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Work wraps up on Clayton downtown project in Jefferson County
CLAYTON, N.Y. — Crews have finished work on a $9.3 million project that reconstructed and modernized State Route 970L, the main travel route through the

Schumer says infrastructure bill includes local-workforce provision for I-81 viaduct project
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The newly passed federal infrastructure bill includes a provision that would facilitate a local workforce on the upcoming Interstate 81 (I-81) viaduct-replacement

Binghamton, Cazenovia, Hamilton, and Potsdam companies secure funding in FuzeHub contest
VERONA, N.Y. — Companies from Binghamton, Cazenovia, Hamilton, and Potsdam are among seven capturing a total of $350,000 in funding at the FuzeHub commercialization competition.

Rotary Club of Ithaca announces grant-award recipients
ITHACA, N.Y. — The Rotary Club of Ithaca has awarded nearly $16,000 in community grants to 17 local nonprofits, the “largest amount of funding” it

Green Hills Farms, other small businesses receive county grants
ONONDAGA — Onondaga County recently awarded Green Hills Farms grant funding of nearly $500,000 to help pay for improvements to the grocery store in the Valley section of the town of Onondaga. The $485,000 award will help pay for a façade, improvements to its entrance, signage, and lighting, Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon said in
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ONONDAGA — Onondaga County recently awarded Green Hills Farms grant funding of nearly $500,000 to help pay for improvements to the grocery store in the Valley section of the town of Onondaga.
The $485,000 award will help pay for a façade, improvements to its entrance, signage, and lighting, Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon said in announcing the funding on Oct. 27 at the small business located at 5933 South Salina St. in Onondaga.
The Green Hills Farms funding represents the largest grant of a total Onondaga County investment of $559,000 in small businesses in the Nedrow area of the town of Onondaga.
That $559,000 will lead to $186,000 of private funding matching the investment, resulting in an influx of capital of about $750,000 as part of Onondaga County’s Main Street program, according to McMahon.
“The county will be working with the Town [of Onondaga] and give the Town $363,000 and Green Hills will match with $121,000,” he added.
“When we went through the last 19 months, we really focused in on COVID, and we focused in on the public-health perspective of COVID. But we always knew there was going to be other impacts of the pandemic and what we’ve forgotten is how this pandemic impacted day-to-day [operations of] small businesses throughout the community and how it impacted Main Street,” McMahon said.
He also noted how he would get feedback from Bud Kennedy, general manager at Green Hills Farms, and the leaders of other grocery-store chains during conference calls about the status of their operations.
The funding for the grants comes from Onondaga County’s federal COVID-19 stimulus funding, he added.
Additional Onondaga grant recipients
Besides Green Hills Farms, neighboring businesses will also benefit from the grant funding.
Ferris Motors, at 6901 S. Salina St., will use its $86,000 grant, which the business will match with $29,000, to pay for a retaining wall, new siding, paint, and fencing.
E.C.K. Tree & Outdoor Power Products, at 7000 South Salina St., will use its $56,000 grant for a new fascia and soffit (parts of a roof), commercial doors, paint, and a replacement of deteriorated pavement. E.C.K will provide a nearly $19,000 match.
EJ’s Auto at 6605 S. Salina St. will use a nearly $25,000 grant and its own match of more than $8,300 to replace the façade and doors on the business.
CNY Glass Block at 6704 S. Salina St. will receive a grant of more than $15,600 with its own match of more than $5,200 to replace two old planters and install new fencing.
Colonial Laundromat has plans for a sidewalk-replacement project with its grant of $12,000, which it will match with $4,000 of its money.
“We challenged our partners at the local level and towns and villages to come up with plans … where we can support Main Street and support the businesses so that we can help revitalize different corridors, and the Town of Onondaga had a great plan,” McMahon said.

Pathfinder Bank profit, revenue jump in 3rd quarter
OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBHC), the holding company for Pathfinder Bank, recently reported that its net income soared 128 percent to $3.4 million, or 56 cents a share, in the third quarter from $1.5 million, or 25 cents, in the year-ago quarter. The Oswego–based banking company generated total revenue (net interest income
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OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBHC), the holding company for Pathfinder Bank, recently reported that its net income soared 128 percent to $3.4 million, or 56 cents a share, in the third quarter from $1.5 million, or 25 cents, in the year-ago quarter.
The Oswego–based banking company generated total revenue (net interest income plus total noninterest income) of $11.3 million in the third quarter, up nearly 16 percent from $9.8 million in the same quarter in 2020, per its Nov. 2 earnings report.
In the first nine months of 2021, Pathfinder reported net income of $8.5 million, or $1.43 per share, up 70 percent from $5 million, or 85 cents, for the same nine-month period last year.
Paycheck Protection Program data
Pathfinder Bancorp also used its earnings report to provide an update on its Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan statistics. From April 2020 to May 2021, the banking company participated in all phases of PPP as administered by the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA). Designed to help keep small businesses and nonprofits afloat during the coronavirus pandemic, “PPP loans are substantially guaranteed as to timely repayment by the SBA and have unique forgiveness features whereby loan principal amounts may be discharged, for the benefit of the borrowers, by direct payments from the SBA to the lending institution holding the indebtedness,” Pathfinder said.
Pathfinder Bank made 1,177 PPP loans, totaling $111.7 million, with an average loan amount of nearly $95,000, since the start of the program. As of Sept. 30 of this year, 759 of the loans (64 percent) have been forgiven, while loan balances of $82.4 million (74 percent) have been forgiven. The bank had 418 total PPP loans remaining, with a total balance of nearly $29.3 million, as of Sept. 30.
Pathfinder has received both interest (calculated at a stated rate of 1 percent) and various levels of fee income related to issuing PPP loans. The bank recognized more than $1.74 million in deferred PPP fee income in the first three quarters of this year, compared to $639,000 in in deferred PPP fee income in the first nine months of 2020.
Pathfinder Bank is a New York State-chartered commercial bank that has 10 full-service branches located in its market areas consisting of Oswego and Onondaga County and one limited-purpose office in Oneida County. The Pathfinder Bancorp subsidiary, Pathfinder Risk Management Company, Inc., owns a 51-percent interest in the FitzGibbons Agency, LLC. As of Sept. 30, Pathfinder Bancorp and its subsidiaries had total consolidated assets of $1.26 billion and total deposits of $1.05 billion.

Whitesboro School District participates in Connected Community Schools program
WHITESBORO, N.Y. — The Whitesboro Central School District, which serves a population of about 40,000 people, has joined the Connected Community Schools program this 2021-22 academic school year. The partnership will serve the district’s four elementary schools — Deerfield, Hart’s Hill, Marcy, and Westmoreland Road. Connected Community Schools (CCS) is a Rome–based initiative that combines
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WHITESBORO, N.Y. — The Whitesboro Central School District, which serves a population of about 40,000 people, has joined the Connected Community Schools program this 2021-22 academic school year.
The partnership will serve the district’s four elementary schools — Deerfield, Hart’s Hill, Marcy, and Westmoreland Road.
Connected Community Schools (CCS) is a Rome–based initiative that combines the efforts of more than 100 businesses and community-based agencies pursuing solutions to a wide-ranging array of challenges facing students, their families, and the school community. In each district, CCS helps to coordinate, streamline, and deliver needed services to students and families so that students can succeed despite personal obstacles.
Examples of areas where the CCS team can help include housing, food insecurity, medical and dental issues, and mental health. The initiative has been especially valuable for local families during the
ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, CCS says. For example, last year, its school-based hub in Rome pivoted to consolidate efforts into its central hub in Staley, which became the largest food pantry in Oneida County, assisting 56,000 people across Central New York, helping families meet nutritional needs during school closures and beyond.
The initiative also provides embedded student and family engagement and classroom programming, where community experts are invited to educate and organize engagement opportunities for students and families.
CCS says it has established community hubs at all four elementary schools to provide families with no-cost essentials such as food items, hygiene needs, and school supplies that are available to any student or family with need. This can make the difference between a student being ready to learn and participate rather than worry about basics, while also supporting teachers and staff who have taken on the task of buying these items out of pocket, CCS contends.
“Over the last 18 months, we all have learned that struggles, individually or globally, do not discriminate,” Danielle Martin, co-leader of the Connected Community Schools Initiative, said in a release. “CCS is excited to embrace the partnership with the Whitesboro district to ensure that students, families, and the community have the supports that they need to be successful.”
To commemorate their partnership, CCS and the Whitesboro Central School District held a ceremonial ribbon-cutting event at the Marcy Elementary School on Nov. 3.
Mohawk Valley Retina to open second office in DeWitt
DeWITT, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Retina, an eye-care practice based in New Hartford, recently leased 3,370 square feet of office space at 5750 Commons Park Drive in DeWitt for its second office. Karen Cannata-LaRocca and Kristen Nave, of Sutton Real Estate Company, represented the landlord in this transaction, per a Sutton news release. Colvin Holdings
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DeWITT, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Retina, an eye-care practice based in New Hartford, recently leased 3,370 square feet of office space at 5750 Commons Park Drive in DeWitt for its second office.
Karen Cannata-LaRocca and Kristen Nave, of Sutton Real Estate Company, represented the landlord in this transaction, per a Sutton news release. Colvin Holdings of DeWitt, LLC owns the property, which has a one-story, 6,704-square-foot building on nearly 1.3 acres, according to Onondaga County’s online real-estate records. The property is assessed at $590,000 for 2021.
Carole Iseneker, of Pavia Real Estate, represented the tenant, Mohawk Valley Retina, which has its other office at 4350 Middle Settlement Road in New Hartford.
Drs. Amir F. Yazdanyar, Joseph P. Gale, and Steven M. Williams are board-certified ophthalmologists and vitreoretinal surgeons at Mohawk Valley Retina, according to its website. They are all experienced in treating severe eye disorders and ocular emergencies such as vitreoretinal disease, uveitis (eye inflammation), optic neuropathy, glaucoma, trauma, ocular oncology, ocular infections, and orbital disease.

D’Aniellos donate $30 million for Syracuse University’s IVMF
SYRACUSE — Their names are on the building that houses Syracuse University’s (SU) National Veterans Resource Center (NVRC), which includes the Institute for Veterans and Military Families (IVMF). Daniel D’Aniello, an SU graduate and life trustee, and wife, Gayle, have donated $30 million to the IVMF. The donation is meant to “secure the future and
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SYRACUSE — Their names are on the building that houses Syracuse University’s (SU) National Veterans Resource Center (NVRC), which includes the Institute for Veterans and Military Families (IVMF).
Daniel D’Aniello, an SU graduate and life trustee, and wife, Gayle, have donated $30 million to the IVMF.
The donation is meant to “secure the future and long-term success of the IVMF,” Syracuse University said.
Daniel D’Aniello — a U.S. Navy veteran — is a 1968 graduate of SU. He’s also co-founder and chair emeritus of The Carlyle Group (NASDAQ: CG), a private- equity firm.
“The IVMF is doing the kind of groundbreaking work that is vital to understanding and breaking down the barriers facing veterans and their families as they transition from military service to civilian life,” D’Aniello said in a statement. “The institute’s innovative programs and services provide veterans an opportunity to find a meaningful career or launch their own business. In turn, our nation’s veterans and their families contribute to their communities and serve their country in new and profound ways. Gayle and I are honored to support this work that is taking place at the University that means so much to us.”
The donation, which builds on the D’Aniello family’s $20 million gift in 2018 to help construct the NVRC, will support the creation of an endowment to provide annual operational support for the IVMF, “ensuring it remains the nation’s leading academic institute focused on the concerns of America’s more than 20 million veterans and their families,” Syracuse University contended in a news release.
SU on Nov. 3 dedicated and formally opened the NVRC and marked the IVMF’s 10-year anniversary.
With the D’Aniellos’ donation, Forever Orange: The Campaign for Syracuse University — a $1.5 billion fundraising campaign — has topped $1.048 billion in funds raised, the school said.
“Dan’s love for Syracuse University goes beyond alumni loyalty or the responsibility as a trustee,” Syracuse University Chancellor Kent Syverud said. “The D’Aniellos are invested in our vision for serving veterans and military-connected families. It is impossible to measure the ripple effect that his leadership and support have had on our community. Thanks to the D’Aniellos, Syracuse University’s commitment to veterans will continue to grow, to aspire to new and better programs, and to make a tangible difference to those who have served our nation.”
J. Michael Haynie, vice chancellor for strategic initiatives and innovation, created the IVMF. Haynie credits the support that Syracuse University has received from the D’Aniello family for making it possible for the IVMF to provide training, educational programming and community-based services to more than 160,000 veterans and military families since its founding in 2007.
Founded in 2011, the IVMF has grown to become “one of the most influential centers” of thought leadership, research and programming focused on the nation’s veterans and military families, SU contends. The IVMF “designs and delivers” programs — at no cost to veterans, military-connected individuals and families — focused on vocational skills training, career preparation and business ownership, while also conducting actionable research, policy analysis, and advocacy.
With the support of public- and private-sector partners, the IVMF also works in communities across the U.S., supporting efforts to help veterans and their families navigate the transition from military to civilian life, SU said.

Core Athletix Syracuse renews lease on Taft Road in Cicero
CICERO, N.Y. — Core All Stars (Core Athletix Syracuse) has recently renewed its lease at 6261 E. Taft Road in the town of Cicero. Bill Evertz from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company negotiated the lease renewal on behalf of the tenant, according to a news release from the real-estate firm. No lease terms or square
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CICERO, N.Y. — Core All Stars (Core Athletix Syracuse) has recently renewed its lease at 6261 E. Taft Road in the town of Cicero.
Bill Evertz from Cushman & Wakefield/Pyramid Brokerage Company negotiated the lease renewal on behalf of the tenant, according to a news release from the real-estate firm. No lease terms or square footage were disclosed.
Core Athletix Syracuse is a fitness center specializing in all-star cheerleading teams and training.
The 6261 E. Taft Rd property is owned by the Richard W Sitnik Revocable Living Trust, according to Onondaga County’s online real-estate records. Two one-story buildings of 6,000-6,500 square feet each are located on nearly 1.5 acres at the site. The property is assessed at $625,000 for 2021.
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