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SBA Upstate district honors veteran-owned business in DeWitt
DeWITT, N.Y. — The Upstate New York District of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has recognized the veteran-owner of a company located in DeWitt. The SBA has awarded its 2023 Veteran-Owned Business of the Year Award to Michael Bower, owner of Eagle Metalcraft at 3550 Burnett Ave. in DeWitt, across from Lotte Biologics. Bernard […]
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DeWITT, N.Y. — The Upstate New York District of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has recognized the veteran-owner of a company located in DeWitt.
The SBA has awarded its 2023 Veteran-Owned Business of the Year Award to Michael Bower, owner of Eagle Metalcraft at 3550 Burnett Ave. in DeWitt, across from Lotte Biologics.
Bernard J. Paprocki, director of the SBA Upstate New York district recently presented the award to the business as part of National Small Business Week, held this year from April 30 through May 6. He was joined at Eagle Metalcraft by Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon.
Paprocki said the SBA Upstate New York district selected Bower for the recognition after he acquired Eagle Metalcraft, a precision sheet-metal fabrication business. After the acquisition, Bower led “strong” business growth as general manager during the pandemic, doubling sales and the number of staff.
Bower also gives back as a SCORE mentor and works with the Syracuse City School District P-TECH students; transitioning servicemembers; and the apprenticeship program at MACNY, the Manufacturers Association.
Before becoming an entrepreneur, Bower “learned the value of hard work” growing up on a farm in Arkansas and serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, the SBA said in a release.
With a “strong belief in the region’s entrepreneurial spirit,” he sought support from the Onondaga Small Business Development Center (SBDC) in 2020 to purchase and run a business in Central New York. Bower began working as general manager for Eagle Metalcraft in the worst sales month of the pandemic and began making improvements “immediately” while working on the business acquisition, the SBA noted.
SBDC business advisor Mark Pitonzo guided Bower through the business-valuation process, helped him write a business plan, and connected him with Citizens Bank in Syracuse. Citizens Bank approved an SBA 7(a) loan for Bower in 2021 to purchase Eagle Metalcraft.
“I’ve moved a lot for jobs, and I’ve never seen a community come together like Syracuse does,” Bower said in the SBA release. “The best part of business ownership is job creation. I am surrounded by hard working and smart people, and being part of their growth is more rewarding than I could have imagined. I believe in the old aphorism, ‘A rising tide lifts all boats.’ Supporting and promoting growth of my team translates to our company growing and taking better care of our customers.”
2023 Sales and Marketing Awards Event Supplement
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CNYSME to recognize Mower’s Crockett as latest recipient of Crystal Ball Award
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — As the 46th recipient of the Crystal Ball Award from the Central New York Sales & Marketing Executives (CNYSME), Stephanie Crockett knows she’s joining a list of past recipients who are well known and prominent names in the CNY business community. “The list is really incredible,” says Crockett. “To be in that
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — As the 46th recipient of the Crystal Ball Award from the Central New York Sales & Marketing Executives (CNYSME), Stephanie Crockett knows she’s joining a list of past recipients who are well known and prominent names in the CNY business community.
“The list is really incredible,” says Crockett. “To be in that same company is again an honor. It’s extremely humbling.”
Crockett is now president and CEO of Syracuse–based Mower, an advertising, marketing, and public relations firm. She spoke with CNYBJ on May 5.
She went on to say that she’s “grateful” to the people who have “been in my corner and in my network.”
“The colleagues that I work with every day that give me the opportunity to do what I do,” Crockett added. “It’s a pretty incredible opportunity for the [Mower] agency to be recognized for everything that this awesome team does every day.”
Mower is headquartered inside the Jefferson Clinton Commons at 211 W. Jefferson St. in Syracuse. The agency has offices across the nation.
In her work duties, Crockett is responsible for growth, planning, culture, and leading all external activities of the Mower agency. She also leads the client-leadership team at Mower, as well as the agency’s energy & sustainability practice.
Drawing on her 25 years in marketing and communications, Crockett has led complex marketing communications for key clients including National Grid, Turning Stone Resort Casino, Crouse Health, Community Bank, the New York State Energy Research & Development Authority, FirstEnergy, Exelon, Avangrid, LG, and Bausch & Lomb.
CNYSME will present the award during the annual Crystal Ball and Sales & Marketing Excellence Awards presentation and celebration, which is set for May 18 at the Marriott Syracuse Downtown.
“If there is a continuing thread over 46 years of CNYSME’s Crystal Ball Awards, it is the recognition of one, exceptional individual each year who strives to make our Central New York Community a far better place to live and to work. Quite appropriately, this year the recognition goes to Stephanie Crockett in light of her notable professional accomplishment and her engaged civic leadership,” Eric Mower, executive chairman of Mower, said. “Stephanie is inspirational. She aspires to excellence in all she does and, in doing so, she engenders ambition in others. That is evidenced by the tangible, beneficial impact she has every day with her clients and co-workers as well as numerous area organizations including United Way of Central New York, Landmark Theatre and CenterState CEO among others. I salute CNYSME on their well-considered selection and I salute Stephanie Crockett on her well-deserved recognition.”
Mower also won the Crystal Ball Award, in 1984, per the CNYSME website.
“An enduring symbol of the organization’s mission,” the CNYSME annually awards the Crystal Ball to a local businessperson or group of businesspeople in recognition of their contributions to the sales and marketing profession and for their endeavors in the areas of community development and support.
The criteria for Crystal Ball recognition includes but is not limited to: a person whose visibility impacts the progress and prosperity of Central New York, a leader who demonstrates commitment to superior quality and professionalism, a person who fosters excellence in their industry, local involvement in community and civic organizations, and demonstrates and practices an appreciation of the sales and marketing industry.
Recent past CNYSME Crystal Ball recipients include Ed Riley of Brine Wells Development/Marriott Syracuse Downtown in 2022; Laura Serway, philanthropist and former owner of Laci’s Tapas Bar in 2021; Mark Re of Howard Hanna Real Estate Services in 2019; Howard Dolgon, owner, president, CEO, and team governor of the Syracuse Crunch minor-league hockey team in 2014; and Peter Belyea, president of CXtec and TERACAI in 2013.

Lewis County’s vacant-property program awards grants to 9 projects
LOWVILLE — The first round of grant awards in Lewis County’s vacant-property revitalization (VPR) program has nine projects sharing a total of $691,000. The Lewis County Development Corporation (LCDC) approved the funding for the nine projects in the first-round application process. Naturally Lewis, in partnership with Lewis County, created the VPR program to target vacant
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LOWVILLE — The first round of grant awards in Lewis County’s vacant-property revitalization (VPR) program has nine projects sharing a total of $691,000.
The Lewis County Development Corporation (LCDC) approved the funding for the nine projects in the first-round application process.
Naturally Lewis, in partnership with Lewis County, created the VPR program to target vacant and “potentially unsafe or blighted” properties within downtown and surrounding areas to turn them into usable spaces for business-development opportunities. The VPR program was created with $1,000,000 of funding made available to the LCDC through the American Rescue Plan Act and Lewis County.
“We are excited to empower our property and business owners through funding and staff support to help turn vacant, blighted and underutilized buildings into usable spaces that will lead to great economic and community impacts,” Tim Petersen, chairman of the Lewis County Development Corporation board of directors, said in a news release. “Once all projects are complete, this program will have led to $7.7 million in total project investment across Lewis County.”
VPR program award recipients were eligible to receive 50 percent of total project costs — up to $100,000 per project — and will be in the form of a reimbursement grant, Naturally Lewis said.
Funding will be reimbursed to the property owner “once agreed upon milestones are met” and the project is complete. The community economic-development program committee, a committee through the LCDC, reviewed the applications with final approval of the LCDC board of directors.
Developers of projects winning funding included the following:
• The Case Building Remodel at 1147 State Route 26 in West Leyden was awarded $50,000 to construct new commercial space on the first floor and an apartment on the second floor.
• The Crumbs Bakeshop building at 5421 Shady Ave. in Lowville won $71,730 to turn the vacant second and third floors into living space.
• The Lowville Apartments (Dollar General) building at 7619-23 N. State St. in Lowville was awarded $100,000 to turn the second and third floors into rental units.
• Double Play Community Center at 6912 Bardo Road in Lowville was provided $100,000 to help turn a vacant former restaurant building into their new consolidated community center, including fitness center, dance and yoga studios and senior and teen community space.
• Grand Slam Safety at 9801 Bridge St. in Croghan won $49,235 to renovate a vacant former bus garage on their property into additional manufacturing space, which will create five new jobs.
• The Kellogg Block building at 5406-5424 Shady Ave. in Lowville was awarded $100,000 to renovate the second floor into apartments.
• McRez Packing International at 3823 Marmon Road in Lyonsdale won $100,000 to renovate a vacant former storage building into a U.S. Department of Agriculture-certified, meat-processing facility, which would create 13-15 new jobs.
• Port Leyden Portal (Phase 2) at 3336 Lincoln St. in Port Leyden was awarded $100,000 toward the renovation of the second story of the former Port Leyden school building (river facing) into short- and long-term apartments and lodging units.
• Snow Ridge Ski Resort at 4173 West Road in Turin was awarded $20,000 for the renovation of an underutilized 2nd floor space into a short-term lodging unit.

Hematology-Oncology Associates breaks ground on Camillus cancer center
CAMILLUS — Hematology-Oncology Associates of CNY (HOA) is building a 21,000-square-foot cancer center in Camillus. The new building will be located at 5490 Cobbler Way. HOA is tentatively planning to open the center in December 2024. HOA on May 8 held a groundbreaking ceremony for the cancer center at a vacant field just before 2555
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CAMILLUS — Hematology-Oncology Associates of CNY (HOA) is building a 21,000-square-foot cancer center in Camillus.
The new building will be located at 5490 Cobbler Way. HOA is tentatively planning to open the center in December 2024.
HOA on May 8 held a groundbreaking ceremony for the cancer center at a vacant field just before 2555 Hambletonian Way in Camillus, but the address of the future building will be 5490 Cobbler Way.
The new cancer center’s design team includes Bennetts & Huysman Architects, P.C. of Manlius; St. Germain & Aupperle Consulting Engineers LLP of Camillus; RAM-TECH Engineers, P.C. of DeWitt; and Terry Horst, Landscape Architect, P.C. of Syracuse. Rich & Gardner Construction Company, Inc. will handle the construction process, HOA noted in a news release. HOA declined to provide a project-cost figure.
“Providing our patients with the best possible care includes a modern, spacious location where they can conveniently and cost-effectively receive all their cancer care, rather than traveling to different locations,” Maryann Roefaro, CEO of HOA, said. “We have outgrown our current Onondaga Hill location, which this new center will replace. Plus, we are excited to move our Wellness Center into this new location which offers more space and greater accessibility for our patients and members of the community.”
HOA also operates offices at 5008 Brittonfield Parkway in DeWitt and at 37 W. Garden St. in Auburn, per its website.
HOA says the new Camillus cancer center will offer services that include medical oncology care, including infusion services for cancer and other non-oncology needs; radiation oncology care; medical imaging; nutrition counseling for cancer patients; social-work services; clinical research; laboratory services; pharmacy services; and a wellness center offering holistic care and classes for cancer patients and the community.
VIEWPOINT: OFCCP Issues Updated Voluntary Self-Identification of Disability Form
The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) approved the use of a revised voluntary self-identification of disability form (Form CC-305) on April 25. The recently released form includes updated language and additional examples of disabilities. Federal contractors and subcontractors have until July 25, 2023, to implement the new form into their applicant and employee
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The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) approved the use of a revised voluntary self-identification of disability form (Form CC-305) on April 25.
The recently released form includes updated language and additional examples of disabilities. Federal contractors and subcontractors have until July 25, 2023, to implement the new form into their applicant and employee systems and processes. Contractors are required to use this form in order to be in compliance with Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and its implementing regulations.
The applicable regulations require federal contractors and subcontractors to invite applicants and employees to self-identify their disability status using the OFCCP-prescribed form: (1) at the pre-offer stage of the application process; (2) after an applicant is offered a position but prior to starting work; and (3) by survey of the workforce every five years. In addition, at least once during the years between the survey invitations, contractors must remind their employees that they may voluntarily update their disability status at any time.
The regulations include an aspirational utilization goal of 7 percent to give contractors a yardstick against which they can measure the success of their efforts to reach out to and recruit individuals with disabilities. OFCCP’s national utilization goal, which is not a quota, will remain the same.
The new voluntary self-identification form is currently only available in English but will be available in other languages soon.
Christa Richer Cook is a member (partner) with Syracuse–based Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC. She assists clients with their labor and employment issues, including internal investigations, unemployment insurance, wage and hour issues, workforce reductions, and more. Contact Cook at ccook@bsk.com. This article is drawn from Bond’s New York Labor & Employment Law Report blog.

Construction underway on Huntington Apartments housing project in Seneca Falls
SENECA FALLS, N.Y. — Construction continues on the Huntington Apartments, a $24 million adaptive re-use of the 19th-century-era Huntington Building in Seneca Falls. When complete, the development will feature 53 affordable apartments in an energy-efficient building, including 27 with supportive services for veterans in need of housing, the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul announced on
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SENECA FALLS, N.Y. — Construction continues on the Huntington Apartments, a $24 million adaptive re-use of the 19th-century-era Huntington Building in Seneca Falls.
When complete, the development will feature 53 affordable apartments in an energy-efficient building, including 27 with supportive services for veterans in need of housing, the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul announced on March 21.
The redevelopment of Huntington Apartments is part of Seneca Falls’ Downtown Revitalization Initiative. The town was selected as the Finger Lakes region winner of the $10 million DRI award in round four. The DRI serves as a component of the state’s economic-development policy by transforming downtown neighborhoods into vibrant centers of activity that offer a high quality of life and attract businesses, jobs and economic and housing diversity.
New York State Homes and Community Renewal provided federal and state low-income housing tax credits in Huntington Apartments that will generate $12.1 million in equity, as well as $3.7 million in subsidy. The New York State Historic Preservation Office provided $7.1 million in federal and state historic tax credits.
The New York State Department of State offered $800,000 as part of the DRI, and the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority provided $51,800 from its Multi-Family New Construction program. The Community Preservation Corporation, a nonprofit multifamily finance company, is offering a SONYMA-insured $475,000 permanent loan to support the project.
“Huntington Apartments will provide a new future to dozens of families and veterans while preserving a piece of Seneca Falls history,” Hochul said.
About the project
Located at the corner of Fall Street and the Veteran’s Memorial Bridge, Huntington Apartments is under development by Home Leasing. It will use the existing three-story building and rebuild the previously demolished fourth story, while also incorporating an addition to the west side of the building, per Hochul’s office.
The completed development will include five studio apartments, 45 one-bedroom, and three two-bedroom apartments, with one unit set aside for the building’s superintendent. It will include 31 apartments affordable to households earning at or below 50 percent of the area median income (AMI), with the remaining 21 apartments affordable to those at or below 60 percent of the AMI.
Eagle Star Housing of Spencerport will provide supportive services and rental subsidies for 27 apartments. The services are funded through the Empire State Supportive Housing Initiative and administered by the New York State Office of Temporary Disability Assistance.
Provided services will include case management, transportation services, connectivity to substance abuse, and medical and mental-health services.
Huntington Apartments will meet EPA Energy Star Certified Homes V3.1 program and Enterprise Green Communities 2020 standards, Hochul’s office said. All apartments will utilize Energy Star appliances and central air conditioning.

Welliver adds project superintendent
MONTOUR FALLS, N.Y. — Construction-services company Welliver recently added a new project superintendent. Jonah Bixby will oversee the day-to-day operations on construction-project sites including schedule, manpower, ordering material, documentation, building plans and specifications, quality control, and communication with project managers and others. He brings significant knowledge of construction processes and building codes along with experience
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MONTOUR FALLS, N.Y. — Construction-services company Welliver recently added a new project superintendent.
Jonah Bixby will oversee the day-to-day operations on construction-project sites including schedule, manpower, ordering material, documentation, building plans and specifications, quality control, and communication with project managers and others. He brings significant knowledge of construction processes and building codes along with experience delivering a customer-driven, organized, and efficient building process. In his new role, he will ensure a safe and effective work site for employees, clients, and owners, the company said in a release.
Bixby brings more than a decade of experience as a foreman and project superintendent for several regional construction companies, Welliver said. In those positions, he gained hands-on experience with foundations, electrical, plumbing, interior systems, job-site safety, coordinating subcontractors, overseeing labor, maintaining schedules, procuring equipment, and controlling projects.
Bixby currently serves as an instructor with the North Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters, conducting training programs on scaffold assembly, first aid, CPR, and automated external defibrillators.
Based in Montour Falls, Welliver provides construction-management, pre-construction, general-construction, and design/build services to clients in the health care, higher education, K-12 education, commercial/residential, and industrial sectors.

Welliver honored for Cornell residential expansion project
MONTOUR FALLS, N.Y. — Welliver, a provider of construction services in New York state and northern Pennsylvania, received the 2023 Jeffrey J. Zogg Build New York Award from the Associated General Contractors New York State (AGC NYS) on May 4. In recognition of excellence in construction management and teamwork, Welliver won the award for the
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MONTOUR FALLS, N.Y. — Welliver, a provider of construction services in New York state and northern Pennsylvania, received the 2023 Jeffrey J. Zogg Build New York Award from the Associated General Contractors New York State (AGC NYS) on May 4.
In recognition of excellence in construction management and teamwork, Welliver won the award for the Cornell University North Campus Residential Expansion (NCRE) project. The award ceremony was held in Albany, in conjunction with the AIA NYS Excelsior Awards for Public Architecture.
Welliver provided pre-construction and construction services on the NCRE project, developed in anticipation of Cornell’s growing class size. The two-phase, LEED Gold, 776,000-square-foot expansion of the student-life residential complex provides undergraduate students more housing options on campus.
“Recognition by the AGC NYS, as well as our peers in the construction industry, is a testament to the expertise of our people, versatility of the team, and construction capability to successfully execute large projects such as the residential expansion on the Cornell campus,” Anne Welliver-Hartsing, president of Welliver, said in a news release.
The project, in collaboration with ikon.5 architects, provides more than 2,000 new beds for first-year and second-year students on Cornell’s residential North Campus. Both sites include three-story to five-story courtyard buildings that also offer lounges, meeting spaces, classrooms, and kitchens. The new Morrison Dining Hall, at 58,230 square feet, provides 11 micro stations and a 2,400-square-foot Discovery Kitchen with 24 teaching stations used for academic classes and Cornell dining.
Work on the project included new buildings, road improvements, landscaping, high-end foodservice, and turf fields. NCRE is the largest project Cornell University has completed, spread across 27 acres of the campus in total and involving three different municipalities.
At peak construction, the project employed more than 500 people with Welliver putting an emphasis on working with local contractors whenever possible. The project provided more than $192 million in revenue to contractors in the state, the company said.
The NCRE project was also named the 2022 ENR Regional Best Project in the higher education/research category, a 2022 Excellence in Safety Award winner, and the 2022 New York Project of the Year.
“The Jeffrey J. Zogg Build NY Award is a symbol of a cohesive construction team,” Ben Robertson, project executive, said. “This group, from the architects to the craftspeople, epitomizes the characteristics that this award represents — substance, quality, and dependability.”
Developed in 1990, the AGC Build New York Awards program highlights the positive impact of the construction industry in the state. Today, the awards emphasize the construction team, not only the general contractor or construction manager, but also many others — the owner, architect, engineer, subcontractors, suppliers, and craftspeople — who contribute to the success of a project.
Welliver provides construction management, pre-construction, general construction, and design/build services to industries including health care, higher education, K-12 education, commercial/residential, and industrial.

Greek Peak to complete $1M in improvement projects by next ski season
VIRGIL, N.Y. — It may be the middle of spring, but Greek Peak Mountain Resort in Cortland County is already looking ahead to the next ski season. The ski resort has announced nearly $1 million in ski-side improvement projects for the 2023-24 season, which will mark its 65th anniversary year. Greek Peak is located at
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VIRGIL, N.Y. — It may be the middle of spring, but Greek Peak Mountain Resort in Cortland County is already looking ahead to the next ski season.
The ski resort has announced nearly $1 million in ski-side improvement projects for the 2023-24 season, which will mark its 65th anniversary year.
Greek Peak is located at 2000 State Route 392 in the town of Virgil, just south of Cortland.
Next ski season, the facility will have new snow-making pipe and air line on the downhill Hercules trail, along with 57 new HKD snow-guns and new hydrants all around the mountain, per its announcement. Crews will replace the pumps at the east mountain pumphouse, which will double water output from 900 to 1,800 gallons per minute to run the new, high-efficiency snow guns.
The new snow-making infrastructure projects from this past year were key to delivering 114 ski days for the 2022-23 season versus 107 the previous year. Greek Peak described the recently concluded ski season as an “uncharacteristically warm and low-snow accumulation year” but noted that skiers gave the resort positive feedback on “how Greek Peak was able to maintain its covered terrain.”
Wes Kryger, president of Greek Peak Mountain Resort, described the upgrades as a “continued commitment by ownership to add to the exceptional ski experience Greek Peak offers its guests each year.”
“Investments like these are significant and they’re part of what has made Greek Peak a regional skiing destination for so many years,” Kryger contended. “We are in year three of a five-year snow-making plan, and our focus continues to be on the mountain and the overall guest experience.”
In addition to the snow-making upgrades, crews will install a new variable drive on chair 1 and apply a fresh coat of paint between now and ski season. The improvements will also include upgraded trail lighting and a “significant investment” in new rental equipment, including additional rental helmets, skis, and snowboards, Greek Peak said.
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