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Smart Path clean-energy transmission project in North Country hits halfway mark
Construction of the New York Power Authority’s (NYPA) Smart Path transmission project in the North Country is 50 percent complete. The Smart Path project will upgrade 78 miles of transmission lines that span from Massena in St. Lawrence County to Croghan in Lewis County, the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a Nov. 15 news […]
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Construction of the New York Power Authority’s (NYPA) Smart Path transmission project in the North Country is 50 percent complete.
The Smart Path project will upgrade 78 miles of transmission lines that span from Massena in St. Lawrence County to Croghan in Lewis County, the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a Nov. 15 news release.
With fewer poles made out of steel, the project will “harden the lines” against weather events and “enable the secure transmission” of clean energy from Northern New York into the state’s electric power grid. The project will “strengthen the grid and help advance” New York’s clean-energy goals, as outlined in the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act.
Work on the Smart Path upgrades began in early 2020 and are on track for completion in 2023, “despite challenges posed by COVID-19.”
“Our state boasts a generous supply of clean hydropower, and transmission lines like the Smart Path project will help us meet our clean-energy goals and combat the effects of climate change,” Hochul said. “We are working to make these lines reliable and resilient, so that once we have all the clean power we need, we have a way to deliver it safely and cost-effectively to the areas across the state that need it — while creating family-sustaining, clean-energy jobs for New Yorkers in the process.”
NYPA is also working with National Grid on a separate but connected transmission project involving the rebuild of about 100 miles of transmission lines in the North Country and the Mohawk Valley. The project — known as Smart Path Connect — runs east to west from Clinton (in Clinton County) to Massena and North-South from Croghan to Marcy.
When completed, the two segments of Smart Path Connect will join the Smart Path project, creating one continuous upgraded transmission line from Clinton to Marcy. The Smart Path Connect project is currently under environmental review with the New York State Public Service Commission.
About Smart Path
Phase one of the Smart Path project involves rebuilding about 78 miles of the total 86-mile transmission artery that the federal government originally built in 1942.
Phase two of the Smart Path project will be completed as part of the Smart Path Connect project and will upgrade an additional six miles of 230kV transmission lines to 345kV. The Smart Path line was the first asset that NYPA acquired in 1950. Running north to south through St. Lawrence and Lewis counties in the North Country, the newly rebuilt lines will connect “economical, clean and renewable” energy into the statewide power system, including low-cost hydropower from NYPA’s St. Lawrence-Franklin D. Roosevelt Power Project as well as power from newly constructed renewable-energy sources such as wind and solar, per Hochul’s office.
Construction involves the replacement of the original H-frame wood poles, some of which are more than 80 years old with single steel monopoles in the existing right of way. The project, which includes high-voltage transmission lines from Massena to Croghan, has created hundreds of jobs during construction, per Hochul’s office.
The rebuilt lines will be capable of transmitting up to 345 kilovolts (kV). They will be operated in the near-term at the 230 kV level until the completion of the Smart Path Connect project.
Together, the lines are currently rated to carry 900 megawatts during the winter months, which is enough clean electricity to power up to 900,000 averaged-sized homes. The ability to increase the voltage when the demand requires it is a “cost-effective way” to add on more renewable power.
That power could be from in-state renewable generation, anywhere along the transmission line, as New York “continues to advance its clean-energy goals,” the state says.

Syracuse mayor appoints Lead Program administrator
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh recently appointed Jessica Vinciguerra as Lead Program administrator in the Department of Neighborhood and Business Development (NBD). Vinciguerra previously served as a planner and environmental review certifying officer for the City of Syracuse, working as the northside planner for NBD. “The City of Syracuse is working every day
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh recently appointed Jessica Vinciguerra as Lead Program administrator in the Department of Neighborhood and Business Development (NBD).
Vinciguerra previously served as a planner and environmental review certifying officer for the City of Syracuse, working as the northside planner for NBD.
“The City of Syracuse is working every day to reduce the risk of childhood lead poisoning. As part of this commitment, Jessica will play an integral role in implementing the Lead Hazard Reduction Demonstration Program grant, awarded to the City of Syracuse by the Department of Housing and Urban Development” Mayor Walsh said in a release. “Jessica has the right background for this role, acting as a liaison with program partners and key stakeholders, having already begun to build meaningful connections both with city residents and other city departments.”
As the Lead Program administrator, Vinciguerra will be responsible for implementing the city’s Lead Hazard Reduction Demonstration Program grant. She will assist city residents and property owners in accessing available grant funding and will represent the city with potential funding partners. In her previous role, Vinciguerra completed environmental reviews for the city and assisted in the city’s Lead Program. In 2019, she attended the Central New York Community Foundation’s Lead Safe Forum.
In addition to her new role, Vinciguerra serves as co-vice president of the Northeast Hawley Development Association and has worked as a volunteer on home renovation and property maintenance with Yeshua Restoration Ministries on the northside. She received her bachelor’s degree in policy studies and citizenship and civic engagement from Syracuse University in 2019.

Shineman Foundation’s grants include conservation aid
Awards funding to Tug Hill Tomorrow Land Trust OSWEGO, N.Y. — The Richard S. Shineman Foundation announced that 12 not-for-profit organizations earned grant awards totaling $248,000 at its November board meeting. It was the last of three 2021 grant rounds in this “unprecedented year of the continued coronavirus pandemic,” the foundation said in a Nov.
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Awards funding to Tug Hill Tomorrow Land Trust
OSWEGO, N.Y. — The Richard S. Shineman Foundation announced that 12 not-for-profit organizations earned grant awards totaling $248,000 at its November board meeting.
It was the last of three 2021 grant rounds in this “unprecedented year of the continued coronavirus pandemic,” the foundation said in a Nov. 22 news release. The funded projects represent a diverse cross-section of community organizations in health and human services, education, civic benefit, and conservation.
The Shineman Foundation grants included an award to Tug Hill Tomorrow Land Trust to build its conservation capacity in northern Oswego County and other counties in the northern part of New York state. Watertown–based Tug Hill Tomorrow Land Trust says its mission is to protect the wildlands, working forests, and farms of the Tug Hill region and surrounding areas, and to promote appreciation of the region’s natural and cultural heritage — for present and future generations. That includes Jefferson, Lewis, Oswego, and Oneida counties.
The Shineman Foundation’s largest grant award, $52,500, went to Victory Transformation, to fund the completion of preliminary renovations for its Men’s Shelter/Center at 24 E. Oneida St. in Oswego. Another commitment of $50,000 was made to the Desens House at 264 W. Second St. in Oswego to create a resource center that will serve as a comprehensive community link between women in recovery and the resources the community provides, the foundation stated.
Other health and human services awards went to ARISE Child and Family Services to purchase a storage container for the ramps in its ramp program; David’s Refuge for provision of respite/caregiver support to Oswego County parents and guardians of children with special needs; and Fulton’s Blessings in a Backpack for its weekend backpack program for 250 K-6 children in the Fulton City School District.
The Shineman Foundation awarded five education grants to organizations expanding their outreach within Oswego County. It provided to funding to the Museum of Science and Technology for its digital theatre/planetarium upgrade and its “Oswego County Discovery Sessions” science program, which will bring a virtual or in-person 45-minute classroom-based science demonstration to all 78 sixth-grade classes in 16 school buildings in Oswego County; the Oswego Bookmobile to provide the remaining funds needed to purchase a new bookmobile for use in the summer of 2022; and to Fulton City Schools for the expansion of a community-involved endeavor allowing for families to participate in sap collection and the creation of a finished maple-syrup product. Foundation grants also went to the Boy Scout Longhouse Council to enable it to update its outdated technology and serve more youths across the county; and the St. Lawrence Valley Educational TV Council for the creation of seven Oswego County segments on WPBS Weekly shows.
A civic benefit/revitalization grant was also given to Girl Scout Troop 10871 in Central Square to fund phase two of its inclusive playground in 2022.
The Shineman Foundation says its mission is to be a catalyst for change and to enhance the quality of life in Oswego County. The foundation says it engages in charitable activities to stimulate economic vitality, encourage strong social bonds that strengthen the community, and to build the capacity of its not-for-profit partners.
OPINION: Rejecting the New York State Carbon Tax
[I] recently participated in an Assembly Environmental Conservation Committee hearing discussing New York’s rapid transition to full electrification of the economy as a way to influence climate change. As the ranking minority member of the committee and an avid outdoorsman, [I am] keenly aware of environmental concerns over the cost of carbon. New taxes on gasoline, diesel,
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[I] recently participated in an Assembly Environmental Conservation Committee hearing discussing New York’s rapid transition to full electrification of the economy as a way to influence climate change.
As the ranking minority member of the committee and an avid outdoorsman, [I am] keenly aware of environmental concerns over the cost of carbon. New taxes on gasoline, diesel, propane, natural gas, propane, and fuel oil are bad for the economy at this time.
With inflation running at the highest levels in the past 30 years, and no end in sight, New York is not in the position to implement drastic changes at the moment.
The tax-and-spend ideas I’ve heard from environmental advocates compromise an already-struggling economy and will directly target the rural people who use energy to take care of their families. We can’t support it right now, and I can’t support any initiative that takes from those struggling to make ends meet.
The idea of another new tax when New York is already the highest tax state in the country is deeply flawed. The continued search for sustainable energy is important, but to implement these changes without reliable or affordable alternatives already identified is the wrong move.
Robert Smullen is the Republican representative of the 118th New York Assembly District, which encompasses Hamilton and Fulton counties as well as parts of Herkimer, Oneida, and St. Lawrence counties. This article is drawn from a news release his office issued on Dec. 3.
OPINION: Redistricting is a Challenge to Our Democracy
It would be fair to say that for a good bit of our history, Americans paid scant attention to redistricting. The redrawing of congressional and legislative lines every 10 years, sparked by population shifts captured by the Census, tended to pass unnoticed. Unless, of course, it involved some particularly outrageous instance of gerrymandering. For line-drawers, especially in
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It would be fair to say that for a good bit of our history, Americans paid scant attention to redistricting. The redrawing of congressional and legislative lines every 10 years, sparked by population shifts captured by the Census, tended to pass unnoticed. Unless, of course, it involved some particularly outrageous instance of gerrymandering.
For line-drawers, especially in the age of the computer, this was just fine. When your basic laptop can so easily create any desired political complexion for a district, the politicians who were usually in charge of the process were quite happy to get the chance to choose their voters without much public notice. This would give the party in power in a state a lock on as many seats as possible — never mind the damage it did to competitive elections and, more generally, our representative democracy.
An interesting thing happened after the last redistricting round, however. As overt and divisive partisanship ratcheted up around the country, so did public concern about partisan line-drawing. In several states, reform advocates were able to create citizen-led redistricting commissions, including in Arizona, California, Colorado, Michigan, New York, Ohio, and Virginia. The goal was to remove redistricting from the hands of self-interested politicians and, ideally, make it fairer and more representative of voters’ political desires.
But these are highly partisan times, and in at least three of those states — New York, Ohio, and Virginia — the commissions split along partisan lines, with each side putting forth its own preferred maps. Moreover, as bracing as it is to see public support for non-partisan redistricting, the reality is that most states still put state legislators in control; this go-round, like last time, Republicans (who control the legislatures and governorship in most of those states) will have a distinct advantage.
Does this matter? I would argue that it does. To begin with, would you rather vote in a district in which you knew that your preferred candidate could never win, or in a district in which your party had a realistic chance of prevailing every other November? I don’t think it’s a coincidence that as elections have grown less competitive, the interest of ordinary citizens has waned.
But the truly troubling issues arise when it comes to the overall makeup of the U.S. House and of state legislatures. When a district is drawn to make it easy for a particular party to win there, it means that politicians don’t need to appeal to a cross-section of the electorate; instead, they must win over “the base.” Which, not surprisingly, means that they focus on voters who are more extreme than the electorate in general. Our roiling partisanship these days is partly a result of redistricting bipartisanship out of existence. Overcoming it will prove nearly impossible as long as congressional and legislative districts are explicitly designed as vehicles for partisanship.
The problem is, from a politician’s point of view the incentive to keep gerrymandering is quite strong. A 2017 study by the Brennan Center for Justice found that extreme partisan redistricting in a handful of states produced 16-17 more Republican seats than the party would have won otherwise, thus bulking up the GOP presence in the House for much of the last decade. The party seems likely to extend its dominance this time around, though in several Democrat-controlled states, legislators are doing their level best to cut into their margins.
This is not healthy. For most of our history, the House was legitimately seen as “the people’s house,” and state legislatures were viewed as equally representative. But if their members actually represent only committed activists, it is hard to see them living up to the founders’ expectations. Elections need to reflect public opinion as it evolves over time, and political competition forces candidates to adjust. They must work to understand the needs and desires of voters, explain their positions, and offer voters a choice in the marketplace of politics. Competitive elections undergird our self-expression as citizens. Don’t let self-interested politicians take that away from you.
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.

JOE BENARICK was recently promoted to manager of fundraising communications at Riger Marketing Communications in Binghamton. Benarick has nearly two decades of experience in fundraising marketing communications for nonprofits.
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JOE BENARICK was recently promoted to manager of fundraising communications at Riger Marketing Communications in Binghamton. Benarick has nearly two decades of experience in fundraising marketing communications for nonprofits.
Valicenti Advisory Services, Inc.
KEVIN FALKENBERG has joined Valicenti Advisory Services, Inc. — an Elmira–based registered investment advisor and provider of tax and business services — as data manager. He posts and reconciles daily account transactions and monitors system information, ensuring the accuracy of all data. Falkenberg opens and closes accounts on the system and provides daily updates to
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KEVIN FALKENBERG has joined Valicenti Advisory Services, Inc. — an Elmira–based registered investment advisor and provider of tax and business services — as data manager. He posts and reconciles daily account transactions and monitors system information, ensuring the accuracy of all data. Falkenberg opens and closes accounts on the system and provides daily updates to the website. He brings 13 years of experience. Falkenberg previously worked as a financial-services representative, managing client assets and achieving record production levels. Currently, he is an owner and partner in an event-planning business part-time. Falkenberg graduated from Ithaca College with a bachelor’s degree in fine arts.
SAMSON LIN has joined Valicenti Advisory Services as an investment analyst. In this position, he will be working closely with the investment team and will provide critical support to the lead analyst and portfolio managers in the areas of research, position and risk monitoring, performance attribution, and trade execution. Samson graduated from Syracuse University with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and a minor in finance and psychology. During his college career, he was a facilities supervisor at the Barnes Center and served as an intramural referee for college students at Syracuse University Recreation Services and was the treasurer of the Chess Club.

AVNEET SINGH, MD has joined the Community Memorial Hospital (CMH) health-care system as its new cardiologist. Singh studied medicine at Maulana Azad Medical College, earning degrees in medicine and surgery in New Delhi, India. Singh also completed education around internal medicine before completing his residency and fellowship in cardiology at SUNY Upstate Medical University. As
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AVNEET SINGH, MD has joined the Community Memorial Hospital (CMH) health-care system as its new cardiologist. Singh studied medicine at Maulana Azad Medical College, earning degrees in medicine and surgery in New Delhi, India. Singh also completed education around internal medicine before completing his residency and fellowship in cardiology at SUNY Upstate Medical University. As the previous director of echocardiography at Upstate, Singh received his certifications in both cardiovascular computed tomography and cardiovascular disease. Dr. Singh comes to the CMH medical staff as longtime cardiologist, Dr. Raymond Carlson retires. Practicing in Hamilton since 2010, Dr. Carlson built a strong reputation for providing quality cardiology care. He served as an integral part of the selection process for the new cardiologist. CMH also has an agreement with Dr. Joseph Battaglia at Crouse Medical Cardiology to collaborate with Dr. Singh, the hospital’s Emergency Department, and hospital physicians, for extensive patient care. Dr. Singh holds professional memberships within the Fellowship of the American College of Cardiology, the National Board of Echocardiography, along with the American Heart Association and the American College of Physicians. He will be seeing patients out of the Hamilton Family Health Center location.

JESSICA YEARBY has joined the Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) Surgical Group in Utica as a certified family nurse practitioner, where she will provide pre- and post-operative care to patients. Yearby has more than 13 years of nursing experience at MVHS in the Intensive Care and Neuro/Trauma Intensive Care Units. Yearby earned her family nurse
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JESSICA YEARBY has joined the Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) Surgical Group in Utica as a certified family nurse practitioner, where she will provide pre- and post-operative care to patients. Yearby has more than 13 years of nursing experience at MVHS in the Intensive Care and Neuro/Trauma Intensive Care Units. Yearby earned her family nurse practitioner master’s degree from SUNY Polytechnic University in Marcy. She earned her bachelor’s degree in nursing from Utica College.
MUZEYYEN ERCANLI, MD, has joined the MVHS Medical Group as an obstetrician/gynecologist (OB/GYN) at the MVHS Women’s Health Center and MVHS OB Care Center, where she will provide inpatient and outpatient care. Dr. Ercanli has more than 15 years of experience in the OB/GYN specialty and joins MVHS from Heights Medical, a private practice in Brooklyn. She specializes in providing care to women across the continuum of care, including prenatal, antepartum and postpartum gynecological care. She also provides support and care to women through the perimenopause and menopausal processes. Ercanli earned her medical degree from Uludag University in Bursa, Turkey. She performed her OB/GYN residency at Suleymaniye Maternity and Women’s Hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. She completed an additional OB/GYN residency at Saint Peter’s University Hospital in New Jersey. She is board certified by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology and is a fellow of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

CATHERINE A. RAY has joined Bousquet Holstein as an associate attorney in the firm’s Trust & Estates and Elder Care Practice Group and will work in the firm’s Syracuse and Ithaca offices. Prior to joining Bousquet Holstein, Ray worked with clients at a private law practice preparing estate-planning documents, including last wills and testaments and
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CATHERINE A. RAY has joined Bousquet Holstein as an associate attorney in the firm’s Trust & Estates and Elder Care Practice Group and will work in the firm’s Syracuse and Ithaca offices. Prior to joining Bousquet Holstein, Ray worked with clients at a private law practice preparing estate-planning documents, including last wills and testaments and revocable and irrevocable trusts. In addition, she advised and represented small-business owners on various employee benefits/ERISA matters affecting compliance of their qualified retirement plans, including identifying qualification failures and working with clients to ensure their qualified plans were appropriately corrected. Ray also worked with clients to ensure they had policies in place to avoid future qualification failures. Originally from northern Virginia, she is a graduate of Syracuse University College of Law. Ray earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology from Virginia Tech. While in law school, she focused her studies on estate planning and administration, and federal tax law, graduating with an estate-planning certificate. Her experiences also include externing at a policy think-tank in Washington D.C.; providing services to indigent clients as a student attorney in the law school’s Bankruptcy Clinic; and externing at the Surrogate’s Court in Manhattan.
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