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Naples comes out of retirement to join Community Bank
DeWITT, N.Y. — Allen Naples is back. The veteran banker, who had been a fixture of the Central New York banking scene for more than four decades, retired a year ago but has returned to the industry. Naples has joined Community Bank, N.A. as a regional executive for the Central New York market, based at […]
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DeWITT, N.Y. — Allen Naples is back. The veteran banker, who had been a fixture of the Central New York banking scene for more than four decades, retired a year ago but has returned to the industry.
Naples has joined Community Bank, N.A. as a regional executive for the Central New York market, based at the bank’s DeWitt headquarters. He will be the executive in charge of Community Bank’s efforts to build its corporate-banking business across the greater Syracuse area and Central New York.
Naples retired as the Central New York regional president for M&T Bank in May 2021. He spent 16 years at M&T and had a 48-year banking career in total, including working at HSBC.
His first day in his new post at Community Bank was June 21.
Why return to work so soon? Quite frankly, he missed it. Naples tells CNYBJ in an interview that he missed being part of the Central New York economy and the role that bankers play in it and also there’s only so much golf you can play.
“It’s been a struggle retiring. I’ve been getting into golf, playing at least four, five times a week, which was far more than I was used to or would like to do,” Naples says. “I just miss what goes on in the economy. Central New York is extremely important to me and my family. I’ve done an awful lot on the banking side but also the civic and community side and I just wanted to get back to it.”
Naples says he has been stockholder in Community Bank’s parent company, Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU), for about 25 years and this was the only bank he spoke to when discussing a return to work.
“I knew what I wanted. I felt if I’m going to get into the business, I’m going to get with a bank that has the same values and the same kind of direction and commitment to the Central New York community that I have. For me getting back into it was either going to be with Community Bank or I would just stay retired,” he said.
Naples will have about a dozen bankers that will work under him in his new role at Community Bank.
“We are really happy that Allen Naples has joined us after a long and successful career in banking at a lot of different places,” says Mark Tryniski, president and CEO of Community Bank. “I have known Allen for 20 years, maybe longer, from the community as well as the banking industry. Allen retired from M&T and was interested in doing something else and we were interested in having him,” He joined Naples for a June 21 phone interview with CNYBJ.
Tryniski continues, “What Allen has done in the Central New York market … is remarkable and astonishing. His skill and understanding of this market and his relationships across the Central New York community at every level are remarkable. It’s a great fit for us to have someone of Allen’s experience and expertise in this market join Community Bank.”
Tryniski would like to see Community Bank boost its share of the Central New York banking market. Though based in DeWitt, Community Bank ranked just sixth in deposit market share in the Syracuse metro area as of June 2021 with just a 6.6 percent share of total deposits, according to FDIC data. It has 13 branches in the metro area but just three in Onondaga County.
“We have a lot of opportunity in this market. I would say we are underpenetrated in this market relative to our size and capacity. We have the lending capacity and products and services to be able to serve 98 percent of businesses in Central New York,” Tryniski said.
Naples said that was one of the factors that helped convince him to join Community Bank. “There’s not a product or service from one end of the spectrum — from the retail side to small business to middle market, to the commercial real-estate side — that Community Bank does not have the capacity and capabilities to offer at a very compatible level to any of our competitors in the marketplace.”
Community Bank operates more than 220 branches across upstate New York, northeastern Pennsylvania, Vermont, and western Massachusetts. Community Bank System has total assets of more than $15.6 billion.
In the broader 16-county Central New York area (including the Southern Tier, Mohawk Valley, and North Country), Community Bank ranked fourth in deposit market share with just under 9.6 percent, per the latest FDIC data.

New pediatric office opens in New Hartford
NEW HARTFORD, N.Y. — Blooming Pediatric & Family Nurse Practitioners, PLLC, the brainchild of Michal Hovak and Coral Montana, is a new pediatric medical office at 1 Oxford Crossing, Suite 3, in New Hartford. Hovak, a family nurse practitioner, and Montana, a pediatric nurse practitioner, met when both worked for longtime area pediatrician William Fuchs.
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NEW HARTFORD, N.Y. — Blooming Pediatric & Family Nurse Practitioners, PLLC, the brainchild of Michal Hovak and Coral Montana, is a new pediatric medical office at 1 Oxford Crossing, Suite 3, in New Hartford.
Hovak, a family nurse practitioner, and Montana, a pediatric nurse practitioner, met when both worked for longtime area pediatrician William Fuchs. When Fuchs retired in September, Hovak and Montana got the idea to open their own practice together.
The duo first started working on a business plan and worked with Med-Care Administrators, LLC in Marcy, which provides medical billing and practice-management consulting services. “They have been amazing for us,” Montana notes.
Working with realtor Patricia Virkler of Signature Realty in New Hartford, they began looking for a suitable office location. The space at Oxford Crossing was vacant for several years and had just what they were seeking.
Blooming Pediatrics, which is the shortened name they use for the practice, leases 3,000 square feet from property owner Aaron Harris. Hovak and Montana praised Harris for collaborating with them as they designed their ideal space. “He let us pick everything from the floors to the paint,” Montana notes.
The end result is a bright and cheerful space welcoming to the youngest of patients. The office features two waiting rooms, so ill patients are separated from those who come in for well-child visits, and five exam rooms.
Blooming Pediatrics officially opened on April 18 and the need for its services was already high. In recent months, Hovak notes, three pediatricians in Oneida County retired while a fourth died. “That put close to 1,000 patients out there looking for new providers,” she notes.
The practice has about 500 patients, but Hovak expects that to expand quickly as they recently received word the practice can accept Fidelis Care insurance, a main provider of insurance under the state’s Child Health Plus subsidized program. There were close to 1,000 patients on the practice’s Fidelis waiting list.
“We have room to grow still,” Montana says of the space. Currently, Blooming Pediatrics doesn’t use all the space, and leases out space to Kayla Hajdasz-Cha, a licensed master social worker, and Shelly Studer, a licensed social worker.
Blooming Pediatrics employs four nurses on a part-time or per-diem basis and also works with Mohawk Valley Lactation in Utica to provide a lactation consultant, in addition to Montana who is certified in lactation counseling.
Certifications and professional experience aside, there are a few things that set Blooming Pediatrics apart, Hovak contends. “We both have kids,” she says. “We can share a lot of our experiences.” They also take more time with patients and try to truly listen to the parents of their patients, answer questions, and provide reassurance.
Blooming Pediatrics provides well care, sick care, and immunizations for children from birth to age 21. The practice celebrated its grand opening with a reception and ribbon cutting on May 25 with the Greater Utica Area Chamber of Commerce.

Rev: Ithaca Startup Works launching a new AgTech manufacturing hardware accelerator
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Thomas named GM of Radisson Corning hotel
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