SARATOGA BUSINESS JOURNAL • JANUARY 2012 • 1
SBJ P.O. Box 396 Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
SARATOGA BUSINESS JOURNAL
VOL. 16 NO. 11
★★ The Business Newspaper of Saratoga County ★★
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PAID GLENS FALLS, NY 12801 PERMIT #600
JANUARY 2012
Home Builders’ Association Recognizes Duo As Area Business Leaders Provide Perspectives On Builder Of Year And Associate Member Of Year The Saratoga County Economy Going Forward
Annemarie Mitchell (left), owner of Legacy Timber Frames, and Margie Miller, who is in sales and public relations for Curtis Lumber, were recognized by CRBRA for their industry involvement. Stock Studios Photography
BY BARBARA BREWER LA MERE Capital Region Builders and Remodelers Association (CRBRA), the local chapter of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) recently announced that Annemarie Mitchell, CEO and President of Legacy Timber Frames and Margie Miller, who works in sales and business development at Curtis Lumber, are the winners, respectively, of its Builder of the Year and Associate Member of the Year awards. Annemarie Mitchell and business partner Dan Rosenberger have operated Legacy
Timber Frames since 1988. Mitchell, whose background is in design, has worked every aspect of her company, from the field to sales and design. In recent years, her efforts have focused primarily on running the shop and business. She has also contributed considerable time and volunteer effort to the local and national chapters of CRBRA. She is a charter member and current chair of the Professional Women in Building Council of Capital Region Builders and Remodelers Association. She is active in CRBRA’s Green Building Group and is Continued On Page 7
BY TODD SHIMKUS, CCE Whether you think our local economy will improve or not in 2012, there’s no escaping the fact that we’re all in this together. The fact is that we are fortunate that Saratoga County’s economy is driven collectively by businesses large and small from a diverse and wide range of sectors. Saratoga County has become a global destination for tourists, talent and trade as well as remaining a place where buying local from stores and farms in our local communities is important to many of us. Looking ahead to 2012, there are a lot of signs that would indicate that Saratoga County is heading in the right direction, including: • Saratoga County continues to have the lowest property tax rate in New York State. • There are significant private sector led developments throughout the County at places like the Clifton Park Center Mall and Rideret Center at Railroad Place. • The Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) is expanding its pre-performance activities to attract more visitors and www. spac.org recorded more than 1 million unique visitors in 2011 alone. • The Saratoga County Chamber has partnered with CEG and the Albany, Schenectady and Rensselaer County Chambers as well as with the Albany International Airport to utilize a $750,000 federal grant and $500,000 of local matching funds to attract new carriers, new direct flights and more competition to the Airport in 2012. • GLOBALFOUNDRIES will see the first wafers run through the production line in early 2012 at Fab 8 in Saratoga County and their Admin-2 building will be ready for occupancy this year as well. • With monies from the new VLT at Aqueduct, NYRA will be increasing purses this
Todd Shimkus, President, Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce, Saratoga Springs. Courtesy Of Saratoag County Chamber Of Commerce
summer at the Saratoga Race Course and NBC will again be broadcasting live racing in a show called “Summer At Saratoga.” • The City of Saratoga Springs is preparing to construct a 450+ space parking deck downtown. • The Saratoga-Washington on the Hudson Partnership has received a state grant to construct a state of the art visitor center in Schuylerville. • National Grid is projecting that utility rates will decline in 2012. • During 2011 in partnership with SCORE, more than 400 hours of free technical assistance was provided to hundreds of entrepreneurs and small business owners at the Chamber to help them develop business plans and to obtain financing for their operations. • The City of Mechanicville received a Continued On Page 6
Experienced Dentist Who Took A Hiatus From The Natural Foods Store Features Selection Of ‘Localvore’ Profession Has Now Opened Smiles For Life Dentistry Products Grown Within 100 Miles Of Saratoga Springs
Following a four-year break from his profession, during which he and his family sailed the world, Dr. Marc Johnson has opened another dental practice in Saratoga Springs.
Tina Bakkalapulo has opened For Earth’s Sake, a natural foods store that carries a selection of organic foods, cosmetics and gifts.
Stock Studios Photography
BY BARBARA BREWER LA MERE When Dr. Marc Johnson, DDS, was a small child, he was extremely fearful of going to the dentist, to the point that he would hide in a closet when he was supposed to be leaving for an appointment in hopes that he just wouldn’t have to go. In spite of those fears or perhaps out of empathy for others who had such fears, he later attended dental school at the University of Michigan, graduating in 1988. He began a practice, Saratoga Smiles, in Saratoga that same year with an emphasis on helping patients with extreme fear of dentists and whose dental
issues were such that having them addressed, in some cases, truly transformed their lives in ways, says Dr. Johnson, that “seemed like magic.” Once their dental issues were addressed and their appearance, self-confidence, and health were substantially changed by their new smiles, people went from being introverts to extroverts, loners to married folks, and various other seemingly miraculous changes. Dr. Johnson has found it very gratifying to bring about such changes and to be the person that the patient trusts to bring about what Continued On Page 12
Stock Studios Photography
BY BARBARA BREWER LA MERE Tina Bakkalapulo, president of For Earth’s Sake, a new natural foods store opening in early January in Suite 102 of the Camen Building at 120 West Avenue in Saratoga, says that she has always wanted to own a natural foods store, created as one she herself would like to shop in, both in terms of décor (A thickly cut slab of a tree is a counter in the store.) and products offered. Besides a wide range of natural supplements from various manufacturers, For Earth’s Sake features groceries that include numerous “localvore” foods grown and
produced within 100 miles of Saratoga, “Not,” says Bakkalapulo, “just what can be found in any health food store.” Locally produced meats and vegetables and even localvore pickles are available. For Earth’s Sake is pleased to be supporting local farmers. The store offers a variety of gluten-free foods, bulk foods, and frozen organic options, locally sourced where possible. Baking supplies and organic soups are also carried. All- natural make-ups can be tried at counters in the store. From the Mineral Fusion Continued On Page 13