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Thursday, September 02, 2010
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by Traci DeLore

 

Former Wilber Corp. President and CEO Alfred Whittet on Aug. 27 took the reins as interim president and CEO of the banking company's subsidiary, Wilber National Bank.
He temporarily replaces Douglas Gulotty, who departed in early August.

Whittet currently also serves as a director and vice chairman of the company and the bank. He served as president and CEO from 1998 until he retired in 2006. Whittet first joined Wilber in 1972.


by Eric Reinhardt

 

The New York State Energy Research & Development Authority (NYSERDA) today announced an award of $360,000 for Crouse Hospital in Syracuse to pay for a lighting retrofit project.

The award, funded by the federal economic stimulus package, will save Crouse more than $100,000 per year in energy costs, Dr. Paul Kronenberg, CEO of Crouse Hospital, said in a news release.


by Kevin Tampone

 

SRC, formerly Syracuse Research Corp., said today it won a federal contract worth up to $41.9 million for information-technology (IT) work.

The contract is from the Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement unit. SRC will establish and maintain a security operations center under the deal that will help protect IT infrastructure against cybersecurity threats.


by Kevin Tampone

 

The federal Court of Appeals has upheld several rulings on violations of patents owned by Syracuse-based Pass & Seymour/Legrand.

The U.S. International Trade Commission ruled in 2009 that a number of Chinese manufacturers and their U.S. distributors violated Pass & Seymour's patent rights. The appeals court has affirmed the earlier rulings in the case of seven of the nine manufacturers involved.


by Eric Reinhardt

 

The Syracuse area added 100 construction jobs between July 2009 and July 2010, making it one of 61 metropolitan areas nationwide that added construction jobs during that period.

The Utica-Rome area lost 400 construction jobs while the Binghamton area lost 100 construction jobs during the same 12-month stretch.



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