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The funding seeks to help several nonprofit organizations in Central New York to support workforce development and community initiatives. These grants are part of KeyBank’s

Bassett adds robotic-assisted weight-loss surgery to offerings
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Bassett Healthcare Network has expanded its services to include technologically advanced robotic-assisted Roux-en-Y gastric-bypass surgery as a weight-loss surgery option. Dr. Joon Shim, attending surgeon and program director of the general-surgery residency program, recently performed Bassett’s first surgery of this type. “Robotic-assisted surgery is a tool that enables surgeons to make even
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COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Bassett Healthcare Network has expanded its services to include technologically advanced robotic-assisted Roux-en-Y gastric-bypass surgery as a weight-loss surgery option.
Dr. Joon Shim, attending surgeon and program director of the general-surgery residency program, recently performed Bassett’s first surgery of this type.
“Robotic-assisted surgery is a tool that enables surgeons to make even smaller incisions resulting in faster recovery, less post-operative pain, and shorter hospital stays,” Shim said in a news release. “Rural patients deserve the same options available in large urban areas.”
The robotic-assisted Roux-en-Y gastric-bypass surgery provides a three-dimensional view of the surgical field with high definition and a magnification 10 times what the human eye can see, Shim said.
“We can innovate in rural hospitals and improve the outcomes of our patients with excellent results,” she added.
Bassett’s bariatric surgery team received quality recognition for patient safety and better outcomes including the Blue Distinction Center+ for Bariatric Surgery by Excellus BlueCross BlueShield and accreditation by the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program.
Bassett Healthcare Network covers a 5,600-square-mile region in upstate New York with five hospitals, more than two dozen community-based health centers, 21 school-based health centers, and two skilled-nursing facilities.

Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute announces new board chair, trustee
UTICA, N.Y. — F.X. Matt III is the new board chair of the Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, and the board also welcomed Laura Tansey Wetzel of Cooperstown as a new board trustee. Matt has served on the board for several terms since 2007. He previously served as board chair from 2013-2016 and has worked closely with
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UTICA, N.Y. — F.X. Matt III is the new board chair of the Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, and the board also welcomed Laura Tansey Wetzel of Cooperstown as a new board trustee.
Matt has served on the board for several terms since 2007. He previously served as board chair from 2013-2016 and has worked closely with the finance and governance committees.
He succeeds William Craine, who served as chair for the last three years, and helped Munson-Williams take major steps forward in its organization strategic plan, including the development of a campus master plan and a new brand it will unveil in March. During his tenure, the organization navigated the COVID-19 pandemic, relaunched in-person events, welcomed the largest PrattMWP College class to date, grew membership, and welcomed several new directors.
“William Craine successfully led Munson-Williams’ Board of Trustees through tumultuous and exciting times,” Munson-Williams President/CEO Anna D’Ambrosio said in a release. “We look forward to F.X. Matt III’s leadership as we move ahead on our rebrand and vision for the future.”
Board member Christian Heilmann serves as vice chair while Dietra Harvey serves as secretary.
The new trustee Wetzel was the director of quality management and regulatory compliance at Bryn Mawr Hospital, Main Line Health System, in Pennsylvania before moving to the area. She has served on the boards for the Guild of the Glimmerglass Festival and the Catskill Symphony Orchestra, among others. Wetzel has served as a Museum of Art docent since 2019.
Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, founded in 1919, includes a 12,000-work collection, the PrattMWP College of Art and Design, community arts classes for all ages, and a calendar of performances and events throughout the year.
Corn production in New York fell nearly 17 percent in 2022
New York farms produced 80.5 million bushels of corn for grain last year, down 16.9 percent from 96.86 million bushels in 2021. That’s according to a Jan. 12 report from the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Northeastern Regional Field Office. The total yield per acre in the Empire State averaged 140 bushels per acre in
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New York farms produced 80.5 million bushels of corn for grain last year, down 16.9 percent from 96.86 million bushels in 2021.
That’s according to a Jan. 12 report from the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Northeastern Regional Field Office.
The total yield per acre in the Empire State averaged 140 bushels per acre in 2022, down 27 bushels per acre, or 16.2 percent, from 167 bushels in the previous year.
Area harvested for grain corn totaled 575,000 acres last year, down less than 1 percent from 580,000 in 2021, the USDA NASS said.
New York soybean production declined almost 14 percent last year
New York farms produced 14.63 million bushels of soybeans in 2022, down 13.8 percent from 16.96 million bushels the prior year. That’s according to a Jan. 12 report from the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Northeastern Regional Field Office. The total yield per acre in New York averaged 45 bushels per acre last year, down
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New York farms produced 14.63 million bushels of soybeans in 2022, down 13.8 percent from 16.96 million bushels the prior year.
That’s according to a Jan. 12 report from the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Northeastern Regional Field Office.
The total yield per acre in New York averaged 45 bushels per acre last year, down 8 bushels per acre, or 15.1 percent, from 53 bushels in 2021.
Area harvested for soybeans totaled 325,000 acres in 2022, up more than 1.5 percent from 320,000 the year before, according to the USDA NASS.

New state office to oversee Micron’s $100 billion investment
ALBANY — Gov. Kathy Hochul is creating an office that will oversee both Micron Technology’s (NASDAQ: MU) $100 billion investment for a semiconductor campus in Clay and the state’s overall effort to develop its semiconductor industry. Hochul’s office refers to it as GO SEMI, which is short for the Governor’s Office of Semiconductor Expansion, Management,
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ALBANY — Gov. Kathy Hochul is creating an office that will oversee both Micron Technology’s (NASDAQ: MU) $100 billion investment for a semiconductor campus in Clay and the state’s overall effort to develop its semiconductor industry.
Hochul’s office refers to it as GO SEMI, which is short for the Governor’s Office of Semiconductor Expansion, Management, and Integration. The governor announced her plan to create the office during her Jan. 10 State of the State address in Albany.
Empire State Development will lead GO SEMI with support from experts from numerous state agencies. It will work in coordination with federal and local partners and oversee investments in the semiconductor industry. GO SEMI will also help form and implement a broader, national model for “maximizing industry and community returns” on such public/private partnerships.

“Micron’s historic investment in New York State will create thousands of jobs, cement our manufacturing leadership, and is a testament to businesses seeing opportunities to relocate, grow and thrive in our state,” Hochul contended. “Our forward-thinking new GO SEMI office will build on that groundbreaking momentum, bringing public and private sector partners together to attract even more investment, jobs and businesses to New York State.”
The creation of GO SEMI follows Micron’s proposed $100 billion investment in Central New York to build the largest memory chip fab in the world, along with the opportunity for growth resulting from New York’s Green CHIPS program and the federal CHIPs and Science Act.
Micron plans to create nearly 50,000 jobs statewide, including 9,000 new high-paying Micron jobs with an average annual salary of over $100,000 and more than 40,000 community jobs. The project will also create thousands of prevailing-wage construction jobs, Hochul’s office noted.
When complete, the complex will include the nation’s largest clean-room space at about 2.4 million square feet, the size of nearly 40 football fields.

Federal funding to help Port of Oswego Authority make repairs to Oswego Harbor
OSWEGO — The Port of Oswego Authority will use a federal grant of nearly $18 million to help pay for the completion of repairs to Oswego Harbor’s west break wall. “Significant” repairs are needed on deteriorated sections of the west break wall, the office of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) announced Jan. 6.
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OSWEGO — The Port of Oswego Authority will use a federal grant of nearly $18 million to help pay for the completion of repairs to Oswego Harbor’s west break wall.
“Significant” repairs are needed on deteriorated sections of the west break wall, the office of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) announced Jan. 6.
The west arrowhead breakwater protects the harbor’s primary channel, which allows for safe navigation between Oswego Harbor and Lake Ontario.
The $17.9 million in federal funding is part of the recently passed $1.7 trillion federal-budget package for fiscal year 2023.
“This is vital to the port’s expanding business, local farmers and the many [businesses] that depend on the port,” William Scriber, executive director and CEO of the Port of Oswego Authority, said. “As we close out a record setting year in 2022 with the most tonnage in over two decades, this project is an investment in continued business and job growth in Central New York.”
Schumer explained that Oswego Harbor is the only commercial harbor in New York state on Lake Ontario. It has four operating businesses that use the harbor in addition to two marinas that are integral to Central New York’s agriculture and manufacturing sectors.
Waterborne transportation that the harbor facilitates supports $24.4 million in business revenue; 119 direct, indirect, and induced jobs; and $8 million in labor income for the transportation sector, per Schumer’s office.

New CEO starts duties at St. Camillus, Integrity Home Care
GEDDES — A leadership transition is underway at St. Camillus, a nursing and rehabilitation facility, and Integrity Home Care Services in the town of Geddes. The nonprofit on Jan. 16 announced Michael Schafer is now serving as president and CEO. Schafer, who started in his position on Dec. 16, previously served as VP for the
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GEDDES — A leadership transition is underway at St. Camillus, a nursing and rehabilitation facility, and Integrity Home Care Services in the town of Geddes.
The nonprofit on Jan. 16 announced Michael Schafer is now serving as president and CEO.
Schafer, who started in his position on Dec. 16, previously served as VP for the St. Camillus nursing facility for 11 years. St. Camillus is located at 813 Fay Road in the town of Geddes.
He’s succeeding Aileen Balitz, who plans to retire Jan. 27 after having served 31 years as president and CEO of St. Camillus.
Integrity Home Care Services is an affiliate of St. Camillus, which says it provides personal-care services to “help people remain safe, independent, and empowered at home.” It also provides support for caregivers.
Schafer has extensive operational knowledge, strategic experience, and the ability to develop relationships with staff, residents, donors, clinical partners, and community members, St. Camillus said. In addition, Schafer has previously served as an administrator for two other nursing facilities prior to joining St. Camillus.
“I am very excited to be provided the opportunity to lead the organization and continue to collaborate with the passionate and committed board members and St. Camillus team to navigate the organization through these challenging industry times,” Schafer said in a statement. “The collective focus remains to continue to re-vision the St. Camillus of the future and to support our greatest asset which continues to be the dedicated staff that drive the provision of quality care and services.”
About Balitz
Balitz’s career at St. Camillus spanned a total of 48 years. She started as a speech-language pathologist in 1974. Balitz was appointed president/CEO following her father’s retirement in 1991. Her father, Robert Mack, was the founding administrator of St. Camillus.
“I was privileged to work with my father,” Balitz said. “He inspired me to think more creatively, to identify and support people who had a passion for helping others and to advocate as strongly as possible for long term care.”
During her career at St. Camillus, Balitz helped to launch the Katherine Clancy Brown (KB) Rehabilitation Unit in 1992, which has provided care to thousands. She also helped oversee the start of Integrity Home Care Services in 1996 and an onsite LPN (licensed practical nurse) school with OCM BOCES in 2001.
Balitz also helped start a partnership with Upstate Medical University’s Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation in support of St. Camillus’ brain injury and rehabilitation programs. The partnership has continued for more than 30 years, the organization noted.
In addition — through a partnership with Christopher Community in 2018 — she was part of the groundbreaking of Harborbrook Apartments, which is next to St. Camillus. Harborbrook is a 60-unit independent-housing complex, which includes 20 units that are supported by St. Camillus.
Ask Rusty: Will My Work Earnings Affect My SS Benefits?
Dear Rusty: I am presently 67 years of age and am still working full time. I am receiving Medicare coverage, but I have not yet applied for monthly Social Security (SS) payments. I have been told that I can take SS payments even if I am still working. Is that correct? Is there a limit
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Dear Rusty: I am presently 67 years of age and am still working full time. I am receiving Medicare coverage, but I have not yet applied for monthly Social Security (SS) payments. I have been told that I can take SS payments even if I am still working. Is that correct? Is there a limit to how much I can earn each year and still receive SS payments?
Signed: Working but Wondering
Dear Working: Social Security’s so-called “earnings test” applies only to those who haven’t yet reached their full retirement age. At 67 years of age, you are already past your SS full retirement age (FRA) of 66 years and 2 months, which means there is no longer a limit to how much you can earn from working. Regardless of how much you earn, your monthly Social Security benefits will not be affected, so you can claim your Social Security at any time and not worry about your benefits being affected.
You should also know that because you haven’t yet claimed your Social Security, your monthly benefit has been growing since you reached your full retirement age in October 2021. You’ve been earning delayed retirement credits (DRCs) at the rate of 0.667 percent more benefit for each month you have delayed claiming, so your benefit now at age 67 would be over 8 percent more than it would have been at your FRA last year. And, if you wish to, you can continue waiting to claim SS and continue to earn those DRCs to get a still-higher benefit. But DRCs stop when you reach age 70, when you would get your maximum Social Security benefit — about 31 percent more than your FRA amount — so never wait past age 70 to claim.
To recap: because you’ve already passed your full retirement age you can claim your SS benefit now and get a benefit which is 8-plus percent more than you would have received if you claimed at your full retirement age, or you can continue to wait and get an even higher amount by claiming even later. Which way to go depends a lot on your current financial needs and your life expectancy. If you don’t urgently need the money now and are in good health and expect at least average longevity (about 84 for a man your current age), then waiting longer to claim would be a smart move. But if you need (or want) the money now, then claiming at this time would also be a wise choice. In either case, you don’t need to worry about your earnings from work negatively affecting your monthly Social Security benefit — they won’t.
Russell Gloor is a national Social Security advisor at the AMAC Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC). The 2.4-million-member AMAC says it is a senior advocacy organization. Send your questions to: ssadvisor@amacfoundation.org.
Author’s note: This article is intended for informational purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association (NSSA). The NSSA and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity.

Luxury apartments planned in Endicott
ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Atlas James Construction & Fabrication recently announced it will build a $30 million, 150-unit luxury apartment complex near the intersection of Odell Avenue and Watson Boulevard in Endicott. Atlas James Construction owner Stephen Donnelly says his Vestal–based firm is in the final stages of negotiating the parcel acquisition from Phoenix Investors, LLC,
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ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Atlas James Construction & Fabrication recently announced it will build a $30 million, 150-unit luxury apartment complex near the intersection of Odell Avenue and Watson Boulevard in Endicott.
Atlas James Construction owner Stephen Donnelly says his Vestal–based firm is in the final stages of negotiating the parcel acquisition from Phoenix Investors, LLC, with hopes to break ground on the project in May. He is also working with the Village of Endicott and Town of Union for necessary approvals and will receive a 10-year PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) agreement from The Agency – Broome County IDA/LDC
The demand for housing is only growing, he says, especially since Imperium 3 New York announced it plans to add about 1,200 jobs to Endicott’s nearby Huron Campus by 2028. Couple that with the recent announcements in support of turning the Southern Tier into a battery-technology-innovation hub, Donnelly says the need for housing, especially housing that caters to working professionals, is acute.
“If we’re going to make Endicott … a mecca for battery manufacturing, we have to make sure we have the infrastructure in place,” he says.
Consumers, especially after COVID-19, are looking for places to live that offer convenience, comfort, and for many, the ability to work from home, he notes. That’s why Serenity Tower will offer a business center, study areas, a daycare center, coffee bar, game room, 24-hour fitness center, and on-site security along with its one-, two-, or three-bedroom apartments.
The apartments will all feature energy-efficient appliances, in-unit washers and dryers, and underground parking for all residents.
Donnelly’s hope is that Serenity Tower offers up what professionals moving here from areas like the Silicon Valley or big cities are seeking. In addition, having such luxury housing available can help companies recruit that new talent.
Funding for the project comes from $10 million in private investments by Atlas James Construction & Fabrication and several private partners and $20 million in financing through M&T Bank. Atlas James Construction, with a 55 percent share, is majority owner of Serenity Tower.
Interest in the apartments has been great, Donnelly says, with most units already under pre-lease. His plan is for all of the units to be pre-leased before the building opens. He expects that opening to happen, at the earliest, at the end of 2024, but more likely toward the end of the first quarter of 2025.
“We’re excited about it,” Donnelly says.
Atlas James Construction & Fabrication will spearhead the project and partner with LeChase Construction Services, LLC, which has an office in Binghamton, on project management.
Founded in 2022, Atlas James Construction provides residential and commercial construction, general contracting, natural-stone countertops, and construction management.
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