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Jake Van Ness

2440 Articles

Southern Adirondack Independent Living Expands With New Albany County Office

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
Southern Adirondack Independent Living has opened a new Albany County office at 1873 Western Ave., expanding services in the Capital Region and strengthening support for independent living across 17 counties.
Courtesy SAIL

Southern Adirondack Independent Living announced the expansion of its services in the Capital Region with the opening of a new Albany County office at 1873 Western Ave., strengthening the organization’s presence across New York’s North Country and Capital Region.

Founded in Glens Falls in 1988, SAIL serves 17 counties, providing support that empowers people with disabilities and older adults to live independently in their communities. The Albany office follows SAIL’s award of the Capital Region contract for the Regional Resource Development Center for the Nursing Home Transition and Diversion Waiver and Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver, contracts the organization also holds in the Adirondack Region.

“This expansion builds on the work we’ve been doing in the North Country and allows us to reach more people across the Capital Region who want to live independently,” said Tyler Whitney, executive director of SAIL. “Our focus is on removing barriers and providing the supports people need to live with dignity and choice.”

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Use Less Store Brings Refillery, Thrifting And Sustainability To Downtown Glens Falls

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
Kevin Kroeze stands inside The Use Less Store in downtown Glens Falls, where bulk refills, thrift finds and sustainable swaps offer shoppers practical alternatives to single-use plastics.
Ann Donnelly Photo

By Ann Donnelly

When visitors walk into the building at 12 E. Washington St. in Glens Falls, the first thing they notice is the scent. For Kevin Kroeze, owner of the Use Less Store, that sensory experience is just the gateway to a business model designed to change how the community consumes everyday goods.

The shop, which opened in early October, is centered on a concept Kroeze calls a “refillery”. It is an effort to provide Glens Falls with a sustainable alternative to the “buy-and-toss” cycle of modern retail.

“The Use Less Store is built around the centerpiece there, which is the refillery,” Kroeze said. “And that’s where we have bulk products—cleaners, shampoo, conditioner, you know, body care items like that. You can just bring in your empty container and refill it rather than buy another container to recycle and throw out”.

The store’s inventory extends beyond liquids. Kroeze stocks a variety of non-toxic plastic replacements, including shampoo bars, solid dish soap, and laundry detergent sheets. The shelves also feature glass straws, wood utensils, and bamboo cutting boards.

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Aroxy Cleaners Marks More Than 50 Years Of Family-Owned Service In Queensbury

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
The Aroxy Cleaners storefront on State Route 9 in Queensbury reflects more than five decades of family-owned garment care, serving generations of local residents and professionals.
Courtesy Aroxy Cleaners

By Carol Ann Conover

For more than half a century, the name Aroxy Cleaners has been synonymous with fabric care in the region. While many businesses struggled to navigate the changing tides of the late 20th century, this family-owned dry cleaner has maintained a steady presence by leaning into its roots and prioritizing speed.

The business traces its lineage back to the late 1960s. Rick Poladia, the current family member at the helm, recalls that his father and uncle took over operations around 1970. Originally part of a different franchise, the family added a single letter to the name for legal purposes, transforming “Roxy” into “Aroxy”—a moniker that has remained on the storefront ever since.

“From 1970 up to now, it’s been in the family,” Poladia said. Today, Rick and his sisters continue the legacy, operating out of their central location on State Route 9.

While the business once operated multiple branches, the family eventually consolidated to a single, high-efficiency location. This move allowed them to maintain a tighter grip on quality control and turnaround times, which Poladia identifies as a core facet of their success. In an era of automated service and delayed shipping, Aroxy Cleaners prides itself on same-day service for customers in a pinch. Poladia notes that they often handle unexpected emergencies, ranging from last-minute wedding attire and funeral garments to suits needed for job interviews.

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ARCC Announces Promotion Of Ava Kanninen To Director Of Membership Development

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
Ava Kanninen is director of membership development at ARCC.
Courtesy ARCC

The Adirondack Regional Chamber of Commerce (ARCC) has announced the promotion of Ava Kanninen to Director of Membership Development. After 10 years in the wine and spirits field, Ava took her energy and enthusiasm to fulfill the role of Membership Manager for the ARCC in January 2023.

“One of the things that was a joy to learn in my time at the ARCC was how much talent there is in our region,” said Kanninen. “I didn’t realize that we were creating, developing, and manufacturing so many things here until I started in my role at the Chamber.”

At the Chamber, Ava cultivates meaningful relationships and fosters business growth throughout the Adirondack region. With a passion for shared success and a commitment to strengthening local businesses, she plays a key role in driving membership engagement and regional collaboration.

“Ava’s role at the Chamber has evolved into developing meaningful relationships with our members by focusing on engagement and retention,” said ARCC President & CEO Tricia Rogers. “She will serve as a liaison to build community, demonstrate value, and foster collaboration.”

Guided by the principle that “a rising tide carries all ships,” Ava is dedicated to enhancing regional prosperity and nurturing a thriving, interconnected business community.

“I love what I do, and I am so excited to expand my role and take on more responsibility with the organization”, Kanninen added.

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Why More Small Businesses Are Turning To Fractional HR For Compliance And Growth

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
Jennifer Barry, J.D., HR consultant practice leader at GTM Payroll & HR on fractional HRs.
Courtesy GTM Payroll & HR

by Ann Donnelly

For small business owners, the “to-do” list is often a mountain that never levels off. Between managing growth and daily operations, the complex world of human resources—compliance, payroll, and employee relations—can quickly become a liability rather than an asset.

Jennifer Barry, J.D., HR Consultant Practice Leader at GTM Payroll & HR, says businesses don’t have to choose between a hefty salary and a “recipe for disaster”.

“Asking non-HR staff to take on these duties is risky,” Barry said. “You may alienate the employee, you may lose them, and frankly, they may just get it wrong. Many HR areas require strict compliance, and there is no room for error”.

Fractional HR is emerging as a major tool for smaller businesses or startups operating on a lean staffing budget. The concept is simple: instead of hiring a full-time mid-level HR professional at an average salary of $80,000 per year, a company can hire a highly experienced consultant for 10 to 12 hours per week, only when needed.

“Consultants can often do in 10 hours per week what a full-time employee can do,” Barry noted. “Because they aren’t ingrained in the organization or distracted by day-to-day office operations, they work with a level of efficiency that is hard to match internally”.

At GTM, the consulting team functions like a “Halls of Justice,” providing clients with access to a “superhero” on call. These generalists bring up to 30 years of experience to the table, supported by a network of specialists in areas like employment law, training, handbook development, and benefits.

For many owners, the sign that it is time to look outward is a simple lack of “peace of mind”. Barry suggests owners ask themselves: What am I doing that I don’t like? What is taking too much time? Where do I lack the knowledge to proceed?

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Saratoga-Based Staffing Firm Connects U.S. Companies With Latin American Workers

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026

By Carol Ann Conover

Tim McNeil’s path to running a staffing company that recruits exclusively from Latin America began with clients who needed support staff but found domestic hiring challenging.

McNeil and his business partner Rob Rogers own GSD Staffing, a company that places workers from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Belize with U.S. businesses seeking to fill behind-the-scenes roles at rates well below domestic labor costs. The partners operate from a coworking space in Saratoga and work remotely from their homes in Queensbury and Charlton.

The business emerged from the partners’ other company, OSR Manage, which provides fractional sales management services to IT companies across North America. When clients began requesting appointment setters and marketing support but expressed concerns about salary expectations, McNeil and Rogers redirected their existing recruiter to source candidates from Latin America.

What started as a solution for a handful of clients has evolved into a business model the partners believe could eventually become their primary focus. GSD Staffing currently employs about 30 people and aims to double that number by year’s end.

“We got those first 30 kind of by accident,” McNeil said. “We’ve got the marketing engine going now.”

The company charges clients between $2,500 and $3,000 monthly per placement, a significant discount compared to domestic salaries. McNeil attributes rising wage pressures to the pandemic’s aftermath, saying some positions have jumped from $45,000 annually to $65,000. GSD Staffing serves as the employer of record, handling payroll, taxes and compliance with labor laws in each country.

The workers themselves remain in their home countries, taking advantage of time zone proximity that McNeil describes as a key selling point over offshore alternatives in the Philippines or India. Depending on the season, workers in GSD’s recruiting markets operate in either Central or Mountain time zones, typically within one or two hours of their U.S. clients.

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Business Report: Phishing Scam Teaches Businesses About Security

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
Reg Harnish, CEO of OrbitalFire Cybersecurity, says small firms must own cybersecurity.
Courtesy OrbitalFire

By Reg Harnish

Late last year, Warren County officials disclosed that more than $3 million was mistakenly sent from the Treasurer’s Office after staff fell victim to a phishing scam. Two routine wire payments believed to be legitimate vendor transactions were redirected to fraudulent accounts.

This was not a technical failure or a sophisticated cyberattack. It was a breakdown in how routine business decisions were made and verified.

That is what makes phishing so effective. It hides inside normal work.

How Phishing Gets Past Capable Teams

Modern phishing often does not look suspicious at first glance. Emails are designed to feel familiar, frequently appearing to come from known vendors, contractors or internal staff. Formatting looks correct, timing makes sense and the request fits neatly into an existing workflow.

Common examples include a request to update banking information, a revised invoice or a reminder that a payment needs to go out.

Add urgency, and the email blends into a busy inbox. Nothing about it feels dramatic. That is the core of social engineering: getting people to act, not just to click.

Why Smaller Organizations Are Common Targets

Smaller organizations run lean by necessity. Fewer approval layers and handoffs mean fewer chances for someone to pause and ask whether something looks right.

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Exclusivity And Storytelling Matter More Than Price In Tough Economy

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
Neal Sandin, President of 643 Research is a full-service qualitative market research company.
Courtesy 643 Research

By Neal Sandin

Economic uncertainty reigns, with concerns about tariffs, rising unemployment and inflation, and the possible “AI Bubble” spilling out from social media feeds and news outlets. With higher costs for groceries, utilities, as well as at the gas pump and seemingly everywhere else, people are becoming more discerning about where to spend their hard-earned money. The challenge for brands and market researchers that work for them is not to focus too much on one single factor: price.

Many companies when faced with economic hurdles immediately reduce prices. This is understandable. After all, a typical question that the market researcher asks is if there is anything preventing someone from buying something. Not surprisingly, the first answer is always cost. If things were only a little less expensive, they would buy. Yet ironically, reduction of prices can actually cause people to not buy from a brand. 

For example, if Rolls-Royce suddenly started selling their vehicles at a Honda Civic price point, many people would wonder about the brand and if the quality was truly there. The true appeal of Rolls-Royce is that it is exclusive. These vehicles belong to a rarefied group, one that is full of brand-loyal customers. The more exclusive, the more exciting the brand, the more it captures the imagination on both an emotional and social level. All of this creates and reinforces customer loyalty. 

Some may conclude from this that a higher price is required to create exclusivity. While it is true that a Rolls-Royce at $30,000 is not nearly as remarkable as a Rolls-Royce at $300,000, it is the stories we tell about the brand that truly makes them something special. Rolls-Royce played a key role in royal weddings, including between Princess Diana and Prince Charles. Yet, that Honda Civic that can last 200,000 miles also tells a story, one that Rolls-Royce never could, that of road trips and memories with loved ones. These stories give people a reason to buy from that brand. They make the customer want to spend their money with a specific company and not anyone else. Stories create loyalty. 

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Hilltop Construction Builds On Strong Demand Across Residential, Commercial Markets

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
About 60 percent of Hilltop Construction Company’s business is from residential clients building upscale lakefront homes such as this one on Lake George.
Courtesy Hilltop Construction

By Paul Post

Hilltop Construction Company started out as a one man operation – Tom Albrecht Sr. and a pickup truck.

Today his son, Tom Jr.; daughter, April; and her husband, Dan Washburn, are leading the Queensbury-based firm into a second half-century of business, with thriving activity in both the residential and commercial sectors.

“We work with about eight different architects,” Albrect Jr. said. “They all tell me they have plenty of work, at least 12 months of work in front of them. That means there’s work we haven’t even touched yet on the construction side of things. So the outlook is very, very healthy.”

Hilltop is marking its 50 anniversary this year, with plans for an official celebration in August. The company is headquartered in a handsome new building at 21 Casey Road, just north of Floyd Bennett Memorial Airport.

 Tom Sr. and his wife, Cindy, founders of the company retired three years ago.

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Family-Run Adirondack Customs Turns Local Roots Into Lasting Craftsmanship

Posted onFebruary 17, 2026
An Adirondack Customs truck sits near the Hudson River in Riparius, underscoring the family-run builder’s deep local roots and hands-on craftsmanship throughout the Southern Adirondack region.
Courtesy Adirondack Customs

By Carol Ann Conover

In the heart of the Adirondack Park, where the rugged landscape demands as much resilience from its structures as its people, Adirondack Customs LLC has spent nearly two decades turning regional character into craftsmanship. Founded in 2007, the Riparius-based custom home builder has evolved from a hands-on startup into a multifaceted family venture that manages everything from timber frame construction to complex permitting. According to Jaki Rainsberger, who recently joined the team to support the company’s growing operations, the firm’s identity is inextricably linked to the land it builds upon. The company’s mission statement emphasizes their local roots, noting that they do not just work in the Adirondacks—they live there—and that this local knowledge shapes every structural decision.

The business operates as a true family venture under the umbrella of 6K Holdings, a name that represents the family members who keep the engine running. This structural synergy is further strengthened by their sister company, Bison Facilities Management Services (FMS). While Adirondack Customs focuses on the artistry and physical construction of regional homes, Bison FMS acts as a core strategic partner, allowing the family to offer a more comprehensive suite of services. Ken Stonitsch, a partner who has been with the company for 10 years, serves as the primary man on site for the construction side. Known for his old-school work ethic, Stonitsch handles the heavy lifting of estimating, drafting and subcontractor management, often utilizing Chief Architect software to bring client visions to life.

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