In the vibrant city of Rochester, New York, there is a community-driven movement making waves and warming hearts—We Are Rochester. This inspiring initiative symbolizes Rochester's dedication to fostering unity and support among its
residents. It emphasizes the unique qualities that make this city a wonderful place to live, showcasing the diverse and resilient spirit that defines Rochester.
We Are Rochester captures the very essence of community collaboration, highlighting stories of local residents and small businesses who contribute tirelessly to the city's growth and well-being. It fosters a sense of shared purpose and belonging, whether through uplifting
Community Spirit
Hello Rochester, New York • Spring Issue |5
local artist showcases, engaging community projects, or spotlighting the passionate individuals passionately working to make Rochester a better place.
The initiative also plays a vital role in promoting Rochester's rich cultural tapestry. From its world-class museums and galleries to its bustling food scene and innovative tech industry, We Are Rochester celebrates the energy that surges through this city. More than just a
campaign, it’s a heartfelt reminder of the city’s solidarity, resilience, and commitment to progress.
In Rochester, New York, We Are Rochester is more than a slogan—it's a testament to a thriving community, always ready to uplift each other and shine brightly
Community Spirit
Community Spirit: We Are Rochester's Heartfelt Impact
In the vibrant city of Rochester, New York, there is a community-driven movement making waves and warming hearts—We Are Rochester. This inspiring initiative symbolizes Rochester's dedication to fostering unity and support among its residents. It emphasizes the unique qualities that make this city a wonderful place to live, showcasing the diverse and resilient spirit that defines Rochester.
We Are Rochester captures the very essence of community collaboration, highlighting stories of local residents and small businesses who contribute tirelessly to the city's growth and well-being. It fosters a sense of shared purpose and belonging, whether through uplifting local artist showcases, engaging community projects, or spotlighting the passionate individuals passionately working to make Rochester a better place.
The initiative also plays a vital role in promoting Rochester's rich cultural tapestry. From its world-class museums and galleries to its bustling food scene and innovative tech industry, We Are Rochester celebrates the energy that surges through this city. More than just a campaign, it’s a heartfelt reminder of the city’s solidarity, resilience, and commitment to progress.
In Rochester, New York, We Are Rochester is more than a slogan—it's a testament to a thriving community, always ready to uplift each other and shine brightly together.
What’s the Difference Between Highlights, Balayage, and Glossing?
Choosing the right hair color can feel confusing, especially when you hear terms like highlights, balayage, and glossing used interchangeably. Each technique works differently and creates a unique effect on your hair. Highlights and balayage brighten the hair and add dimension, while glossing improves
tone, shine, and overall hair health. Knowing these differences helps you select a style that fits your lifestyle, hair type, and long-term goals. Understanding how each method works also allows you to make an informed decision before scheduling your salon appointment.Highlights are a traditional
6 | HelloRochester, New York • Spring Issue
What’s the Difference Between Highlights, Balayage, and Glossing?
Choosing the right hair color can feel confusing, especially when you hear terms like highlights, balayage, and glossing used interchangeably. Each technique works differently and creates a unique effect on your hair. Highlights and balayage brighten the hair and add dimension, while glossing improves tone, shine, and overall hair health. Knowing these differences helps you select a style that fits your lifestyle, hair type, and long-term goals. Understanding how each method works also allows you to make an informed decision before scheduling your salon appointment.
Highlights are a traditional hair coloring method that involves lifting small sections of hair from root to tip. The sections can be thin for a subtle effect or wider for a bold contrast. Highlights add depth and dimension, making hair look brighter, fuller, and more textured. They can frame the face, accentuate layers, or highlight certain angles in the haircut.
Highlights are typically applied using foils to separate the strands and ensure precision. They require regular maintenance to stay visible and vibrant, as roots grow out and color fades. People often choose highlights when they want a noticeable, dimensional change in their overall hair appearance. This technique works on many hair lengths and textures, giving the stylist flexibility to create a tailored look for each client.
Balayage offers a softer, more modern approach. The term comes from the French word “sweep,” which describes how the color is painted onto hair. Instead of starting at the roots, balayage typically begins at mid-lengths and extends to the ends, creating a gradual, sun-kissed transition.
The hand-painted technique ensures that the color blends naturally with the hair, making regrowth less noticeable and reducing the need for frequent salon visits. Balayage works well on all hair lengths and textures and can be customized for subtle or more dramatic effects. It is particularly appealing to people who want a natural look with low maintenance. The results are soft, lived-in color that adds dimension and highlights movement, giving hair a polished yet effortless appearance.
Glossing differs from both highlights and balayage because it is not primarily used to lighten hair. Instead, a gloss enhances the tone of your existing color, smooths the hair, and increases shine. Glossing can remove unwanted brassy tones, refresh faded color, or add warmth and depth to brunette hair.
Blondes often use gloss to maintain brightness and neutralize yellow undertones, while brunettes can enrich warmth and improve overall color depth. Gloss treatments are gentle, conditioning, and safe for all hair types. They can be applied alone or combined with highlights or balayage to enhance the overall color result. Glossing also helps improve hair texture, leaving strands soft, smooth, and reflective, even between color appointments.
Choosing between highlights, balayage, or glossing depends on your hair type, lifestyle, and maintenance preferences. Highlights are ideal for those who want bold contrast and are willing to visit the salon regularly to keep the color bright. Balayage is better for those seeking a low-maintenance style that grows out naturally while still looking polished. Glossing works for anyone who wants to maintain or refresh their hair color without chemical lightening. Hair health is another important factor.
Lightening used in highlights and balayage can dry hair if not properly conditioned. Gloss treatments, however, improve shine and smoothness while protecting hair from damage. Combining techniques, such as balayage with a gloss, can give hair both dimension and vibrant color, while keeping it healthy and soft.
Lifestyle considerations also play a role in choosing the right method. People who style their hair frequently may prefer highlights for contrast and flexibility. Those with a busy schedule or minimal styling routines may benefit more from balayage, which grows out naturally. Glossing fits almost any routine, offering refreshed shine with minimal effort. It is important to consider how often you visit a salon, your natural hair texture, and the look you want to achieve when choosing a technique.
Ultimately, selecting highlights, balayage, or glossing depends on your personal hair goals and willingness to maintain the style. A professional stylist can evaluate your hair’s history, texture, and natural color to recommend the best approach. Choosing the right technique can transform your hair, leaving it vibrant, healthy, and perfectly suited to your style and lifestyle.
Rachel Swartz McCooey
hair coloring method that involves lifting small sections of hair from root to tip. The sections can be thin for a subtle effect or wider for a bold contrast. Highlights add depth and dimension, making hair look brighter, fuller, and more textured. They can frame the face, accentuate layers, or highlight certain angles
in the haircut.Highlights are typically applied using foils to separate the strands and ensure precision. They require regular maintenance to stay visible and vibrant, as roots grow out and color fades. People often choose highlights when they want a noticeable, dimensional change in their overall hair appearance. This technique works on many hair lengths and textures, giving the stylist flexibility to create a tailored look for each client.Balayage offers a softer, more modern approach. The term comes from the French word “sweep,” which describes how the color is painted onto hair. Instead of starting at the roots, balayage...
Choosing the right technique can transform your hair, leaving it vibrant, healthy, and perfectly suited to your style and lifestyle.
About the Author
Rachel Swartz McCooey is the owner and a stylist at Tru On Park in Rochester, New York. She has loved doing hair since 2001, and has served Park Avenue guests since 2012. She takes pride in her workspace, thrives on mentoring, and helps a skilled, diverse team grow with confidence.
HelloRochester, New York • Spring Issue |7
FEATURED STORY
Microgrids for Small Businesses: When Reliability Matters Most
by Jason Guck
As electricity demand grows across the U.S., small and midsize businesses are facing new risks to reliability that can affect operations, revenue, and safety. While large data centers and industrial users are often cited in the energy crunch, SMBs feel the impact through higher outage exposure and slower grid upgrades. Understanding when local energy solutions like microgrids make sense can help businesses protect themselves without overpaying for unnecessary infrastructure.A microgrid is a localized energy system that can operate independently
8 | HelloRochester, New York • Spring Issue
Jason Guck
ABOUT THE AUTHOR My mission is to revolutionize the way businesses consume utility resources by providing intelligent, conservation-based infrastructure solutions. By integrating advanced technologies, data analytics, and innovative designs, we optimize how buildings use electricity, natural gas, water, and more. Efficiency and sustainability go hand in hand, and we make it our mission to help clients achieve both—one smart solution at a time.
from the main grid when needed. During an outage, a microgrid can disconnect, or “island,” from the utility network and keep critical loads powered using local generation or energy storage. This islanding capability is the core resilience benefit, ensuring operations continue even when the broader grid fails.Microgrids are particularly valuable for businesses where downtime carries high costs. Hospitals, water treatment facilities, emergency shelters, and public safety sites all benefit from systems that can maintain power regardless of utility interruptions. For SMBs, the concept
Hello Rochester, New York • Spring Issue |9
Microgrids for Small Businesses: When Reliability Matters Most
As electricity demand grows across the U.S., small and midsize businesses are facing new risks to reliability that can affect operations, revenue, and safety. While large data centers and industrial users are often cited in the energy crunch, SMBs feel the impact through higher outage exposure and slower grid upgrades. Understanding when local energy solutions like microgrids make sense can help businesses protect themselves without overpaying for unnecessary infrastructure. A microgrid is a localized energy system that can operate independently from the main grid when needed. During an outage, a microgrid can disconnect, or “island,” from the utility network and keep critical loads powered using local generation or energy storage. This islanding capability is the core resilience benefit, ensuring operations continue even when the broader grid fails. Microgrids are particularly valuable for businesses where downtime carries high costs. Hospitals, water treatment facilities, emergency shelters, and public safety sites all benefit from systems that can maintain power regardless of utility interruptions. For SMBs, the concept applies to locations where repeated outages disrupt production, service delivery, or revenue streams. Businesses in areas prone to extreme weather events or long restoration times may find that a microgrid offers both operational continuity and a more predictable energy expense. Microgrids also make sense in campuses or dense industrial parks where multiple loads can be controlled behind a single system. In fast-growing regions where utility upgrades lag, microgrids can serve as a practical bridge, providing reliability until new transmission or generation comes online. They can also be used daily for peak shaving or demand response, helping offset costs even when the grid is functioning normally. However, microgrids are not a solution for every energy challenge. They do not replace the need for broader grid modernization or transmission expansion. Most microgrids remain connected to the main grid under normal conditions and operate in island mode only when necessary. They are not intended to completely eliminate utility dependency, and they are not a primary tool for wide-area decarbonization. SMBs considering microgrids should weigh the costs against outage risk, operational criticality, and the ability to use the system daily for efficiency or demand management. Ultimately, deciding whether a microgrid is right for a small business comes down to a few practical questions. Is the cost of downtime high? Are outages frequent or predictable due to weather? Can your business get timely grid upgrades to support growth? Can the system be used daily to generate savings or efficiency gains? If the answer is yes to any of these, a microgrid can provide a reliable, financially sensible solution. As the U.S. energy landscape continues to face rising demand and growing reliability risks, SMBs have options beyond waiting for utility improvements. Microgrids offer a way to maintain operations, protect revenue, and manage energy costs more predictably. By understanding the role and limitations of these systems, small business owners can make informed energy decisions that balance resilience with efficiency.
This islandingcapability is the coreresilience benefit,ensuring operationscontinue even whenthe broader gridfails.
applies to locations where repeated outages disrupt production, service delivery, or revenue streams. Businesses in areas prone to extreme weather events or long restoration times may find that a microgrid offers both operational continuity and a more predictable energy expense.Microgrids also make sense in campuses or dense industrial parks where multiple loads can be controlled behind a single system. In fast-growing regions where utility upgrades lag, microgrids can serve as a...