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Renzi Food Service wins contract worth upwards of $10.5M
WATERTOWN, N.Y. — Renzi Brothers Inc. (doing business as Renzi Food Service) of Watertown, was recently awarded a contract from the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency worth up to $10.53 million for full-line, food-distribution services to the military. It’s a two-year base contract with two 18-month option periods, according to a contract announcement from the U.S. Department […]
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WATERTOWN, N.Y. — Renzi Brothers Inc. (doing business as Renzi Food Service) of Watertown, was recently awarded a contract from the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency worth up to $10.53 million for full-line, food-distribution services to the military.
It’s a two-year base contract with two 18-month option periods, according to a contract announcement from the U.S. Department of Defense. Renzi Food Service beat out one other company that bid for the contract. The work will be performed in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and southern New York. The award date for the contract is July 9, 2021, with a June 30, 2023 ordering-period end date. The U.S. Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard will be using the services Renzi provides, per the contract announcement.
The contracting authority is the Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support division in Philadelphia.
New York soybean plantings rise 5% this year
New York farms planted an estimated 330,000 acres of soybeans this year, up 5 percent from 2020, the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service recently announced. New York farms harvested 312,000 acres of soybeans last year, up 39 percent from 225,000 acres in 2019, the USDA previously reported. The 2021 United States soybean planted area is
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New York farms planted an estimated 330,000 acres of soybeans this year, up 5 percent from 2020, the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service recently announced.
New York farms harvested 312,000 acres of soybeans last year, up 39 percent from 225,000 acres in 2019, the USDA previously reported.
The 2021 United States soybean planted area is estimated at 87.6 million acres, up 5 percent from 2020. Compared with last year, planted acreage is up in 23 major producing states. Area for harvest, forecast at 86.7 million acres, is also up 5 percent from 2020. If realized, this will be the third-highest planted and harvested soybean acreage on record, the USDA notes.

Rudy Schmid Total Car Care adapts to the challenging times
When Diane Schmid-McCall and Paul J. (PJ) Schmid took over Rudy Schmid Total Car Care, the siblings were told the third generation of a business — their generation — did not typically see success. “We were told right off the bat that, as third generation, you’ve got about seven years and then you close the doors,”
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When Diane Schmid-McCall and Paul J. (PJ) Schmid took over Rudy Schmid Total Car Care, the siblings were told the third generation of a business — their generation — did not typically see success.
“We were told right off the bat that, as third generation, you’ve got about seven years and then you close the doors,” Schmid recalls.
His sister concurs. “That’s the generation that usually brings the business down and does not succeed,” Schmid-McCall says she was told. “This many years in, we’ve been able to overcome that stigma.”
Now, nearly 30 years into their partnership as co-owners, they have indeed proven any early naysayers wrong, as Rudy Schmid Total Car Care draws nearer to a century in business.
Rudy Schmid Total Car Care is an auto body and collision-repair shop, located on Syracuse’s northside, that has been in business since 1930.
Their careers in the industry started at young ages, as they grew up in their grandfather’s and then father’s business.
“He was my dad’s shadow growing up,” Schmid-McCall says about her brother. “He loved the hands-on work and he learned the trade that way.”

After they began working at Rudy Schmid Total Car Care in their teenage years, their father approached Schmid-McCall and Schmid when they were 25 and 28 years old, respectively, about purchasing the business. While they admit they were relatively young to be business owners, they had been inadvertently training for the responsibility for years, they say. Another reason their father knew it was time to turn the reins over to the next generation, Schmid-McCall says, was the rate at which technology was evolving, both on the administrative side of things and within the mechanics of the vehicles themselves.
The generational change in leadership had its challenges, especially as the rest of the staff adjusted to their former coworkers becoming their bosses. Throughout the transition, the siblings’ similar goals and core values united them in camaraderie.
“We’ve really been strong about having each other’s back,” Schmid-McCall says.
As time went on and the business grew, their responsibilities and skill sets became more defined.
“Because we grew up together, we knew each other’s strengths and we knew each other’s weaknesses, in a good way,” Schmid-McCall says. “We were there to support each other.”
That strong bond helped the duo lead their team through ups and downs of nearly three decades in business, most recently successfully navigating their 17 employees through the COVID-19 pandemic. Schmid-McCall notes the business’s annual revenue was up about 6.5 percent from the year before, as the fiscal year was concluding at the end of June. The owners say were grateful for that, given the circumstances.
When the shutdowns began in the early weeks of the pandemic in March and April of 2020, Schmid-McCall and Schmid feared they would be forced to reduce their workforce and quickly developed a plan to have two separate shifts, to keep their team employed and complete their scheduled workload. They soon received good news, though.
“Our business was deemed essential, so we started from a place of gratitude because we were able to keep people employed and take care of our customers,” Schmid-McCall says. “So, we’ve been very humble and grateful through all of that.”

Brother and sister agree that the most difficult challenge of the pandemic was the uncertainty. From the pockets of silent phones and light schedules to frequently changing restrictions and guidelines, they kept open communication with their staff a top priority. Schmid-McCall says their employees responded well, being respectful of each other and all policies.
“They hung in there with us,” Schmid adds.
The owners are proud to have been able to keep everyone employed through the last year and a half, only having to furlough three people for less than four weeks.
Though they are thankful to have the worst of the pandemic behind them, Schmid-McCall explains that the automotive industry has not yet completely returned to normal, given the supply-chain challenges.
“There’s still a lot of uncertainty. People want to get back to their lives. You’re seeing that at airports. You’re seeing people on vacations. You’re seeing more cars on the road,” she says. “But we still may struggle with getting materials to fix their vehicles in a timely manner. I think that could be another six months at least.”
Like nearly all businesses, Rudy Schmid Total Car Care saw changes in protocols throughout the pandemic, some of which will remain, including sanitization practices and openness with employees.
Looking to the future, the business owners plan to continue making connecting with younger generations a top priority as a key to attracting new employees and clients.
In the past, Rudy Schmid Total Car Care clients were typically repeat referral clients, people whose families and friends had become familiar with the company’s reputation over the years. Now, competing with larger businesses like Goodyear, Monro, and Midas, as well as smaller independent businesses, the owners aim to keep people aware of how highly they value personal connections with their clients.
“We try to let people know that when you come here, you’re not a number,” Schmid says. “We try to personalize it and make it more of a customer-service experience.”
In terms of staffing, the team has no plans in the works for a fourth generation to take over the business but hopes to recruit more young people into the auto-repair field. Schmid-McCall says it might require more input from all trade industries together to inform parents and guidance counselors of career opportunities available in those fields.
Rudy Schmid Total Car Care is located at 228 Hiawatha Blvd. in Syracuse. In addition to collision repair, its services include rust proofing, vehicle maintenance, and fleet service.

Upstate consumer sentiment dips in Q2, Siena reports
State sentiment rises slightly Consumers in upstate New York became slightly less confident about the economy in the second quarter, according to a new report. Consumer sentiment in upstate New York was measured at 76.6 in the second quarter, down 3.1 points from the last measure of 79.7 in the year’s first quarter. That’s according to the
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State sentiment rises slightly
Consumers in upstate New York became slightly less confident about the economy in the second quarter, according to a new report.
Consumer sentiment in upstate New York was measured at 76.6 in the second quarter, down 3.1 points from the last measure of 79.7 in the year’s first quarter. That’s according to the latest quarterly survey of Upstate and statewide consumer sentiment that the Siena College Research Institute (SRI) released on July 7.
Upstate’s overall sentiment of 76.6 was 7.1 points below the statewide consumer-sentiment level of 83.7, which rose 1.2 points from the first quarter.
The statewide number was 1.8 points lower than the second-quarter figure of 85.5 for the entire nation, which rose 0.6 points from the first quarter, as measured by the University of Michigan’s consumer-sentiment index.
The overall and future indexes for New York each increased in the second quarter and remain above the breakeven point at which optimism and pessimism balance. The current index also increased and is at breakeven. The overall and future national indexes increased but New Yorkers continue to be more optimistic about future economic conditions than the nation, SRI said.
“Consumer sentiment continued to climb this quarter driven by increases in New York City, among Democrats and as the state’s lowest income-bracket residents start to see light at the end of their economic tunnel. Overall, New York is up 17 points from the initial COVID shock as belief in a better tomorrow is now nearly as strong as it was before the pandemic,” Doug Lonnstrom, professor of statistics and finance at Siena College and SRI founding director, said in the report. “Upstate isn’t moving towards ‘Happy Days’ as quickly as NYC but outside of the City the future looks brighter than it did in March 2020. Demand for major consumer goods is very robust, up 20 percent over March 2020 for cars, 31 percent for furniture, and 82 percent for home improvements. But, as concern over the impact of gas now exceeds 50 percent and approaches two-thirds for food, price increases, or inflation, could slow this recovery.”
In the second quarter of 2021, consumer buying plans rose 4.7 percentage points from the first-quarter measurement to 22.5 percent for cars/trucks; edged up 0.1 points to 47.2 percent for consumer electronics; increased 3.4 points to 13.4 percent for homes; and rose 3.4 points to 34.5 percent for major home improvements. Buying plans were down 0.2 points to 31.8 percent for furniture.
Gas and food prices
In SRI’s quarterly analysis of gas and food prices, 57 percent of upstate respondents said the price of gas was having a serious impact on their monthly budgets, which is up from 47 percent in the first quarter and 29 percent in the fourth quarter of 2020.
In addition, 54 percent of statewide respondents said the price of gas was having a serious impact on their monthly spending plans, up from 43 percent in the first quarter and 34 percent in the final quarter of 2020.
When asked about food prices, 64 percent of upstate respondents indicated the price of groceries was having a serious impact on their finances, up from 56 percent in the first quarter and from 58 percent in the fourth quarter of 2020.
At the same time, 63 percent of statewide respondents indicated the price of food was having a serious effect on their monthly finances, up from 57 percent in both the first quarter of 2021 and the final quarter of 2020.
SRI conducted its survey of consumer sentiment between June 16 and June 29 by random telephone calls to 404 New York adults via landline and cell phone. It has an overall margin of error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points, according to SRI.

Carrols adds Burger King restaurants in Indiana, Michigan
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Carrols Restaurant Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: TAST) has added to its presence in Indiana and Michigan with the purchase of 19 Burger King restaurants. Syracuse–based Carrols is one of the largest restaurant franchisees in North America. It is the largest Burger King franchisee in the U.S. “These 19 restaurants, which were acquired in
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Carrols Restaurant Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: TAST) has added to its presence in Indiana and Michigan with the purchase of 19 Burger King restaurants.
Syracuse–based Carrols is one of the largest restaurant franchisees in North America. It is the largest Burger King franchisee in the U.S.
“These 19 restaurants, which were acquired in two separate transactions, constitute our first multi-restaurant acquisitions in more than two years and increase our store count in two large Midwestern states where we already have a significant presence. Importantly, we believe that we can improve upon the average sales volume of these restaurants and increase their margins over time as we integrate them into our existing operations,” Daniel Accordino, the chairman and CEO of Carrols Restaurant Group, said in a release.
Carrols is currently operating 1,029 Burger King restaurants in 23 states, as well as 65 Popeyes restaurants in seven states. Carrols has operated Burger King restaurants since 1976 and Popeyes restaurants since 2019.

Ithaca College preps for leadership transition
ITHACA, N.Y. — Ithaca College is preparing for a leadership transition as the school’s provost and executive VP will become interim president, effective Aug. 30. The Ithaca College board of trustees has appointed La Jerne Terry Cornish to role for the entirety of the 2021-22 academic year. Current school president Shirley Collado has accepted a
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ITHACA, N.Y. — Ithaca College is preparing for a leadership transition as the school’s provost and executive VP will become interim president, effective Aug. 30.
The Ithaca College board of trustees has appointed La Jerne Terry Cornish to role for the entirety of the 2021-22 academic year.
Current school president Shirley Collado has accepted a job as president and CEO of College Track, which is described as a college-completion program, effective on Jan. 10, 2022.
Before she departs, Collado will assume the role of senior advisor to the interim president and the board of trustees of Ithaca College through Dec. 31, 2021, “helping to ensure a smooth and successful transition” for Provost Cornish as well as working on projects that are currently in-process to help advance the college’s strategic plan, Ithaca College said.
In a message to the campus community, David Lissy, who chairs the board of trustees and vice chair Jim Nolan “expressed confidence” in Cornish’s ability to lead the college during the coming year. They noted that since her appointment as provost in 2018, Cornish has played a “significant role” in partnering with Collado on decision-making processes related to the overall direction of the institution.
“She steered the development and implementation of the Ithaca Forever strategic plan and helped ensure that students and faculty were able to successfully navigate the challenges of the pandemic this past academic year — one of the most challenging in the college’s history,” they wrote. “We are very confident that the strong and steady leadership that she has already demonstrated, in concert with an accomplished and dedicated senior leadership team, will provide the continuity and momentum that will serve the college well as we continue to achieve forward progress.”
Cornish said that she is honored to be given this opportunity.
“I want to thank the board of trustees for placing its trust in me and in our leadership team, and I look forward to working on behalf of our students, faculty, and staff to maintain the positive trajectory generated by the launch of our strategic plan,” said Cornish. “I also want to thank President Collado for establishing such a solid foundation from which to advance this important work.”
On behalf of the board of trustees, Lissy and Nolan offered their congratulations to Collado on her new appointment at College Track and expressed their “deepest appreciation” for her service to Ithaca College over the past four years.
Co-founded in 1997 by philanthropist Laurene Powell Jobs, Oakland, California–based College Track works in collaboration with the nearby Emerson Collective to remove the academic, financial, and social-emotional barriers that keep first-generation students from low-income communities from completing college and thriving in the workforce, as described in an Ithaca College news release.

Pathfinder Bancorp to pay second-quarter dividend of 7 cents a share
OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBHC), holding company for Pathfinder Bank, recently declared a quarterly cash dividend of 7 cents per share on its common stock for the fiscal quarter ending June 30. The dividend will be payable to all Pathfinder shareholders of record on July 16 and will be paid on Aug.
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OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBHC), holding company for Pathfinder Bank, recently declared a quarterly cash dividend of 7 cents per share on its common stock for the fiscal quarter ending June 30.
The dividend will be payable to all Pathfinder shareholders of record on July 16 and will be paid on Aug. 13, the banking company announced in a news release.
At Pathfinder’s current stock price, the dividend payment yields about 1.75 percent on an annual basis.
Pathfinder Bank is a New York State-chartered commercial bank headquartered in Oswego that has 10 full-service branches located in its market areas of Oswego and Onondaga counties and one limited-purpose office in Oneida County.

SU buys the Marshall complex as part of new housing strategy
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse University’s acquisition of the Marshall student-housing complex is part of the university’s new housing strategy. The new approach, which follows the completion of a “comprehensive” housing review that began in 2019, “prioritizes student feedback and seeks to meet the needs of today’s undergraduate and graduate students,” Syracuse said in a July
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse University’s acquisition of the Marshall student-housing complex is part of the university’s new housing strategy.
The new approach, which follows the completion of a “comprehensive” housing review that began in 2019, “prioritizes student feedback and seeks to meet the needs of today’s undergraduate and graduate students,” Syracuse said in a July 9 news release.
“Ultimately, the review process and development of the housing strategy are the first of many steps in a multi-year process,” Amir Rahnamay-Azar, senior VP for business, finance and administrative services and CFO, said. “The housing strategy is a roadmap for the university and will guide housing decisions for years to come.”
The university’s purchase of the Marshall begins “the process of fulfilling the goals set out in the housing review,” per its release.
Syracuse bought the towering student-housing complex at 727 South Crouse Avenue from a firm whose principals know the campus well.
Elmwood Park, New Jersey–based Aptitude Development announced the sale of the Marshall, per a separate news release. It didn’t include financial details, including the price Syracuse University paid to buy the complex.
Syracuse University graduates Jared Hutter and Brian Rosen are the co-founders of Aptitude Development. Hutter and Rosen started their business by building in Syracuse, “purposefully” constructing their first two projects within the campus to “invest in and give back to the school that fostered their original idea” of developing student housing, per the release.
“We are proud Syracuse alumni and we hope that the university takes pride in our collective story and that it helps inspire current students to pursue careers in development,” Rosen, principal at Aptitude, said. “We will leave the market in Syracuse knowing we left it in a better place than we found it and that future generations will benefit.”
The Marshall opened in 2018 and is named after the well-known street located just south of the complex. It was built on the site of what Aptitude Development described as a “dilapidated strip mall.”
It now houses almost 300 students and has businesses that include Five Guys and Kung Fu Tea, the developer said.
The Marshall is the second building Aptitude has sold in the Syracuse area. The first building, UPoint at 404 University Ave., was sold to Austin, Texas–based American Campus Communities (NYSE: ACC) in 2016.
“Marking the end of an era spent in the Syracuse area following the sale of the Marshall,” Aptitude Development says it is already expanding to markets across the U.S. The firm has also opened multiple projects at the University of Louisville, Coastal Carolina University, and the University of Arkansas. It also has construction projects in progress in Ithaca and in Birmingham, Alabama with “more than 10,000 beds on its drawing board from New York to California.”
Aptitude Development tells CNYBJ that the project in Ithaca is called the Ithacan and will serve students from Cornell University and Ithaca College.

Innovare Advancement Center in Rome operates as accelerator for AI, cyber, UAS
ROME, N.Y. — A facility that’s described as an “open innovation hub” is now open to the public. Innovare Advancement Center (IAC) in Rome is a talent and technology accelerator for artificial intelligence/machine learning, cyber, quantum, and unmanned-aircraft systems (UAS). The IAC is a partnership between the Griffiss Institute, the Air Force Research Laboratory Information
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ROME, N.Y. — A facility that’s described as an “open innovation hub” is now open to the public.
Innovare Advancement Center (IAC) in Rome is a talent and technology accelerator for artificial intelligence/machine learning, cyber, quantum, and unmanned-aircraft systems (UAS).
The IAC is a partnership between the Griffiss Institute, the Air Force Research Laboratory Information Directorate (AFRL/RI), which is also known locally as Rome Lab, New York State, Oneida County, the City of Rome, NYSTEC, and SUNY.
The facility at the Griffiss International Airport will bring together scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs from academia, industry, and the U.S. Department of Defense to collaborate on technology projects.
“I am thrilled to finally unveil Innovare Advancement Center to the public. We have been the Mohawk Valley’s best kept secret since the Griffiss Institute quietly moved into this innovative space this winter, working in close partnership with Oneida County and Rome Lab to prepare to welcome international scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs to collaborate with us as soon as it became safe,” Heather Hage, president and CEO of Griffiss Institute, said in a release. “Today, with over 300 collaborators in service with the GI, we finally get to show off all that Innovare has to offer the tech community. I am so excited to be a part of this great organization and team, and the GI is committed to do all we can to grow Innovare as a global destination for scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs to collaborate as we educate, innovate, integrate and elevate the next generation of technology leaders, right here in the Mohawk Valley.”
The IAC on July 8 held a formal-opening ceremony. The day’s activities included an Invest NY program that focused on entrepreneurs in aerospace and defense.
“All across the world, innovation and collaboration are becoming synonymous with Oneida County,” Oneida County Executive Anthony Picente, Jr. said. “The investment the county and its partners have made in the Griffiss Business & Technology Park is paying off huge dividends for the City of Rome and the region at large, and the Innovare Advancement Center is the epitome of that success. This facility will serve as hub to produce revolutionary research from those on the forefront of cutting-edge technology. Together with Rome Lab, Griffiss Institute and SUNY Poly, we will entrench ourselves as a trailblazer in the emerging field of Quantum Information Science and spur economic development that will feed our robust high-tech economy.”
Described as a 150,000-square-foot “open innovation hub,” IAC’s capabilities include highly specialized laboratories for experimentation in quantum and neuromorphic computing; 40,000 square feet, across two floors, of collaboration spaces; an auditorium with capacity for more than 250 people; and a “first in the nation,” New York State funded 50-mile drone corridor for advanced unmanned aircraft operations.
In addition — coming in the spring of 2022 — an indoor sUAS research and testing facility with a 22,500-square-foot indoor flight-testing area, which will be the “largest in the United States.”
“I’m delighted to represent AFRL in celebrating this milestone of how vision, persistent leadership and teamwork have created a new engine for growing talent, catalyzing partnerships, and delivering solutions that will benefit not just the Air Force and Space Force but the nation as a whole,” Timothy Sakulich, executive director of the Air Force Research Laboratory in Dayton, Ohio, said. He provided the keynote address during the formal-opening ceremony.

Finland firm sets up North American HQ at SU’s CASE Center
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A company founded in Helsinki, Finland has established its North American headquarters at the Center for Advanced Systems and Engineering (CASE) at Syracuse University. Launched in 2017, NSION Technologies Inc. has established operations at the CASE business incubator. NSION Technologies provides situational awareness and secure communications channels with live-data transmission through encrypted-management
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A company founded in Helsinki, Finland has established its North American headquarters at the Center for Advanced Systems and Engineering (CASE) at Syracuse University.
Launched in 2017, NSION Technologies Inc. has established operations at the CASE business incubator. NSION Technologies provides situational awareness and secure communications channels with live-data transmission through encrypted-management platforms, while utilizing equipment owned by the users, as described in a Syracuse University news release.
“When a second is a lifetime, NSION Technologies provides secure data for split second responder decision-making,” George Davis, VP of systems integration at the company, said. “CASE offered the perfect mix of connectivity to Syracuse University faculty and student talent, a location on the main campus, and great office space with access to a variety of testing equipment. With the support of CASE, we see great growth potential for our company.”
NSION says it is building global operations with offices in the U.S., Finland, Australia, and “more to come,” per the release.
NSION contends that its technology NSC3 system improves the efficiency of mission-critical operations by streaming and storing live video from drones, phones, vehicles and other sources to command-and-control room to mobile devices in the field. NSC3 technology supports any camera, any platform, and is functional in any network. All of them improve the situational-awareness needs by optimizing data security and speed in data transfer, even in complex, life-critical situations, the company notes.
“We are truly excited that NSION Technologies decided to make Syracuse its North American headquarters at our CASE Center,” Pramod Varshney, director of the CASE Center said. “The opportunities of NSION’s platform are virtually endless, and a perfect fit for our UAV/UAS cluster in CNY, and we look forward to connecting NSION to our extraordinary talented researchers, as well as our economic development partners in the region.”
CASE is a NYSTAR-designated Center for Advanced Technology. It provides businesses from a range of industry sectors with expertise in all aspects of “big data,” including data mining and analytics, information fusion, predictive analysis, cybersecurity, autonomy, drones, and the “internet of things,” Syracuse University says.
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