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Le Moyne opens Keenan Center after construction project
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Following a year-long construction project, Le Moyne College on Oct. 13 formally opened the Keenan Center for Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Creativity, which is part of the Madden School of Business. The Keenan Center is located in a building on the west side of the Le Moyne campus, which is also home to […]
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Following a year-long construction project, Le Moyne College on Oct. 13 formally opened the Keenan Center for Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Creativity, which is part of the Madden School of Business.
The Keenan Center is located in a building on the west side of the Le Moyne campus, which is also home to the school’s bookstore, Joe Della Posta, spokesman for Le Moyne College, tells CNYBJ in an email.
Le Moyne College oversaw and managed the construction project. Sub-contractors on the effort included the DeWitt office of Chicago, Illinois–based Huen Electric; Century Heating + Cooling of DeWitt; Woodcock & Armani Mechanical Contractors of DeWitt; Flower City Glass of Syracuse; and Oliva Companies of DeWitt, according to Della Posta.
In addition, Holmes King Kallquist & Associates, Architects of Syracuse handled the design work, and IPD Engineering of Syracuse was the mechanical engineer on the project.
About the Keenan Center
The primary goal of the Keenan Center, which is open to Le Moyne students and the community, is to “increase the density of entrepreneurial, innovative and creative talent in Central New York,” Jim Joseph, dean of the Madden School of Business, said in an Oct. 13 release.
“Today, with the official opening of the Keenan Center, we are taking a moment to celebrate what we have accomplished and recommit ourselves to this goal,” Joseph said. “I am so grateful for the generosity of Tim and Kathleen Keenan, ‘81, Pete ‘78 and Tara ‘78 DiLaura and others, along with the expertise and hard work of the incredible team that has made this vision a reality.”
Those involved raised a total of $5.4 million for the Keenan Center, including $2 million from Le Moyne College. The funding also included a combination of alumni philanthropy, public grants, and corporate donations.
In 2019, the New York State Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) awarded Le Moyne a grant of $485,000 for the redevelopment, and earlier this year, the DiLauras made a gift in funds and equipment.
“We attended college in two of the hardest hit areas of the country — Central Ohio and Central New York — and believe that increased entrepreneurial activity will return these regions to economic growth, lifting communities out of poverty,” Tim and Kathleen Keenan said. “We found ourselves in the unique position to reshape how higher education can impact entrepreneurship and innovation. Following two decades of building other successful entrepreneurship programs, we are looked upon as thought leaders and our vision for the future is applied through that filter every day.”
The 2,700-square-foot center has been built to standards established by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is “one of the most unique facilities of its kind found on a college campus in the country,” Le Moyne College contends.
The Keenan Center includes the DiLaura Innovation & Design Lab. The lab is funded by Pete DiLaura, chair of the Le Moyne board of trustees, and his wife, Tara, both of whom are founders of CADimensions, Inc. of DeWitt.
“Our vision for this lab is to provide students and all those who use it with tools and technology to inspire them to impact the world,” the DiLauras said.
Up to 20 students a day will use the DiLaura Lab for classes and learning. The facility allows them to build electronic vehicles and spacecrafts and do laser cutting, milling, operate a HAM radio, drone work, and other high-tech designing, building, and making.
The Keenan Center also includes a digital-media studio/recording studio, virtual/augmented reality station, production/communications center, and equipment for woodworking, Le Moyne said.

Earlville Opera House project gets Preservation League grant
EARLVILLE, N.Y. — The Earlville Opera House says it will use grant funding from the Preservation League of NYS to help pay for an ongoing project. Besides a $10,000 grant from the Preservation League, Earlville Opera House has also been named the 2022 Donald Stephen Gratz Preservation Services Fund grant recipient, receiving an additional $10,000 to
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EARLVILLE, N.Y. — The Earlville Opera House says it will use grant funding from the Preservation League of NYS to help pay for an ongoing project.
Besides a $10,000 grant from the Preservation League, Earlville Opera House has also been named the 2022 Donald Stephen Gratz Preservation Services Fund grant recipient, receiving an additional $10,000 to fully fund its Victorian-era storefront restoration and window repair project.
“As a graduate of Hamilton College, I am always pleased that the award in honor of my friend Don Gratz helps preserve Central New York cultural and educational institutions,” said Thomas Schwarz, whose contributions underwrite the League’s Gratz Fund.
Since including opera houses on its statewide “Seven to Save” list of endangered historic sites in 2018, the Preservation League of NYS has worked to study and assist opera houses across New York state.
The Arthur F. and Alice E. Adams Charitable Foundation of New York City has supported that work. After funding a statewide opera-house survey in 2019, the Adams Foundation proposed a re-grant partnership in 2022 to help pay for the rehabilitation, restoration, and repair of historic arts and cultural venues, open to organizations that previously received Preservation League grants.
Both the Earlville Opera House and the Hubbard Hall Center for the Arts and Education in Washington County (northeast of Albany and near the Vermont border) were awarded grant funding.
“Rental income from the newly renovated shops will help support our dual mission to enrich Central New York through the arts while preserving our historic building for future generational use,” Michelle Connelly, Earlville Opera House executive director, said. “We take our role as stewards of this National Landmark to heart and strive to make Earlville Opera House a destination reflective of the cultural resources of our region. As an anchor in our community, we aim to make the arts accessible to all.”

Hinckley Reservoir boat-launching ramp closes for season
HINCKLEY, N.Y. — The Hinckley Reservoir boat-launching ramp closed for the season, effective Sunday, Oct. 2, the New York Power Authority (NYPA) announced. NYPA also removed the directional and warning buoys at the boat launch, and by the power dam spillway and other areas in the vicinity of its Gregory B. Jarvis Power Plant, a
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HINCKLEY, N.Y. — The Hinckley Reservoir boat-launching ramp closed for the season, effective Sunday, Oct. 2, the New York Power Authority (NYPA) announced.
NYPA also removed the directional and warning buoys at the boat launch, and by the power dam spillway and other areas in the vicinity of its Gregory B. Jarvis Power Plant, a small 9,000-kilowatt hydroelectric facility that straddles Oneida and Herkimer counties.
The reopening of the Hinckley Reservoir boat-launching ramp is planned for May 2023, before the Memorial Day holiday weekend, NYPA said.
Located along the north side of the reservoir on Route 365, the Hinckley Reservoir boat launch was first opened to the public in 1985. NYPA said it built it as a recreational benefit in connection with the construction of the Jarvis Power Plant.
The launch includes concrete planks extending 250 feet into the reservoir to permit easy access for boaters. NYPA also provided for parking spaces for cars and boat trailers, as well as a turnaround area.

FTC critical of Upstate Medical’s proposed acquisition of Crouse Health
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The staff of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) believes Upstate Medical University’s proposed acquisition of Crouse Health “would likely lead to higher

Port of Oswego Authority awards contract for $2.1M marina project
OSWEGO, N.Y. — W.D. Malone Trucking & Excavating Inc. of Oswego is building a new deep-water marina on the site of the former Goble Dry Dock and Shipyard at the Port of Oswego. The Port of Oswego Authority recently awarded the construction contract for the $2.1 million project, which is happening adjacent to the port’s
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OSWEGO, N.Y. — W.D. Malone Trucking & Excavating Inc. of Oswego is building a new deep-water marina on the site of the former Goble Dry Dock and Shipyard at the Port of Oswego.
The Port of Oswego Authority recently awarded the construction contract for the $2.1 million project, which is happening adjacent to the port’s west pier, William Scriber, Port of Oswego Authority executive director and CEO, said.
The port announced the project last November. According to William Scriber, Port executive director and CEO: “We anticipate the second phase of construction to start before winter and be finished by late sprint, 2023.”
“We are extremely happy to have awarded this project to a local contractor,” Frances Enwright, who chairs the Port of Oswego Authority board of directors, said. “It’s exciting to be creating more opportunities for boaters in Oswego and access to facilities on Lake Ontario.”
The new deep-water marina is part of the New York State Resiliency and Economic Development Initiative (REDI). The state created the REDI program in 2019 “to increase the resilience of shoreline communities and bolster economic development in the region … in response to the extended pattern of flooding along the shores of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River,” per the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul.
“Projects like the marina cement the Port Authority’s mission to not only create industrial and commercial development, but recreational opportunities as well,” Scriber said. “I’m delighted that we are advancing our major position as a multi-faceted Port Authority on the Great Lakes.”
Under the REDI program, the Port of Oswego Authority was awarded $1.8 million to create the new marina. It’s also using an additional $361,284 from the Passenger Freight Rail Assistance Program for the project.
“The 24-slip marina will have modern docks with both power and water available,” Scriber said. “It will also have a pavilion and new bathroom facilities — all within walking distance to downtown Oswego — and will focus on the boating community and allow direct access to the many local businesses downtown.”
The new marina will include a docking area for the H. Lee White Museum’s boat for lighthouse tours, the Port of Oswego said.
“Because this is a deep-water marina, it will accommodate deeper draft recreational boats in a protected area, thus eliminating the need for a breakwater when they are tied up there,” Scriber noted.
The Port of Oswego’s strategic location at the crossroads of the Northeastern North American shipping market, puts them less than 350 miles from 60 million people. It also has 14 companies that call it home for its domestic and international operations.
As one of the most-productive ports in the Great Lakes, the port supports 209 local jobs, $26.7 million in economic activity, and $13.8 million in personal income and local consumption expenditures.

Construction begins on Home Depot project in Schuyler
SCHUYLER, N.Y. — Crews from C2C Construction Solutions, LLC in Utica recently began site-preparation work in advance of constructing a new 52,500-square-foot, pre-engineered steel Butler building in the Schuyler Business Park. “Site work is under way, and foundations will be completed by the end of the year,” says David Kleps, C2C president. The company is
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SCHUYLER, N.Y. — Crews from C2C Construction Solutions, LLC in Utica recently began site-preparation work in advance of constructing a new 52,500-square-foot, pre-engineered steel Butler building in the Schuyler Business Park.
“Site work is under way, and foundations will be completed by the end of the year,” says David Kleps, C2C president. The company is building the project for owner/developer Bloom Utica, LLC. Endwell–based Delta Engineers, Architects & Surveyors, which has an office in Vernon, completed the design work on the project.
The building will be home to a Home Depot last-mile distribution center, according to an Aug. 29 news release from the Herkimer County Industrial Development Agency (IDA). The IDA estimates the total project cost at $9 million for the building, which includes 15 dock doors, 50 automobile stalls, 34 box-truck stalls, and office space. The structure will be located on 11 acres on Andrew Usyk Sr. Drive in the business park.
Kleps estimates the project will wrap up by mid-October of 2023. Work this year will end when the foundations are complete and resume next March, he says.
While the number of workers varies each day, the project employs about 30 workers and it’s a good way for C2C to end 2022 and kick off 2023. It’s the second building the Utica company has worked on in the park. C2C also completed a 62,000-square-foot expansion for Wilcor International, a camping and outdoor-industry wholesaler.
This latest building will put C2C near the 4-million square-foot mark of Butler buildings it has constructed since it began in 1982, Kleps says, and he hopes it’s the beginning of a good relationship with Bloom Utica.
Schuyler Town Supervisor Anthony Lucenti says the business park has been a great asset for the town, and he’s excited to see another tenant arrive in the park.
“The town has been very good over the past couple of years in fostering a very business friendly environment,” he says. The town highway department has even helped with road projects over the years to keep new business projects on schedule.
“I think it definitely strengthens the economy,” he says of the business park. It builds local assets and provides jobs. Those employed in the park spend money in town for gas, lunch, and more, Lucenti says.
Existing businesses in the park have been great assets to the community, he added, with several sponsoring or participating in town activities.
Along with Wilcor, the 188-acre business park is home to the Lignetics, Inc. wood-pellet facility, The Fountainhead Group, and a PepsiCo distribution center.
The Herkimer County IDA also announced that a processing facility and a convenience store/truck stop will be headed to the park but didn’t release any specifics on those projects. There are only 15 acres of space left in the park, it said.
The IDA is offering certain incentives to Bloom Utica including a real property tax abatement, sales-tax exemption, and mortgage-recording tax exemption.
Home Depot is expected to use the building for a last-mile distribution center, according to the IDA. A last-mile facility handles the final stages of delivery and serves as an important link between the factory or main warehouse and the customer’s door.
Amazon opened a last-mile warehouse in Frankfort this past summer.

C&S taps Wenham to lead national aviation practice
SALINA, N.Y. — The C&S Companies announced it has selected Matthew Wenham to lead the firm’s national aviation practice. The aviation team includes 120 people in 15 offices providing full-service aviation consulting including planning, sustainability, design, construction management, and residential sound attenuation. Michael Hotaling, who previously led the C&S national aviation practice, has transitioned into
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SALINA, N.Y. — The C&S Companies announced it has selected Matthew Wenham to lead the firm’s national aviation practice.
The aviation team includes 120 people in 15 offices providing full-service aviation consulting including planning, sustainability, design, construction management, and residential sound attenuation. Michael Hotaling, who previously led the C&S national aviation practice, has transitioned into a corporate role as C&S’s executive VP, the firm said in a news release.
Wenham is a VP with C&S Companies with 25 years of experience in aviation consulting — all with C&S. His experience includes planning, design, and construction of all aspects of airport-improvement projects, including leading design teams at some of the country’s largest airports. He previously led the engineering and construction teams in the C&S aviation group, providing client service and quality oversight.
Wenham has significant experience working with the FAA and served as past chair and eight-year member of the Board of Airport Consultants Council (ACC) and past-chair and member of the ACC Engineering Committee.
Wenham is a licensed professional engineer in numerous states and Envision sustainability professional. Wenham has been with C&S since 1997 and is a graduate of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

Area libraries receive construction grants for improvement projects
Several libraries around the region will undertake a variety of construction projects funded by library construction grant funds from $34 million in capital funds included in the 2020-2021 state budget, according to state Sen. Joseph Griffo (R–Rome). Dunham Public Library, located at 76 Main St. in Whitesboro, received $323,625 to tackle a number of issues that will make
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Several libraries around the region will undertake a variety of construction projects funded by library construction grant funds from $34 million in capital funds included in the 2020-2021 state budget, according to state Sen. Joseph Griffo (R–Rome).
Dunham Public Library, located at 76 Main St. in Whitesboro, received $323,625 to tackle a number of issues that will make the facility more modern and accessible, says April Bliss, library director.
With the funding, Dunham Public Library will upgrade and renovate several toilet rooms including making one toilet room on the main floor ADA compliant, she says.
Other work will include installing a fire door, a new secure circulation desk, new carpeting, removing a tree, and adding an LED sign near the road the library can put changing messages on.
“We have one,” Bliss says of the sign, “but the only way you can see the sign is if you turn and look at the building.” The new sign will be visible to passing motorists, helping the library get its message out.
The library will also be changing the layout of its community room and adding a handwashing station at the circulation desk.
Over the past 10 years, Dunham Public Library has received more than $1 million in construction grants, which are vital to keeping the library in good shape and accessible to all its patrons, Bliss contends.
She says the work will be split into several phases, with the first phase kicking off in the spring of 2020 with the circulation desk and toilet rooms. During the summer when the library is especially busy, work will move outside before the project wraps up at the end of next year with work on the community room. Dunham Public Library is preparing to put the project out for bid soon.
Other area libraries receiving construction grants include the following:
• Mid York Library System, at 1600 Lincoln Ave. in Utica, $19,209 to upgrade its security-monitoring system, modify a portion of the building exterior, and install network equipment.
• Utica Public Library, at 303 Genesee St., $13,190 to upgrade the fire detection/alarm system with new smoke detectors, fire alarms, and supporting infrastructure.
• Waterville Public Library, at 206 White St. in Waterville, $24,024 to rehabilitate, seal, and insulate failed windows in the main library room and install touchless automatic doors for the main entrance.
• Lowville Free Library, at 5387 Dayan St. in Lowville, $8,784 for the removal of a damaged boiler and air-conditioning condenser and replacement with high-efficiency models.
“Our public libraries play a critically important role as centers of learning, culture, and civic activity in many communities throughout the region,” Griffo said in a press release. “However, it can be difficult to afford the necessary upgrades and renovations that these buildings may need. This funding will help libraries throughout my district undertake a variety of improvements and projects that will help them to flourish for years to come.”
OPINION: Inflation still running hot, real incomes down
Congressional Democrats run out of time Inflation continued to run hot into September, with consumer inflation still up 8.2 percent annualized and producer inflation at 8.5 percent annualized, according to the latest data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The post-COVID supply crunch is continuing, and the economy overheats, now with demand on the downturn as
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Congressional Democrats run out of time
Inflation continued to run hot into September, with consumer inflation still up 8.2 percent annualized and producer inflation at 8.5 percent annualized, according to the latest data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The post-COVID supply crunch is continuing, and the economy overheats, now with demand on the downturn as OPEC curtails oil production and another apparent global recession is imminent, emanating from Europe as energy costs remain extremely elevated especially for natural gas.
As these are the last two inflation reports before the November Congressional midterms, voters only have but one attitude to express about prices: they’re high and they continue getting higher. This is undoubtedly bad news for Democratic leaders including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader (D-N.Y.) who are hoping to retain control of slim majorities in Congress. A swing of six seats in the House and just one seat in the Senate is all that is needed to put Republicans back into majorities.
If 2022 is a referendum on cash-strapped household budgets, there can only be one outcome at the polls.
Food prices are up 11.2 percent compared to a year ago. Energy, all told, has risen 19.8 percent. Gasoline, even coming off its highs, is still up 18.2 percent compared to last year. Fuel oil is up 58.1 percent. Electricity is up 15.5 percent and utility piped gas service has risen 33.1 percent.
New car prices are up 9.4 percent and used cars are up 7.2 percent. Transportation services have increased 14.6 percent.
Shelter is up 6.6 percent and medical services are 6.5 percent higher.
In the meantime, real incomes continue to take a huge hit, with the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reporting, “From September 2021 to September 2022, real average hourly earnings decreased 2.5 percent, seasonally adjusted.” That is the American people’s wages, on a real basis, being cut just as prices are increasing.
And interest rates are way up, too, with 30-year mortgages now up to 6.66 percent, according to Freddie Mac data, as banks demand more in return for lending.
As a result, revolving consumer credit owned and securitized has skyrocketed 15.3 percent annualized, according to data compiled by the Federal Reserve, as households resort to plastic to settle payments on all the goods and services that cost so much more now. That should continue until households on balance curtail spending, which will contribute to the recession that looks to be ongoing into the new year.
Politically, it is hard for Americans not to look to their elected representatives and the policies they are pursuing for an explanation for the crunch we are in.
COVID lockdowns dramatically collapsed global production, but when the economy reopened sooner than expected, producers could not catch up. Meanwhile, Congress and the Federal Reserve borrowed and printed $6 trillion to shore up the economy during the pandemic as the M2 money supply exploded.
As far as energy goes, environment, social and governance (ESG) investing has successfully reduced the growth of America’s oil production, which is still below pre-COVID levels, and Congress has invested heavily in more expensive green energy.
Combine those policies with a botched foreign policy toward Saudi Arabia — President Joe Biden has been favoring a nuclear deal with Iran at the expense of Riyadh — where Biden requested expanded production and instead received reduced production from OPEC. So. prices had nowhere to go but up.
And then there’s the war in Europe, which appears to be entering its most- dangerous phase yet after the sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipelines from Russia to Germany and the Russian annexation of Donetsk, Luhansk, and other areas in eastern Ukraine. And now the presidents of Russia, Ukraine, and the United States are all talking about a nuclear war. If nothing else, assuming there is no wider war, the supply crunch for Europe is real and will be ongoing, where inflation is far worse than here.
But telling voters: “It could be worse” is the same thing as telling them: “It could get worse.” That’s likely not a winning formula for Pelosi and Schumer, who may be watching their paper-thin majorities evaporate in a hurry without too much to show for it in the way of legislation. Certainly, there has been no true inflation reduction for households as prices continue rising — and that may be all that matters at the end of the day on Nov. 8.
Robert Romano is the VP of public policy at Americans for Limited Government (ALG). The organization says it is a “non-partisan, nationwide network committed to advancing free-market reforms, private property rights, and core American liberties.”

CHENG CHENG recently joined Syracuse University Libraries as the collection development and analysis librarian. In this role, he will be responsible for analyzing usage and selecting and deselecting library resources. Prior to joining Syracuse University, Cheng was the collection-strategy librarian at San Jose State University and the acquisition and e-resources librarian at SUNY College at
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CHENG CHENG recently joined Syracuse University Libraries as the collection development and analysis librarian. In this role, he will be responsible for analyzing usage and selecting and deselecting library resources. Prior to joining Syracuse University, Cheng was the collection-strategy librarian at San Jose State University and the acquisition and e-resources librarian at SUNY College at Oneonta. Cheng obtained his master’s degree in library science from the University at Buffalo and his bachelor’s degree from Lingnan University in Hong Kong.
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