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OPINION: With the Start of a New Year, Looking Ahead with Optimism to 2022
While my colleagues and I gear up for a new legislative session, I am optimistic for a brighter and better 2022. To say that the last year has been littered with obstacles and unfortunate distractions is an understatement, and it is now time to get New York back on track for the 20 million residents who call […]
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While my colleagues and I gear up for a new legislative session, I am optimistic for a brighter and better 2022. To say that the last year has been littered with obstacles and unfortunate distractions is an understatement, and it is now time to get New York back on track for the 20 million residents who call this great state their home.
As Assembly Minority Leader, improving the way of life for every New Yorker has always been, and will continue to be, my number one priority. This year, along with the support of the members of my conference, I will again be advocating for measures that strengthen the state’s economic viability, make our streets and neighborhoods safer, alleviate financial pressure on middle-class taxpayers and families, and offer true government reform in the hopes of restoring faith in elected officials.
The New York Legislature must act without partisan politics, move past the scandals that plagued Albany for most of the past year, and deliver sound policies for our constituents. Elected officials from both sides of the aisle must embrace the upcoming legislative session for what it is, an opportunity to get New York back on the right path.
Bad policies and ill-advised measures implemented over the last few years have pushed New Yorkers to leave for more opportunities to achieve prosperity. Before things slide further in the wrong direction, our conference will again be advocating for:
• The “Inflation Relief & Consumer Assistance Plan,” calling for the suspension of state sales-tax charges on everyday items including gasoline, personal-care products and food, as Americans deal with staggering inflation and cost-of-living increases;
• Government reform, including replacing JCOPE with an independent ethics watchdog, televising Assembly committee meetings, and ensuring proper legislative procedures remain in place even if the legislature is forced to, once again, operate remotely;
• The “Restore Order” initiative, giving judges back much-needed discretion on bail, requiring unanimity from parole-board members when considering early release and other reforms aimed at keeping violent criminals off the streets; and
• A wide variety of measures designed to stabilize the economy and bolster the state’s small businesses and workers still struggling to recover from the devastating economic impact of the pandemic.
With a renewed focus, we can reverse troubling trends impacting the quality of life for all New Yorkers and once again become a desired destination for people to safely live, work, and raise a family. I’m eager to get started, and look forward to working with the legislature and Gov. Hochul to improve our state’s fiscal outlook and give New Yorkers the tools they need to succeed.
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.
OPINION: U.S.-Russia tensions must be managed
We had high hopes for the future of U.S.-Russian relations after the collapse of the Soviet Union three decades ago. The Cold War had ended, and Russia seemed for a time to be moving in the direction of openness and democracy. But those hopes were soon dashed. Under Vladimir Putin, who has effectively been in charge for
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We had high hopes for the future of U.S.-Russian relations after the collapse of the Soviet Union three decades ago. The Cold War had ended, and Russia seemed for a time to be moving in the direction of openness and democracy. But those hopes were soon dashed.
Under Vladimir Putin, who has effectively been in charge for more than 20 years, Russia has turned increasingly hostile toward the West and aggressive toward its neighbors. It’s not that America hasn’t tried to get along. I cannot remember a U.S. administration that didn’t start its tenure with hopes of improving relations with Russia. Inevitably, they were disappointed.
Today the relationship has reached a low point in a tense standoff over Ukraine that some observers are calling the worst security crisis in Europe since the Cold War. Russia has amassed up to 175,000 troops near the Ukrainian border, prompting fears of an invasion.
Meanwhile, Russia has turned increasingly authoritarian at home. Putin and his allies have restricted protests and detained journalists and critics. Human-rights advocates hold Russia responsible for the 2020 poisoning of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who is serving a sentence in a prison camp near Moscow.
In 2014, Russia invaded and annexed Crimea, a part of Ukraine, leading the U.S. and other Western nations to impose economic sanctions. Russia supports separatists who have been fighting an insurgency in eastern Ukraine. This spring, President Joe Biden imposed a new round of sanctions over Russian meddling in American elections and cyberattacks that breached U.S. government computer networks.
It’s worth noting there are many areas in which U.S. and Russian interests are — or could be — compatible. Nuclear-arms control is an obvious example. The U.S. and Russia control most of the world’s nuclear weapons, and it’s in everyone’s interest to prevent them from falling into the wrong hands. We have mutual interests in stability in Afghanistan, the status of Iran’s nuclear program and the operation of the International Space Station. But the Ukraine impasse, which recalls conflicts of the Cold War era, is getting in the way of progress.
Russia and Ukraine, which were the largest and most important republics of the Soviet Union, have cultural, economic, and political ties that go back centuries. Important Soviet leaders and Russian writers were from Ukraine, an important agricultural, industrial, and military region. Many Russians seem to see the split with Ukraine, which became independent in 1991, as a tragedy. Putin has emphasized the countries’ ethnic and historic connections and suggested Russia needs a friendly Ukraine as a buffer against the West. Ukraine’s leaders and much of its population, however, have turned increasingly westward, even applying to join the NATO alliance, which Russia takes as a provocation.
That was the setting when Biden and Putin met Dec. 7 for a one-on-one video conference, a session that both sides described as tense but productive. According to a White House statement, Biden expressed “deep concerns” about Russia’s actions toward Ukraine and warned there would be “strong economic and other measures” if Russia further escalated the situation.
U.S. officials have been vague about what those other measures could be. The risk of war with Russia strikes me as low. But this is a difficult, volatile moment; it is no time for us to avert our attention.
Going forward, we should cooperate with Russia where we can. We should welcome educational, cultural, and business exchanges where appropriate. And we should continue to warn Putin about the dangers of his aggressive stance toward Ukraine.
Above all, we should keep talking, but we need to remain clear-eyed about how difficult and tension-filled this relationship has become. We need to make every effort to keep the conflict from spiraling out of control.
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.

ELIZABETH LUDOVICI has been promoted to account manager at Pinckney Hugo Group. She was previously an assistant account manager and has been with the agency for one year. Before joining Pinckney Hugo Group, Ludovici was a marketing coordinator at China Towne Furniture and Mattress in Solvay. She has a bachelor’s degree in marketing from SUNY
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ELIZABETH LUDOVICI has been promoted to account manager at Pinckney Hugo Group. She was previously an assistant account manager and has been with the agency for one year. Before joining Pinckney Hugo Group, Ludovici was a marketing coordinator at China Towne Furniture and Mattress in Solvay. She has a bachelor’s degree in marketing from SUNY Oswego.

CLAIRE STOCUM has been promoted to branch manager of the NBT Bank branch in Endicott. She joined NBT Bank in 2019 through the NBT Bank Management Development Program and most recently served as an assistant branch manager at the Binghamton Eastside Office. Stocum earned her bachelor’s degree in management and marketing from Syracuse University. She
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CLAIRE STOCUM has been promoted to branch manager of the NBT Bank branch in Endicott. She joined NBT Bank in 2019 through the NBT Bank Management Development Program and most recently served as an assistant branch manager at the Binghamton Eastside Office. Stocum earned her bachelor’s degree in management and marketing from Syracuse University. She is a member of United Way of Broome County’s Emerging Leaders Society and American Business Women’s Association of Broome County.

NEIL BURKE was recently appointed as the new director of special projects for the Syracuse Department of Public Works (DPW). In his new role, Burke is responsible for transportation initiatives, managing ongoing projects, staff, and daily operations within DPW. He oversees numerous infrastructure projects geared toward making transportation in the city safer, easier, and more
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NEIL BURKE was recently appointed as the new director of special projects for the Syracuse Department of Public Works (DPW). In his new role, Burke is responsible for transportation initiatives, managing ongoing projects, staff, and daily operations within DPW. He oversees numerous infrastructure projects geared toward making transportation in the city safer, easier, and more equitable, including the municipal sidewalk program, traffic calming installations, and the Traffic Management Center. He reports directly to Jeremy Robinson, commissioner of DPW. Since 2016, Burke has served as a transportation planner for the City of Syracuse. His work involved coordination and implementation of planning projects, design review and analysis, and project management of various initiatives including the Municipal Sidewalk Program, Pavement Rating Program, and the Syracuse Bike Share Program. Prior to working for the City of Syracuse, Burke earned his master’s degree in landscape architecture from the SUNY College of Environmental Science & Forestry and his bachelor’s degree in adolescent education from SUNY Oswego.

AMINE HILA, M.D., was recently appointed to the new position of VP for digestive services at UHS. Dr. Hila has been a member of the UHS medical staff since 2006 and has served since that time as a provider with UHS Gastroenterology. He brings to his new role an “exceptional background” in clinical knowledge and
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AMINE HILA, M.D., was recently appointed to the new position of VP for digestive services at UHS. Dr. Hila has been a member of the UHS medical staff since 2006 and has served since that time as a provider with UHS Gastroenterology. He brings to his new role an “exceptional background” in clinical knowledge and team building, and a deep appreciation for the patient-centered values of UHS, the health system said. Hila will serve in a key position for the ongoing management and strengthening of UHS’ services in the diagnosis and treatment of digestive diseases, one of the organization’s most important service lines. He has led UHS’s Graduate Medical Education (GME) since 2013. Hila significantly contributed to the growth of the GME, including the addition of cardiology and gastroenterology fellowship programs, and is committed to the ongoing improvement in the quality of UHS residency programs. Hila was born in Italy and grew up in the nearby Mediterranean country of Tunisia. He earned his medical degree in 1998 from the Faculté de Médecine de Tunis. Hila then completed an internal-medicine internship and residency in 2002 at the Graduate Hospital in Philadelphia and a clinical and research gastroenterology and hepatology fellowship in 2006 at the Medical University of South Carolina.

Research & Marketing Strategies, Inc.
MICHAEL FIORE has joined Research & Marketing Strategies, Inc. (RMS), a Baldwinsville–based market-research firm, as its newest research analyst within the research analytics department. Fiore comes to RMS from the Schenectady Jewish Community Center, where he was director of enrichment programming. Before that, Fiore, who has a master’s degree in educational psychology, was a graduate
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MICHAEL FIORE has joined Research & Marketing Strategies, Inc. (RMS), a Baldwinsville–based market-research firm, as its newest research analyst within the research analytics department. Fiore comes to RMS from the Schenectady Jewish Community Center, where he was director of enrichment programming. Before that, Fiore, who has a master’s degree in educational psychology, was a graduate assistant working at the University at Albany, honing his business-communications prowess. It was there that Fiore conducted extensive research for the university, which included both survey creation and implementation, data analysis, as well as creating and presenting reports. At RMS, Fiore will focus on custom client projects, designing surveys, survey programming, interviewing, analyzing data, and summary reporting. He works with the research team to interpret primary and secondary data, helping to identify key findings and trends. Fiore also assists in preparing custom-tailored proposals, facilitating client meetings, and kick-off conferences.
MICHAEL BUTLER has been promoted to supervisor of research analytics at RMS. He first joined the firm as a research analyst within its analytics department and has quickly proven himself to be a “highly regarded research professional and outstanding member of the team.” Butler’s new preliminary focus encompasses designing surveys, programming, interviewing, analyzing data, and developing reports that identify key findings and trends to inform future strategy and growth across a variety of industries.

SRC, Inc. announced that it has named SEAN O’HARA and HARVEY SCHUMAN as SRC fellows. In that role, both O’Hara and Schuman will provide technical mentorship and expertise in their respective business areas to SRC’s employees. The designation of SRC fellow recognizes the “outstanding contributions of an exclusive group of technical professionals,” the company says.
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SRC, Inc. announced that it has named SEAN O’HARA and HARVEY SCHUMAN as SRC fellows. In that role, both O’Hara and Schuman will provide technical mentorship and expertise in their respective business areas to SRC’s employees. The designation of SRC fellow recognizes the “outstanding contributions of an exclusive group of technical professionals,” the company says. Fellows must meet strict criteria including “superior demonstration of engineering or scientific expertise, leadership, and innovation which have advanced the state of the art within a specific technical domain.” The individuals are well-known to customers and employees as leaders in their field. Over the past 25 years, O’Hara has enhanced SRC’s technical reputation by “continuing to push the limits and developing state-of-the-art technology of national significance.” He is widely seen as a technical and cultural role model, mentoring SRC employees and guiding people to “push the limits” of what’s possible. In addition, he instructs numerous SRC technical courses and

is an adjunct professor at Syracuse University. O’Hara has bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering from Syracuse University, and an associate of applied science degree in engineering from Onondaga Community College. He has received the Technology Alliance of Central New York’s (TACNY) technologist of the year award, has received the annual outstanding thesis award from Syracuse University, and received the presidential eagle award from the Association of Public Safety Communications Officials. Schuman, in his 25 years at SRC, has “used his stellar technical prowess and vision to advance the company’s systems and capabilities.” His expertise in signal processing and electromagnetics has contributed to numerous development projects for ground, airborne, and space-based systems. Schuman has authored dozens of papers and presentations and holds seven patents. In addition to being recognized as an expert in his field, “everyone who knows Schuman can attest to him being a great person to work with — always willing to share his knowledge and assist to find a solution,” SRC says. Schuman earned his doctorate, master’s, and bachelor’s degrees in electrical engineering from Syracuse University. He is a member of a variety of professional affiliations including Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu, and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. ν

Langston named first female chief information officer at Excellus
ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Excellus BlueCross BlueShield, the largest health insurer in Central New York, has appointed Cindy Langston as senior VP and the first female

People news: Hartwick College names VP for academic affairs
ONEONTA, N.Y. — Hartwick College in Oneonta has announced Laurel Bongiorno as its new VP for academic affairs/dean of faculty. She assumes her new role
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