Stevens was recently formally promoted to president of construction at VIP Structures.
The role is a natural evolution for her, Stevens says. She joined VIP just over seven years ago after an eight-year career working for a real-estate developer. At that job, Stevens was well versed in the customer side of capital projects and gained experience working with the real estate, construction, and design sides of those projects.
“I really enjoyed the way all those things came together,” she says.
When she started at VIP, Stevens worked in construction leading projects and then spent several years on the development team before taking over as the interim general manager of construction last fall.
“I had earned a reputation for being a good person to have on a team,” she says when asked what set her apart for the role.
As president of construction, she works to turn clients’ visions into reality while also establishing schedules, managing budgets, and allocating resources, along with helping clients find and obtain economic-development incentives.
“Christine’s unwavering dedication to fostering an efficient and productive client and team experience is a key component of her success,” VIP Structures CEO Meg Tidd said in a release announcing Stevens’ promotion. “From the initial vision to the final delivery, her attention to detail ensures every moving part aligns perfectly.”
During her interim tenure, company officials credit Stevens for strengthening financial performance, operations, and morale; retaining and recruiting staff; and serving as a role model for client relations and teamwork.
“We take tremendous pride on those relationships we develop with clients,” Stevens says.
Through her years at VIP, Stevens has led several of the company’s largest and most-complex projects including Cryomech’s high-tech manufacturing facility in DeWitt and the redevelopment of the former Post-Standard building in downtown Syracuse.
The Cryomech project, along with the Food Bank of CNY warehouse renovation, and Kris-Tech Wire new manufacturing facility designed and built by VIP are all repeat customers, she notes. “We’re really proud to be doing work for repeat clients,” she says. In a market where clients could choose any construction company, it means something when they return to VIP for the next project.
“I just feel really fortunate to be here at this time when we’re poised for such growth,” she adds.
Stevens holds a master’s degree in international relations and economics from Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and a bachelor’s degree in political science from Fordham University. Prior to her jobs in commercial real estate and joining VIP, Stevens spent 15 years working in international development and living overseas.
Founded in 1975, VIP is an integrated design-build company that offers architecture, engineering, construction, and development services. VIP employs about 130 people companywide.

Syracuse University Art Museum’s new leader is coming home
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The next executive director and chief curator of the Syracuse University Art Museum is returning to her home area. Maika Pollack — an art historian, critic, and curator — will begin her new duties this fall. Pollack will assume the duties that Vanja Malloy previously held. Malloy who had served as director
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The next executive director and chief curator of the Syracuse University Art Museum is returning to her home area.
Maika Pollack — an art historian, critic, and curator — will begin her new duties this fall.
Pollack will assume the duties that Vanja Malloy previously held. Malloy who had served as director and chief curator since August 2019, accepted a position at the University of Chicago last September, per a Syracuse University news release at the time. Emily Dittman has been serving as interim director and Melissa Yuen as interim chief curator since last Sept. 23, the university said in the release.
“Maika Pollack brings the talent and vision to support and expand the important role that Syracuse University Art Museum plays in campus life and in the greater Syracuse community,” Gretchen Ritter, Syracuse University’s vice chancellor, provost and chief academic officer, said in a statement. “I look forward to working with her and watching the museum flourish under her leadership.”
Pollack, who grew up in Central New York, comes to Syracuse University from the University of at Manoa in Honolulu. In Honolulu, she serves as the director and chief curator at John Young Museum of Art and University Galleries.
Pollack said she is looking forward to joining the Syracuse University community and returning to her home area.
“I am honored to take this role,” Pollack said. “Syracuse University has a long history of graduates who are enormously influential in the arts, from Clement Greenberg and Sol LeWitt to LaToya Ruby Frazier. I’m excited to help make this unique history more visible through exhibitions and publications, and to work with the museum’s talented staff and leadership.”
In her new role, Pollack will report to Marcelle Haddix, associate provost for strategic initiatives. Haddix’s portfolio includes, among other things, all university-wide arts and humanities affiliates and programs.
Pollack’s background
At the University of Hawai’i at Manoa in Honolulu, Pollack established a founding endowment of nearly $500,000, created an imprint with nationally reviewed publications and curated shows with such artists as Ken Okiishi, Tadashi Sato, Stephanie Syjuco, Hadi Fallahpisheh, David Salle and Tetsuo Ochikubo and others, Syracuse said.
She expanded diversity in programming and put together exhibitions lauded in local and national media, resulting in an attendance of almost 40,000 unique visitors in 2022-2023. She also oversaw the creation of a scholarly study room, the rehousing of the museum’s permanent collection, the transition to an updated collections management system and renovations to improve facilities.
Prior to Honolulu, Pollack was co-founder and director of Southfirst, a contemporary art gallery in Brooklyn that presented experimental exhibitions for almost two decades, where her curated shows were reviewed by major publications.
Previously, Pollack worked as the curatorial assistant to the chief curator at PS1 Contemporary Art Center in Queens, where in 2000 she was part of the original curatorial team for the highly popular “Warm Up” summer performance series. Additionally, she founded the imprint Object Relations.
Her writing on contemporary art and culture has been widely published. She was the museum exhibition critic for the New York Observer from 2011-2015, Syracuse University noted.
Pollack earned Ph.D. and master’s degrees in the history of art and architecture at Princeton University and a bachelor’s degree in art history and social studies at Harvard University.
She has taught art history and curatorial studies at Sarah Lawrence College, Pratt University, New York University, the University of Hawai’i at Manoa and Princeton. Her research focuses on the history of photography, late 19th-century European art, feminist art, American art of the 1960s and 70s, contemporary art and postcolonial studies.

Daughter for Hire seeks to start franchising
CLINTON, N.Y. — Since it launched more than a decade ago, the companion-care business Daughter for Hire has moved into a local office in Clinton, opened an Albany–area location in Latham, and is now looking ahead to franchising its services. “I am loving what we do,” says Kathleen Rutishauser, who started the business in 2012.
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CLINTON, N.Y. — Since it launched more than a decade ago, the companion-care business Daughter for Hire has moved into a local office in Clinton, opened an Albany–area location in Latham, and is now looking ahead to franchising its services.
“I am loving what we do,” says Kathleen Rutishauser, who started the business in 2012. “We’ve got good news stories every day that we hear from our clients, our caregivers, family members of our clients. It’s good work.”
Rutishauser spoke with CNYBJ from Clinton on June 23. She remains co-owner of Daughter for Hire with Denise Flihan and they’ve co-owned the business since 2014.
The company’s mission, values, and culture have helped it to not only remain in business but also to continue to successfully grow throughout the Albany area and in the Mohawk Valley, Flihan told CNYBJ in a July 13 email message.
“We believe in our mission and we live it every day. We truly believe that our clients are no different than our own families and we want to make sure that we are doing all that we can to help them age with dignity,” Flihan said.
Daughter for Hire has between 70 and 75 employees, including office staff and part-time care companions, as they’re called. The business is serving between 75 and 100 clients in the Mohawk Valley, as of June 23. It has an estimated total of about 200 between both regions, according to Rutishauser.
Franchising
Rutishauser and Flihan started thinking about franchising in the fall of 2022, Rutishauser tells CNYBJ.
“We had been discussing it for so long. We decided the time is right … for us to kick off 2023 with franchising,” she says.
They signed an agreement with an Atlanta firm, Franchise Marketing Systems (FMS), in late December and in early January started working on all the paperwork necessary to file with New York State to sell franchises throughout the nation.
“Because we feel … what we do is different from what a lot of companies out there do that are also companion-care services,” she says. “And we feel as though we can replicate what we do because there’s such a need.”
Flihan says she sees a big market opportunity because the U.S. Census Bureau projects the number of Americans aged 65 and older to nearly double from 52 million in 2018 to 83.9 million in 2050. By 2030, when all baby boomers will be age 65 or older, seniors will account for about 21 percent of the U.S. population.
“Seniors are choosing to stay in their homes for as long as possible. As the number of older Americans increases, so does the need for resources to help them age with dignity. This leads to a rise in the demand for in-home care as seniors look to age in place,” Flihan says. “Companion care services, like the services Daughter for Hire provides, will help support the demand to age in place.”
The company is working with FMS for all of the marketing. The process will include a website that is separate from the Daughter for Hire webpage that provides information on buying a franchise, including costs and other details.
The marketing process is still to come, but she says the company gets occasional inquiries wondering about providing a similar services in areas outside the Mohawk Valley.
“Probably over the last five years, we’ve been asked at least a few times a year,” Rutishauser notes.
Services provided
Daughter for Hire falls under the category of companion care, which includes non-medical care and non-personal care.
“We are not able to do anything medical at all … giving drugs, doing any kind of an injection, helping with a catheter, anything like that … In terms of non-personal, it means we don’t do bathing and toileting,” says Rutishauser
As care companions (renamed from care givers which Rutishauser believes has a “clinical tone to it.”) they go into clients’ homes 24-7, and they can handle activities that include making a meal, grocery shopping, light housekeeping, assisting clients around their home, and planting flowers.
Care companions can also take clients to medical appointment. They’ll take notes during the appointment so they can share details both in writing and verbally with the client’s family, if need be.
“We’ve actually got a portal that backs up everything that we do in case a client or a client’s family wanted to know — how did the visit go today,” says Rutishauser.
Daughter for Hire accepts private pay, long-term care insurance (a small percentage of clients), or through a grant, such as through the Alzheimer’s Association administered through the Oneida County Office for the Aging.
Latham office
Daughter for Hire opened a second office in Latham in 2016.
Rutishauser says she had been involved in the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Emerging Leaders program. During her time with the program, she credited the assistance of John Liddy and Dan Rickman who reviewed the business to make sure Rutishauser was operating it the proper way.
“I’ve always felt like we run a good business but that gave us additional insight. The end results of being in that program is that you need to come up with a business plan for the next five years.”
The plan included expansion. Rutishauser grew up in the Capital Region, so expanding there was a “no brainer” for the business.
The Latham office has a director and an office administrator, as well as 35 companion-care givers working from the office.
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