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Onondaga SBDC Director Powers set to retire
ONONDAGA, N.Y. — Joan Powers will retire as director of the Small Business Development Center (SBDC) at Onondaga Community College at the end of January,

Skana Spa ranks No. 1 in ranking of spas in North America
VERONA, N.Y. — Spas of America recently named Skana Spa at Turning Stone Resort Casino the number one spa in North America for 2021. The Spas of America annual Top 100 Spas list provides a ranking of travelers’ favorite spas. For the 2021 awards, it ranked spas across 38 states, Canada, and Mexico with Skana
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VERONA, N.Y. — Spas of America recently named Skana Spa at Turning Stone Resort Casino the number one spa in North America for 2021.
The Spas of America annual Top 100 Spas list provides a ranking of travelers’ favorite spas. For the 2021 awards, it ranked spas across 38 states, Canada, and Mexico with Skana placing as travelers’ top choice in all of North America, according to a news release from Oneida Nation Enterprises.
“These unprecedented times have elevated the importance of self-care, and Skana has provided a safe and tranquil place for our guests when they needed it most,” Ray Halbritter, Oneida Indian Nation representative and Oneida Nation Enterprises CEO, contended in the release. “While navigating evolving health and safety protocols, our talented spa team continued to provide an exceptional guest experience, which makes this recognition all that more meaningful.”
Skana was the first Native American inspired spa in the Northeast and pays homage to the Oneida and American Indian culture through décor, ambiance, treatments, and hospitality. Many of the services incorporate ingredients essential in the Oneida culture including strawberries, sage, and white pine. Services include massages, facials, full-body services, salon amenities, manicures, and pedicures.
“Skana has consistently been one of the leading spa and wellness destinations with our audience, providing guests with an incomparable guest experience, amazing facilities, and leading and evolving spa therapies and treatments. [The] Skana story is unique and authentic, and it resonates with people,” Spas of America President Craig Oliver said.

NYS Hospitality & Tourism Association elects Ridley as board chairman
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The New York State Hospitality & Tourism Association recently elected Eric Ridley, director of hospitality management at Pioneer Companies, as chairman of the association’s board of directors effective Jan. 1. As chairman, Ridley will help the association lead and protect the state’s hospitality and tourism industry through advocacy, education, and resources. “As
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The New York State Hospitality & Tourism Association recently elected Eric Ridley, director of hospitality management at Pioneer Companies, as chairman of the association’s board of directors effective Jan. 1.
As chairman, Ridley will help the association lead and protect the state’s hospitality and tourism industry through advocacy, education, and resources.
“As somebody who has worked in hospitality at every level, I am honored and humbled to have been chosen as chairman of the New York State Hospitality Association,” Ridley said in a release. “The impact that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on the hospitality and tourism industries cannot be understated. This period has illustrated how critical these industries are not only to the overall economy, but also to the millions of guests who make memories in our hotels, restaurants, and destinations.”
“I look forward to continuing the critical work of advocating statewide for our members and am steadfast in my commitment to advancing the industry and its recovery during these unprecedented times,” he added.
Ridley has served as director of hospitality management at Pioneer Companies in Syracuse since May 2016, according to his LinkedIn profile. His asset-management responsibilities have included collaborating with Hilton Garden Inn, Homewood Suites, Hyatt House, and others on franchise and hotel-management agreement analysis, site selection, budget analysis, sales and marketing strategies, and much more.
The New York State Hospitality & Tourism Association (www.nyshta.org), the oldest state lodging association in the country, is a not-for-profit trade organization. It represents 1,000 members including hotels, motels, resorts, conference centers, country inns, bed and breakfast establishments, and reservation-service organizations. It also has as members amusement parks, attractions, museums, recreational facilities, historical sites, convention and visitor bureaus, chambers of commerce, colleges and universities, hospitality students, and suppliers to the industry.
DeWitt firm wins nearly $29M Army contract for Niagara Falls work
DeWITT — Structural Associates Inc., of DeWitt, was recently awarded a nearly $28.8 million contract from the U.S. Army for construction for the fuel-hydrant repair project at Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station. Bids were solicited via the internet with three companies submitting them. Work will be performed in Niagara Falls, with an estimated completion date of
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DeWITT — Structural Associates Inc., of DeWitt, was recently awarded a nearly $28.8 million contract from the U.S. Army for construction for the fuel-hydrant repair project at Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station.
Bids were solicited via the internet with three companies submitting them. Work will be performed in Niagara Falls, with an estimated completion date of Dec. 29, 2023, according to a Jan. 13 contract announcement from the U.S. Department of Defense.
Fiscal 2022 operation and maintenance, Air Force Reserve funds totaling $28,762,800 were obligated at the time of the award. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Louisville, Kentucky was the contracting authority.
Structural Associates, headquartered at 5903 Fisher Road in DeWitt, says it specializes in general construction, construction management, program management, and design-build project delivery. It has extensive experience in the military/Department of Defense, and federal market, per its website.
Corn production in New York jumped 24 percent in 2021, USDA reports
New York farms produced 97.7 million bushels of corn for grain last year, up more than 24 percent from 78.5 million bushels in 2020. That’s according to a Jan. 12 report from USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) New York Field Office, based on surveys conducted in the first two weeks of December. The total
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New York farms produced 97.7 million bushels of corn for grain last year, up more than 24 percent from 78.5 million bushels in 2020.
That’s according to a Jan. 12 report from USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) New York Field Office, based on surveys conducted in the first two weeks of December.
The total yield per acre in the Empire State averaged a record-high 167 bushels per acre in 2021, up 10 bushels per acre, or 6.4 percent, from 157 bushels in the prior year.
Area harvested for grain corn totaled 585,000 acres last year, up 17 percent from 2020, the USDA NASS said.

Hayner Hoyt starts work on mixed-use project at City Center
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Hayner Hoyt Corporation of Syracuse is beginning work to redevelop the building at 400 S. Salina St. in Syracuse, which is now known as City Center. It was previously home to the former Sibley’s department store. Hayner Hoyt and the nonprofit Red House Arts Center hosted a Jan. 18 groundbreaking event
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Hayner Hoyt Corporation of Syracuse is beginning work to redevelop the building at 400 S. Salina St. in Syracuse, which is now known as City Center.
It was previously home to the former Sibley’s department store.
Hayner Hoyt and the nonprofit Red House Arts Center hosted a Jan. 18 groundbreaking event at City Center.
“We originally were hired as the general contractor and construction manager to redevelop this building about five years ago, and as things went through the process, we were asked to step in and help as partners in the project and we were very honored to do so,” Jeremy Thurston, president of the Hayner Hoyt Corporation, said in his remarks at the groundbreaking
Thurston also acknowledged development partners Samara Hannah, executive director of the Redhouse, and William Hider, a member of the executive committee of the Redhouse board of directors. He also noted the involvement of Tompkins Trust Company, as well as partners Pathfinder Bank and Adirondack Bank.

The project cost is listed at $37 million, in a project document on the website of the Syracuse Industrial Development Agency.
The construction effort will turn the 280,000-square-foot building into a mixed-use commercial, retail, and apartment building, according to Hayner Hoyt. Anchor tenants include the Redhouse Performing Arts Center, which has occupied part of the building since 2018, and Hayner Hoyt which will take up the new portion of the building when it opens in early 2023.
The remaining office spaces and the new residential apartment units are also planned to be available for lease in early 2023.
The project represents “such an important symbol in downtown’s rebirth” Merike Treier, executive director of the Downtown Committee of Syracuse, Inc., contended in her remarks.
“Salina Street has always been our Main Street and the building saw new life back in 2018 when the Redhouse Arts Center moved in,” Treier added. “We’re excited to now see this phase of redevelopment moving forward where we’ll be able to see a whole new exterior of the building, which will activate the heart of our community.”
Schopfer Architects, LLP of Syracuse is the architect on the project. The project design includes a courtyard bordered by glass walls to highlight the ground-level retail spaces, and balconies for the residential-apartment units.
The top-floor office space will have an outdoor balcony overlooking Armory Square. City Center has a 750-space parking garage, making it “very accessible” for office tenants, residential tenants, and visitors, Hayner Hoyt said.
“This has long been a big gap in downtown in our overall development that we are about to fill,” Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh said.
City Center also made headlines in 2017 when Aspen Dental Management, Inc. (ADMI) decided against moving its corporate office and nearly 600 employees to downtown Syracuse from its location in DeWitt. ADMI is now headquartered in Chicago, Illinois
“This project is so instrumental in our downtown … in the core of our downtown to really help revitalize a building that should be a stronger asset but also help revitalize our arts and cultural corridor, which is a huge piece of our future growth,” Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon said in his remarks at the groundbreaking event.

Clarkson’s Shipley Center, Dennings Point project get grant boost
POTSDAM, N.Y. — A state grant of $1.4 million will benefit Clarkson University’s Shipley Center for Innovation and its Dennings Point project as well. The funding for Clarkson is part of the 11th round of the state’s Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) initiative. This round of REDC funding seeks to “stimulate New York’s post-pandemic recovery,”
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POTSDAM, N.Y. — A state grant of $1.4 million will benefit Clarkson University’s Shipley Center for Innovation and its Dennings Point project as well.
The funding for Clarkson is part of the 11th round of the state’s Regional Economic Development Council (REDC) initiative.
This round of REDC funding seeks to “stimulate New York’s post-pandemic recovery,” per the Clarkson website. The money will target two projects.
The majority of the $1.4 million grant award ($1.25 million) will allow the Shipley Center to continue its operation of the North Country Innovation Hot Spot through 2026.
Empire State Development provided the funds as part of the state’s Incubator and Innovation Hot Spot program. The program pays for one Hot Spot in each of New York’s 10 economic-development zones, along with a total of 20 certified business incubators across the state.
With this money, the Shipley Center will continue providing support to inventors and entrepreneurs throughout the North Country. The services include business mentorship, prototype development, marketing assistance, connections to investors, and subject-matter experts.
The grant will also allow the Shipley Center to continue facilitating in-person and virtual workshops for inventors and entrepreneurs around the region. In the past, these workshops have been held in Canton, Lake Placid, Clayton, Plattsburgh, Tupper Lake, and Ticonderoga. They’re hosted in collaboration with the Point Positive angel-investment group, Clarkson noted.
In addition to providing these services to the region, the Shipley Center operates the North Country Business Incubator on Clarkson’s downtown Potsdam campus. This space allows aspiring entrepreneurs to maintain a physical office or lab and to have “even greater access to the resources and expertise available at Clarkson,” the school said.
As the designated Hot Spot for the North Country region, the Shipley Center also coordinates its efforts with economic-development organizations and professionals around the region.
Additional project
Besides the Shipley Center programming, Clarkson University will also use the remaining $150,000 for the Dennings Point campus build-out project at Clarkson’s Beacon Institute for Rivers & Estuaries.
The Dennings Point build-out is a project that will renovate a 40,000-square-foot former paperclip factory. The university hopes the project will bring job creation to Beacon and support its science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) programming for both Clarkson students and the public.

Eastwood Rotary honors Bregman with Lifetime Service Award
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Rotary Club of Eastwood recently honored Bernard (Bernie) Bregman, who at age 89 is the eldest current club member, with the inaugural Bernie B. Bregman Lifetime Service Award. Bregman was recognized as part of the Eastwood Rotary’s 60th anniversary celebration in November. The club said it “would not be what it
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Rotary Club of Eastwood recently honored Bernard (Bernie) Bregman, who at age 89 is the eldest current club member, with the inaugural Bernie B. Bregman Lifetime Service Award.
Bregman was recognized as part of the Eastwood Rotary’s 60th anniversary celebration in November. The club said it “would not be what it is today without Bernie.”
Known to many as a warm and friendly face, Bregman is a natural-born networker, philanthropist, friend, and longtime Eastwood Rotary member, the organization, said.
Bregman had a successful 32-year career in sales at The Central New York Business Journal. He has a vision for creating impactful connections. Whether it’s through the local Tip Club, CNYSME, Congregation Beth Shalom Chevra Shas, or the countless nonprofits he supports, Bregman has made his community, and everyone in it, stronger, the Eastwood Rotary said. The club said it created the Bernie Bregman Lifetime Service Award in order for others to strive to achieve so much.
“Bernie is an institution in our community. He works, networks, connects, and sells. His dedication to community and family are unmatched. Central New York is richer because of Bernie,” Lynn Hy, chief development officer at Food Bank of Central New York, said in a statement.

Equitable to remain in downtown Syracuse towers
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The financial-services firm whose name is on the twin towers in downtown Syracuse has plans to stay in the buildings with a multi-million renovation project to its operating space. Empire State Development (ESD) on Jan. 12 announced that it’s providing Equitable with up to $9 million in Upstate Revitalization Initiative grant funding.
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The financial-services firm whose name is on the twin towers in downtown Syracuse has plans to stay in the buildings with a multi-million renovation project to its operating space.
Empire State Development (ESD) on Jan. 12 announced that it’s providing Equitable with up to $9 million in Upstate Revitalization Initiative grant funding. That’s in exchange for the firm’s commitment to invest in upgrades to its presence in Syracuse and retain jobs in the city and across the state.
The total project cost has been estimated to be $65 million, per ESD.
Equitable cited the “continuing momentum already underway downtown” for its decision to refurbish its space inside of the historic 19-story tower buildings located on Madison Street, ESD added.
In February 2021, Equitable announced that it would relocate its corporate headquarters within New York City to 1345 Avenue of the Americas by 2024, where the company has maintained a presence since its founding in 1859.
Besides Syracuse, Equitable also maintains local branch offices across the state in Binghamton, Buffalo, Clifton Park, and Long Island.
Equitable is a principal franchise of Equitable Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: EQH). All told, Equitable has about 2,000 employees working throughout New York state.
“Equitable has been proud to call Syracuse home since 1967,” Mark Pearson, CEO of Equitable, said. “Today’s announcement reaffirms our commitment to the region. We look forward to being an active community partner in the Syracuse revitalization effort and having a lasting social impact for future generations.”
In its release, ESD also notes that the Equitable Foundation provides ongoing support for Syracuse–area organizations. They include the Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science and Technology (MOST); the Food Bank of Central New York; Syracuse Honor Fight; Griffin’s Guardians; and ERIE21, an initiative led by Le Moyne College.
“Equitable’s presence atop the cityscape of Syracuse is a point of pride, and the company’s people are a valued part of our downtown Syracuse community,” Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh said. “I am proud to join Empire State Development in celebrating Equitable’s commitment to remain in the tower buildings that bear its name. I appreciate the company’s continuing investment in Syracuse and am grateful for ESD’s partnership in keeping Equitable’s strong presence in the City. With the upcoming expansion of the Tech Garden at the tower plaza and the growth occurring at tech companies in the Center City Innovation Hub, this is more good news for the Syracuse Surge, our strategy for inclusive growth in the New Economy.”

N.Y. private-industry workplace injury rate is below U.S. average
In 2020, private-industry employers in New York state reported 129,000 nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses, according to figures from the latest Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) in January. The state’s private-industry incidence rate of total recordable cases (TRC) was 2.2 cases per 100 full-time equivalent
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In 2020, private-industry employers in New York state reported 129,000 nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses, according to figures from the latest Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) in January.
The state’s private-industry incidence rate of total recordable cases (TRC) was 2.2 cases per 100 full-time equivalent workers, placing it “significantly lower than the national rate of 2.7,” according to BLS Chief Regional Economist Martin Kohli.
Some additional findings from the 2020 Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses include:
• The 2.2 private-industry TRC rate remained unchanged from the figure recorded in 2019.
• Two industry sectors — education and health services and trade, transportation, and utilities — accounted for 68 percent of New York’s occupational injuries and illnesses during the year, while representing 45 percent of private-industry employment.
• Of the 129,000 private-industry incidents reported, 90,100 were severe, resulting in days away from work, job transfer, or restriction.
• Larger organizations had markedly higher TRC rates than smaller firms. Private-industry employers of at least 1,000 employees had an incidence rate of 3.5, while firms of fewer than 11 employees recorded a rate of 0.6.
• New York’s state and local-government sector reported 60,300 incidents in 2020, resulting in a TRC rate of 5.8.
The full BLS survey release and additional data from the report can be accessed at: https://www.bls.gov/regions/new-york-new-jersey/news-release/workplaceinjuriesandillnesses_newyork.htm
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