News

SUNY Cortland students receive startup funding from Adam Weitsman

SUNY Cortland students receive startup funding from Adam Weitsman

Photo: Saga Communications


CORTLAND, NY (607NewsNow) — During Innovation Day at SUNY Cortland, local businessman Adam Weitsman acted as a judge and provided a total $45,000 to six startups.

Held on May 28th, Innovation Day gave students the ability to pitch business ideas that they had developed over the course of the academic year. While judges conferred about who to name as winners of the competition, Weitsman (owner and chief executive officer of Upstate Shredding – Weitsman Recycling) decided he wanted to award $10,000 to the top three groups and $5,000 each for the remaining three. 

Photo of Weitsman (center right) meeting with a student during SUNY Cortland’s Innovation Day. Photo courtesy of Brian Bosch.

The winning startups are as follows:

  • Next Life Junk Removal – $10,000: Sophomore Ryan Craig’s startup is a junk culling service that picks up loads of recyclable materials and sorts the refuse for donation, recycling or scrap.
  • Rockwood by Vinci – $10,000: Senior Dominic Vinci plans to combine woodcraft and stone elements to create custom, high-end furniture using 3D modeling and laser cutting technology. He plans to launch his business this summer with help from the startup funding.
  • Shred Air – $10,000: Sophomore Bryan Sredniawski, junior Nicholas Bliss, senior Lyndsey Hillenbrandt, senior Esteban Mitchell, and senior Morgan Shelvin have teamed up to bring Sredniawski’s idea for a personal use fan with an automated cleaning system that removes dust and bacteria from its blade to life.
  • Throwing Shade – $5,000: Senior Jayden Lont runs an established business that he started last year and developed in his entrepreneurship classes at SUNY Cortland. His business rents chairs, tents and other items to visitors on Topsail Island, in North Carolina, hoping to take the business nationwide.
  • Scrap Fit – $5,000: Junior Luka Kvizhinadze, junior Thomas Wheeler, senior Justin Womeldorph, and senior Christopher Youngs teamed up to create a business that makes workout equipment from junkyard leftovers.
  • Motion – $5,000: Senior Jonathan Finewood developed an app inspired by behavior economics that allows users to bet on themselves to accomplish a goal. A user sets a goal, such as consistent exercise, and if they don’t succeed, they lose the bet. A portion of that money is paid to the app, the rest going to support users who successfully accomplished their set goal.

The judging panel for the startups consisted of Weitsman, SUNY Cortland President Erik J. Bitterbaum, and Diana Lawson ’76, dean of the Seidman College of Business at Grand Valley State University and a Cortland College Foundation board member.

“I’m always impressed when that light bulb goes off, they get to this phase of actually accomplishing it and they’re excited about it,” Wilson said. “It becomes part of their identity.  

“They kind of live with this stuff throughout the semester, and they finally get a chance to be on stage and deliver it,” said James Wilson, lecturer of economics who emceed the event. “I’m impressed by what the students have done.”

Read a full recap of this year’s Innovation Day at SUNY Cortland here.

News

2 days ago in Education, Entertainment, Local, Sports

Cornell alum receives lacrosse honor

Class of 1976 graduate Mike French received the Tewaaraton Legends Award on Thursday.

2 days ago in Business, Community, Food & Music, Lifestyle, Local

Vacant building demolished ahead of Chipotle construction in Lansing

Crews began knocking down the former Imperial Kitchen Buffet building on Graham Road West this week in preparation for the construction of a new Chipotle restaurant.

3 days ago in Sports, Trending

MLB owners have proposed a salary cap for the first time since baseball’s 1994-95 strike

Major League Baseball owners made their long-expected salary cap proposal to the players' association on Thursday, a system the union has vowed never to accept, setting the sides on course for a confrontation that threatens the 2027 season and perhaps beyond.

3 days ago in Lifestyle

Why your co-worker might be listening to music tuned to 432 hertz

Music recorded in 432 hertz (cycles per second) is taking off on social media platforms and music streaming services, where users can find an increasing number of tracks and playlists employing the alternate tuning, everything from meditation soundscapes to reggae songs recorded by Ziggy Marley.