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Onondaga County reports four COVID deaths over the weekend but infections flatten
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Four Onondaga County residents died from COVID-19 over the three-day Saturday through Monday period, Ryan McMahon, the county executive, reported on Twitter.

MVCC names new dean for the School of Public and Human Services
UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC) announced it has appointed Sheila Flihan as the new dean of its School of Public and Human

Rome Health to host career fair Sept. 29
ROME, N.Y. — Rome Health will host a career fair on Sept. 29 from 2-5 p.m. at the hospital located at 1500 N. James St.

VESTAL, N.Y. — Binghamton University researchers will use two federal grants totaling more than $1.3 million for research into antibody-mediated, drug-delivery technology for the treatment

People news: Lesko Financial Services names three advisors as partners/owners
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — Lesko Financial Services, Inc. announced that three of its financial advisors have become partners in the firm. Binghamton–based Lesko Financial Services, founded

Crews complete nearly $11 million runway-improvement project at Syracuse airport
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Syracuse Regional Airport Authority (SRAA) on Friday announced that crews have finished construction of the nearly $11 million runway 10-28 rehabilitation

Oneida Indian Nation pays out $1.5 million in summer bonuses to hourly employees
VERONA, N.Y. — The Oneida Indian Nation says it is paying a total of $1.5 million in summer bonuses to nearly all its hourly employees.

People news: Boris joins Barclay Damon
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Barclay Damon announced Traci Boris has joined the firm as partner in its health care & human services and labor & employment

Startup IoT develops air-purification technology that helps with COVID
SYRACUSE — A Syracuse tech startup is aiming to help with the COVID-19 pandemic by deploying a computer platform to monitor air purification and to destroy particles of the virus in the air with scrubbing technology. After two years of development, the founders and investors in IoT Right hope to bring their technology to scale
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SYRACUSE — A Syracuse tech startup is aiming to help with the COVID-19 pandemic by deploying a computer platform to monitor air purification and to destroy particles of the virus in the air with scrubbing technology.
After two years of development, the founders and investors in IoT Right hope to bring their technology to scale nationally with an infusion of new investors.
“Unfortunately, as a startup, our timing was impeccable,” David Montanaro, an angel investor in IoT Right, says of the company’s efforts to scale up when the safety of ventilation has become a paramount concern.
As the delta variant of the coronavirus makes it so even people who have been vaccinated can transmit the virus, Montanaro says that his heart is breaking because of the stress that his adult children and everybody else is experiencing because of the pandemic.
Montanaro hopes that IoT’s technology will ease tensions around mask wearing and sharing public spaces because it will help provide safe air.
“When COVID hit, we were already looking at indoor air quality,” Montanaro says. “When it became very clear that it was aerosols that was driving infections after circulating in the air, so now, particularly with Delta, we have focused our efforts on adding and integrating the best air-purification technology into the smart-building platform.”
IoT Right’s name derives from the Internet of Things concept, which refers to a network of physical objects embedded with sensors, software, and other technology and that are connected to the Internet.
Modern buildings generate volumes of data; what IoT aims is to integrate all that data into the most comprehensive platform out there for the owners of buildings in the health care and education spaces, IoT leaders say.
The CDC recommends that air inside of buildings be exchanged with exterior air six times an hour, Montanaro says. However, bringing in outdoor air runs havoc on HVAC systems, he says, and air purification is a better modality.
Mike Marley, founder and CEO of IoT Right, spun the company off as its own concern from parent company, Unimar. That firm manufactures “obstruction lighting,” which must be placed on any structure that exceeds 200 feet above ground level and must meet federal regulations.
Unimar developed an Internet-of-things platform to monitor remote towers, oil rigs, wind turbines and other tall structures, Marley says. It can do diagnostics and do updates remotely.
“We thought, ‘Why do we just want to build this platform for towers?’ We wanted to expand to other industries,” Marley says.
Joe Romano, chief revenue officer at IoT Right, says the firm has partnered with ActivePure Technology. ActivePure’s units pull free oxygen and water molecules in the air, creating oxidizers that when released back into the air kills the coronavirus and other viruses on surfaces and in the air.
“This goes out and proactively cleans the air,” Romano notes.
IoT’s role in this is to make sure that ActivePure units are working and make sure that the air is safe in the areas in which the units are placed, he explains.
IoT’s platform also can help building owners and managers monitor energy efficiency, water consumption, refrigeration, lighting, HVAC, and other functionalities, according to Marley.
“It’s truly the connection of data and integrating smart buildings and getting data from any device in the buildings,” Marley says. “It helps building owners get information about their buildings and make smart, safer decisions for employees and customers.”
IoT Right has developed its own sensors and can integrate its system with sensors made by other manufacturers, Marley says.
Montanaro says that the firm is partnering with HVAC companies about their technology so they can monitor if their air purification systems are working.
IoT Right’s leaders say the firm’s revenues are growing exponentially, through they declined to disclose revenue totals. The company has five full-time employees and two employees who split their time between Unimar and IoT.
So far, the business has been financed by Marley’s own investments and also Montanaro as an angel investor.
Romano says that being located in the entrepreneurial ecosystem of the Syracuse Technology Garden has helped IoT by working with other members on integrating sensor solutions and hardware products.
SyracuseCoE, New York State’s Center of Excellence in Environmental and Energy Systems, also has worked with IoT regarding integration of its platform into HVAC-control systems, Romano says. He also came from the Tech Garden to work for IoT.
Another way that the Tech Garden has been instrumental for IoT’s work is that it has been selected as a technical advisor for the Clean Tech Center, the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority-funded initiative focused on developing clean-energy technology companies in Central New York, Romano says.
NYSERDA is looking to connect small- and medium-sized facilities to the grid so they can access and control their peak usage, Romano says.
“Even a single school in the education space will fit into that market,” Romano says. “We identified early on that there was a need in that market definitively.”
IoT Right says it has a great opportunity for its technology to make a difference in the marketplace.
“The time is right,” Montanaro says. “We are anxious to get it out there.”

Syracuse firms to embark on redevelopment project at ShoppingTown Mall property
DeWITT — A group of Syracuse firms plans to redevelop ShoppingTown Mall in DeWitt in a project spanning multiple years. OHB Redev LLC is a joint venture that includes Redev CNY; Hueber-Breuer Construction Co. Inc.; DalPos Architects; and Housing Visions. OHB Redev LLC will buy the property for $8 million and invest at least $300 million
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DeWITT — A group of Syracuse firms plans to redevelop ShoppingTown Mall in DeWitt in a project spanning multiple years.
OHB Redev LLC is a joint venture that includes Redev CNY; Hueber-Breuer Construction Co. Inc.; DalPos Architects; and Housing Visions.
OHB Redev LLC will buy the property for $8 million and invest at least $300 million into the site over the course of a “several year redevelopment,” per a July 21 Onondaga County announcement.
The companies haven’t yet determined when the project will begin, according to Ryan Benz, a partner in OHB Redev LLC, who responded to an Aug. 20 CNYBJ inquiry about the project.
Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon announced the joint venture as the developer during a July 21 event inside the ShoppingTown property at 3649 Erie Blvd East in DeWitt.

The project — dubbed District East — focuses on turning the property into five “distinct, but blended districts” that include residential housing, entertainment, restaurants/hospitality, retail, and office space.
The housing component includes a goal of creating housing structures for different income brackets. That would include units available for those that would be eligible for workforce housing and those earning between 60 and 120 percent of the area median income and senior living. Condominiums would also be part of the plan.
The developer estimates the project will create about 400 constructions jobs over the course of the redevelopment process and projects another 1,400 full-time, permanent jobs once the site is fully redeveloped.
“We’re really excited,” Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon said in his remarks inside the once-bustling facility. “The investment that will be made … the development corporation will make an $8 million purchase price to the county of Onondaga. That will pay us back for what we have certainly invested in getting the property from [property owner] Moonbeam Capital [Investments LLC] and then that will pay us back some of the back taxes that we’ve been owed.”
McMahon in November 2020 had announced that the county reached an agreement with Moonbeam on a plan to redevelop the property.
Under the agreement announced in November, the parties involved would pay Moonbeam $3.5 million, Moonbeam would transfer the ShoppingTown Mall property, the nearby Scotch ‘N Sirloin property, along with the KeyBank location. The Town of DeWitt and the Jamesville-DeWitt School District will contribute “roughly about one third” of that $3.5 million payment, according to the county executive.

Onondaga County and Moonbeam would split the revenue from the sale, based off the sales price on a sliding scale, per McMahon.
The Syracuse group involved in the redevelopment say it was an opportunity they couldn’t pass up.
“It was really important to all of my partners and I to present a local opportunity to come in and redevelop our community,” Ryan Benz, a partner in OHB Redev LLC, said in his remarks inside ShoppingTown Mall. “I remember making the first phone calls to say hey guys, what do you think about this, and everybody immediately kind of signed up and said, yes, let’s do this. Let’s be part of something that builds a greater version of Central New York together.”
The group foresees five to six phases of construction involved in the project, Benz noted.
“We envision a significant alteration to the existing premises, and I would estimate [demolition] in terms of 50 percent of greater of the existing structure,” Benz said. “We’re looking to really take the roof off and create a beautiful outdoor, amenity rich space complemented with at least four residential towers.”
The development team is encouraging feedback from the community and will solicit suggestions and opinions from local residents and businesses through a portal on the project website. The community can continue to follow the progress on this redevelopment by visiting districteastsyr.com.
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.