Westchester County Business Journal 072015

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JULY 20, 2015 | VOL. 51, No. 29

4 | CABARET LAW UPDATED

15 | E-CIG BAN

YOUR ONLY SOURCE FOR REGIONAL BUSINESS NEWS

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Court sinks Entergy’s challenge over river habitat BY COLLEEN WILSON cwilson@westfairinc.com

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he owner and operator of Indian Point Ener�y Center lost the most recent court battle in its ongoing tussle with New York state, this time over a 2012 expansion of a state-protected habitat on the Hudson River. The Appellate Division of the state Supreme Court in Albany this month affirmed a lower court’s decision in favor of the state and its right to extend the protected area by 9 miles. Miles 45 through 56 of the Hudson River were designated by the state in 1987 as a “significant coastal fish and wildlife habitat area.” In 2012, that area was extended by the state Department of Environmental Conservation to span from miles 40 through 60. The new 20-mile zone, which runs through Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland and » ENTERGY, page 6

A boat passes Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan. File photo by Bob Rozycki

House sales rise again Orange County leads with 30% surge; Westchester had highest sale prices BY JOHN GOLDEN jgolden@westfairinc.com

THE LOWER HUDSON VALLEY’S residential real estate market continues to show good health and “sustainability” through the first half of 2015, with housing sales in the four-county region up more than 12 percent in volume from the first half of last year, according to market analysts at the Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors. Second-quarter property sales were up nearly 15 percent from the second quarter of 2014 in Westchester, Putnam and Orange counties, where 3,669 residential deals closed from April through June, 474 more than last year.

The strong second quarter followed an active first quarter for the region’s housing market, when sales jumped 12.1 percent from last year’s first quarter. Through the first half of the year, brokers with the Hudson Gateway Multiple Listing Service reported 6,460 sales of single-family houses, condominiums, cooperatives and twoto four-family buildings. Westchester County brokers closed 2,183 sales in the second quarter, an 11.4 percent increase from the same period last year, and accounted for about 60 percent of the region’s total real estate sales for the quarter. Sales of single-family homes in Westchester were up 8.4 percent from the second quarter of

2014. The county’s strong condominium market recorded 311 second-quarter sales, a nearly 17 percent increase from the previous year. The 116 multifamily buildings sold amounted to a nearly 59 percent jump from a year ago. Westchester single-family homes again far outpaced neighboring counties in sale prices, with the second-quarter median price of $660,500 representing a 1.4 percent rise from the second quarter of 2014. By comparison, the second-quarter median price of a singlefamily home was $410,000 in Rockland County, $289,500 in Putnam County and $209,950 in Orange County. In Westchester, a single-family home fetched » HOUSE SALES, page 6


Biz VASSAR BROTHERS HIRES EXECUTIVE

INBRIEF COMPANIES AGREE TO ‘ZOMBIE PROPERTY’ RULES Buffalo-based First Niagara Bank NA and Anaheim, Calif.-based Carrington Mortgage Services LLC recently adopted a set of best practices pushed by New York state to combat the neighborhood blight and economic damage caused by vacant and abandoned “zombie properties.” Under the set of practices, banks and mortgage companies regularly inspect properties that fall into delinquency to determine if they are vacant and abandoned and make sure they are maintained. Banks and mortgage companies report vacant and abandoned properties to a state registry developed by the state Department of Financial Services. With First Niagara and Carrington Mortgage’s agreement, a total of 13 banks, credit unions and mortgage companies representing roughly 70 percent of the New York market have now agreed to adopt the practices. “Ensuring abandoned properties do not fall into disrepair not only protects neighborhoods from blight, but also shields homeowners from having to contend with the falling property values, public safety issues and increased taxpayer costs associated with having these zombie properties in their community,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement. Under current laws, property owners are responsible for their property’s upkeep, and banks and mortgage companies are not required to maintain abandoned properties until they receive a judgment of foreclosure.

WESTMED ADDS OB-GYN PRACTICE Putnam Gynecolo�y & Obstetrics of Greenwich, with Connecticut offices at 55 Holly Hill Lane in Greenwich and at 106 Noroton Ave. in Darien, is joining Purchasebased Westmed Medical Group. The medical practice reported it serves thousands of patients in Fairfield County and lower Westchester County. The six board-certified physicians on the staff will remain. They are Michael Schechter, Elizabeth Molinelli, Dzwinka Carroll, Y. Elizabeth Hung, Catherine Berzolla and Linda Reid. In addition to retaining its physicians, the OB-GYN group will retain its staff. Additional diagnostic services will be introduced over time and will be offered onsite, Westmed said in a statement. Westmed is staffed by 287 physicians at its nine locations in central and lower Westchester County and now in Fairfield County.

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Michael Doyle, a psychiatrist and U.S. Military Academy graduate, has joined Vassar Brothers Medical Center in Poughkeepsie this month as vice president of medical affairs. A Cornwall-on-Hudson resident, Doyle previously served as associDr. Michael Doyle ate chief medical officer and case management medical director at St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital. He came to St. Luke’s after serving as chief medical officer for Keller Army Community Hospital at West Point. “With a $466 million new Vassar Brothers planned, it couldn’t be a more exciting time to join the team,” Doyle said in the Vassar Brothers announcement. Doyle holds a medical degree from the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., and a Master of Business Administration degree from Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Wash. He completed his medical residency at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., and is board certified in psychiatry.

WHEELABRATOR TECHNOLOGIES NAMES NEW CEO Wheelabrator Technologies Inc., which operates waste-to-ener�y conversion plants in Peekskill and Bridgeport, recently announced that Robert C. Boucher Jr. became as the company’s new president and CEO on July 13. He succeeds Mark A. Weidman, a 25-year Wheelabrator employee, at the helm of the international renewRobert C. Boucher Jr. able ener�y company headquartered in Hampton, N.H. Boucher previously was CEO and executive director of Transpacific Industries Group Ltd., a publicly traded waste management business in Australia. He has more than 20 years of experience in the U.S. waste management industry.

In Peekskill, Wheelabrator Westchester LP operates a plant on John Walsh Boulevard, where it supplies steam ener�y to an industrial neighbor, the White Plains Linen commercial laundry plant. In Connecticut, the 27-year-old Wheelabrator Bridgeport LP plant supplies ener�y generated from garbage to two dozen municipalities in Fairfield, Litchfield and New Haven counties. Wheelabrator Technologies in December was acquired by Ener�y Capital Partners, a private equity firm focused on ener�y infrastructure with an office in Short Hills, N.J., in a $1.94 billion deal.

CHASE TO PAY $6M TO NY CUSTOMERS As part of a $136 million state-federal settlement over credit card debt collection practices, Chase Bank USA NA and Chase BankCard Services Inc. will pay roughly $6 million in restitution to 5,300 New York customers and the bank will be required to reform its collection practices. In an announcement of the settlement, New York state Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman said investigators in a multistate and federal probe found Chase engaged in unlawful debt collection practices, including inaccurate credit reporting, calculation errors and subjecting consumers to collections for accounts that were not theirs. As part of the settlement, Chase also agreed to cease collection efforts for more than 528,000 customers nationwide that it sued for credit card debts between 2009 and 2014, including an estimated 5,300 in New York. An additional $11.3 million will be paid to New York state. In a press release, Schneiderman said the settlement also requires Chase to prevent future credit card debt resales by debt buyers. The investigation involved attorneys general in 47 states and the District of Columbia, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. — Evan Fallor, John Golden and Bill Fallon

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White Plains approves changes to cabaret law Cover charges allowed for some nightclubs BY COLLEEN WILSON cwilson@westfairinc.com

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Coliseum, on South Broadway in White Plains, operates under a cabaret license. File photo

fter a year of debate over rules for cabarets, the White Plains Common Council has updated the city code to allow certain nightlife establishments to charge cover fees. The changes to the city code will allow certain proprietors with a cabaret license to charge patrons entrance fees for events, but some businesses will have to get approved for a live entertainment permit with the Department of Public Safety. The changes to the code also allow cabaret performances to start at noon and last until 3 a.m., and increased the annual fee for a cabaret license from $100 up ‘to $500.

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Previously, there was no language in the city code regulating whether cabaret operators could charge cover fees, but starting around 2012 each cabaret license had built-in language that operators could not charge at the door, according to Damon A. Amadio, city building commissioner. A cabaret is defined in the new code as any area where “musical entertainment, singing, dancing or other form of amusement by performers and/or by patrons” is allowed. This type of entertainment is only allowed in restaurants where food service is available during the operation of the cabaret. Businesses that play music through the radio or most electronic devices are not considered cabarets and therefore cannot charge cover fees. In May, the council passed a zoning ordinance to differentiate small and large cabaret forms of entertainment. The new zoning rule delineated an “accessory cabaret” as a restaurant where the entertainment does not occupy more than 40 percent of the aggregate floor space, not including the bathrooms. A “primary cabaret” is where the entertainment occupies more than 40 percent of the aggregate floor space. The latter is not allowed to be within 300 feet of a dwelling unit. If accessory cabarets are interested in having live music events, the operators are required to apply for the live entertainment permit in order to charge patrons an entrance fee. These applications must be submitted to the Department of Public Safety at least 10 days in advance of the intended date of the event. Accessory cabarets may not charge cover fees if they are having DJ entertainment. Primary cabarets, however, may charge covers for any type of entertainment they are providing, including DJs, and are not required to apply for a permit to host live music. But depending on the event, Amadio said, the Department of Public Safety may inquire for more information about the event. Amadio said most, if not all, of the cabaret licenses issued and renewed in the past have been for establishments aligned with the accessory cabaret definition. Any violations of the cabaret law could result in a fine of up to $2,500 for each offense or imprisonment up to 15 days. The changes come just over a year after the Common Council passed a moratorium on issuing new cabaret licenses as the city considered potential changes to the cabaret law. In February, the city tossed around the Cabaret law, page 8

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White Plains park caps Renaissance Square development BY COLLEEN WILSON

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cwilson@westfairinc.com

park in downtown White Plains was dedicated July 9, marking the opening of the site to the public and representing the finishing touch on a more than $1 billion development project. Louis R. Cappelli was joined by Mayor Thomas M. Roach, the Rev. Richard A. Kunz of the park’s neighbor Grace Church, members of the Common Council and about 50 onlookers to celebrate the completion of what Cappelli called “the last piece of the puzzle” for his company’s Renaissance Square development. The yet-to-be-named park on Main Street is nestled between the 900,000-sqaure-foot mixed-use development and the quaint Episcopal church that was built in 1865. The 10,000-squarefoot property, the former site of the sales office for The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester hotel, features a small, lighted waterfall at the center and is surrounded by greenery and seating. “It’s the connecting piece between us, the new, and the church, the historic,” Cappelli WCBJ said. Attorney

The park’s completion, however, was met with challenges. Cappelli said his firm, White Plainsbased Cappelli Organization, signed on to create the park in 2009 — a year that left Cappelli reeling from lawsuits, health problems and debt. The other hurdle he acknowledged was developing the park as a publicprivate venture; it is open to the public but maintained by The Ritz-Carlton, Westchester. “Working with the city to try to partner to do a job like this is almost impossible, but it wasn’t,” Cappelli said. “Old administration, new administration, everybody helped us to create what’s here.” Roach said the park “sends a message about this city about how active and vital our downtown is, and I think that’s worthwhile.” “Having built City Center and The Ritz, which is what I set out to do in 2003 starting with City Center, this is the, like I said, the last piece of the puzzle,” Cappelli said. “It feels good that my job is done.” 10” wide x 5-58” tall

The new park on Main Street in White Plains.

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House sales — From page 1

a mean or average sale price of $866,707 in the second quarter, an increase of less than 1 percent from the same quarter last year. Analysts at the Hudson Gateway Association said the county’s median and mean prices together “suggests that the Westchester market was in balance as to a smooth distribution across the pricing spectrum.” The region’s second-quarter sales surge was led by the Orange County market, where the 742 housing units sold in the three-month span marked a more than 30 percent increase in sales volume from 2014. HGAR analysts noted the Orange County market for several years has been driven by “an abundance of moderately priced properties.” The county’s second-quarter median sale price for a single-family house was down nearly 10 percent from a year earlier, while the mean sale price of a house fell more than 8 percent. HGAR analysts noted that housing inventory in Orange County has stayed roughly proportional to the rate of sales, “indicating a balanced market with ample choices for prospective purchasers.” At Houlihan Lawrence, a leading brokerage in the lower Hudson Valley’s luxury homes market, brokers have seen a 21 percent jump in Westchester’s inventory of homes priced at more than $2 million. Pending sales in the luxury market have declined 8 percent, Houlihan Lawrence reported in its recent second-quarter report.

Brothers Stephen Meyers, president and CEO of Houlihan Lawrence in Rye Brook, and Chris Meyers, the company’s managing principal, in their second-quarter executive summary said demand from buyers is especially weak in the $4 million-plus segment of the market. “There is plenty of competition, and buyers have a wide selection to choose from,” they wrote. “It may be time for sellers to re-think the value proposition offered by their property.” At the other end of the Westchester market, demand is surging for starter homes, with many communities seeing double-digit increases in sales levels for homes priced below $500,000, according to Houlihan Lawrence. And homes sold at prices closer to their asking price in the second quarter than they did a year ago in Westchester, Putnam and Dutchess counties, according to the Meyers brothers. They noted the market could see higher mortgage rates, which in recent years have stayed at historic lows, as soon as September. A rise in rates “gives an edge to well-positioned homes that are marketed correctly,” they wrote. “They will find the right buyers, who are motivated to lock in sooner rather than later, and beat the clock on rate hikes.” The principals at Houlihan Lawrence see new prospects for Westchester’s real estate market in the millennial generation of 18- to 34-year-olds. “New people are looking to put down roots and finally have the resources to be serious buyers,” they said. Source: Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors

Entergy — From page 1

Westchester counties, is called the Hudson Highlands. Enter� y Nuclear Wholesale Commodities, the operator of Indian Point and a business segment of Enter�y Corp., took legal action in October 2012 against the DEC and the state Department of State, hoping to annul the expansion of the environmental protection area on the Hudson because mile 42 runs adjacent to the nuclear power plant in Buchanan. The owner of Indian Point, which uses about 2.5 billion gallons of water a day from the river to cool its reactors, argued that the scientific basis supporting the DEC’s decision to amend the mileage was flawed. The appeals court agreed with the

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lower court that the DEC and Department of State had “a rational, scientific basis for their conclusions so as to support the July 2012 modification,” according to the decision, written by Justice Christine M. Clark and entered on July 9. In a footnote, Clark, quoting a past state decision, wrote that “the issue here is not one of substantial evidence but, rather, whether the (agency’s) determination has a rational basis.” Enter�y had to prove that basis for a new regulation was irrational or unreasonable, according to state law. Pleased with the outcome was the office of state Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman. “The Hudson River and its ecosystems are among New York’s precious natural resources. This decision will help put protections in place that will ensure the health and vitality of the river and its wildlife for generations to come,” according to a statement from Matt Mittenthal, a spokesman

for Schneiderman. Jerry Nappi, a spokesman for Enter�y, wrote in an email that the company is “considering the decision and our potential options.” Enter�y has 30 days from the date of the decision to decide whether to appeal to the Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court. Indian Point is involved in other litigation as it awaits a decision from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on whether to renew the licenses for the plant’s two reactors. Enter�y applied to be relicensed with the federal agency in 2007, but the process has been held up for years as the company litigates a variety of issues with the state. The license for the facility’s Unit 2 reactor expired in September 2013 and Unit 3’s license will expire at the end of this year. Because Enter�y applied for license renewals more than five years in advance, it was granted extended licenses until the legal

issues have been resolved. In another case in December, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Indian Point and said the facility is exempt from the state’s Coastal Management Plan, which also helps protect the river’s habitats. The Department of State is appealing the ruling with its first brief due Sept. 17. A separate problem Enter�y is facing with the DEC has to do with acquiring a Water Quality Certificate from the state, which is necessary as part of the license renewal process with the NRC. The crux of the issue is determining the best option to keep fish and larvae out of the river water Indian Point uses to cool its reactors. Hearings on the alternatives being considered – which include forcing summer outages during fish spawning season, installing expensive cooling towers or using wedge-wire screens to keep fish out – are scheduled from Sept. 14 to Oct. 2.


ASK ANDI

BY ANDI GRAY

How to balance benefits and profits We’re not sure what to do about health care. We’re worried about getting hit with increases in premiums this year, which could eat into our profits. How do we sort it out? THOUGHTS OF THE DAY: Figure out what your company can and can’t afford to pay. Health care has been in constant change for the last several years for every company — it’s time to discuss that reality with your employees. Considering encouraging employees to turn to your state’s exchange for insurance? Be sure you have someone lined up who can help explain all the policy options. Make sure you can explain what you’re doing and why. Look at your ratios. Set a target range for all salaries and benefits calculated as compared to revenue and to gross profit. As you consider adding or adjusting benefits, and paying out bonuses, make sure that your changes don’t blow the target ratio. Ideally, any growth in benefits and bonus payouts comes from growth of the company. Forecast increases in revenue and gross profit, and figure out if you’ll need any additional personnel. Deduct that increased personnel plus any material costs from the increase in forecasted revenue and gross profit. What’s left over is the amount of income you can use to build up profits, pay additional benefits and bonuses, invest in savings and infrastructure and use to pay taxes on profits. Not sure whether your salaries and benefits are in line with your industry? Turn to your industry association for advice and benchmarks. Some industries have stats posted online, so check that as well. You can also contact peers in your industry across the country and ask them what they’re spending. Keep in mind that both coasts tend to have a higher cost of living. Many companies struggle as they take on additional health care costs, benefits and pay increases without sufficient revenue growth. If that’s a problem your company is facing, be honest about what’s going on before potentially sending the company into a financial black hole. Raises and additional benefits should happen as a result of increased profits. Over the past several years, companies have had to absorb a number of mandates regarding how employees are paid and what benefits they receive. The cost of these mandates is equivalent to annual cost-of-living pay raises and then some. Many companies have taken on substantial increases in cost of pay without seeing significant growth in revenue or improve-

ment in profitability through increased productivity. Show your employees how much the company pays on their behalf, above and beyond salary. Start with federal insurance and unemployment contributions; don’t forget to add in the costs of medical, dental and life insurance, child care, time off from work, and any other benefit programs your company provides. Have a rationale and set limits on how benefits are distributed and paid for. The simplest way to handle health care is to pay for theDevine company’s individual premium or a TWB percentage of that. Employees who want to WCBJ elect more coverage 7.375” w x 7.125” h for their family can do 1/8/15 so and use a portion of their paycheck to cover the cost. Be careful when considering higher

ly more productive. Those who can afford to see a doctor regularly are more likely to be healthy and productive. Employees who can afford to stay home when they’re sick recover more quickly. Employees who know their children are safe are less distracted. The list goes on. Looking for a good book? Try “The Employee Benefits Answer Book” by Rebecca Mazin.

benefit costs for managers. Keep in mind that managers tend to be more expensive in salary. Loading additional costs onto an already expensive manager may make that person so costly that they can’t prove they can deliver enough profits to allow the company to break even. When getting ready to give out raises, calculate the raise as a percentage of the existing salary. One company decided to give employees an hourly raise, without realizing it was a 10 percent to 15 percent increase in pay across the board. They would have been better off giving this money as a bonus and making it clear to employees that it was only going to continue if profits stayed up. There are some great reasons for providing employees with benefits. Employees who take time off regularly tend to be significant-

Andi Gray is president of Strategy Leaders Inc., strategyleaders.com, a business-consulting firm that specializes in helping entrepreneurial firms grow. She can be reached by phone at 877-238-3535. Do you have a question for Andi? Send it via email to AskAndi@strategyleaders. Visit AskAndi.com for an entire library of Ask Andi articles.

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Cabaret law — including White Plains Honda, for unlawfully hiding identity theft prevention services, credit repair and other costs in the sale or lease of cars.

INBRIEF DEALERSHIP TO PAY STATE $32K OVER AD PRACTICES

KPMG TO ACQUIRE HR PRACTICE International audit, tax and advisory firm KPMG has entered into an agreement with Towers Watson, a talent and human capital professional services company, to acquire the Towers Watson Human Resources Service Delivery practice. The deal marks KPMG’s sixth venture into HR via acquisition in the last four years. Financial terms were not disclosed. Towers Watson, which has offices in Stamford and in White Plains, has 16,000 employees globally; KPMG has 162,000, with 9,000 of them partners. KPMG said it will be acquire Towers Watson’s HRSD practice resources in the U.S., U.K., China, Hong Kong, Canada, Singapore and the Philippines. The acquisition marks KPMG’s sixth transaction in what it terms “the HR transformation space” in the past four years. In addition to Towers Watson’s HRSD practice, the firm has acquired EquaTerra, Optimum Solutions, The Hackett Group’s Oracle Enterprise Resource Planning practice, Zanett Consulting Solutions and the Workday practice of Axia Consulting. The transaction was signed July 9 and is expected to close in the coming weeks. — Colleen Wilson and Bill Fallon

The office of the New York state attorney general recently reached a settlement with Hyundai of White Plains LLC over what the attorney general said were deceptive advertising practices. The company, on Westchester Avenue, will pay $32,500 in penalties and reform the way it advertises, according to a statement released by Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman’s office. Many of the online and print ads from Hyundai of White Plains showed its vehicles priced with discounts or rebates only available for certain potential customers, such as military rebates or loyalty rebates for customers who bought a vehicle within the last six months, the attorney general’s office said. Other problems with the advertising included the use of footnotes or asterisks that modified the “principal message of an ad” and failing to mention promotions that were available for a limited time. The settlement is part of a larger crackdown on deceptive practices at auto dealerships in the state. Last month, Schneiderman’s office announced a $13.5 million settlement with three dealerships,

From page 4

idea of barring entrance fees and forcing cabarets to close at 1 a.m. Business owners criticized those rules, according to previous reports by the Business Journal, saying the fees are essential in order to cover the cost of entertainment and that early closure times could deter young professionals from moving to White Plains. Not everyone was pleased with the final outcome. At a special meeting convened by the Common Council on June 29, Councilwoman Beth Smayda voiced concerns about crowding outside of cabaret establishments. “Another protection to having unruly crowds would be to not allow queuing outside on the streets, which could cause a lot of language or noise for neighbors,” she said. In response to her comment at the meeting, Amadio said “queuing is inevitable” if restaurants are allowed to charge at the door. Mayor Thomas M. Roach said the response to the issue of possible disorderly conduct from people lining up outside is to deny those establishments a permit or cabaret license going forward. “If you have someone who is continually having a line in the street that’s disorderly and is a problem, then they’re not getting another cabaret license because we’re going to have a history of problems that are associated with it,” he said. At the Common Council meeting held July 6 to vote on the amendments, Smayda was the only member of the seven-person council who voted against the ordinance. Councilwoman Nadine Hunt-Robinson said she had some initial concerns about the revisions but that the entertainment permit provides safeguards in a way that “balances out the interests of the businesses that want to have the cabaret” and “balances out with respect to safety and those who live in the surrounding areas.”

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THELIST: LEADING CFOs

WESTCHESTER COUNTY Leading CFOs

Ranked by year of CFO appointment. Name Address Area code: 914, unless otherwise noted Website

CFO Title Year appointed • Salary • Age

Universal American Financial Corp.

Ronald Holbert Senior vice president and CFO 1990 • $1,540,163 • NA

ENT and Allergy Associates LLP

Arthur Schwacke CFO 1998 • NA • NA

C.W. Brown Inc.

Peter Belmont CFO 2002 • NA • NA

4

Open Door Family Center

Maria Mazzotta CFO 2003 • NA • NA

5

Consolidated Edison Inc.

Robert Hoglund Senior vice president and CFO 2004 • $3,194,860 • 53

6

MBIA Inc.

C. Edward Chaplin President, CFO and chief administrative officer 2006 • $2,771,500 • 58

MasterCard International

Martina Hund-Mejean CFO 2007 • $4,717,152 • 55

Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings Inc.

Spencer Schwartz Executive vice president and CFO 2010 • $2,880,804 • 48

Heineken USA

Gabriele Giudici CFO 2010 • NA • NA

Morgan Stanley

Ruth Porat CFO and executive vice president 2010 • $14,782,844 • 58

13

PepsiCo Inc.

Hugh E. Johnston CFO and executive vice president 2010 • $7,201,527 • 53

14

1

44 S. Broadway, Suite 1200, White Plains 10601 934-5200 • uacf.com

2

560 White Plains Road, Tarrytown 10591 333-5800 • entallergy.com

3

1 Labriola Court, Armonk 10580 741-1212 • cwbrown.net

165 Main St., Ossining 10562 941-1263 • opendoormedical.org

511 Theodore Fremd Ave., Rye 10580 752-6633 • coned.com

113 King St., Armonk 10504 273-4545 • mbia.com

7

2000 Purchase St., Purchase 10577 249-2000 • mastercard.com

8

2000 Westchester Ave., Purchase 10577 701-8000 • atlasair.com

360 Hamilton Ave., White Plains 10601 681-4100 • heinekenusa.com

2000 Westchester Ave., Purchase 10577 255-5510 • morganstanley.com

700 Anderson Hill Road, Purchase 10577 253-3055 • pepsico.com

Name Address Area code: 203, unless otherwise noted Website

CFO Title Year appointed • Salary • Age

Prestige Brands

Ron Lombardi CFO 2010 • $1,846,877 • 51

GAMCO Investors Inc.

Robert S. Zuccaro * Executive vice president and CFO 2011 • $1,150,820 • 58

ITT Corp.

Tom Scalera CFO 2011 • $1,684,914 • 43

Progenics Pharmaceuticals Inc.

Angelo Lovallo Jr. Vice president, finance and treasurer 2013 • 581,847 • 50

660 White Plains Road, Suite 250, Tarrytown 10591 524-6800 • cenveo.com

9

1 Corporate Center, Rye 10580 921-5100 • gabelli.com

1133 Westchester Ave., White Plains 10604 641-2000 • itt.com

10

777 Old Saw Mill River Road, Tarrytown 10591 789-2800 • progenics.com

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc.

777 Old Saw Mill River Road, Tarrytown 10591 847-7000 • regeneron.com

11

International Business Machines Corp.

Martin Schroeter Senior vice president and CFO 2014 • $5,112,899 • 51

Jarden Corp.

Alan W. LeFevre Executive vice president - finance and CFO 2014 • $896,454 • 55

Mack-Cali Realty Corp.

Anthony Krug CFO 2014 • $775,003 • 57

The Westchester Bank

Kenneth D. Walter Senior vice president and CFO 2014 • NA • NA

Avon Products Inc.

James S. Scully Executive vice president and CFO 2015 • NA • 50

S.L. Green Realty Corp.

Matthew DiLiberto CFO 2015 • $1,632,800 • NA

1 New Orchard Road, Armonk 10504 499-1900 • ibm.com

555 Theodore Fremd Ave., Rye 10580 967-9400 • jarden.com

12

Cross Westchester Executive Park 100 Clearbrook Road, Elmsford 10523 592-4800 • mack-cali.com

2001 Central Park Ave., Yonkers 10701 337-1900 • thewestchesterbank.com

601 Midland Ave., Rye 10580 935-2000 • avon.com

360 Hamilton Ave., White Plains 10601 750-7200 • slgreen.com

This is a listing of chief financial officers from a selection of companies located in the region. If you wish your CFO to be included in our next list, please email Danielle Renda at drenda@westfairinc.com. * Zuccaro resigned as chief financial officer as of July 15, 2015. Zuccaro will remain as a consultant until the end of the year to help choose his successor. Source: Note: NA

10

Information obtained from proxy statements and company websites. Addresses above contain regional locations, not necessarily company headquarters. Not available.

JULY 20, 2015

WCBJ | HV Biz

Robert E. Landry Senior vice president, finance and CFO 2013 • $7,322,956 • 51


BY LAURENCE P. GOTTLIEB

The state of the Hudson Valley economy

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s we invest in the Hudson Valley’s future, it’s critical we have an honest discussion about the evolving importance of science, technolo�y, engineering, the arts and math — known collectively as STEaM — in workforce training and the potential these areas have to influence economic growth in our region. In recent years, business leaders and public officials have stressed the development of STEaM skills, but often there is no comprehensive plan on how and when to introduce STEaM-based learning into the workforce. The truth is STEaM skills empower Hudson Valley residents by providing a straighter path to potentially higher earning levels within our regional business community. Recently, at the Hudson Valley Economic Development Corp.’s second annual State of the Hudson Valley Economy: Full STEaM Ahead! presentation, HVEDC was privileged to have global labor expert Paul Harrington, director of Drexel University’s Center for Labor Markets and Policy, elaborate on the importance of STEaM development by delivering this point to more than 200 business and community leaders at the conference at SUNY New Paltz. Harrington shared a lifetime’s worth of data on the economic attainment opportunities available to those in STEaM careers, while helping us understand the regional leadership’s part in developing a STEaM-educated workforce throughout the Hudson Valley. There is no denying the income potential for workers in STEaM-related careers remains high. Average salaries in the Hudson Valley for employees in the computer science, mathematics, architecture and engineering fields are all greater than $80,000 annually. For regional physical science and life science careers, salaries increase to more than $90,000. Despite these possibilities, sadly, only 5 to 7 percent of Hudson Valley workers have jobs in these sectors; therefore, to compete with other states for business attraction and retention, we must dramatically increase the area’s pool of STEaM-trained workers. For the second year in a row, in close consultation with global real estate management firm JLL, HVEDC has released its Business Climate Survey, which gives us greater insight as to the economic perceptions of key business entrepreneurs and nonprofit executives throughout the region. The optimism of survey participants fell slightly this year in regard to their perception of the Hudson Valley economy. Downward trends persisted through questions related to overall business climate, hiring expectations and projected revenue. These survey findings make HVEDC’s continuing efforts toward driving change and development even more important.

Opportunities for employment in STEaM fields are available to the Hudson Valley’s multigenerational workforce, although deeper analytical research into the local communities found baby boomers are the leading economic influencers. Although much attention is paid nationally to the up-and-coming millennial generation, in the Hudson Valley region, baby boomers have the highest percentage of aggregate household income, at 47 percent. This outweighs the aggregate household incomes of both Generation Xers (33 percent) and millennials (5 percent). We need to rebalance limited regional resources, to in turn encourage the development of millennial job and startup opportunities, without sacrificing the significant contributions baby boomers make as solo entrepreneurs as well as those among the ranks of C-suite management. Equally, when it comes to increasing involvement in STEaM careers, we are looking at the current workforce as only one part of the equation. Driving interest in STEaM skills among even younger generations — as early as elementary school — is a critical part of ensuring the continued growth of the Hudson Valley economy for years to come. Bluntly, we need a better birth-to-death model to train, employ and keep residents actively engaged in the Hudson Valley economy at every stage of life. Looking ahead, it will be important to cultivate the younger generations’ abilities in STEaM skills and to mesh these subjects with other areas of academia. There is a widespread economic shift toward the increased need for specialized services, and we want to make sure our workforce is properly prepared. Survey respondents felt that the Hudson Valley offered children a better than average opportunity of securing a good primary and secondary education. Through these existing educational channels, we can provide a comprehensive approach to learning that enables students to pursue high-level careers. Teaching STEaM skills to future workers is a direct investment in our region’s economy. Even the simplest of jobs will soon require STEaM skills. A STEaM-skilled workforce can make the Hudson Valley a hub for technological and science-based companies. As a result, these companies will create more highpaying, local jobs for our STEaM-skilled workforce. In time, we’ll see our dedication to educating our community come full circle, as we move full STEaM ahead into a brighter future.

HAPPY hour HOUR half PRICE price happy HALF

ALL SUMMER LONG HALF PRICE cocktails, wine and appetizers MONDAY - FRIDAY 4PM –7PM Restaurant & Beer Garden In the Portchester Train Station • Across From Capitol Theatre

Laurence P. Gottlieb is president and CEO of Hudson Valley Economic Development Corp. in New Windsor. He can be reached at lgottlieb@ hvedc.com. WCBJ | HV Biz

JULY 20, 2015

11


ACCESS. ADVOCACY.

Westchester County Association

ACTION.

“Engineering also encompasses cancer research, immunology, ‘synthetic biology’ and neuroprosthetics. An engineering program in Westchester will help propel The Innovation Economy.”

HOT SECTOR UPDATE:

How Bringing an Engineering School to Westchester Will Bolster The Innovation Economy exploding, the need for a new generation of engineers has never been greater, says Marissa Brett, WCA president.

If the companies founded by MIT graduates formed an independent nation, their revenues would propel that nation to the 17th-largest economy in the world, according to a Kauffman Foundation study. But MIT alumni, drawn from all over the world, remain heavily in Massachusetts, where they provide significant economic benefit to their local and regional economies. Could bringing an engineering school to Westchester have similar positive results? “Unquestionably, yes!” says Bob Roth, a professional engineer and principal at JMC Site Consultants in Armonk. “An engineering school would provide a source of employees for businesses who are here or want to come here. The trouble is Westchester has talented high school students in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) who leave and never come back.” The MIT study isn’t surprising, notes Roth, who says companies recruiting Bob Roth JMC Site Consultants

12

JULY 20, 2015

WCBJ | HV Biz

top engineering grads from distant schools find it is prohibitively expensive. “Students go to Boston, like what they see and stay. An engineering school here will help Westchester stay competitive.” Making Westchester more competitive with technology clusters located elsewhere in the nation is exactly why the WCA recently announced the launch of a feasibility study and the formation of a committee (on which Roth serves) to determine the viability of attracting an engineering school to the County. With Westchester’s biotech and healthcare sectors

“Engineering is about infrastructure, buildings, and roads, but it also encompasses cancer research, immunology, ‘synthetic biology’ and neuroprosthetics. Technology is not all about building Internet applications, but also about bioengineering. Engineering and the life sciences are converging, and we must excel in research and invention in order to stay competitive,” Brett explains.


WCA WELCOMES NEW YORK-PRESBYTERIAN HEALTHCARE SYSTEM!

Michael Kaplowitz and Gary Friedman, Westchester County Board of Legislators

The sea change in Westchester’s healthcare landscape over the past year has spurred notable partnerships between NewYorkPresbyterian Healthcare System and two community hospitals here: Bronxville’s Lawrence Hospital, and Hudson Valley Hospital in Cortlandt Manor. To celebrate NewYorkPresbyterian’s investment in Westchester, the Westchester County Association hosted a special reception on June 18th at the Westchester Country Club, attended by over 150 people, key political leaders, and healthcare and business executives.

COMING UP Young Professionals Happy Hour Tuesday, August 18, 5:30–7:30 pm Lola’s Mexican Kitchen White Plains Series Sponsors: Citrin Cooperman & Co., Journal News Media Group, Manhattanville College, NYU-Stern School of Business, and Hudson United Mortgage

Shaun Smith, NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare System; Cheray T. Burnett, St. John’s Riverside Hospital

Quarterly Networking Reception Wednesday. September 16 5:30–7:30 pm Location: TBD Series Sponsor: People’s United Bank

2nd Annual Women in Tech Awards Luncheon Thursday, October 1, 11 am–2 pm Tappan Hill Mansion, Tarrytown

Robert Kelly, MD, Laura Forese, MD, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital

Sedrick O’Connor, NewYork-Presbyterian/Hudson Valley Hospital; Paula Mandell, M&T Bank; William Mooney, Jr., WCA; Paul White, New York Life Insurance

“We’re changing the way healthcare is delivered. Our new relationships offer opportunities to bring access to our world-class services in New York to local communities.” — Laura Forese, MD, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital

H. Guy Leibler, Simone Healthcare Development; Arthur Hedge, Jr., MD, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital; Carl Austin, Austin Companies

Mary Beth Walsh, Burke Rehabilitiation Center; Amy Allen, WCA

Top 3 Takeaways:

Event Sponsors: Chase, Citrin Cooperman & Co., Con Edison, Harrison Edwards PR & Marketing, Hospitality Resource Group, KeyBank, Skyline Genesis Event Marketing, Sterling National Bank Event Supporters: Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Recruit Westchester 4th Annual Collaborative Job & Internship Fair Friday, October 9, 10 am–1 pm Hilton Westchester, Rye Brook Employers: Sign up now for the early bird pricing, available until Aug. 15. Visit recruitwestchester.org for registration and more details. Title Sponsor: Journal News Media Group

Customer Satisfaction and Service Excellence

Event Sponsors: One-Stop Employment Center of Westchester and Putnam and RPW Group

A lot has changed since Marshall Field introduced the “customer is always right” approach to customer service. We may be living in a social-media driven marketplace, but students in the WCA’s Hudson Valley Workforce Academy course, Customer Satisfaction and Service Excellence, learned that personal interactions are still critical to the success of any business. Here are the top three takeaways from the class, which wrapped up in June:

SAVE THE DATES

1. FOLLOW THE PLATINUM RULE: Remember The Golden Rule? In customer service, the Platinum Rule—treating others the way they want to be treated—works better. Service is not about what you want to give; it’s about what others want to receive. 2. ANTICIPATE PROBLEMS: Providing a good customer experience means being in “service netting,” vs. “service recovery” mode. Service netting means to proactively fix problems before they happen. In recovery mode, businesses are reactive—responding to an issue in order to regain the trust and loyalty of their customers. 3. IT ALL COMES DOWN TO EMPATHY: All businesses need to tune into their customers, and understand that empathy is not the same as sympathy. It’s about understanding what other people want; it’s about putting yourselves in your customer’s shoes; and it’s about picking up on signals customers are sending in order to provide the best experience possible.

Annual Fall Leadership Dinner Thursday, November 19 5:30–9:30 pm Westchester Marriott, Tarrytown Annual Holiday Party Tuesday, December 1, 5:30–8 pm Westchester Country Club For more information or to register for events:

westchester.org To become a sponsor, email jemrick@westchester.org

The WCA launched the Hudson Valley Workforce Academy to address the workforce skills gap and help fill jobs in Westchester and the region. For details, contact Amy Allen at aallen@westchester.org.

WCBJ | HV Biz

JULY 20, 2015

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CHALLENGING CAREERS

BY CATHERINE PORTMAN-LAUX

Home health aide recounts trials and triumphs

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person couldn’t ask for a more rewarding career than being paid to do good, Cold Spring’s Peg Lijoi has concluded after serving as an independent home health care aide. Lijoi is hired by clients or their families to pick up the household slack. A typical day might find her running errands, taking a patient out to dine or cooking a favorite meal. But, then, there’s no such thing as a typical day, says Lijoi, who has worked primarily with Alzheimer’s patients. She tells of the scholarly retired professor with whom she had many interesting conversations. “But, I had to hear many stories a few times over, because he would forget that he told them to me,” she says. “He loved going to book stores, but I had to keep track of previously purchased books because he would buy the same ones over and over again. “He loved to eat out. After we left a restaurant, he would say, ‘Let’s go get something to eat now.’ I’d remind him that we had just finished eating. I then began to make it a habit, before we left the table, to ask him, ‘Does your stomach feel full?’ I hoped that

his full stomach would remind him that he did not have to eat.” To jog his memory of events, Lijoi made a scrapbook of places they went together. “I added movie ticket stubs, restaurant takeout menus, brochures when we visited Boscobel or Stonecrop or other local places,” she says. Lijoi poignantly remembers successfully aiding cupid. “I worked with this dear gentleman whose wife was in a nursing home,” she says. “I took him to see her twice weekly. He loved his wife with his entire being. I fought back tears watching how he would console her as she carried on and begged to go home. He would promise her that she was coming home, but she was bedridden and the chances of her coming out of that miserable place were not looking good. “At her request I made sure to cook him the same meals that she used to prepare. I wanted to see her home once more, even if it was for a short time. So, I set in motion a search for a full-time aide to live there. The family resisted, because having mom back home would eat up money of dad’s

that would otherwise be left to them. It was a battle, but we got her home. They were a couple again in their own home, truly together until death do part, as in their wedding vows. “Then there was a client who refused to get dressed and could not be torn from wearing a mink coat over her naked body. I donned another mink coat and drew her to a mirror, where we laughed at how ridiculous the two of us looked. That solved the problem.” Raised in Central Islip with a twin brother and six other siblings, Lijoi learned compassion and patience from her mother, a geriatric nurse. Marriage brought her to Cold Spring, where she became known as the person to go to with troubles. Her most recent independent philanthropies involved saving small farms that would otherwise close down. In June, she raised $2,000 in five hours in an event to help a Poughquag farmer whose greenhouses were demolished in a hurricane. Lijoi has a 28-year-old daughter, Dara, a wine distributor in part named for Lijoi’s mother, Sarah, and a 24-year-old son, Tolon,

Peg Lijoi, of Cold Spring, prepares to take a client on an outing. Photo by Lynn Segarra

an asbestos-removal inspector whose name derives from a Mark Brown children’s book teaching the arts of kindness and consideration. Challenging Careers focuses on the exciting and unusual business lives of Hudson Valley residents. Comments or suggestions may be emailed to Catherine Portman-Laux at cplaux@optonline.net.

GET BREAKING BUSINESS NEWS DAILY – PLUS ALL OUR BEST STORIES FROM PRINT.

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colleges& universities AN ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE FAIRFIELD COUNTY BUSINESS JOURNAL | HV BIZ | WESTCHESTER COUNTY BUSINESS JOURNAL | JULY 20, 2015


Colleges&Universities ALBERTUS MAGNUS COLLEGE

CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY

THE CULINARY INSTITUTE OF AMERICA

700 Prospect St., New Haven, Conn. 06511 PHONE: 203-773-8550 WEBSITE: albertus.edu EMAIL: admissions@albertus.edu PRESIDENT: Julia M. McNamara YEAR FOUNDED: 1925 ENROLLMENT: approximately 550 full time, 1,700 continuing education and graduates FACULTY: 75 full time and part time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 13:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: post-graduate certificates include addiction counseling and advanced alternative preparation for literacy specialist ANNUAL TUITION: $29,160 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $1,215 part-time student cost

1615 Stanley St., New Britain, Conn. 06050 PHONE: 860-832-2228 WEBSITE: ccsu.edu EMAIL: matterazzo@ccsu.edu PLEASE SEE OUR AD ON PRESIDENT: Jack Miller PAGE 10 YEAR FOUNDED: 1849 ENROLLMENT: 11,155 FACULTY: 482 part time, 434 full time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $19,212 in state, $30,717 out of state AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $417 in state, $426 out of state, both for part-time students

Hyde Park Campus 1946 Campus Drive, Hyde Park, N.Y. 12538 PHONE: 845-452-9600 WEBSITE: ciachef.edu EMAIL: admissions@culinary.edu PRESIDENT: L. Timothy Ryan YEAR FOUNDED: 1946 ENROLLMENT: approximately 9,200 FACULTY: more than 170 chefs STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: associate’s and bachelor’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: accelerated culinary arts certificate program and accelerated wine and beverage certificate program ANNUAL TUITION: $33,740 but varies by year AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

BARD COLLEGE Campus Road, P.O. Box 5000 Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y. 12504 PHONE: 845-758-6822 WEBSITE: bard.edu EMAIL: admission@bard.edu PRESIDENT: Leon Botstein YEAR FOUNDED: 1860 ENROLLMENT: approximately 2,000 undergraduates at the main campus FACULTY: 293 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 10:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $49,226 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: students registering for more than 20 credits are charged an additional $1,538 for each credit

BERKELEY COLLEGE White Plains Campus 99 Church St., White Plains, N.Y. 10601 PHONE: 914-694-1122 WEBSITE: berkeleycollege.edu EMAIL: info@berkeleycollege.edu PRESIDENT: Michael J. Smith YEAR FOUNDED: 1931 ENROLLMENT: more than 8,000 students FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 18:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: medical assistant; medical insurance, billing and coding; patient care technician; practical nurse; and surgical processing technician ANNUAL TUITION: $30,800 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $525

THE COLLEGE OF NEW ROCHELLE 29 Castle Place, New Rochelle, N.Y. 10805 PHONE: 914-654-5000 WEBSITE: cnr.edu EMAIL: info@cnr.edu PRESIDENT: Judith Huntington YEAR FOUNDED: 1904 ENROLLMENT: approximately 4,000 FACULTY: 438 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 14:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: addiction counseling program ANNUAL TUITION: $46,300 for the school of arts and sciences AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $1,082

THE COLLEGE OF WESTCHESTER 325 Central Ave., White Plains, N.Y. 10606 PHONE: 914-559-2398 WEBSITE: cw.edu EMAIL: admissions@cw.edu PRESIDENT: Mary Beth Del Balzo YEAR FOUNDED: 1915 ENROLLMENT: approximately 2,000 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $23,350 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $745

CONCORDIA COLLEGE 171 White Plains Road, Bronxville, N.Y. 10708 PHONE: 914-337-9300 WEBSITE: concordia-ny.edu EMAIL: evelyn.cea@concordia-ny.edu PRESIDENT: Viji George YEAR FOUNDED: 1881 ENROLLMENT: approximately 900 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 17:1 DEGREES: associate’s and bachelor’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $38,630 commuter, $43,524 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

S2 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | JULY 20, 2015

DOMINICAN COLLEGE 470 Western Highway, Orangeburg, N.Y. 10962 PHONE: 845-359-7800 WEBSITE: dc.edu EMAIL: admissions@dc.edu PRESIDENT: Mary Eileen O’Brien YEAR FOUNDED: 1952 ENROLLMENT: 1,998 FACULTY: 75 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 15:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: certificate in personal computers, certificate in computer information systems (computer management) and certificate in computer programming ANNUAL TUITION: $25,680 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $776

DUTCHESSS COMMUNITY COLLEGE 53 Pendell Road, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601 PHONE: 845-431-8000 WEBSITE: sunydutchess.edu EMAIL: admissions@sunydutchess.edu PRESIDENT: Pamela Edington YEAR FOUNDED: 1957 ENROLLMENT: 10,221 FACULTY: NA DEGREES: associate’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: paralegal, C++/Java advanced programming, computer networking, computer software support, web administration, early childhood, advanced science and mathematics, air conditioning and refrigeration, chemical dependency counseling, child direct care, teacher assistant, phlebotomist and music performance STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 20:1 ANNUAL TUITION: $3,360 for New York state residents, $6,720 for out-of-state residents AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $140 for New York state residents, $280 for out-of-state residents


The Fordham Westchester Campus WORLD-CLASS EDUCATION IN YOUR OWN BACKYARD

F

ordham University’s state-of-theart campus in Westchester provides programs focused on traditional career paths as well as today’s emerging industries. We offer class schedules designed for Westchester, Fairfield and Hudson Valley residents with busy lives. Fordham Westchester provides adult undergraduate and graduate degree programs as well as classes for your personal enrichment. Several of the same distinguished faculty from our New York City campuses teach at our Westchester location. Fordham School of Professional and Continuing Studies and prestigious graduate schools of business, education and social service will help you earn the credentials to start a new career or strengthen an existing one. Our Westchester campus features 26 state-of-the-art classrooms in a three-story, 62,500-square-foot building situated on 32 beautifully landscaped acres that include a garden courtyard, pond and stream. The new classrooms,

off Interstate 287 near the Hutchinson River Parkway and Route 684—with parking to accommodate 250 vehicles. It is

which are wireless and equipped with smart boards and teleconferencing capabilities, are complemented by indoor

“THE PEOPLE WHO PUT IN THE TIME AND EFFORT TO IMPROVE THEIR KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS WILL BE THE ONES WHO ARE READY FOR NEW AND BETTER OPPORTUNITIES.”

— GLEN REDPATH

conveniently accessible by all modes of public transportation. As the economy continues to recover, those who have enhanced their education

and outdoor meeting spaces, a libraryresource center, a dining facility and a student lounge. The campus is conveniently located on the White Plains border—just

with an eye toward current trends will be among the first to be hired when new jobs are created, said Glen Redpath, assistant dean of admission at Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus. “The people who put in the time and effort to improve their knowledge and skills will be the ones who are ready for new and better opportunities,” he said. Officials at the school like to remind their students of the numerous research studies showing that the single most important factor in career advancement is education, and that a Fordham education is considered second to none. Since 1841, the Fordham degree has stood for a unique standard of intellectual inquiry, ethical decisionmaking,and academic excellence. It’s a degree that’s valued by many of the world’s most prestigious companies, agencies and institutions, where thousands of graduates have embarked on successful careers. To find out more or to register for programs, visit fordham.edu/westchester to contact a representative of the school you are interested in attending.

Westchester Healthcare Innovation Workshops

Take advantage of Fordham University’s prestigious graduate, undergraduate, and professional programs.

Gabelli School of Business

Four Intensive Courses Include:

Graduate School of Education

• Healthcare Data Security and Information Systems

Graduate School of Social Service

• Data Analytics for Healthcare

School of Professional and Continuing Studies

• Healthcare Marketing

• Degrees for adult undergraduate learners

• Navigating the Healthcare System

• Digital and Social Media Marketing courses Proud to be a Yellow Ribbon University eeo

400 Westchester Ave.

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West Harrison, N.Y.

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914-FORDHAM

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fordham.edu/westchester

JULY 20, 2015 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | S3


Colleges&Universities FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY

IONA COLLEGE

MANHATTANVILLE COLLEGE

1073 N. Benson Road, Fairfield, Conn. 06824 PHONE: 203-254-4000 WEBSITE: fairfield.edu EMAIL: admis@fairfield.edu PRESIDENT: Jeffrey P. von Arx YEAR FOUNDED: 1942 ENROLLMENT: 5,000 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 11:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various certificates programs offered at the undergraduate, graduate and professional levels ANNUAL TUITION: $56,360 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $725

715 North Ave., New Rochelle, N.Y. 10801 PHONE: 914-633-2000 WEBSITE: iona.edu EMAIL: admissions@iona.edu PLEASE SEE PRESIDENT: Joseph E. Nyre OUR AD ON YEAR FOUNDED: 1940 PAGE 7 ENROLLMENT: 3,909 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 15:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various advanced and post-master’s certificates ANNUAL TUITION: $35,324 commuter, $49,304 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

FORDHAM UNIVERSITY

LIU HUDSON AT ROCKLAND AND WESTCHESTER

Westchester Campus 400 Westchester Ave., West Harrison, N.Y. 10604 PHONE: 914-367-3426 WEBSITE: fordham.edu EMAIL: enroll@fordham.edu PLEASE SEE OUR AD ON PRESIDENT: Joseph M. McShane PAGE 3 YEAR FOUNDED: 1841 ENROLLMENT: 15,231 FACULTY: 737 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 14:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: certificates offered for degree and/or career advancement include digital and social media, CMA exam preparation and intensive experience in health care innovation workshops ANNUAL TUITION: $46,120 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $840-$1,537

LIU Hudson at Rockland 70 Route 340, Orangeburg, N.Y. 10962 PHONE: 845-359-7200 WEBSITE: rockland@liu.edu LIU Hudson at Westchester 735 Anderson Hill Road, Purchase, N.Y. 10577 PHONE: 914-831-2700 WEBSITE: westchester@liu.edu PRESIDENT: Sylvia Blake, dean and chief operating officer YEAR FOUNDED: 1926 ENROLLMENT: more than 20,000 across all campuses FACULTY: nearly 600 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various advanced certificate programs ANNUAL TUITION: NA AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $1,010

2900 Purchase St., Purchase, N.Y. 10577 PHONE: 914-694-2200 WEBSITE: mville.edu EMAIL: admissions@mville.edu PLEASE SEE PRESIDENT: Jon C. Strauss OUR AD ON YEAR FOUNDED: 1841 PAGE 5 ENROLLMENT: 2,700 FACULTY: 103 full time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 16:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: professional advanced certificate programs include marketing communication management, business leadership, international management, human resource management and organizational effectiveness and finance ANNUAL TUITION: $34,870 commuter, $43,550 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $810

HOUSATONIC COMMUNITY COLLEGE 900 Lafayette Blvd., Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 PHONE: 203-332-5000 WEBSITE: housatonic.edu EMAIL: egraham@hcc.commnet.edu PRESIDENT: Paul Broadie II YEAR FOUNDED: 1966 ENROLLMENT: approximately 6,000 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: associates CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: certified medical reimbursement specialist, Microsoft Office Specialist certification in Excel, Microsoft Office Specialist certification in Word, national certified bookkeeper, certified nursing assistant, certified professional coder, community health worker, patient care technician national certification, pharmacy technician certification, qualified food operator, professional bartending certification, CompTIA A+ certification preparation, real estate principles and practices, personal trainer national certification, safe boating and certificate of personal watercraft operation ANNUAL TUITION: $4,052 in state, $12,116 out of state AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $150

MARIST COLLEGE 3399 North Road, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601 PHONE: 845-575-3000 WEBSITE: marist.edu EMAIL: admission@marist.edu PRESIDENT: Dennis J. Murray YEAR FOUNDED: 1905 ENROLLMENT: 6,356 FACULTY: 232 full time, 341 adjuncts STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 16:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: advanced certificate programs offered in data center technologies, business analytics and information systems ANNUAL TUITION: $33,250 full time AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $634

MANHATTAN COLLEGE

MERCY COLLEGE

4513 Manhattan College Parkway, Riverdale, N.Y. 10471 PHONE: 718-862-8000 WEBSITE: manhattan.edu EMAIL: admit@manhattan.edu PRESIDENT: Brennan O’Donnell YEAR FOUNDED: 1853 ENROLLMENT: 3,675 FACULTY: 219 full time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 12:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: environmental engineering, treatment process engineering, water quality modeling, geoenvironmental, engineering, environmental construction management, water resources, environmental engineering, and project management ANNUAL TUITION: $35,985 commuter, $49,605 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

555 Broadway, Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. 10522 PHONE: 877-MERCY-GO WEBSITE: mercy.edu EMAIL: admissions@mercy.edu PRESIDENT: Timothy Hall PLEASE SEE OUR ADS ON YEAR FOUNDED: 1950 PAGE 9, 13 ENROLLMENT: 11,272 FACULTY: 196 full time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various advanced certificates offered ANNUAL TUITION: $8,733 per term AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $735

S4 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | JULY 20, 2015


MANHATTANVILLE COLLEGE

Reid Castle at Manhattanville College

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM

SCHOOL OF BUSINESS

THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION

Founded in 1841, Manhattanville College is an independent, co-educational liberal arts institution dedicated to academic excellence. Manhattanville prepares students to be ethical and socially responsible leaders in a global community. The college has a rich history of preparing highly motivated students who value ethical integrity and social responsibility with the highest-quality education amongst a globally diverse campus community. Located just 30 minutes from New York City, Manhattanville serves 1,700 undergraduate students from more than 50 countries and 30 states. Consistently ranked as one of the nation’s best institutions, Manhattanville is recognized amongst a distinguished list of colleges and universities in the Fiske Guide to College 2016 and The Princeton Review’s “Best 378 Colleges.” The undergraduate programs combine the intellectual strength and passion of a liberal arts education with the hands-on, real-world experiences to turn a student’s passion into an exciting career. The College offers more than 50 undergraduate areas of study including newly developed majors in Sport Studies, Digital Media Production, Accounting and Marketing. With career-focused education, and New York City less than 30 miles away, students can combine in-class learning with on-the-job experiences through access to more than 700 internships ranging from Fortune 500 companies to nonprofits, arts and entertainment venues to research opportunities and more. At Manhattanville, students get an insider’s view of how the world works— through powerful internships, international study and services learning, and four years of life on a campus just minutes from the world’s most cosmopolitan city.

It’s time to advance your career … but where do you go? Is your checklist: gain immediate industry connections, attend classes around your work/life and learn only from faculty with real world experience? If so, then you go to Manhattanville College’s School of Business…possibly Westchester’s best-kept secret…but not for long! It’s all about who you (get to) know! Manhattanville’s School of Business students capitalize on its extensive faculty and alumni network employed or interning at the area’s top companies, including MasterCard, PepsiCo, the NFL and the New York Stock exchange. What’s key when evaluating graduate business programs? Industry-driven content is critical. Consider these highdemand Master’s degree programs offered by Manhattanville’s School of Business: Marketing Communication Management has a strong focus on new media. Business Leadership is a more focused alternative to an MBA. Chose one of four concentrations in the area’s only MS in International Management program, designed for today’s global economy. The School of Business also offers an MS in Finance with concentrations in Accounting, Corporate Finance, and Investment Management. Prepare for strategic level positons with a graduate degree in their highly respected Human Resource Management and Organizational Effectiveness or their Sport Business Management program, where senior level sports executives come to campus almost daily to teach. Looking for an Accelerated Bachelor’s Degree, or a Dual (Master/Bachelor) Degree option? The School of Business offers these and professional certificates such as their Nonprofit Management Certificate or SHRM certification test preparation. Their Education and Research Institute for Managing Risk delivers global best practices and their Women’s Leadership Institute promotes the leadership and professional development needs of women. For more information or to attend an informational event, contact: business@mville.edu or call 914-3235150. Get to work on your future today!

Manhattanville College offers programs to prepare graduates for careers in education at all levels, from teaching to leadership and administration. Undergraduates often earn a double major in education and another liberal arts concentration, while the graduate program is geared to students interested in becoming teachers, often after having had other careers, and to classroom teachers who want to extend their teaching certifications or update their knowledge base. Manhattanville offers a graduate-level accelerated teacher certification program, Jump Start, which is especially popular with adults who are changing careers. Jump Start is also open to those eligible to complete a post-master’s certification program. Cohorts begin twice a year, in fall and spring. Jump Start students are eligible to be in their own classrooms by September of the following year as well-prepared, fully paid teachers with full benefits, while they finish the additional requirements for the master’s degree. Manhattanville offers three master’s programs, the Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.), the Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.), and the Master in Educational Studies (M.Ed.) as well as the Ed.D. in Educational Leadership. In addition, Manhattanville offers classes in more than 60 areas of concentration leading to 18 different New York State certifications. The Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) degree program in Educational Leadership is designed to meet the needs of midcareer professionals who have leadership experience in public or private schools, community programs, governmental agencies, or nongovernmental organizations with major education initiatives. This program builds on Manhattanville’s educational leadership master’s and professional diploma certification programs for building-level and/or district-level leadership. All programs are registered with and approved by the New York State Education Department. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE).

JULY 20, 2015 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | S5


Colleges&Universities MONROE COLLEGE

NORWALK COMMUNITY COLLEGE

PACE UNIVERSITY

2501 Jerome Ave., Bronx, N.Y. 10468 PHONE: 718-933-6700 WEBSITE: monroecollege.edu EMAIL: olm@monroecollege.edu PRESIDENT: Stephen Jerome YEAR FOUNDED: 1933 ENROLLMENT: 6,997 FACULTY: 298 full time, 136 part time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 17:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: criminal justice certificate ANNUAL TUITION: $13,248 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $552

188 Richards Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 06854 PHONE: 203-857-7000 WEBSITE: norwalk.edu EMAIL: admissions@ncc.commnet.edu PRESIDENT: David L. Levinson YEAR FOUNDED: 1961 ENROLLMENT: approximately 14,372 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 18:1 DEGREES: associate’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: bookkeeping, real estate, travel careers, professional bartending certification, computer programming, computer graphics, Microsoft Office specialist, software applications, web design, web mastering, certified nurse aide, dental assistant, electrocardiogram technician, homemaker companion, medical billing reimbursement specialist, patient care technician, pharmacy technician, phlebotomy technician, physical therapy aide, veterinary assistant, emergency medical technician, security officer certification and special security officer training ANNUAL TUITION: $3,598 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $482

Westchester Campus 861 Bedford Road, Pleasantville, N.Y. 10570 PHONE: 914-773-3200 WEBSITE: pace.edu EMAIL: infoctr@pace.edu PRESIDENT: Stephen J. Friedman YEAR FOUNDED: 1906 ENROLLMENT: 12,857 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 18:1 DEGREES: associates, bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: certified internal auditor; bookkeeping certificate; certificate in Quickbooks; business analysis; business writing, presentation skills and social media; grant writing; Internet marketing essentials; property management; additional human resources management, legal, real estate, project management and technology courses and certifications ANNUAL TUITION: $41,681 commuter, $59,219 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $1,096 part-time undergraduates

NYACK COLLEGE SEMINARY GRADUATE SCHOOLS

800 Country Club Road, P.O. Box 2540, Waterbury, Conn. 06723 PHONE: 203-596-4500 WEBSITE: post.edu EMAIL: admissions@post.edu PRESIDENT: Don Mroz YEAR FOUNDED: 1890 ENROLLMENT: approximately 6,500 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 15:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: undergraduate and graduate certificates to pursue on campus ANNUAL TUITION: $26,250 commuter, $38,050 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $875

MOUNT SAINT MARY COLLEGE 330 Powell Ave., Newburgh, N.Y. 12550 PHONE: 845-561-0800 WEBSITE: msmc.edu EMAIL: admissions@msmc.edu PRESIDENT: Anne Carson Daly YEAR FOUNDED: 1959 ENROLLMENT: more than 2,500 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 14:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: advanced certificates offered ANNUAL TUITION: $27,233 commuter, $41,061 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

NEW YORK MEDICAL COLLEGE 40 Sunshine Cottage Road, Valhalla, N.Y. 10595 PHONE: 914-594-4000 WEBSITE: nymc.edu EMAIL: mdadmit@nymc.edu, shsp_admissions@nymc.edu PRESIDENT: Alan Kadish YEAR FOUNDED: 1860 ENROLLMENT: more than 1,400 FACULTY: more than 2,700 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: graduate certificate programs offered in emergency preparedness global health and health education/certified health education specialist and industrial hygiene ANNUAL TUITION: $52,200 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

1 South Blvd., Nyack, N.Y. 10960 PHONE: 845-358-1710 WEBSITE: nyack.edu EMAIL: admissions@nyack.edu PRESIDENT: Michael G. Scales YEAR FOUNDED: 1882 ENROLLMENT: 2,938 FACULTY: 110 full time, 178 adjuncts STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $12,200 commuter, $17,100-$17,175 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $1,000 part time, $580 full time

S6 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | JULY 20, 2015

POST UNIVERSITY

QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY 275 Mount Carmel Ave., Hamden, Conn. 06518 PHONE: 203-582-8200 WEBSITE: quinnipiac.edu EMAIL: admissions@quinnipiac.edu PRESIDENT: John L. Lahey YEAR FOUNDED: 1929 ENROLLMENT: 9,000 FACULTY: 400 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 16:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various advanced certificate programs ANNUAL TUITION: $42,270 commuter, $57,090 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $690 per credit for courses scheduled 5 p.m. or later and Saturday classes; $965 per credit for courses scheduled before 5 p.m. Monday-Friday


Iona College Celebrates its 75th Year of Moving the World

I

f you’re looking for a welcoming community with challenging academics and a commitment to serving others, Iona could be the right fit for you. Located on 45 scenic acres in New Rochelle, just 20 miles north of midtown Manhattan, Iona provides an educational experience grounded in the liberal arts and enhanced by a strong focus on career-ready skills. As an Iona student, you will develop the knowledge, problem-solving ability and real-world connections — mentored by our faculty and alumni — to gain a competitive edge in your career. Iona prepares its students for success in all facets of their lives. Founded in 1940 by the Christian Brothers, today the private, comprehensive, four-year Catholic college enrolls 3,900 undergraduate and graduate students from diverse backgrounds and more than 30 countries. Centrally located in Westchester County between the economic centers of New York City and Fairfield County, Conn., Iona students have easy access to internship opportunities in all career fields and nearly 70 percent complete at least one. Many also participate in Mission & Ministry’s local service projects or weeklong trips. Ninety-one percent of Iona graduates are employed or enrolled in graduate school

within six months of graduation, with an average starting salary of $40,183. ACADEMICS AND CAREER PATHWAYS Iona College offers more than 60 bachelor’s programs and 45 master’s programs in the School of Arts and Science and Hagen School of Business. With a student-faculty ratio of 15:1, all classes are taught by professors. Iona’s honors program offers specially designed courses, opportunities to conduct independent research, a professional mentoring program and six tuition-free credits each academic year. Five-year bachelor’s/ master’s degree programs in chemistry, computer science, criminal justice, education, English, history, mathematics and psychology, as well as a fast-track MBA program, allow qualified students to earn two

degrees with a year’s cost savings and an earlier start to their career. Academic facilities include new, stateof-the-art science labs, a real-time trading floor with Bloomberg terminals, a Speech and Language Pathology Clinic serving the community and broadcast media studios. Our faculty have served as international policy advisors, school district superintendents, media professionals and chief executives in many industries and they share their expertise with Iona’s students. CAMPUS LIFE AND FACILITIES Iona’s vibrant, friendly and safe campus offers much to do, including performances, Division I athletics, a thriving Greek life, more than 80 students clubs and intramural sports. Housing includes traditional residence

halls, suites and apartments. Meal plans are available to students living on or off campus. With the regularly operating Gael Express to the nearby New Rochelle Metro-North train station, it takes about 30 minutes for Iona students to reach the heart of New York City. This hub of international finance, arts, sports and communications offers not just internships and career opportunities but lots of recreational and cultural options too. ADMISSION AND FINANCIAL AID At Iona, you’ll have your own personal admissions counselor. Contact us today to be connected with yours and to schedule a campus visit. Iona offers undergraduates both need-based financial aid and merit scholarships up to $33,000 your first year and up to $132,000 over four years.

START HERE TO MOVE THE WORLD

Move the World.

Iona combines the friendliness of a small college with the

Iona is proud of its vibrant campus life, including Division

resources to deliver a superior academic experience. We

I athletics and more than 80 student clubs, its students’

invite you to visit our beautiful 45-acre campus – just 20

commitment to serving others, and the success of its more

miles from midtown Manhattan – and see our new science

than 40,000 alumni. With more than 60 undergraduate and 25

labs, simulated trading floor with Bloomberg terminals,

graduate programs, and flexible online course options, your

broadcast media studios, and speech and language clinic.

journey to Move the World starts here.

CONNECT WITH US: IONA.EDU/WBJ

ADMISSIONS@IONA.EDU

800.231.IONA JULY 20, 2015 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | S7


St. John Fisher College Offers Doctoral Program at The College of New Rochelle

S Are You Ready to Lead? Advance your career with an Ed.D. in Executive Leadership.

The Ed.D. in Executive Leadership from St. John Fisher College, offered at the College of New Rochelle, is an accelerated doctoral program that develops the critical leadership skills and knowledge required in today’s increasingly complex, diverse, and information-driven organizations. Program features: • An accelerated format which allows coursework and dissertation to be completed in as little as 28 months. • Classes meet on alternate Friday evenings and Saturdays to accommodate the schedules of working professionals. • An attractive and viable alternative to traditional doctoral programs in leadership designed for managers and executives in education, business, health care, nonprofit, military, and other related organizations. To learn more, call (585) 385-8161, or visit sjfc.edu/edd.

S8 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | JULY 20, 2015

t. John Fisher College, an independent, liberal arts institution in Rochester, N.Y., has offered a doctoral program in Westchester County residents’ backyards at The College of New Rochelle (CNR) since 2009, and the program continues to grow. The Doctor of Education in Executive Leadership (Ed.D.) is an accelerated doctoral program offered by Fisher’s Ralph C. Wilson Jr. Sch ool of Education and provides candidates with an opportunity to develop the critical leadership skills and knowledge that are required in today’s increasingly complex, diverse and information-driven organizations. This unique program was developed to provide an attractive and viable alternative to traditional doctoral programs in educational leadership. To date, the program has enrolled 20 cohorts and graduated 231 students. CNR was the first extension site for the program, followed by Onondaga Community College in Syracuse in 2013. The program is designed for managers and executives in education, business, health care, nonprofit organizations, the military and other related organizations. The accelerated format allows students to complete their coursework and dissertation in as little as 28 months. Classes meet on alternate Friday evenings and Saturdays to accommodate the schedules of working professionals.

The cohort-paced model is designed around a multidisciplinary program of study in executive leadership. Courses are offered sequentially, organized by topical themes and aligned with New York state, national and institutional standards. In addition, the program includes professional development opportunities and seminars conducted by experts in the field of leadership. Candidates will also complete field experiences that align with the coursework. The curriculum is based on theory and processes that are essential for effective organizational leadership and theory related to practice. Graduates will walk away with the ability to plan strategically, make ethical and fair decisions, maximize the talents and skills of their employees and much more. The sequence of courses and field experiences are organized into six interrelated thematic modules. Each module includes topics, activities and assignments that reflect key concepts that impact leadership at the executive level. Some of the concepts covered include law, politics, finance, governance, diversity, human relations and development, data and informed decision-making, policy and ethics. For more information about the Doctor of Education in Executive Leadership (Ed.D.) at CNR, visit www.sjfc. edu/edd or call St. John Fisher College’s Office of Graduate Admissions at 585-385-8161.


Angel Cespedes B.S. - Accounting, ’16

FIND OUT MORE 1-877-MERCY-GO

WWW.MERCY.EDU/WBJSOB Dobbs Ferry | Manhattan | bronx | yorktown heights | online JULY 20, 2015 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | S9 WBJ_2015_7/20.indd 1

7/13/15 9:49 AM


Central Connecticut State University

ONE OF CONNECTICUT’S PREMIER COMPREHENSIVE PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES

C

entral Connecticut State University (CCSU) is a vibrant learningcentered community dedicated to teaching and to scholarship. Education balances academic challenge with personal support, leading students to become thoughtful, responsible and successful. A network of study-abroad opportunities, overseas inter-institutional arrangements and other internationally focused educational programming prepares our students to become global citizens, responsive to a world of cultural differences and able to succeed in an increasingly international marketplace. Our faculty’s commitment to scholarly inquiry ensures the intellectual vitality of our classrooms. One of Connecticut’s premier comprehensive public universities, CCSU comprises the Carol A. Ammon College of Liberal

Arts & Social Sciences and the Schools of Business; Education & Professional Studies; Engineering, Science, & Technology; and Graduate Studies. Our programs are nationally accredited by AACSB, ABET, ACCE, ACS, ATMAE, CCNE, CSAB, CSW, NAIT, NCATE, and NEASC. The University is one of only two public universities in the state to offer ABET-accredited undergraduate engineering programs and the only university with a wide variety of engineering technology and technology management programs, complementing its STEM discipline programs. CCSU is also one of only two public institutions in the state to offer an AACSB-accredited undergraduate program in the School of Business. CCSU offers undergraduate and graduate programs through the master’s and sixth-year levels, the MBA, and the Ed.D.

in Educational Leadership. Committed to educational excellence and access, the University works to keep tuition low and to provide a robust financial aid program that has grown to more than $100 million annually. The college guide Affordable Colleges Online recognizes CCSU as one of the top “low-cost colleges with graduates who earn high starting salaries.” CCSU’s educational excellence has been nationally honored. The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching recognized CCSU’s many community outreach activities by selecting the University as a “Community Engagement Institution.” The Open Doors Report ranks the University’s study abroad and course abroad programs 17th and 23rd in the nation. Our professors are committed to helping students make the most of their education.

Come to one of the best universities in New England

CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY S t a r t w i t h a d re a m. F in ish w ith a fu tu re ! • Selected as a “Highest Return on Investment College” by Affordable Colleges Online • Honored by Octameron Associates as a “Great College for the Real World” • Over 100 excellent academic programs • Exciting Division I athletics www.ccsu.edu/facebook

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They challenge students AND provide the support they need to succeed. They take pride in making themselves available outside the classroom for one-on-one education, advice and guidance. As one student recently said, “There are great professors at CCSU who are willing to help out every step of the way.” CCSU professors are dedicated scholars and have won national and international awards for their scholarship, but they consider teaching their first calling. They are experts in their fields and they know how to make learning exciting and rewarding. Our low 16-to-1 student-to-faculty ratio keeps most classes small; nearly half have 20 or fewer students. This ensures that professors get to know their students as individuals. Our commitment to student success begins with providing the tools and the support to complete their degree in four years. Whether students choose to “finish in 4” or decide to take longer, our student support programs are designed to help! Our 18 NCAA Division I programs are a major source of campus pride and excitement. Blue Devil football, men’s basketball, women’s and men’s soccer, men’s track and cross country and our women’s swimming and diving teams have been frequent Northeast Conference Champions, with a slew of tournament trophies, too! The campus features several new academic buildings. A new residence hall, housing some 600 students, opens in fall 2015, and the entire campus is being renovated to provide one of the most attractive, convenient and modern campuses in the state. Central is the state’s oldest public university and we are proud of the University’s historical role as a significant resource for Connecticut. CCSU serves approximately 12,500 students—10,000 undergraduate and 2,500 graduate. Our distinguished alumni include successful business men and women, the first Latina state supreme court justice, CEOs in a wide range of industries and corporations, leading academics at national universities, award-winning educators and educational leaders, trainers and coaches at high schools and colleges as well as top NFL and MLB teams, journalists, novelists, artists—each and all demonstrating that success begins with CCSU. To learn more, please visit www.ccsu. edu. Central Connecticut State University 1615 Stanley Street New Britain, CT 06050 www.ccsu.edu Admissions@ccsu.edu 860-832-CCSU


Colleges&Universities ROCKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE

RENSSELAER HARTFORD

SACRED HEART UNIVERSITY

145 College Road, Suffern, N.Y. 10901 PHONE: 845-574-4000 WEBSITE: sunyrockland.edu EMAIL: admissions@sunyrockland.edu PLEASE SEE PRESIDENT: Cliff L. Wood OUR AD ON YEAR FOUNDED: 1959 PAGE 12 ENROLLMENT: approximately 7,000 FACULTY: 125 full time, 400 part time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 22:1 DEGREES: associate’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: bookkeeping/office administration, business: office technologies, computer-assisted design – CAD (architecture and landscape or computer animation, computer information systems/computer support, computer web development, culinary arts, early childhood development, entrepreneurship, fitness specialist and paralegal studies ANNUAL TUITION: $4,299 for Rockland County residents; $4,299 for New York state residents, out of country with a certificate; $8,598 for New York state residents, out of county without a certificate; and $8,598 for out-of-state residents AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $179.50 for Rockland County residents; $179.50 for New York state residents, out of county with a certificate; $359 for New York state residents, out of county without a certificate; and $359 for out-of-state residents

275 Windsor St., Hartford, Conn. 06120 PHONE: 860-548-2419 WEBSITE: ewp.rpi.edu EMAIL: admissions@rpi.edu PRESIDENT: Shirley Ann Jackson YEAR FOUNDED: 1824 ENROLLMENT: 7,028 FACULTY: 440 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 15:1 DEGREES: master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various advanced graduate certificates offered ANNUAL TUITION: $48,100 commuter, $66,172 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

5151 Park Ave., Fairfield, Conn. 06825 PHONE: 203-371-7999 WEBSITE: sacredheart.edu EMAIL: tsimortosc@sacredheart.edu PRESIDENT: John J. Petillo YEAR FOUNDED: 1963 ENROLLMENT: 7,781 FACULTY: 262 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 15:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAM: advanced certificate programs offered in addition to financial planning and paralegal certificate programs ANNUAL TUITION: $36,920 commuter, $41,920 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $600

Westchester Community College Supports Local Businesses

W

ESTCHESTER COMMUNITY COLLEGE has always supported the business community and we continue to provide new resources to help bolster the local economy. This support includes credit classes for the thousands of credit students who move on after graduation to begin their careers in the local workforce. Several years ago, we opened the $40 million Gateway Center on the main campus in Valhalla, housing a variety of programs and services in an innovative and exciting learning environment. Gateway provides resources for students, including immigrants and international students, as well as businesses and community-based organizations. It encompasses the institution’s English Language Institute, the county’s largest English language acquisition program and the college’s business programs. As all of these various programs work together to form a synergistic whole, the business community benefits from a highly trained workforce, which will include many new employees. Meanwhile, the college has worked to replicate this effort on a national scale, creating the Community College Consor-

tium for Immigrant Education (CCCIE). It is raising the profile of immigrant education among community college administrators and educators and their professional associations. Teresita Bango Wisell, CCIE director and the college’s Vice President of Continuing Education and Workforce Development, has established a blue-ribbon panel of experts in the field of immigrant education. Together, they have organized a speakers’ bureau whose members present at various annual conferences. In addition to working on improving the local workforce through Gateway and CCCIE, the college’s Professional Development Center (PDC) continues to provide resources to serve business and industry through customized training and education. This while the college’s numerous academic programs provide knowledge for today’s and tomorrow’s workforce. Thousands of students at the county’s largest educational institution pursue studies in the business field, including marketing, business administration, retail management/fashion merchandising, telecommunications and computer networking. For information on the college, phone 914-606-6735. For the Professional Development Center, phone 914-606-6669 or visit www.sunywcc.edu.

Learn to Grow. Cultivate Your Greatest Asset. Your business growth depends on employees who are skilled, educated and up to date. The Professional Development Center at Westchester Community College delivers affordable, local, customized training and skills development to help your team stay ahead of the competition. • Customized training programs delivered on your schedule • Professional skills development classes at your site or at our Valhalla location • Programs Include: Management, Sales, Customer Service, English as a Second Language, Computer Applications, Business Communication, HR Compliance, Advanced Manufacturing, and more...

914-606-6669 ▪ sunywcc.edu/pdc

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Colleges&Universities SARAH LAWRENCE COLLEGE

SOUTHERN CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY

SUNY PURCHASE COLLEGE

1 Mead Way, Bronxville, N.Y. 10708 PHONE: 914-337-0700 WEBSITE: sarahlawrence.edu EMAIL: slcadmit@sarahlawrence.edu PRESIDENT: Karen R. Lawrence YEAR FOUNDED: 1924 ENROLLMENT: 1,640 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 10:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAM: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $49,680 commuter, $59,186 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $1,656

501 Crescent St., New Haven, Conn. 06515 PHONE: 203-392-SCSU WEBSITE: southernct.edu EMAIL: information@southernct.edu PRESIDENT: Mary A. Papazian PLEASE SEE YEAR FOUNDED: 1983 OUR AD ON ENROLLMENT: 10,825 PAGE 15 FACULTY: 433 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: advanced certification programs offered ANNUAL TUITION: $18,410 estimated for a full-time, in-state resident undergraduate student AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $512

735 Anderson Hill Road, Purchase, N.Y. 10577 PHONE: 914-251-6300 WEBSITE: purchase.edu EMAIL: admissions@purchase.edu PRESIDENT: Thomas J. Schwarz YEAR FOUNDED: 1967 ENROLLMENT: 4,138 FACULTY: 163 full time, 262 part time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: NA DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s degrees CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: appraisal studies, arts management, drawing and painting, geographic information systems, health coach training, home staging, interior design, museum studies, nonprofit management, paralegal, Pilates mat instructor and social media marketing ANNUAL TUITION: $17,340 for New York state residents, $38,530 for out-of-state residents AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $270 for New York state residents, $680 for out-of-state residents

Rockland Community College The mentoring in “ RCC's Honors Program

was a driving force in my success.

—Nelson Boyce Graduate of RCC and Harvard Executive at Black Entertainment Television

HONORS OPEN HOUSE

Save $100,000 on your education by starting at RCC! Tuition $2,150/semester (NYS residents)

Thursday, October 29, 2015

APPLY NOW!

www.sunyrockland.edu/go/honors 845-574-4796 www.facebook.com/sunyrcc

S12 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | JULY 20, 2015

FIRST CHOICE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION

R

ockland Community College (RCC), an affordable steppingstone to the Ivy League for students in its acclaimed Honors Program, offers quality education in a safe, supportive environment. Small class size enables caring faculty to offer personal attention to students. RCC offers about 50 associate’s degrees and one-year certificates. The distinguished faculty includes Fulbright Scholars, published authors and artists. The nationally acclaimed Honors Program offers a rigorous academic program to qualified students seeking to transfer to premier colleges. Career changers can take courses at their convenience during the daytime, evenings, weekends or online. High school students can earn college credits, either in their high school or on campus at RCC. Continuing education provides credit-free courses for job training, professional advancement or personal enrichment. Internships at hundreds of regional businesses allow students to earn credit toward their degree while gaining hands-on experience.

GREAT VALUE

Rockland’s tuition of $2,150/semester full time or $180 per credit (for New York state residents) represents a fraction of the cost of four-year colleges. Loans, grants and scholarships are also available. Last year, RCC provided $16 million in various forms of financial assistance to students, including grants, loans and scholarships.

TRANSFERABILITY

Most Rockland graduates transfer to four-year colleges and universities. To ease the process, Rockland has established transfer agreements with private and public four-year colleges. More than 100 four-year institutions accepted transfer students from the Class of 2014, many on full scholarships, including Columbia, Cornell, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, NYU, Pace, University of Virginia, and many SUNY and CUNY schools. Admissions: 845-574-4224 Center for Personal & Professional Education: 845-574-4151 www.sunyrockland.edu


ONE-YEAR MBA WHO WILL YOU BE IN ONE YEAR? LET’S FIND OUT.

With Mercy College’s Manhattan-based, one-year MBA program, you can put the nation’s premier business credential in your hand in just one year. With eight concentrations in many of today’s most valued fields, real consulting opportunities for major corporations, and taught by CEOs and executives from Fortune 500 companies means, by this time next year, you’ll be taking the next big step in your career.

STARTS AUGUST 10. SEATS ARE LIMITED. APPLY TODAY. FIND OUT MORE 1-877-MERCY-GO

WWW.MERCY.EDU/WBJMBA Dobbs Ferry | Manhattan | bronx | yorktown heights | online JULY 20, 2015 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | S13

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Colleges&Universities ST. JOHN FISHER COLLEGE

UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT

VASSAR COLLEGE

3690 East Ave., Rochester, N.Y. 14618 PHONE: 585-385-8000 WEBSITE: sjfc.edu EMAIL: admissons@sjfc.edu PLEASE SEE PRESIDENT: Gerard J. Rooney OUR AD ON PAGE 8 YEAR FOUNDED: 1948 ENROLLMENT: 3,900 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 12:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various advanced certificate programs ANNUAL TUITION: $30,110 commuter, $41,570 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

Stamford Campus 1 University Place, Stamford, Conn. 06901 PHONE: 203-251-8400 WEBSITE: stamford.uconn.edu EMAIL: beahusky@uconn.edu PRESIDENT: Susan Herbst YEAR FOUNDED: 1881 ENROLLMENT: 31,119 FACULTY: 1,485 full time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 16:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: various advanced certificate programs ANNUAL TUITION: $9,858 commuter, $24,518 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $939 in state, $1,780 out of state

124 Raymond Ave., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12604 PHONE: 845-437-7000 WEBSITE: vassar.edu EMAIL: admissions@vassar.edu PRESIDENT: Catharine Bond Hill YEAR FOUNDED: 1861 ENROLLMENT: 2,450 FACULTY: more than 290 STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 8:1 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $63,280 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: NA

ST. THOMAS AQUINAS COLLEGE

UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAVEN

125 Route 340, Sparkill, N.Y. 10976 PHONE: 845-398-4000 WEBSITE: stac.edu EMAIL: admissions@stac.edu PRESIDENT: Margaret Mary Fitzpatrick YEAR FOUNDED: 1952 ENROLLMENT: 2,800 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 18:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: NA ANNUAL TUITION: $27,130 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $835

300 Boston Post Road, West Haven, Conn. 06516 PHONE: 203-923-7000 WEBSITE: newhaven.edu EMAIL: admissions@newhaven.edu PRESIDENT: Steven H. Kaplan YEAR FOUNDED: 1920 ENROLLMENT: approximately 6,500 FACULTY: 241 full time, 379 part time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 16:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: undergraduate certificates include biomedical engineering, crime analysis, criminal justice management, fire/arson investigation, fire prevention, forensic computer investigation, industrial fire protection, information protection and security, law enforcement science, paralegal studies, private security and victim services administration ANNUAL TUITION: $34,330 AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $1,145 for day credits, $575 for evening credits

75 Grasslands Road, Valhalla, N.Y. 10595 PHONE: 914-606-6600 WEBSITE: sunywcc.edu EMAIL: admissions@sunywcc.edu PRESIDENT: Belinda S. Miles PLEASE SEE OUR AD ON YEAR FOUNDED: 1946 PAGE 11 ENROLLMENT: 13,000 FACULTY: NA STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 16:1 DEGREES: associate’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: applied art, chemical dependency counseling, computer aided drafting, computer applications specialist, computer programming, computer security and forensics, digital arts, digital filmmaking, direct care practice, early childhood, emergency medical services, emergency medical technician, financial office specialist, medical billing and coding, networking, office technologies, small business entrepreneurship, teaching assistant, telecommunications technology and web development ANNUAL TUITION: $4,280 for in-state residents, $11,770 for nonresidents AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $179 for in-state residents, $493 for nonresidents

UNIVERSITY OF BRIDGEPORT 126 Park Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 PHONE: 203-576-4000 WEBSITE: bridgeport.edu EMAIL: admit@bridgeport.edu PRESIDENT: Neil Albert Salonen YEAR FOUNDED: 1927 ENROLLMENT: 3,865 FACULTY: 120 full time, 364 part time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 16:1 DEGREES: associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: criminal justice, gerontology and human resource management ANNUAL TUITION: $30,540 commuter, $42,940 room and board AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $905

WESTCHESTER COMMUNITY COLLEGE

WESTERN CONNECTICUT STATE UNIVERSITY 181 White St., Danbury, Conn. 06810 PHONE: 203-837-9000 WEBSITE: wcsu.edu EMAIL: murrayj@wcsu.edu PRESIDENT: John B. Clark

YEAR FOUNDED: ENROLLMENT: 5,952 FACULTY: 622 full time, 511 part time STUDENT-FACULTY RATIO: 14:7 DEGREES: bachelor’s and master’s CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS: advanced certificate programs offered

ANNUAL TUITION: $11,174 in state, $23,444 out of state AVERAGE COST PER CREDIT: $451

S14 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | JULY 20, 2015


SCSU_MBA_CPA_Fairfield_5x11.5.qxp_Layout 1 7/9/15 9:48 AM Page 1

Federal Grant Gives SCSU Nursing Ed Students a Shot in The Arm ‘FORGIVABLE’ LOANS OFFERED TO STUDENTS SEEKING TEACHING JOB

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EW HAVEN – Students pursuing an advanced degree in nursing education at Southern Connecticut State University (SCSU) may have most of their tuition, fees and books paid for through a federal grant if they complete the program and become a nursing teacher. The federal Health Resources and Services Administration, a division of the U.S. Health Department of Health and Human Services, has awarded SCSU a $430,673 grant for loans to students enrolled in two degree programs – the Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) in nursing education and the Master of Science in Nursing (M.S.N.) (nursing education track) for the 2015-16 academic year. The Ed.D. program is a collaborative project between SCSU and Western Connecticut State University, and students enrolled in that program at WCSU also are eligible for the loans. The loans are deemed partially “forgivable,” meaning that a portion of the money will not have to be paid back if students finish their degree requirements and work as a faculty member at an accredited school of nursing for one to four years. Students who teach for one year after earning their degree will have 20 percent of their loan forgiven. That proportion rises to 40 percent after two years of teaching, 60 percent after three years and 85 percent after four years. “We are delighted to be a recipient of this federal grant for the third time in the last four years,” said Barbara Aronson, SCSU professor of nursing and coordinator of its Ed.D. in nursing education program. “This is the most amount of money that we’ve received and it’s the first time that our master’s degree students are eligible. This award helps in our efforts to increase the number of highly qualified nurses at a time of a worsening nursing shortage.” Aronson said she anticipates about 15 students will be enrolled in the M.S.N. in nursing education program this fall. In addition, 13 students are finishing their dissertations in the Ed.D. program this fall, while another 18 students also are enrolled. Patricia Zibluk, director of SCSU’s Sponsored Programs and Research, noted that the university will provide an 11-percent grant match ($47,853), bringing the total amount of loan money available to the nursing students to $478,526. “Collectively, over the last several years,

Two Programs. Endless Possibilities.

about $1 million in loans have been made available to our nursing students,” Zibluk said. “That goes a long way in helping to generate more nursing educators, which in turns, allows us to teach more nursing students.” Students are required to take 51 credits to complete the Ed.D. program, which consists of on-line courses that are taken on a parttime basis. It typically takes about three years and a total cost of about $50,000 to complete the program.

“WE ARE DELIGHTED TO BE A RECIPIENT OF THIS FEDERAL GRANT FOR THE THIRD TIME IN THE LAST FOUR YEARS ... THIS AWARD HELPS IN OUR EFFORTS TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF HIGHLY QUALIFIED NURSES AT A TIME OF A WORSENING NURSING SHORTAGE.”

Graduate Certificate in Accounting • Start your journey to becoming a CPA with our Certificate in Accounting Program for non-accounting undergraduate majors. Our program provides the necessary accounting credits to sit for the CPA exam. • Undergraduate business majors graduating from the program are eligible to sit for the CPA exam. A track within the MBA has been designed to allow non-business undergrads to earn necessary business credits. • Flexible 27-credit program can be completed in as little as 12 months. Day and evening classes available. For more information: AccountingGrad@SouthernCT.edu

— BARBARA ARONSON

Flexible MBA Offerings The nursing education track for M.S.N. students consists of 42 to 45 credits, which can be taken on a full-time or part-time basis. The cost for students typically runs about $30,000 to complete the program, depending upon whether they are full- or part-time and how many courses they take per semester. Zibluk noted that when SCSU first applied for the grant in 2012, only Ph.D. programs were eligible. But she said that once Southern explained how Ed.D. programs actually were more targeted to help increase nurse educators, such programs were added to the eligibility list. In 2012, SCSU launched one of only a handful of Ed.D. nursing education programs in the country. Most doctoral programs fall under the Ph.D. (Doctor of Philosophy) or D.N.P. (Doctor of Nursing Practice) categories. The former focuses on research, while the latter centers on clinical skills. But the Ed.D. program is geared toward developing nursing teachers.

• Earn your MBA without putting your career on hold. Traditional MBA offered evenings (full or part-time); accelerated MBA offered Saturdays (in a hybrid format; online and classroom). • State-of the-art facility featuring high-tech trading room, class and seminar rooms, and conference space. • Outstanding faculty, vibrant connection to the business community. For more information: BusinessGrad@SouthernCT.edu

SouthernCT.edu/business

JULY 20, 2015 | COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ADVERTORIAL RESOURCE GUIDE | S15


2015

CFO OF THE YEAR AWARDS

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS CRITERIA

I

n its fourth year, this popular award is open to any CFO who has worked

a minimum of two years for a company in Westchester County. Three winners will be chosen by a distinguished panel of judges; one from a company with revenue up to $20 million, another from a company with revenue between $21 to $200 million and the third from a company with revenue more than $200 million.

NOMINATIONS ACCESSIBLE AT WESTFAIRONLINE.COM/CFO-OF-THE-YEAR-NOMINATE/ NOMINATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED FROM NOW THROUGH AUG. 31

AWARDS CELEBRATION SAVE THE DATE, MEET THE CANDIDATES AND CELEBRATE THE 2015 WESTCHESTER COUNTY CFO OF THE YEAR WINNERS WITH GUESTS AND COLLEAGUES.

DATE/TIME OCTOBER 8 | 5:30 P.M.

SPONSORS


SPECIAL REPORT MID-YEAR REVIEW: BANKING, INVESTMENT, LAW

Smoked out?

Little effect seen in ban on indoor e-cigarette use BY EVAN FALLOR evan@westfairinc.com

C

heryl Richter opened CV Vape Den LLC in Port Chester last February in an effort, she said, to help friends and family kick the tobacco habit. A former smoker of more than 30 years, Richter said electronic cigarettes — commonly referred to as e-cigarettes and their use referred to as “vaping” — helped wean her off tobacco, and she wanted to help other conventional tobacco smokers, many in their 50s and 60s, do the same at her vape shop and lounge. Now, she said, the positive message she has been trying to spread around e-cigarettes is being threatened after the Westchester County Board of Legislators last month voted unanimously to ban the use of electronic cigarettes in the workplace and in restaurants and bars. The goal of the bill, proposed by board Majority Leader Catherine Borgia, a Democrat, was to safeguard nonsmokers from the chemicals of e-cigarettes whose effects are still being evaluated. Borgia cited studies that have shown chemicals in e-cigarette vapor to have negative side effects, but Richter cited alternative peer-reviewed studies that she believes show otherwise. “It is important for electronic cigarette users to follow the same rules as cigarette smokers and not unwillingly put people in contact with the vapors,” Borgia said in June. “People working in the next cubicle, or eating at a restaurant next to a person using an electronic cigarette … should not be exposed to the potentially dangerous products being emitted from these devices.” The other motive behind the legislation, Borgia said, was to prevent children and teens from trying and possibly becoming addicted to e-cigarettes, which are offered in flavors such as cotton candy and bubble gum. According to a December federal study, e-cigarette smoking among high school students for the first time topped traditional smoking, partly due to a 61 percent rise between 2012 and 2013. “We have a much older clientele,” said

A case contains items for e-cigarettes.

Richter, a Stamford resident and New Rochelle native. “Many were hardened smokers. These are adults and not kids playing around looking to try e-cigarettes.” One customer of hers in particular, a New Rochelle nurse, said she was accustomed to using her e-cigarette in restaurants and did not believe she was disturbing other patrons. Once she learned about the ban, “She was absolutely floored,” said Richter, who co-owns the Vape Den with area native Christopher Maoist. “And this is a nurse we’re talking about.” Borgia said that before introducing the bill, she heard feedback from several Westchester bar and restaurant owners who wished to make clear what they felt were vague guidelines. Some cited the odor associated with e-cigarettes that irked some customers, while others simply found it difficult to enforce their own ban without a county backing. “This gives bar owners and restaurant owners a way to say ‘You can’t do that in

here,” Borgia said in an interview with the Business Journal. “I can’t say we’ve heard too much negative feedback from restaurants or bars.” While e-cigarette users could previously use their devices inside at bars and restaurants, Richter said they are now relegated to outdoor smoking sections with conventional cigarettes smokers, which could reintroduce them to smoking. She said many Manhattan vape users began coming to Westchester bars and lounges after New York City enacted a similar law banning e-cigarettes in April 2014. Now they’re not. She’s not so much worried about her store’s business affected by the ban — the law does not extend to vape shops and lounges. “If anybody’s business is impacted directly it’s the bars and nightclubs,” she said. A White Plains bar that did not wish to be identified said that business has not been impacted because most customers had already been under the impression that vap-

ing indoors was considered taboo. E-cigarettes can come in various forms, including traditional cigarettes or cigars, pens or memory sticks. Most are batterypowered and use a vaporizer to create a water vapor inhalant instead of tobacco smoke. Still, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, e-cigarettes contain nicotine and other addictive substances found in tobacco. There are more than 250 different e-cigarette brands on the market. Often marketed as a safe alternative to cigarettes and for those looking to quit smoking, customers must still be at least 18 years old to purchase them. Westchester County’s ban, which went into effect June 1, is enforced by the county Department of Health. The county’s Smoke Free Work Site Laws, passed in 2003, prohibit the smoking of conventional cigarettes in bars and restaurants. In January, Gov. Andrew Cuomo proposed a statewide ban on e-cigarettes in all indoor places where smoking is already banned. WCBJ | HV Biz

JULY 20, 2015

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LKB-2814 Hudson Valley Biz Trust Ad_LKB-2814 Hudson Valley Biz Trust Ad 6/30/15 11:07 AM Page 1

BY MARCUS COBBE

TRUST

Make time for midyear planning

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ven with half of the year in the books, many small-business owners wait until December or January to assess their business and identify ways to improve its financial performance. Yet making time in June or July for a midyear check-in — when you have a good idea of your business’ needs — may be one of the best times to help your business save time and money, and operate more efficiently in the long run. As a banker, I see the benefits of doing a midyear review first hand. A midyear review can help a business owner evaluate what lies ahead on the fiscal horizon and plan accordingly. The key to making the review effective is to keep it focused on the outcomes you want. Here are five key areas every business owner should consider at midyear to help make the rest of the year a success.

Evaluate business expenses

The handshake is just the beginning… At Lakeland Bank, the relationships we develop with customers are governed by the principles of trustworthiness: honesty, integrity and reliability. It’s what our customers expect, and it’s what we deliver every day. Contact John Rath, Senior Vice President/Group Leader 845-988-6680 JRath@LakelandBank.com

Serving the Hudson Valley Region and 48 offices throughout Northern New Jersey

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JULY 20, 2015

WCBJ | HV Biz

Understanding how profitable your business has been year to date can help you evaluate your current position and modify your financial goals as needed. If you don’t already do it, keep your business and personal accounts separate. Business checking and credit accounts that are kept separate from personal accounts can help you maintain accurate and complete records of all business-related income and expenses. Keeping separate records will also help you as you look for ways to minimize expenses and improve cash flow. A best practice is to track your cash flow on a monthly basis, which can help you improve cash flow projections and better plan for recurring expenses and business expansions.

Assess your business plan

Every small business should have a formal, written business plan to help with business decisions and strategic planning. According to a recent Wells Fargo survey, business owners who said they had a formal plan reported much greater optimism for 2015. If you don’t have one or if your plan hasn’t been updated in a long time, now is the time to consider writing or updating your business plan. The process of putting your goals in writing will help you focus on long-term business objectives and the steps needed to achieve them. (Among free online resources is the Business Plan Center that Wells Fargo offers).

Prepare for transitions

While you’re developing or refreshing your business plan, it’s also a good time to

look at your transition plan. As a business owner, it’s never too early to start planning for the future. There are many options to think about — such as whether you want to sell your business, pass it to a family member, cash out now or wind down over time — which can make transition planning seem like a daunting task. For this reason, it’s helpful to start the process of exit planning several years before you plan to make the transition. Four important steps to complete when preparing a transition plan are: • identifying your business exit planning goals and objectives; • determining what the company is worth; • identifying transition options, including sources of funding or financing for the transition; and • developing an implementation strate�y and timeline.

Rethink your payment options

Now also is the time to evaluate all of the payment options you offer customers to determine needed updates, including whether to transition to chip card/ EMV acceptance for credit card payments. Accepting advanced technologies like credit and debit cards embedded with chips (EMV cards) is one important step to strengthen security, and merchants are encouraged to upgrade their equipment by Oct. 1, when the fraud liability shift occurs. It’s important for small-business owners to understand and research this new payment method now so they are prepared by October.

Think taxes

It can be easy to lose sight of the need for year-round tax planning for your business. The more proactive you can be with managing and filing your tax returns, the better. Spend time reviewing your tax entries for the first half of the year to ensure you’ve captured all expenses, especially for things like cars that are used for business and personal use. If you haven’t met with your tax professional recently, now is a good time to go over key filing dates and deadlines like quarterly tax payments, and stay organized and prepared on business taxes. Marcus Cobbe was recently named head of small-business strate�y for Connecticut, New York and New Jersey for Wells Fargo. He can be reached at marcus.j.cobbe@wellsfargo.com.


Bank to lay off 42 Yonkers employees BY JOHN GOLDEN jgolden@westfairinc.com

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terling National Bank will lay off 42 workers in October at two of its recently acquired Yonkers offices as it shuffles and reorganizes staff following its parent company Sterling Bancorp’s completed merger with Hudson Valley Holding Corp. The layoffs in Yonkers were among 59 planned layoffs this fall recently reported by Montebello-based Sterling National Bank

to the state Department of Labor. Forty-one affected employees are at the headquarters branch of the former Hudson Valley Bank, now operating as Sterling National, at 21 Scarsdale Road. One employee will be laid off at the former Hudson Valley Bank branch at 35 E. Grassy Sprain Road in Yonkers. Rodney Whitwell, chief operating officer of Sterling National Bank, said the Scarsdale Road office will be refurbished by its new owner and “will continue to be our

Regeron tops list of best NY stocks

headquarters” in Yonkers. Sterling also will maintain its Rockland County corporate office at 400 Rell Blvd. in Montebello. Eight workers there will be included in the layoffs that will begin on Oct. 5, the bank notified the Labor Department. Eight employees will be laid off at three Sterling bank branches in Manhattan, and one worker will be affected at Sterling’s Long Island branch in Woodbury. Whitwell said the bank is eliminating overlapping positions created by Sterling

Michael Schiliro Commercial Loan Officer 914-422-2720

Bancorp’s $538 million deal to acquire Hudson Valley Holding Corp. that closed last month. The merged banking institutions have approximately $11.2 billion in combined assets, $6.9 billion in gross loans and over $8.4 billion in deposits, according to Sterling National Bank. The Sterling COO said the company is “going slowly on new hires” so as to keep open positions for current bank employees whose jobs are being eliminated in the merger.

Anthony Bruno Consumer Loan Officer 914-241-4701

Michael Goldrick Chief Lending Officer 845-279-7101

A RECENT ANALYSIS BY FINANCIAL TECHNOLOGY COMPANY SMARTASSET uncovered which New York-based stocks performed the best between January 2010 and March 2015. The company considered three factors in its analysis: stock price, dividends paid and volatility, and found the risk-adjusted return of the stocks, by which companies were indexed and ranked. The list below shows the top-performing companies in New York.

Raymond Sacher Commercial Loan Officer 914-241-4784 Stephanie Melowsky Commercial Loan Officer 914-289-2920

WE JUST STRENGTHENED OUR LENDING TEAM PCSB has been partnering with Hudson Valley consumers and businesses for over 140 years. We’re committed to knowing you and your business well enough to help you make sound financial decisions. So we provide the best and brightest financial minds in the business. Meet the newest members of our team. They’re ready to work with you on your finances today.

We offer a full line of banking products and services: • Residential Mortgages • Commercial Checking • NOW Account (Non-Profit) • Cash Management Services • A Variety of Savings Options • Construction Loans • Commercial Mortgages Make the PCSB team part of your team!

Visit a local branch or call (845) 279-7101 www.pcsb.com Source: Smart Asset

2477 Route 6, Brewster, NY 10509

Brewster • Eastchester • Fishkill • Greenburgh • Jefferson Valley Kent • Mahopac • Mount Kisco • Mount Vernon • New City Pawling • Pawling Village • Silver Lake • Somers • Yorktown

WCBJ | HV Biz

JULY 20, 2015

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FACTS & FIGURES

MANHATTAN

Sabine South Texas Gathering LLC. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 1511842-scc.

Giant Gas Gatherine LLC. 1415 Lousiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, volunray. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11836-scc.

Sabine Williston Basin LLC. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11844-scc.

BANKRUPTCIES

Sabine Bear Paw Basin LLC. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11837-scc. Sabine East Texas Basin LLC. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11838-scc. Sabine Mid-Continent LLC. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11840-scc. Sabine Mid-Continent Gathering LLC. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 1511839-scc. Sabine Oil & Gas Finance Corp. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11841-scc. Sabine Oil & Gas Corp. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11835-scc. Sabine South Texas LLC. 1415 Louisiana, Suite 1600, Houston, Texas 77002. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Jonathan S. Henes. Filed: July 15. Case no. 15-11843-scc.

Items appearing in the Westchester County Business Journal’s On The Record section are compiled from various sources, including public records made available to the media by federal, state and municipal agencies and the court system. While every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of this information, no liability is assumed for errors or omissions. In the case of legal action, the records cited are open to public scrutiny and should be inspected before any action is taken. Questions and comments regarding this section should be directed to: Bob Rozycki c/o Westfair Communications Inc. 3 Westchester Park Drive, Suite G7 White Plains, N.Y. 10604-3407 Phone: 694-3600 • Fax: 694-3680

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JULY 20, 2015

POUGHKEEPSIE William VasselL Services Inc. 6 Cannon St., Poughkeepsie 12601. Chapter 11, voluntary. Represented by Lewis D. Wrobel. Filed: July 8. Case no. 15-36256-cgm.

COURT CASES 105 Mt. Kisco Associates LLC et al. Filed by Richards Lumber & Building Materials Center Inc. et al. Action: comprehensive environmental. No attorney listed. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05346-NSR. Advanced Reconnaissance Corp. Filed by Joseph Lee Simpson. Action: FLSA: minimum wage. Attorney: Russell Gustavson Wheeler. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05391-KMK. Alpha Gas and Electric LLC. Filed by Stewart Abramson. Action: Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991. Attorney: Aytan Yehoshua Bellin. Filed: July 13. Case no. 7:15-cv-05299KMK. Barnes Medical Billing Services Inc. Filed by Eugene Chiulli. Action: Fair Debt Collection Act. Attorney: Vincent Volino. Filed: July 10. Case no. 7:15-cv-05347-NSR. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Marciela Barrera, Jaime Armijo, Kymberlee Bateni, Tiffany Blundell, Sheila Bradshaw, Melissa Cherry, Robin Corbello, Denise Esparza, Amanda Ferguson, Deshaaron Holmes, Stephanie Klopack, Sherry Lopez De Ricci, Healther Lulo, Stephanie Martini, Jaime Slaven, Amber Snyder, Amber Thompson and Tyson Thompson. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Tara Bohannon, Jessica Brown, Alexis Burdette, Emily Cooper, Meghan Flores, Tykena Grigg, Jessica Johnson, Ashley Kinsey, Alexandra Marin, Susan McIntosh, Keristan Phelps, Candace Shepard, Elizabeth Stouder, Kimberly Stuckey, Sara Sturgil, Tonya Toothman, Nakita White, Jennifer Whittington and Carenia Williams. Action: diversityproduct liability. Attorneys: Brian S. Kabateck, Richard L. Kellner, Linda Berjouhi Melidonian and Paul D. Stevens. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv05455-CS.

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Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Amanda Bradway. Action: diversity-personal injury. Attorney: Christopher Nemat Shakib. Filed: July 9. Case no. 7:15-cv-05307-CS.

Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Varita Williams. Action: diversity-product liability. Attorney: Brian John Perkins. Filed: July 9. Case no. 7:15-cv-05310-CS.

2440 Walton Realty LLC, Yonkers. Seller: Rojan Realty Company LLC, Mount Vernon. Property: 315 E. Third St., Mount Vernon. Amount: $3.4 million. Filed July 13.

5 Stanley Lane Corp., New Hyde Park. Seller: Migdalia Rivera, Mount Vernon. Property: 13 12th Avenue South, Mount Vernon. Amount: $118,000. Filed July 10.

Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Martha E. Cota. Action: diversity-product liability. Attorney: Sarah J. Showard. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05441-CS.

DM Restoration Inc. Filed by Star Insurance Co. Action: diversity action. Attorney: Robert Mark Dunn. Filed: July 13. Case no. 7:15-cv-05413-CS.

779 Palisades LLC, Scarsdale. Seller: Roberts Realty LLC, Yonkers. Property: 184 Roberts Ave., Yonkers. Amount: $3.4 million. Filed July 9.

CitiMortgage Inc. Seller: Loren Glassman, White Plains. Property: 281 N. Washington St., Mount Pleasant. Amount: $816,357. Filed July 10.

Independent Living Inc. Filed by Jack Bennett. Action: Americans with Disabilities Act – employment discrimination. Attorney: William Joseph Sipser. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv05490-KMK.

Focus International LLC, Ardsley. Seller: Dukil Ohnuki, et al, Ardsley. Property: 2048 Saw Mill Rive Road, Yorktown. Amount: $1.7 million. Filed July 9.

EAL Corp., Bronxville. Seller: Peter P. Rosato, White Plains. Property: 560 Halstead Ave., 3D, Harrison. Amount: $90,000. Filed July 10.

Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Kristina Marie Crisel. Action: diversity-product liability. Attorney: Clinton L. Kelly. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05445-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Julie Deal. Action: diversity-personal injury. Attorneys: Jennifer L. Bartlett and David Todd Mathews. Filed: July 10. Case no. 7:15-cv-05314-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Samantha Berry Garner. Action: diversity-product liability. Attorney: James H. Colmer Jr. Filed: July 9. Case no. 7:15-cv-05317-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Melanie Hartman. Action: diversity-personal injury. Attorneys: Timothy J. Becker, Rolf Fiebiger and Michael J. Johnson. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05450-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Lisseth Heredia. Action: diversity-product liability. Attorney: Keith David Griffin. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05447-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Amy Johnson and Linda Rogers. Action: diversityproduct liability. Attorney: Catherine Theodora Heacox. Filed: July 10. Case no. 7:15-cv-05358-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Angele Lovejoy. Action: diversity action. Attorney: Wendell Terry Locke. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05446-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Angela Ochoa. Action: diversity-product liability. Attorneys: Mark John Geragos, Tina Glandian and Benjamin Jared Meiselas. Filed: July 13. Case no. 7:15-cv05394-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Dena Simons. Action: diversity-product liability. Attorney: Robert Roy Luke. Filed: July 9. Case no. 7:15-cv-05276-CS. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Filed by Yolanda Villarreal. Action: diversity (citizenship). Attorney: Robert J. Evola. Filed: July 9. Case no. 7:15-cv-05308-CS.

Inovanti LLC. Filed by Lorenzo Gasperini. Action: diversity-torts. Attorneys: Craig Matthew Cepler and Russell Marc Yankwitt. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05410-VB. Mid-Hudson Medical Group PC et al. Filed by Charlene Gai. Action: job discrimination (religion). Attorney: Vincent Louis DeBiase. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05420-CS. Star Insurance Co. Filed by Ramapo Central School District. Action: diversity action. Attorney: Robert Mark Dunn. Filed: July 13. Case no: 7:15-cv05409-CS. Super Stop & Shop 100528. Filed by Ellen Savini. Action: diversity(citizenship). Attorney: Mitchell B. Levine. Filed: July 9. Case no. 7:15-cv05329-KMK. Tommy Moloney’s Inc. Filed by Army West Point Sports Properties LLC. Action: diversity-other contract. Attorney: Lynn Rowe Larsen. Filed: July 15. Case no. 7:15-cv-05492. United Air/Lines Inc. Filed by The Wave Studio LLC. Action: copyright infringement. Attorneys: Nate A. Garhart and Vijay K. Toke. Filed: July 14. Case no. 7:15-cv-05392-CS. Village of Mamaroneck Police Dept. et al. Filed by James Gaffney. Action: job discrimination (age). No attorney listed. Filed: July 9. Case no. 7:15-cv-05290-KMK. Westchester Medical Center Health Care Corp. et al. Filed by Alfred Ortiz and Maritza Ortiz. Action: The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. Attorney: Andrew Rozynski. Filed: July 13. Case no. 7:15-cv-05432NSR.

DEEDS Above $1 million 10 Frog Rock Road LLC, Chappaqua. Seller: CitiMortgage Inc. Property: 10 Frog Rock Road, New Castle. Amount: $1.3 million. Filed July 9.

Gus Van Tam LLC, Encino, Calif. Seller: Wendy Friedman, Cross River. Property: 110 N. Salem Road, Lewisboro. Amount: $1.2 million. Filed July 10. HSBC Bank USA N.A. Seller: Steven T.Wieder, et al, Rye Brook. Property: 189 Farragut Circle, New Rochelle. Amount: $1.2 million. Filed July 8. Mitchell Wilk Development LLC, Rye. Seller: Novella Adoue, Rye. Property: 34 Griswold Road, Harrison. Amount: $1.2 million. Filed July 10. P and J Housing Partners LLC, New York City. Seller: Rebuild General Contracting Inc., Bedford. Property: 63 Charles Road, Bedford. Amount: $3.7 million. Filed July 8. Three Coat Corp., Whitestone. Seller: 750 S. Columbus LLC, Douglaston. Property: 754 S. Columbus Ave., Mount Vernon. Amount: $1 million. Filed July 10. WA Special 8 LLC, New York City. Seller: Curban Realty Corp., Valhalla. Property: 1217 Yonkers Ave., Yonkers. Amount: $1 million. Filed July 13. Youth Study Basketball LLC, Pelham. Seller: Component Assembly Systems Inc., Pelham. Property: 632/636 Fifth Ave., Pelham. Amount: $1.2 million. Filed July 9.

Below $1 million 139 S. Main Street Inc., Bronx. Seller: Torosan Realty LLC, Port Chester. Property: 139 S. Main St., Rye. Amount: $250,000. Filed July 9. 170 Harrison Avenue LLC, Stamford, Conn. Seller: Barry Feiner, trustee of the Feiner Family Trust, Harrison. Property: 1780 Harrison Ave., Harrison. Amount: $740,000. Filed July 13. 4 Summerland Lane Builders LLC, Briarcliff Manor. Seller: David I. Kahn, Cortlandt Manor. Property: 4 Summerland Lane, Mount Pleasant. Amount: $400,000. Filed July 9.

Equity Trust Co., Bronxville. Seller: Philip Simchock, Newburgh. Property: 52 Fox Ave., Yonkers 10704. Property: 62 Fox Ave., Yonkers. Amount: $215,000. Filed July 8. Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. Seller: Barry R. Fertel, New Rochelle. Property: 1701 Crompond Road, Peekskill 10566. Amount: $46,643. Filed July 10. Federal National Mortgage Association. Seller: Daniel P. Romano, Yonkers. Property: 351 Union Ave., Mount Vernon. Amount: $298,319. Filed July 8. Federal National Mortgage Association. Seller: John A. Sarcone III, White Plains. Property: 18 McGregor Lane, Cortlandt. Amount: $457,491. Filed July 8. Global Real Estate USA Inc., New York City. Seller: Madeline Carullo, Eastchester. Property: 2 Myrtle Place, Eastchester. Amount: $665,000. Filed July 8. Global Real Estate USA Inc., New York City. Seller: Robert V. Napoli, Eastchester. Property: 57 Howard Ave., Eastchester. Amount: $580,000. Filed July 13. Goshen Mortgage REO LLC, Greenwich, Conn. Seller: Frank M. Rutigliano, White Plains. Property: 6 Ashdown Court, 15-F, Peekskill. Amount: $359,149. Filed July 10. JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Seller: Nicholas P. Barone, White Plains. Property: 130 Rolling Way, Peekskill. Amount: $529,283. Filed July 9. National Residential Nominee Services Inc. Seller: Theresa Campbell, Cross River. Property: 24 Briar Court, Lewisboro. Amount: $335,000. Filed July 10. Olymbos Realty LLC, Flushing. Seller: Laura Stark, Chesapeake City, Md. Property: 155 Webster Ave., New Rochelle. Amount: $480,000. Filed July 10. P5 Realty LLC, Peekskill. Seller: Beach Auto Group Inc., Peekskill. Property: 1099 Washington St., Peekskill. Amount: $300,000. Filed July 13.


FACTS Sabrinas Holdings LLC, Montrose. Seller: Naomi Johnson, Buchanan. Property: 193 First St., Cortlandt. Amount: $105,000. Filed July 9. U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: Diane Johnson, et al White Plains. Property: 399 Ringgold St., Peekskill. Amount: $144,500. Filed July 9. U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: Joseph A. Maria, White Plains. Property: 8 Glendale Road, New Castle. Amount: $500,076. Filed July 13. U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: Marcos Mendoza, et al, White Plains. Property: 168 Linden St., Yonkers. Amount: $178,500. Filed July 13. U.S. Bank Trust N.A. Seller: David Gallo, Armonk. Property: 605 S. Sixth Ave., Mount Vernon. Amount: $388,238. Filed July 10. Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Seller: Bertha Zevallos, Larchmont. Property: 44 Oak St., Rye. Amount: $154,800. Filed July 13. Wilmington Savings Fund Society FSB. Seller: P. Daniel Hollis, Mount Kisco. Property: 87 State St., Ossining. Amount: $147,000. Filed July 10.

FORECLOSURES CORTLANDT MANOR, 1212-14 Main St. Two-family residence; lot size: N/A. Plaintiff: PNC Bank NA. Plaintiff ’s attorney: Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, 877-759-1835; 175 Mile Crossing Blvd., Rochester. Defendant: Paul Vataj. Referee: Robert Lefcourt. Sale: July 30, 10 a.m. Approximate lien: $387,218.07. HARTSDALE, 17 Washington Ave. Single-family residence; .13 acre. Plaintiff: Greenpoint Mortgage Funding Inc. Plaintiff ’s attorney: Charfield Okon Salomone & Pincus; 425 RXR Plaza, Uniondale. Defendant: Ester Maya. Referee: John Gifford Molloy. Sale: July 22,10:30 a.m. Approximate lien: $456,549.48. MOUNT VERNON, 168 Hillside Ave. Commercial building; .23 acre. Plaintiff: Colfin Metro Funding LLC. Plaintiff ’s attorney: Westerman Ball Ederer Miller Zucker; 1201 RXR Plaza, Uniondale. Defendant: James Spiridigliozzi Inc. Referee: Robert Cypher. Sale: July 28, 9 a.m. Approximate lien: $665,756.84. PEEKSKILL, 4101 Do�wood Court. Single-family residence; .02 acre. Plaintiff: Federal National Mortgage Association. Plaintiff ’s attorney: Rosicki & Rosicki & Associates, 845897-1600; 2 Summit Court, Suite 301, Fishkill. Defendant: Andrew Head. Referee: Massimo DiFabio. Sale: July 22, 9:30 a.m. Approximate lien: $493,501.72.

SOMERS, 50 Wilner Road. Singlefamily residence; .95 acre. Plaintiff: JPMorgan Chase Bank NA. Plaintiff ’s attorney: Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, 877-759-1835; 175 Mile Crossing Blvd., Rochester. Defendant: Jaimi Vozzo. Referee: Paul Noto. Sale: July 20, 10 a.m. Approximate lien: $499,937.03. WHITE PLAINS, 35 Kass Road. Single-family residence; lot size: N/A. Plaintiff: HSBC Bank USA National Association. Plaintiff ’s attorney: Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP; 700 Crossroads Building, 2 State St., Rochester. Defendant: Zina Charlip-Evans. Referee: Julia Henrichs. Sale: July 20, 9:30 a.m. Approximate lien: $628,976.96. YONKERS, 37 Dunbar St. Twofamily residence; .11 acre. Plaintiff: The Bank of New York Mellon. Plaintiff ’s attorney: Frenkel, Lambert, Weiss, Weisman & Gordon, 631-969-3100; 53 Gibson St., Bay Shore. Defendant: Yvon Joseph. Referee: Anthony Cornachio. Sale: July 27, 10:30 a.m. Approximate lien: $629,657.13.

JUDGMENTS Aark Contractors Inc., Spring Valley. $84,785 in favor of Marjam Supply Company Inc., Farmingdale. Filed July 8. Anthony Rivara Contracting LLC, White Plains. $5,386 in favor of Richard Dudgeon Inc., Bridgeport, Conn. Filed July 8. Jag Contracting Service Corp., Mount Vernon. $12,432 in favor of Bushwick Metals LLC, Bridgeport, Conn. Filed July 8. LLF Construction Services Inc., White Plains. $19,900 in favor of Norguard Insurance Co., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Filed July 8. Marcs Village Pharmacy Inc., Elmsford. $6,569 in favor of Collins Asset Group LLC, Austin, Tex. Filed July 6. Newburgh Winnelson Co., Newburgh. $1,575 in favor of Fleet Pump and Service Group Inc., Harrison. Filed July 6. Northeast Landscape and Masonry Associates Inc., Elmsford. $10,480 in favor of Bushwick Metals LLC, Bridgeport, Conn. Filed July 8. TATSF Corp., Chappaqua. $7,105 in favor of US Foods Inc., Rosemont, Ill. Filed July 6. White City Limo Inc., Ossining. $18,702 in favor of Twin City Fire Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn. Filed July 7. Wish Home Styles Inc., Rye. $1,985 in favor of Golden Rabbit Enamelware, Arlington, Va. Filed July 7.

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LIS PENDENS The following filings indicated a legal action has been initiated, the outcome of which may affect the title to the property listed. Acevedo, Rafael, et al. Filed by Nationstar Mortgage LLC. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $328,000 affecting property located at 108 Frederic St., Yonkers 10703. Filed Sept. 5. Barchella, Frank A., et al. Filed by Customers Bank. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $525,690 affecting property located at 141 Highland St., Port Chester 10573. Filed Sept. 5. Cameron, Nadine J., et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 325 Highland Ave., Unit 403, Mount Vernon 10553. Filed Sept. 3. Coviello-Macedo, Sally, et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $101,000 affecting property located at 104 Byron Road, Thornwood 10594. Filed Sept. 4. Delisser, William Alton, et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $700,000 affecting property located at 168 Park Ave., Mount Vernon 10550. Filed Sept. 5. Echavarria, Ernesto, et al. Filed by HSBC Bank USA N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $535,500 affecting property located at 82 Maple St., Yonkers 10701. Filed Sept. 3. Estaba, Margaret, et al. Filed by U.S. Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 194 Buena Vista Ave., Yonkers 10701. Filed Sept. 4. Forchetti, Romeo, et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 419 Palmer Road, Yonkers 10701. Filed Sept. 5. Gentzler, Bernadette Yu Ning Li, et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $385,000 affecting property located at 670 Locust St., Mount Vernon 10552. Filed Sept. 4. Hartwell, Patricia W., et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $500,000 affecting property located at 844 Peach Lake Road, North Salem 10560. Filed Sept. 4. Hasou, Ilham, et al. Filed by The Bank of New York Mellon. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 5 Noble Ave., Bronxville 10708. Filed Sept. 3.

FIGURES Hemmings, George, et al. Filed by U.S. Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $472,000 affecting property located at 405 S. 10th Ave., Mount Vernon 10550. Filed Sept. 4.

Triglia, Rocco, et al. Filed by Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $750,000 affecting property located at 24 Aida Lane, Cortlandt Manor 10567. Filed Sept. 3.

Hernandez, Raul, et al. Filed by Nationstar Mortgage LLC. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $461,250 affecting property located at 70 Remington Place, New Rochelle 10801. Filed Sept. 3.

Vassell, Florene, et al. Filed by Flagstar Bank F.S.B. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $360,000 affecting property located at 427 Nuber Ave., Mount Vernon 10553. Filed Sept. 4.

Inoa, Evelyn, et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $627,520 affecting property located at 821 Midland Ave., Yonkers 10704. Filed Sept. 5.

Velardo, Antonio, et al. Filed by HSBC Bank USA N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $568,000 affecting property located at 104 Dale Ave., Ossining 10562. Filed Sept. 3.

Lewis, Donovan, et al. Filed by U.S. Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 306 E. Sidney Ave., Mount Vernon 10553. Filed Sept. 3.

Watson, William C. Jr., et al. Filed by Federal National Mortgage Association. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $155,000 affecting property located at 1334 Longview Ave., Peekskill 10566. Filed Sept. 5.

Morris, Keith, et al. Filed by Hudson City Savings Bank. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $260,000 affecting property located at 210 Eighth St., Verplanck. Filed Sept. 4. Noka, Agostin, et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 175 Hugenot St., No. 903, New Rochelle 10801. Filed Sept. 3. Oceguera, Salvador, et al. Filed by CitiMortgage Inc. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $353,600 affecting property located at 84 Union St., New Rochelle 10805. Filed Sept. 5. Palmiotto, Steven D., et al. Filed by Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $607,000 affecting property located at 122 Pershing Ave., New Rochelle 10801. Filed Sept. 4. Robinson, Thomas, et al. Filed by U.S. Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $407,040 affecting property located at 135 N. MacQuesten Parkway, Mount Vernon 10550. Filed Sept. 4. Samuels, Seymour, et al. Filed by HSBC Bank USA N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $477,000 affecting property located at 2191 Crompond Road, Yorktown Heights 10598. Filed Sept. 5. Sergi, Vincent, et al. Filed by JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $160,000 affecting property located at 544 King St., Port Chester 10573. Filed Sept. 5. Townsend, Donald E., et al. Filed by Citizens Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 7 Copley Road, Larchmont 10538. Filed Sept. 4.

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Brooks Shopping Centers LLC, as owner. $42,055 as claimed by Piccini MCN Inc., West Nyack. Property: in Yonkers. Filed July 9.

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FC Yonkers Associates LLC, as owner. $312,982 as claimed by Center Line Studios Inc., New Winsor. Property: in Yonkers. Filed July 8. Hartsdale Development LLC, as owner. $74,742 as claimed by Engineered Devices Corp. Property: in Greenburgh. Filed July 10. Post Rd Plaza Fee LLC, as owner. $19,957 as claimed by Parkview Plumbing and Heating Inc., Bronxville. Property: in Pelham. Filed July 9.

NEW BUSINESSES This paper is not responsible for typographical errors contained in the original filings.

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Partnerships Girly Beauty Supply, 237 E. Main St., Mount Kisco 10549, c/o Elmer Alfredo Jara Gamarra and Cynthia K. Avila. Filed May 2. Mili Restaurant, 540 Halstead Ave., Mamaroneck 10543, c/o Jose Luis Guevara Merlos and Rosa L. Acosta. Filed April 29.

Sole Proprietorships Caasi Classic, 300 Palisade Ave., Yonkers 10703, c/o Betty Ofori. Filed May 2. Cervantes Landscaping, 45 Perry Ave., Port Chester 10573, c/o Juan Cervantes-Macias. Filed May 1.

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JULY 20, 2015

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LIBRARY SYSTEM NAMES TECH TRAINER

Allison Midgley

Allison Midgley has been appointed technology trainer at the Westchester Library System in Tarrytown. Midgley has nearly 20 years experience in developing curriculum and teaching digital literacy programs, most recently as technology coordinator for the David A. Howe Public Library in Wellsville, N.Y. “Allison will deliver training to staff of the WLS member libraries on the use of existing and emerging software, database and e-content programs and resources” said Terry Kirchner, WLS executive director. Her in-depth knowledge of integrated library systems will help WLS to creatively and effectively improve training to support WLS and the member libraries.”

BRAUDE TO TEACH AT PACE LAW Daniel Braude has been hired by Pace University School of Law as an adjunct professor to teach its e-discovery course scheduled for the fall semester. Braude is a partner in the law firm Wilson Elser, which has offices in White Plains. Co-chairman of the firm’s national e-Discovery practice, Braude will teach a class titled “Electronic Discovery” designed to provide students with the wide range of litigation skills needed to navigate today’s discovery-centric legal environment. Braude graduated cum laude with a J.D. degree from Seton Hall University School of Law and earned his Bachelor of Science degree from Lehigh University. He is a Certified Information Privacy Professional.

Daniel Braude

AMALGAMATED PROMOTES SCHAEFER Michael Schaefer has been promoted to managing director, strategic partnerships at Amalgamated Life Insurance Co. in White Plains. Schaefer will continue to serve as a senior sales executive, southern region while serving in his new position.

HRHCARE FLAGSHIP RENAMED Community health pioneer Jack Geiger, executives and staff and federal officials rededicated HRHCare’s flagship facility in Peekskill on the occasion of its 40th anniversary and renamed it in honor of Jeannette J. Phillips, the organization’s first board president in 1975 and the last living “founding mother” of Hudson River Health Care. The renaming ceremony took place at Pugsley

Park in Peekskill. HRHCare was founded to provide care to the medically underserved population of Peekskill. It has grown to include 24 directly operated health centers and six sub-recipient health centers delivering care throughout a 10-county region of New York to 135,000 patients with more than 200 primary care practitioners.

FOOD BANK APPOINTS DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR Allison L. Carballo has been appointed director of development by Elmsford-based The Food Bank for Westchester. Carballo will manage fundraising efforts to raise support from individuals, foundations, corporations and state and federal sources. A resident of Danbury, Carballo most recently worked for Abilis in Greenwich, a nonprofit organization that meets the needs of

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JULY 20, 2015

people with developmental disabilities. Prior to that, Carballo served as director of development for AMIC/Clear View School in Briarcliff Manor and Visiting Nurse & Hospice of Fairfield County in Norwalk. She also worked for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University in the Bronx and the Visiting Nurse Association of Hudson Valley.

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Schaefer joined Amalgamated Life in 2012. Prior to his first position at Amalgamated Life, Schaefer served as vice president and employee benefits consultant with Wells Fargo Insurance Services USA in Knoxville, Tenn.

COLDWELL BANKER NAMES YORKTOWN OFFICE MANAGER

Don M. Cummins III

Longtime Mahopac resident Don M. Cummins III has been appointed branch office manager of the Yorktown Heights office of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. Cummins will be responsible for the oversight of approximately 50 real estate professionals. A licensed attorney, Cummins has had nearly 20 years of legal experience, including as the director of legal services and professional standards for the Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors for the last four years. Prior to his position at HGAR, Cummins ran a private legal practice based in northern Westchester and Putnam counties that specialized in real estate issues, wills, trusts and estates and general litigation.

MOVING UP AT WEBSTER BANK Deborah Linder of Pleasantville has been promoted to senior vice president, senior portfolio manager, middle market, metro New York City at Webster Bank. Linder joined Webster in 2013 and most recently held the position of vice president, senior portfolio manager. She has more than 25 year of experience in

banking and financial services. Based in New York City, Linder is vice chairman of the Westchester Big Brother Big Sisters Advisory Board, a Big Sister for 10 years and a longtime volunteer of the Yonkers Sharing Community, a soup kitchen serving Westchester County.


PALLIATIVE CARE NURSE JOINS ORANGE REGIONAL MEDICAL GROUP

Patricia Barschow-Marton

Patricia Barschow-Marton has joined Orange Regional Medical Group in Middletown as palliative care nurse practitioner. She joins Emma Fattakhov, medical director, and Eileen Schmidt, palliative care navigator. Barschow-Marton served as an oncology nurse practitioner at Mount Sinai for nearly 20 years. In that role, she oversaw all aspects of oncology care for patients and received multiple awards for her efforts. Prior to her work as a nurse practitioner, Barschow-Marton worked in interventional radiology, in the emergency room at St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital, and as an infusion nurse at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

CO-COMMUNICATIONS HONORED Co-Communications Inc., a marketing and public relations agency, was recently recognized with awards from the Advertising Club of Connecticut, Public Relations Society of America Connecticut Valley Chapter and the Connecticut Art Directors Club. “We are thrilled to be recognized by these three distinguished organizations,” said Jessica Lyon, executive vice president and COO of Co-Communications. The awards included two recognizing graphic design

work on behalf of the Greater Hartford Arts Council; one award for the timeline lobby display developed for Burke Rehabilitation Center; and Gold Mercury Awards for the strategic communications plan developed for Marrakech; campaign for Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy; and marketing an educational online quiz for Grace Smith House to teach teens about digital abuse. Co-Communications’ work on behalf of Grace Smith House also won “Best in Show” award.

NEW BOARD MEMBERS AT WHITE PLAINS YOUTH BUREAU The Friends of the White Plains Youth Bureau has announced the appointment of three new board members: David Yount, attorney, founder and CEO of LicenseLogix; Steven R. Kramer, attorney and member-in-charge of the White Plains office of Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott; and Ted Havelka, campus operating officer at Berkeley College White Plains. Yount founded LicenseLogix in 2011, which offers business licensing and corporate compli-

ance services to corporations and nonprofit organizations. Kramer is a regional and national trial counsel for Fortune 100 companies in class action, multidistrict, consolidated multiparty and single-party litigation. Havelka brings more than 19 years of experience in career-focused post-secondary education to his post at Berkeley CollegeWestchester where he has increased student population, while increasing efficiencies in marketing and brand management.

AUG. 1 The Hudson Valley Gateway Chamber of Commerce presents the Hudson Valley Exposition, noon to 9 p.m., Riverfront Green Park in Peekskill. The event will feature a children’s stage with performers, music, arts, food, a farmers market and a fire and laser light show.

TOMPKINS FINANCIAL NAMES WEALTH ADVISER

BANK MARKS ANNIVERSARY OF MOBILE BRANCH

Steven Shepherd

Steven Shepherd has become part of the Hudson Valley team of Tompkins Financial Advisors based in its Brewster office on Route 22. In his new role, Shepherd is responsible for building new client relationships and identifying the appropriate investment strategies toward meeting their specific needs. He works closely with an internal team of financial planners and analysts to provide a variety of strategies focusing on wealth management, financial planning, risk management and tax planning. Prior to joining Tompkins, Shepherd held senior vice-president and managing director positions at Citi Bank, Morgan Stanley, CRT Capital and LaBranche, specializing in institutional equity research sales and trading.

BLEAKLEY PLATT WELCOMES NEW PARTNER

Michael G. Lewis

Michael G. Lewis, former chief legal officer at Lukoil North America, has joined Bleakley Platt & Schmidt LLP in White Plains as partner. Lewis has extensive experience managing large portfolios of commercial properties, structuring and enforcing franchise and distribution relationships and managing all areas of litigation affecting a company in the energy industry. Previously, he served as vice president and general counsel and corporate secretary at Getty Petroleum Marketing Inc. His multidisciplined practice will concentrate on real estate, environmental law and litigation, focusing on leasing, acquisitions and divestments and regulatory compliance.

From left: Cathy Scibelli, branch manager, mobile branch; Anthony Simeone, executive vice president and chief lending officer; Geraldine Brennan, senior vice president and chief risk officer; Walter Reese, senior vice president of retail banking; Rosemarie Mignogna, senior vice president and chief technology officer; Monica Zanotti, vice president and district manager; Laura K. Peters, senior vice president; LouAnn Mannino, vice president; and Peter M. Boger, chairman, president and CEO.

Ridgewood Savings Bank celebrated the 10th anniversary of its mobile branch, which brings banking directly to people at senior living facilities, schools and community events. The mobile branch was the first of its kind in New York state. In addition to now making regular stops at 22 senior housing centers, it serves as a traveling classroom for the ABA Teach Children to Save Program. The 40-foot-long vehicle features a fully equipped bank office enabling real-time transactions with cellular

technology. It’s equipped with teller windows, ATM, private office and customer-service desk. Walter Reese, the bank’s senior vice president of retail banking, explained, “The mobile branch originated when we were brainstorming about new ways to serve our customers. Although banking has changed during the past 10 years and technological advancements have given many customers greater access to their finances, the bus still serves an important role in our community.”

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JULY 20, 2015

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SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED

NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS OF FSW Family Services of Westchester Inc. has appointed Valerie Brown as executive director of Big Brothers Big Sisters of FSW. A college and career counselor, Brown has been in private practice for more than 20 years. She has extensive corporate employment experience before holding numerous volunteer leadership roles with a focus on youth counseling, men-

toring, college and career guidance. She is deeply committed to the Big Brothers Big Sisters program, having served for more than 14 years on the board of trustees for BBBS New York City, most recently holding the position of vice president of the executive committee. Brown currently serves on the National Board of Family Equality Council.

10TH ANNIVERSARY FOR GREEN TEAM

Citrin scholarship committee, from left, Kelly DiChiaro, Alex Serrano, Ed Roberts, Karen Kosakevitch, Gil Watkins, Mayke Prezkop, Sharon Zsoldos, Lori Drucker, Steven Battino, Loren Camara, Pete Lupi, Jackie Weinstein, Michael Bayne, Brooke Mayones, Stacey Genna, Patti Faubel and Andrew Synder.

Citrin Cooperman announced that it has awarded 11 high school student college scholarship winners totaling $55,000 as part of the firm’s 11th annual High School Accounting/Business Student Grant Program.

“We’re proud to acknowledge the hard work and commitment of these students,” CEO Joel Cooperman said. Since 2005, Citrin Cooperman’s scholarship program has awarded $376,000 to 94 students.

KEANE NAMED STEPINAC BOARD CHAIRMAN

Kevin J. Keane

Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains has named alumnus (class of 1974) Kevin J. Keane of White Plains, managing partner of O’Connor Davies LLP, as chairman of its board of trustees. Keane succeeds William F. Plunkett Jr. (class of 1958) who served as the board’s first chairman since its creation five years ago. Keane’s career with O’Connor Davies, has

spanned more than 30 years. As managing partner and a member of the executive committee, he has led O’Connor Davies, a certified public accounting and consulting firm with nine offices in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Maryland to become the largest CPA firm in Westchester County. He is also a director and founder of The Westchester Bank.

DORF & NELSON NAMES NEW PARTNER

Nicholas J. Chivily

Nicholas J. Chivily has joined Rye-based Dorf & Nelson LLP as the firm’s newest partner, working in the Rye headquarters. Chivily joined the Dorf & Nelson team after serving as partner and head of the New York office of Mayo Crowe LLC, a Hartford-based firm, for 10 years. Prior to that he was co-managing partner at McCarthy Fingar LLP in White Plains.

Chivily has extensive experience representing lenders and borrowers in all aspects of restructuring, negotiating and documenting loan transactions. He also has experience with commercial loans, mortgage loans, structured finance and asset-based finance, restructures, workouts and problem loans, with an emphasis on bankruptcy considerations.

Information for these features has been submitted by the subjects or their delegates.

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JULY 20, 2015

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Geoff Green, owner of the Green Team Home Selling System in Warwick, marked the 10th anniversary of his business. “Because our success is tied so heavily to our local community,” said Green, “I always

feel compelled to give back. One of our missions as a company is to be a leader in the community.” Last year The Green Team donated funds to 26 local charities, youth groups and other philanthropic organizations.

PARIJA JOINS NYPA The New York Power Authority in White Plains has named Soubhagya Parija as senior vice president and chief risk officer, to administer all aspects of risk management and insurance at the nation’s largest state public power organization. Parija joins NYPA from Walmart, where he was a director and oversaw the global compliance risk strategy for the retail giant’s operations in 26 countries. He has also

worked in management at two major utilities in the U.S. and India. Before Walmart, Parija worked at Signet Jewelers Inc., where he developed the company’s enterprise risk-management program, which included regulatory compliance, and he spent six years at Duke Energy, the nation’s largest electric power holding company. Parija also worked at NTPC, India’s largest utility.

GOLF TOURNEY RAISES $240,000 Orange Regional Medical Center Foundation in Middletown recently held its annual golf tournament raising $240,000 in net proceeds to benefit ORMC’s new medical office building and Spagnoli Family Cancer Center. The event, headed by Ray VanVoorhis and Jake Kriney, hosted 248 golfers at the Wallkill Golf Course and West Hills Country Club. Orange Regional Medical Center has be-

gun construction on a 153,000-square-foot, five-story medical office building and a 26,000-square-foot, single-story Spagnoli Family Cancer Center at the hospital’s main campus. When completed in the fall of 2016, the $99 million project will help relocate many outpatient services currently provided at other offcampus locations.

C&W WELCOMES RUOFF Cushman & Wakefield announced the addition of senior director Craig Ruoff to its White Plains team. Ruoff specializes in both tenant and landlord representation services in Westchester and Fairfield counties, as well as

on a national and international basis. He has 25 years of professional real estate experience. Prior to joining C & W, Ruoff was an associate broker at Rakow Commercial Realty Group for 12 years.


FACTS Dance X-Treme Fitness, 37 Lexington Ave., Mount Vernon 10552, c/o Nigel Jeremiah. Filed April 30. Dome of Auset, 290 Union Ave., New Rochelle 10801, c/o Sankofa Ra. Filed April 30. Done Right Services General Contracting, 26 First St., Yonkers 10704, c/o Antonios Petratos. Filed May 1. Expressions of Praise, 65 Winthrop Drive, Cortlandt Manor 10507, c/o Lisa McNeil. Filed May 1. Fit Meals, 40 Thomas St., Pleasantville 10570, c/o Roberta Ramos. Filed April 30. GSP General Contracting, 660 N. Barry Ave., Mamaroneck 10543, c/o Oswaldo Rafael Interiano Pineda. Filed April 30. Happyfeet Group Family Daycare, 158 S. 10th Ave., Mount Vernon 10550, c/o Tiwana Sutton. Filed May 2. Hudson Valley Alarm Systems, P.O. Box 509, Somers 10589, c/o Vincent Cotrona. Filed May 1. J.V. Electric, 2305 Crompond Road, Cortlandt Manor 10567, c/o Juan A. Vintimilla Pintado. Filed April 30. Little Angel’s Day Care, 12 Lincoln Ave., West Harrison 10604, c/o Antonia Perez. Filed May 1. New Branding Generation, 1350 E. Main St., Suite 284, Shrub Oak 10588, c/o Derek E. Johnson. Filed April 30. Robin’s Heavenly Hands, 300 Olivia St., Port Chester 10573, c/o Robin Randolph. Filed May 1. Rolling Fields Neighborhood Association, 38 Kathleen Lane, Mount Kisco 10549, c/o Leonard G. Cristino. Filed May 2. Stateside Staffing USA, 5 Hemlock Road, Briarcliff Manor 10510, c/o Michael Katz. Filed April 30.

FIGURES Lau Properties LLC, Greenwich, Conn. Seller: Gary Walters, et al, Danbury, Conn. Property: in Dover. Amount: $999,000. Filed July 9.

Pennings Meadow LLC, Warwick. Seller: Judith A. Gleason, Warwick. Property: 125 Sanfordville Road, Warwick. Amount: $250,000. Filed July 14.

Federal National Mortgage Association. Seller: Jeffrey Albanese, Goshen. Property: 49 King St., Port Jervis 12771. Amount: $111,808. Filed July 13.

Leprechaun Ventures Ltd., Esopus. Seller: Myrna Ann Hricisak, Kingston. Property: 158 Schryver St., Port Ewen. Amount: $65,000. Filed July 7.

River Peek 3250 LLC, Newburgh. Seller: 3250 Route 9W Associates LLC, New Windsor. Property: 3250 Route 9W, New Windsor. Amount: $448,000. Filed July 14.

Tuthill Finance LP, Fairfield, Conn. Seller: John Revella, Walden. Property: 22 Bain Ave. and 516 Main St., Poughkeepsie 12601. Amount: $1 million. Filed July 6.

Federal National Mortgage Association. Seller: Linda Sanchez, Newburgh. Property: 6 Birchwood Lane, Salisbury Mills 12577. Amount: $192,673. Filed July 13.

LK Properties of Orange County LLC, Newburgh. Seller: The Bank of New York Mellon. Property: 57 Poplar St., Newburgh 12550. Amount: $47,000. Filed July 13.

Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Seller: Karen E. Paul, et al, Goshen. Property: 53 S. Main St., Harriman 10926. Amount: $92,400. Filed July 7.

KMM Homes LLC, Catskill, as owner. Lender: The Bank of Greene County, Catskill. Property: Lot 2 and Lot 4, Penn Avenue, Saugerties and Catskill. Amount: $100,000. Filed July 10.

Yi Yuan Inc., Bearsville. Seller: Royal King Property LLC, Huntington Station. Property: in Kingston. Amount: $1.3 million. Filed July 2.

Federal National Mortgage Association. Seller: Stephan Hohil, et al, Ellenville. Property: 18 Franko Drive, Kerhonkson 12446. Amount: $321,803. Filed July 8.

Marist Real Property Services Inc., Poughkeepsie. Seller: Landslide Enterprises LLC, Poughkeepsie. Property: 57 Fulton St., Poughkeepsie. Amount: $870,000. Filed July 9.

SRMOF II 2012-I Trust. Seller: Robert W. Fink, Goshen. Property: 12 Knox Road, Highland Falls 10928. Amount: $158,629. Filed July 9.

McDonough, Tara, et al, Newburgh, as owner. Lender: M&T Bank, Buffalo. Property: in Newburgh. Amount: $178,341. Filed July 10.

Below $1 million

GKMM LLC, Kinnelon, N.J. Seller: Pritam S. Grewal, et al, Mahwah, N.J. Property: 204 Barclay St., Port Jervis 12771. Amount: $165,000. Filed July 10.

NBC Properties LLC, et al, Fairlawn, N.J. Seller: Gabriel Butkovich, Congers. Property: in Newburgh. Amount: $32,000. Filed July 10.

Highview Estates of Orange County Inc., Salisbury Mills. Seller: Agotaras Properties LLC, Goshen. Property: S. Montgomery St., Walden 12586. Amount: $30,000. Filed July 13.

NEP Properties LLC, Marlboro. Seller: Kevin M. Johnston, Conway, Ariz. Property: in Marlborough. Amount: $28,000. Filed July 8.

Dellaportas Enterprises I Inc., as owner. Lender: Leonard Gerber. Property: in Beacon. Amount: $300,000. Filed July 10.

Beacon Real Estate Group LLC, Beacon. Seller: Melzingah Corp., Fort Plain. Property: in Beacon. Amount: $1.2 million. Filed July 10.

Equity Homes of New York Inc., Port Jervis, as owner. Lender: Toda Capital LLC, Stamford, Conn. Property: 62 Guinea Hill Road, Wawayanda. Amount: $200,000. Filed July 8.

Globalfoundries U.S. 2 LLC, Santa Clara, Calif. Seller: International Business Machines Corp., Armonk. Property: in East Fishkill and Fishkill. Amount: $44.6 million. Filed July 9.

Equity Homes of New York Inc., Port Jervis, as owner. Lender: Toda Capital LLC, Stamford, Conn. Property: Rebecca Drive, Wawayanda. Amount: $200,000. Filed July 8.

Migliore, Michael J., et al, Gardiner, as owner. Lender: Farm Credit East ACA, Middletown. Property: in Gardiner. Amount: $225,000. Filed July 7. Pennings, Stephen K., et al, Warwick, as owner. Lender: Farm Credit East ACA, Middletown. Property: 4 Warwick Turnpike, Warwick. Amount: $300,000. Filed July 14. Santoro, James, et al, as owner. Lender: Sawyer Savings Bank. Property: in East Fishkill. Amount: $417,000. Filed July 9. The DM Equities of New York LLC, Harriman, as owner. Lender: Libertyville Capital Group II LLC, Montgomery. Property: Lot 22, Howard Court, Goshen. Amount: $200,000. Filed July 8. The DM Equities of New York LLC, Harriman, as owner. Lender: Libertyville Capital Group II LLC, Montgomery. Property: Lot 23, Howard Court, Goshen. Amount: $200,000. Filed July 8.

Your Tru Voice, 85 Park Drive, Mount Kisco 10549, c/o Rachelle Cohen. Filed April 29.

The DM Equities of New York LLC, Harriman, as owner. Lender: Libertyville Capital Group II LLC, Montgomery. Property: Lot 5, Howard Court, Goshen. Amount: $200,000. Filed July 8.

HUDSON VALLEY

The DM Equities of New York LLC, Harriman, as owner. Lender: Libertyville Capital Group II LLC, Montgomery. Property: 8 Ruth Court, Goshen. Amount: $200,000. Filed July 8.

BUILDING LOANS

&

DEEDS

Below $1 million

Above $1 million

Benoni, Theodore, et al, as owner. Lender: Ulster Savings Bank. Property: in Poughkeepsie. Amount: $199,219. Filed July 6.

303 Tower Drive LLC, Middletown. Seller: THM Properties Inc., Middletown. Property: in Wallkill. Amount: $1.8 million. Filed July 10.

12 Lemberg 007 LLC, Monroe. Seller: Lemberg Gardens LLC, Monroe. Property: in Monroe. Amount: $100,000. Filed July 7. 37 Hawk Lane LLC, Holtsville. Seller: Dominick Volino, Poughkeepsie. Property: 37 Hawk Lane, Poughkeepsie. Amount: $232,000. Filed July 6. 77 Mill Street LLC, Newburgh. Seller: FSB Properties Inc., Uniondale. Property: 77 Mill St., Newburgh 12550. Amount: $135,540. Filed July 8. 84 Hurley Property LLC, Ann Arbor, Mich. Seller: Ronald B. Hanovice, Kingston. Property: in Kingston. Amount: $350,000. Filed July 2. Ashley Homes LLC, Wappingers Falls. Seller: DiMarco Properties LLC, Oldsmar, Fla. Property: in Poughkeepsie. Amount: $50,000. Filed July 10.

Diamond Back Properties LLC, New Rochelle. Seller: Peggy Norman Kiernan, Poughkeepsie. Property: in Poughkeepsie. Amount: $175,000. Filed July 7.

HSBC Bank USA N.A. Seller: Jason Paul Sautter, Unionville. Property: 84 Gregory Road, Johnson 10933. Amount: $289,745. Filed July 9. HSBC Bank USA N.A. Seller: Melvin Paul Spivak, Poughkeepsie. Property: 79 S. Cross Lane, Hyde Park 12580. Amount: $366,500. Filed July 10. Hudson Heritage Federal Credit Union, Middletown. Seller: Sterling National Bank, Montebello. Property: in Crawford. Amount: $800,000. Filed July 13.

Aspen Tree LLC, Fishkill. Seller: Richardo Cortijo, et al, San Angelo, Texas. Property: in Beacon. Amount: $100,000. Filed July 7.

J. Hengen LLC, Warwick. Seller: Christine Louvet-Edel, Sugar Loaf. Property: 1382 Kings Highway, Sugar Loaf 10981. Amount: $150,000. Filed July 13.

Atereth Developments LLC, Monroe. Seller: Bryce E. Weeden, et al, Port Jervis. Property: in Port Jervis. Amount: $87,500. Filed July 13.

Jade Projects LLC, Newburgh. Seller: Fannie Mae. Property: 512 Balmoral Circle, New Windsor 12553. Amount: $117,000. Filed July 6.

Brown Birch Inc., New Windsor. Seller: Elizabeth L. Wuelfing, Wallkill. Property: N. Plank Road, Newburgh 12550. Amount: $32,000. Filed July 10.

Juda Properties LLC, Beacon. Seller: Mary Ann DeSanto, Old Orchard Beach, Me. Property: in Fishkill. Amount: $150,000. Filed July 8.

Central Hudson Gas and Electric Corp., Poughkeepsie. Seller: Manuk Kerovpyan, et al, Ellenville. Property: in Wawarsing. Amount: $175,000. Filed July 9.

Kin�wood Associates LLC, Woodstock. Seller: Linda A. Caddy, Kingston. Property: in Kingston. Amount: $30,000. Filed July 2.

CitiMortgage Inc. Seller: Geoffrey E. Chanin, Goshen. Property: 38 Bonney Court, Unit 38, Monroe. Amount: $124,000. Filed July 8.

Lakeside at Montgomery HOA Inc., Hyde Park. Seller: William T. O’Keeffe, Goshen. Property: 314 Angelo Drive, Montgomery 12549. Amount: $23,900. Filed July 8.

Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. Seller: Sharon M. Faulkner, Poughkeepsie. Property: 500 Hicks Hill Road, Pine Plains 12567. Amount: $680,500. Filed July 10.

Lan Properties LLC, Montgomery. Seller: Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Property: 22 Blumel Road, Middletown 10941. Amount: $87,500. Filed July 10.

Old Stockade Development LLC, Kingston. Seller: Congregation Emanuel of the Hudson Valley, Kingston. Property: 110 Maiden Lane, Kingston. Amount: $135,000. Filed July 8. Olive Bay LLC, Poughkeepsie. Seller: Kristine Ciganek, New City. Property: 55 Woodcock Mount Road, Washingtonville 10992. Amount: $161,000. Filed July 9.

U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: Charles P. Obremski, Cornwall-on-Hudson. Property: 2434 Route 208, Walden 12586. Amount: $282,697. Filed July 10. U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: James B. Biagi, Goshen. Property: 129 S. William St., Newburgh 12550. Amount: $277,164. Filed July 10. U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: Luis M. Williams. Property: 179 Liberty St., Newburgh 12550. Amount: $60,000. Filed July 9. U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: Ralph Beisner, Hyde Park. Property: 94 Somerset Road, Hopewell Junction 12533. Amount: $587,000. Filed July 8.

FEATURE PROPERTIES OF THE WEEK

4 STORY OFFICE BUILDING / RESIDENTIAL CONVERSION — POUGHKEEPSIE, NY Location: Dutchess County’s Central Business District Square Feet: 35,750 +/- SF Total, To Be Confirmed. 0.18 +/- Acres Suitable For: Office / Medical / Loft Conversion Sale Price: $1,600,000 Contact: info@crproperties.com (845) 485-3100 / www.crproperties.com

COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 6 UNIT INCOME PROPERTY — POUGHKEEPSIE, NY (LAGRANGE TOWNSHIP)

RESTAURANT / COMMERCIAL BUILDING FOR LEASE — HYDE PARK, NY Location: U.S. Route 9 / Albany Post Road near Franklin D. Roosevelt and Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Sites Space: 7,070 +/- SF Total, To Be Confirmed / 0.92 +/- Acres Price: $13.00 Per SF, Triple Net Contact: info@crproperties.com (845) 485-3100 / www.crproperties.com

INDUSTRIAL BUILDING POUGHKEEPSIE, NY

WCBJ | HV Biz

Location:Taconic State Parkway, NYS Rt 55 / NYS RT 82 Space: 10,000 +/- SF Total / 0.73 +/- Acres Price: $795,000 Contact: info@crproperties.com (845) 485-3100 / www.crproperties.com

Location: NYS Route 9G Space: 100,000+/- SF Total / 11 +/- Acres Price: $3,950,000 / $4.50 Per SF Contact: info@crproperties.com (845) 485-3100 / www.crproperties.com

JULY 20, 2015

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FACTS U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: William Rose, New Windsor. Property: 368 Route 32, Central Valley 10917. Amount: $221,000. Filed July 13. U.S. Bank N.A. Seller: Yesenia Martinez, New Windsor. Property: 12 Reed Court, Washingtonville 10992. Amount: $246,400. Filed July 7. U.S. Bank Trust N.A. Seller: Alan Joseph, Goshen. Property: 922 Craigville Road, Chester 10918. Amount: $455,909. Filed July 10. V Mortgage REO 2 LLC, Greenville, S.C. Seller: Donald Cappillino, Pawling. Property: 7 McDonnells Lane, Hopewell Junction 12533. Amount: $205,500. Filed July 6. Wallkill Valley Federal Savings and Loan Association. Seller: Radhika Nagubandi, New City. Property: 84 Ridge Road, Chester 10918. Amount: $351,996. Filed July 13. Warwick Valley 62 Main Street LLC, Warwick. Seller: Susan Loughren, Highland Lakes, N.J. Property: in Warwick. Amount: $955,000. Filed July 13. Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Seller: Peter W. Green, Goshen. Property: 73 Prospect St., Middletown 10940. Amount: $236,554. Filed July 9.

Accountant (Yonkers, NY) Fin’l statements; forecast reports; budgeting; bus. valuation, acctg, & tax analysis; auditing; & tax reporting. Reqs acctg rltd Bachelors deg & 2 yrs exp in job. Resume only to: Tiffany and Lyman Chen Corp., lymanfree@gmail.com.

Wilmington Savings Fund Society FSB. Seller: Joan Helen McCarthy, Fishkill. Property: 1 Sucato Drive, Poughkeepsie 12601. Amount: $312,500. Filed July 8.

Green Empire Management and Associates Inc., Montgomery. $2,035 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10.

Wilmington Savings Fund Society FSB. Seller: Michael S. Blustein, Goshen. Property: 50 Lutheran St., Newburgh 12550. Amount: $172,030. Filed July 7.

Greenwood Lake Auto Inc., Greenwood Lake. $3,875 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10.

Windsor Crest LLC, New Windsor. Seller: County of Orange, Goshen. Property: in New Windsor. Amount: $195,000. Filed July 8. Young Men’s Christian Association of Middletown N.Y., Middletown. Seller: Young Men’s Christian Association of Dutchess and Eastern Orange, Newburgh. Property: 131 North Drive, Walden. Amount: $140,000. Filed July 9.

JUDGMENTS A and C Carpet Care and Floor Specialist Corp., Port Jervis. $62 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. CMU Designers and Builders Inc., Middletown. $297 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Coqui Latin Jazz Café Inc., New Paltz. $15,250 in favor of the Workers’ Compensation Board of the State of New York, Albany. Filed July 7. Fleet Worldwide Inc., Monroe. $190 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Gill Abstract Corp., Goshen. $312 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10.

Law Clerk, Mt. Kisco, NY. Assist lawyer in preparation of title insurance rltd documents incl title reports, searches, title insurance policies; title clearance affidavits; affidavits for Trusts, LLC’s, Corporations, Partnerships; Estates; order, read & review abstracts of title respecting all NY counties; utilizing the on-line portals such as Westchester Country PREP & NYC ACRIS systms; attend & manage closings; review documents post-closing. Req: 2 yrs exp in job. Must be a public notary; must be proficient in Westchester County PREP & NYC ACRIS. Resumes to Mary E. Rasamny, Future Title Agency, Inc, 37 West Main St, Mt Kisco, NY 10549. 24

JULY 20, 2015

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WCBJ | HV Biz

Homeline Landscape and Design Inc., Highland Mills. $1,469 in favor of the New York State Department of Labor Unemployment Insurance Division, Albany. Filed March 6. Horizon Fiberglass Pools Inc., Warwick. $100 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Horizon Heights Ltd., Slate Hill. $523 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Hudson Valley Pool Supply Inc., New Windsor. $632 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Jag Host Inc., Cornwall-on-Hudson. $258 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Joy Transportation LLC, Middletown. $2,315 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. King Patty Caribbean Restaurant LLC, Middletown. $149 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Leatherneck Inc., Goshen. $462 in favor of the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Albany. Filed March 10. Morgan Construction Enterprises Inc., Goshen. $271 in favor of the New York State Department of Labor Unemployment Insurance Division, Albany. Filed March 6. Newburgh SDA Church Newburgh School of Excellence, Newburgh. $2,359 in favor of the New York State Department of Labor Unemployment Insurance Division, Albany. Filed March 6. Orange County Dental Center, Middletown. $3,905 in favor of the New York State Department of Labor Unemployment Insurance Division, Albany. Filed March 6.

FIGURES LIS PENDENS The following filings indicated a legal action has been initiated, the outcome of which may affect the title to the property listed. Adams. Scott, et al. Filed by JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $276,930 affecting property located at 12 Sachson Place, Wappingers Falls 12590. Filed May 13. Alperstein, David S., et al. Filed by Bank of America N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $100,000 affecting property located at 1 White Pine Lane, Fishkill. Filed May 29. Azzari, Robert L., et al. Filed by Bank of America N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $129,000 affecting property located at 38 County House Road, Millbrook 12545. Filed June 5. Bahr, Matthew J., et al. Filed by Bank of America N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $366,170 affecting property located at 389 Crescent Ave., Highland 12528. Filed July 10. Casailinova, William V. Jr., et al. Filed by Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $259,200 affecting property located at 21 Pleasant Lane, Wappingers Falls 12590. Filed June 5. Casale, Joseph J., et al. Filed by CitiMortgage Inc. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure an unspecified amount affecting property located at 4 Overhill Road, Stormville 12582. Filed May 28. Casiano, Miguel, et al. Filed by Federal National Mortgage Association. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $238,500 affecting property located at 19 Kilmer Ave., Poughkeepsie 12601. Filed June 2. Chung, Jay, et al. Filed by Citizens Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $624,500 affecting property located at 64 Innsbruck Blvd., East Fishkill. Filed May 12. Ciechalski, William, et al. Filed by Bank of America N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $323,785 affecting property located at 15 Vorndran Drive, Wappingers Falls 12590. Filed May 26. Nesheiwat, Raghda, individually and as administratrix of the estate of Joseph Nesheiwat, et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $420,000 affecting property located at 9 Hart Drive, Poughkeepsie 12603. Filed June 3.

O’Connell, Edward D., et al. Filed by M&T Bank. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $60,000 affecting property located at 21 Wendy Road, Wappingers Falls 12590. Filed June 5.

Rodriguez, Benjamin J. II, et al. Filed by U.S. Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $118,840 affecting property located at 204 Smith St., Poughkeepsie 12601. Filed June 5.

Okulanis, Tadeusz, et al. Filed by OneWest Bank F.S.B. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $228,400 affecting property located at 9 Terwilliger Road, Napanoch 12458. Filed July 7.

Rossi, Renald Peter, et al. Filed by U.S. Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $230,468 affecting property located at 110 Pinebrook Drive, Hyde Park 12538. Filed June 2.

Pereira, Steven, et al. Filed by Citizens Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $345,000 affecting property located at 16 Fairview Road, East Fishkill. Filed May 20.

Rossini, Anthony J., et al. Filed by HSBC Bank USA N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $230,100 affecting property located at 5 Manitou Ave., Poughkeepsie 12603. Filed May 15.

Phillips, Duane M., et al. Filed by Nationstar Mortgage LLC. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $252,000 affecting property located at 25 Shady Creek Road, Pleasant Valley 12569. Filed June 4.

Ruzich, Jo Ann E., et al. Filed by the State of New York Mortgage Agency. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $112,760 affecting property located at 4 Park Place, Hyde Park. Filed May 12.

Phillips. Jeremy M., et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $261,449 affecting property located at 5 Spratt Ave., Poughkeepsie 12603. Filed May 22. Pitts-Garvin, Polly, executrix under the Last will and testament of Vincentine Sette, et al. Filed by Bank of Millbrook. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $85,000 affecting property located at 819 Camby Road, Union Vale. Filed May 28. Playford, Robyn M., et al. Filed by HSBC Bank USA N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $89,600 affecting property located at 165 Highland Ave., Kingston 12401. Filed July 10. Polanco, Edwin, et al. Filed by U.S. Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $251,322 affecting property located at 159 Riverview Drive, Fishkill 12524. Filed May 20.

NEW BUSINESSES This paper is not responsible for typographical errors contained in the original filings.

Doing Business As J and H Pinkz Inc., d.b.a. Northeast Paving and Sealcoat, 612 Oak Ridge Road, Ellenville 12428. Filed July 7. Noble Boy Inc., d.b.a. Underground Coffee and Ales, 74 Vineyard Ave., Highland 12528. Filed July 8.

Partnerships Acapulco Mexican Grill and Party Foods, 21 Hayes St., Kingston 12401, c/o Fredy Juarez Hernandez and Rosa Isela Pena Lopez. Filed July 6.

Rainbow’s End Child Development Center Inc., et al. Filed by Rhinebeck Bank. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $186,500 affecting property located at 123 Hibernia Road, Pleasant Valley. Filed June 4.

D and M Property Management, 100 Washington Ave., Montgomery 12549, c/o Matthew D. Kryger and David R. Holbert Jr. Filed July 7.

Richardson, Brenda P., et al. Filed by JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $89,101 affecting property located at 75 Overocker Road, Poughkeepsie 12603. Filed June 2.

A Cork of Art, 37 Elm St., Cornwallon-Hudson 12518, c/o Daniel James Lennon. Filed July 9.

Rivas, Jose R., et al. Filed by Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Action: seeks to foreclose on a mortgage to secure $279,837 affecting property located at 5 Rowell Lane, Wappingers Falls 12590. Filed May 27.

Sole Proprietorships

Aesthetics Contracting, 4 Old Minnewaska Trail, Kerhonkson 12446, c/o Steven J. Schuetz. Filed July 8. All-American Paintworks, 93 Jordan Lane, Middletown 10940, c/o Thomas Martin Tucker. Filed July 7.


LEGAL NOTICES Debartolo Development Group, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 5/27/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 133 Pelham Rd., New Rochelle, NY 10805. General purpose. #59997 Notice of Formation of WillWright Entertainment LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on May 28, 2015. Office location: Westchester County. Princ. Office of LLC: 22 Clinton Avenue, New Rochelle, NY 10801. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr. of its princ. office. Purpose: Any lawful activity. #60001 Name of LLC: RockyStream Global Wealth Management, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed NY Sec. of State 04/20/2015. Princ. off. loc.: Westchester Cty. Sec. of State designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. Sec. of State shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, c/o Yan Zhang, 8 East Clinton Ave, Irvington. Purpose: any lawful activity. #60002 Notice of Formation Vonny Holding Company LLC Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY 6/3/15. Off. Loc.: Westchester Cnty. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o the LLC, 1 Town Dock Rd, New Rochelle, NY 10805. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60003 Notice of Formation of The Studios at PBF, LLC, a domestic limited liability company. Articles of Organization filed with the Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/10/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 130 Rhodes St., New Rochelle, NY 10801. Purpose: Any lawful activity. #60005 145ELMSFORDNY LLC Art. of Org. Filed SSNY 04/07/15. Westchester County. SSNY designated as agt. upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process: 560 Route 6, Suite 170, Mahopac, NY 10541. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60007 280 BrewsterNY LLC Art. of Org. Filed SSNY 04/07/15. Westchester County. SSNY designated as agt. upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process: 560 Route 6, Suite 170, Mahopac, NY 10541. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60008

Notice of formation of Battle Hill Coach L.L.C articles origin file with SSNY 12/4/13 office location in Westchester County SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process to; 219 Fisher ave, White Plains NY 10606. Purpose : any lawful activity #60017 Notice of Formation of eGeniustec, LLC . Of Org. filed with SSNY on 6/19/14. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 4 Sadore lane 6J. Yonkers NY 10710. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60019 Name of Limited Liability Company (LLC): Exa Staffing LLC. Date of filing Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State (SSNY) 06/18/2015. The LLC is located in Westchester County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The post office address to which the SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against it served is to the principal business location at c/o 18 Flanders Lane, Cortlandt Manor, NY 10567. Purpose of business of LLC is any lawful act or activity. #60020 Notice of Formation of The Manners Dotson Group, LLC, Art. Of Org, filed with SSNY on 4/23/15. Loc. Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. As agent of the LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 67 Charlotte Place, Hartsdale, NY 10530. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60021 BOBOíS CAFE, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 6/12/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Lisa Derosa, 7 Lake St., Office., White Plains, NY 10603. General purpose. #60022 1079 YONKERS AVENUE LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 6/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 1079 Yonkers Ave., Ste. 3, Yonkers, NY 10704. General purpose. #60023 GESHERNY, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 6/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to David B. Simon, 303 E. Wacker Dr., Ste. 2725, Chicago, IL 60601. General purpose. #60024

Notice of Formation Nestor Kyritsis Architect L.L.C. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY 8/12/2005. Off. Loc.: Westchester Cnty. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o the LLC, 26 Plymouth Road, Larchmont, NY 10538. Purpose: architecture. #60010

JLM Integrated Architectural Services PLLC. Arts of Org filed with Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 6-162015. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY designated agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process to: c/o Michael J. Vardaro, Esq., Zetlin & De Chiara LLP, 801 2nd Ave, NY, NY 10017. Purpose: to practice the profession of architecture. #60025

Notice of Formation of 2 Ω LEONARD STREET LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 5/14/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 128 Mustato Rd., Katonah, NY 10536. Purpose: any lawful act or activity. #60011

Notice Of Formation of M J Beauty Lounge, LLC Articles of Org. filed with Secretary of State of New York on 05/26/15 Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designate as agent of the LLC Upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 45 E 131st St. apt 3C NY,NY 10037.Purpose: LLC may engage in any lawful act or activity #60026

Notice of Formation of EOJ Development LLC. Arts of Org filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/02/15. SSNY has been designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of the process to the LLC at primary office location: 22 Belmont Ter Yonkers, NY 10703. Purpose: any lawful act. #60014

Notice of Formation of 2 Bridge Partners, LLC Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 3/26/15. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 5 Long Pond Road, Armonk, NY 10504. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60027

Notice of Formation of NEWCO CONTRACTING LLC Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 06/18/2015. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 59 BENEDICT AVE, WHITE PLAINS, NY 10605. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60016

Notice of Formation of SAMCRO Consulting, LLC filed with SSNY on 6/17/14. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 12 Brookside Circle, Chappaqua, NY 10514. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60028

Notice of formation of NINEBAR, LLC. Art. of org. filed with SSNY?on 06/11/2015. Off. location: Westchester County. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 2828 Broadway 9E, New York, NY 11025. Purpose: Any lawful activity. SSNY designated? as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. #60029

Notice of Formation of BLUESTONE 163-165 LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60042

Notice of Formation of Caribbean Motion, LLC Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/14/15. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 128 West 4th St., Mt. Vernon, NY 10550. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. #60031

Notice of Formation of 163-165 EAST 62ND STREET ASSOCIATES LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60043

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF Trio Architecture PLLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/11/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of PLLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the PLLC, 17 Wilson Place, Hastingson-Hudson, NY 10706. Purpose: practice of the profession of architecture #60032

Notice of Formation of 327 WEST 4TH STREET ASSOCIATES LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/18/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities #60044

WORTH WORKPLACE TRAINING LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 6/2/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 110 Walworth Ave., Scarsdale, NY 10583. General purpose. #60033

Notice of Formation of 327 WEST 4TH STREET HOLDING LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/18/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities #60045

Notice of Formation of Herd JN, LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/23/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Joseph Szatkowski, Jr., 112 Legion Drive, Valhalla, New York 10595. Purpose: any lawful purpose #60035

Notice of Formation of BLUESTONE 327 LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/18/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60046

Notice of Formation of SKIPíS LLC. Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/20/15. Office Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Maxwell von Stein, 27 Pershing Ave, apt A, Yonkers, NY 10705. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60036 Notice of Formation of ST CASIMIR REALTY LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 3/24/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 10 St. Casimir Ave., Yonkers, NY 10701. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60037

Notice of Formation of LRF HOLDING LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities #60047 Notice of Formation of LRF SERVICES LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60048

Notice of Formation of HAL PORET, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/15/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 142 Hunter Ave., Sleepy Hollow, NY 10591. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60038

Notice of Formation of LITTLE REST FARM LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60049

Notice of Formation of KNSULTIT, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/21/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 3061 Chen Ct., Yorktown Heights, NY 10598. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60039

Notice of Formation of BLUESTONE LRF LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60050

Notice of Formation of WARRIORS VOLLEYBALL CLUB, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/7/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 1725 Maxwell Ct., Yorktown Heights, NY 10598. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60040

Notice of Formation of Core Integration Services, LLC Art. of Org. filed with SSNY on 7/2/15. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 29 Buttonhook Rd., Chappaqua, NY 10514. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60053

Notice of Formation of 163-165 EAST 62ND STREET HOLDING LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/22/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process against may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o THE LLC, 12 Water St #204,White Plains, NY, 10601. Purpose: all lawful activities. #60041

Notice is hereby given that an restaurant wine license, #1286969 has been applied for by Atirom Inc. to sell beer and wine at retail in an on premises establishment. For on premises consumption under the ABC law at 51-55 Court Street White Plains, NY 10601. #60054

Notice of Formation of Big Bang Coffee Roasters LLC. Arts of Org filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/10/2015. Office location: Westchester county. SSNY designated agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process against LLC to: United States Corporation Agents, Inc., 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose: any lawful act. #60055 Notice of Formation of Macula Designs, LLC Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 7/6/15. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 144 Hidden Hollow Lane Millwood, NY 10546 Purpose: any lawful #60056 Notice of Formation of Foreign Limited Liability Company (LLC) Name: HAECO Americas Line Services, LLC. Application for Authority filed by the New York Department of State on 5/15/15. Office location: Westchester County. Jurisdiction: North Carolina. Organized on 3/30/15. CT Corporation System, 111 Eighth Avenue, New York, NY 10011 designated as Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. Authorized officer in its jurisdiction is: North Carolina Secretary of State 2 South Salisbury Street Raleigh, NC 27601. Purpose: any and all lawful activities. #60057 NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC). NAME: DEEPERSHADES PRODUCE. NYC LLC , Arts of Org filed with the Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/17/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process against LLC to: UNITED STATES CORPORATION AGENTS, INC. 7014 13TH AVENUE, SUITE 202, Brooklyn, New York 11228. Principla business address: 25 Martine Ave. Apt #606 White Plains, NY 10606. Purpose: any lawful act. #60058 Notice of Formation of Alex Butson Consluting, LLC Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 9/3/10. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, c/o United States Corporation Agents, INc. 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 112288 Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60059 Notice of Formation of Blue Iron Security Services, LLC, Art of Org. Filed with NY Secy. Of State on 07/03/2015. Office located in Westchester Co. SSNY designated as agent upon which process may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against it served upon him/her to: 432 Nuber Ave, Mount Vernon, NY 10553. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. #60060

686 Saw Mill, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 4/29/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 159 Main St., New Rochelle, NY 10801. General purpose. #60062

MJDMAD LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 5/18/15. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 2 Stratton Rd., Scarsdale, NY 10583. General purpose. #60068

Notice is hereby given that an Application for aRestaurant Wine Liquor License, serial number 1286671, has been applied for by the undersigned in a Restaurant under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law at 163 Central Park Ave South. Hartsdale, New York 10530. Westchester County/s/ Kishuya 1 LLC #60063

Mnyrxallix, LLC Art. of Org. filed with SSNY 7/07/15. Office: Westchester Co. SSNY designated agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process against LLC to principal business address: 43 Lakeshore Dr, Eastchester, NY 10709. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. #60069

Notice of Formation of G. MUNSELL ASSOCIATES, LLC, a domestic limited liability company (LLC). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/29/2015. Office location: Westchester County. Principal business location: 405 Tarrytown Road, # 1251, White Plains, New York 10607. SSNY is designed as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process served against the LLC to c/o the LLC, 405 Tarrytown Road, # 1251, White Plains, New York 10607. Purpose: operation of agency referring senior citizens to assisted living facilities, and any other purpose. #60064 Notice of Formation of 25 Wendt LLC. Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY 6/12/15. Office Location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent for process. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to: c/o John Halpern, 200 E 61st St., Apt 39D, NY, NY 10065. Purpose: To engage in any lawful act or activity. #60065 Notice of Formation of NVT BIOPHARMA CONSULTING, LLC Art. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 3/7/13. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 520 White Plains Road, Suite 500, Tarrytown, NY 10591. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60066 Notice of Formation of WARFAREXTERMINATING, LLC Articles. Of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/17/15. Offc. Loc: Westchester Cty. SSNY desig. as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The Sec. of State shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, The registered agent: UNITED STATES CORPORATION AGENTS, INC. shall mail process to the LLC, 7014 13TH AVENUE, SUITE 202 BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11228. Purpose: any lawful purpose. #60067

Notice of formation of 12 Eastern Drive, LLC Articles of Organization filed with Secy of State of NY on 6/18/2015. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Ted DiGilio 107 Drisler Avenue White Plains, NY 10607. Purpose: any lawful activity. #60070 Notice of formation of 20 Old Sprain Road, LLC Articles of Organization filed with Secy of State of NY on 6/18/2015. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Ted DiGilio 107 Drisler Avenue White Plains, NY 10607. Purpose: any lawful activity. #60071 Notice of formation of 209 Forest Blvd., LLC Articles of Organization filed with Secy of State of NY on 6/18/2015. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Ted DiGilio 107 Drisler Avenue White Plains, NY 10607. Purpose: any lawful activity. #60072 Notice of formation of 235 Forest Blvd., LLC Articles of Organization filed with Secy of State of NY on 6/18/2015. Office location: Westchester County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Ted DiGilio 107 Drisler Avenue White Plains, NY 10607. Purpose: any lawful activity. #60073

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK ñ COUNTY OF WESTCHESTER INDEX# 66415/2014 FILED: 10/3/2014 SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS AND NOTICE Plaintiff designates WESTCHESTER County as the place of trial. Venue is based upon the County in which the mortgage premise is situated. DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR HSI ASSET SECURITIZATION CORPORATION TRUST 2006-OPT2, Plaintiff(s), JUAN MATUTE and MARIA MATUTE; if living, and if they be dead, any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or generally or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff; M&T MORTGAGE CORPORATION; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK and JOHN DOE and JANE DOE #1 through 7, the last seven (7) names being fictitious and unknown to Plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or parties, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the mortgaged premises described in the Complaint, Defendant(s). YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Amended Complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the Complaint is not served with this Summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s Attorney(s) within 20 days after the service of this Supplemental Summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is complete if this Supplemental Summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York); the United States of America, if designated as a Defendant in this action, may appear or answer within (60) days of service thereof; and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. To the above named Defendants: The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of the Supreme Court of the State of New York and filed along with the supporting papers in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Westchester on 5/08/2015. This is an action to foreclose on a mortgage. ALL that certain piece or parcel of land, and the buildings and improvements thereon, in the Village of Port Chester, Town of Rye, County of Westchester and State of New York (Section 136.78, Block 2 and Lot 15). Said premises known as 81 Haseco Avenue, Port Chester T/O Rye, NY 10573. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING AN ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Clarfield, Okon, Salomone, & Pincus, P.L. 425 RXR Plaza, 4th Floor, Suite 400, UNIONDALE, NY 11556 #60034

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JULY 20, 2015

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$135,000 RAISED FOR PHELPS The 12th Annual Phelps Golf Classic at Sleepy Hollow Country Club raised $135,000 to benefit Phelps Memorial Hospital Center in Sleepy Hollow. More than 95 golfers turned out for the event.

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JULY 20, 2015

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An awards program recognizing outstanding CPAs in Westchester and the Hudson Valley.

PA

BEYOND THE BOTTOM LINE

(C)onscientious (P)roficient (A)ccomplished

HOW TO SUBMIT NOMINATIONS:

Visit westfaironline.com to access the nomination form. Each nomination should consist of a minimum of 200 words describing the credentials of the nominee pursuant to the category chosen. Please submit nominations no later than Oct 2.

For more information, contact Holly DeBartolo WESTFAIRONLINE.COM HDEBARTOLO@WESTFAIRINC.COM 914-358-0743

PRESENTED BY

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS: Members of the Westchester and Hudson Valley business and accounting communities are encouraged to nominate, pursuant to the criteria listed, one or more candidates for the following award categories: MOST TRUSTED ADVISER – A CPA who is customer-focused and gives sound advice to his or her clients, helping them make a positive impact in their business. AHEAD OF THE CURVE – A CPA who stays ahead of his or her respective discipline as it relates to new legislation and trends thereby providing exceptional customer service. INDEPENDENT CPA – A CPA, not associated with a CPA firm, performing accounting responsibilities full time in business, corporate or professional organizations. TOP ACCOUNTANT UNDER 40 – A promising young CPA who shows a high level of technical expertise and customer service as well as an ability to develop new business. MOST GENEROUS – A CPA who provides an exemplary level of service and attention to the nonprofit and government sectors and gives back to the community through volunteer work and sharing his or her expertise.

This award program is co-sponsored by the Westchester County Business Journal and HVBiz, divisions of Westfair Communications Inc.


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