SBJ P.O. Box 766 Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
SARATOGA BUSINESS JOURNAL
VOL. 25 NO. 06
HH The Business Newspaper of Saratoga County HH
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GLENS FALLS, NY 12801 PERMIT #600
AUGUST 2020
www.saratogabusinessjournal.com
Gideon Putnam Hotel Is Open Again After HVCC Plans New Building, Programs To COVID Health, Safety Issues Are Addressed Help Fill Shortages In Skilled Trade Workers
The Gideon Putnam Hotel in Spa State Park is open again featuring new health and safety standards aimed at helping keep guests and employees safe while slowing the spread of COVID-19. The Gideon Putnam hotel in Saratoga Spa State Park re-opened Aug. 1 with the implementation of a comprehensive health and safety program. The hotel has been closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Officials said the hotel has adopted the Rest Assured—Commitment to Care program, developed by Delaware North, which operates the Gideon Putnam for the state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. It features new health and safety standards
Courtesy Gideon Putnam
aimed at helping keep guests and employees safe while slowing the spread of COVID-19. “Nothing is more important than the health and safety of our guests and employees, and our Rest Assured program is focused on that,” said John Howard, general manager of the Gideon Putnam for Delaware North. “We’ve re-engineered our operating procedures to minimize contact risk and bolstered hygiene protocols to meet or exceed best-practice guidelines of the U.S. Centers for Disease Continued On Page 17
This is a rendering of the proposed Applied Technology Education Center that will allow HVCC to expand its training of a skilled technical workforce. BY CHRISTINE GRAF Hudson Valley Community College is responding to the skilled labor shortage in the area and across the state by pursuing plans to build a new $65 million facility for skilled trades education. The proposed 130,000-square-foot Applied Technology Education Center (ATEC) will allow the college to expand its training of the skilled technical workforce. A capital campaign is underway, and a concept plan of the project has been prepared by
Courtesy JMZ Architects and Planners
JMZ Architects and Planners of Glens Falls. Construction of ATEC, a net energy zero building, is in the planning phase. The architectural bidding process will begin in one to two months. Officials said that within 10 years, ATEC will be able to graduate 4,877 technicians in a variety of fields, including mechatronics, plumbing, electrical, welding, HVAC and automotive. That would benefit areas including Saratoga, Warren and Washington counties. UA Plumbers & Continued On Page 15
Local Group, Including NBA Star, Has Plans Monopoly Board Game Depicting Local To Develop Community Athletic Center Businesses Helps Raise Money For Nonprofits BY LISA BALSCHUNAT Three area families from the Capital District have teamed up to develop plans for the construction of an athletic and community center on Route 146 in Halfmoon. Since 2016, Chris and Andrea Litchfield, Joyce and Grantley McLeod, and Erin and Tom Huerter, have had visions of creating a sports and community center in their neighborhood. Now, collectively, they have created an $11.7 million project proposal with hopes of it becoming a community hub. The project also includes the Heurters’ son, Kevin, forward/guard of the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks. A 2016 Shenendehowa graduate he was a standout at the University of Maryland and a first-round NBA draft pick in 2018. “This isn’t a big corporate effort,” Andrea said. “It’s three local families investing in a much needed athletic and community center. We want it to be a place all, from newborns to seniors.” It would be called Impact Athletic Center. Plans include six hardwood courts, a training room, two fitness studios, a recovery room with cryotherapy and massage chairs, a child care area and café. Impact Athletic Center is slated to be a 73,000-square-foot indoor facility, with outdoor sand courts for volleyball and strength and conditioning resistance. “I am stoked about this project,” said Huerter from his Georgia home. “I am in the process of establishing the Huerter Foundation to assist athletes with special needs.” He intends to run programs and summer camps at Impact Athletic Center, “inclusive for all in the
Kevin Huerter of the Atlanta Hawks, is part of the Impact Athletic Center development group. Courtesy Atlanta Hawks
community” not elite athletes. “I want to reach kids and athletes with special needs.” Huerter was back in his hometown of Clifton Park during the COVID-19 lockdown, lifting weights in his family basement and shooting hoops with his sister in the driveway to keep up on his training. Continued On Page 6
BY ANDREA HARWOOD PALMER The Adirondack Trust Co. Community Fund has created a Monopoly board game, specific to Saratoga Springs, is being sold to benefit nonprofits in the area. The game—based on the classic board game played by millions over decades—is currently for sale in hotels and retail locations throughout Saratoga. “This was primarily an effort on the part of our own community outreach managers, Leah Ferrone and Caroline Putnam, who work with the Community Fund; Rob Ward, who recently retired, and the board members of the Community Fund,” said Celia Vincek, digital marketing assistant at the Adirondack Trust Co. “Caroline has been down in the trenches with Leah and Rob, working on this project. Brian Straughter (Community Fund chair) has been a huge advocate for this project as well,” she said. Putnam was chair of the Community Fund at the time of project implementation. She is now the board treasurer. “It started with the Cooley Advertising Firm reaching out to the Chamber of Commerce. Kathleen Fyfe was smart enough to know it would be a heavy lift. The project was brought to Adirondack Trust, in the marketing department, and made its way to Rob Ward and Leah Ferrone, who brought it before the Community Fund,” said Putnam. Jeana Nicotera of the Cooley Group was the brainchild of this whole project, said Putnam. “I immediately thought, ‘Wow, I think this is a great idea. I have no idea what’s involved, but I
A Monopoly game, based on the classic board game, is being sold locally. think this would be so much fun, to put the town of Saratoga on a board,’” said Putnam. “We were all very excited about it. We went to the bank to get their blessing, and they gave it completely.” Nicotera has done this project before in other cities. She worked with Hasbro, the game publisher (the original Parker Brothers company was absorbed by Hasbro in 1991) to put the city Continued On Page 19