Empire State Entrepreneurs: NY Business Law
In this wide-ranging conversation, David Pfalzgraf sits down with Larry Quinn, one of Buffalo's most prolific behind-the-scenes forces, for a deeply personal and candid look at a career spanning city government, Manhattan real estate, professional sports ownership, the film industry, and education reform. From his early days as the youngest commissioner in Buffalo city government to co-owning the Sabres, helping build KeyBank Center, launching Great Point Studios [https://greatpointstudios.com/studios/buffalo-studios/], and now leading the charge on Tom Golisano's transformative Golisano Institute [https://golisanoinstitute.org/], Larry Quinn's story is ultimately about one thing: people. The Topics: The Golisano Institute Larry's primary focus today is the Golisano Institute, a two-year post-secondary program founded by Tom Golisano designed to bridge the gap between high school and the workforce. The program is business-focused, covering Finance, Accounting, Public Speaking, and AI, with an emphasis on real-world work experience. Students graduate within two years, paying a maximum of $18,000 in tuition, with no summer breaks. Courses are accredited by Niagara University, Daemen University, St. John Fisher, Syracuse University, and RIT. Job placement runs at approximately 90%. The institute is opening its Buffalo location this fall (September) in the renovated former Buffalo News building downtown. The facility will include a stunning 700-seat forum with a 38-foot interactive video wall, designed not just for student programming but as a community venue for corporate events and major speakers. Building KeyBank Center Larry was recruited back to Buffalo by Seymour Knox to oversee the design and construction of what is now KeyBank Center, a $97 million hard-cost project that opened in 1996. He shared a memorable opening-night story: being summoned by Nordy Knox, who stood at the top of the escalator watching fans pour in, in tears, overcome with pride for Buffalo. "Those are the things I remember most," said Larry. Buying the Buffalo Sabres with Tom Golisano Larry recounted how Carl Paladino first connected him with Tom Golisano, who was interested in saving the Sabres from relocation. After initial skepticism (Tom famously told Larry "this thing loses money every year"), the deal eventually came together in a dramatic sequence involving bankruptcy court, Adelphia Cable, the NHL, and a Sunday-night phone call from Golisano. The team was purchased in 2003, and their ownership period helped stabilize professional hockey in Buffalo. Great Point Studios Larry helped broker the partnership between Great Point Media (founded by Robbie Halmi, former head of the Hallmark Channel and producer of Lonesome Dove) and the Rich family (Rich Products) to develop a film studio on Niagara Street. The studio produced 10 movies last year, primarily Christmas films. Larry sees the film industry as "the new manufacturing": democratic, diverse, and accessible without requiring a college degree. The Future of Buffalo: Niagara Falls Power & Data Centers Larry shared a forward-looking vision around the Niagara Falls Power Project as an untapped economic engine. With AI and data centers requiring enormous amounts of power, he believes Western New York has a unique natural advantage that regional leaders should leverage, not fight. His vision: use renewable hydroelectric power as a bargaining chip to attract major tech companies and require them to relocate divisions and hire locally. On Risk and Career Philosophy Larry credits a pivotal moment at Notre Dame: a professor challenged him to spend a week at a law firm before committing to law school (he lasted one day), and it became the catalyst for a career defined by calculated risk-taking. The professor gave him a book, Outrageous Good Fortune by Michael Burke, whose philosophy of "know yourself, seize opportunity without knowing where it leads" became a guiding framework for Larry's life. Tom Golisano's Philanthropy Larry shared a remarkable story about Tim Shriver of the Kennedy family approaching Golisano at the Clinton Global Initiative with a request for $500,000 to create medical clinics for Special Olympics athletes. Golisano's response: "You think too small." He gave $25 million. The resulting network of Golisano Special Olympics clinics now operates worldwide. Highlights & Memorable Moments * The professor who saved him from law school: Assigned to interview at a South Bend law firm, Larry lasted exactly one day, and it set the course of his entire career. * Meeting the Knox family: Larry's first encounter with Nordy Knox came after being kept waiting nearly an hour for a 9:00 AM meeting. Nordy arrived furious, and the awkwardness of that moment led, serendipitously, to Larry being recruited to build KeyBank Center. * Nordy Knox in tears on opening night (1996): Standing at the top of the escalator, Nordy pulled Larry in for a hug, overcome with pride for the city and the memory of his brother Seymour. "I'm emotional talking about it," Larry admitted. * Tom Golisano's negotiating style: After Larry secured 2 or 3 of Tom's 5 demands from the NHL to close the Sabres deal, Golisano gave him a hug and said, "Atta boy. I never thought you'd get any of them." Then: "I guess we own a hockey team." Followed immediately by: "There's only one problem... I don't like hockey." * $500,000 vs. $25 million: Tim Shriver asked Golisano for half a million. Tom told him he was thinking too small, and wrote a $25 million check. * "You think something's too crazy? Find out anyway." Larry's philosophy on opportunity, illustrated through the story of how Great Point Studios came to be despite his initial skepticism. Key Takeaways * Relationships outlast results. The buildings, the arenas, the studios: Larry remembers the people, not the concrete. Every great project he's been part of was defined by the quality of the team and the relationships built along the way. * Risk is the price of opportunity. Opportunities are never clear or guaranteed. Larry was taught early to embrace uncertainty, and it's a mindset that took him from Buffalo city hall to Manhattan real estate to professional sports ownership. * Buffalo has untapped leverage. Natural resources, renewable energy, a lower cost of living, and an emerging film industry give Western New York real competitive advantages, but they require bold regional leadership to unlock. * Real philanthropists don't just write checks. They create systems. What separates Tom Golisano is that he doesn't just fund ideas; he funds the infrastructure and execution behind them. The Golisano Institute is a perfect example: visionary, fully funded, and built to produce measurable workforce outcomes. * Workforce development is economic development. Larry's involvement with the Golisano Institute reflects his conviction that building human capital (not just attracting companies) is the path to sustained regional growth. * The film industry is the new manufacturing. Accessible, diverse, and year-round (especially with the rise of streaming), Buffalo's film economy offers broad employment opportunities tha...
26 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Empire State Entrepreneurs: NY Business Law!