Les Granger: Granger Construction Company, Inc. ; Wide array of experiences brought foundation for building business

By: Martha Conway

Les Granger was born in Seneca Falls 74 years ago; he attended Union Springs High School and attended Auburn Community College – now Cayuga Community College – and did what folks did in those days: got a job and got married.

“When I graduated from high school, I immediately went to work in construction as a laborer, and it didn’t take me but a week to say, ‘Uh-oh; what did I do? I don’t look forward to this being my life,’” Granger said, laughing. “So here I was married and starting a family and had a full-time job and thought, ‘Oh, my God, I should have done something.’”

So for two or three years, he took night courses in accounting and business. He said he also was extremely fortunate to have a lot of great experiences.

“I grew up on a farm,” Granger said, “so I learned hard work at a very early age. I started as a laborer in the construction business. I later went to work with a general contractor, learning the masonry and carpentry trades.

“Back in those days you didn’t sleep much. You needed at least two full-time jobs, so I was working days and nights. I took Sunday afternoons off. I was building houses, basements, fireplaces and remodeling kitchens.

Granger said he believes everyone aspires to a leadership role, but it’s not always what people may think.

“I got the opportunity to become president of a large, local construction company,” Granger said. “It was a total disaster. It involved corporate politics, 18-month cash flow projections, visiting New York City bonding companies, Chamber of Commerce meetings and glad-handing, none of which was suited to me.”

 

 

The company was managed by three people, Granger said, of which he was one.

“I was president for two years and every vote was two-to-one,” he said. “So it was a real defining point in my life: I aspired to success, and said, ‘Wow, I really enjoyed getting here, but I hate where I am.’ I have a passion for building; I love building things. I’m not a very good politician. I don’t like corporate attitudes and politics. When I walked away from that life, it was the last time I wore a tie.

“I went back to building.”

Granger said he’s been lucky enough to come up with something that works for him.

“I enjoy all aspects of the work and still participate in putting projects together, even though I don’t swing a hammer anymore,” Granger said. “I get to put together the people and the process.”

Granger said he worked as a subcontractor, a general contractor and has experience from many different sides of the field.

“And I was always willing to work more hours than the next guy.”

Granger had co-owned businesses in the past, and at the end of the mall-building boom, he was looking for something to do.

“I was too young to retire,” he said. “I wasn’t sure I could afford to. I love building buildings – that’s where my passion is – so I went back to general contracting and started from scratch. I’ve always had that entrepreneurial spirit.”

Granger Construction opened in 1992.

“Learning to make unemotional decisions was the toughest thing I had to do,” Granger said.

A second location soon followed in North Carolina.

“I figured if things went bad up here, we’d have that to fall back on,” Granger said, explaining he really liked that area. “But the exact opposite happened.”

He said the 2008 crash made southern lenders shut down all lines of credit to builders because they didn’t want to work with contractors down there – there weren’t any middle managers who had experience making decisions during hard times.

“Business began to flourish here, and I didn’t have the stomach to do it again down there,” Granger said.

 Granger said he has issues with some technological advances, especially those that have replaced people.

“You used to have someone at the bank you could look in the eye, and now the numbers are just fed into a computer that decides whether you’ll get a loan, for instance,” he said. “I’ve had the same accounting firm for 40 years, but some of my long-time professionals, like lawyers, are retiring.”

Due to COVID-19, Granger said he is working from home for the first time.

“I would do whatever I had to do – work 18 hours in the office – to not bring work home, because home is my sanctuary,” Granger said. “I never brought work home until now.”

Granger said working so many hours prevents him from doing more hands-on work in the community, but says he’s always tried to be a good community member and good neighbor, making donations and working for non-profits.

“I’ve always worked so many hours, I’ve never had much time for anything else,” he said.

And in that work, Granger wants the world to know that integrity is everything to him.

“I can’t deal with a liar,” he said. “We have enough of a tough time dealing with the English language because so many words can be interpreted so many different ways. You have lawyers who can give you hundreds of different definitions of the word ‘the.’

As a result, integrity is a quality demanded of his staff, also, and he finds watching people grow in the business rewarding.

Granger said he’s not big into talking about activity or clock-watching.

“I’m a results-oriented person,” he said. “If you’re responsible for getting something done, do it. I have a tendency to retain people who are results-oriented. I enjoy other people’s success more than my own.”

He said he thinks watching other people succeed is his greatest success.

“I love watching people do things and surprise themselves. They need the push and the opportunity.”

“Our website says it all,” Granger said. “We legitimately try to do a good job at a fair price. We believe it, we live it, and we weed out those who don’t share that priority.”

Granger is clear he wants the business to far surpass his involvement in it.

“You can’t change the world; you have to adapt to the changes within it,” he said. “We need to continue what we’re doing and implement the newest technologies.”

He said he worries about the temptation to standardize the design field; he said each project is a work of art hand-crafted by good people.

“That’s our stock in trade, and it’s too easy to just cut and paste,” he said. “A good general contractor is an orchestra conductor. Not every violin is a good fit. We always have an eye out for the best people for the best fit.”

 “I want the succession group after me to go on to face challenges and flourish for the next group after them.”

Granger said the biggest challenge will be attracting and maintaining youth in the industry.

“It’s an environment that respects age but depends on youth,” he said. “It’s very hard for a young person to get respect in construction. We need new blood trained to use these improved technologies with care.

“Success isn’t necessarily how it’s typically defined,” Granger said. “It’s the ride that’s the fun.”

Craig Zinserling: CRAL Contracting, Inc.; Treat people better than you treat yourself

By: Martha E. Conway

The breadth and culture of CRAL Contracting, Inc., has been in a state of continual metamorphosis since its inception 16 years ago. Starting as a one-man operation with help from friends and family, Craig Zinserling, 52, has built up the business to employ nearly 30 full-time staff and multiple support entities. The service coverage area has expanded, with field offices as needed, starting with just Upstate New York and expanding to service the entire state.

Services also expanded as demand rose starting with asbestos abatement and now encompassing mold remediation, lead stabilization and many other environmental-related services. He said multiple crews totaling 25 to 50 employees head out to the field daily, supplemented with contract environmental laborers for the larger projects.

Zinserling was born, raised and educated in Liverpool, graduating from Liverpool High School.

“I was drawn to business, as my dad had his own business for many years,” Zinserling said, adding that he studied and played percussion in high school and college, and continues to play in his church.

Beginning in high school, he worked summers for Cordelle Development in Manlius, a home building outfit that builds homes in eastern Onondaga County. He learned the business from the ground up – from digging trenches to closing new home building property deals. He stuck with it through college, gaining six years of business experience.

“You know, they start these homes with a hole,” Zinserling said. “Into that hole, they dumped 16 yards of No. 1 stone. I spent a lot of time in a 90-degree hole shoveling and spreading out stone.”

 

 

Zinserling worked for Cordelle after graduating with a Bachelor of Science in business/economics from Wheaton College in Illinois, moving from there to MARCOR Environmental, where he learned the business operations end of environmental projects.

But those experiences were not what formed his leadership style.

“My mom and dad always taught me to treat people better than I treat myself,” Zinserling said. “That’s where my leadership style comes from.”

With his motivation for independence, he envisioned starting his own business and began planning to do that.

“I really had an itch to go into business for myself,” Zinserling said.

“The first thing I had to do was to calm my wife down,” he said, laughing. “But I’m not kidding, really. We had three kids, a mortgage, two cars in the garage and no paycheck. With a couple of years of planning, setting up a budget and developing a market plan already in the works, he used unconventional means to start by not borrowing from a bank and came through okay at the end of the day.”

Zinserling said there were a couple of years early on where things were touch-and-go, and he spent his fair share of nights in the office working and sometimes sleeping there as the daily commute between Rochester and Syracuse can get treacherous at times.

“I started with abatement,” he said, “and I was responsible for finding the jobs, selling myself to clients and then actually doing the work. My first job was an asbestos abatement project at Crucible Specialty Metals in Solvay.

“Asbestos abatement was a logical place to start the business. The emerging awareness of the dangers of mold exposure and opportunities that existed with controlling exposure is what really started the business concept.”

“Everyone knows someone who is afflicted with asthma or allergies; many relating to healthy indoor air quality and mold exposure.”

Understanding that the mold remediation field was going to be expansive, he made it his mission to learn everything he could about the subject, right down to the spores, attending all the professional conferences he could and working to obtain the pertinent credentials.

“That meant a good volume of work, and I knew I could get jobs,” Zinserling said. “With that, lead abatement, pigeon/bat droppings remediation and other services followed; it was a solid base.”

Zinserling said he was lucky to not get broadsided by any self-employment-related surprises.

“I was seasoned enough that I knew what to expect at the onset of the business; some people pay you when you work, and some don’t.”

Zinserling redefines success on a minute-by-minute basis, with no firm definition, and no established milestone. It’s not about achieving perfection, but more about a drive to always be improving.

“I’ve never really thought about there being a single measure of success,” he said. “I always think there’s more I could be doing. I will never get ‘there.’ Continual improvement is at the heart of how I view life and business.”

“To me, I see success in the expressions on the faces of the people whose lives we’ve touched, from compassionate employees, grateful customers, loyal colleagues and friends and family,” Zinserling said. “I do get excited that my mom and dad come to our company Christmas party each year, and my mom gets to brag about me. This is where you see the effects of this leadership style; as those around you prosper.”

Zinserling said he advises those who want to own or lead a business or organization one day to take their time planning to do it right.

“Line up your resources and find good people you can rely upon,” he said, “and treat people better than you treat yourself.”

One of the tenets of that philosophy is giving to help those in need. Zinserling said that one of his proudest affiliations is that of his involvement with David’s Refuge, a non-profit focused on support and caring for those tasked with being 24/7 caregivers.

“My wife suggested we volunteer on Valentine’s Day one year for an event aimed at giving special needs kids a fun time carnival so that their parents could have a few hours to themselves,” he said. “I was struck by the reality that marriage is hard and raising kids is hard, and these couples have the additional challenge of raising children who require 24-hour, round-the-clock care.”

“The impact a small respite has on their lives made a tremendous impact on ours. We set up games and activities in the gymnasium, the kids had a blast and the parents appreciation was incredible. We fell in love with the organization and its mission. David’s Refuge is so wonderful, I am so grateful for the privilege of participating and proud of helping it grow.”

Zinserling said the needs of the organization far outweigh its resources.

“They need resources such as volunteers and funding,” he said. “In fostering this mission, we’re now partnering with the Syracuse Builders Exchange. I’ve talked to [Syracuse Builders Exchange Executive Director] Earl Hall, and we’re looking at available opportunities to adopt this mission and help this group, including adding a link to the SYRABEX website. Leadership by example is a trusted and true endeavor. These leadership philosophies aren’t just ideas, they are action words. Treat people better than you treat yourself.”

Zinserling’s plan for the next five to 10 years is to continue slow and steady growth, hopefully doubling the current volume in five years. He said one of his intentions when starting the business was to develop something he could pass on to his children, now aged 23, 21 and 19.

“They have other interests, and that’s fine,” Zinserling said. “My dad wanted me to do better than he did, and I want my children to do better than me.”

He said CRAL Contracting is a small family-run business, and everyone there cares very much about each other. He said that dynamic is fostered through orientation into the business and reinforced by the actions and modeled by the behavior of everyone there.

“No one is more important than anyone else,” Zinserling said. “From the guys out in the field to me, we are all equal – we just have different roles.”

For more information on CRAL Contracting, Inc., visit cralinc.com. For more information about David’s Refuge, visit davidsrefuge.org.

Pierre Morrisseau: OneGroup; Let’s help each other out

By: Sarah Hall

You might think you know Pierre Morrisseau’s family’s roots.

You’d be wrong.

“I’m not French,” he said. “Our name is actually Scottish. When [my ancestors] went to France they put the ‘eau’ at the end of it. My father was very eccentric and just decided to give us all French first names for the fun of it.”

The story is rather on-brand for Morrisseau, the CEO of OneGroup. The company is, by the most basic definition, an insurance firm. But it’s also an advisory group, a public policy maker, a small business incubator, a community partner, a leadership academy, and so much more.

 

“The premise of [OneGroup is] ‘insurance is a lot more than insurance,’” Morrisseau said. “The company is built around getting people to think broader and bigger and engage in it on another level.”

Morrisseau spent several years in the insurance industry before launching an entrepreneurial endeavor with two colleagues, focusing on what he calls “performance-based risk management.”

“How do we take safety, which is a don’t-do-this thing, to actually a performance-based culture?” he said. “So if you think about football, you can’t not tackle. So what’s better? Let’s teach them how to tackle effectively and efficiently so they’re not hurting themselves.”

It was that idea of performance-based risk management that followed Morrisseau as he climbed the ladder at OneGroup. In his day-to-day business, he spoke with many companies whose executives were struggling on so many fronts from technology, finding qualified workers, environmental, ergonomics, indoor air quality and more. In order to address those needs — to mitigate the risks faced by these companies — he came to believe it was necessary to assemble a team with diverse knowledge. Now, OneGroup and its affiliates are able to provide everything from financial planning, to business planning, to retirement planning, to estate planning and many of the services needed for each along the way.

In helping other businesses to grow to their full potential, OneGroup has soared, as well. When Morrisseau joined the firm 16 years ago, it had just 35 employees and $3.5 million in revenue. Now, revenue is up to $32 million, with more than 200 employees in 19 locations, and current growth projections suggest it will double in size over the next five to eight years.

‘More than insurance’

So what is “risk management?”

“It’s kind of one of those overused terms, right?” Morrisseau said. “In reality, insurance is just what’s called risk financing. So if something bad happens, there will be cash flow to get me through that.”

Among OneGroup’s offerings is personal insurance. Especially if one owns a business, it is critical that their personal insurance protection is properly planned to insulate their business from personal risks. In personal insurance, OneGroup’s experts are available to speak to clients to understand their goals and determine proper coverage.

“The number one problem in personal insurance is people don’t know whether they’re getting the right coverage or not,” Morrisseau said.

But OneGroup’s true bailiwick is helping businesses: human resources, workers’ compensation, employee benefits, business insurance and cyber liability insurance. Just as they do with personal insurance clients, OneGroup’s experts work to help their business clients figure out what coverage they need and how it will best benefit them.

“Keeping your business going is risk management,” Morrisseau said. “So part of it is having game plans to deal with [catastrophe]. We help people with everything from sales risks, receivable risks, fiduciary risks. All these things you never think about in everyday life, and yet, if something happens and then maybe only one in a thousand chances it can happen. But if it does, you’re done.”

Unfortunately, not all risks are insurable. The vast majority — 80 percent — are not. But that’s where the planning comes in. Often, he said, such planning helps businesses to grow.

“I had a client [with whom] we would go down this exercise and said, ‘You can’t “what if” everything,” he said. “So let’s just start with the big ones, right? What’s a big worry? What if your building burns down? How are you going to go out and take six months?’ I said, ‘So, can we diversify where everything is so that at least, you have half of your stuff somewhere else?’ They go, ‘You know, we’re just thinking about expanding into other states.’ So they then did and now, they have three or four locations. So risk management is moves away from being this thing you have to do, to something that actually can help you grow your business.”

OneGroup also works with a number of start-ups, Morrisseau said, where they begin by asking “better questions.”

“How would [your business] work?” he said. “What would happen if…? How could we mitigate that if it does happen? How could we have a plan B or plan C? Believe it or not, they are applied to all big, small, or large. The thing is no one takes the time to ask. No one takes the time to slow down a minute and give that benefit, especially if you’re a small business.”

‘All we need is the question to be asked’

Morrisseau said OneGroup’s team of advisors are there to ask those questions, and to answer any clients may have.

“What we can really bring to the table is our willingness to take the time and really understand who you are and what you’re trying to achieve,” he said.

What makes the firm unique is that it’s a kind of one-stop shop for business owners and executives where all advisors and services can coordinate together to determine what’s best for the business, allowing them to consider a broad range of options and saving on overhead costs. OneGroup has over 200 experts with backgrounds in law, human resources, business, engineering, occupational therapy, geology, marketing, accounting, sales, wealth management, health, human resources and, of course, insurance, among other fields.

“It’s fascinating to really understand how many different types of professions work here,” Morrisseau said. “We’re seeing so many different things from different angles that we can take the experience of one and bring it over to another. So all we needed is the question to be asked.”

As evidenced by their enthusiasm for entrepreneurship, OneGroup doesn’t shy away from the unknown.

“We don’t necessarily know the answer, but we really know how to figure stuff out,” Morrisseau said. “We don’t really run away from anything.”

Indeed, OneGroup is delving into uncharted territory. The firm is working with Nuair, one of six companies around Central New York working on drone technology. OneGroup has provided financial backing as well as a space for the tech start-up to work on its initiative.

Drone technology introduces a host of new questions for OneGroup’s advisors.

“The reality is we have to look at what’s unknown, and the unknown risk that we face right now is very, very high,” Morrisseau said. “All of us work up really weird questions that we don’t know how to answer yet. We’re actually on the forefront of trying to help people define public policy.”

A holistic approach

OneGroup is also trying to redefine employment. No more does each staff member take on a specific task, then pass on the file, assembly-line style. Instead, each client’s case is handled cooperatively.

“If you think about the industrial age, we love the concept of, ‘I’ll just do my piece and pass it on,’” Morrisseau said.  “But the reality is we really need to think more holistically about things.”

Morrisseau said this way of thinking marks a major shift in the business paradigm, but it’s one that clearly benefits OneGroup’s clients, as well as its employees.

“We tend to think of it like, ‘Hey, it’s working. Why will we break it?’” he said. “We really believe in breaking it all the time. As a matter of fact, every year we break stuff… it creates a very higher purpose type of culture.”

Also contributing to that sense of higher purpose is OneGroup’s dedication to promoting leadership and personal development among its staff. The firm has launched initiatives like a Day of Giving to replace holiday parties and retreats, where employees pick a nonprofit to work with, as well as OneGroup Day of Learning, where the agency will rent out the OnCenter and run a day-and-a-half-long conference and allow employees to pick whatever learning and personal development tracks they choose and run it like any other career conference.

Morrisseau said he sees OneGroup as being in the idea sharing business, and it’s important that leadership be cultivated internally.

“Ideas come from everywhere,” he said. “We don’t care what your role is. Everyone is really important to us. Everyone should be learning. Everyone should be contributing.”

And leadership internally, he said, contributes to leadership in the community.

“I think the world requires more community,” he said. “How can we help each other out? Because at the end of the day, is that not what insurance is? Helping each other out?”

Earl Hall: Syracuse Builders Exchange; A leader is only as good as his team

By: Martha E. Conway

The Syracuse Builders Exchange was founded on April 30, 1872, and was known as the Builders Board of Trade.  In 1900, the organization changed its name to the Syracuse Builders Exchange.  The Syracuse Builders Exchange is the largest Builders Exchange in New York State, serving 950 diverse member firms, and is affiliated with the Building Industry Employers of New York State, which was founded in 1895.  As the oldest Builders Exchange in the United States, the Syracuse Builders Exchange has evolved over the past 136 years to become the regional industry leader in gathering and disseminating of important construction information to construction industry employers.

The mission of the Builders Exchange is to further the best intentions of the building and construction industry in Central and Upstate New York; to uphold wholesome relationships among all constituents of the building and construction industry and the public which they serve; to foster and encourage just and equitable principles for the conduct of business within the building and construction industry; and to acquire and disseminate information and materials which are useful and beneficial to the building and construction industry.

For more information, visit syrabex.com/, email Lisa at lisa@syrabex.com or call 315.437.9936.

 

“Make plans, engage your teammates and create the vision where you want the organization to be. Identify the skill sets of your team that will allow you and them to lead best. Take your experienced and talented people … promote buy-in, and lean on them for collaboration and advice … Most importantly, don’t be afraid of failing.”

 

Syracuse Builders Exchange Executive Director Earl R. Hall, 53, has a hard time taking sole credit for his nearly three-decades-long career; he said he surrounds himself with good people and encourages them to play to their strengths.

Hall was born and raised in Central New York. He has ties to Syracuse and Brewerton and graduated from Liverpool High School. He attended Syracuse University’s School of Business Management and enjoyed being a part of its National Championship lacrosse teams in his junior and senior years.

Hall was president of the Liverpool Youth Lacrosse League until the younger of his two daughters aged out of the program. His eldest, Cassidy, a senior at Wagner College in New York City, was recently named co-captain of the Wagner women’s lacrosse team this year. Kendra, a junior at Liverpool, has committed to playing lacrosse for Wagner, as well.

Hall said his lacrosse experience didn’t give him a lot of insight into performing under pressure or learning how to lead; he said he felt there were far better people on his team than he.

“I learned from the strengths and weaknesses of my teammates,” Hall said. “There are people better than you, and everyone brings different strengths and skill sets to the team. These are the same things that make an organization successful.”

Hall said he didn’t fully realize this on his own.

“Coach Roy Simmons, Jr. was the architect of that environment, and I learned from him,” Hall said.

His team now is made up of the officers, board of directors and staff at the Syracuse Builders Exchange, as well as professionals such as its accountants and attorneys. Hall said playing the strengths and experience of his team drives the success of the association.

“That’s the playing experience I bring to the business world,” Hall said.

Hall said as a young boy, he loved athletics and was on the path to a career in sports business. He said he did an internship at the United States Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. He joked he learned the internship was more important than the paycheck.

During this time, Hall’s father was the executive director of the Syracuse Builders Exchange, and Officers were talking about a succession plan down the road. Hall said he was brought in at a very low-level position in spring 1992.

“It was supposed to be a very short-term sort of thing before I went off to conquer the world of athletics,” Hall said. Fast-forward 27 years, and I’m still here, just in a different capacity.”

He said his father, the officers and board of directors gave him the opportunity to prove himself; he said he learned there were amazing people and opportunities in construction.

“They provided the skills and experience for me to eventually succeed my father,” Hall said.

He said he was trusted and given confidence to work to his potential and earn respect for his own abilities and not be seen as riding his father’s coattails.

“I was concerned with how that could be viewed by the general public and by the members we serve,” Hall said.

He said the officers, board and his father allowed him to transition into the position over time, groomed by those leaders and mentors, eliminating any transition hiccups or surprises. Hall said he was a part of the launch of the virtual plan room and said he was allowed the opportunity to mold and manage the association to his vision and wasn’t micro-managed, something that might be expected by a younger employee.

“They gave me their confidence and trust, judging me on my own merits,” Hall said. “I had the support of a team working in the best interest of the organization.”

 

Hall said the definition of success can be widely debated, even within the association. He said as a not-for-profit organization, the Syracuse Builders Exchange should be judged on the range of services delivered to members, growing and retaining membership during challenging times, delivering as much value as possible for every member dollar, developing team members toward their own strengths and encouraging them to lead in their own areas.

“Who are we serving?” Hall asked. “Are we growing as an organization? Are we growing our membership? Are we growing our services?”

Hall said he believes the Syracuse Builders Exchange is the largest in the state.

“We have morphed our traditional marketing and sales efforts into those more modeled after for-profit firms,” Hall said. “We’ve undertaken an internet marketing campaign, social media marketing campaign, as well as traditional marketing and sales strategies to attract as many potential members as possible.”

He said the Syracuse Builders Exchange covers an 18-county area and remains in that footprint to avoid crossing into regions covered by other associations.

“We’re constantly working to attract new firms and following up with the human element throughout the year,” Hall said, listing off a host of social events, education and training opportunities for member firms and their employees. “When members get their annual dues notice, they have time to reflect on the numerous human interactions we’ve had during the year.”

In addition to providing access to comprehensive construction bidding documents, the association provides information on projects that are in the planning stages, safety training and other educational training – including state-mandated trainings on a variety of subjects, social outings and group purchasing power – the economy of scale for even the smallest member outfit – for things such as medical and dental insurances, cellular phones, fuel and workers compensation insurance.

Hall said he thinks the association is heading into a challenging time because of the projected construction boom the next five years. As a past president of the International Builders Exchange Executives, he said he was struck by the different markets around the country.

“History has shown in other regions of the country that members may not need their local association when they’re busy,” Hall said. “We’re in a good economic environment, and there are a lot of opportunities for contractors throughout the region. I think it’s going to be increasing the next five years out.”

Hall said his team will meet that challenge by stepping up human interactions with members and additional training opportunities while continuing to be leaders in project bidding documents and those in the planning stages, right down to the town, city and county levels.

“Delivering services when our members are extremely busy is the most pressing challenge we will face as we enter 2020,” Hall said. “The Syracuse Builders Exchange was the first such association in the country, founded in 1872. We have a rich history working with construction firms, industry professionals and project owners; we will continue delivering bidding documents to contractors and identifying projects in the planning stages going forward.

“We will continue making contractors’ business lives easier by offering more training opportunities and making sure members continue to be able to review bidding documents and other project information in the ePlanroom daily,” he said. “We are a one-stop shop for contractors who rely upon a wide variety of industry services.”

Hall said he hopes the personal communication with existing and new members provides them with a thorough orientation of all the association has to offer. Identifying what contractors will need in the future will lead to a broader vision five and 10 years down the road, and finding that blend of services and technology will be critical to enhance members’ experiences, he said.

“Our vision for the next five to 10 years is a little different,” Hall said, explaining that peer associations across the state will meet early next year to collaborate what potentially new services they may offer members. What technology will be important and how can it be delivered in a cost-effective manner?

He said some big considerations are adapting to increases in state mandates, as well as developing a more diversified workforce that can meet the requirements for minority- and woman-owned business enterprises, particularly in demand for public works projects.

“We are heavily engaged in developing outreach to cultivate a diverse workforce,” Hall said. “How do we attract the next generation of construction industry workers? There is a labor shortage predicted. And employers want engaged workers. Where do we find them and how do we entice them into the industry?”

Hall said he is proud of the volunteer work he does with the Syracuse City School District’s Career and Technical Education Advisory Board.

“I get to work with the city school district officials and educators, and identify students who do not want to go to college, but instead want a construction career pathway program,” Hall said. “I think I take the greatest pride in that capacity and have the most impact, albeit small, on development of a much-needed diverse workforce.”

Hall said he is proud of the other impacts, involved, as well.

“I think it may help in a small way to address the poverty issue impacting particular segments of our society,” Hall said. “While addressing labor needs, the most meaningful piece of that board is working with students in the Pathway Program who want a construction career, who want a way out of poverty, who want to work.

“If we can capture that diversity for the workforce, various segments of society will be engaged, and those engaged citizens are just what our community and the state want to see in our communities, not just in construction.”

Hall’s advice to those seeking to be – or finding themselves in – leadership roles is to think big.

“Look at the big picture of what the industry needs,” he said. “Make plans, engage your teammates and create the vision where you want the organization to be. Identify the skill sets of your team that will allow you and them to lead best. Take your experienced and talented people and allow them to lead in their own areas; promote buy-in, and lean on them for collaboration and advice. Be open to change if the change makes sense. Most importantly, don’t be afraid of failing.”

On leaving a legacy at the Syracuse Builders Exchange, Hall said he doesn’t really think of it that way.

“The Syracuse Builders Exchange is a very strong membership association for the construction industry,” he said. “I’m just the fiduciary of the association. The only thing I would hope for is to leave it even better than when I took over. It’s a great team effort, working in the interests of members and the organization in general. The association has adapted over the past 147 years and it will continue to do so with or without me.

“I think long after I’m gone, the Syracuse Builders Exchange will continue to adapt to changing times, hire good people and thrive due to the dedication of the Board of Directors and Officers. It will be in really good hands for decades to come.”

CCBLaw ; At the Forefront of Health Law

NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED QUALITY

Cohen Compagni Beckman Appler & Knoll PLLC [CCBLAW] is home to four Best Lawyers-recognized attorneys and is ranked by U.S. News & World Report’s Best Law Firm Rankings as a Tier 2 regional law firm in the areas of health and employee law. With the addition of Bruce E. Wood and Bruce A. Smith of Wood & Smith P.C., CCBLaw now employs five of Super Lawyers’ top-rated
Central New York health law experts.

‘’ CCBLaw has always been an all-purpose practice for the  healthcare community, and now we·ve enhanced that practice with additional quality legal experts who share our philosophies and are willing to take the extra steps to ensure clients get the services they need. The integration of Wood & Smith P.C. with CCBLaw furthers our joint goal to continue to be a preeminent boutique health law firm in the state of New York …”

– MICHAEL COMPAGNI, MANAGING
MEMBER, COHEN COMPAGNI BECKMAN
APPLER & KNOLL PLLC (CCBLAW)

The ever-evolving, heavily regulated nature of health care makes this legal specialty one of the most challenging. CCBLaw attorneys have provided counsel to regional physi­cians for more than 40 years. In the last decade, CCBLaw has expanded its client base nationally and has been recognized for its consulting services. 

In January 2018, Bruce A. Smith and Bruce E. Wood – attor­neys with nearly 30 years of health law experience – integrated their practice with CCBLaw. The partnership expands the number of CCBLaw attorneys to 13 and enhances the resources available to new and existing clients. 

Complementary Practices, shared approach. 

The integration of CCBLaw and Wood & Smith P.C. is rooted in common practice and service philosophies. Both groups have physician-centered practices that provide business, transactional and regulatory counsel to physician groups, provider networks, ambulatory surgery centers, health care joint ventures and ancillary service providers, and have complementary areas of expertise.

Over the years, Wood & Smith P.C. has developed expertise in  representing free-standing ambulatory surgery centers, with special focus on these centers’ development and ongoing operations. Thanks in large part to the vision of CCBLaw Partner Stephen Cohen, CCBLaw is regionally and nationally recognized as the go-to firm for physician practice integration law.

“CCBLaw specializes in prividing services that we traditionally would have had to refer out, such as litigation, labor and employment, ERISA and employee benefits, and professional license defense,” Smith says. “ To now have in-house access to these areas of expertise will provide an efficient and effective benefit to our clients.” 

“Bruce and I have particular strengths in the areas of business, finance and real estate, and we provide services to both healthcare and non-healthcare clients,” Wood adds.

“I’m confident that work­ing with CCBLaw’s existing attorneys who practice in these areas will enable us to leverage these strengths as a part of CCBLaw.” 

Beyond the scope of practice, the teams share priorities, including a client-centric focus with an emphasis on attentiveness and immediacy during client interac­tions. 

At least two CCBLaw attorneys remain apprised of each client’s case, so an expert is always readily available to answer questions and respond. 

 

“CCBLaw makes it a point to be avail­able to our clients 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” Cohen says. “Our clients are often in the midst of sensitive nego­tiations, so we can’t delay our response because we’re on vacation, at home sick or traveling. Service and availability are key factors in our success, and Wood & Smith practice the same way. The more quality lawyers available to meet our clients’ needs, the better client service we provide.”

An All-Encompassing Resource

CCBLaw serves clients throughout the country – from here in New York all the way to Southern California, Oregon, Maine, Louisiana and Florida. While the majority of CCBLaw’s clients are physicians and physician organiza­tions, the firm also represents small business clients. As a result, physician practices can take advantage of busi­ness, real estate, litigation, banking, business, and labor and employment law services in addition to the firm’s health law capabilities. 

Resources available to physicians through CCBLaw include:

Assistance with the creation of health­care entities, such as large physician practices, independent practice associations and ACOs

■ Support with federal regula­tory compliance

■ Representation in payer disputes and reimbursement issues

■ Professional license defense in the event of a New York Office of Professional Medical Conduct investigation

■ Representation in matters involving fraud, abuse, malpractice, audits, credentialing, and HIPAA breaches and reporting

■ Drafting and negotiating employee contracts and resolving employment ­related disputes

■ Employee benefits and qualified plans counsel

■ Commercial real estate transactions “Physician practices – no matter the size – need legal support and appreci­ate a personal touch,” Smith says. “The healthcare legal landscape is constantly changing, so physicians need representa­tion from experienced attorneys who understand the industry. The CCBLaw team delivers high-quality, sophisticated and user-friendly health law services.”

For more information about CCBLaw’s health law services, visit ccblaw.com.

Telehealth—How the Technology Benefits Businesses

By: Kimberly Townsend, President and CEO, Loretto Management Corporation 

Telehealth, the use of electronic and telecommunications technology to deliver healthcare at a distance, is gaining momentum across the nation. Eighty four percent of Americans report they would use video or online health services if available, but only one-third of hospitals and 45% of outpatient facilities offer it. Telehealth can be a key tool to improve employees’ health across all industries, particularly in rural and underserved locations where available medical services are few.   

The use of telecommunications and electronic technologies to deliver care outside of traditional healthcare facilities means it’s easier, faster and more affordable for everyone – employers and employees – to receive care. This translates to healthier, happier employees who are more present and productive at work.

Healthcare providers face many challenges: a severe shortage of qualified workers, an aging population dealing with complex health issues and the lack of funding, to name a few. The use of technology to ‘bridge the gap’ through remote access to physicians and medical staff allows healthcare providers to do more with limited resources.

Loretto debuted telemedicine services in its Restorative Care Unit in 2018 and expanded remote patient monitoring services to the PACE-CNY program in 2019. To date, feedback from PACE and Loretto’s staff have been overwhelmingly positive – staff were able to provide more care to residents without sacrificing the quality of their outcomes and experiences. PACE participants also appreciate the easy access to medical professionals 24/7.

 

The availability of anytime/anywhere healthcare gave providers, employees and those we serve peace of mind.

Loretto saw that offering telemedicine services was not just a solution for staffing shortages, but it is a significant opportunity for strategic business growth and operational efficiencies. For this reason, Loretto expanded its use of remote patient monitoring to include two more locations: the Cunningham skilled nursing program and Fahey rehabilitation buildings on Loretto’s main campus.

Aside from easing the pressure of clinical workforce shortages we’re facing in the United States, telehealth lowers the cost of care by reducing unnecessary hospital and emergency room visits. The American Medical Association reports that over 70% of doctor’s visits can be done over the phone and 50% of ER visits are actually non-emergencies that could be manged by video or online telehealth solutions.

The rising costs of healthcare are the focus of employers who provide health insurance, and employees who pay for portions of insurance and other medical expenses. If there’s a way we can start to regain control of these costs, it will benefit everyone in our community and in our country.

Telehealth can work two ways: to track and prevent issues, or to provide immediate access to a professional healthcare provider for non-emergent issues. The use of remote patient monitoring can reduce hospital visits by closely tracking a patient’s vital signs and detecting early indicators of significant health issues. When potential health risks are identified and addressed early, unnecessary hospital visits are avoided. Telemedicine, or the use of electronic and telecommunications like video conferences, allows patients to access care 24/7.

One of our new telemedicine programs has already seen a 67% reduction in hospitalization in 2019 (compared to 2018), saving thousands of dollars in medical expenses. The new technology has also shown that a third of the calls to medical professionals were made after hours on weekdays and another third were made on weekends – times when the only other options for medical care are urgent care or an emergency department.

For insurers, this means fewer and/or lower claim costs. For employers, this (hopefully) means lower insurance plan premiums. For our residents and for patients across the country, this means fewer out-of-pocket expenses. It’s certainly a win-win-win scenario.

As we forge a new path in the future of healthcare, I believe telehealth technologies will play a key role in keeping the overall cost of healthcare down. The recent proposed federal and state budget cuts in Medicare and Medicaid have added a new layer of challenges to an already strained healthcare system.

Our society is aging at a rapid pace, and this population faces even more health issues than previous generations because people are living longer lives and staying in their homes longer. This means they are coming to Loretto older, sicker, frailer, and with more complex health conditions.

Likewise, with increasing healthcare costs, fewer people are seeking the treatment they need – at any stage in life – because they fear the bills they will receive following a visit to their doctor. And I don’t need to tell you the trickle-down effect that has on work performance or the overall well-being of our community. So, we must find ways to provide quality care while containing costs across the healthcare continuum.

As local business leaders and decision makers, we need to embrace technology and healthcare delivery system innovations, and further explore how technology can benefit our businesses and our community. Loretto will continue to innovate and deliver high quality care and diversify our programs to keep up with the ever-changing demands of our aging population. I welcome a discussion on these important topics with other leaders.

Dr. Kimberly Townsend is President and CEO, Loretto Management Corporation, and author of “Lifecircle Leadership: How Exceptional People Make Every Day Extraordinary.”

Keeping Residents and Employees Safe During a Crisis; Dr. Kimberly Townsend President, CEO, Loretto Management Corporation

By Sarah Hall

As of this writing, there are more than 1.8 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the United States, and more than 100,000 confirmed deaths. According to a state-by-state analysis of reported COVID-19 fatalities compiled for the Freedom for Research on Equal Opportunity, some 42 percent occurred in nursing homes and residential care facilities, even though patients in such facilities only make up 0.6 percent of the American population.

“The tragedy,” said study co-author Avik Roy, “is that it didn’t have to be this way.”

Thanks to good planning, good people and strong leadership, the largest elder care agency in Central New York was able to avoid that tragedy. To date, Loretto has managed to keep positive cases down to roughly 1 percent overall out of 10,000 residents and 2,500 employees.

“We have 19 sites across Onondaga and Cayuga counties,” said Loretto CEO Dr. Kimberly Townsend. “With 10,000 vulnerable people in our care, it makes it a challenge to keep people safe. All you need is somebody to go to Target in Fayetteville at the wrong time.”

So how did Loretto manage to protect its vulnerable population? Townsend said the organization’s senior leadership took on planning for the pandemic as a long-term effort.

“COVID is not a spring 2020 problem,” she said. “It will be with us for months to come. Pace yourself—it’s a marathon, not a sprint… What we are looking at from an organizational perspective is just continued vigilance and keeping people safe.”

 

Longtime leader

Townsend came on as CEO at Loretto in January of 2014. She said her longevity at the company has been a blessing in this trying time.

“By now, I know all the players. I know all of our ins and outs,” she said. “It has a been a huge mobilization of every single member of Loretto to keep people safe. I’m really grateful that I’ve been here for a while and really know the organization inside and out, because it’s hard.”

Even before joining Loretto, Townsend was a well-respected leader in the healthcare field. She spent 14 years at Welch Allyn, first as an attorney, then as Associate General Counsel. When she left the medical devices firm for the job at Loretto, she was the Senior Director of Government Affairs. 

 

“Welch Allyn really was a seedbed of leadership greatness,” Townsend said. “Welch Allyn… was wholly focused on community engagement, and really heavily focused on providing opportunities for their employees to excel in many different ways to build their education and experience.”

Townsend benefitted directly from that generosity. Though she had several impressive qualifications going into the job—a law degree, a CPA and an MBA—Welch Allyn supported her as she got a Master’s in Public Administration from the Maxwell School in Health Economics and Policy. She has also earned a Doctorate in Executive Leadership from St. John Fisher College.

“All of those things, plus the experiences that I had at Welch Allyn, interacting with large customers, the senior leadership team, who’s just a really fine group of leaders, really enabled me to do the job that I’m doing today,” she said.

Top priorities

Right now, that job looks different than Townsend could ever have imagined.

“The word unprecedented really has been overused at this point, but it is unprecedented,” she said. “At the end of the day, the most important thing is that we care for the people who work for us and that we care for the people whose lives are entrusted to us. We are planning just how we continue to do that, but it’s a challenge.”

Once news of the pandemic hit, Townsend and her executive staff knew they had to act quickly to protect their residents. What wasn’t as clear was what actions were necessary.

“I think as we looked at it and really understood how enormous the tasks were, when you’re looking at a global pandemic, that we came down as a senior leadership team to three critical things that we had the ability to control,” she said.

Those three things involved focusing on basic needs first: personal protection equipment (PPE) for the staff, restricting visitors and early and aggressive screening.

“We could have focused on a hundred different things, because certainly there were a hundred different facets to the crisis,” she said. “But those are all the three focus areas, the priority areas that I think has helped us have very good outcomes today.”

Once tests were available, Loretto performed widespread testing, which became a critical priority for the organization. Loretto coordinated mandatory testing of all nursing home residents with the State Department of Health, supported the executive order to conduct mandatory testing of staff twice a week, and offered testing for certain other residents throughout the organization. This put additional strain on staffing access to PPE, developing a process to conduct testing safely for employees, and a major cost impact to the bottom line.

“But we never hesitated, not even for a single minute, because it’s the right thing to do for the safety and security of our staff and residents,” Townsend said.

‘One has to be somewhat comfortable with uncertainty’

Because the COVID-19 pandemic is a constantly evolving situation, additional planning is difficult, to say the least.

“There is so much we don’t know,” Townsend said. “I think one has to be somewhat comfortable with uncertainty, right?”

That said, Townsend and her staff are hardly flying blind. The team did extensive scenario planning and financial modeling to best prepare themselves and made sure everything was flexible enough to respond to rapid changes in circumstance.

“Our screening tool was a living document,” Townsend said. “As you know more, you have to evolve your processes.”

But she said the most important task at hand is to keep all stakeholders informed at all times.

“Communicate, communicate, communicate,” Townsend said. “You cannot communicate too much with our families, with our residents, with our staff with our managers, even with the media. It’s important that we are honest with people in terms of what we know and honest with them about what we don’t know.”

She said it’s also important to acknowledge moves the team has made that could have been handled better. For example, Townsend said they could have been more efficient in procuring PPE.

“In late February, early March, we just went out into the market and we just started buying PPE from everywhere,” she said. “As it turned out we were able to get everything that we needed, but there were things that didn’t pan out. There was a lot of energy put into it that might have been put into other areas.”

Townsend said it’s important to highlight the failures along with the successes to maintain a good relationship with the people she serves.

“Just having that organizational honesty is important to continue to maintain trust, reach those expectations,” she said. “But you can’t just do it in a crisis. If you didn’t have people’s trust prior to COVID-19, you’re probably not going to get it now.”

Helping employees

Townsend said it’s also critical to maintain a culture of trust and integrity between Loretto’s leadership and its employees.

“Here at Loretto, it’s part of our leadership paradigm,” she said. “We try to be open, and good listeners, and good leaders. We try to listen to the needs of our staff and to meet those needs.”

The company distributed 400 emergency food bags, and its free diaper program, started two years ago, continues to give out 13,000 diapers every month.

“We heard from employees with their children home from school, employees had less than a day’s worth of food on hand. They’re working all day or working double shifts. They get to the grocery store, the shelves are empty,” Townsend said. “We try to do things that meet people’s needs.”

While the experience has been stressful, Townsend said it’s also shown her how many great people are associated with Loretto.

“It has really reinforced my faith in all the members of the Loretto family, in my organization—that’s our staff, that’s our leadership, that’s our residents and their families,” she said. “It just reinforces my faith in the lengths that people will go to, to show up and bring their best self to a situation for the care of someone other than themselves.”

While Loretto leadership is still closely monitoring the health and safety of employees and residents in each of its facilities, neither a specific date nor specific protocols have been finalized for when and how the facilities will reopen for visitors.

Oswego Health: Center for Orthopedic Care; Care Close to Home

Dr. Kamaljeet Banga, MD, DNB, FRCSC, practiced orthopedics for 18 years, coming to Oswego Health’s Center for Orthopedic Care from Auburn Community Hospital. Dr. Michael Diaz, DO, practiced orthopedic care for 20 years at Bassett Healthcare’s Oneonta Surgeons and Specialists office before joining the team. Now both doctors, who knew from childhood they wanted to be doctors, share space at Oswego Health’s Center for Orthopedic Care.

Banga has two uncles who are doctors, and Diaz said he knew at age 6 it was his path.

During his orthopedics rotation in Canada, Banga, who now specializes in sports medicine, decided he loves the field. About a year ago while looking for a change, he learned another surgeon in the same specialty was leaving Oswego Health.

“The people are so welcoming and accepting,” Banga said. “I work close to home, and I really like the hospital administration. The timing was perfect.”

Diaz said he also is impressed with the administration.

“They are good business people, but they are refreshingly not all about the money,” Diaz said. “They are so positive and supportive, make sure we have everything we need and hire good, qualified people. My wife – an interior designer – even helped with the design.”

A couple of years ago when the kids were out of school, Diaz decided to transition out of a healthcare system that had grown far bigger than he cared to be part of. A headhunter called: Dr. Ayres was looking for someone at Oswego Health, would Diaz be interested?

“I said, ‘As a matter of fact…,’” Diaz said. “This was an opportunity to build the ideal practice and facility from the ground up.”

Now, like Banga, he’s minutes from work.

“It’s on the Great Lakes,” Diaz said. “I get to enjoy sitting on a bench and watching the sunsets, and it’s still close to my parents in New Jersey.”

Jamie Leszczynski, senior director of communications for Oswego Health, said the Center for Orthopedic Care opened in April 2019. She said Oswego Health has two locations: the new facility in Fulton and a smaller Oswego facility staffed by Dr. John Ayres and his team.
Banga and Diaz agreed there’s a misconception that surgeons immediately opt for surgery.

“We try all non-surgical options first,” Banga said. “After we’ve exhausted those, we discuss surgery. If a patient is managing their symptoms, we send them on their way.”

Both men said trust is essential in making a patient comfortable.

“People fear complications,” Banga said. “Nobody likes surgery. If they haven’t tried everything non-surgical, we do that before talking through surgical options.”

Diaz agreed.

“We have a calming staff and atmosphere,” he said. “People sigh in relief when we don’t jump right into surgery, that we don’t see them as dollar signs.”

“If someone gets relief with an injection, we see in five or six months if they are doing well,” Banga said. “I think a lot of people believe if they visit a surgeon, they’ll be booked for surgery.”

“The Center is ideal in many ways,” Diaz said. “People don’t want to drive or take time off from work. Some people even walk to the clinic. It’s care close to home. The quality can’t be beat. You are near family in private rooms with low infection rates. It’s got a much more home-like vibe, not a factory conveyor belt. The doctors and nurses employed here are your neighbors.”

Banga said he specializes in child and adult trauma, arthritis, sports injuries, hand injuries, rotator cuff and total shoulder repair. He said most patients can be seen within a day or two.

Diaz, who tackles adult trauma injuries and total knee and hip replacements at Oswego Health’s Center for Orthopedic Care, also brought with him his NAVIO robotics expertise.

“At Bassett, I was tasked with becoming a pro with robotics,” Diaz said. “I was reluctant at first, but it’s proven to be the best system.”

Like DaVinci for general surgeries, NAVIO-assisted surgery offers speedier recovery times, reduced pain, less scarring and other benefits for many; however, many fewer are trained in NAVIO, Diaz said.

Diaz said his definition of success is two-pronged.

“My wife and kids are everything to me, and I always dreamed of being my sons’ Little League coach,” Diaz said. “I wasn’t going to be that doctor-dad who was never there. Providing good care is the other measure. Others may be cavalier with diagnoses, but I believe in performing absolutely no unnecessary surgery. I always do my best for the patient. If I don’t get the results I want, I take it very personally.”

“Patients go out and talk about this experience with their family and friends,” Banga said. “It’s better than any advertisement. It’s also a state-of-the-art center. It’s spacious and accommodating; we have all the diagnostic tools you could need here.”

In addition to CT, x-ray and MRI technologies, an urgent care is co-located, as well as other specialties and several primary care physicians.

“They can refer patients, and we’re right here ready to deliver excellent service – as good as any place,” he said. “Among us, there’s nothing we can’t do. We are a great team; if I’m not here, Dr. Diaz can see my patients and vice-versa. We cover each other.”

Diaz said when you aim for perfect, you get excellent; when you aim for excellent you get good; when you aim for good, you get fair.

“We aim for perfect,” Diaz said, “and I won’t do anything to a patient I wouldn’t recommend for my own parents.”

Diaz earned his doctor of osteopathic medicine from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine. While at Bassett, Diaz performed about 250 joint replacement surgeries yearly. He serves as clinical assistant professor of orthopedic surgery at Upstate Medical University and Columbia University Medical Center.

Banga earned his medical degree from Punjab University in Chandigarh, India. He completed fellowships in upper extremity and sports medicine and serves as clinical assistant professor of orthopedic surgery at Upstate Medical University.

For more information on the Center or its surgeons,
visit oswegohealth.org/services/orthopedics/
or call 315.349.5873

CNY C-Suite Spring 2020, V1-N2

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CNY C-Suite Winter 2020, V1-N1

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