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Weichert joins commercial-lending team at Community Bank
DeWITT, N.Y.— As Community Bank, N.A.’s new senior VP, commercial banking group manager, Lindsay Weichert is excited for a lot more than working for her hometown bank. Working for a bank where decisions are made locally was a huge draw for the Syracuse native. That the bank shares her passion for economic development and community […]
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DeWITT, N.Y.— As Community Bank, N.A.’s new senior VP, commercial banking group manager, Lindsay Weichert is excited for a lot more than working for her hometown bank.
Working for a bank where decisions are made locally was a huge draw for the Syracuse native. That the bank shares her passion for economic development and community service is another perk, she adds.
Weichert joined Community Bank just over two weeks ago, bringing 18 years of commercial-banking experience. Prior to joining Community Bank, she worked at M&T Bank in several positions including commercial real estate group manager and overseeing Fitch Ratings as a director of performance analytics.
“I was brought in because of my background in lending,” Weichert says. In her new role at Community Bank, she oversees two lending teams with a staff of about eight. One team focuses on Onondaga, Cayuga, and Oswego counties, while the other team concentrates on the North Country.
The bank is looking to grow organically across the region, she says, and her teams are at work to make that happen.
“It’s really just a matter of getting out in the community,” and letting potential customers know what Community Bank has to offer, Weichert says. That list of offerings is extensive including “anything you could possibly need in terms of balance-sheet lending, “along with wealth management, insurance, 401(k) and pension plans, and even human-resources services.
“We are thrilled to welcome Lindsay to the Community Bank family and are excited to see her grow in her new role,” President of Commercial Banking Jeffrey Levy said in a news release. “Lindsay’s commercial real estate finance experience will be an excellent complement to our commercial banking team.”
Weichert earned her bachelor’s degree from St. Lawrence University, where she majored in multi-language with minors in economics and mathematics. She received her master’s degree in real estate with a finance and investment concentration from New York University.
She is president of the Syracuse City Ballet, treasurer of the Downtown Syracuse Foundation, a board member of Humane CNY and the United Way of Central New York, a committee member of NUAIR UAS Job Fund, and a member of the Syracuse Surge Business Development Workgroup. She was honored in 2015 as one of The Central New York Business Journal’s Forty Under 40 honorees.
Community Bank is the banking subsidiary of Community Bank System, Inc. (NYSE: CBU) which operates more than 215 branches across New York, northeastern Pennsylvania, Vermont, and western Massachusetts. Headquartered in DeWitt, Community Bank System has more than $15.5 billion in assets.

A recap of the CenterState CEO annual meeting
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Business of the Year Awards in five categories, remarks from the organization’s top official, and a keynote panel discussion were part of CenterState CEO’s annual meeting held April 26, which attracted a crowd of nearly 600. Business of the Year recipients included Raymour & Flanigan Furniture, which won in the “More than
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Business of the Year Awards in five categories, remarks from the organization’s top official, and a keynote panel discussion were part of CenterState CEO’s annual meeting held April 26, which attracted a crowd of nearly 600.
Business of the Year recipients included Raymour & Flanigan Furniture, which won in the “More than 50 Employees” category, while Wireless Business Group was honored in the “Fewer than 50 Employees” group.
CenterState CEO also recognized Liberty Resources Inc. in the “Nonprofit” category, Gwen Inc. in the “Minority-owned Business” category (presented in partnership with the Upstate Minority Economic Alliance), and Kinney Drugs Inc. in the “Community Involvement” category.
Besides the Business of the Year Award announcements, Robert Simpson, president and CEO of CenterState CEO, also addressed attendees at the Nicholas J. Pirro Convention Center at Oncenter in Syracuse.
In his message, Simpson spoke about how the Central New York region is experiencing a “moment of exceptional opportunity” as it emerges from the pandemic, per CenterState CEO’s news release on the event.
“We are incredibly excited to be back in person for this event, which has always been a moment for our business community to come together and renew our shared sense of purpose to advancing the trajectory of our community and region,” Simpson said. “The past two years have tested our resolve, but Central New York has always faced its challenges head on. Data driven strategies set into motion over the past decade have laid the foundation for progress we are seeing today, be that population gains, businesses investing in and creating jobs in the region, growth in our innovation ecosystem, or being positioned to compete for major federal investments, such as the Build Back Better Regional challenge.”
In an April 28 CEO Focus email message to CenterState CEO members, Simpson called the focus of this year’s annual meeting, Transcend, “perhaps the most fitting adjective for this chapter in Central New York’s story.”
Simpson said it “rightfully acknowledges the challenges of our past,” when global economic forces buffeted Central New York, weakening the area’s traditional industrial base, economic vitality, and the region’s self-image.
“Thankfully, that was not the end of our story, it was just the beginning. Together, we established a new set of strategies that aligned our assets and positioned us to capitalize on global trends. We made investments in our communities to create a sense of place and attract talent. Targeted investments helped spur entrepreneurial activity and establish a new center of gravity for the next economy,” Simpson said in the email. “Today, we’re seeing the results of these efforts. Businesses, including Amazon and Microsoft, are investing in our community. Startups can attract venture capital to accelerate growth and create jobs. New development projects continue to reshape our skylines. These efforts, led by many members of our business community, helped us achieve progress that is gaining national recognition.”
The annual meeting also included a keynote panel featuring Naria Santa Lucia, general manager of digital inclusion and U.S. community engagement at Microsoft Philanthropies, and Jennifer Cruickshank, head of public policy and community engagement at Amazon New York. The panel conversation focused on digital transformation, workforce inclusion, and the impact of community investment and collaboration.
“The conversation was particularly relevant given the region’s focus on digital transformation, workforce inclusion, and the impact of community investment and collaboration,” Simpson said.
Fraser joins St. Joseph’s Health
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — St. Joseph’s Health recently welcomed Dr. Cynthia Fraser, obstetrician and gynecologist, to its St. Joseph’s Health Infant Services unit. Dr. Fraser is a board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist with more than 25 years of clinical experience. Prior to joining St. Joseph’s Health, she was a laborist at Upstate Community Hospital in the town of Onondaga.
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — St. Joseph’s Health recently welcomed Dr. Cynthia Fraser, obstetrician and gynecologist, to its St. Joseph’s Health Infant Services unit.
Dr. Fraser is a board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist with more than 25 years of clinical experience. Prior to joining St. Joseph’s Health, she was a laborist at Upstate Community Hospital in the town of Onondaga. She assisted with deliveries and provided general consultations associated with pregnancies and childbirth.
Dr. Fraser was also the attending physician with full admitting and surgical privileges at Lewis Country General Hospital in Lowville, from 2010-2016. Prior to that, Fraser saw patients at a small private medical practice in the Finger Lakes region while serving as the attending physician with full admitting and surgical privileges at F.F. Thompson Hospital in Canandaigua. She is currently an active volunteer of the Central New York Medical Reserve Corp., where she has volunteered her time to assist with COVID-19 testing and vaccination.
Fraser holds a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Cornell University and her medical degree from SUNY Upstate Medical University, where she was a nominee for an American Osteopathic Association Award. Dr. Fraser completed her residency at Albany Medical Center.
Fraser is currently welcoming new patients at her office at 615 N. Seward Ave. in Auburn, as well as performing deliveries at St. Joseph’s Health Hospital in Syracuse.

MV Chamber Alliance meeting covers downtown revitalization
WHITESBORO, N.Y. — The Chamber Alliance of the Mohawk Valley met on May 3 to celebrate 25 years of the alliance and to hear from one of the region’s newest companies, Wolfspeed, about its plans for employment. Adam Milton, VP of Wolfspeed’s Mohawk Valley Fab silicon-carbide wafer fabrication facility that just opened in Marcy, said
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WHITESBORO, N.Y. — The Chamber Alliance of the Mohawk Valley met on May 3 to celebrate 25 years of the alliance and to hear from one of the region’s newest companies, Wolfspeed, about its plans for employment.
Adam Milton, VP of Wolfspeed’s Mohawk Valley Fab silicon-carbide wafer fabrication facility that just opened in Marcy, said the company currently employs more than 250 people and is looking to hire many more. Wolfspeed projects it will employ 600 by 2029.
“We’ve had a lot of employees move from out of town,” he said, noting that he and his family relocated to Clinton from North Carolina.
As those employees move to the area, it’s crucial that the area offers them the things they need to thrive, Jennifer Waters, VP of business development and communications at Mohawk Valley EDGE, told the gathering.
That’s why things like workforce development, expanding childcare, improving broadband access, and fostering business resilience in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic are all crucial.
Creating vibrant downtown districts is also vital, she said, and that’s why the New York State Downtown Revitalization Initiative (DRI) with $600 million in funding is so important.
“These compact, walkable downtowns are key,” Waters said. By the end of 2021, the Mohawk Valley region had received $40 million in DRI funding.
A number of Mohawk Valley communities have already received funding including Oneonta, Rome, and Utica. They have used the money for a host of projects including Hartwick College’s Grain Innovation Center in Oneonta, Copper City Lofts set to break ground later this year in Rome, and plans to redevelop underutilized buildings and bolster arts and cultural offerings in Utica.
Little Falls is using funding to plan and develop its waterfront district from a group of separate development areas into one more cohesive district highlighting the Erie Canal and Mohawk River.
To the west, Oneida has already used funding to open a new, modern library and will allocate additional funds for projects including wastewater upgrades and creating pocket parks around the city.
Prospective recipients of the DRI funding are nominated by their local regional economic development council based on the downtown’s potential for transformation. The Mohawk Valley Regional Economic Development Council plans to meet in mid-June.
Established in 1997, the Chamber Alliance of the Mohawk Valley consists of 23 chambers of commerce and affiliate partners from six counties. In 2021, the Genesis Group took on the administrative duties of the alliance, which became a committee within the framework of Genesis.
New York’s local sales-tax collections rise 21% in Q1
Local government sales-tax collections grew by 21.1 percent, or $901 million, in the first quarter of 2022 compared to the same period last year, according to a report released April 29 by New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. Collections for the three-month period totaled nearly $5.2 billion, with growth at least partially driven by
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Local government sales-tax collections grew by 21.1 percent, or $901 million, in the first quarter of 2022 compared to the same period last year, according to a report released April 29 by New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.
Collections for the three-month period totaled nearly $5.2 billion, with growth at least partially driven by inflation, which hit a 40-year-high in March.
“Local sales tax collections continue to come in strong. While local governments are collecting more, they are also dealing with some of the same increased costs that consumers and private businesses are,” DiNapoli said. “With prices rising, we’re watching closely to see what impact the rate of inflation and economic volatility is having on New York’s economic recovery.”
New York City’s tax collections in the first quarter grew by 28.5 percent compared to the same period last year and exceeded pre-pandemic levels for the second straight quarter after remaining below pre-pandemic levels for most of the last two years. The city’s collections have taken longer to recover from the effects of the pandemic compared to the rest of the state, the comptroller noted.
Outside New York City, nearly every county generated double-digit growth in sales-tax collections in the first quarter. Broome County saw the highest growth at 24.3 percent, followed by Yates County (22.2 percent), and Schuyler and Columbia counties (21 percent). Sullivan County had the lowest growth at 6.6 percent.
Of the cities that impose their own sales tax (not including New York City), Norwich saw the biggest jump in the first quarter at 30.8 percent, followed by Johnstown (29.2 percent) and Ithaca (28.6 percent). Gloversville had the lowest growth at 4.6 percent.
The report notes that the recently enacted state budget provides for a partial suspension of certain state taxes on gasoline from June to December 2022, amounting to a reduction of 16 cents per gallon.

Bond adds Long Island law firm in downstate expansion
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Bond, Schoeneck & King, PLLC — a Syracuse–based law firm with 250 attorneys across 13 offices — has been on a mission to expand and become a full-service law firm in the greater New York City area. The firm has taken another key step in that direction with its announcement that it
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Bond, Schoeneck & King, PLLC — a Syracuse–based law firm with 250 attorneys across 13 offices — has been on a mission to expand and become a full-service law firm in the greater New York City area.
The firm has taken another key step in that direction with its announcement that it will soon be combining with a smaller Long Island firm.
Effective June 1, Lazer, Aptheker, Rosella & Yedid — which is based in Melville, New York and also has an office in South Florida — will join Bond, bringing 23 lawyers. That includes about 15 partners. Bond will also add 14 support staff from the Lazer firm.
The combination will boost Bond’s Long Island presence to 40 attorneys — the firm already has an office in Garden City — and continue its downstate expansion. A little over a year ago, Bond combined with New York City–based Putney, Twombly, Hall & Hirson, adding 15 lawyers. Bond also opened an office in Westchester County last fall.

“For a long time now, we’ve been looking to make our downstate practice, in particular our Long Island practice, full service. Currently in our Garden City office, we represent a lot of public-sector clients, we do a lot of litigation work, and labor and employment in particular. But we’ve always had a strategic plan to expand and diversify the practice,” Kevin Bernstein, chair of the Bond, Schoeneck & King management committee, tells The Central New York Business Journal in an interview. “[Lazer] provided us exactly what we’re looking for, and that is they are a commercial business and litigation firm. They do a lot of things, and basically, they would turn our practice downstate into a full-service location.”
Bond and Lazer had discussed combining on and off over several years and like a lot of things in business, COVID put things on pause for a while. But the timing looked right now.
“Why now? The opportunity presented itself. We finally got past some, but not all, of the

difficulties of COVID, and it just seemed like the time was right …so that we could move forward with a really comprehensive and actually fairly large-sized Long Island practice,” Bernstein explains.
Founded in 1987, Lazer, Aptheker, Rosella & Yedid began as a small commercial litigation firm. Since its founding, it added services in real-estate conveyance, financing, and leasing; general business and corporate law; mergers and acquisitions; debtors’ and creditors’ rights; tax; trust and estate; and banking litigation.
“Our culture is a great fit with Bond’s, making this combination something that our attorneys are looking forward to. We have referred services to Bond over the years in practice areas that we didn’t offer and know many of the lawyers professionally and personally,” Ralph Rosella, managing partner of Lazer, said in a statement. “This will be beneficial to our clients, and we’re excited to be part of a firm that can offer a broader array of legal services and excellent client service to help them realize their objectives.”
Rosella is coming aboard Bond and will be the Melville co-office managing member with Craig Olivo, who has that role now in Bond’s Garden City office.

Bernstein says that as soon as Bond’s leadership met the leadership of the Lazer firm to forge an agreement, “we knew we could work well together.”
“I could tell right from the beginning that we would enjoy practicing law together. And that’s really what you’re looking for in kind of a collegial, collaborative approach to the practice of law, which to me makes up a large part of what law firms like to call culture,” he notes.
After the Lazer lawyers join, the Bond law firm, which was founded in 1897, will grow to 15 offices in five states and 275 attorneys. The Lazer office in Melville encompasses 20,000 feet while its office in West Palm Beach, Florida is about 4,000 square feet, according to Bernstein.
VIEWPOINT: Digital transformation is imperative to combat health care’s labor crisis
As the coronavirus pandemic first spread across the globe, health systems turned to technology and virtual care while focusing their efforts on COVID-19 and its consequences. Physicians deployed digital tools to keep the worried well out of hospitals, to keep beds open for COVID-19 patients, and to support and manage conditions like pregnancy from the safety
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As the coronavirus pandemic first spread across the globe, health systems turned to technology and virtual care while focusing their efforts on COVID-19 and its consequences. Physicians deployed digital tools to keep the worried well out of hospitals, to keep beds open for COVID-19 patients, and to support and manage conditions like pregnancy from the safety of patients’ homes.
Now the health-care industry faces a new challenge. The so-called “Great Resignation” is causing workers to leave their jobs in droves. The health-care sector is among the top three industries affected.
Hospitals were already operating on razor-thin margins after several years of limiting or foregoing lucrative elective procedures. Now they have been strained to the breaking point by increasing staff shortages. With skilled workers in high demand, many health systems are allocating resources to wooing employees with higher salaries and benefits, paying two to three times the typical salary for in-house nurses to fill staffing gaps with traveling nurses. In the meantime, they’re halting or permanently shutting down services like labor and delivery and emergency departments.
Why not use that budget to invest in digital tools, to fundamentally rethink how care is delivered? The same tools hospitals used to deliver remote care at the onset of the pandemic can serve as a stopgap during the present labor shortage.
Extend the reach of overburdened care providers with asynchronous care
Burnout is both a cause and effect of current staffing shortages. The U.S. was struggling with a shrinking clinical workforce before the pandemic. COVID-19 accelerated the problem, with some taking the opportunity to retire, others moving to more lucrative contract work, and still others switching fields altogether.
Digital tools are not a solution by themselves. Modalities that require a physician on the other end of a solution (e.g., virtual visits) do nothing to address the problems of physician shortages. Health systems need to implement mobile self-care — consumer technologies like smartphone and tablet apps that enable consumers to capture their own health data without direct provider assistance. When this biometric data is communicated into a patient’s electronic health record, providers can identify elevated risks remotely and act on them.
Reduce the need for in-office visits
The transition to virtual care at the start of the pandemic forced health-care leaders to re-evaluate and rewrite outdated industry standards. The maternal-health field is a great example of this. Although data showed long ago that a standard schedule of 12 to 14 prenatal visits is not tied to better outcomes, those recommendations remained largely unchanged since the 1930s.
Then, in response to the need to reduce in-person visits, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists assembled a panel of experts who determined that patients without medical conditions or pregnancy complications were safe to select a less-intense visit schedule, aided by digital health tools.
Remote patient monitoring can help providers capture more than 20 times the data typically collected at an in-office appointment, maximizing their time and facilitating better outcomes. Providing continuous digital touchpoints to patients also strengthens feelings of safety and support on the patient end, addresses fears from health-care staff that the labor shortage is compromising patient care, and provides a critical safety net for patients that were already struggling with access before hospitals suspended or eliminated services.
Decrease emergency-department utilization with remote patient monitoring
Remote patient monitoring (RPM) is likewise a solution for managing readmissions and emergency-service utilization. Early research showed the benefits of RPM for reducing hospital stays and admissions. The technology (and providers’ fluency with it) has improved exponentially in the ensuing years.
While its level of effectiveness varies by population and condition, data shows that RPM reduces acute-care use, and enables providers to intervene in high-risk events without sacrificing quality of care for low-risk patients.
In the U.S., COVID-related emergency department visits doubled between December 2021 and January 2022 to their highest level since the pandemic began. This strain on emergency services touched non-COVID ER patients as well. Bed shortages in rural facilities caused some ER patients to wait days to be transferred out of state.
If RPM can effectively mitigate the need for emergency services, it carries the promise of reducing the strain on emergency care within our increasingly crowded hospitals — a potentially life-saving development.
Encourage patient engagement and adherence to quality measures
The collateral damage in this labor crisis are patients — particularly the economically vulnerable, as the hospitals that typically serve these communities struggle to compete with wealthier systems that can better afford the steep rising labor costs. With these hospitals reallocating staff and resources, closing beds and services, and struggling with overloaded schedules, patients are in more danger than ever of slipping through the cracks.
It’s imperative that hospitals provide a digital safety net for their patients — 24/7 access to provider-approved education, connections to community resources, as well as reminders to engage with important quality measures such as taking medication or measuring blood-pressure levels. Digital tools are critical for supporting patients and providers.
COVID-19 revealed and exacerbated major holes in a system that was already struggling to service its patients while supporting providers. Unless today’s short-staffed hospitals adapt to current remote patient-monitoring practices, the challenges it has revealed will be with us for a long time. The “Great Resignation” should spark a great transformation, where digital innovation is no longer a stopgap but an integral part of any health-care delivery strategy moving forward.
Juan Pablo Segura is president and co-founder of Babyscripts, a virtual-care platform for managing obstetrics. He has been named a “Healthcare Transformer” by the Startup Health Academy in New York and a Wireless Lifechanger by CTIA for his work in detecting problems in pregnancy faster.

Rome Health gets county funding for maternity department renovations
ROME, N.Y. — Rome Health will receive $3 million from Oneida County to help fund a dedicated Caesarean section (C-section) suite, adjacent to the maternity department on the fourth floor of the hospital. Oneida County Executive Anthony J. Picente, Jr. announced the funding in his April 6 State of the County address. The hospital will
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ROME, N.Y. — Rome Health will receive $3 million from Oneida County to help fund a dedicated Caesarean section (C-section) suite, adjacent to the maternity department on the fourth floor of the hospital.
Oneida County Executive Anthony J. Picente, Jr. announced the funding in his April 6 State of the County address.
The hospital will use the funds to renovate 2,000 square feet of existing space and convert it to a surgical suite next to the maternity department. This will enhance patient safety and optimize the hospital’s existing operating suites on the first floor, hospital officials said.
“We are proud to be one of only two “Best Maternity Hospitals” in the state,” Rome Health CEO AnneMarie Czyz, said in a news release. “The funding for a dedicated C-section suite will enable Rome Health to take the next step in advancing our bold plan for the future.”
While the hospital’s C-section rate is lower than the state average, Rome Health’s overall obstetrics volume grew 28.5 percent between 2020 and 2021 as the community had reduced access to care in neighboring communities.
At the same time, the hospital’s overall surgical volume increased 26.4 percent with the addition of new service lines and new surgeons. Currently, one of the hospital’s four existing operating rooms is reserved for emergent C-sections.
Creating a dedicated women’s surgical suite for both scheduled and emergent C-sections will increase available capacity for general surgical growth, according to hospital officials. In 2021, 744 babies were born at Rome Health, including 282 by C-section.
“The county’s investment will help us accelerate our plans for expanding access to the best care out there, here in Rome,” Czyz said.
Other recent growth initiatives at Rome Health include breaking ground during the pandemic on a new physician center, becoming a nationally accredited bariatric center, and investing in 7D technology for spine surgery.
Rome Health provides services from primary and specialty care to long-term care, is an affiliate of St. Joseph’s Health, and is an affiliated clinical site of New York Medical College.

Binghamton entrepreneur named SBA Upstate Small Business Person of the Year
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — Anthony Folk, owner of Chenango Point Cycles in Binghamton, has won the 2022 Small Business Person of the Year Award from the

St. Elizabeth College of Nursing names Panko president
UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) has appointed Kimberly A. Panko as the next president of the St. Elizabeth College of Nursing (SECON) in Utica, effective June 6. Panko succeeds Varinya Sheppard, who is retiring on June 1 after a 40-year nursing career that included serving as president of the college and multiple
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UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) has appointed Kimberly A. Panko as the next president of the St. Elizabeth College of Nursing (SECON) in Utica, effective June 6.
Panko succeeds Varinya Sheppard, who is retiring on June 1 after a 40-year nursing career that included serving as president of the college and multiple nursing roles including chief nursing officer at St. Elizabeth Medical Center.
“In its nearly 118-year history, SECON has graduated thousands of nurses who have gone on to take care of the people of this community,” MVHS President and CEO Darlene Stromstad, said in a release. “Building upon its long legacy, we look to SECON and Dr. Panko to help take us into the future as we educate the nurses of tomorrow and open our new, state-of-the-art Wynn Hospital next year.”
“The role of president of SECON is vital to ensuring this region has access to strong nursing,” she continued. “Dr. Panko will be an integral leader in our recovery from the pandemic and our ability to deal with workforce shortages. Educating the next generation of nurses is critical to our success, and we are so lucky to have such a well-established and respected college as part of our system. Dr. Panko is the best person to take over the reins and move us into the future of healthcare in our community.”
Currently serving as director of nursing, medical surgical, and acute-inpatient rehabilitative services at MVHS, Panko’s career at MVHS began in 2001. She previously served as dean of students and faculty development and as nursing instructor/course coordinator. She has more than 28 years of experience in various nursing positions.
“My entire career has been spent providing care to this community, so to be able to take on the role of president of SECON at this juncture is exhilarating,” Panko said. “There are so many new and exciting things happening at MVHS and in our community, I am grateful that I have the opportunity to contribute to the excitement through my work at the college. Our students are the future of healthcare in this community, and I am thrilled to prepare them for this wonderful profession.”
Panko earned her doctorate degree in nursing practice, systems leadership from Chamberlain College of Nursing in Downers Grove, Illinois; master’s in nursing and administration from Clarkson College in Omaha, Nebraska; bachelor’s degree in nursing from SUNY Polytechnic Institute; and her associate degree in nursing from Northern Maine Technical College in Presque Isle, Maine.
Founded in 1904, St. Elizabeth College of Nursing offers multiple curriculum plans including weekday programs, an evening/weekend program, and a dual-degree program with SUNY Polytechnic Institute that allows students to earn two degrees in four years.
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