Tag Archives: Louie Marven

September News Digest

Madsen Named to Council

Dave Madsen is Harrisburg’s newest council member, as City Council last month appointed the Midtown resident to a four-month term.

Madsen takes the seat vacated by former Councilman Jeffrey Baltimore, who resigned in August.

Six city residents applied for the position, and City Council named four finalists: Madsen, Brian Ostella, Jennie Jenkins and Joshua Burkholder. In the end, Madsen, Ostella and Jenkins received nominations from council, which selected Madsen, a technician with the state Department of Revenue, by a 4-2 vote.

Also last month, the Democratic Committee of Dauphin County selected Madsen to appear on the November ballot as its nominee for a two-year council seat to fill the remainder of Baltimore’s term.

In that committee contest, Madsen narrowly bested city official Devan Drabik after Jenkins withdrew her name from contention and threw her support behind Madsen.


Civil War Museum Accord Reached

Harrisburg’s mayor and a city museum have put aside their contentious past in a deal that would give the museum ownership of its permanent collection.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse and board members of the National Civil War Museum last month outlined an agreement in which the city would sell the collection to the museum for $5.25 million and begin to charge the museum rent.

“My goal has always been to reach an agreement in the city’s best interest, and I believe this is in everyone’s best interest,” Papenfuse said.

After becoming mayor in 2014, Papenfuse strongly objected to deals reached under former Mayor Steve Reed that allowed the museum to display the city-owned artifacts at no cost and that charged the museum just $1 a year in rent for the city-owned building. The new agreement, which must be approved by City Council, addresses both those issues.

First, the city would sell the artifacts to the museum for $5.25 million. In turn, the city would put $1 million into a reserve fund to pay for capital improvements to the building, which the city would continue to own. The other $4 million would pay for improvements to Reservoir Park, where the museum is located.

Under the deal, the museum has five years to raise the $5.25 million to purchase about 25,000 artifacts. If it fails to raise the money within that time, the city would be allowed to sell 20 percent of the museum’s collection.

The agreement also outlines a graduated schedule for the payment of rent.

For the first five years, the museum would pay the city $45,000 per year in rent. However, no money would change hands, as the cumulative amount over that period almost equals the amount of money that the museum is owed by the city for unreimbursed building repair costs dating back to 2009.

“It took us a long time to be here, but I think we realize that this made a heck of a lot of sense for both (parties),” said Gene Barr, a museum board member.”


Harrisburg Finances Praised

State officials last month offered an optimistic forecast for Harrisburg’s 2017 finances, but the city’s ability to maintain a balanced budget through the end of the year remains uncertain.

Members of the city’s Act 47 team appeared before City Council to give a mid-year assessment of the current budget.

Praising the “exemplary” leadership of Mayor Eric Papenfuse and City Council, the team summarized the city’s 2017 finances through June and offered recommendations for the second half of the year.

While the team commended the city’s financial vigilance, Harrisburg will see some challenges looking into the second half of the year.

For example, the city doesn’t yet know if it can count on its annual payment from the state. In past years, the state has made a single, lump-sum payment to Harrisburg to cover the costs of supporting the state Capitol complex.

“Not getting $5 million from the state is a little concerning,” said Bruce Weber, city finance director. “Even though we may be in good financial position now, it’s tenuous.


Term Limits Proposed

Former Harrisburg Mayor Steve Reed served seven full terms, leaving financial devastation in his wake when he left office after 28 years.

City Council President Wanda Williams says she now wants to prevent a future mayor from staying in office too long, thus endangering the welfare of the city. So, she has introduced an ordinance that would limit future Harrisburg mayors to two terms.

“I don’t want that to happen again,” she said.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse said that, in general, he supports term limits for officeholders and might even consider them as part of a new Home Rule charter. However, he does not support this proposal because, he said, one branch of government cannot use term limits “to control” another.

In contrast, he said he might support a proposal that subjects all municipally elected officials to term limits. Williams said that she might go for that.

“If he wants to consider council members, that’s fine with me, too,” said Williams, who, with 12 years on council, is the longest-serving elected official in the city government.

 

Hamilton Health to Expand

A planned expansion at Hamilton Health Center in Allison Hill will increase pre-K access for children in that neighborhood, while also providing additional parking for the facility’s patients and employees.

Last month, Harrisburg City Council approved Hamilton Health’s application to add a new parking lot and a 25,000-squre-foot building to its facility on S. 17th Street. The building will house classrooms for Capital Area Head Start and another childcare facility.

Jo Pepper, executive director of Capital Area Head Start, said that the Hamilton Health expansion will allow her organization to direct more resources to its highest-need area, adding 80 slots starting next year.

“Every year, one of our biggest problems is finding safe, age-appropriate facility space in our areas of need,” Pepper said. “We’ve been looking for additional space in Allison Hill for five years now.”

Capital Area Head Start will occupy five classrooms in the new Hamilton Health building.

“We are a one-stop shop for families to access what they need,” said Jeanine Peterson, CEO of Hamilton Health. “Co-locating with Head Start eliminates a lot of the barriers that a lot of families have in ensuring that their kids get quality health care.”

New Office Building Planned

Downtown Harrisburg may soon get its first new office building in several years, as Harristown plans to clear and develop a narrow space off of Market Square.

Asbestos remediation work began last month on 21 S. 2nd Street, a small, three-story, dilapidated brick building that once housed the Coronet restaurant on the ground floor. Demolition will follow, said Brad Jones, president and CEO of Harristown Enterprises.

“This building was beyond repair,” Jones said. “Rehabilitation is always our preference when working on an old building, but, unfortunately, this former restaurant had severe water damage and asbestos and couldn’t be saved.”

Harristown hopes to construct a new, six-story office building next year, with retail or restaurant space on the first floor, once demolition is completed in February 2018. It expects to combine the space with a renovation of the historic SkarlotosZonarich building next door.

Home Sales Continue Rise

Area home sales resumed their upward trend in August, rising 4.4 percent year over year.

Sales totaled 989 units versus 947 in August 2016, while the median price rose to $184,900 against 169,900 the year earlier, according to the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors.

In Dauphin County, 325 homes sold compared to 311 homes in the year-ago period, and the median price was $169,900 versus $157,500, GHAR said. In Cumberland County, sales increased by 10 to 346 units, and the median price rose to $204,950 compared to $178,450 in August 2016.

Perry County had sales of 36 homes, down by two units, while the median price decreased to $159,450 versus $162,250 a year ago.

GHAR covers all of Dauphin, Cumberland and Perry counties and parts of York, Lebanon and Juniata counties.


So Noted


Amanda Arbour
last month was named the new executive director of the LGBT Center of Central PA. Arbour replaces Louie Marven, who served for more than five years in the post.

Beau MacGinnes, gallery curator for Zeroday Brewing Co., captured the first-place prize for “Windows of Perception,” his entry into Wildwood Park’s annual “Art in the Wild” competition. Eve Gurbacki and Adrianne Zimmerman took second place with “When Trees Dream,” and Sean Rafferty and Katlyn Goodyear won third for “Equus Cabullus.”

Boo-Boo’s Barbecue held its grand opening last month at 912 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. The new eatery, which features barbecued meats and homestyle sides, is owned by Litho “Boo Boo” Ware, a former city police officer.

Harrisburg Bike Share plans to launch this month with 10 city locations downtown, Midtown and on City Island. For a $25 annual fee, users will be able to use the bike-sharing service. For details, visit www.bike.zagster.com.

Meeka Fine Jewelry last month held a ribbon cutting at its location at 2135 Market St., Camp Hill. Owner Monika Kroll co-locates her studio in the renovated space, which features products from eight independent artisans.

Rep. Lou Barletta (R-11) last month announced that he would run for the U.S. Senate in 2018. Barletta, who is in his fourth term in the U.S. House of Representatives, would vie for the seat currently held by Sen. Robert Casey Jr.

Sam Jordan has been promoted to vice president, commercial banking, for S&T Bank. He previously served as assistant vice president, commercial banking.

Timothy Reardon last month announced his retirement as executive director of Tri-County Regional Planning Commission following a seven-year tenure in the position. The commission provides planning services and expertise for the greater Harrisburg area.

Zeroday Brewing Co. last month celebrated the grand opening of the Zeroday Outpost inside the stone building of the Broad Street Market in Harrisburg. To mark the occasion, a “community ribbon cutting” was held, with patrons cutting small pieces of ribbon.


Changing Hands

Adrian St., 2249: N. Townsend to T. Bui, $48,000

Berryhill St., 2338: M. Ortiz to PA Deals LLC, $30,000

Berryhill St., 2432: PA Deals LLC to E. Shelly, $63,500

Boas St., 421: B. Andreozzi to M. Berlin, $115,000

Boas St., 433: D. & D. Dreher to S. Rives, $120,000

Brookwood St., 2619: B. Sweger to J. Torres, $65,200

Buckthorn St., 223 & 225; 1208 Walnut St.; 1468 Zarker St.; 2144 N. 4th St.; 1835 North St.: LMK Properties LLC to RT Propertiez LLC, $86,867

Calder St., 102: K. Goodling & K. Shepherd to C. Hommel, $164,900

Derry St., 2435: PA Deals LLC to J. Tucker, $64,000

Fulton St., 1408: J. Bancroft to K. Black, $109,900

Fulton St., 1413: A. Beasy to C. Wilson, $118,000

Herr St., 214: Leonard J. Dobson Family Limited Partnership to P. Dee, $58,000

Green St., 800: J. & S. Wesley to D. & C. Seltzer, $219,900

Green St., 922: M. Roan to S. Winkeljohn & D. Black, $184,900

Green St., 1201: Equity Trust Co. Gordon Trump IRA to D. & L. Butcher, $189,900

Green St., 1417: B. Williams to L. Santos & O. Labinjo, $173,000

Green St., 1926: W. O’Brien to M. Stier & D. Gottlieb, $210,000

Green St., 2014: H. & S. Johnson to R. & J. Tilley, $135,000

Green St., 2137: N. Morrison to T. Sangrey, $51,000

Green St., 2138: C. Ly to Round Rock Investments LLC, $87,000

Green St., 2340: E. & K. Woolever to J. Clmens, $184,000

Green St., 3240: J. Mueller to M. Sangrey, $115,000

Hamilton St., 232: T. Gagnolet & M. Barth to A. & M. Fretz, $165,000

Harris St., 238: D. Leaman to W. Davis & T. Helwig, $194,824

Harris Terr., 2483: H. Nguyen to HT Properties LLC, $35,000

Lenox St., 1910: M. & J. Bryant to RTD Properties and Management, $40,000

Lexington St., 2600: M. Sink to Harrisburg Properties LLC, $38,500

Logan St., 2000 & 2001 N. 3rd St.: Otterbein Evangelical & Z. Haverstock to New Day Way of the Cross Church in Christ, $85,000

Logan St., 2246: Dobson Family Partnership to S. Powell, $42,294

Maclay St., 219: Kusic Capital Group LLC to Good Management LLC, $105,000

Mercer St., 2424: L. Barber to R. Murphy III, $50,000

Mercer St., 2455: MidFirst Bank to D. Pham, $32,500

Moore St., 2122 & 2122A: 3 Anvi LLC to Harrisburg Homes Investment LLC, $50,000

Nagle St., 120: J. Piglacampo to J. & D. Griffin, $168,500

Naudain St., 1522 & 1524: H. & C. Myers to ERD Small Property LLC, $40,000

N. 2nd St., 1105: K. Brett to Hamr Second Street LLC, $112,000

N. 2nd St., 1331: E. Benion to S. Mimm, $70,120

N. 2nd St., 1714: R. & N. Walborn to Harrisburg Redevelopment Group LLC, $325,000

N. 2nd St., 1909: PA Deals LLC to S. Jusufovic, $35,000

N. 2nd St., 2527: S. & A. Andrus to GRSW Stewart Real Estate Trust, $193,500

N. 2nd St., 3031: J. Ritchie to D. & M. Main, $96,000

N. 3rd St., 1620: K. Reimer to J. Reimer, $90,000

N. 3rd St., 2010: R. Blumenstein to N&R Group LLC, $31,000

N. 3rd St., 2204: R. & M. Zeigler to P. Ford, $146,000

N. 4th St., 1701: R. Steinmetz to S. Biray, $129,000

N. 4th St., 1703: D. Hopkins to S. Bradley & R. Daman, $123,900

N. 5th St., C. & M. Enoch and S. Pollard to S. Jawhar, $35,000

N. 6th St., 1316: A. Kraft & B. Kephart to T. Jones, $92,000

N. 7th St., 2612: Great Foods Inc. to V. Galasso, $50,000

N. 18th St., 112: Bigfoot Properties to Amiracle4sure Inc., $52,500

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 208: I. Valeo to S. & L. Weitzman, $115,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 511: A. & C. Yastishock to S. Sulecki, $200,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 601: A. Prashar to J. Devine, $174,900

Penn St., 1706: W. & M. Fontana to C. Harris, $132,000

Race St., 612: C. Pinto to D. Amaguayo, $180,000

Rudy Rd., 2492: My Neighbor LLC to HT Properties LLC, $33,600

S. 2nd St., 21: D. Bratic to South Second Associates LLC, $150,000

S. 17th St., 209: K. Lawson to M. Khan, $60,000

S. 17th St., 447: O. & Y. Han to C&P Property Management, Inc., $60,000

S. 28th St., 726: R. McClure to P. & L. Brown, $35,000

S. 29th St., 712: C. Kiscadden to M. Gill, $92,900

State St., 234: G. & L. Martin to Harrisburg Buildings & Grounds Co., $163,000

State St., 1508: 1508 State Street LLC to Harrisburg Homes Investment LLC, $40,000

Woodlawn St., 2511: T. Hoa to PA Double Deals LLC, $130,000

Harrisburg property sales for August 2017, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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Arbour Named New Executive Director of LGBT Center of Central PA

Amanda Arbour

Amanda Arbour has been named the new executive director of the LGBT Center of Central PA, the center announced this morning.

Arbour replaces Louie Marven, who left after a five-year tenure to take a position with the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.

Most recently, Arbour served as the racial justice program coordinator at the YWCA Greater Harrisburg. She earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology and politics from Messiah College and is pursuing a master’s degree of education in training and development from Penn State Harrisburg.

With this appointment, Arbour becomes the Harrisburg-based center’s third executive director.

“I’m proud to be part of this diverse, vibrant and resilient community,” Arbour said in a statement. “I look forward to working with the board of directors, staff, partners, donors and community members to continue providing the safe spaces, supportive services and educational programs that the LGBT Center has become known for.”

Arbour’s past work includes service as the legislative liaison for the Pennsylvania Department of Aging and interim coordinator of local community service for the Agape Center for Service and Learning at Messiah College.

“I am appreciative of Amanda’s evolving understanding and continuous display of ally-accomplice-ship to communities of color, people with disabilities, immigrants, trans-specific issues and more,” said Shaashawn Dial-Snowden, board president, in a statement. “Amanda is a bold, consistent voice in our movement and I look forward to working with her.”

Arbour begins in her new role on Sept. 11. To welcome her, an open house will be held at the LGBT Center, located at 1306 N. 3rd St. in Harrisburg, from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., Friday, Sept. 22.

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1 Story at a Time: LGBT History Project re-creates an often-hidden past.

LGBTDan Manedal’s voice still shakes when he recalls the night that teenagers pelted rocks through his windows.

“There was nothing I could do,” he said. “My life was like this because I had decided to be open about my sexuality.”

Coming out in the 1960s and ‘70s was far different than it is for people today, said Manedal, now 67. At age 25, after telling his friends and family he was gay, his life changed.

He moved to a trailer park when he didn’t feel safe in his home.

He was beaten walking out of a gay bar.

He met someone at a gay social event 200 miles from his home in Williamsport only to find they were neighbors. Each had been forced to go far from home to try to find support.

Manedal said he’s proud to see how far the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender movement has advanced. But he fears that where it came from will soon be forgotten.

His story is just one of many that, when combined with artifacts and stacks of documents, will help tell the story of LGBT people in central Pennsylvania.

A Story Told

Barry Loveland is founder and chair of the History Project organized by the LGBT Center of Central PA. He’s worked with about 50 volunteers, from student interns to retired professors and historians to preserve the local history of the LGBT community.

The project was started in August 2012 after Loveland met with the center’s Common Roads group for teenagers. A small panel was formed to talk to the younger generations about the hardships many faced when coming out often meant giving up family and friends.

The panel was so well received that it led to a story circle at the LGBT Center, located in Midtown Harrisburg. About 20 people attended, and it sparked the idea, Loveland said, that there were stories to be told.

Over the following months, Loveland recruited volunteers, who were trained how to perform interviews, use video equipment and catalog artifacts. A partnership also was created with Dickinson College in Carlisle, where anything collected or recorded would be kept safe.

The project has grown into a full chronology of central Pennsylvania’s history regarding LGBT issues, from political movements to social acceptance.

“My vision is to have a way for LGBT people to really connect with that history,” Loveland said.

After dozens of interviews are transcribed and more than 100 artifacts are cataloged, the center will create an interactive website including videos, photos and documents.

Many stories examine discrimination, what it was like for people to come out at home and in the workplace, and how community infrastructures were developed for support and socialization, Loveland said.

“A lot of straight people don’t think about the fact that, in their tradition or families, people kind of hand down stories to generations,” Loveland said. “LGBT people have their families, but they also have their chosen families, and sometimes those intergenerational stories don’t come down to them. It’s really important that we build those ties that have never really been there for the LGBT community.”

Slow Process

Lonna Malmsheimer, professor emeritus from Dickinson College’s American studies department, heard about the project while attending a separate event at the LGBT Center.

Because of her experience in communication and history, she was asked if she’d train a group of people who would interview LGBT activists.

So far, three groups of volunteers have gone through training on how to use the video equipment needed to record interviews, but it’s been a slow process.

“Working with volunteers is generally not all that easy,” she said. “They are busy people, too, and it’s often the busiest who offer help.”

While they’ve completed a number of interviews—Malmsheimer having done five or six herself—there are about 80 people on a waiting list who want to tell their own stories.

Malmsheimer, now 73, remembers going to a research library as a graduate student and finding that materials related to LGBT issues were locked up in a separate room. If she wanted to see any of it, she had to get permission.

“Part of the push, as far as I see it as a historian, is that, in the past, this work not only wasn’t done, it couldn’t have been done,” she said.

Sara Tyberg, a 20-year-old sophomore sociology student at Dickinson College, is one of two interns assisting in the project.

Her responsibilities include transcribing interviews and proofing the completed work.

“I think the LGBT History Project is an important project because it is revealing a huge, marginalized history in this area,” Tyberg said. “There’s the saying, ‘History is written by the victors,’ and, for most of history, especially in areas like central Pennsylvania, the (LGBT) community hasn’t been the victor.”

So Local

Tyberg believes participating in the project has taught her a lot about the LGBT experience.

While most people are familiar with LGBT identity, she said, each story is unique.

Louie Marven, executive director of the LGBT Center, said he’s happy to watch the project form under the work of volunteers.

“They’re really the ones who have been making this happen,” he said.

What’s unique about the project is that it’s so local, Marven added. Similar things have been done in major cities, he said, but LGBT people are everywhere.

Many people who are just coming out feel they’ll find the most support in big cities, Marven said. But he wants to change that.

“I hope this project can emphasize that people in rural spaces are doing things to support each other,” he said. “Changes are happening in the LGBT community. I’m excited to see where it takes us.”

For more information on the project or to learn how to get involved, visit www.centralpalgbtcenter.org.

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Over the River: Messiah College graduates are streaming into Harrisburg, bringing youth, creativity & change to the city.

Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.36.31 Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.36.42 Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.36.21 Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.36.10 Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.36.03 Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.35.52 Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.35.44 Screenshot 2014-02-28 08.35.35Louie Marven, executive director of the LGBT Center of Central PA, is tired of hearing the phrase, “What’s in the water at Messiah?”

“Oh my god,” he mimics sarcastically while sipping on a Nugget Nectar ale, “another gay person that went to Messiah and lives in Harrisburg?”

But the question, “What’s in the water at Messiah College?” can be applied to more groups than just the gay community. There are lots of us settling down here.

Marven, ’07, is one of countless graduates who moved to the Sycamore House, an intentional Christian service corps, after graduation. While he hesitates to categorize himself as a “Messiah shill,” Marven admits that it was attractive to stay local, with friends who were staying local, to live and work in community together—one of Messiah’s big thrusts.

Nearly six years later, Marven says he finally feels like a Harrisburg citizen who happened to go to Messiah rather than a Messiah grad living in Harrisburg. “I think it can feel very forceful that we’re this sort of army,” he says, “and I don’t want to be a part of that.”

On the other hand, Marven thinks that Messiah’s supposed “city takeover” is overstated. “It’s a local college, and it’s the closest city. It’s not that weird.”

Indeed, Messiah students long have moved into Harrisburg after graduation. (An amusing confirmation of this came when two of my interviewees bonded over annoyances about their respective Messiah-bred landlords). And in a small city like Harrisburg, we can’t help but cross paths.

But for many fresh graduates, Harrisburg—especially in Midtown and Uptown—is starting to feel like campus, minus the hanging baskets. There are a couple of caffeine hubs where everyone does their homework (job searching), a few small restaurants where they spend their flex dollars (savings), taverns within biking distance that serve adult fountain drinks, and places like the Sycamore House and The MakeSpace, where give-or-take 20-somethings can dine potluck style or catch a live performance.

So, were these hotspots mapped out on diploma backs? Or is there something else going on here?

Growing Network

While Messiah-gration isn’t new, it’s clear that we are connecting and clustering much more visibly than before.

Take Hana Grosh, ’12, who moved to the city seven months ago after feeling a bit nostalgic for her college life and a bit stymied in Lancaster, where her family lives. I see her working her barista magic at Little Amps on Green and State streets. She’ll see my boyfriend, ’09, at band practice and my good friend Liz Laribee, ’07, at the back shop table most days of the week. Laribee is an artist who led the founding of The MakeSpace, a studio, gallery and concert venue situated in Olde Uptown.

A table or three away from Laribee sits Dave Robertson, ’00, who operates a web design business called Factory 44. For years, he was very involved with the civic organization Friends of Midtown. “I was here before it was cool,” he volunteers proudly for a laugh.

“You’re the reason we started The MakeSpace,” says Laribee. “I had about eight ideas brewing at once, and you encouraged me to focus on one at a time, starting with an art center.”

This sort of rap session isn’t unique to certain personalities or to environments with psychedelic tables (we were at Ted’s Bar & Grill; rest in peace, Brick City). Instead, it demonstrates how a growing alumni network has been functioning well in the city.

“Even if I hadn’t known people before moving,” says Marven, “there were mechanisms for meeting them.” Something as simple as a free darts and pool night at Appalachian Brewing Co., advertised through the grapevine, made newcomers feel connected.

“I don’t know how I would have tried to make friends without knowing what previous Messiah people did,” he says.

For example, almost every Messiah student I’ve run into has at least heard of the Sycamore House, if not attended an event or actually lived there for a year. (As a sophomore, I remember sitting on the creaky floor for some benefit concert wondering if this is what a rockin’ house party looked like in the real world.)

Laribee, who helped start the Sycamore House and who lived there between her junior and senior years, saw how easy it was to get involved in the city, thanks to a friend she met through juggling club. She began volunteering at the Center for Champions and moved back into the Sycamore House with Marven after graduation.

While some Sycamore alumni have communicated their frustrations with the program’s growing pains, it continues to offer free housing in exchange for community service pursuits, which is a pretty excellent deal. And for someone like Marven who was helping to write the rules and form the board early on, the program was an invaluable way to find a job in Harrisburg and assist in the formation of the LGBT Center.

Inevitable Intimacy

For Marven and Laribee, the city has certainly provided great resources for growth and creativity, but it can also get tiring after awhile. “Harrisburg is a fascinating, enriching, endless blank canvass for me to figure out how I like to pursue development, creativity and grassroots projects,” says Laribee. “But being so involved here means that there’s a lot to do. As easy as it is to feel you’re in community here, you can also feel trapped.”

Paul Boyed, ’13, who lives within snowball-throwing distance of Laribee, Grosh and me, has started to feel a bit trapped by this inevitable intimacy. “The world that Messiah students live in in Harrisburg is kind of like the activities in college,” he says. He points to the coffee shops and alternative music scenes occupied by local young people.

Boyed lived in Harrisburg his senior year because it was much more affordable than living on campus. Now as a Children’s Targeted Case Manager for Dauphin County, a position he heard about through the Messiah grapevine, Boyed says he’s becoming more frustrated with Harrisburg’s dichotomy of socioeconomic experiences.

“I hear the complaints of people who live here—there are bigger problems,” he says. “But then, when I’m in my own life, it’s peppy, fun. The bigger picture of Harrisburg is the school district. It’s exhausting.”

Henok Begashaw, ’11, works with Boyed as a targeted case manager, and, like Boyed, wrestles with the positives and negatives of the conspicuous Messiah bubble. “The whole point of the city is to attract young people, [but] I hope that people come in and that they’re very aware of the people and space that were here,” he says. “A lot of Messiah alums move to Harrisburg with a missionary mentality. That can be a good thing; that can also be a bad thing.”

Begashaw lived at Messiah’s Harrisburg Institute his senior year and then at the Sycamore House after graduation. Institute/SALT Program Director Ashley Sheaffer, ’06, who remembers Begashaw causing an appropriate amount of mischief during his time there, sees a trend for many students who spend a semester in the city. “They deepen their understanding of the forces at play in a city and become acutely aware of their privilege, while genuinely developing a heart for Harrisburg,” she says. “Most students,” she clarifies, “not all.”

Marven himself remembers that aha moment of discovering the city with friends, and it seemed “a little bit imperialistic for a lot of people,” he admits. Except, then again, Harrisburg was where students, particularly LGBT students, knew to seek community because it was more open, he says.

Project opportunities and left-wing safe spaces aside, students seem to like Harrisburg for its “platform city” feel. Fewer amenities aren’t always a bad thing, and many transplants eventually want to call what was once a platform for better prospects “home.”

“Philly was so big I couldn’t take a bite out of it,” says Katie Manzullo-Thomas, ’10, who moved to Philadelphia after graduation, but is now living in Olde Uptown. “I would rather live in a city with two Little Amps instead of 15 amazing coffee houses. You couldn’t show up somewhere [in Philly] and see someone you know—unlike here.”

And, for Grosh, whose Ethiopian heritage has always inspired her to work with coffee, a part-time barista income can go a long way in Harrisburg. It nearly covers her rent, and she’s able to use her downtime for projects that she cares about—writing and playing music, modeling for Stash Collective, baking for Little Amps, auditioning at Carley’s.

She acknowledges, though, that working part-time isn’t by choice, and that living this way doesn’t facilitate any savings, an ever-increasing problem facing Millennials. Nevertheless, Grosh is grateful to be in a city that is accessible and artistically minded.

“I think Harrisburg has a lot to offer if you really want it to,” she says. “I needed it to be a platform for something bigger [at first], but I don’t want to be waiting on the next best thing. It’s not like you’re biding your time here—you’re making the best of it.”

Samantha Moore, a 2010 Messiah grad, lives in Olde Uptown.

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Same-Sex Marriage & the Urge to Localize

Two decades ago, when I was a young pup in the journalism biz, an editor gave me an assignment that I thought the height of absurdity.

I was told to “localize” the Rodney King riots.

I should mention that, at the time, I worked nowhere near Los Angeles or even in a city. I was at a newspaper in north-central New Jersey in a suburban county that was probably 99 percent white.  Essentially, I was being told to go find some black people to talk to.

“I think that this event is as historic to blacks as the JFK assassination was to the country,” said my overly confident, middle-aged white editor, as if he knew what in the world he was talking about.

Since then, I’ve scoffed at the old journalism nugget of localizing national stories, so was hesitant this morning to join the media throng, which was assembling in full force at the LGBT Community Center of Central Pa., to hear the Supreme Court’s decisions on the Defense of Marriage Act and California’s Proposition 8.

By the time I got there, satellite trucks already lined N. 3rd Street in front of the center in Midtown Harrisburg. Inside, a large bank of cameras peered onto the rows of folding chairs that the Center’s Executive Director Louie Marven had hurriedly put out. In front, he had set up a screen with a Twitter feed that gave real-time updates of the decisions.

As the 10 a.m. announcement neared, most of the seats were occupied. I sat in the front row chatting with Center board President Stuart Landon about this and that. Then someone said, “Quiet, quiet,” and the buzz in the room silenced.

The decision was in: a split court ruled DOMA to be unconstitutional. A loud cheer went up. People hugged. “Of course, it’s unconstitutional!” one woman called out, expressing her personal belief more than the inevitability of the decision.

For the next 10 minutes, people huddled in groups to discuss specifically what this meant in Pennsylvania. Not too much at the moment, they agreed. Still, it was necessary, they said, both in terms of the continuing battle for equality and for ensuring that Pennsylvania couples are not denied federal benefits once the commonwealth approves same-sex marriage, which they vowed to work hard to make happen.

In contrast, the subsequent decision over Prop 8, which basically sent the matter back to Californians to decide for themselves, was something of a letdown, but generally didn’t surprise the crowd.

“This is what I expected to happen,” said City Treasurer John Campbell, who viewed the day’s decisions as another step forward in the fight.

I can’t say that the day’s events changed my mind about the value (or lack thereof) of localizing national stories. I still think it’s cheap, brainless journalism, such stories assigned by editors who rarely leave their cubicles and know nothing about the communities they allegedly serve.

But, on this day, there actually was a story — and a good one at that — as a roomful of people rejoiced together, believing momentum was on their side, that, some day soon, gay couples in the Harrisburg area would enjoy legal equality in their relationships.

 

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