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Let the Buffalo Games begin!

From Buffalo Rising: https://www.buffalorising.com/2020/04/let-the-buffalo-games-begin/

What would you say if I told you that the largest jigsaw puzzle manufacturer in North America was located right here in Buffalo? Buffalo Games currently makes 500 different jigsaw puzzles and 75 other types of party games. To demonstrate just how big the company is, over the last five years, the jigsaw puzzle industry has grown by 25%. According to the company’s president, Nagendra Raina, retail sales at Buffalo Games account for 80% of that market growth.

I caught up with Raina, to see how the COVID-19 virus was impacting Buffalo Games, and what he had to say was both enlightening and sobering. At this point in time, the company has transitioned its paper jigsaw manufacturing to Asia, because the local production operation in temporarily shuttered. I asked Raina how he was able to shift manufacturing so quickly to Asia, to keep inventory flowing, and he said that they normally outsource their plastic and wooden game manufacturing overseas, so it made perfect sense until everything is once again operational back in Buffalo.

Empty warehouse shelves| COVID-19 resulted in an unprecedented shortage of jigsaw puzzle inventory, which is now being remedied by a temporary switch to production in India

Although Raina had a backup plan, he says that the transition has still been painful, and that the company has been dealing with major challenges due to production headaches, which has led to some empty warehouse shelves.

Interestingly, the problem has been solely on the manufacturing side, not the sales side. In fact, sales of these types of puzzle games is very strong, and Raina has witnessed competitors vying for shelf space during the pandemic. This new competition is coming from game manufacturers in other states that are still operating “business as usual” during the crisis, says Raina.

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Buffalo Common Council committee OKs school bus stop-arm cameras

From Buffalo News (https://buffalonews.com/2020/04/23/in-first-virtual-meeting-council-committee-oks-school-bus-stop-arm-cameras/)

In its first virtual meeting since figuring out how to include public comment, a Buffalo Common Council committee approved a contract for stop-arm cameras on school buses.

The program targets drivers traveling behind or toward school buses, who illegally pass buses stopped with flashing red lights and stop arms extended as students board or disembark.

During Tuesday’s virtual Finance Committee meeting, members agreed to a five-year contract with BusPatrol America to equip all 610 school buses with stop-arm cameras by September. The goal is to reduce the stop-arm violations by 25% to 30% each year of the program, said Jean Souliere, chief executive officer of BusPatrol.

There is no cost to the City of Buffalo or the Buffalo Public Schools for the program. BusPatrol will provide the capital investment up front to equip all of the buses with the cameras and provide service and equipment maintenance.

“All of the operating costs that go into supporting the program, we’re also doing that,” Souliere said.

When violations are captured on camera, BusPatrol will provide the information to law enforcement, which will authorize the issuance of tickets, Souliere said. BusPatrol will print the tickets and mail them to the vehicle’s registrant.

Per state law, the initial violation is $250 per ticket. A subsequent violation within 18 months is $275, and a third violation within 18 months is $300, said Parking Commissioner Kevin Helfer. 

BusPatrol will keep 60% of the money paid for citations, and the city will keep 40%. BusPatrol also guarantees $2.5 million for the city for the first year of the contract.

Lawmakers also held a virtual Legislation Committee meeting Tuesday, sending to the full Council without recommendation a request from Community Resources for Justice to open a halfway house on Glenwood Avenue for some prisoners released to relieve crowding in response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Both meetings were conducted remotely and broadcast live on the Council’s Facebook page. The public commented and asked questions – particularly about the stop-arm cameras – through the Facebook live comments section and by email at councilstaff@city-buffalo.com or phone at 851-5105. A Council staffer read the public’s correspondence to the Council members.

“My goal was to make the communications as open as they would normally be if we were having person-to-person meetings. That meant the public being able to comment in real time,” said Council President Darius G. Pridgen.

When City Hall was closed to the public last month in accordance with the stay-at-home rules in reaction to the coronavirus health emergency, the Council announced it would cancel its committee meetings – which are held every other Tuesday – until further notice.

The Council’s regular business meetings continued with the first virtual session streamed live on the Council’s Facebook page on March 31. Each member participated remotely from home, but the public typically doesn’t comment at meetings of the full Council. Pridgen said during that meeting that Council staff would work on resuming committee meetings virtually to include public comment. The agenda items would have to be time-sensitive or related to the Covid-19 pandemic, he said.

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Buffalo Games works on a new puzzle

From Buffalo News: https://buffalonews.com/2020/04/30/buffalo-games-works-on-a-new-puzzle-how-to-get-ready-to-reopen/

Like many small business owners, Nagendra Raina has been frustrated for weeks at not being able to maintain his company’s production under the governor’s shutdown order.

He’s also, well, puzzled.

After all, Raina reasons, his company, Buffalo Games, is the leading manufacturer of jigsaw puzzles in North America. And doing large and complicated puzzles has quickly emerged as one of the most popular – and safest – activities that people can do while they’re staying put at home to avoid the coronavirus pandemic.

“The demand for our product is through the roof,” Raina said.

Plus, he says, his operation has a large enough facility – and a small enough workforce – that maintaining social distance isn’t a problem. Even so, “we were deemed to be nonessential,” Raina mused ruefully.

“It is what it is,” he said.

Now, though, he’s eyeing Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s plan for restarting the economy with eagerness, hoping to be part of the first phase that would include construction and manufacturing. That’s essential to remaining competitive while his rivals internationally are still producing, he said.

It’s a process that manufacturers across the Buffalo Niagara region will be watching closely as they make their own preparations to resume production under rules and guidelines that almost certainly will be more restrictive than before the outbreak and require changes in operations.

At Buffalo Games, Raina and his team are already taking steps to prepare their production and warehouse facilities to prove they can meet the standards set by Cuomo.

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