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How Raymour & Flanigan pivoted during pandemic
CLAY, N.Y. — Saying much of the furniture industry was “hit hard” by the pandemic, Clay–based Raymour & Flanigan Furniture and Mattresses says it has been able to keep items in stock and grow its customer loyalty by “providing superior service and quick delivery.” The company responded to a CNYBJ inquiry about how it has […]
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CLAY, N.Y. — Saying much of the furniture industry was “hit hard” by the pandemic, Clay–based Raymour & Flanigan Furniture and Mattresses says it has been able to keep items in stock and grow its customer loyalty by “providing superior service and quick delivery.”
The company responded to a CNYBJ inquiry about how it has navigated the COVID-19 pandemic.
The furniture and mattress retailer says it’s been able to keep thousands of items in stock and available for delivery “in as soon as next day due to our in-house delivery teams.”
“The pandemic has also helped us expand our ability to meet customers where they want to shop and when, creating a seamless online to in-store experience where customers can shop online, visit a store to see a piece in person and complete their order wherever they feel most comfortable,” the retailer said.
Raymour & Flanigan describes itself as the largest furniture and mattress retailer in the Northeast and seventh largest nationwide.
The company started 2021 by naming Seth Goldberg as its next president. Goldberg replaced his father, Neil Goldberg, who had served as president and CEO since 1982. Neil Goldberg is now serving as chairman and CEO.
When asked about its goals for 2022, Raymour & Flanigan says it wants to continue providing “superior” customer service; leading sustainability efforts in the furniture industry; giving back to the communities it serves; and “creating a welcoming work environment where our associates are excited to come into work each day,” per its email response.
As for the company’s reaction to its recognition as a Central New York Legend, Raymour & Flanigan appreciates the honor.
“As a company who was founded in the Syracuse community in 1947 and one that takes pride in our New York roots, we’re very humbled to be recognized as a Central New York Legend along with the other incredible companies this year.”

Raymour & Flanigan Furniture: A family business story & much more
The story of Raymour & Flanigan Furniture Company, Inc. actually begins with another family furniture business: M. Goldberg & Sons. Meyer Goldberg and his sons Moses and Benjamin established this furniture and jewelry business in 1910 on North State Street in Syracuse after consolidating Meyer’s furniture store with Benjamin’s jewelry store. Pooling their business resources,
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The story of Raymour & Flanigan Furniture Company, Inc. actually begins with another family furniture business: M. Goldberg & Sons. Meyer Goldberg and his sons Moses and Benjamin established this furniture and jewelry business in 1910 on North State Street in Syracuse after consolidating Meyer’s furniture store with Benjamin’s jewelry store. Pooling their business resources, the trio of Meyer, Moses, and Benjamin launched M. Goldberg & Sons.
The business grew and, in 1921, the company opened stores in Fulton and Oswego. Another family member and company employee, Solomon Eli Goldberg, participated in opening these two stores. Solomon (Sol) worked for M. Goldberg & Sons until he left in 1946 to establish Raymour Furniture Company at 146 James St. in Syracuse. Sol and his wife, Mollie, had three sons — Seymour, Bernard, and Arnold. Bernard and Arnold joined their father in the furniture business. Seymour owned an antique store on Long Island called Raymour Antiques. Since the Goldberg family name already was taken, Sol, Bernard, and Arnold called their new furniture company Raymour, after Seymour’s antique business. Twenty-year-old Bernard and 16-year-old Arnold co-owned the new furniture business, but named Sol as company president, a position he would retain until his death in 1960 at age 69.

Along with working in the furniture business for about 40 years, Sol Goldberg also was active in the community as a member of the International Order of Odd Fellows, the Zionist Organization of America, the Young Men’s and Ladies Benevolent Association, and the Mt. Sinai Lodge 864 of the Free & Associated Masons. He also worshiped at Temple Adath Yeshurun.
Raymour Furniture moved from 146 James St. to 242 North Salina St. in 1950, but, in 1963, moved a third time to a larger, four-story building located at 229 North Salina St., once occupied by the former Markson Bros. Furniture Company. The new store offered dinette, living room, and bedroom furniture, kitchen appliances, as well as carpeting and home décor. The store also offered a 60-car parking lot behind the building. By 1963, Bernard Goldberg was Raymour Furniture’s president and Arnold became secretary-treasurer. Seymour also had joined his two younger brothers as company VP.
Raymour Furniture continued to expand in January 1966 by purchasing the entire inventory and fixtures of the Robert’s Furniture Store at 216 North Salina St. for $350,000 (worth about
$3 million in today’s dollars). Raymour then opened a new store at 421 South Warren St. in March 1968. Accompanied by their wives, Mayor William Walsh, Onondaga County Executive John Mulroy, and bank officials, Bernard and Arnold cut the ribbon on their new store. The brothers had completely renovated the former Ajemian and Sagenkahn buildings at 417-421 South Warren St. for the site of their new furniture store. To help defray the cost of the renovation, the brothers received a $50,000 (worth about $400,000 today) low-interest federal rehabilitation loan, the first of its kind awarded by New York State, and processed by the Syracuse Urban Renewal Agency.
Raymour Furniture celebrated its Silver (25th) Anniversary in April 1971. The celebration included a cake-cutting ceremony and featured models dressed in silver attire. At the time, Raymour was recognized as one of the largest furniture and appliance emporiums in Central New York. The company had grown from a few family members to 35 employees.
In November 1972, Raymour opened its first furniture warehouse showroom at Seneca Mall on Route 57 in Clay. This new warehouse showroom was to offer “carry-out merchandising.” The huge warehouse at the Seneca Mall was the length of two football fields, had a 30-foot-high ceiling, and held about $3 million worth of furniture stacked on storage racks. The warehouse also featured an adjacent showroom comprised of 250 room settings that were decorated with a variety of furniture styles. When a customer purchased an item in the showroom, that purchase information was transmitted to warehouse staff. While the customer paid for the merchandise, a warehouse employee would retrieve the item from a storage rack and transport it to a loading dock where the customer retrieved it. If the merchandise was too large for the customer’s vehicle, store employees would deliver it the next day. The company also redesigned its store on South Warren Street to mimic this new concept in furniture buying. Bernard Goldberg said at the time, “This is a furniture revolution taking place in most major cities. The furniture customer of today is interested in savings, elimination of delivery delays, and wants a wide selection.” The idea of selling furniture and appliances via a warehouse showroom concept was immediately successful and attracted customers from Albany and Rochester, as well as Pennsylvania and Canada.
That same year, Bernard Goldberg’s son, Neil, joined his father and uncle in the business. He graduated from Syracuse University’s School of Management in 1975 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting.
Raymour Furniture expanded its concept of warehouse furniture and appliance shopping into the town of DeWitt in 1975. The new warehouse and showroom that opened at 3430 Erie Boulevard E. was the company’s third location. Raymour had developed one of the largest merchandise inventories in the state and its three stores were open seven days a week.
Opening the warehouse showroom on Erie Boulevard East had been phase three of a five-phase expansion goal that began in 1972. Phase one involved recruiting executive personnel with specialized experience in buying, advertising, merchandizing, and finances. Phase two had planned and constructed the warehouse furniture showroom in the Seneca Mall. Phase four comprised a complete remodeling of the South Warren Street store. Company officials also announced that Phase five also was underway, searching for another warehouse showroom location.
After working for several months in 1976 with Touchette Corporation, a Syracuse–based computer-services business, Raymour Furniture developed a computer software program that allowed Raymour and other furniture companies to track inventory, merchandise control, and sales and profit figures. Known as the Raymour-Touchette system, the software also allowed Raymour to maintain information for billing, accounts payable, and profit & loss. This software system was the first of its kind in the American furniture industry. Raymour also made the software available to members of the Retail Furniture Marketing Guild, a 1,300-member group of major furniture retailers across the U.S. It greatly simplified the company’s operations, saved customers money, and allowed Raymour to expand again in the future.
Raymour Furniture expanded into Camillus in 1978 when the Ethan Allen Manor House moved to Fayetteville, making their 25,000-square-foot space available to Raymour.
In 1982, Neil Goldberg succeeded his father, Bernard, as company president and CEO. Bernard and Arnold then became co-chairmen of the company.

The company then built a 60-foot-high warehouse in Clay in 1986. Raymour Furniture had purchased the former Sperry-New Holland warehouse and hired VIP Structures to remodel it, expand the available space from 50,000 square feet to 100,000 square feet. Raymour now had six stores and 170 employees, and was planning to open additional stores in the late 1980s.
The year 1990 represented another pivotal year for Raymour Furniture. In January, the business acquired Flanigan’s Furniture, a competitor with 14 stores in the Rochester and Buffalo areas, renaming itself Raymour & Flanigan Furniture, Inc. The acquisition also increased the number of stores to 20. As the merger of the Raymour and Flanigan’s stores unfolded later that year, the company decided to close Flanigan’s stores in Poughkeepsie and Buffalo; close Flanigan’s warehouses in Buffalo, Olean, and Rochester to consolidate warehouse operations in Clay; and reduce the employee roster from 600 to 500.
In May of that year, Raymour also closed its store at 421 South Warren St. in downtown Syracuse, adding its name to the growing list of long-time businesses that were moving to the suburbs. The store had six employees and less than $1 million worth of inventory. Store employees noticed that customers usually window-shopped downtown but later bought items at the suburban stores. Neil Goldberg stated that closing the Warren Street store was an emotional experience for company officials. “We’ve never closed a store in the history of the company, and to close what was once our flagship store is not something we relish doing.” By this time, the company had four new stores in North Syracuse, Oswego, Utica, and Watertown.
By the mid-1990s, Raymour & Flanigan had grown to become a 27-store enterprise and had expanded outside of New York into Springfield, Massachusetts, Wilkes-Barre and Scranton, Pennsylvania, and Hartford, Connecticut. By 1998, the number of Raymour & Flanigan stores had increased to 33 with 1,200 employees.
Arnold Goldberg passed away on Oct. 27, 1999, at age 69. He had retired about 20 years earlier as a co-chairman of the board with his brother, Bernard. Along with founding the successful furniture company, Arnold was very involved in civic and social duties, including being president of Temple Adath Yeshurun and as a member of the Anti-Defamation League in New York City. In June 1999, the Anti-Defamation League awarded the Goldberg family its American Heritage Award at its annual dinner in New York City. Arnold was survived by his wife, Lois, and his children, Deborah, Susan, and Michael.
At the dawn of the 21st century, Raymour & Flanigan had increased to 45 stores in five states, with 2,000 employees. By July 2001, the company built a 112,500-square-foot shopping center that included a 72,000-square-foot furniture superstore on Route 31 in Clay. To accomplish the superstore concept, the company closed two smaller stores in Camillus and North Syracuse, and the store in Liverpool was converted from a showroom into a service center. The Seneca Mall store was scheduled to close soon after opening the superstore. The displaced employees were offered positions at the new superstore. was converting its warehouse showroom at Seneca Mall into a 37,000 square foot retail clearance center. This was the third such outlet for the company, with two others previously opening in Poughkeepsie and Philadelphia.
Raymour & Flanigan was also considering further expanding into the Baltimore-Washington, DC area, Boston, Pittsburgh, and New York City. The total number of company stores had risen to 47 in six states in 2002.
Raymour & Flanigan began to expand its presence in the New York City metropolitan area with the acquisition of Futurama, a furniture retailer consisting of three stores, in 2005.
Then, in 2007, Raymour & Flanigan acquired the business, inventory, and real estate of Alpert’s Furniture Showplace, headquartered in Seekonk, Massachusetts. The acquisition increased to 71 the number of Raymour & Flanigan stores. By then, the company also had expanded into Delaware and employed 3,800 total people.
Raymour & Flanigan continued its expansion in the New York City metropolitan area in 2008 by purchasing 18 Levitz Furniture stores when that company liquidated its assets due to bankruptcy proceedings.
Also in 2008, Seth Goldberg, Neil’s son, joined the business after graduating from Yale University and University of Pennsylvania Law School. Seth took on the role of senior VP of marketing, e-commerce and information technology, where he helped pioneer the company’s expansion across digital platforms while growing its customer base. Seth and his siblings, Adam and Shira Boschan, represented the third generation of Goldbergs to manage the furniture business.
Bernard Goldberg, co-founder of the original Raymour Furniture in 1946, passed away in April 2010 at age 84. Bernard had remained company chairman until his death but had not participated in company affairs for several years. He had served in the U.S. Army during World War II, where he was awarded the Bronze Star. Bernard then graduated from Syracuse University in 1948. Along with co-founding Raymour Furniture, Bernard was very active in social and community organizations. He was president of Temple Adath Yeshurun, a board member of the New York State Division Human Rights, as well as a founding trustee of the Syracuse Jewish Community Foundation of Central New York.
Raymour & Flanigan had expanded to more than 140 stores in the Northeast by 2019 and, in 2020, was declared the Northeast’s largest furniture and mattress retailer. In September 2020, during the coronavirus pandemic, Raymour & Flanigan was looking to hire 1,000 new employees to handle a sharp increase in sales. People staying at home during the pandemic were buying more furniture and mattresses, as well as home office and multifunctional furniture. Sales also spiked in outdoor furniture. Unable to go away on vacation, people were upgrading and investing in their homes. Toward the end of 2020, Raymour & Flanigan operated 142 stores and distribution centers and had 6,053 employees.
Raymour & Flanigan announced another management change in January 2021. Neil Goldberg, company present and CEO since 1982 announced that he was transitioning to chairman and appointing his son, Seth, as the next company president in February. Neil’s brother, Steven, and his cousin, Michael, who both joined the company back in 1977, would become vice chairmen. Seth’s brother, Adam, is now VP of marketing, and their sister, Shira Boschan, is current VP of people development. Shira’s husband, Jared Boschan, is VP of e-commerce.
Raymour & Flanigan is committed to fostering sustainability, by operating five recycling facilities, including its first recycling facility located in Clay, which are dedicated to recycling shipping waste. These sites employ more than 100 recycling associates who focus on ensuring materials are processed in an acceptable manner according to best practices outlined by the United States government. The company also is committed to becoming more energy efficient by operating a solar-panel site spanning more than three acres to harvest energy and electricity, as well as installing solar panels on its warehouses. Raymour & Flanigan recycles 99 percent of all packaging materials, resulting in 200 million pounds diverted from landfills since 2002.
At Onondaga Historical Association’s museum in downtown Syracuse, Raymour & Flanigan is featured in an exhibit on the Jewish community of Syracuse and Onondaga County. Called “From Laying the Foundation to Forging Ahead,” the exhibit highlights the contributions made by local Jewish citizens to the community, business, entertainment, and athletics. Raymour & Flanigan’s company history is presented as an integral component of the exhibit’s business section.
Thomas Hunter is curator of collections at the Onondaga Historical Association (OHA) (www.cnyhistory.org), located at 321 Montgomery St. in Syracuse.
2021 CNY Legends Special Report
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Longtime Oneida Health board member, Sirchia, dies
ONEIDA, N.Y. — Oneida Health recently announced that Victor Sirchia, who served on its board of trustees for 28 years, died on Dec. 14. Sirchia was a board member since 1993 and was chair of the board since 2003. Professionally, he was a partner, business advisor/consultant, and CPA for Sirchia CPAs and Financial Advisors since
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ONEIDA, N.Y. — Oneida Health recently announced that Victor Sirchia, who served on its board of trustees for 28 years, died on Dec. 14.
Sirchia was a board member since 1993 and was chair of the board since 2003.
Professionally, he was a partner, business advisor/consultant, and CPA for Sirchia CPAs and Financial Advisors since 1998. Sirchia was a local native and graduate of Vernon Verona Sherrill Central Schools.
“Vic’s dedication to Oneida Health and the community it serves was second to none and he showed it over decades of selfless service. He will be greatly missed by the Oneida Health family and all those who knew him,” Michael Kallet, vice chairman of the Oneida Health board of trustees, said in a release.
Oneida Health noted that Sirchia was part of numerous key decisions its board had to make during the last three decades.
“Vic played a vital role in the many challenges we have faced in the past 28 years. From spinning off from the city as a stand-alone not-for-profit; dramatic changes in how hospitals are paid; technological changes from laparoscopic surgeries, CAT and MRI machines, to robotic surgery; adding services, locations and buildings; and the great challenge of surviving as a community hospital in a health care environment that does not truly value community hospitals,” Peter Hedglon, member of the Oneida Health board of trustees, added. “We could have not done it without him.”
Oneida Health serves an area comprised of 29 communities in Madison and western Oneida counties with a population of about 100,000 people. The health system includes a 101-bed acute-care hospital, emergency department, surgery center, 160-bed extended-care and short-term rehab facility, primary-care offices, internal medicine, comprehensive lab services, home medical equipment, comprehensive imaging services, outpatient therapy, and various care specialties.

Boss Meal Prep leases space in building on Northern Boulevard in DeWitt
DeWITT, N.Y. — Divine Dishes Kitchen, dba Boss Meal Prep, recently leased 1,550 square feet of space in the building at 6780 Northern Blvd. in the town of DeWitt. Don O’Leary and Chris Savage from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage helped arrange the transaction. O’Leary represented the property owner and Savage represented the tenant in the
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DeWITT, N.Y. — Divine Dishes Kitchen, dba Boss Meal Prep, recently leased 1,550 square feet of space in the building at 6780 Northern Blvd. in the town of DeWitt.
Don O’Leary and Chris Savage from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage helped arrange the transaction. O’Leary represented the property owner and Savage represented the tenant in the transaction, according to a release from the real-estate firm.
The 6780 Northern Blvd. property is owned by Northwood Business Center Associates, according to Onondaga County’s online real-estate records. It consists of a one-story, nearly 40,000-square-foot structure, positioned on more than 3.5 acres of land. The property is assessed at $1.05 million for 2021.
Boss Meal Prep says it offers “a way for individuals to eat healthy without all the hassle.” The business was founded in 2019 by Alexandra Nero. As a certified health coach and “lifelong pursuer of all things health and wellness,” Nero says she noticed “a serious lack of convenient healthy food options in CNY,” according to the Boss Meal Prep website. With her experience in corporate marketing and meal prepping for herself every week, a new business was born.
New York milk production slips slightly in November
New York dairy farms produced 1.24 billion pounds of milk in November, down 0.2 percent from 1.243 billion pounds in the year-ago month, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported. Milk production per cow in the state averaged 1,975 pounds in November, off 0.5 percent from 1,985 pounds in the year-prior month. The
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New York dairy farms produced 1.24 billion pounds of milk in November, down 0.2 percent from 1.243 billion pounds in the year-ago month, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported.
Milk production per cow in the state averaged 1,975 pounds in November, off 0.5 percent from 1,985 pounds in the year-prior month.
The number of milk cows on farms in New York state totaled 628,000 head in November, up 0.3 percent from 626,000 head in November 2020, NASS reported.
Milk prices rose in the latest month for which data is available. New York dairy producers in October were paid an average of $19.90 per hundredweight, up $1 from September, and up $1.10 from October 2020.
In neighboring Pennsylvania, dairy farms produced 800 million pounds of milk in November, down 3.5 percent from a year before.
Lockheed’s Owego plant to perform half the work on nearly $22M Navy contract
OWEGO, N.Y. — Lockheed Martin Corp.’s (NYSE: LMT) Owego operation recently won a $21.7 million firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract from the U.S. Navy. This contract provides tear down and evaluation of the P3-C aircraft mission systems hardware, as well as obsolescence studies and technical support to maintain the P3-C mission systems for the government of Taiwan,
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OWEGO, N.Y. — Lockheed Martin Corp.’s (NYSE: LMT) Owego operation recently won a $21.7 million firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract from the U.S. Navy.
This contract provides tear down and evaluation of the P3-C aircraft mission systems hardware, as well as obsolescence studies and technical support to maintain the P3-C mission systems for the government of Taiwan, according to a Dec. 20 contract announcement from the U.S. Department of Defense.
Work will be performed in Owego (50 percent) and Clearwater, Florida (50 percent), and is expected to be completed in December 2026. No funds will be obligated at the time of award; funds will be obligated on individual orders as they are issued, per the contract announcement.
The Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division in Lakehurst, New Jersey is the contracting authority.

Welch Allyn has a new parent company as Baxter completes acquisition of Hillrom
Welch Allyn — the medical-device maker in Skaneateles Falls whose presence in Central New York dates back more than a century — has a new owner. Baxter International Inc. (NYSE: BAX), an Illinois medical-products company, on Dec. 13 announced it has completed its acquisition of Hillrom (NYSE: HRC) in a $10.5 billion deal. Hillrom is the
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Welch Allyn — the medical-device maker in Skaneateles Falls whose presence in Central New York dates back more than a century — has a new owner.
Baxter International Inc. (NYSE: BAX), an Illinois medical-products company, on Dec. 13 announced it has completed its acquisition of Hillrom (NYSE: HRC) in a $10.5 billion deal.
Hillrom is the parent company of Welch Allyn.
Baxter paid $156 in cash for each outstanding share of Hillrom common stock, per Baxter’s news release.
Including the assumption of Hillrom’s outstanding debt obligations, the enterprise value of the transaction is about $12.5 billion.
Hillrom, a global medical-technology firm, is headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, while Baxter International (NYSE: BAX) is headquartered in Deerfield, Illinois, a Chicago suburb.
Baxter’s proposed acquisition of Hillrom was announced on Sept. 2.
Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. in June 2015 announced plans to acquire Welch Allyn Inc. for about $2.05 billion in cash and stock. Nearly three years later, Hillrom formally dedicated a $12.7 million expansion project that adds about 100,000 square feet to the Welch Allyn campus.
Welch Allyn employs about 1,000 people in Skaneateles Falls, according to CNYBJ research.
“The Baxter-Hillrom combination unlocks the next phase of our transformation, presenting a new wave of potential to drive greater impact for patients, clinicians, employees, shareholders and other communities we serve worldwide,” José (Joe) Almeida, chairman, president and CEO of Baxter, said. “Integrating our complementary capabilities introduces additional opportunities for growth across our broad geographic footprint and also creates remarkable new possibilities for connectivity with leading-edge digital health innovation focused on enhancing care, lowering costs and increasing workflow efficiency.”
The combination unites two med-tech organizations in a “shared vision for transforming healthcare and advancing patient care worldwide.”
Baxter says plans to build on its global footprint, including commercial and service infrastructure, to expand legacy Hillrom and Welch Allyn products into new international markets, and bringing the collective portfolio of products and services to even more patients and providers worldwide, per its news release.

Stanley to transition to SUNY interim-chancellor role
ALBANY, N.Y. — SUNY Oswego President Deborah Stanley is heading toward retirement on Dec. 31, but her immediate plans will keep her quite active in the education sector. The SUNY board of trustees on Dec. 20 announced it has appointed Stanley as interim chancellor to lead SUNY after Chancellor Jim Malatras steps down on Jan.
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ALBANY, N.Y. — SUNY Oswego President Deborah Stanley is heading toward retirement on Dec. 31, but her immediate plans will keep her quite active in the education sector.
The SUNY board of trustees on Dec. 20 announced it has appointed Stanley as interim chancellor to lead SUNY after Chancellor Jim Malatras steps down on Jan. 14.
Malatras announced his resignation on Dec. 9 after documents pertaining to the sexual-harassment probe of former Gov. Andrew Cuomo revealed that Malatras had conversations that included comments about Lindsey Boylan, a Cuomo accuser and a former Malatras co-worker that used language involving an expletive. The New York State Attorney General’s office the previous week had released the documents on the sexual-harassment probe of Cuomo.
Malatras noted in his resignation letter that “the recent events surrounding me over the past week have become a distraction.”
In her new role, Stanley brings nearly 45 years of campus leadership to SUNY and will begin serving as interim chancellor on Jan. 15. She’ll retire as the 10th president of SUNY Oswego at the end of this month after serving in the role since 1997 and as interim president for two years before her appointment to the permanent role.
“…President Stanley is the right educator at the right time to lead this prestigious university system,” Merryl Tisch, who chairs the SUNY board of trustees, said in a release. “With President Stanley’s decades of leadership, commitment to academic excellence, and her unwavering support for students, she is well-positioned to serve our 64 campuses with a proven record of accomplishments, integrity, and intellect.”
Stanley made the following statement about her new assignment:
“During my tenure at SUNY, I have had the great pleasure of collaborating with exemplary leaders at all levels throughout our system, and it is an incredible honor to continue that work with the SUNY Board of Trustees and our campus presidents,” she said. “I do not take lightly our responsibility to make sure we are providing a safe and welcoming environment that allows our students to grow academically and provide the foundation to pursue and reach their goals and dreams. During this leadership transition, their success will be my highest priority, and I look forward to leading this great university system to new heights.”
Fred Kowal, president of United University Professions, called Stanley “an immensely accomplished leader” and hopes she will “effectively lead SUNY through this transition period.”
“Today, we also renew our call for a nationwide search for a permanent SUNY chancellor with a high priority on candidates of diversity, and an open, communicative process,” Kowal said in a Dec. 20 statement. “In the coming year, there is critical work that will need to be done and we look forward to working with the Board of Trustees, Dr. Stanley, and the other unions representing SUNY employees to deliver resources and support for our members, our students, and our patients across New York.”
The SUNY board of trustees also announced it will begin a “global search” in January for the permanent SUNY chancellor. The board plans to work with an executive-search firm to identify, recruit, and encourage potential candidates; review the qualifications of applicants; and verify the credentials of all finalists, per the release.

Versatility Enterprises buys Erie Boulevard building for $400,000
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Versatility Enterprises, LLC recently purchased the 6,720-square-foot, freestanding building located on about one acre at 2700 Erie Blvd. E. in Syracuse. Versatility Enterprises is a licensed and bonded freight shipping and trucking company. The purchase price was $400,000 on this transaction, which closed on Oct. 1, according to Onondaga County’s online property
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Versatility Enterprises, LLC recently purchased the 6,720-square-foot, freestanding building located on about one acre at 2700 Erie Blvd. E. in Syracuse.
Versatility Enterprises is a licensed and bonded freight shipping and trucking company.
The purchase price was $400,000 on this transaction, which closed on Oct. 1, according to Onondaga County’s online property records. The prior owner was SB&JB Properties LLC, fka SB&JB Investment. The property was assessed at $204,000 for 2021, with a full market value of almost $274,000, per the county records.
Chris Savage and Bill Evertz from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage helped arrange the transaction, according to a release from the real-estate firm.
Hydrotek, a provider of hydroponic and brewing supplies, used to be located at the 2700 Erie Blvd. E. building.
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