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NBT names successor to retiring CNY Regional President Shirtz
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The man who has been serving as Mohawk Valley regional president for NBT Bank is preparing for additional duties. David Kavney will succeed Richard Shirtz as the Central New York regional president following the March 31 announcement that Shirtz is transitioning toward retirement. Kavney will also maintain his role leading the Mohawk […]
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The man who has been serving as Mohawk Valley regional president for NBT Bank is preparing for additional duties.
David Kavney will succeed Richard Shirtz as the Central New York regional president following the March 31 announcement that Shirtz is transitioning toward retirement. Kavney will also maintain his role leading the Mohawk Valley region as well.
Kavney assumes his additional responsibilities this month with continued support from Shirtz, Florence Doller, senior VP & director of corporate communications at NBT Bank, tells CNYBJ in an email.
Shirtz is concluding a banking career that spans more than 40 years, including nearly a decade of service to NBT. Shirtz has served as the leader of NBT’s commercial-banking business in Central New York and provided executive leadership for other business units in the region since 2013.
“Professionally, Rick played a critical role in transitioning employees and customers into NBT when we expanded in Central New York and has since grown our team and customer base through excellent leadership and expertise,” Sarah Halliday, president of commercial banking at NBT Bank, said in the release. “Personally, his deep connections within the community and countless hours spent mentoring and developing his team will leave a lasting impact on both our organization and all who he has interacted with during his career.”

Kavney, who will lead NBT’s Syracuse and Mohawk Valley regions, joined NBT Bank in 2019 and has more than 30 years of experience in commercial banking in the Mohawk Valley and Central New York.
“I am honored to take on this expanded role and to be able to serve these two markets I have had the pleasure of calling ‘home,’” Kavney said. “With the strong foundation Rick has built, I look forward to continuing to work alongside our talented and experienced Mohawk Valley team and to begin working with our Central New York team to deliver the highly personalized and responsive community banking that has been the hallmark of NBT Bank’s success.”
Shirtz had this to say about the transition to Kavney. “Having worked closely with David as the Mohawk Valley regional president these past few years, I can say with the utmost confidence that there is no one better for this job,” Shirtz said. “His significant financial services experience in greater Syracuse and in the Utica–Rome area position him to be able to deliver unique and personal leadership to both our customers and employees in these unique regions.”
Besides his banking duties, Shirtz has remained actively involved in the community as immediate past chair of Syracuse Stage, VP of the board of directors for The First Tee of Syracuse, a member of CenterState CEO partners advisory committee, and a member of the Syracuse Roman Catholic Diocese investment committee, NBT Bank said.
About NBT Bank
Headquartered in Norwich, NBT Bank offers personal banking, business banking, and wealth-management services from branches in seven states, including New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine and Connecticut.
The bank and its parent company, NBT Bancorp Inc. (NASDAQ: NBTB), had assets of $12 billion as of Dec. 31, 2021.

Dannible/McKee and Associates to host succession-planning seminars
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Dannible/McKee and Associates, Ltd. is planning three virtual seminars on “successful succession planning,” specifically designed for architecture and engineering firms, in the coming weeks. The first two seminars are set for April 20 and May 19, from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., and the third is slated for June 8 between 10:30 a.m. and
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Dannible/McKee and Associates, Ltd. is planning three virtual seminars on “successful succession planning,” specifically designed for architecture and engineering firms, in the coming weeks.
The first two seminars are set for April 20 and May 19, from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., and the third is slated for June 8 between 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m., per an email from the Syracuse–based firm.
Dannible/McKee and Associates, Ltd. is a provider of valuation, ownership transition, and financial consulting services to architecture, engineering, planning, and environmental consulting firms, per its website. It’s an affiliated company of Syracuse–based Dannible & McKee, LLP, a full-service certified public accounting firm.
“A smooth and effective transition requires an understanding of all the options available, careful preparation and long-term planning,” Dannible/McKee said.
The program — developed specifically for partners, shareholders and associates — examines the complex environment of ownership transition in architecture and engineering firms and provides expert guidance on structuring the most-effective transition plan.
Dannible/McKee and Associates says the virtual seminars are designed to ensure attendees can still receive the content without the travel and group setting. Attendance is kept small and sessions offer full interaction with the presenters through the meeting platform — allowing attendees to ask specific questions about their situation, the firm said.
During the one-day seminar, Dannible/McKee and Associates will cover topics that include proper methodologies for valuing a firm, understanding financial statements and financial ratios, choosing the proper buy-sell agreement, ownership succession and transfer of control, income and estate-tax considerations, and mergers and acquisitions.
The cost of the virtual seminar is $595 per person. The firm offers a 20 percent discount for each additional registrant from the same firm. More information is available at https://www.dmconsultingseminars.com/#seminar-overview

VIEWPOINT: Tully native serves as a member of U.S. Navy’s submarine force
A Tully native is serving aboard USS New Mexico, one of the world’s most-advanced nuclear-powered submarines. Petty Officer 3rd Class Aaron Wintermute joined the Navy three years ago. Today, he serves as an electronics technician navigation. Those working in this position are responsible for maintaining all electronic equipment used in navigating and piloting submarines. “I joined
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A Tully native is serving aboard USS New Mexico, one of the world’s most-advanced nuclear-powered submarines.
Petty Officer 3rd Class Aaron Wintermute joined the Navy three years ago. Today, he serves as an electronics technician navigation. Those working in this position are responsible for maintaining all electronic equipment used in navigating and piloting submarines.
“I joined the Navy after realizing that college wasn’t for me,” said Wintermute. “My dad served in the military and told me about the technical training I could get from joining. The Navy beat out other branches for technical training and I love the water.”
Growing up in Tully, Wintermute attended Tully Jr. Sr. High School and graduated in 2014. Today, Wintermute relies upon skills and values similar to those found in Tully to succeed in the military.
“Back home, I played baseball throughout high school and college,” said Wintermute. “Being able to work with a group of guys really helped me when I joined and realized the Navy is one giant team.”
These lessons have helped Wintermute while serving in the Navy.
Known as America’s “Apex Predators!,” the Navy’s submarine force operates a large fleet of technically advanced vessels. These submarines are capable of conducting rapid defensive and offensive operations around the world, in furtherance of U.S. national security.
The Navy has three basic types of submarines: fast-attack submarines (SSN), ballistic-missile submarines (SSBN), and guided-missile submarines (SSGN).
Fast-attack submarines are designed to hunt down and destroy enemy submarines and surface ships; strike targets ashore with cruise missiles; carry and deliver Navy SEALs; conduct intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions; and engage in mine warfare. The Virginia-class SSN is the most advanced submarine in the world today. It combines stealth and payload capability to meet combatant commanders’ demands in this era of strategic competition.
The Navy’s ballistic-missile submarines, often referred to as “boomers,” serve as a strategic deterrent by providing an undetectable platform for submarine-launched ballistic missiles. SSBNs are designed specifically for stealth, extended patrols, and the precise delivery of missiles. The Columbia-class SSBN will be the largest, most capable, and most advanced submarine produced by the U.S. That replaces the current Ohio-class ballistic-missile submarines to ensure continuous sea-based strategic deterrence into the 2080s.
Guided-missile submarines provide the Navy with unprecedented strike and special-operation mission capabilities from a stealthy, clandestine platform. Each SSGN is capable of carrying 154 Tomahawk cruise missiles, plus a complement of heavyweight torpedoes to be fired through four torpedo tubes.
Strategic deterrence is the nation’s ultimate insurance program, according to Navy officials. As a member of the submarine force, Wintermute is part of a rich 122-year history of the U.S. Navy’s most versatile weapons platform, capable of taking the fight to the enemy in the defense of America and its allies.
Serving in the Navy means Wintermute is part of a world that is taking on new importance in America’s focus on rebuilding military readiness, strengthening alliances, and reforming business practices in support of the National Defense Strategy.
“The Navy is important to national security because with our submarines, our adversaries have no idea where we are; we keep them on their toes,” said Wintermute. “And they can’t get away with anything without us knowing.”
With more than 90 percent of all trade traveling by sea, and 95 percent of the world’s international phone and internet traffic carried through underwater fiber optic, Navy officials continue to emphasize that the prosperity and security of the United States is directly linked to a strong and ready Navy.
Wintermute and the sailors he serves with have many opportunities to achieve accomplishments during their military careers.
“I received a Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal for a huge corrective maintenance job that took my division over a month to fix,” said Wintermute. “Because we were able to fix it, we could get underway. It was very rewarding to be recognized and to see the hard work that was put in and seeing it work properly.”
As Wintermute and other sailors continue to train and perform missions, they take pride in serving their country in the Navy.
“To me, serving in the Navy means carrying on a tradition,” he said. “My cousin is serving, my grandpa served, my uncle was a submarine guy, so it’s definitely in my family. Serving has made our bond stronger.”

Registered apprentices graduate from MIAP
DeWITT, N.Y. — A new group of registered apprentices has graduated from the Manufacturers Intermediary Apprenticeship Program (MIAP). That’s according to MACNY, the Manufacturers Association. The organization partners with the New York State Department of Labor to sponsor MIAP, “acting as an intermediary” to help small and medium-sized companies in Central New York and across
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DeWITT, N.Y. — A new group of registered apprentices has graduated from the Manufacturers Intermediary Apprenticeship Program (MIAP).
That’s according to MACNY, the Manufacturers Association. The organization partners with the New York State Department of Labor to sponsor MIAP, “acting as an intermediary” to help small and medium-sized companies in Central New York and across the state establish registered apprenticeships at their companies.
To date, nearly 600 registered apprentices have participated in the program at more than 158 companies throughout New York, per MACNY’s March 30 announcement. MIAP funding supports these companies that train apprentices in more than 20 different trades.
An apprentice learns directly from his/her employer with on-the-job training to earn the credentials needed to progress in the industry, MACNY said.
When apprentices complete the program, they earn a “journeyworker” national certificate. As a result, entry-level positions also become available to provide opportunities for other people in the community and to help “fill the talent pipeline,” MACNY noted.
“We are so proud of all the hard-working graduates who have contributed to the successful story of MIAP,” Randy Wolken, president and CEO of MACNY, said in a statement.
Two graduates
Patrick Rogers, who works at Anoplate in Syracuse, recently earned his journeyworker certificate. He joined Anoplate as a maintenance helper. After completing the apprenticeship program in four years, he now works as a maintenance mechanic for the company, per MACNY.
“The apprenticeship program has done wonders,” Rogers said, “It is not just about the income and providing for my family, it’s about the advanced skills I’ve developed and how these skills will open up more opportunities for me. I could never have pictured myself in the position I am today. I love what I do. Going through and completing the program is one of the smartest decisions I’ve made.”
Chad Wierzbicki, another Central New York native, has a similar story.
He also grew up in the region and recently graduated as a journeyworker maintenance mechanic at WestRock in Solvay. He takes pride in the work he handles at the paper mill and says the program has improved his quality of life.
“The decision to get into the apprenticeship program at the mill was a great opportunity to learn new skills that I don’t believe I otherwise would have,” Wierzbicki said. “It has helped me expand my knowledge, as well as be able to further provide for my family.”
MIAP offers apprenticeship programs in various trades that include, but are not limited to, welder, CNC machinist, toolmaker, electronics technician, electro-mechanical technician, and industrial-manufacturing technician.
Since the program launched in 2016, MIAP has expanded its industries and trades to include high-tech manufacturing, the semiconductor industry, and information technology. It also has increased outreach to underserved and underrepresented populations in the state, MACNY said.

Partnership creates pathway to college credits for IBEW Local 43 apprentices
UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC), Alfred State College, Syracuse University (SU), the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 43, and the

Survey: 44% of businesses seeking interns in 2022
Nearly all of those expect to hire interns for jobs afterward Facing a critical lack of skilled workers, some U.S. hiring decision-makers are looking to create their own trained workforce. A new survey from The Harris Poll, commissioned by Express Employment Professionals, found that 44 percent of businesses plan to bring on interns in 2022 with 94
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Nearly all of those expect to hire interns for jobs afterward
Facing a critical lack of skilled workers, some U.S. hiring decision-makers are looking to create their own trained workforce.
A new survey from The Harris Poll, commissioned by Express Employment Professionals, found that 44 percent of businesses plan to bring on interns in 2022 with 94 percent likely to hire interns as part- or full-time employees afterward.
The majority (84 percent) of hiring decision-makers say interns will be paid for their time, the survey found.
Early, on-the-job experience is invaluable and that knowledge transfer between experts and younger generations is even more important with baby boomers retiring in multitudes, according to Express Employment International CEO Bill Stoller.
“With a large number of internships and apprenticeships expected to be offered by companies this year, those looking to break into new fields should jump at the chance to add real-world experience to their resumes and an advantage over their competition,” Stoller added.
The survey was conducted online within the U.S. by The Harris Poll on behalf of Express Employment Professionals between Nov. 10 and Dec. 2, 2021, among 1,009 U.S. hiring decision-makers (defined as adults ages 18-plus in the U.S. who are employed full-time or self-employed, work at companies with more than one employee, and have full/significant involvement in hiring decisions at their company).
Express Employment International, founded in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, is an international staffing franchisor of the Express Employment Professionals franchise and related brands.
VIEWPOINT: 3 ways to cultivate an effective multi-brand strategy
Think about a brand — maybe a big corporation — that has a hierarchy of other brands and services. Maybe you’re thinking about Amazon, which has Prime Video, Audible, and Amazon Echo. Or maybe P&G which owns Gillette, Pampers, Tide, Cascade, and Old Spice. Unilever owns everything from Ben & Jerry’s and Skippy to Lipton and
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Think about a brand — maybe a big corporation — that has a hierarchy of other brands and services. Maybe you’re thinking about Amazon, which has Prime Video, Audible, and Amazon Echo. Or maybe P&G which owns Gillette, Pampers, Tide, Cascade, and Old Spice. Unilever owns everything from Ben & Jerry’s and Skippy to Lipton and Dove.
While these corporations sell different products and services, what they all have in common is a clear brand hierarchy. Brand hierarchy is a structure that has a top-level parent company or corporate brand, a secondary level of family brands, and, below that, individual brands.
Brand hierarchy isn’t only reserved for large corporations. Any organization that is composed of multiple brands or services can develop a clear structure, and they should. A lack of organization and intention can undermine business planning and confuse buyers. By clearly defining how your brands and products differentiate and relate to each other, you’re able to market them more effectively.
Here are three ways to cultivate an effective multi-brand strategy:
1. Identify and eliminate sources of brand confusion
As you study the various product lines in your organization’s portfolio, you might discover some overlap. Think about each brand from a consumer’s perspective: where might the consumer be confused about each brand’s identity and what it represents?
It’s important for every organization to eliminate any internal confusion among its various brands. It’s also imperative to eliminate confusion between its own brands and the similar products and services offered elsewhere in the marketplace. Where do any brand redundancies exist? What’s the missing component that will allow each of your organization’s brands to stand out?
As one example, Innovative Ergonomic Solutions (IES) is a parent company that acquired multiple brands within a short period. IES found itself with five different companies all producing ergonomic workspace solutions through various products and channels (HAT Contract, Ergotech, SiS Ergo, CompuCaddy, Innovative Office Products). But without a clear brand hierarchy in place, there was confusion both internally, and in the market, about how these companies related (or didn’t relate) to each other.
With the explosion of growth and acquisition of different product lines and market segments, IES’s challenge was to organize the brands with a clearly defined go-to-market strategy and optimize each brand’s potential while not cannibalizing market share or alienating its dealer network.
2. Develop a holistic strategy for the organization
Every multi-brand organization should be able to envision its corporate hierarchy in a simple chart featuring a parent brand at the top and each subsidiary brand branching off. In this structure, the main corporate entity oversees multiple subordinate companies organized by their primary sales channels, or other market-defining characteristics.
Once the organization’s internal brand redundancies have been eliminated, the chart should practically fill itself out. This can be a useful tool for determining the common thread uniting every brand in an organization’s portfolio, and where each brand aligns in the marketplace. As you study the chart, ask: is every product offered within the most suitable sales channel? Where do opportunities for re-branding specific products exist? Is there a better way to organize the chart for the organization’s long-term strategy, including any future brand acquisitions?
For IES, this meant establishing an overarching corporate entity with subordinate companies organized by primary sales channels. Innovative Ergonomic Solutions made sense as the umbrella entity because “ergonomic workspace solutions” is the common thread between each subsidiary brand, regardless of sales channel. And the new IES brand, while not a consumer-facing brand, provides a common identity for corporate shared services, like operations, finance, marketing, and customer service.
Building on HAT Contract, the contract office brand with the strongest name recognition, two companies were consolidated under a common name — HAT Collective — that also absorbed the relevant product lines from CompuCaddy and Innovative Office Products. This greatly simplified their brand structure and provided a template for future acquisitions in the contract market.
Now IES could focus on its original-equipment manufacturer (OEM) and point-of-sale (POS) business. This company was re-branded Innovative Design Works (IDW), a stronger name positioning for a refined strategy of designing, engineering, and manufacturing products as a contract office OEM supplier and direct seller in the POS market.
CompuCaddy had a strong direct-to-business sales model, primarily in health care. However, the brand had little name recognition. IES folded its direct-to-business sales under the IDW name and organization, while phasing out the CompuCaddy brand and further simplifying the IES brand structure. The CompuCaddy products were absorbed into a healthcare vertical within HAT Collective.
Another brand (Ergotech) primarily sells through distribution partners, which can be perceived as competition with contract office dealers. So it made sense to keep Ergotech separate from HAT Collective, both in product lines and marketing. The Ergotech brand was given a brand refresh and direction to continue servicing the distribution channel.
3. Articulate new brand strategy/strategies
With a long-term strategy in place, and a sustainable hierarchy of brands to build upon, it’s time to refine specific brand strategies.
What are the unique attributes and customer perceptions that each brand offers? What’s the most effective strategy for leveraging these positive attributes and perceptions, while elevating each brand’s position? Tackling these essential questions will require a ground-up approach to refining the verbal and visual expression of each brand.
For IES to establish its new brand, HAT Collective, multiple companies and product lines were merged into one. Each brought unique attributes and customer perceptions. This new entity needed to leverage those positive attributes and perceptions but with a new, elevated aesthetic. This required a ground-up approach to verbal and visual expression.
The first step was to articulate the mission of HAT Collective — “empowering people to work their way” — then develop their story based on the brand’s mission to improve employee health, satisfaction, productivity, and engagement through a sophisticated and flexible range of workplace solutions. From this foundation, the HAT Collective visual and verbal voice were created.
Other inspiration came from the Danish design aesthetic of SiS Ergo: a clean, warm, design-forward approach to all HAT Collective brand visuals, from logo design and typography to product renderings and advertising creative. Leveraging this core attribute of a merged brand not only elevated the look and feel of HAT Collective, but did so in an authentic and ownable way.
Creating clarity in a multi-brand organization demands intention and a strategic approach — a proactive investment of time and energy. The alternative is an accidental brand structure that may cost an organization more due to internal and market confusion, cannibalized sales, and missed opportunities. A clearly defined brand structure, and effective brand positioning for each company within it, is the solid foundation of all excellent marketing organizations.
John Williamson is an account leader at ddm marketing + communications. He has served clients in a wide range of industries, from startups to Fortune 500 companies, with over a decade of experience leading creative teams in strategy and execution of all aspects of B2B and B2C marketing.
OPINION: New York State budget process remains as dysfunctional as ever
Gov. Kathy Hochul promised a better, more transparent budget process when she took over as New York’s executive. Promises made, promises broken. Unfortunately, New Yorkers were left with the same secretive, ineffective negotiations they have come to expect from one-party rule in Albany. The process remains as broken and dysfunctional as ever. The final spending
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Gov. Kathy Hochul promised a better, more transparent budget process when she took over as New York’s executive. Promises made, promises broken. Unfortunately, New Yorkers were left with the same secretive, ineffective negotiations they have come to expect from one-party rule in Albany. The process remains as broken and dysfunctional as ever.
The final spending plan was bloated, more than a week late and required an emergency extender to ensure state employees received paychecks and government continued to function. The $220 billion spending plan is twice the size of Florida’s budget despite the fact Florida now has more residents than New York. Simply put, [the Empire State] has a serious spending problem under Democrat leadership.
Much like the budgets of 2019 and 2020, criminal justice found its way into the state-spending plan. And similar to what we saw two years ago, the disingenuous attempt to fix our broken system and improve public safety didn’t approach what needs to be done. Republican lawmakers, victim advocates, law-enforcement professionals and the majority of New Yorkers have called for sweeping changes. This budget offered much less than what is necessary.
With state revenue coming in higher than expected and an influx of federal aid available, I was pleased to see a number of Republican priorities addressed. The overdue suspension of the state tax on gasoline will provide relief at the pump; $4.6 billion in tax cuts should ease the financial burden for families; Assembly Republicans have called for JCOPE to be replaced since 2013 and advocated for the creation of the Department of Veterans’ Services — both are part of this budget. In addition, there are increases in infrastructure investments, school aid, funding for career and technical education, and a cost-of-living adjustment for human-services staff.
Overall, the 2022-23 enacted budget is too big when it comes to spending and too small when it comes to fixing systemic quality-of-life issues. The state’s current ability to offer short-term assistance — thanks to an infusion of non-recurring funding sources — will not adequately address the persistent affordability crisis that drives families and businesses out of New York.
There is much more to be done during the remainder of the 2022 legislative session. And the Assembly Republican Conference will continue to fight for stronger, more comprehensive solutions to these growing concerns.
William (Will) A. Barclay, Republican, is the New York Assembly minority leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. This editorial is drawn from a statement Barclay issued on April 9.
OPINION: What Does It Take to Be Important in America?
Maybe it’s the perspective a long life brings, but I find myself eyeing with some skepticism the glut of “personal brands” that assault us every day on television, in print, and through social media. Entertainers, celebrities, politicians striving for acclaim, artists and writers who have mastered the public-relations game, journalists and media stars who are building their
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Maybe it’s the perspective a long life brings, but I find myself eyeing with some skepticism the glut of “personal brands” that assault us every day on television, in print, and through social media.
Entertainers, celebrities, politicians striving for acclaim, artists and writers who have mastered the public-relations game, journalists and media stars who are building their national profiles — all are “important” in terms of the attention they garner. But are they actually important?
In some ways, of course, the question is impossible to answer. Each of us has our own definition of what matters and our own approach to what makes a public figure significant. In the end, it’s a subjective question — the sort of exercise that makes for a fascinating family discussion or friendly debate: Who is really important, and why?
My own list would start with some obvious choices. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison — these men (and others, of course) created the United States, not just as a political entity but as a set of ideals and political values that, over time, reshaped the history of the world. Our representative democracy, our rights, and the systems and procedures that make it possible to function spring from their contributions.
I’d put some other former presidents on the list, too: Abraham Lincoln, for obvious reasons; Teddy Roosevelt, for the legacy he left behind in our national-park system; Franklin Roosevelt for turning the U.S. into an international force for democratic values during WWII. From the Congress, there’s Henry Clay and his system of internal improvements, Sen. Justin S. Morrill and his land-grant universities; and from the judiciary, John Marshall, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and many others.
Still, politicians are hardly the only people who have been important to this country’s course as a nation. Martin Luther King, Jr., Rosa Parks, John Lewis, and other civil-rights activists and leaders confronted head on the inequities that were present at our founding and were allowed to linger. Though they hardly ended them, by virtue of their courage and political skill they produced not only legal change but lasting social change. The same could be said for the countless Americans — women, Latinos, gays and lesbians, and others — who over the last half-century have pushed the notion that this needs to be a land of opportunity for all, not just a few.
At the same time, there’s more to U.S. history than politics and social movements. We’ve produced more than our share of inventors who transformed the world, often (though not always) for the better: Thomas Edison (from the lightbulb to motion pictures to batteries); George Washington Carver (plastics, laundry soap, dyes, a wide variety of foods); Nikola Tesla (alternating current, among many other things); and a wide variety of tech pioneers, from Grace Hopper and Shirley Jackson to David Packard and Steve Jobs. And that’s not even taking into account the medical researchers and pioneers — people like Jonas Salk, whose work measurably improved the well-being of humanity, or corporate leaders like Andrew Carnegie and Henry Ford.
You can play this game for hours if you wish. In the end, it all comes down to what you think matters. If “importance” is purely a matter of impact — for good or ill — then the list will be quite long.
But I tend to take a narrower view. In the end, our country, its democracy, and the welfare of its citizens need constant tending. The long arc of our history has pointed toward justice, the rule of law, freedom of conscience, opportunity for all, and advancement of the greater good, but it requires never-ending work to get there. To my mind, it’s the people who pursue those ideals — prominent and ordinary alike — who are most important. They are the ones who strive to ensure that we live up to our promise and who belong on a list of important Americans.
Lee Hamilton, 90, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south-central Indiana.
Pinckney Hugo Group has promoted BELLA KNAPP, of Syracuse, to senior account manager, and hired MAKENNA REILLY, of New York Mills, as an assistant account manager. Knapp was previously an account manager and has been with the agency for three years. She has a bachelor’s degree in marketing from St. John Fisher College. Prior to
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Pinckney Hugo Group has promoted BELLA KNAPP, of Syracuse, to senior account manager, and hired MAKENNA REILLY, of New York Mills, as an assistant account manager. Knapp was previously an account manager and has been with the agency for three years. She has a bachelor’s degree in marketing from St. John Fisher College. Prior to joining Pinckney Hugo Group, Knapp worked as an assistant brand manager and digital-marketing coordinator at Aspen Dental Management, Inc. She also gained experience in account services at Martino Flynn in Rochester. Reilly previously worked as a marketing specialist at New Media Retailer, a digital-marketing agency in Norwich. Reilly also served as an intern at Pinckney Hugo Group, while she was completing her bachelor’s degree in management from Cazenovia College.
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