Mayor Deana Michaels To Serve On Oswego County Micron Steering Committee

Fulton Mayor Deana Michaels. Photo provided by Chirello Marketing.

FULTON – Fulton Mayor Deana Michaels recently joined the Oswego County Micron Steering Strategy Committee, led by SUNY Oswego, to position the county to capitalize on the opportunities presented by Micron’s investment in our area.

Mayor Michaels has recommended members of the Fulton Common Council and community leaders to serve on subcommittee work groups.

“Fulton’s location, educational and industrial base, housing stock and continuing housing development make us a prime location to Micron’s needs while mutually benefiting our city,” Michaels said. “We can be the bedroom community for those thousands of people who will be employed there. From improvements to Route 481 to utilizing funds from the Downtown Revitalization Initiative, we’re working to find different ways to position Fulton as a Micron partner.”

Last December, SUNY Oswego Officer in Charge Mary C. Toale, Ed.D. wrote: “The Steering Committee will create, unite, and implement Oswego County’s strategy to best support and mutually-benefit from the tremendous opportunity Micron presents. Workgroups are being created with leaders from across all segments of Oswego County to align and enact efforts to position Oswego County’s workforce, infrastructure, environmental and educational assets so that we all may capitalize on this unprecedented investment.”

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Located in the Key Bank Building, Fulton, Chirello Advertising offers full service advertising, public relations, and marketing expertise to a variety of industrial, professional, institutional and retail clients throughout Central New York. Established in 1996, the agency specializes in public relations planning, graphic design, web design and streaming web video, video production, market research, radio, television, online, and print advertising. Steve Chirello can be contacted at (315) 592-9778, [email protected] and www.chirello.com. Profiles of the agency are also on Facebook® and LinkedIn®.

1 Comment

  1. Why would anyone from Micron want to move to Fulton? The streets are pitiful.. The sidewalks are dangerous. There are abandoned and boarded houses on every city block. There is no money to improve any of these problems as seventy percent of the city budget goes to police and fire. Deana, you’re drinking your bath water and telling yourself that it tastes good. Unless or until those departments are right sized, there will never be any money to address those problems. So again, why would anyone want to move to Fulton?

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