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NSF awards Binghamton University $3.5 million for cybersecurity scholarships
VESTAL, N.Y. — Binghamton University will use a federal grant of $3.5 million over the next five years to help fund cybersecurity scholarships for two

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Usherwood Office Technology has promoted Andrew Flamik to chief financial officer. In his new position, Flamik is responsible for the financial and

Oneida County to close several COVID testing sites
UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County announced on Friday that it will cease testing at Griffiss International Airport in Rome, Turning Stone Resort Casino, and Utica

Broome County COVID Recovery Fund launches
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — The Agency, in partnership with Broome County, has launched the Broome County COVID Recovery Fund (CRF) to assist small businesses impacted by

Upstate’s Dr. Thomas honored with State Senate’s Liberty Medal for pandemic work
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The man who has served as one of the primary voices of pandemic-related information in Central New York has been recognized by

Brown & Brown Insurance to pay Q1 dividend in mid-February
Brown & Brown, Inc. (NYSE: BRO), the Florida–based parent of Syracuse–based Brown & Brown Empire State, recently announced that its board of directors has declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of 10.25 cents a share for the first quarter. The dividend is payable on Feb. 16 to shareholders of record on Feb. 4, the insurance
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Brown & Brown, Inc. (NYSE: BRO), the Florida–based parent of Syracuse–based Brown & Brown Empire State, recently announced that its board of directors has declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of 10.25 cents a share for the first quarter.
The dividend is payable on Feb. 16 to shareholders of record on Feb. 4, the insurance agency said in a news release.
The dividend amount is the same that Brown & Brown paid in the fourth quarter, when the company boosted its dividend by almost 11 percent from its prior regular quarterly cash dividend of 9.25 cents a share. That was the 28th consecutive annual dividend increase for the company.
Daytona Beach–based Brown & Brown, through its subsidiaries, offers a broad range of insurance products and related services. It has more than 11,000 employees and over 300 offices across the U.S. and select global markets. The insurance-brokerage firm makes frequent acquisitions of insurance agencies a key part of its growth strategy.
Brown & Brown Empire State is headquartered at 500 Plum St. in Syracuse’s Franklin Square area. It also has an office at 4104 Vestal Road in Vestal.

Unplugged Gaming leases nearly 14,000 square feet in Manlius
MANLIUS, N.Y. — Unplugged Gaming recently leased 13,860 square feet of retail space in the Manlius Mart Plaza at 315 Fayette St. in the village of Manlius. Bill Evertz and Chris Savage from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company helped arrange the transaction, representing the landlord. Manlius Realty LLC owns the shopping center, according to Onondaga
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MANLIUS, N.Y. — Unplugged Gaming recently leased 13,860 square feet of retail space in the Manlius Mart Plaza at 315 Fayette St. in the village of Manlius.
Bill Evertz and Chris Savage from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company helped arrange the transaction, representing the landlord. Manlius Realty LLC owns the shopping center, according to Onondaga County’s online property records.
Unplugged Gaming says it offers a wide variety of trading-card games and other games at its collectible hobby shop.

Syracuse Builders Exchange names 2022-2023 officers
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Syracuse Builders Exchange (SBE) recently announced that its board of directors approved officers for 2022-2023. The following officers will each serve a two-year term, effective Jan. 10, 2022: President: Lisa Brownson — president of Safety Source Consultants, Ltd. in Cicero. The firm provides construction-industry employers with professional education and safety-training consulting
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Syracuse Builders Exchange (SBE) recently announced that its board of directors approved officers for 2022-2023.
The following officers will each serve a two-year term, effective Jan. 10, 2022:
President: Lisa Brownson — president of Safety Source Consultants, Ltd. in Cicero. The firm provides construction-industry employers with professional education and safety-training consulting services.
First Vice President: Karen Bellows — president of Bellows Construction Specialties, LLC, a full-service general-contracting firm located in Syracuse.
Second Vice President: Eli Smith — president of E. Smith Contractors, LLC, which is a full-service construction company specializing in general contracting and construction-management services. E. Smith Contractors is located in Syracuse.
Secretary: Steve Perry — president of Airside Technology Corp., located in DeWitt. Airside Technology is a full-service HVAC contractor specializing in commercial and industrial HVAC service and maintenance, and sheet-metal contracting.
Treasurer: David Bowles — a certified public accountant and former partner of Syracuse Builders Exchange member firm Dermody, Burke & Brown, CPAs, LLC, based in Syracuse.
Additionally, Earl R. Hall, executive director of the Syracuse Builders Exchange, also serves as a board officer. Hired in 1992, Hall has been executive director since 2006, and will be celebrating his 30th anniversary working for SBE.
“The new class of officers brings significant industry-related experience and expertise and will greatly help in evaluating initiatives or making governance decisions that are in the best interest of the membership and the regional construction industry,” Hall said in a statement.
The Syracuse Builders Exchange is a 501(c)(6) not-for-profit trade association, serving the construction industry throughout Central New York’s 16-county region. It is the largest construction-industry association in New York, and the nation’s oldest builders’ exchange.
New York milk production falls nearly 2 percent
New York dairy farms produced more than 1.27 billion pounds of milk in December, down 1.7 percent from nearly 1.3 billion pounds in the year-prior month, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported. Milk production per cow in the state averaged 2,055 pounds in December, off 0.7 percent from 2,070 pounds in the
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New York dairy farms produced more than 1.27 billion pounds of milk in December, down 1.7 percent from nearly 1.3 billion pounds in the year-prior month, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported.
Milk production per cow in the state averaged 2,055 pounds in December, off 0.7 percent from 2,070 pounds in the year-ago month.
The number of milk cows on farms in New York state totaled 620,000 head in December, down 1 percent from 626,000 head in December 2020, NASS reported.
Milk prices rose in the latest month for which data is available. New York dairy producers in November were paid an average of $21.30 per hundredweight, up $1.40 from October, and up $1.30 from November 2020.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, dairy farms produced 834 million pounds of milk in December, down 2.4 percent from a year earlier.

Uncle, nephew team up to operate Brewerton Ace Hardware store
CICERO, N.Y. — With spring right around the corner, the Brewerton Ace Hardware is gearing up for its first full year in business. The 9,400-square-foot store opened its doors last June at 9655 Brewerton Road in Brewerton (town of Cicero). Jeff Parzych and his nephew Austin Parzych operate the store in a family effort. The idea
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CICERO, N.Y. — With spring right around the corner, the Brewerton Ace Hardware is gearing up for its first full year in business.
The 9,400-square-foot store opened its doors last June at 9655 Brewerton Road in Brewerton (town of Cicero). Jeff Parzych and his nephew Austin Parzych operate the store in a family effort.
The idea first came about when a family member was approached about a similar type of investment, Jeff Parzych says. While that family member passed on the investment, it got the family thinking about options and opportunities, he says. “That sort of sparked it.”
Owning a hardware store wasn’t a completely foreign idea to Parzych. His grandparents operated Alpar Hardware in the Eastwood neighborhood of Syracuse. After doing his due diligence, Parzych settled on Ace Hardware, which is a retailer-owned hardware cooperative.
“Ace is a solid business,” he says, and owners benefit from Ace’s national marketing efforts and distribution network. Ace also worked with Parzych through the entire process from helping to find a suitable location to setting up the store and training employees.
The Brewerton location is a good one with a definite need for a hardware store, he says. To create the store, they leased the space formerly occupied by the antique store One the Farm and an empty 2,000-square-foot storefront next door in the same shopping center.
“We did quite an extensive remodel,” Parzych says, including taking out the wall connecting the two spaces, installing new flooring and lighting, and painting the entire area. He declined to provide specifics on the investment but noted it was substantial.
According to myace.com, the typical investment to open an Ace Hardware store runs between $650,000 and $1 million, depending on the size of the store. As a cooperative, Ace does not charge a franchise fee or royalties, but does require owners to have $250,000 in unencumbered cash and a net worth of at least $400,000.
Sales have been good so far, Parzych says, adding that the store is hitting Ace’s projected numbers for customer counts and number of transactions.
The biggest struggle has been getting the word out about the store. “We’re very active on social media,” he says. He also has radio ads running on The Dinosaur 94.1, 95.3, 103.9 FM, Fox Sports 92.5 FM, and 1490 AM. “We’re going to be having some TV stuff coming up,” he adds, and the store advertises in Clipper magazine.
Parzych also plans to start a newsletter and recently started working with a marketing firm. The store also benefits from fliers that Ace mails out.
Starting in February, the store will work with the Cicero parks and recreation department to offer kid’s building sessions. Looking ahead to spring, Parzych is excited for what is typically a busy season for hardware stores. He’s hoping to partner with local farmers to bring a weekly farmer’s market to the store.
He says it’s efforts like that, along with extra services such as screen repairs offered onsite, which help set his Ace store apart from big-box stores like Lowe’s Home Improvement Warehouse or Home Depot. In addition, the Ace store stocks more uncommon items that the big stores don’t routinely carry, Parzych notes. On top of the roughly 20,000 items carried in the store, he has access to more than 200,000 items through the Ace distribution network to help him get whatever his customers need.
The store currently employs 15 people, most of them part-time. Prior to opening the Brewerton Ace, Parzych ran his own lawn and landscaping business.
Headquartered in Oak Brook, Illinois, the Ace Hardware cooperative has more than 5,300 locally owned and operated stores in about 70 countries.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.