• 5 for CNY - Learn How
  • Crouse Weight Loss 530 x 75
  • Land Bank - Restoring Properties
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Celebrating Urban Life Since 1989

  • 5 for CNY - Learn How
  • Crouse Weight Loss 530 x 75
  • Land Bank - Restoring Properties
  • Mannion for NY_Vote on Nov 5th_Horizantal General Election
  • NYSF Urban CNY Banner 530 x 75
  • Second City 530x75
  • Malmgren Concert Duke Ellington
Neighborhoods News

I-690 Eastbound to Close During Overnight Hours Between Exits 15 & 16S in the City of Syracuse

The New York State Department of Transportation is alerting motorists that Interstate 690 eastbound will be closed to traffic between Exit 15 (Midler Ave.) and Exit 16S (Thompson Rd.) in the City of Syracuse from 8 p.m. on Thursday, December 21, through 6 a.m. Friday, December 22, to replace the fascia beam carrying Midler Avenue over I-690. A signed detour will be in place directing traffic traveling eastbound on I-690 to exit 15 (Midler Ave.), to east on Erie Boulevard, to north on Thompson Road, to I-690 eastbound. All construction activities are weather dependent. Drivers are asked to use caution when traveling through the work zone area and pay attention to all traffic control devices, including signs and flaggers. Motorists are reminded that fines are doubled for speeding in work zones. In accordance with the Work Zone Safety Act of 2005, convictions of two or more speeding violations in a work zone could result in the suspension of an individual’s driver’s license. For up-to-date information, call 511, visit www.511.org , or the mobile site at m.511ny.org. Follow the I-81 Viaduct Project on Twitter: @NYSDOTI81.  Find us on Facebook at facebook.com/NYSDOTI81. 

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City Scuffle Schools – Primary/Secondary

Syracuse City School District Students Benefit from Winter Apparel Drive

Syracuse City School District students will soon be receiving more than 300 winter clothing items as the result of a Winter Clothing Drive hosted by Armory Square businesses this holiday season. Over the past month, Armory Square businesses including 315 Beauty Bar Downtown, AmeriCU (Armory Square), Best Western Syracuse Downtown Hotel & Suites, Bling N Thingz by Brittani, Cathy’s Cookie Kitchen, FlynnStoned Cannabis Co, Forum Barber, Galaxy Media Partners, Marisa’s Fortress of Beauty, The MOST, The Hops Spot, and Sweet on Chocolate hosted collections, where individuals could donate coats, sweatshirts, boots, gloves, hats, and more. As a thank you for participating in the drive, those who contributed received a stamp card to use at select Armory Square businesses this winter. Community members who donated to the drive can redeem their stamp cards through the end of January 2024. Businesses offering discounts via the stamp card include: “Syracuse City School District students, families, and staff always appreciate the support and generosity of the greater Syracuse community,” Superintendent Anthony Q. Davis said. “This winter apparel drive has enabled us to provide warm winter clothing to our students – while also serving as a reminder that they are seen and valued. Thank you to the businesses, organizations, and individuals who took the time to contribute to this cause.”

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Colleges & Universities Education

Medgar Evers College and Onondaga Community College Create New Pathway to a Four-Year Degree

Onondaga Community College (OCC) and Medgar Evers College (MEC) today signed a transfer agreement which will give OCC students who meet specific requirements a guaranteed pathway to a bachelor’s degree program and financial support at MEC. OCC is a two-year school in Syracuse which is part of the State University of New York system. MEC is a four-year school in Brooklyn which is part of the City University of New York system. OCC students who express an interest in eventually transferring to MEC will receive continuous guidance while enrolled at OCC through periodic reviews with advisors. To be eligible for the Direct Admission Program, OCC students must: Successful OCC graduates who are NY residents will be eligible for the Medgar Evers CHAMPSS Program which includes financial support of up to $3,500 per semester, book vouchers, and metro cards. The CHAMPSS Program is available to MEC full-time students for up to two years. CHAMPSS is an acronym for Cultivating Holistic Academic Mindsets to Promote Student Success. “This Direct Admission Program provides our students with a guaranteed, predictable pathway to a bachelor’s degree at an outstanding institution. As we welcome students to our campus from the New York City area, this provides them with the option to pursue their bachelor’s degree closer to home. And, it provides Upstate NY residents with an affordable option to obtain their bachelor’s degree in New York City. We thank the leadership at Medgar Evers College for their tireless work on this agreement which will benefit students and improve their lives in future years. This agreement will no doubt produce for New York State future nurses, accountants, computer programmers, teachers, social workers, and more,” said OCC President Dr. Warren M. Hilton. “Strategic relationships with institutions such as Onondaga Community College are critical to the long-term health and vitality of Medgar Evers College. Our commitment to improving the lives of our students and their communities is mission critical, and we have found a fellow college with similar DNA. Working with Onondaga will allow us to not only welcome students back home to complete their bachelor’s degree, but also expose those from elsewhere in the state of New York to our little slice of heaven here in Brooklyn. We can’t wait to welcome students through this partnership and look forward to the ongoing innovative work we will do with Onondaga to continue to find unique opportunities for students in the years to come,” said Dr. Patricia Ramsey, President of Medgar Evers College.

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Urban CNY Money

Attorney General James Sues SiriusXM Radio for Trapping Consumers in Unwanted Subscriptions

AG James’ Lawsuit Alleges SiriusXM Makes it Difficult for Consumers to Cancel Subscriptions Due to a Deliberately Lengthy and Burdensome Cancellation Process New York – New York Attorney General Letitia James on Wednesday December 20th, sued SiriusXM Radio, Inc. (SiriusXM) for trapping consumers in subscriptions and maintaining deliberately long and burdensome cancellation processes. An investigation by the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) found that SiriusXM forces its subscribers to call or chat online with an agent to cancel a subscription, then deliberately draws out those interactions as part of its strategy to prevent subscribers from canceling. The OAG also found that the company trains its agents to not take “no” for an answer when customers try to cancel, making it extremely difficult and frustrating for consumers to end their subscriptions. Through this lawsuit, Attorney General James seeks restitution, penalties, and disgorgement from SiriusXM for violating New York’s business laws. “Having to endure a lengthy and frustrating process to cancel a subscription is a stressful burden no one looks forward to, and when companies make it hard to cancel subscriptions, it’s illegal,” said Attorney General James. “Consumers should be able to cancel a subscription they no longer use or need without any issues, and companies have a legal duty to make their cancellation process easy. New Yorkers can trust that when companies like SiriusXM try to take advantage of them and violate the law, my office will step in to stop them.”  SiriusXM is an audio entertainment company headquartered in New York City and has approximately 35 million subscribers, of which nearly 2 million are New Yorkers. The OAG opened an investigation into the company after hundreds of consumers reported to OAG and other agencies that they could not cancel their subscription. The OAG’s investigation found that the company trains its agents to keep customers on the phone or in the chat for a lengthy six-part conversation that includes asking a series of questions and then pitching the subscriber as many as five retention offers, all to delay cancellation. When customers decline the offers, agents are trained not to take “no” for an answer and to keep bombarding customers with questions or offers until they either relent or become frustrated. According to SiriusXM’s own data, it takes subscribers an average of 11.5 minutes to cancel by phone, and 30 minutes to cancel online, although for many subscribers it takes far longer. Subscribers often spend substantial time waiting to be connected with an agent, with wait times that regularly reach more than 20 minutes for online chat agents. Despite these long wait times, OAG found that the company can cancel a customer’s subscription with a simple click of a button, or even allow customers to do so themselves. In affidavits submitted to OAG, consumers described how difficult it was to cancel subscriptions they no longer used or wished to pay for. In one case, a SiriusXM agent kept a subscriber in a chat for 40 minutes, despite the subscriber’s clear and repeated requests to cancel, according to a log of the chat. And after that, the company continued to charge the customer anyway. When the consumer then filed a complaint, SiriusXM said that it was not able to locate any cancellation request from him. Another complaint — handwritten by a consumer on behalf of her 92-year-old mother — described a maddening phone call with a SiriusXM agent that lasted nearly 40 minutes. The OAG’s lawsuit charges that SiriusXM violated state and federal laws concerning subscriptions that renew automatically by failing to provide subscribers with a cancellation mechanism that is simple, timely, and easy to use. The OAG’s lawsuit also alleges that SiriusXM engaged in fraud and deception by misleading subscribers seeking to cancel.  Through her lawsuit, Attorney General James seeks full restitution for all impacted subscribers nationwide, including compensation for the time SiriusXM wasted by putting its subscribers through a deliberately lengthy cancellation process. Attorney General James also seeks disgorgement, penalties, and costs, and to require SiriusXM to implement a simple and easy-to-use cancellation process. Attorney General James asks any consumers who have been affected by SiriusXM’s cancellation practices, or the deceptive or fraudulent cancellation practices of any other automatic-renewal service, to file a consumer complaint online.

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City Scuffle Cover Stories

CNY Community Foundation Selects Melanie Littlejohn as Next President & CEO

(Syracuse, NY) December 21, 2023 – Following a nationwide search, the Central New York Community Foundation Board of Directors announced today that it has selected Melanie Littlejohn as the organization’s next president & CEO, effective March 1, 2024. Littlejohn has worked for National Grid-New York for 29 years, most recently serving as vice president of customer & community engagement. “Melanie is the right leader to take the Community Foundation to the next level of community leadership and impact,” said Board Chair Daniel J. Fisher. “She is a humble, empathetic, servant leader who has intimate knowledge and passion for the community and its needs. We believe Melanie will build on the foundation laid by previous leadership and the strengths of our outstanding staff to provide bold and courageous leadership and build trust by being present with those we serve.” Littlejohn was selected after a thorough eight-month search that included input and feedback from many constituencies of the Community Foundation and the greater Central New York community. “The Community Foundation’s staff, board, and stakeholders articulated a vision for a bold, impassioned and grounded leader,” said J. Andrew Breuer, search committee co-chair. “By leading countless community initiatives, work groups and committees over the past three decades, Melanie has proven to be one of Central New York’s most trusted corporate citizens and most valued community advocates. She is a perennial bridge builder, with a tried-and-true devotion to the Community Foundation.” The search committee conducted a nationwide search to find candidates who demonstrated appreciation for the challenges that face our region, such as poverty and racial disparities, and who had proven ability to lead on issues of equity, diversity and inclusion. “Melanie is a boundary crosser, a collaborator and a strategic thinker who will lead the Community Foundation with heart and passion,” said Bethaida González, search committee co-chair. “She is widely known and respected for her responsiveness to community needs and her success at building coalitions to address them. She is committed to deploying our growing asset base in new ways that support local impact, deepen our engagement with the community and build a more inclusive culture of philanthropy and community investment in collaboration with our partners.”  Littlejohn, who earlier this month announced her plans to retire from National Grid in February, leads a team responsible for engaging with customers, key community leaders and policy makers across New York State to ensure processes, planning and best practices were delivered consistently. Her focus is to drive customer satisfaction while promoting safety and reliability measures, emergency management services and economic development initiatives. She was also responsible for the design and delivery of the company’s corporate social responsibility program, which aims to support neighborhood revitalization, environmental justice, social equity and workforce development. Littlejohn has worked for National Grid since 1994, when she initially joined the company as director of inclusion & diversity – US operations. In this role, she was responsible for the company’s overall strategy for inclusion, diversity and compliance. “Melanie has been a leader at National Grid for nearly 30 years, in a variety of roles where she has been able to bring out the best for our colleagues, our company and the communities we serve,” said Rudolph Wynter, president, National Grid-New York. “On behalf of our more than 10,400 employees across New York, I want to congratulate Melanie and the Community Foundation on their next chapter together. We know they’ll do great things.” Prior to starting at National Grid, Littlejohn served as executive director of the Urban League of Onondaga County and manager of international client services for Banker’s Trust Company in the Wall Street District. She holds a master’s in business administration (MBA) degree from Syracuse University. She earned a bachelor’s degree in liberal arts from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Littlejohn is active in numerous civic and philanthropic initiatives. She currently serves as co-chair of the Micron Community Engagement Committee, which helps drive the company’s community investment strategy. She is also board trustee and vice chair of Onondaga Community College and serves on the boards of CenterState CEO and Pathfinder Bank. She has served on numerous boards over the course of her career, including that of the Community Foundation, where she served as chair from 2011-2013.   Littlejohn has received numerous honors in recognition of her civic leadership. Most recently, she was named a 2022 Woman of Prestige from the Yva Jourdan Foundation and she received the 2019 Wisdom Keeper Award from FOCUS Greater Syracuse. She is also recognized for her commitment to mentoring up-and-coming leaders and has served as a student mentor and guest speaker to classes at Syracuse University. Littlejohn plans to apply her career and life experiences to the Community Foundation’s work by supporting community transformation and fully engaging residents, including those impacted by specific issues and donors of varying backgrounds. “For me, there is no better place to be than with this foundation and in this tremendous community,” said Littlejohn. “After almost 30 years at National Grid, I understand the power of service and the importance of collaboration to leave our communities and neighborhoods a little better than we found them. This is truly a transformative time for Central New York, so leading the Community Foundation at this moment of great promise is an honor.” Littlejohn succeeds Peter Dunn, who served as the Community Foundation’s president & CEO since 2008. Under Dunn’s leadership, assets nearly quadrupled from $110 million in 2008 to nearly $400 million in 2022. Annual grantmaking increased from $5.2 million in 2008 to $18.1 million in 2022 and the staff grew from 16 employees to 25. Until Littlejohn assumes her new role on March 1, Thomas Griffith will continue to serve as the Community Foundation’s interim president and CEO. About the CEO Search Committee: The Community Foundation’s board of directors was committed to finding the right leader to advance the organization’s mission to foster a thriving and equitable Central New York region. The Board formed a search committee comprised of current

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