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Seneca Foods net sales rise nearly 10% in latest fiscal year
MARION, N.Y. — Seneca Foods Corp. (NASDAQ: SENEA, SENEB) — a Wayne County–based provider of packaged fruits and vegetables, with facilities across the U.S., including Geneva — reported that net sales for the 12-month period ending March 31 rose 10 percent to $1.47 billion from $1.34 billion for the prior year. The company attributed the […]
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MARION, N.Y. — Seneca Foods Corp. (NASDAQ: SENEA, SENEB) — a Wayne County–based provider of packaged fruits and vegetables, with facilities across the U.S., including Geneva — reported that net sales for the 12-month period ending March 31 rose 10 percent to $1.47 billion from $1.34 billion for the prior year.
The company attributed the overall increase in sales in the period (which it calls fiscal-year 2021) to increased sales volume of $74.2 million, as well as higher selling prices and a favorable sales mix of $57.6 million. Both factors were present in its canned-vegetables business.
Gross margin as a percentage of net sales increased from 10.6 percent in fiscal 2020 to 15.8 percent in fiscal 2021 due to the favorable impact of higher selling prices and an improved selling mix “outweighing the negative business effects of a smaller than planned pack and incremental expenditures incurred for precautionary and safety measures taken for COVID-19,” the company said in its earnings report issued on June 11.
“Fiscal 2021 was a year of contrasts. While increased pandemic demand for our products led to record financial performance it was overshadowed by the suffering and loss from the virus by many of our employees, their families and our communities.” Paul Palmby, CEO of Seneca Foods, said.
Seneca Foods says it holds the largest share of the retail private label, food service, and export canned-vegetable markets, distributing to more than 90 countries. Products are sold under the Libby’s, Aunt Nellie’s, Green Valley, CherryMan, READ, and Seneca labels, including Seneca snack chips.
CEO FOCUS: Downtown Syracuse Continues to Thrive Following a Year of Uncertainty
Downtown Syracuse is at the heart of the Central New York community and is the vibrant center of a region on the rise. While the past year created significant economic hardships or delayed growth for so many small businesses, it is truly exciting to see so many people returning to explore, eat, shop, and work downtown.
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Downtown Syracuse is at the heart of the Central New York community and is the vibrant center of a region on the rise. While the past year created significant economic hardships or delayed growth for so many small businesses, it is truly exciting to see so many people returning to explore, eat, shop, and work downtown.
As people return, they are coming back to an urban center that continues to evolve and grow as new retail and restaurants open, and development projects and investments take shape. During the pandemic year, downtown welcomed 30 new retail businesses. In just the last two months, new restaurants Luna Loca, Guadalajara Mexican Restaurant, and Day Bird have opened. Earlier this spring, downtown’s first full-service grocery store, the Syracuse Cooperative Market, opened at the Salt City Market.
In all, nearly $80 million in investment activity was completed during the pandemic, with another $172 million in development currently underway or announced. In 2020, 281 new residential units were completed, providing room for downtown’s population to grow another 12.5 percent. Additionally, more than 112 units are under construction right now.
This economic activity is a welcome sign as is the return of workers to downtown offices, both critical components of a full economic recovery following the COVID-19 crisis. Yet, there is more we can all do to ensure downtown’s small businesses, and arts, entertainment, and cultural amenities thrive. This summer, I encourage you to be a tourist in your own community. Go out to eat and shop downtown, visit the weekly farmers market, or take your family to a museum. Buy tickets to be there when the curtains rise at the Landmark Theatre and the Redhouse.
If this past year has taught us anything it is that we are resilient, and together we can make an impact when we support one another. As we begin to see the light at the end of this crisis, let’s continue to invest in our community to make sure this recovery is accelerated and sustained.
To learn more about the progress downtown, download the 2021 Downtown Committee of Syracuse’s annual report (https://downtownsyracuse.com/sites/default/files/2020-2021%20Annual%20Report.pdf), or visit downtownsyracuse.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 June 25.

Finger Lakes village receives financing and grant for clean-water project
INTERLAKEN, N.Y. — A village in Seneca County is one of the recent recipients of financing and grants to support vital water-quality infrastructure projects across New York state. The New York State Environmental Facilities Corporation (EFC) approved $26.7 million in grants, interest-free loans, and low-cost loans at its June 24 meeting. The funding supports municipalities
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INTERLAKEN, N.Y. — A village in Seneca County is one of the recent recipients of financing and grants to support vital water-quality infrastructure projects across New York state.
The New York State Environmental Facilities Corporation (EFC) approved $26.7 million in grants, interest-free loans, and low-cost loans at its June 24 meeting. The funding supports municipalities that are working to update their aging drinking water and wastewater systems and improve utility services for residents with “innovative, cost-effective financing solutions,” according to a June 25 news release from the office of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo
The Village of Interlaken in Seneca County was approved for nearly $3.9 million in short-term, interest-free financing through the Clean Water State Revolving Fund, and more than $1.2 million in Water Infrastructure Improvement Act (WIIA) grant funding for wastewater-treatment plant upgrades and improvements.
Three other clean-water projects in Western New York, one drinking-water project in the same region, and one clean-water initiative downstate also received funding.
“The funding announced today and the critical projects it supports are investments in the future of New York’s cities, towns, and villages and will protect the environment, bolster local economies, and improve overall quality of life for generations to come,” Basil Seggos, Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner and EFC board chair, said in the release.
The financings are subject to Public Authorities Control Board (PACB) approval and are scheduled for consideration at PACB’s meeting in July.

Search committee will help Clarkson find next president
POTSDAM — Clarkson University plans to form a search committee to find a successor to current president Anthony Collins, who plans to step down following the 2021-22 academic year. Collins, the university’s 16th president, has served as its top official since 2003, per a Clarkson news release. The committee will include trustees, faculty, staff, students,
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POTSDAM — Clarkson University plans to form a search committee to find a successor to current president Anthony Collins, who plans to step down following the 2021-22 academic year.
Collins, the university’s 16th president, has served as its top official since 2003, per a Clarkson news release.
The committee will include trustees, faculty, staff, students, and alumni. The search committee will provide details on the full committee membership and the process guiding the search for Clarkson’s 17th president “when available,” the university added.
A Clarkson faculty member since 1982, Collins has been a “booster” for economic development in the North Country and throughout New York State, and a “national advocate” for higher education, the university said.
“President Collins’ contributions to Clarkson University have been extraordinary and will prove to be enduring. He has exceeded the broadest measure of success, leaving the institution in far better shape than when he accepted the role of president. In addition to advancing many of the metrics typically considered in assessing institutional success, Tony’s leadership throughout the challenges wrought by the pandemic in 2020 and 2021 has been outstanding,” Tom Kassouf, chair of the board of trustees, contended in the release.
About Collins
Under Collins’ leadership, the Vision of a Clarkson Education and Clarkson@125 have “guided strategic initiatives which have been substantially realized over almost two decades,” the school said.
Clarkson’s Potsdam hill campus has been expanded both physically and in “academic reach,” while the downtown campus has been “repurposed to advance interdisciplinary entrepreneurship,” with the recently added Lewis School of Health Sciences and the “economic revitalization” of the village of Potsdam.
Outside Potsdam, Clarkson has expanded geographically in recent years, with new graduate and professional programs accessible at its Capital Region campus in Schenectady and at the Beacon Institute for Rivers and Estuaries on Dennings Point in Dutchess County.
A native of Australia, Collins earned an undergraduate civil engineering degree from Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. He then worked for Australian Consolidated Industries and the Utah Development Company before earning master’s and doctoral degrees from Lehigh University in Pennsylvania.
After earning his Ph.D in 1982, Collins launched his career at Clarkson, progressing from assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering to full professor, department chair, dean, vice president for academic affairs, and provost.
During that time, he received awards for outstanding teaching, research, and advising, as well as lecturing internationally, and authoring more than 90 publications.
He currently serves as chair of the Association of Independent Technological Universities (AITU), is emeritus chair of New York’s Commission for Independent Colleges and Universities (CICU), serves on the board of the Business Council of New York State, is president of the Seaway Private Equity Corporation, and was previously nominated to serve on the advisory board of the Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation.
Collins has also served on a number of New York State advisory task forces as well as co-chair for the North Country Regional Economic Development Council, Clarkson said.

Hidden Level settles into new Syracuse headquarters
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A firm that’s developing a low-altitude airspace-monitoring service is getting acclimated to its new headquarters at 1014 North Geddes St. in Syracuse’s Inner Harbor area and making plans for growth. The business started operations in a basement in Camillus for a few months before moving to a space at 1153 W. Fayette
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A firm that’s developing a low-altitude airspace-monitoring service is getting acclimated to its new headquarters at 1014 North Geddes St. in Syracuse’s Inner Harbor area and making plans for growth.
The business started operations in a basement in Camillus for a few months before moving to a space at 1153 W. Fayette St., and now making it to the new location.
Hidden Level held a ribbon cutting to acknowledge the opening of its new two-story, 10,000 square foot facility in the Inner Harbor area. It includes office space along with laboratory and manufacturing facilities for developing its proprietary sensor systems.
The company says it started transitioning operations to its Geddes Street location in early April.
Hidden Level plans to hire about 15 people in the next year, “effectively doubling” the company’s employee count.
“This new facility will allow us to continue to innovate and develop new cutting-edge sensor technology and services that will help our customers improve airspace safety,” said Jeff Cole, CEO at Hidden Level. “Central New York is our home, and we are proud to be bringing jobs and innovation to this community.”
Besides the new headquarters and hiring plans, the firm says it has also closed on a $17.6 million in series A investment and was involved in recent test flight activities with NASA Ames Laboratory.
The new investment will enable Hidden Level to advance development and deployment of its sensor technology and services.
The Mountain View, California–based NASA Ames Research Center has been working with Hidden Level on drone-traffic management and advanced aerial mobility applications of the airspace monitoring service (AMS) data feed.
In May, Hidden Level conducted tests of its AMS for NASA Ames, using Onondaga Lake and surrounding areas as a surrogate for Mountain View. Testing consisted of numerous UAS flights over Onondaga Lake while Hidden Level’s network of sensors monitored and reported the location of each drone. A UAS includes a drone and equipment used to control its flight. A drone is also referred to in the industry as an unmanned aerial vehicle, or UAV.
Default cloud-security tools may not protect data enough, expert says
The business benefits of moving to the cloud come with risk and default cloud-security tools may leave businesses vulnerable, a cybersecurity expert says. “Many cloud providers offer default cloud security tools,” says Jennifer Mazzanti, CEO, of eMazzanti Technologies, a greater–New York City–area cybersecurity and cloud-services provider. “But these free tools can leave companies vulnerable.” In an article
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The business benefits of moving to the cloud come with risk and default cloud-security tools may leave businesses vulnerable, a cybersecurity expert says.
“Many cloud providers offer default cloud security tools,” says Jennifer Mazzanti, CEO, of eMazzanti Technologies, a greater–New York City–area cybersecurity and cloud-services provider. “But these free tools can leave companies vulnerable.”
In an article on the firm’s website (https://www.emazzanti.net/default-cloud-security-tools/), Mazzanti cites the example of Windows Defender as a security solution that she contends falls short in some areas like blocking phishing sites. She then urges business leaders to choose effective security solutions such as encryption, security automation, access management, and data loss-prevention.
Mazzanti warns that the new cloud landscape many businesses are embracing to facilitate remote work and collaboration “brings new risks.”
“For instance, in a public cloud, one server may store data from multiple companies. And, while cloud providers generally place a priority on security, no system can promise complete protection. A single successful breach of a cloud provider could have disastrous effects for dozens, even hundreds, of companies,” she notes.
NONPROFIT MANAGEMENT: Red flags for our health-care delivery system
“Health-care costs are an issue both for the government and for our larger economy.” —Sylvia Mathews Burwell I’m officially raising red flags of significant concern for the future of the New York state and United States health-care delivery system. Fact #1: The U.S. is rapidly approaching 20 percent of our gross domestic
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“Health-care costs are an issue both for the government and for our larger economy.” —Sylvia Mathews Burwell
I’m officially raising red flags of significant concern for the future of the New York state and United States health-care delivery system.
Fact #1: The U.S. is rapidly approaching 20 percent of our gross domestic product (GDP) on health care. Preliminary estimates for 2020 have the country crossing the 18 percent threshold. As you may know, the U.S. has always been, since the adoption of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, the leader in percentage of GDP devoted to health care. When compared to other G-7 industrialized nations, in certain cases, we are double our G-7 colleagues, some of whom have yet to cross the 10 percent threshold for GDP.
Fact #2: The recently passed New York State (NYS) budget for the fiscal year beginning April 1, 2021 included a budget, for Medicaid only, of $83 billion. Total NYS budget expenditures are expected to be $212 billion, which makes Medicaid close to 40 percent of total New York State expenditures. Post-pandemic Medicaid eligibility in New York state is 7 million residents, or about 33 percent of the population.
I have been writing this column since 1996 and have been involved in health-care finance for 48 years. To be clear, I am a social liberal and a fiscal moderate. For most of my career, I have been and continue to be in a minority position with what might appear to some as a contradiction in my beliefs regarding social-justice issues, with a moderate to conservative view on health-care fiscal policy.
You may say, “So what’s new that we haven’t heard many times before?” What’s new is that we have just experienced the worst public-health crisis in over 100 years. The impact of the pandemic will take several years, or perhaps a decade or more, to be fully understood. In my continuing homage to both David Letterman and more recently ESPN, please consider the following top 10 topics to be important and relevant to your strategic plan. I believe it is appropriate for each health and human-services provider to update or modify its strategic plan between now and March 31, 2022.
As one of my early mentors in the 1970s, Darrell Hartline, CFO of The Genesee Hospital, made a profound statement that has proven true for my entire career: “Health-care costs should be viewed as a balloon. Efforts to reform health care without letting air out of the balloon cannot result in significant cost savings, particularly in a society with an entitlement mentality.”
1) Inflation
The $6 trillion that has been printed to stimulate the economy during and after the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in inflation-rate increases that have not been seen for the past 15 years. The Federal Reserve remains focused on a 2 percent inflation rate, which, you should know, typically excludes food and energy prices. The return of inflation will challenge all health and human-service providers in balancing budgets after the positive effect of federal stimulus has been exhausted.
2) Demographics
Retirees and high-net worth / high-income individuals will continue to leave New York state for lower/no-tax states. The fact that the recently adopted budget increased the New York State top income tax bracket to 10.9 percent, with 9.65 percent rate applying to individuals with income above $1 million, will undoubtedly accelerate the geographic move of wealthy taxpayers to Florida, Arizona, and Texas, among others.
3) Employees
The current workforce crisis is exacerbated by the fact that on average, 10,000 people per day will be retiring in the U.S. through 2029. That means on average, 300,000 individuals leave the workforce each month. Based on my research, I do not believe that the published new jobs report each month accurately reflects the fact that 300,000 jobs are being replaced each month. Depending upon which health and human-service sector is analyzed, most employers are now experiencing double-digit vacancy factors, with some organizations at more than 30 percent. This is not a sustainable model for a service sector that is labor-intensive and requires direct face-to-face contact for service provision. Historical vacancy factors have generally been in the low single digits.
4) Minimum Wage
President Joe Biden increased the minimum wage for federal-contract employees to $15 several months ago. New York City adopted a $15 minimum wage on Jan. 1, 2020. These actions, coupled with the inflation pressures resulting from federal stimulus, have accelerated the move to a $15 minimum wage for almost every county in upstate New York. But that’s not the most difficult challenge for many providers. The bigger challenge is the salary compression resulting from the fact that current employees expect a commensurate increase in their wages based on length of service and performance in support of their employers. Extreme compensation examples recently publicized have been $200 per hour for traveling registered nurses and $80,000 annual salaries to recruit registered nurses.
5) Remote
Virtually every employer is facing the challenge of satisfying its workforce on flexibility regarding in-office vs. remote working environments. Rapid advancements in video-conferencing technologies will make it difficult for employers to compete for talent when there will be many employers offering hybrid or fully remote work environments. Competition for recruitment of millennials will become an extraordinary challenge, since that generation is known for frequent job, career, and geographic changes.
6) Organized labor awakens
The convergence of each of the foregoing topics coupled with the incredible communication power of social media may increase organized-labor activities for employers and employees. This is more likely since almost all industry service sectors need filling vacant positions. In addition, income inequality between senior management and front-line staff may stir the sleeping giant of organized labor to challenge non-union work environments throughout the country. Therefore, a strategic imperative that must be addressed with increased focus will be employee relations. Employees now have a tremendous number of options based on a shortage of workers throughout the economy. As a result, competition for new employees and retention of existing employees must be addressed with creative, flexible, and competitive work environments.
7) Telehealth
In addition to advancements in video-conferencing technology, the by-product of telehealth and telemedicine services has been advanced by a decade in the past 15 months. In the 1996 book “Jumping the Curve: Innovation and Strategic Choice in an Age of Transition,” it’s fair to say that no one predicted the technology advancements that have occurred in the past 25 years. Many technology experts believe that the pervasive implementation of artificial intelligence may result in the current decade exceeding the progress of the past 25 years.
8) Drugs
The cost and utilization of pharmaceuticals must be subject to continuous evaluation by both providers and the individuals served. For those of you who still watch cable television, the direct marketing of what seems to be an infinite number of medications results in pressure on all health-care providers, particularly those with prescription privileges. In a recent informal survey of recently graduated physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants, I asked for their top five recommendations regarding effective control over our ever-increasing health-care costs. While I have spent thousands of hours in meetings with physicians over the past 40 years, one comment that each of them made was news to me. That is, in the current patient-physician interaction, there is incredible pressure and, in some cases, a perceived obligation for the practitioner to “do something once the patient arrives at the practitioner’s office”. This may include but is not limited to a referral to another physician’s specialty, an imaging referral, and/or a prescription for medication.
9) Tort reform
Relative to the statement above regarding practitioner obligations to “do something”, my informal survey also disclosed that the risk of litigation in providing care to patients does drive increased utilization among the various physician subspecialties. For example, a prostate-cancer diagnosis typically involves the primary-care physician, a medical oncologist, a radiation oncologist, a urologist, and possibly a surgeon. We must have meaningful tort reform at the state level, since more than six decades of debate at the federal level have produced essentially no meaningful progress.
10) Home care vs. long-term nursing-facility care
Long-term nursing-facility care may be the service sector most impacted by the pandemic. Occupancy percentages for most nursing homes need to be more than 90 percent. One of the effects of the pandemic has been an increased demand for home-care services, even though the individual may be better suited and cared for in a skilled-nursing facility. This change in attitude, most frequently by the frail elderly and their family members, will continue to represent a major challenge for the viability of about 600 skilled-nursing facilities in New York state. And remember that the Medicaid program typically pays a daily reimbursement rate that is only about 50-60 percent of the private pay rate paid by individuals who are not eligible for Medicaid coverage.
Certainly, there will be more to come in future columns on this major topic of health-care service delivery.
Gerald J. Archibald, CPA, is a partner in charge of the management advisory services at The Bonadio Group. Contact him at garchibald@bonadio.com

Buttigieg visits Syracuse to discuss plans for I-81
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg on June 29 visited to Syracuse to discuss plans for the upcoming Interstate 81 (I-81) replacement project, a visit that didn’t include a meeting with the Town of Salina, as town officials had hoped. Buttigieg joined U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) and U.S. Senator
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg on June 29 visited to Syracuse to discuss plans for the upcoming Interstate 81 (I-81) replacement project, a visit that didn’t include a meeting with the Town of Salina, as town officials had hoped.
Buttigieg joined U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.), along with Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh, Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon, and other community leaders outside the Syracuse Center of Excellence at 727 E. Washington St. with the elevated portion of I-81 not far away across from Almond Street.
Buttigieg said the work continues to improve Interstate 81, help it meet the community’s needs, and reconnect the communities that “were once divided” [because of the highway].
“It was 65 years ago, actually today, that President [Dwight] Eisenhower signed a bill creating the interstate highway system. It was an extraordinary achievement, but we know that the planners behind it also made choices that often routed new highways directly through Black and Brown neighborhoods, doing lasting damage to those communities, and one of those highways is right next to us. I-81 was built … right over and through the 15th ward and displaced nearly 1,300 residents from what had been a close-knit, middle class, Black neighborhood. Those who remained were cut off, in many ways, from opportunity. And over the next few decades, much like my own hometown in South Bend [Indiana], Syracuse lost about 30 percent of its population. And now the city has been rebounding in an extraordinary way. And yet these consequences and this legacy is still with us,” Buttigieg said in his remarks.
Buttigieg also joined Schumer and Gillibrand in pushing for the Reconnecting Communities Act and to make permanent an expansion of the local hire pilot program as part of the American Jobs Plan, which would help fund the I-81 project while supporting local workers and “revitalizing Syracuse,” Schumer’s office said in a Tuesday news release.
Schumer’s office said he and Gillibrand have been “vocal advocates of the need for local hire and other targeted” hiring programs as part of federally funded construction. Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) heeded the senators’ calls to implement a local hire pilot program for highway projects. The provision passed out of the Commerce Committee would provide the DOT with the authority to turn the local hire pilot into a permanent authority across all DOT programs, not just the Federal Highway Administration and Federal Transit Administration.
Salina feels “ignored”
Buttigieg heard applause following his remarks outside the Center of Excellence, but officials in an adjacent community that opposes the current I-81 plan expressed frustration at the Transportation Secretary.
In statement release June 30, the Town of Salina said the Buttigieg visit “does not discount the fact that we have been imploring state leaders to listen to our constituents’ concerns for years.”
The Town of Salina’s invitation to Buttigieg was “ignored,” per the statement.
“There are many negative consequences a grid-only proposal would have on our community. Our town relies heavily on its proximity to Interstate 81, and our local small businesses stand to lose the most should traffic be redirected elsewhere. Furthermore, our local tax base would be devastated by this proposal, and the state has continued to dismiss the negative economic impact that a community grid would have for towns like ours. We have repeatedly reached out to Secretary Buttigieg to discuss these issues, and we remain frustrated that only a select few are heard, while the majority of the region is ignored,” the Town of Salina said.
OPINION: Globalization Shapes our Lives
Globalization has transformed our planet, again and again. It touches every part of our lives: the food we eat, the entertainment we enjoy, the ways we communicate, the products we buy. For many of us, it shapes the way we earn a living in an increasingly connected and interdependent world. The constant flow of people, goods, information,
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Globalization has transformed our planet, again and again. It touches every part of our lives: the food we eat, the entertainment we enjoy, the ways we communicate, the products we buy. For many of us, it shapes the way we earn a living in an increasingly connected and interdependent world.
The constant flow of people, goods, information, and ideas across national borders —even from one side of the globe to another — is a basic fact of modern life. Globalization makes our lives richer, but it also raises challenges for governments and policymakers.
We tend to think of globalization first as an economic phenomenon tied to world trade, the exchange of goods and services. There’s also cultural globalization: Music, art, films, and TV span the globe. With the internet and satellite communications, information crosses borders instantaneously.
The globalization of trade has been generally positive. It improves efficiency and expands markets, giving consumers more choices and businesses more opportunity. It has raised the standard of living for many poor countries. But the globalized economy unquestionably creates winners and losers. In the United States, manufacturing jobs have been displaced in recent years, while skilled workers have made gains.
Some aspects of globalization are negative. Terrorists strike targets around the world. Criminals transport weapons and drugs from one country to another. Cyber criminals target businesses and organizations wherever they are vulnerable. And viruses spread worldwide [as we’ve seen with COVID-19].
Nuclear proliferation is probably the most threatening manifestation of globalization. Despite efforts to curb it, nine countries now possess nuclear weapons, including Pakistan and North Korea. The U.S. and its allies worry that Iran could join the nuclear club. The possibility that these devastating weapons could be used, intentionally or by accident, is terrifying, even if we rarely discuss it.
Perhaps surprisingly, the term globalization didn’t come into general usage until the 1980s, but the phenomenon goes back centuries, often driven by breakthroughs in technology. Some scholars trace the rise of globalization to the so-called Age of Discovery, when advances in ship design enabled European adventurers to circle the globe and explore the Americas. In the 1800s, railroads, steamships, and factories facilitated trade, and the telegraph connected distant regions.
With globalization came global conflict. After World War II, the United States took the lead in building a world order to promote peace and prosperity. Nations joined together to resolve disputes under the banner of free trade and the rule of law. The institutions we helped create — the United Nations, NATO, the World Bank, the World Trade Organization, and the International Monetary Fund — are hallmarks of globalization.
Globalization seemed to gain favor in the 1990s and early 2000s, when Congress approved the North American Free Trade Agreement, and the tech boom supercharged the economy. There was bipartisan sentiment that global trade and other aspects of globalization were beneficial. Thomas Friedman’s bestseller “The World Is Flat” celebrated the leveling of the economic playing field and the growing worldwide influence of technology and entrepreneurship.
Attitudes toward globalization can fluctuate, however. President Donald Trump proclaimed, “America first,” feuded with allies, rejected trade deals, and imposed tariffs. But Joe Biden, on his first international trip as president, met with G-7 leaders and declared “the United States is back” as a global partner.
In the long run, the forces that draw the world together may be stronger than the ones that drive us apart. The COVID-19 pandemic showed that a virus that starts in one country will quickly spread to others, and it will take international cooperation to stop it. Threats like climate change, nuclear proliferation, and the plight of refugees cannot be solved by nations acting alone. Globalization will continue to advance, and the challenge is to adapt and make it work better for everyone.
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.
OPINION: End of state of emergency is welcome news but should have happened sooner
The announcement [on June 23] that the declared state of emergency for New York State would not be extended was welcome news for all New Yorkers. Weeks ago, the Assembly Republican Conference called for an end to Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s executive order. Unfortunately, when Democrats in Albany had an opportunity and responsibility to return checks and balances
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The announcement [on June 23] that the declared state of emergency for New York State would not be extended was welcome news for all New Yorkers.
Weeks ago, the Assembly Republican Conference called for an end to Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s executive order. Unfortunately, when Democrats in Albany had an opportunity and responsibility to return checks and balances back to state government and return control and authority back to local municipalities and school districts, they didn’t act.
For more than 15 months, 19.5 million people have been operating under executive orders, arbitrary restrictions, and emergency declarations. [One June 24], it finally ended. New Yorkers can now, at long last, return to their daily routines and a sense of normalcy. It is time to move forward.
William (Will) A. Barclay, Republican, is the New York Assembly minority leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. Contact Barclay at barclaw@assembly.state.ny.us. This article is drawn from a statement that Barclay issued on June 23.
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