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Crews complete $20M affordable-housing project in Herkimer
HERKIMER, N.Y. — Crews recently completed a $20 million renovation of the Eastern Gardens Apartments in the village of Herkimer in Herkimer County. Now known as Stone Ridge Mills, the rehabilitated public-housing development offers 63 new energy-efficient and affordable homes for families, according to a news release from the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul. Built […]
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HERKIMER, N.Y. — Crews recently completed a $20 million renovation of the Eastern Gardens Apartments in the village of Herkimer in Herkimer County.
Now known as Stone Ridge Mills, the rehabilitated public-housing development offers 63 new energy-efficient and affordable homes for families, according to a news release from the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul.
Built in 1954, the original apartment complex included seven two-story buildings with 48 apartments. Rehabilitation work included new roofs and siding, energy-efficient windows, open floor plans, upgraded security systems, high-efficiency lighting, low-flow plumbing fixtures, new kitchens and bathrooms, and Energy Star appliances.
Construction crews also built an additional two-story building with 15 new apartments. All buildings meet the standards of the New York State Energy and Research Development Authority’s low-rise residential new construction program, EPA’s Performance Path with Energy Star, and those of Enterprise Green Communities, the release noted.
Stone Ridge Mills features 14 one-bedroom, 34 two-bedroom, 10 three-bedroom, and five four-bedroom apartments. Most apartments are affordable to households earning at or below 50 percent of the area median income.
The complex includes eight fully accessible apartments for mobility-impaired residents and five fully accessible apartments for hearing/vision impaired residents. Seven apartments are set aside for those who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.
Stone Ridge Mills is located near public transportation, shopping, a bank, hospital, and Herkimer College. An existing Head Start facility that provides free on-site programs for children is being relocated from the community building to another Herkimer Housing Authority property, Stone Ridge Daycare, so that the building can be returned for use as community space. The rehabilitated community building now has energy-efficient mechanical, electrical, plumbing, fire-suppression systems, and accessible laundry facilities, as well as new playgrounds and sidewalks.
The project developer is the Herkimer Housing Authority with Edgemere serving as housing consultant. State financing for the development came through New York State Homes and Community Renewal’s (HCR) allocation of federal and state low-income housing tax credits that generated nearly $16 million in equity and
$2.4 million from the Public Housing Preservation program. An additional $1.3 million was awarded by HCR through the Rural and Urban Community Investment Fund to finance the relocation and upgrade of the Head Start facility. NYSERDA also provided $63,000 in funding.
CEO FOCUS: Proposed Investments Will Create a More Vibrant Community
Right now, there are projects and investments being proposed at a level we have not seen in generations. Over the past year, our business-development team has been actively tracking more than $89 million in proposed projects that are interested in expanding and locating in Central New York. Not only do these investments drive growth, progress, and economic
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Right now, there are projects and investments being proposed at a level we have not seen in generations. Over the past year, our business-development team has been actively tracking more than $89 million in proposed projects that are interested in expanding and locating in Central New York. Not only do these investments drive growth, progress, and economic opportunity, but they also help create a more vibrant and culturally rich region that we know is so critical to businesses’ efforts to attract and retain talent.
In addition to this surge in business-development interest, regional stakeholders are making commitments to drive new tourism-rich opportunities. [In September], Onondaga County proposed a $25 million soccer and lacrosse regional sports complex in Salina that would generate about 400 jobs. This investment could attract 500,000 people a year which would generate $20 million in direct spending, and more than $1 million in sales and hotel room-tax revenues annually.
The county also announced [recently] an $85 million aquarium at the Inner Harbor. The project could attract 500,000 people each year, drive $50 million in economic impact and be a significant catalyst for further development at the harbor, which has long been a priority for development.
These regional tourism initiatives will support the continued revitalization of our urban core as well. Later this month, the Downtown Committee of Syracuse’s “Good Morning Downtown Syracuse Progress Breakfast” will focus on investing in our community. The virtual event will highlight projects and their impact, such as the $37 million City Center redevelopment, which will transform a large section of the former Sibley’s Department Store into mixed-use space. This project includes façade improvements, a new entrance for Redhouse, and new headquarters for the Alion Science and Technology Corp. Additionally, the event will celebrate the impact of tourism drivers like the return of live theater to downtown this fall. [Representing] one of downtown’s largest employers, National Grid, CenterState CEO Board Chair Melanie Littlejohn will be on hand to share her perspective on this progress.
These investments and the many others in the pipeline are part of an exciting period of growth that will make our community an attractive place to live and work — one that is writing a new future for this region. To learn more, contact Andrew Fish, CenterState CEO’s senior VP of business development, at afish@centerstateceo.com.
Robert M. Simpson is president and CEO of CenterState CEO, the primary economic-development organization for Central New York. This article is drawn and edited from the “CEO Focus” email newsletter that the organization sent to members on Oct. 7.

SUNY Oswego honors Stanley with naming of arena & convocation hall
OSWEGO — SUNY Oswego’s arena and convocation hall are now named after school president Deborah Stanley, who plans to retire on Dec. 31. Donors, led by the Oswego College Foundation board, have raised more than $2.4 million to name the facility the Deborah F. Stanley Arena and Convocation Hall. Rose Cardamone Crane, who chairs the board
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OSWEGO — SUNY Oswego’s arena and convocation hall are now named after school president Deborah Stanley, who plans to retire on Dec. 31.
Donors, led by the Oswego College Foundation board, have raised more than $2.4 million to name the facility the Deborah F. Stanley Arena and Convocation Hall.
Rose Cardamone Crane, who chairs the board of directors of the Oswego College Foundation, on Oct. 1 made the announcement at SUNY Oswego’s Founder’s Weekend luncheon. During the event, the college recognized Stanley, who announced in May her intentions to retire in December after 26 years as president and 44 years at the college.
The multimillion-dollar gift establishes an endowed fund that will be used to keep the ice-hockey arena and convocation hall equipped with the latest technology and amenities, the university said.
The SUNY board of trustees approved the naming at a meeting in September, the school said.
“This campus center, and in particular this arena and convocation hall, serve as the heart of the SUNY Oswego campus,” Crane said. “It is the place where students launch their academic careers during the annual Welcoming Torchlight Ceremony and where they conclude their careers during the annual commencement ceremony. This arena is the most fitting space on campus to recognize the indelible impact that President Stanley has made. We want her contributions to SUNY Oswego to live in perpetuity in a space that she helped make a reality.”

Early in her tenure as president, Stanley shared her vision for a student center and indoor corridor to serve as a main hub of activity that also provided an enclosed walkway to connect the campus, “known for its formidable winters and winds off Lake Ontario,” per a university news release.
She also wanted the new campus center to contain space for student organizations, career services, experiential learning, and an ice arena and convocation hall to make Laker athletic contests and large-scale concerts and cultural events more accessible to students. The vision became reality when the campus center opened in 2006, the school said.

HealthWay hopes private-equity firm can help it reach the next level
PULASKI — HealthWay president Vinny Lobdell, Jr. believes that the time was right to find a partner that could help his company “reach the next level.” “AE Industrial has the industry and operational expertise, and deep relationships needed to build a premier global air purification technology solutions platform,” Lobdell said. He’s referring to private-equity firm
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PULASKI — HealthWay president Vinny Lobdell, Jr. believes that the time was right to find a partner that could help his company “reach the next level.”
“AE Industrial has the industry and operational expertise, and deep relationships needed to build a premier global air purification technology solutions platform,” Lobdell said.
He’s referring to private-equity firm AE Industrial Partners, LP, which has acquired the Pulaski–based HealthWay Family of Brands. HealthWay specializes in air-purification products for both commercial and residential settings.
AE Industrial Partners focuses on the aerospace, defense & government services, space, power generation, and specialty-industrial markets.
The acquisition of HealthWay represents AEI’s 14th platform investment in its AE Industrial Partners Fund II, LP, which closed in 2018 with $1.36 billion in equity commitments, per a news release on the HealthWay website. No financial terms for the acquisition were disclosed.
Founded in 2004, HealthWay is a family-owned and operated firm that says it “has seen tremendous growth.” To continue facilitating growth and investment in innovations in indoor air quality, HealthWay says it has joined forces with AEI.
“We’re pleased to join the AE Industrial team and gain the needed resources to further invest in growth and innovation,” Vince Lobdell, CEO and chairman of HealthWay, said in the release. “Ensuring high levels of air quality is now considered a top priority for all organizations, whether it’s a school, office building, hospital, or shopping mall. We have an incredible opportunity to leverage AE Industrial’s relationships and business acumen to increase market share and become a household name in air purification.”
HealthWay has more than 100 employees in Pulaski and more than 300 around the world, according to its website.
AEI considers the acquisition of HealthWay to be a platform investment and plans to work alongside the management team to reach global channels, sectors, and customers.
“As we learned first-hand over the last 18 months, guaranteeing the purity of indoor air is critically important to getting back to and maintaining ‘everyday’ life, and we are proud to invest in HealthWay, an innovator in the air purification industry,” Kelly Romano, operating partner at AEI, said. “The air purification industry is at a long overdue inflection point, and we believe that building a platform featuring HealthWay’s differentiated technology with the global scale to reach all channels, sectors and customers will be a game-changer. With his 40 years of industry experience, Vince is a true leader in the space, and we’re excited to work with him and his team to capitalize on strong industry tailwinds.”
OPINION: Americans have a right to speak out against public-school policies
The Biden administration has gone into full attack mode against the First Amendment right to petition the government as his attorney general has declared that parents opposing critical race theory (CRT) [and mask mandates] before their local school boards should potentially be treated as domestic terrorists under the Patriot Act. This abuse of that dubious post-Sept. 11
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The Biden administration has gone into full attack mode against the First Amendment right to petition the government as his attorney general has declared that parents opposing critical race theory (CRT) [and mask mandates] before their local school boards should potentially be treated as domestic terrorists under the Patriot Act.
This abuse of that dubious post-Sept. 11 law proves once again that while well-intentioned, 20 years later, the Patriot Act is one of the biggest legislative mistakes in our nation’s history. The politicization of the Department of Justice and the FBI has led to many well-chronicled abuses of power. However, the brazen application of this anti-terrorism law against parents voicing opposition to a Marxist education policy that racist academicians are trying to force down the throats of their children is such a step beyond the intended scope of the law that Congress must take steps today to repeal it.
The announcement by Attorney General Merrick Garland [to have the FBI team up with schools to combat parents protesting mask mandates and CRT] falls hard on the heels of an FBI request for 200,000 encrypted ProtonMail email accounts in an unprecedented mass-surveillance operation targeting conservatives.
Congress needs to begin the process of repealing the Patriot Act and holding Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray accountable for its abuse. In the meantime, state attorneys general need to push back hard against these broad, sweeping measures which criminalize political activism. Governors, state legislatures, county commissions, and school boards must denounce the characterization of the very taxpayers who pay for the schools as being terrorists because they support Martin Luther King, Jr.’s ‘I have a dream’ vision. And state and local governments should deny all public funds from being spent for membership in the National School Board Association, which asked that the domestic-terrorist designation be given to parents opposing critical race theory. There is no excuse for a single taxpayer dollar to go to an organization which has declared war on the parents of the children entrusted to them.
Americans have a right to hold election officials accountable for their decisions. Americans have a right to petition government at all levels for redress. Americans have a right to speak out and organize in favor or against public policies. The attempt by Garland to criminalize these actions is grounds for his impeachment.
Rick Manning is president of Americans for Limited Government (ALG). The organization says it is a “non-partisan, nationwide network committed to advancing free-market reforms, private property rights, and core American liberties.” This op-ed is drawn and edited from a news release the ALG issued on Oct. 5.
OPINION: Why I’m Optimistic about the Future
One of the great privileges of reaching and working on a university campus is the chance to be in regular touch with young people. Even better, I sometimes get asked to give talks elsewhere and to meet with young people of all kinds and descriptions. That’s sometimes one on one, other times in small groups, and sometimes
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One of the great privileges of reaching and working on a university campus is the chance to be in regular touch with young people. Even better, I sometimes get asked to give talks elsewhere and to meet with young people of all kinds and descriptions. That’s sometimes one on one, other times in small groups, and sometimes with as many as 50 or 60 people.
Over the past few years, this has given me a chance to observe the upcoming generation of citizens and leaders, and what I have seen heartens me. Not least because the young people I’ve met are, for the most part, deeply concerned about the future of the country. They can be sharply critical, but it’s clear that most of them take a fundamental pride in what this nation stands for and how far it’s traveled over the centuries.
This shows up in a fundamental respect for the country’s diversity, and an overall respect for many of the institutions of representative democracy: the military, the courts, law enforcement, the health-care system — though Congress often comes in for some sharp words. To be sure, they can also be critical of these institutions’ flaws, but I haven’t encountered anyone who wants to tear them up and start over again. Instead, they want to fix what’s in front of them. They’re curious about how the nation’s institutions work, even skeptical, but they don’t reject them outright as irredeemably flawed.
There are several key issues that dominate our conversations: climate change, COVID-19, student loans, and college debt. If you ask what problems they’re most concerned about, racial issues also loom large: they see racial inequity and repairing historic wrongs as a huge and important challenge to our representative democracy. Interestingly, more than the older people I encounter, they will often speak up in favor of U.S. engagement with the world and want the US to exert a helpful leadership role.
When it comes to domestic politics, I’ve been struck by the extent to which the students I meet seem interested in making voting easier. Not infrequently, they’ll bring up the idea of making election day a national holiday. And they seem to like the idea of automatic voter registration for citizens, to encourage participation.
As for their own participation, I often ask if anyone wants to run for public office. I’m always pleasantly surprised at the number of hands that go up. More than a few want to pursue jobs in government at all levels, arguing that they can make a greater contribution there than they might otherwise — they recognize that working for government is not a path to great wealth, yet they’re still committed to that idea. Perhaps most heartening, even those who have no desire to serve in government confess an interest in serving their communities and improving their corner of the world. I always come away stirred by the number of these young people who speak with knowledge and commitment about their desire to be of service.
To be sure, it’s bracing to sit in on their discussions about where the country is headed. They’re often robust, with plenty of differences of opinion. But underlying these conversations is a general optimism about the future — and, quite notably in this political climate, a wide tolerance for the viewpoints of others and a willingness to listen to one another. I wish it were more common among adults.
The one other thing I’ll note is that regularly, I come across students — of all races, ethnicity, and description — who are clearly talented, engaged, and impressive. They are, I believe, marked for leadership. And if I’m right, we’re going to be in good hands.
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.

BARBIE DIANGELO has joined Fust Charles Chambers LLP as a payroll administrator/HR generalist. DiAngelo has more than 15 years of experience working in various HR positions, both locally and in Florida. She is certified as a professional in human resources and is certified by the Society for Human Resource Management. ALEXYS JACOBS has joined the
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BARBIE DIANGELO has joined Fust Charles Chambers LLP as a payroll administrator/HR generalist. DiAngelo has more than 15 years of experience working in various HR positions, both locally and in Florida. She is certified as a professional in human resources and is certified by the Society for Human Resource Management.
ALEXYS JACOBS has joined the firm as a tax associate. Jacobs received her bachelor’s degree in accounting from Le Moyne College and master’s in taxation from SUNY Oswego this past May. She is currently working to complete the examination requirements to earn her certified public accountant (CPA) license. Jacobs also previously interned with Fust Charles.
JESSICA KOCH joins the firm as an audit associate. Koch received her bachelor’s in accounting and MBA from SUNY Oswego this past May. She is currently working to complete the examination requirements to earn her CPA license.
MACKENZIE MAXAM has joined Fust Charles Chambers as an audit associate. Maxam received her bachelor’s in accounting and MBA from SUNY Oswego this past May. She is currently working to complete the examination requirements to earn her CPA license. Maxam also interned with the firm and participated in the firm’s preview tour.
MACKENZIE MCCARTHY joins Fust Charles Chambers as an audit associate. McCarthy received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in accounting from SUNY Brockport this past May. She is currently working to complete the examination requirements to earn her CPA license.
ALMEDINA MUMINOVIC joins the firm as a tax associate. Muminovic received her bachelor’s and master’s in accounting from Le Moyne College this past May. She is currently working to complete the examination requirements to earn her CPA license. Muminovic also interned with the firm.
JESSICA PACCONE has joined Fust Charles Chambers as an audit associate. Paccone received her bachelor’s in accounting from SUNY Geneseo this past May. She is currently working to complete the examination requirements to earn her CPA license. Paccone also interned with the firm.
ADAM SCHARF joins the firm as an audit associate. Scharf received his MBA in accounting this past May from SUNY Oswego and associate degree in business from Cayuga Community College in 2018. He is currently working to complete the examination requirements to earn his CPA license.

BRIANNA TUBBS has joined the marketing-communications firm Pinckney Hugo Group as an accounting assistant. Prior to Pinckney Hugo Group, Tubbs was an accounting associate at Liberty Resources. She also gained experience in accounting at other organizations in Central New York. Tubbs has a bachelor’s degree in business and management, with a concentration in marketing, from
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BRIANNA TUBBS has joined the marketing-communications firm Pinckney Hugo Group as an accounting assistant. Prior to Pinckney Hugo Group, Tubbs was an accounting associate at Liberty Resources. She also gained experience in accounting at other organizations in Central New York. Tubbs has a bachelor’s degree in business and management, with a concentration in marketing, from the Lally School of Management at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Erie Materials, a regional distributor of building materials in New York and Pennsylvania, has recently made several promotions and new hires. ANDY BRILL returned to Erie Materials as the warehouse manager in Elmira. Brill previously left Erie Materials to help run a family business. MELISSA YOUNGS joined Erie’s accounting team at corporate headquarters in Syracuse
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Erie Materials, a regional distributor of building materials in New York and Pennsylvania, has recently made several promotions and new hires.
ANDY BRILL returned to Erie Materials as the warehouse manager in Elmira. Brill previously left Erie Materials to help run a family business.
MELISSA YOUNGS joined Erie’s accounting team at corporate headquarters in Syracuse as an accounts receivable staff accountant. Youngs comes from the banking industry with a strong financial background that included account reconciliation, credit lending, and processing of cash flow.
PENNY JONES has been named an accounts payable staff accountant. Jones has been with the company since 1995, most recently as an accounts receivable staff accountant.
AMANDA AIKEN and EMILY RYAN have joined Erie Materials as human-resources generalists. Aiken comes from Resource Center for Independent Living (RCIL). Ryan comes from SUNY Upstate Medical University.

JENNIFER WHITMORE, an adult nurse practitioner, has joined Seneca Family Health Center in Waterloo, which is part of Finger Lakes Health. Whitmore received her master’s degree in nursing from the University of Rochester and her bachelor’s in nursing from Roberts Wesleyan College in Rochester.
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JENNIFER WHITMORE, an adult nurse practitioner, has joined Seneca Family Health Center in Waterloo, which is part of Finger Lakes Health. Whitmore received her master’s degree in nursing from the University of Rochester and her bachelor’s in nursing from Roberts Wesleyan College in Rochester.
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