February 23, 2010 - Diversification helps JGB Enterprises withstand the recession, thrive
January 29, 2010 - JGB awarded $10 million Air Force contract
May, 2009 - JGB makes its Big 50 debut this year, with more than $90 million in sales
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JGB Enterprises, Inc. is proud to announce that we have been chosen to supply the US Military with the Basic Expeditionary Airfield Resources (BEAR) Water System
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| August 13, 2008 |
Syracuse, New York (WSYR-TV) - With the loss of hundreds of jobs, it's been a difficult couple of weeks for central New York. Congressional candidates Dan Maffei and Dale Sweetland are focusing on job creation in their campaigns, addressing what needs to be done to ease a host of economic hardships. We followed along as each candidate spoke with business owners about what needs to be done. JGB Enterprises grew from three employees to 250. They have relationships and contracts with many vendors, including the Department of Defense. Vice president Steve Starrantino says the company would never close their Liverpool location, even though they are dealing with the same economic woes as everyone else. JGB president Bob Zywicki says his company has seen double-digit increases in costs from manufacturers – increases that he’s never seen before in his nearly 20 years at the company. The cost of doing business in upstate New York is expensive, but Zywicki says it sometimes gets a bad rap. He says JGB has three other locations in Charlotte, Kansas City and St. Louis, and each one is more expensive to operate than the New York facility. Congressional candidates Dale Sweetland and Dan Maffei have made jobs the top issue of their campaign. To Sweetland, it comes down to the energy crisis and high property taxes. “It has to be dealt with, because it hurts business, it hurts people, and it hurts the business that these companies are doing,” Sweetland says. “Small business can’t absorb [the rising costs] as well as big business can.” Maffei says incentives will stop the bleeding -- businesses can't expand because it's too expensive. He says it's about finding creative solutions. “A really vibrant community will see that big businesses and universities and colleges are spinning off a lot of little businesses, like retail, small manufacturing and boutique firms – that’s how an economy really gets going,” says Maffei. Maffei is focusing his campaign on finding ways to get young people
to stay or move into the area. Sweetland, meantime, is calling
on Congress to address the energy problem, and says that high property
taxes are inhibiting economic growth. |