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Finger Lakes Health’s affiliation with URMC begins Aug. 1
GENEVA — Finger Lakes Health (FLH) will officially join the health system led by the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) on Aug.1. Officials of both institutions announced the affiliation during a July 6 news conference in Geneva. The affiliation seeks to “maintain and expand access to high-quality health services close to home” in the […]
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GENEVA — Finger Lakes Health (FLH) will officially join the health system led by the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) on Aug.1.
Officials of both institutions announced the affiliation during a July 6 news conference in Geneva.
The affiliation seeks to “maintain and expand access to high-quality health services close to home” in the communities of eastern Ontario, Seneca, Yates, and Wayne counties served by Finger Lakes Health. It follows a recently signed agreement to collaborate with New York State Attorney General Letitia James to ensure the affiliation meets the health-care needs of Finger Lakes residents, FLH said.
“Affiliation ensures that we can continue to provide vital services for all our patients and focus on expanding their health care choices in the years to come,” Dr. Jose Acevedo, president and CEO of Finger Lakes Health, said. “We are proud to join the University of Rochester Medical Center, a center of research and patient care with a reputation for exceptional innovation, quality, and safety.”
Acevedo will continue overseeing all administrative operations and patient services provided by the new affiliate, which will be known as UR Medicine Finger Lakes Health.
Acevedo noted the advantages of joining a health system that has built “meaningful, productive” affiliations with other rural hospitals in upstate New York at a time when rural hospitals in other parts of the country are “financially fragile and at risk of closure.”
“This connection to one of the nation’s leading academic medical centers will build upon established clinical partnerships, increase access to specialty care, and enhance our ability to serve our communities for generations to come,” Acevedo noted.
About FLH
Finger Lakes Health currently employs about 1,350 doctors, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, and staff members who will join more than 27,000 faculty and staff members employed by URMC and its UR Medicine affiliates.
As a new affiliate, FLH adds two inpatient hospitals — Geneva General in Geneva and Soldiers & Sailors Memorial in Penn Yan — along with four long-term care facilities and 13 physician practices.
UR Medicine, the health system led by URMC, already includes Strong Memorial and Highland Hospitals in Rochester; Thompson Health in Canandaigua; Noyes Health in Dansville; Jones Memorial Hospital in Wellsville; and St. James Hospital in Hornell, as well as nursing homes, senior-housing facilities, home health providers, and physician groups.
Geneva General Hospital and Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Hospital in Penn Yan will retain local governance by community boards, with three URMC representatives joining the Finger Lakes Health board of directors and three FLH representatives joining the URMC board.
Moving forward
The affiliation will now proceed after several years of planning and following anti-trust investigations by the Federal Trade Commission and New York State Attorney General’s office.
The systems provided “extensive” documents and data demonstrating “substantial benefits” to patients and communities served by other rural hospitals after they joined UR Medicine, and showing that the same will be true for Finger Lakes Health. The parties will develop a detailed plan for maintaining and expanding patient services in the Finger Lakes Health service area, reporting progress to the attorney general annually for five years.
“We thank Attorney General James for her support in making this affiliation happen,” Dr. Mark Taubman, CEO of the University of Rochester Medical Center, said. “We are also grateful to [U.S] Senator Chuck Schumer and Congressman Joe Morelle, who expressed strong support for the affiliation to federal and state regulators.”
Expanding on existing collaborations
Taubman noted that URMC and its physicians already collaborate with Finger Lakes Health to provide cardiology, stroke care, cancer treatment, ophthalmology, otolaryngology, urology and vascular-care services in the Finger Lakes Health service area. That includes performing surgeries at Geneva General Hospital and Finger Lakes Surgery Center.
Under the affiliation plan, URMC will work with Finger Lakes Health to expand access to a range of primary and specialty-care services; support implementation of the electronic medical record used by all UR Medicine affiliates to provide patients a “seamless care experience;” build operational efficiencies through group purchasing; and help recruit physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants.
“Our mission as a health system is to provide families across upstate New York with high-quality patient care as close to home as possible for nearly all their medical needs, with access to highly specialized services by traveling no farther than Rochester,” Taubman said. “We have high regard for Dr. Acevedo and his leadership team, and look forward to working more closely to expand access to care for Finger Lakes families.”
“Extensive” search for a partner
The affiliation process began in June 2019 with Finger Lakes Health’s board of directors initiating a request for proposals for potential partners. FLH sought to serve its large patient base in eastern Ontario, Seneca, Yates, and Wayne counties with “comprehensive and patient-centered” medical care.
“Our board was committed to serving our communities’ health-care needs,” Menzo Case, chair of the Finger Lakes Health board of directors, said. “The University of Rochester Medical Center clearly emerged as the best partner aligned with our mission, committed to our communities, and assuring ease of access to services close to home.”
The COVID-19 pandemic delayed the formal affiliation, but in October 2020, the two organizations entered into a management-services agreement that the New York State Department of Health approved. The management-services agreement focused on expanding the “longstanding collaborative relationships” between Finger Lakes Health and URMC physicians and served as a “meaningful step” toward the affiliation, the health organizations said.

Nascentia unveils renovated Beeches Manor
ROME, N.Y. — Nascentia Health recently cut the ribbon on the newly renovated Beeches Manor, the first phase of improvements and changes planned at the Beeches complex. The health-care agency has had an office on the Beeches property since about 2011, COO Cheryl Manna says. About a decade in, Destito Realty, Inc. reached out to
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ROME, N.Y. — Nascentia Health recently cut the ribbon on the newly renovated Beeches Manor, the first phase of improvements and changes planned at the Beeches complex.
The health-care agency has had an office on the Beeches property since about 2011, COO Cheryl Manna says. About a decade in, Destito Realty, Inc. reached out to Nascentia about purchasing the property, she notes, and Nascentia became the new owner in April 2021.
Work began soon after on the Manor. It needed some TLC, Manna says, and was a priority because it’s also the hub of the property.
The Hayner Hoyt Corporation of Syracuse served as general contractor for the project, which updated the kitchen, three banquet rooms, and pub. That included all-new restaurant-grade equipment for the kitchen, restoring or replacing flooring, plaster and woodwork restoration, gas-fireplace inserts, installing new windows, replacing the HVAC system, and new state-of-the-art audio/visual equipment. Copper donated by Revere Copper was incorporated into the bar area.
The goal was to not only modernize things, but also keep the charm and appeal of the 1917 stone mansion, she says. Rather than replace all the old furniture, much was left with new pieces scattered here and there.
The Manor has room for up to 450 people for events, and can also host smaller gatherings like corporate meetings, bridal and baby showers, and seminars. There is an outdoor deck, as well as a lawn area large enough to hold an event tent.
The space is still available for rental for events, and Manna says Nascentia also hopes to make use of the space for the residents it will have on the property eventually. The pub will soon be open to the public for light dinner fare a few days a week.
Future Manor renovations include restoring the second floor to provide guest accommodations.
The next phase of renovations in the multi-year plan to transform the Beeches property into an active adult retirement community includes renovating the Beeches Inn into 55 units of accessible senior housing. Future development will include patio homes.
Some housing may be for sale, while other units are leased, Manna says, Those details are still being worked out as plans are drawn up.
“One of the things we were excited about was the ability to create some housing on the property,” she says. “The right kind of housing is hard to come by for seniors.”
Nascentia is applying for Homes and Community Renewal funding as well as Health Care Transformation funding from the state for the next phase of the project, which includes the housing as well as transforming one of the buildings on the property into a larger office for Nascentia.
The medical offices would house Nascentia’s current operations, Manna says, and also be large enough to provide other services such as primary care.
Other planned work includes repairing an existing pool, including restoring the adjacent stone pool house, and possibly adding fountains with some outdoor seating. Nascentia would also like to add a second pool and other outdoor amenities such as pickleball courts, a gazebo, walking trails, cart paths, and a pavilion.
In the lower level of the Manor, “we’re looking at possibly adding gym or spa services,” Manna says.
“It’s really going to be a hopping property when it’s finished,” she quips.
Nascentia Health is a home-health-care agency serving 48 counties. It employs more than 500 people at offices in Syracuse, Rome, Rochester, Buffalo, and Albany.

Oswego County gets $1.8M in state matching funds after shared-services tax savings
OSWEGO — Oswego County is receiving nearly $1.8 million in state matching funds resulting from taxpayer savings through shared services in 2020. The funding is provided through the County-Wide Shared Services Initiative (CWSSI), the New York Department of State announced recently. CWSSI provides a one-time state match of county and local-government taxpayer savings achieved in
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OSWEGO — Oswego County is receiving nearly $1.8 million in state matching funds resulting from taxpayer savings through shared services in 2020.
The funding is provided through the County-Wide Shared Services Initiative (CWSSI), the New York Department of State announced recently. CWSSI provides a one-time state match of county and local-government taxpayer savings achieved in the first year of implementation of new shared-services projects.
“Our County-Wide Shared Services Initiative plays a critical role in helping local governments run more efficiently and effectively,” New York State Secretary of State Robert Rodriguez said in a news release. “Through this program, Oswego County worked together with its local government partners to identify new and creative ways to share services, delivering real savings for taxpayers that will repeat annually for years to come.”
Pharmacy benefit, highway equipment
As part of the CWSSI, Oswego County created a shared-services plan that identified ways to consolidate services and save taxpayer money through government efficiencies in services and community programs. The two shared-services projects that were implemented as part of this plan and resulted in taxpayer savings included a pharmacy benefit coalition and the sharing of highway equipment.
Oswego County partnered with Onondaga County and the City of Syracuse to create a pharmacy-benefit coalition. This partnership allows the county to reduce spending associated with administering employee benefit plans and save taxpayer dollars, while also reducing prescription-drug costs for employees. Oswego County had more than $1.7 million in taxpayer savings in 2020 as a result of this partnership.
At the same time, Oswego County obtained a piece of highway equipment called a screener that was shared between the towns of Richland and Sandy Creek. A screener is used to refine waste roadway materials for wintertime application and is usually towed behind a large utility vehicle, such as a dump truck.
Oswego County generated $35,702 in taxpayer savings in 2020 as a result, and Richland and Sandy Creek each produced $4,133 in taxpayer savings, for a total of $43,969.

Cooperative Federal formally opens its relocated branch on Erie Boulevard
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Cooperative Federal, a credit union founded and headquartered in Syracuse, on July 21 formally opened its relocated office at 1816 Erie Boulevard East in Syracuse. The credit union’s Erie Boulevard location replaced a branch formerly located just under 1 mile away at 723 Westcott St., where Cooperative Federal operated from 1994 through
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Cooperative Federal, a credit union founded and headquartered in Syracuse, on July 21 formally opened its relocated office at 1816 Erie Boulevard East in Syracuse.
The credit union’s Erie Boulevard location replaced a branch formerly located just under 1 mile away at 723 Westcott St., where Cooperative Federal operated from 1994 through this spring.
The new branch, which has 21 employees, had a “soft opening” on April 20, Meagan Weatherby, development and communications manager for Cooperative Federal, tells CNYBJ in an email.
From this new location, Cooperative Federal contends it offers “expanded access” to financial services for homeownership, small business, personal banking, and credit, “with a focus on reaching people and communities that have been unjustly excluded from wealth.”
“Since our founding over 40 years ago, Cooperative Federal has been more than a financial institution — we are part of the movement for racial and economic justice,” Christina Sauve, CEO of Cooperative Federal, noted in a news release about the grand-opening event. “We use the tools of finance to help uplift Syracuse neighborhoods, unlocking opportunities for homebuyers, entrepreneurs, and people from all walks of life.”
Sauve went on to say. “Above all, Coop Fed’s work is grounded in a commitment to inclusion and solidarity. We know that the only way to reckon with current and historical injustice is to support one another and work side by side.”
The Erie Boulevard East office is now the credit union’s largest branch, offering updated amenities including drive-through service. It represents a “centralized hub” for member service, lending, financial counseling, community development, and back-office operations, including off-street parking.
“As the only Minority Depository Institution [MDI] in the Central NY region, Cooperative Federal has the potential and the responsibility to serve more people,” Sauve said.
MDIs are banks and credit unions where people of color are the majority of the account holders, board leaders, and service-area residents. Cooperative Federal currently serves nearly 6,000 households, small businesses and community organizations, and is on a mission to double that number over the next several years.
“By moving into a larger and more centrally located facility, in a highly diverse neighborhood, Cooperative Federal will build on our founders’ legacy and rise to the challenges facing Syracuse today,” Sauve added. “We welcome all the people of Syracuse to join us.”
The credit union was founded by community organizers in 1982 with a mission to “provide equitable access to capital” for homeownership, small business, and personal finance, per the credit union.
The new branch is also located in a certified opportunity zone, meaning it is designated by local government as a priority area for economic development. Through its presence, Cooperative Federal says it aims to support development that is “inclusive, sustainable, equitable, and beneficial to neighborhood residents who are predominantly people of color living in low-income households.”
Besides the new Erie Boulevard location, Cooperative Federal also has locations at 401 South Avenue (inside the Southwest Community Center), 800 North Salina St., and 516 Burt St. (inside the Syracuse Housing Authority).

AmeriCU announces major expansion of membership field
ROME, N.Y. — Big things are happening at AmeriCU Credit Union. The Rome–based credit union began this year with several strategic moves that set the organization up for continued growth, including opening a virtual branch and other innovative technology as well as adding several new positions, including three business-relations managers. “We have experienced considerable organic
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ROME, N.Y. — Big things are happening at AmeriCU Credit Union.
The Rome–based credit union began this year with several strategic moves that set the organization up for continued growth, including opening a virtual branch and other innovative technology as well as adding several new positions, including three business-relations managers.
“We have experienced considerable organic growth,” AmeriCU CEO Ronald Belle says. Now, the credit union hopes to bump up that growth by expanding its field of membership into 15 additional counties.
The credit union has served the nine counties of Cayuga, Cortland, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, Madison, Oneida, Onondaga, and Oswego for many years. Now, it has approval from the New York State Department of Financial Services to expand its field of membership to include Broome, Chenango, Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Otsego, St. Lawrence, Seneca, Schoharie, Tioga, Tompkins, and Wayne counties.

“That’s a significant increase for us,” Belle says. AmeriCU currently has about 160,000 members and has been growing membership between steadily in recent years. With the expanded field of membership, AmeriCU now has access to a population of about 2.2 million people to further grow membership, he adds. AmeriCU already has some members in those counties, which represents a natural expansion outward from the counties the credit union has already served.
The organization just received the approval in July, Belle says, so there aren’t any immediate plans to open branches in those counties. “With the virtual branch, members in the new county can interact with us without a branch,” he notes.
Belle expects new branches will happen after careful planning and also anticipates employment to grow beyond the current 400 employees in order to maintain the level of service that credit-union members expect.
He credits his team and that level of service they provide, combined with all the same technology that big banks offer, with AmeriCU’s continued membership growth. Advancements such as video teller machines, which connect members in real time with AmeriCU staff via video, and the credit union’s virtual financial center provide a variety of ways for members to transact their business.
The formula allows those who want to interact in person to visit a branch and have that experience, while those who prefer to use technology to handle their banking can do that instead, he says. The mix keeps AmeriCU relevant to members of all ages, and as a result, he says the credit union has seen growth across all age brackets.
AmeriCU is actively working to expand its commercial membership as well. Historically, credit unions were seen as financial institutions for individual consumers, but the reality is that AmeriCU offers the same products and services as a bank, Belle says.
“I do think there’s an opportunity for credit unions to expand in that space,” he adds. Banks serve the business community well — and so do credit unions, he says.
Being local also helps the credit union serve its members — both individuals and businesses, Belle notes. “Our deposits are local. Our loans are local,” he says. “Local matters to people.”
Beyond that, AmeriCU works to invest in the communities it does business in, he says. Managers are encouraged to be active on the boards of organizations within the community. On top of that, the credit union added a “personal day of meaning” to its employee benefits this year. That benefit gives each employee eight paid hours each year to devote to volunteering at an organization that’s important to them to the tune of between 2,000 and 2,500 volunteer hours annually. Additionally, AmeriCU supports about 150 organizations in those communities in some way, and that number will only grow as AmeriCU expands, Belle says.
AmeriCU serves its 160,000 members at 20 branch locations in Central and Northern New York.

SFCU breaks ground on new Cicero branch office
CICERO, N.Y. — Sidney Federal Credit Union (SFCU) recently formally broke ground on its first Syracuse–area branch at 8062 Brewerton Road in Cicero. Construction will begin as soon as the town approves permits, with plans to complete the project by the end of this year or early 2024. Principle Design Engineering, PLLC of Norwich is
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CICERO, N.Y. — Sidney Federal Credit Union (SFCU) recently formally broke ground on its first Syracuse–area branch at 8062 Brewerton Road in Cicero.
Construction will begin as soon as the town approves permits, with plans to complete the project by the end of this year or early 2024.
Principle Design Engineering, PLLC of Norwich is the project architect while S.J. Thomas Co., Inc. of Syracuse is the general contractor.
Once complete, the new Cicero branch will feature the same concierge-style concept the credit union established in its Amsterdam branch with personal teller pods and video-enabled interactive teller machines that connect members virtually with an SFCU representative. The 3,000-square-foot building will also feature a community room that can be used for events such as financial-wellness seminars and first-time homebuyer classes.
The new Cicero branch became possible after SFCU expanded its field of membership in 2022 to include Onondaga, Cortland, Essex, and Hamilton counties. The credit union had already served Chenango, Delaware, Fulton, Madison, Montgomery, Otsego, and Schoharie counties and portions of Broome, Oneida, and Herkimer counties.
Headquartered in Sidney, SFCU has more than 67,000 members and assets of $865 million. Other branch locations include Sidney, Oneonta (2), Green, Norwich (2), Walton, Delhi, Hancock, Bainbridge, and Amsterdam.

Five Star Bank promotes Bader to chief information security officer
WARSAW, N.Y. — Financial Institutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISI), parent company of Five Star Bank, on July 24 announced that it has promoted Scott Bader to serve as the bank’s senior VP and chief information security officer (CISO). In his role, Bader will be responsible for the “execution and evolution” of the bank’s information and cybersecurity
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WARSAW, N.Y. — Financial Institutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISI), parent company of Five Star Bank, on July 24 announced that it has promoted Scott Bader to serve as the bank’s senior VP and chief information security officer (CISO).
In his role, Bader will be responsible for the “execution and evolution” of the bank’s information and cybersecurity program, as well as compliance with statutory and regulatory requirements regarding information access, security, and privacy.
“Scott is an exceptional and proven leader who I’m confident will help the bank achieve its strategic goals while ensuring customer and bank information is maintained in a highly secure manner,” Gary Pacos, chief risk officer of Five Star Bank, said in a release. “Having led Five Star Bank’s technology function through significant growth during the past 15 years, Scott has strong technology experience, deep institutional knowledge and a keen understanding of the sophisticated threats facing the financial services industry today, all of which are key to supporting Five Star Bank and its affiliates into the future.”
Bader background
Since joining Five Star Bank in 2008, Bader has taken on “steadily increasing” responsibility in the information security and technology functions.
From 2010-2014, he led the launch of the bank’s information-security program as senior VP and information security officer and technology services manager. Since 2014, Bader has served as senior VP and technology services director and played an integral role in the bank’s digital transformation.
Prior to joining Five Star Bank, Bader worked in progressive technology roles at retailer Chico’s FAS, Inc. He also served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1990-1994, working on an international counterintelligence team.
Five Star Bank and Financial Institutions, Inc. are headquartered in Warsaw in Wyoming County in Western New York. Five Star Bank has about 50 branches throughout Western and Central New York. Its CNY branches include offices in Auburn, Waterloo, Geneva, Ovid, Horseheads, and Elmira. Five Star Bank recently expanded into the Syracuse market with a new commercial-loan production office at 115 Solar St. in the city’s Franklin Square area.
Financial Institutions, Inc. has about $6 billion in assets, offering banking, insurance, and wealth-management products and services through a network of subsidiaries.

Community Bank System leaders prepare for transition
“We’ve built a company that is very diversified and very stable,” incoming President/CEO Dimitar A. Karaivanov says in an interview with CNYBJ. With a significant banking business (Community Bank, N.A.), insurance business (OneGroup NY), benefits business (BPAS), and wealth-management business (Community Bank Wealth Management), “we have all the pieces in place,” he says. Current Community
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“We’ve built a company that is very diversified and very stable,” incoming President/CEO Dimitar A. Karaivanov says in an interview with CNYBJ. With a significant banking business (Community Bank, N.A.), insurance business (OneGroup NY), benefits business (BPAS), and wealth-management business (Community Bank Wealth Management), “we have all the pieces in place,” he says.
Current Community Bank System President/CEO Mark E. Tryniski will retire on Dec. 31 from the role he has filled since 2006.
Karaivanov will bring with him a new intensity level and energy to the role with plans to continue on the same growth path, including attracting both top talent and top clients.

While the banking climate remains in a bit of turmoil amid current economic and interest-rate conditions, Community Bank has built a reputation of trust and permanence, he says. It’s a business model that is sustainable and bolstered by the company’s diversification.
“A lot of our competitors are, frankly, just a bank,” Karaivanov says. About one-third of Community Bank’s income comes from outside the banking business, he says. That diversification helps the company weather volatility in the industry.
The banking company has focused on steady and consistent growth, he adds. Excluding one-time gains and losses, Community Bank System generated $176.6 million in total operating revenue in the first quarter of 2023, up 10 percent from the prior year’s first quarter and up 0.4 percent from the fourth quarter of 2022.
Community Bank’s approach isn’t flashy, but it’s stable and sustainable. The result is a bank that’s just the right size. It’s a sweet spot, Karaivanov says, between being big enough to offer a robust menu of products and services and small enough to provide a boutique experience for customers. The banking company has 3,000 employees and 200 bank branches throughout New York, northeast Pennsylvania, Vermont, and western Massachusetts.
While Community Bank has relied on acquisitions in the past for growth, today organic growth has doubled over the company’s historic rate, Karaivanov says. Acquisitions remain a growth option when the right opportunity comes along, he adds.
Going forward, one of the things Karaivanov is most enthusiastic about is the staff he will lead. “I just couldn’t be more excited about the talent we have at the company,” he says. “I’m just amazed every day. I think we’re in the best position we’ve ever been in because we have the best people we ever have.”
Tryniski says he counts Karaivanov as one of those talented people, noting that he tried to get his successor to join the banking company for the better part of a decade before Karaivanov finally joined Community Bank System in June 2021 as executive VP of financial services and corporate development.
Looking back on his years of leading the company, Tryniski is proud of the company’s evolution, but is even more proud of its culture and mission of integrity, excellence, teamwork, and humility. “To me, that’s most important,” he says.
Looking ahead toward retirement, Tryniski says he’s ready. “I don’t have anything left to do on my to-do list when it comes to professional aspirations,” he says. Instead, he’s looking forward to spending more time with his friends and family, especially his grandchildren, having more time for his motorcycles, and “watching Dimitar from the bleachers continue to grow and prosper with this company.”

CFCU Community Credit Union names assistant VP of business lending
ITHACA, N.Y. — CFCU Community Credit Union has promoted Margo Korowajczyk to assistant VP, business lending. She oversees the business-loan portfolio and is responsible for analyzing all business-lending documentation, the credit union said in a release. As part of her new role, Korowajczyk will annually obtain and analyze financial statements and current tax returns in
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ITHACA, N.Y. — CFCU Community Credit Union has promoted Margo Korowajczyk to assistant VP, business lending.
She oversees the business-loan portfolio and is responsible for analyzing all business-lending documentation, the credit union said in a release. As part of her new role, Korowajczyk will annually obtain and analyze financial statements and current tax returns in order to evaluate cash flow and viability of the business. She will also work toward limiting CFCU’s risk of losses by monitoring the quality of the loan portfolio while keeping management informed of potential losses, trends, and compliance problems, CFCU said.
Korowajczyk will train, support, and oversee the activities of the credit analyst(s), documentation specialist, and administrative assistant positions at the credit union.
Outside of work, Korowajczyk volunteers as the chairperson of the Town of Harford Zoning Board. She also serves as a member of the State Theater of Ithaca’s Finance Committee.
CFCU Community Credit Union is a nonprofit financial institution serving residents in Tompkins, Cortland, Seneca, Cayuga, and Ontario counties.
VIEWPOINT: Key Elements of a Successful Credit-Union Strategy for 2024
Strategy is a big word. It has different meanings for different people. Most credit unions have a strategy, or at least something they refer to as a strategy. Some think of a strategic plan as a document that is produced in a nice binder and goes on a shelf. Others think of a plan with
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Strategy is a big word. It has different meanings for different people. Most credit unions have a strategy, or at least something they refer to as a strategy. Some think of a strategic plan as a document that is produced in a nice binder and goes on a shelf. Others think of a plan with metrics that are measured every so often to chart progress toward goals.
It is likely that your credit union has revisited strategy a number of times in recent years. The disruption of COVID led to significant changes in approach, different considerations of risk, and unexpected opportunities in 2020. The last three years have continuously brought challenges that require strategic response, including embracing new ways to interact with members, challenges related to too much liquidity (then later too little liquidity), personnel management in a tight job market, on-going cybersecurity threats and risks, and a host of others. Whether you updated the documents in your strategy binder or not, you no doubt adjusted your credit union’s strategy.
Emerging from the COVID disruption has included a series of fast-paced changes. The changes themselves are important but even more critical is the pace of change. Has your credit union kept up? How do you compare to other financial institutions? Are you able to assess your strategic positioning and shift strategy as circumstances change?
Often, the biggest question posed by credit-union leaders is regarding what topics a credit union should strategize about. Or what the future will hold in terms of interest rates, inflation, etc. However, before you get into specific strategic topics, and before there is an attempt to execute a strategy, you need to think about how you “do” strategy.
To get started, there are three factors that are seen more often in high performing credit unions and not as often in credit unions that are not as high performing. Furthermore, these characteristics tend to indicate higher performance regardless of the credit union’s strategic objectives or initiatives. The three factors are:
1. Relentless Execution. High performing credit unions likely have both strategy components of a nicely put together strategy document and quantitative metrics against which progress is measured. But the reason they are high performing is that they consistently embrace the strategy as an integral part of everyday operations.
Most often, successful strategy is one or two “big” decisions followed by relentless day-to-day execution. It’s almost more of an attitude. Think: “We’re doing this. Everyday. All the time.”
There is a strong temptation to “do” strategy and put the nice document on a shelf for occasional admiration. Check it off the list and be “done.” Giving in to this temptation dooms your organization to continue doing what it’s been doing, the way it’s been doing it, and renders the strategic thought worthless as it will not convert to strategic action.
High performing credit unions emphasize the need to change behavior. This includes consistent communication about what you’re trying to do and why. It includes pointing out what behavior is expected and calling out when that behavior is not happening.
This is not easy. This is why high performing credit unions look different than the rest of the bunch.
2. Agility. High performing credit unions are organized in a manner that allows them to gather information effectively, evaluate that information, consider stakeholder input, make decisions, and execute.
Think about March 2020. Like just about every organization of any kind, your credit union probably made decisions to change procedures and practices incredibly quickly. You had no choice at that time. You just did it. Now that we’re three-plus years removed from that disruption, do you decide and execute with a sense of urgency and importance, or are you more casual about it?
High performing credit unions have embraced the idea that decision-making, even for big decisions, doesn’t have to be a long, drawn-out process. Some credit unions used to make strategic decisions with multiple board-meeting presentations and discussions over a series of months. Some of those credit unions have moved to a quicker process designed around committee work and fewer board discussions. This hasn’t diminished the role of the board. If anything, board members who participate in the committee work are more engaged than they were before.
The pace of change is simply too fast in the current environment to allow your credit union’s tradition or some pre-set board meeting schedule to force you to wait to make a strategic move.
3. Focus on People. A lot of strategy discussions, and strategy documents, have a lot of content in the form of facts and figures. Even more often, they have numbers and graphs focused on predicting the future. What’s going to happen with interest rates? Is there going to be a recession? etc.
High performing credit unions think about those things too, but they roll out a strategy that focuses on the people. Most often, the people in this context are the credit union’s employees. What impact does this strategy have on employees? To the extent employees must change their behavior, is credit-union leadership preparing all personnel for that change? Are you communicating the “why” effectively? Are you making it matter to the individuals who will actually execute the strategy?
This must go well beyond handing out a sharp-looking strategy document or making an announcement at a staff meeting. And it must be consistently part of every communication with all personnel, not just the leadership team. High performing credit unions celebrate the strategy as something that makes the credit union a great place to be. They include elements specifically related to the strategy in every person’s performance objectives and goals, and evaluate people in all roles against those expectations.
There are a lot of specific strategic topics with which credit unions must deal in the current environment. But regardless of your credit union’s specific strategy elements, how you formulate and roll out the strategy is what ultimately determines that strategy’s success. There is a huge opportunity to move your credit union forward in a high-performing manner.
Jeff Paille is a partner at The Bonadio Group accounting and consulting firm. He is focused on serving credit unions and tax-exempt organizations.
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