Tag Archives: Robert Philbin

December News Digest

 

2014 Budget Passed

Harrisburg residents will see no tax hike in 2014 as part of a $77.8 million budget that unanimously passed City Council last month.

The 2014 budget process was remarkably smooth following several years of annual conflict between the council and administration over spending priorities, allocations and tax increases.

Council held just a single, 90-minute budget hearing then approved the spending plan with little additional comment.

A direct comparison to last year’s budget is difficult due to the provisions of the Harrisburg Strong plan, which included the sale of the incinerator, the lease of the parking system and the transfer of the water/sewer system.

That said: expenditures from the city’s general fund, which covers most day-to-day operations, will increase about 1.7 percent, from $56.2 million in 2013 to $57.2 million this year.

City Council expects to reopen the budget this month to better reflect the priorities of newly elected Mayor Eric Papenfuse. However, major changes are not expected, as the anticipated amount of revenue will not change, and the current budget already has the blessing of the receiver’s office.

 

Water/Sewer Rates Going Up

Harrisburg water and sewer customers will see a 27 percent rate hike this year for their service under a budget passed by The Harrisburg Authority.

The rate increase was necessary to pay for long-delayed system improvements, said Executive Director Shannon Williams.

“For too long, necessary investments in Harrisburg’s water infrastructure have been deferred to future generations,” she said. “That ends with the adoption of this budget. It will allow us to deliver service and reliability that our customers deserve and that will sustain the city into the future.”

An average customer who uses 5,000 gallons of water per month will pay about $825 per year, an increase of about $175.

Initially, the Authority had projected a 47 percent rise in rates for 2014. However, that amount was reduced after the board of directors and staff developed strategies to control costs, said Chairman Bill Cluck.

 

Sanitation Outsourcing on Hold

City Council last month put the brakes on privatizing trash pickup, as it refused to approve an administration-brokered deal with Republic Services.

Councilwoman Sandra Reid said the city would issue a new request for proposals early this year, which would delay the plan to hire an outside waste hauler well into 2014.

Council balked at the Thompson administration’s selection of Republic Services, the nation’s second-largest trash hauler. Council members claimed they were shut out of the selection process and objected to certain requirements of the proposed agreement, including that sanitation workers would have to pick up their equipment each day in York.

Receiver William Lynch has recommended privatizing sanitation services to save the city money. The contract with Republic would have saved Harrisburg about $1.1 million per year, according to a memo to City Council from Chief Operating Officer Robert Philbin.

Separately, the Department of Public Works is relocating its headquarters and operations to the 1600-block of N. Cameron Street, said Director Kevin Hagerich. The move is due to be completed by March 1.

For many years, the department occupied space on the property of the Harrisburg Authority. That land, though, is no longer available due to the sale last month of the incinerator to the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority.

 

Projects Get Go-Ahead

Harrisburg City Council gave the green light to numerous development plans last month, allowing construction to begin for several critical projects.

Council unanimously approved land use plans for the following:

  • The conversion of the Stokes Millworks building, 340 Verbeke St. in Midtown, to a farm-to-table restaurant and art studio/gallery by Historic Holdings LLC.
  • The conversion of the First Church of God, 15 N. 4th St. downtown, into a new theater and home for Gamut Theatre Group.
  • The construction of four new apartment buildings with 171 units at Brookwood and Melrose streets on South Allison Hill by Brookwood Commons LP.
  • The demolition of small, vacant apartment buildings and their replacement with five townhouses at 222-224 Hummel St. on South Allison Hill by Brethren Housing Association.
  • A 33,000-square-foot expansion of an industrial warehouse at 4000 Industrial Rd., including two parking lots and on-site stormwater infrastructure improvements, by the Sygma Network.

These projects come on the heels of several other recent development initiatives, including the planned completion of the abandoned, half-finished Capitol View Commerce Center on N. Cameron Street by Moran Industries.

 

No Tax Increase from County

For the ninth straight year, Dauphin County will not raise its property tax, as county commissioners last month passed the 2014 budget.

The county tax will remain at 6.87 mils, in addition to a .35-mil library tax.

For 2014, overall spending is actually expected to fall, as the $230.6 million budget clocks in at about 5.5 percent less than the 2013 budget. The decrease is largely due to the Harrisburg Strong recovery plan, which freed the county from most of its obligation from incinerator bond guarantees.

 

Swearing In Slated

Harrisburg will ring in new leadership on Jan. 6 with the swearing in of several key municipal officials.

New Mayor Eric Papenfuse will be sworn into office in a ceremony that will begin at 10 a.m. in the lobby of City Hall. In addition, City Controller Charles DeBrunner will take the oath of office, as will newly elected council members Shamaine Daniels and Ben Allatt and incumbent council members Wanda Williams and Eugenia Smith.

After the swearing in, the new administration will begin to move into its offices. City Council will hold its reorganization meeting in council chambers at 3 p.m.

 

Changing Hands

Barkley Ln., 2509: T. Huynh & L. Lee to C. & S. Moore, $74,900

Boas St., 406: C. DeLorenzo to A. Heisey, $90,000

Brookwood St., 2610: D. Krekstein to Scottsdale Commercial Partners LP, $170,000

Croyden Rd., 2986: PA Deals LLC to N. Peterson, $79,000

Green St., 1608: PA Deals LLC to G. & J. Modi, $137,000

Green St., 1816: J. Tran to G. Brown, $92,945

Green St., 1911: T. & S. Cohen to G.E. Morris III, $159,000

Kensington St., 2252: S. Myers to C. Dell, $52,900

Locust St., 130: D. Bohn et al to WCI Partners LP, $300,000

Market St., 1501 & 1507: Martin Luther King Baptist Church to Eastern PA District Christian & Missionary Alliance, $130,242

N. 2nd St., 1303: U.S. Marshall Service to PA Deals LLC, $30,000

N. 2nd St., 2447: E. & S. Lupyak to M. DePhillip, $57,500

N. 3rd St., 1421: Third Street Development LP & Powers & Assoc. LLC to E. & C. Papenfuse, $60,000.

N. 3rd St., 1912: PA Deals LLC to N. Peterson, $76,000

N. 16th St., 1106: Community First Fund to R.J. Murphy III, $31,500

N. Front St., 111: Front & Locust LLC to J.A. Hartzler, $200,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 312: P. Lafferty to R. & C. Chaudhuri, $160,000

N. Front St., 2509: A.L. Schein MD to Pennsylvania Builders Assoc., $575,000

Reily St., 219: J. Williams to PA Deals LLC, $44,450

Rumson Dr., 369: PA Deals LLC to J. Gaidos, $80,700

S. 14th St., 404: D. Boyle to J. Lopez, $30,000

November 2013 property sales for Harrisburg, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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November News Digest

Papenfuse Elected Harrisburg Mayor

Democrat Eric Papenfuse last month assumed the mantle of mayor-elect of Harrisburg, besting Republican candidate Dan Miller and write-in candidate Aaron Johnson.

Papenfuse won the race with 3,618 votes versus 2,333 for Miller and 1,213 for Johnson. Various others received another 121 write-in votes, including eight for former independent candidate Nevin Mindlin, who was tossed off the ballot after a successful petition challenge. Four votes went to Lewis Butts Jr., who campaigned as a write-in after losing the Democratic primary.

“The real victory will lie in the years ahead when our streets are clean, when our homes are safe, when our young professionals rush to get back to Harrisburg, rather than flee from it,” said Papenfuse, who, in his acceptance speech, encouraged his supporters at Midtown Scholar Bookstore to be humble and seek reconciliation with his opponents in the election.

“The true victory will lie in the days, the months, the years ahead when Pennsylvanians are once again proud of their capital,” he said. “When the people of Harrisburg once again cherish their homes, and when the rest of the nation connects Harrisburg with culture, prosperity and renaissance and not bankruptcy, despair and defeat.”

Running unopposed, Democrats Shamaine Daniels and Ben Allatt earned four-year terms on Harrisburg City Council, while sitting councilwomen Wanda Williams and Eugenia Smith were re-elected. Charles DeBrunner was elected in an uncontested race for city controller.

Papenfuse, DeBrunner and council members will be sworn in on Jan. 6.

For Harrisburg school board, Democrats Danielle Robinson, Patricia Whitehead Myers, James Thompson and Kenneth Mickens earned four-year terms. Monica Blackston-Bailey, LaTasha Frye and Adara Jackson each won two-year seats on the school board.

In Dauphin County races, Bill Tully outpolled Democrat Anne Gingrich Cornick for Court of Common Pleas judge, and incumbent Republican Stephen Farina won his contest for prothonotary against Democrat Kelly Summerford.

 

Parking Deal Passed

The Harrisburg City Council last month approved one of the most important parts of the city’s financial recovery plan, the long-term lease of its valuable parking assets.

The council authorized the city to enter into an agreement with the Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Agency (PEDFA) and another with the Pennsylvania Department of General Services. They, in turn, will contract with a group known as Harrisburg First to run and enforce the city’s on-street parking system.

The council also authorized the transfer of city-owned off-street parking to the Harrisburg Parking Authority, which is entering into its own agreements so that Harrisburg First can operate the HPA’s parking garages and surface lots.

These steps are necessary as the city fulfills the requirements of Harrisburg Strong, the financial recovery plan designed to free the city of about $600 million in debt, solve its long-term structural deficit and provide pools of funds for infrastructure and economic development.

 

Water/Sewer Rates Going Up

Water and sewer rates for city residents are about to go up significantly, according to the Harrisburg Authority’s proposed budget for 2014.

The budget, which had not been officially adopted as of press time, projects an average increase of around $325 per customer per year. That amounts to a nearly 50 percent hike to current rates, which average around $687 annually.

Shannon Williams, the executive director of the Harrisburg Authority, explained that the increased rates are necessary to pay for long-overdue investments in infrastructure. Harrisburg’s aging water and sewer system has not been adequately maintained for years, and it now requires expensive repairs, Williams said.

“No one likes to pay more for utility services—including me. But the reality is that there were more than 40 sinkholes identified in Harrisburg in 2013. Just one of them—the famous 4th Street sinkhole—cost almost $1 million to repair. We cannot continue to punt on these decisions,” she said.

The rate increase comes on the heels of several weeks of customer concerns about expensive utility bills. Last month, City Councilwoman Sandra Reid devoted most of a public works committee meeting to water and sewer charges after she received a bill in the mail totaling several hundred dollars.

That total did not reflect a rate increase, however, but was the result of nearly 18 months of inaccurate bills, which Reid had been receiving because of problems with the city’s meter system. Batteries in the devices that transmit meter readings to the city’s electronic database have been expiring at unexpected rates, requiring the city to estimate water usage for properties across the city. Those estimates, which tended to be lower than customers’ actual usage, led to months of undercharging for Reid and several other residents.

In her announcement of the proposed 2014 budget, Williams tied the meter-battery problem to the infrastructure problem, saying both reflected the consequences of city officials deferring necessary investments onto future generations.

“If an investment had been made years ago to keep up with technology and replace those defective batteries, customers would not have had to rely on water usage estimates month after month,” Williams said. “It’s time to make the necessary investments in our future.”

 

Capitol View Sells

The unfinished Capitol View Commerce Center was sold last month in a bankruptcy proceeding to an out-of-area warehouse, distribution and storage company.

Watsontown, Pa.-based Moran Industries bought the 215,000-square–foot structure at N. Cameron and Herr streets in Harrisburg, including almost nine acres of land, for about $250,000.

Moran plans to finish the building next year then use about half the space for its own offices and rent out the other half, according to the company.

The building has sat as an incomplete shell since 2008, when unpaid workers walked off the job. Two years ago, Capitol View developer David R. Dodd pled guilty to federal charges of money laundering and misuse of government funds in connection with the project.

 

Trash Privatization Debated

Harrisburg last month announced it has selected Republic Services to be its new trash hauler, sparking another squabble between the administration and City Council.

Chief Operating Officer Robert Philbin told council that a three-person team had chosen the country’s second-largest waste hauler to collect and dispose of trash. He said the city would save about $900,000 a year by privatizing waste collection, which currently is done by the city’s Department of Public Works.

The administration had announced in March that it intended to issue an RFP to privatize trash service. Several firms then submitted bids, and the administration eventually selected Republic.

Council members, however, seemed surprised that the decision to privatize had been made definitively and that a hauler had been chosen. They also charged that they had been left out of the process.

The council’s Public Works Committee then held several hearings on the issue, focused on such issues as trash fees, workers’ jobs and the fact that equipment would have to be picked up in York each day. The proposed contract with Republic remained unresolved at press time.

 

Funds for Greenbelt Restoration

The Capital Area Greenbelt is a step closer to a significant improvement after the Harrisburg City Council last month agreed to dedicate $10,000 for a major fix.

Members of the Capital Area Greenbelt Association appealed to the council to transfer funds dedicated for environmental projects to help remediate and protect the Paxtang Parkway section near Penbrook from further damage caused by storm water erosion.

Originally, the association requested $20,000. However, Jim Warner, CEO of the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority, who attended the council meeting, said LCSWMA would split the cost, kicking in $10,000. This month, LCSWMA is expected to close on its purchase of the city incinerator.

The city’s portion of the funds will be derived from the “host fee” that Harrisburg receives as the site of an incinerator that accepts trash from outside municipalities.

In addition to the $20,000, the association has received $25,000 from the Kline Foundation, enabling it to qualify for a $300,000 state grant to cover the extensive work on that portion of the Greenbelt, said Scott Shepler, an association volunteer.

 

New Antiques/Collectibles Shop

The good news keeps coming for Cameron Street, as a new crafts and re-sale co-op has opened near Paxton Street.

Crafty Antiques and Collectibles debuted in late October, featuring everything from antique furniture to old toys to holiday items.

Owners Kathy Clark and Rosemary Hibala rent out space in the 2,400-square-foot shop to a variety of vendors who showcase and sell their items. Though the long-time friends just opened their store, they hope soon to double its size by expanding next door.

“We decided to go into business because we work so well together,” said Clark.

The shop at 712 S. Cameron St. is open Tuesday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Recently, several new businesses have announced plans to occupy space nearby on Cameron Street. Business partners Richard Hefelfinger and Phil Dobson plan to open a blues club and restaurant across the street at 819 S. Cameron St., while Dobson says he will remake 1119 S. Cameron St. into an entertainment and events space.

Crafty Antiques and Collectibles can be reached at 717-547-6032 or CraftyAntiquesPa@gmail.com.

 

Receivership Extension Expected

The state last month requested an extension of Harrisburg’s receivership for another two years.

C. Alan Walker, secretary of the Department of Community and Economic Development, filed a petition in Commonwealth Court asking for the extension, which would run through December 2015. Most elements of the Harrisburg Strong financial recovery plan should be implemented by then.

Separately, Commonwealth Court last month gave receiver William Lynch the authority to sign documents related to the Harrisburg Strong plan on behalf of city Controller Dan Miller.

Judge Bonnie Brigance Leadbetter made the ruling after Miller had not signed off on contracts for key parts of the plan, including for the sale of the city incinerator and the long-term lease of the parking system. Both deals are expected to close this month.

 

Betsy’s Bakery Arrives Downtown

Betsy’s Bakery last month opened its second shop, serving its gluten-free baked goods from a prime location downtown.

Owners Betsy and Shannon Peffley began offering breads, sweets and sandwiches from a storefront right across the street from the state Capitol last occupied by Downtown Café.

Betsy said they decided to open in Harrisburg because so many of their customers from the first location in Camp Hill live on the East Shore. She added that there’s a growing demand for gluten-free products.

“We are 100 percent gluten-free,” she said. “Our customers with celiac disease or who have gluten-free needs appreciate that so they won’t get sick.”

In addition to baked goods and sandwiches made with Boar’s Head meats, the bakery soon will offer soups and paninis, said Betsy.

“We never expected our business to take off like it has,” she said. “We knew there was a need, but didn’t know it’d be so great.”

Betsy’s Bakery is located at 240 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. Hours are Monday to Friday, 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. The shop can be reached at 717-236-9901 or at https://betsysbakery.com.  The original shop is at 115 St. John’s Church Rd., Camp Hill.

 

Changing Hands

Adrian St., 2453: W. Breeze to S. McKune, $58,500

Berryhill St., 2259: PA Deals LLC to J. Vergis, $65,000

Boas St., 122: D. & J. Mowery to J. Sadlock, $115,900

Boas St., 1937: S. Lopez et al to EB & ZEE LLC, $66,500

Briggs St., 233: A. & P. Cowell to T. Harris, $117,000

Cumberland St., 1416: PNL Penn Properties LP to T. Lewis, $35,000

Green St., 3030: E. & K. Peck to J. Luck Jr. & K. Kyper, $220,000

Herr St., 260: D. Leaman to S. Bruder & M. Richards, $165,500

Maclay St., 425: D. & J. Boyle to D. Perez, $31,738

Market St., 1249, 1253, 1255 & 3 S. 13th St.: Hill Café Partners to Hill Café 1249 LP, $500,278

Market St., 1859: M. & D. Nichols to Z. Reeves, $105,900

N. 4th St., 1324: L. Jones & J. Lambright to P. Little, $96,000

N. 4th St., 2030: B. Lerew to I. Alderton, $82,000

N. 6th St., 1500: 1500 SPE LP to A. Gulotta, $558,158

N. Front St., 2601: Radnor Realty to J.A. Hartzler, $200,000

Pennwood Rd., 3135: PA Deals LLC to T. Smith, $118,000

S. 20th St., 1208: T. Nguyen & T. Pham to M. Nguyen, $112,005

S. 26th St., 638: N. Reohr to J. Zimmerman, $69,900

Rudy Rd., 2145: J. Holmes & BAC Tax Services Corp. to M. & K. DeRosa, $162,900

Rumson Dr., 2920: A. & M. Tscherneff to W. Quezada & M. Cedeno, $34,000

Rumson Dr., 2983: PI Capitol LLC to C. Shenk, $64,900

Rumson Dr., 2991: Trusted Source Capital LLC to PA Deals LLC, $40,000

Susquehanna St., 1526: P. Mohr to C. Butcher, $104,500

Susquehanna St., 1725: Fannie Mae to M. Gojmerac & C. Roma, $48,000

Vernon St., 1308 & 113 S. 13th St.: Stevens Emmanuel United to True Worshippers Ministries, $55,000

 

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News Digest: July News in Review

 

Financial Agreement Near

The major parts of a deal to resolve Harrisburg’s financial crisis are nearly in place, receiver William Lynch announced last month.

These include sale of the city’s incinerator, lease of the parking assets, negotiations with creditors and final agreements with the city’s trade unions.

Lynch expects most of the remaining issues to be resolved this month, including the sale of the debt-laden incinerator to the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority.

“All the stakeholders involved in the sale of the incinerator are in agreement,” said Lynch, who added that the city’s creditors also finally understand that they must negotiate in earnest and might have to accept less than they’re owed.

In addition, the city must finalize an agreement with the firefighter’s union. The city’s police union finalized a new contract in June.

The goal, Lynch said, was to pay off about $600 million in debt, including $350 million related to the incinerator, while allowing the city to regain fiscal solvency over the long-term.

“This plan will create important new revenue streams to help the city reduce its structural deficit and spur economic growth,” said Lynch. “The parking agreement may very well become a national model.”

Many aspects of a final plan must be OK’d by City Council and then approved by the Commonwealth Court, actions that should begin to take place this month.

 

HUD Funds Distributed

The Harrisburg City Council last month dispersed nearly $1.8 million in federal funds designed to assist housing and community development.

In the annual distribution of Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds, 13 social service organizations received a total of nearly $500,000. Another $550,000 went to various city housing programs.

Community-based organizations that received funds were:

  • The Fair Housing Council of the Capital Region: $45,000
  • Community Action Commission: $25,000
  • Harrisburg Police Athletic League: $25,000
  • Latino Hispanic American Community Center: $25,000
  • Christian Recovery Aftercare Ministries: $20,000
  • Christian Love Ministries: $10,000
  • Camp Curtin YMCA: $100,000
  • YWCA of Greater Harrisburg: $25,000
  • Broad Street Market Corp.: $47,739
  • Rebuilding Together of Greater Harrisburg: $25,000
  • Habitat for Humanity of Greater Harrisburg: $75,000
  • African-American Chamber of Commerce: $10,000
  • Harrisburg Housing Authority: $65,000

 City programs that received funding were:

  • Homeownership Opportunities Program: $100,000
  • Home Emergency and Lead Repair Program: $100,000
  • Home Improvement Program: $200,000
  • Emergency Demolition: $150,000

Lastly, a large part of the funds were used for administrative/debt obligations. Debt service ate up $367,567 of the CDBG grant, while $353,826 was allotted for administration and “indirect” costs.

 

Auction Proceeds Tallied

Harrisburg recouped about half of what was spent on museum artifacts following a weeklong auction last month on City Island.

Auction sales totaled about $3.1 million for the 8,000 or so items, according to New York-based auctioneer Guernsey’s. Minus the auction fee, the city kept about $2.57 million, money that will pay off a loan taken out in 2006 that used the artifacts as collateral.

Harrisburg had received $1.6 million during two previous sales of another 2,000 items, bringing the proceeds from museum artifacts to $4.17 million. A follow-on auction of historic documents in September should increase that total some more.

Former Mayor Stephen Reed spent at least $8.3 million in public funds on these artifacts in his dream to turn Harrisburg into a museum mecca. Most of the artifacts auctioned were for an “Old West” museum he wanted to build, while some were for a proposed African American history museum.

 

Zoning Board Rejects 3 Projects

The Harrisburg Zoning Hearing Board last month turned down several proposals, all of which had generated neighborhood opposition.

Bethel AME Church had wanted to re-establish a surface parking lot at its site at the corner of N. 6th and Herr streets.

The historic church, located on the 1700-block of N. 5th St., long occupied the 6th Street site, but its building burned down in 1995. It then ran a commercial parking operation there until 2010, when its special exception, under challenge by the community, was not renewed.

The church’s new pastor, the Rev. Micah Sims, pleaded with the board to allow it to resume renting out parking until it could execute a redevelopment plan. The board, however, sided with members of Fox Ridge Neighbors who argued in opposition, stating the church would have no incentive to sell or develop the property.

In other action, the zoning board:

  • Rejected a variance/special exception request by developer Gary Wilson, who wanted to construct two two-family houses on vacant land at 1308 Green St. Neighbors testified in opposition, saying that four rental units were not in the best interest of the community.
  • Rejected a variance request from developer Paul Peffley to locate a convenience store/deli on the ground floor of an historic building he’s redeveloping at the corner of N. 3rd and Hamilton streets. That application met with opposition from residents of Engleton, who feared a negative impact on their neighborhood.
  • Approved a variance to turn the ground floor of the former Barto Building, at N. 3rd and State streets, into restaurant and retail space. Brickbox Enterprises would like a restaurant to locate in the former Barto Building, which the company is transforming into the LUX condominium building
  • Approved a variance to allow a church, Iglesia Pentecostal Jesucristo La Roca, to locate at 913 N. 2nd St., which once housed La Kasbah restaurant.

 

Mayor, Treasurer Clash over Fund Transfers

Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson last month asked for a significant increase in the amount of money her administration can reallocate without approval by City Council, a request that drew strong opposition from city Treasurer John Campbell.

Thompson asked for permission to transfer as much as $50,000 within the approved budget without the consent of council, up from the current level of $20,000.

The request prompted Campbell to write a strongly worded memo, urging council to deny the request.

“While this legislation may seem like an opportunity to allow for great flexibility in spending by the administration, it is my opinion that this legislation will only reduce the proper controls that are presently in place and exercised by City Council,” Campbell wrote. “If this legislation were to be approved, budget transfers would begin to become more frequent and thus negate the importance of passing a proper and reasonable budget annually.”

Every year, the council approves numerous reallocations, as some departments spend more or less than budgeted during the year. Campbell fears that increasing the reallocation threshold to $50,000 would give the administration too much leeway to transfer large sums of money outside of the regular budget process and without proper oversight.

The administration’s proposed ordinance was sent to the council’s Budget and Finance Committee for further review and possible action.

 

$5 Million for Fire Protection, $0 for Revitalization

Harrisburg received a split decision from the state last month, as the legislature approved a record $5 million in fire protection funds, but excluded the city from a new revitalization program.

City officials were pleasantly surprised—even shocked—by the $5 million allocation in the 2013-14 budget, meant to offset the city’s costs of protecting the Capitol complex from fire. That figure is double the amount allotted last year and far more than the $496,000 that House Republicans had approved in their budget plan.

Harrisburg’s state legislators were pushing for $4 million, but late lobbying by receiver William Lynch upped that amount by another $1 million, said state Sen. Rob Teplitz.

The money technically goes to secure the state’s 40 buildings from fire, accounting for the bulk of the Harrisburg Fire Bureau’s $8.4 million budget. However, it actually flows to the city’s general fund, which frees up money for other uses by the highly indebted, insolvent city.

As the state was giving, it also was taking away, as it purposely excluded Harrisburg from participating in a just-launched revitalization program.

The new state budget funded a City Revitalization and Improvement Zone program, which will funnel money to small cities each year to assist in the redevelopment of distressed areas. However, language in the law prohibits any city under state receivership from participating, a designation that applies only to Harrisburg.

 

Kiosks, Online Payments Come to Harrisburg

Harrisburg bill-payers have several new options available to them, as two computerized payment kiosks, as well as an online payment system, came on line last month.

The two kiosks are located in City Hall outside the city treasurer’s office and at the Giant Food Store in Kline Village, said Treasurer John Campbell, who added that a third kiosk would be located in a yet-to-be-determined location Uptown.

Denver-based EZ Pay Corp. is providing the kiosks at no cost to the city, said Campbell.

In addition, bill-payers now can pay online at www.harrisburgpayments.com or by calling 888-243-3456. Campbell said he expected the online bill-paying portal to be integrated with the city’s website soon.

Through these mechanisms, residents can pay most common bills, including for utilities, property taxes and traffic fines. A convenience fee will be added to each payment based upon the amount of the transaction, averaging $3 for most utility bills and $1 for most parking tickets, said Campbell.

Campbell expects the city, the Harrisburg Authority and the school district to save “at least” $80,000 a year by not having to pay the credit card transaction fee.

 

City to Receive State Loans

Harrisburg last month was awarded state funding for two major infrastructure projects, including for utility repair at the Uptown sinkhole site.

Harrisburg received a $900,000 low-interest loan through PENNVEST for repairing water and sewer infrastructure damaged by the sinkhole on the 2100-block of N. 4th Street, said state Sen. Rob Teplitz.

In addition, the Harrisburg Authority received a $26 million low-interest loan, administered by PENNVEST, for upgrading the city’s wastewater treatment facility, said Teplitz.

The improvements will bring the plant’s ammonia and nutrient reduction requirements into compliance with U.S. Department of Environmental Protection regulations. This $53 million project also will receive $26.7 million in outside financing and a $973,000 H20 PA grant, Teplitz said.

 

MLK Street Renaming on Hold

Harrisburg’s financial crisis seems to have doomed another proposal: the effort to supplement the name of N. 2nd St. downtown by adding “Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.”

Last March, the administration made the proposal, which the City Council then sent on to the council’s Public Works Committee.

Committee Chairwoman Sandra Reid said she was in favor of the change, which would give the historic street both names from Chestnut to Forster streets. However, the $6,000 to $8,000 cost of replacing 63 street signs could not be justified, she said.

“We have an ongoing concern that our parks and waterways are not being maintained,” she said.

Last year, park maintenance was transferred from the city’s Parks and Recreation Department to the Public Works Department, which since has been criticized for lax maintenance, particularly in Riverfront Park.

 

Miller: Still In Mayor’s Race

City Controller Dan Miller last month took a step towards running for Harrisburg mayor as a Republican, filing an affidavit affirming his eligibility for the office.

Miller lost in May in the Democratic primary to businessman Eric Papenfuse. However, he won the Republican nomination by gaining 196 write-in votes.

As of press time, Miller hadn’t yet paid the $25 filing fee, which must be received by the Dauphin County Office of Elections and Voter Registration by Aug. 12.

If he decides to run, Miller will face independent candidates Nevin Mindlin and Nate Curtis, in addition to Papenfuse. The general election is slated for Nov. 5.

 

Leak Won’t Close Jackson-Lick Pool

An Uptown pool will be open for the remainder of the summer after a major leak was quickly repaired.

City officials feared the Jackson-Lick pool, located at 1201 N. 6th St., would have to close after it lost about 450,000 gallons of water in a week.

“The city considered closing the pool,” said COO Robert Philbin. “However, we were able to keep the pool open while resolving the problem. City Engineer Paul Francis was able to locate and stop the pool water leakage with the assistance of a diver from the Harrisburg River Rescue.”

The city’s other public pool at Hall Manor on Allison Hill has been shut since last year after persistent leaks led to the finding that its foundation must be rebuilt.

The city’s Engineering Bureau is preparing a maintenance and repair plan to bring both pools back to full operation next season, said Philbin.

 

Farmers Co-op Debuts

Harvest, a new farmers cooperative, opened last month in the brick building of the Broad Street Market, bringing fresh produce and other goods to Harrisburg from more than a dozen area farms.

The co-op is the brainchild of developer Josh Kesler and chef Matthew Hickey, who is managing the business on a day-to-day basis.

“Our commitment is to build a relationship between the farmers and local consumers, providing healthy, sustainable local food, as well as helping to revitalize the Broad Street Market, which we believe will regain its position as the breadbasket of our region,” said Kesler.

The stand itself is unique for the Market, built from reclaimed lumber from the Stokes Millworks building across the street. Kesler recently bought that building and has begun renovating it for a farm-to-plate restaurant, which should open late next year.

 

New School in Strawberry Square

This month, the nonprofit Aegis Education Endeavor (AEE) will open in Strawberry Square, offering a new cyber charter school that “combines art, athletics and industry.”

The 2,800-square-foot facility will take space at 306 Market St. in downtown Harrisburg.  Aegis is partnering with Achievement House Cyber Charter School, a public online school chartered by the state to serve students in grades 7 to 12.

In addition to an education program, Aegis will offer activities to cyber school students and to students learning at home, public or private schools, said founder Denni Boger.

“Strawberry Square is the perfect site for AEE because it is centrally located to be available to students from surrounding school districts who may wish to use public transportation to access the facility,” said Boger.

Aegis will hold an open house and orientation at its new facility on Aug. 7, 1 to 7 p.m.

 

Changing Hands

Adrian St., 2256: Burner Properties LLC to B. Britton, $57,000

Bellevue Rd., 1921: A. & S. Jawhar to CNC Realty Group LLC, $63,500

Cumberland St., 114: B. Cohen to L. Larrieu, $132,000

Green St., 1925: F. Shannon to W. Gonzalez, $215,000

Mulberry St., 1158: E. Grill to S. Elazouni, $59,900

N. 3rd St., 1702: Fannie Mae to M. Mayhew, $75,000

N. 5th St., 1732: Freddie Mac to B. Harris, $100,000

N. 6th St., 2559 & 2561: Deutsche Bank Trustee & Company Americas Trustee to V. Acosta, $31,500

N. 20th St., 32: U.S. Bank Trustee & Pa. Housing Finance Agency to G. Carter & V. Diaz, $52,400

N. Front St., 1705: Rolleston Corp. to WCI Partners LP, $400,000

N. Front St., 2515: Centric Bank to 324 Mishika LLC, $175,000

Penn St., 1716: B. Andreozzi to D. Rhodes, $131,000

Reily St., 311: R. Heath to S. McLearn, $85,500

Rudy Rd., 2465: P. Lemmo to R. Harper, $75,000

Sayford St., 235: R. DeLong to JLS Rentals LLC, $35,000

Showers St., 612: D. & S. Hickethier to M. Murphy & V. Halchak, $166,000

S. Front St., 317: M. & J. Hankins to M. Homa, $115,000

Swatara St., 1321: D. & J. Boyle to J. Rodriguez & J. Vasquez, $33,900

Sycamore St., 1520: L. Miller Jr. to M. Brunner, $97,500

Wallace St., 1529 & 1531; 1513, 1515 & 1517 N. 6th St., $144,100: Buonarroti Trust to U.S. General Services Administration, $144,100

Source: Dauphin County, for sales exceeding $30,000. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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News Digest: A roundup of news events from the prior month.

 

New COO for City

Robert Philbin will fill the post of Harrisburg’s chief operating officer/chief of staff until the end of Mayor Linda Thompson’s term, it was announced last month.

Philbin served as Thompson’s spokesman for almost two years before leaving in February to accept the post of marketing/communications officer for Capital Area Transit (CAT). He said he plans to return to CAT after his stint as COO.

The COO post was open after the sudden departure of Ricardo Mendez-Saldivia, who served about one year. Mendez-Saldivia was the city’s first COO, a position created as part of Harrisburg’s financial recovery plan in an effort to bring more professional management to city operations.

During his six-month tenure, Philbin said he would focus on continuing to implement the city’s financial recovery plan, crafting a budget for 2014 and helping with the transition to a new administration. The job pays an equivalent of $110,000 annually.

“I’m honored to serve the city during this historic period of fiscal recovery and transition, and I look forward to working closely with Mayor Thompson and her administration in the coming months,” Philbin said.

Philbin’s career with the city has been a rocky one. He took the communications director post in 2011, the fourth person to hold that job in over 2½ years, soon becoming a close aide to Thompson. City Council struck the job from the 2012 budget, leading him to work without pay all of last year. Council reinstated the position in 2013 only to have Philbin leave for CAT shortly afterwards.

 

Fee Hikes on Tap

The Harrisburg City Council last month boosted fees for a variety of services, such as answering false alarms, taking out building permits, renting park space and hanging banners.

The hikes, approved unanimously, were in response to suggestions made last year by Maximus Inc., one of several firms assisting the city in its financial recovery. In many cases, the fees had not risen in more than a decade, said Councilman Brad Koplinski.

For instance, the fee for a second false burglar alarm goes from $10 to $50; for a fourth false burglar alarm from $35 to $100. The permit fee for a plumbing fixture and trap increases from $15 to $25.

City Council members said they didn’t want to raise fees, but that the city needed to consider every option to increase revenue. Raising long-stable fees is part of the receiver’s financial recovery plan for the city.

 

Harrisburg Threatened with Fund Cut

The state House last month passed a budget plan that would slash the amount of direct state funding Harrisburg receives from $2.5 million to $496,000.

That money flows into the Fire Bureau budget for compensation to protect the Capitol complex. The bureau estimates that it costs Harrisburg about $4 million annually to provide emergency fire service to the Capitol complex.

State Sen. Rob Teplitz (D-Dauphin County), state Rep. Patty Kim (D-Harrisburg) and Mayor Linda Thompson all said they would work hard to restore the funding for the cash-strapped city before the state budget is finalized.

“At a time when the city is already struggling to maintain safety, this painful cut to fire protection funding further jeopardizes the safety of Pennsylvanians and adds to the burden of the city’s fiscal crisis,” said Kim.

Harrisburg already faces an operating budget deficit of around $3 million this year. The proposed funding cut would widen that gap considerably.

 

School Unions Agree to Cuts

Harrisburg’s two school unions have signed off on a plan to cut staff salaries as part of the financial recovery package for the debt-laden school district.

Both the Harrisburg Education Association (HEA) and AFSCME Council 13 last month tentatively agreed to salary and benefit cuts of 5 percent, said school Chief Recovery Officer Gene Veno. Already, Harrisburg school district personnel have not received regular raises for the past two years.

AFSCME, which represents non-instructional staff, originally rejected the offer, leading Veno to plan layoffs. The union later reversed itself, stating that members objected more to tougher evaluations and performance standards than to the salary and benefit cuts.

At press time, the memberships of both HEA and AFSCME had yet to ratify the agreements.

A third group representing school administrators also agreed to the cuts, said Veno.

 

Vacant Lot Ignites Dispute

A dispute over the use of a vacant lot at the corner of 6th and Herr streets could come to a head this month.

Bethel AME Church had run a commercial parking operation out of the lot until 2010, when its temporary variance to the zoning code expired. In May, the church applied for another temporary variance, but some members of the Fox Ridge neighborhood near the lot raised objections.

Ted Hanson, whose house abuts the southern edge of the lot, said the church falsely claimed “community support” for the commercial parking plan.

“Not one of the signatories on the church’s petition resides in Old Fox Ridge,” he said.

He added that the church historically has not made any effort to develop the lot appropriately, as past variances have required. On a website, foxridgeneighbors.org, Hanson also called into question Bethel’s appeal to make the lot tax-exempt, saying the church already owes nearly $6,500 in back taxes on the property.

Bethel AME declined to comment.

The application was to be considered at a meeting of the Zoning Hearing Board on June 17, but the meeting was cancelled at the last minute due to an error in the public announcement. The board’s next meeting is July 22, though Geoffrey Knight, the city’s zoning officer, said an earlier date is being sought to review the application.

 

Harrisburg Again without Health Officer

Harrisburg lost its Health Officer last month after the city, acting on the instruction of receiver William Lynch, declined to raise the position’s annual salary from $40,000 to $50,000.

The officer, Cornelius Johnson, left the post to accept a $50,000-per-year offer for the same position in Susquehanna Township.

The Health Officer conducts routine inspections on Harrisburg restaurants and food vendors to ensure they are complying with health codes. The city is currently seeking someone to fill the position at a starting salary of $42,000. In the meantime, inspections will be conducted by other codes officers employed by the city.

City Council President Wanda Williams expressed regret over Johnson’s departure and criticized Lynch and Mayor Linda Thompson for not ensuring the position offered competitive pay.

“City Council did everything it could to try to retain him,” she said.

Recently, Harrisburg has had trouble filling that position. The health officer post was vacant for more than a year before Johnson took the job.

Councilwoman Susan Brown-Wilson praised Johnson’s abilities, adding that he was Susquehanna’s “number one choice” for the job.

Lynch, however, pointed out that all other city employees are experiencing a pay freeze and stressed that making an exception for one employee would have a “corrosive” effect.

 

Another Independent for Mayor

Air Force Staff Sgt. Nate Curtis last month announced his candidacy for Harrisburg mayor, the second independent in the race.

At a press conference in the Pennsylvania State Museum, he said his political party affiliation will read “Curtis for Mayor” on the Nov. 5 general election ballot.

Curtis grew up in Harrisburg, where his mother worked at a number of restaurants around the city. His father, whom Curtis said he met when he was a teenager, was a homicide detective with the police department.

Curtis recently returned to the city after a tour in Afghanistan and said he was distressed to find “my hometown at war with itself.” In 2007, his brother Dax was murdered in the foyer of his apartment on Woodbine Street.

His priorities as mayor, he said, would be addressing education and blight and cutting the city’s budget, including a 10 percent pay cut to the mayoral salary and a dismissal of the mayor’s security detail.

The race to replace Mayor Linda Thompson has grown increasingly crowded. Midtown Scholar Bookstore owner Eric Papenfuse captured the Democratic nomination for mayor in May, and Uptown resident Nevin Mindlin also is running as an independent.

City Controller Dan Miller, who lost the Democratic primary, narrowly won the Republican primary based upon 196 write-in votes. At press time, he had not announced his intentions for the general election.

 

Broad Street Market Loses Manager

Harrisburg’s historic city market is again without a manager as Dennise Hill left after less than a year on the job.

The board of the Broad Street Market confirmed Hill’s resignation, saying that Market vendors were informed of the departure, but refused further comment on this personnel issue.

The Market has had great difficulty retaining top staff, with the past three managers all serving very short stints.

 

Restaurant Roundup

Harrisburg-area foodies got a triple treat last month as two long-promised eateries and a café made their debut.

The month started out strong as Little Amps Coffee Roasters opened its second location at the corner of N. 2nd and State streets on June 1. Little Amps first rocked Harrisburg’s gourmet coffee market in October 2011 with a storefront in Olde Uptown, and its new downtown spot offers the same fresh-roasted coffee along with a selection of goodies and sandwiches from Yellow Bird Café.

In mid-month, Taco Solo began serving tacos and salads from a central location at the corner of N. 2nd and Locust streets. The downtown taqueria is the inspiration of Juan and Lisa Garcia, owners of the popular Mexican restaurant El Sol, who wanted to bring their cuisine to the takeout crowd.

About a week later, owner Sri Kumarasingam gave a culinary nod to Midtown in the form of Pastorante, a new pasta-themed restaurant at 1012 N. 3rd St. The completely renovated space features an open kitchen, homemade pastas and numerous creative Italian dishes and pizzas. The storefront has been empty for years, last housing the greatly missed Italian Market.

Speaking of Midtown: Fine diners will be delighted that Char’s Tracy Manor will begin to serve Sunday dinner starting July 7. Until now, Char’s only served Sunday brunch, which will be suspended. Also, the beautiful riverside restaurant at 1829 N. Front St. now features live outdoors music on Friday and Saturday nights, 7 to 10 p.m.

 

Changing Hands: May Property Sales

Briggs St., 1608: T. Simmons to Fannie Mae, $61,911

Capital St., 1007: 3rd Street LLC to CJ Good LLC, $125,000

Cumberland St., 216: D. Maguire Trust to P. Wambach III, $117,500

Derry St., 1711: J. Mendoza to D. Patel, $36,432

Green St., 1628: C. Lex to M. & A. Collins, $90,000

Hale Ave., 433: T. Bryant to G. & C. Speroff, $72,500

Hanna St. 110: Donna C. Flath Trust to M. Knouse, $150,000

Harris St., 625, 641, 643 & 1521, 1523, 1525, 1527 Wallace St.: J. Close to

U.S. GSA, $63,600 each

Harris Terr., 2481: PA Deals LLC to S. Hill, $66,000

Hoffman St., 3028: V. & C. Piatos to J. Hull & L. Downs, $140,000

Holly St., 1849: B. & K. Kreps to D. Reed, $69,900

Hudson St., 1256: J. Fabiankovitz to Lemoyne Land Corp. Inc., $45,000

Hummel St., 224: V. Mainardi to Brethren Housing Assoc., $48,500

Kensington St., 2135: S. Orfanelli to A. Segin, $45,000

Kensington St., 2147: PA Deals LLC to J. Gaidos, $67,900

Liberty St., 1404, 2021 Holly St, 2651 Jefferson St. & 1826 Briggs St.:

Shokes Enterprises & R. Shokes Jr. to R. & D. Requa, $201,000

Locust St., 103 & 105: Front & Locust LLC to Browser Properties, $150,000

Maclay St., 524: W. Grannison to 524 Real Estate Holdings LLC, $100,000

Manada St., 2003: D. Barrick to M. Jackson, $63,000

N. 2nd St., 1225: J. Van Allen to M. & L. Day, $120,000

N. 2nd St., 1404: Kyzer Rentals LLC to Tang Liu Realty LLC, $100,000N. 2nd St., 2405: PBE Companies LLC to M. & R. Lindquist, $140,000

N. 2nd St., 2533: J. & V. First to K., C. & E. Meisinger, $120,000

N. 2nd St., 2619: R. Davis Jr. to D. Skerpon & C. Baldridge, $225,000

N. 15th St., 17: B. Miller to Wofford Enterprises Ltd., $50,000

N. 15th St., 1217: PA Deals LLC to A. Plowman, $79,900

N. Cameron St., 101, 101 Rear, 109 & 111 Hancock St.: C. Green to R. & S.

Otto, $269,000

Oakwood Rd., 2309: M. & S. Gruin to M. Knopf, $245,000

Penn St., 1523:  K. Thralls to E. Jones & J. Lindgren, $134,000

S. 12th St., 1442: Beneficial Consumer Discount Co. to N. Sanchez, $42,500

S. Cameron St., 1119: River Rescue to Statewide Enterprises LLC,

$385,000

Verbeke St., 210: K. Leitner to R. Katsifis, $90,000

 

Sales data is collected from Dauphin County records and is assumed to be accurate.

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A Matter of Justice: Will Harrisburg ever see its day?

Will the people of Harrisburg ever see justice done?

Last month, a group of panelists convened at Midtown Scholar Bookstore to discuss the issue, with their answers widely ranging from “doubtful” to “highly likely.”

At the Harrisburg Hope forum, Neil Grover, founder of the taxpayer group Debt Watch Harrisburg, said he is encouraged after last month’s state Senate committee hearing on the city’s incinerator fiasco.

“We’re moving towards justice on a lot of parallel tracks,” said Grover. “I sat through that whole hearing, and I am optimistic about what I heard, partly because there were two very different stories, and they are compelled to go forward and find out who’s telling the truth.”

Tara Leo Auchey, editor of Today’s the Day Harrisburg, agreed that recent events are reason for optimism.

“The Senate Local Government Committee hearings have me very encouraged,” she said. “As Neil said, we’re starting to hear public contradictions.”

Nearly 200 people packed Midtown Scholar to hear from the panel, which included Bishop A.E. Sullivan Jr., the president of Harrisburg’s Interdenominational Ministers Conference, firefighter union leader Eric Jenkins and mayoral spokesman Robert Philbin.

Of the group, Jenkins was arguably the most pessimistic.

He said that the receiver’s office has barely communicated with his union since March, which is troubling as re-negotiation of union contracts is a key element of Harrisburg’s financial recovery plan.

In addition, he is suspicious of the state’s role in driving the recovery process, as it played a key part in allowing Harrisburg to amass such a large debt level to begin with.

“I find it difficult to believe that justice will be achieved when the people who are conducting the task and responsibility of getting justice are the very same people who are culpable for the problem to begin with,” he said.

If nothing else, the forum has showed how far the issue of “justice” has advanced recently.

A year ago, few thought that anyone connected with the incinerator disaster ever would have to answer for their actions.

But, in January, the Harrisburg Authority set the stage for a discussion of responsibility with the release of its forensic audit, a damning analysis of how the incinerator was upgraded and financed.

Both City Council and former receiver David Unkovic then sent letters asking for federal and state investigations and, last month, the state Senate began hearings on the matter.

Grover applied some historical context to Harrisburg’s problems, saying that public malfeasance and corruption date back practically to the founding of the city.

“The cloud over Harrisburg and honesty has been here for a long time,” he said. “I don’t think we’re going to alter that culture.”

In addition, Grover said that the Reed administration constantly wanted to spend more money than the city took in. Therefore, it took irresponsible actions to plug recurrent budget gaps such as diverting utility and bond fees to the general fund.

“Harrisburg was living beyond its means for 30 years,” he said.

Philbin also expressed optimism that, in the long run, Harrisburg would see some type of justice, whether that will take the form of creditor concessions, restitution, or criminal indictments.

In the shorter run, he said that the financial recovery plan, which currently is being implemented, is the first step towards getting the city healthy again.

“At some point down the road, there may be penalties, fines, etc., but we’re talking about a multi-year process to get to that point,” he said. “In the meantime, I think it’s great that we have this [recovery plan] process in place.”

Both Grover and Auchey said they held out hope that those responsible eventually may be forced to make financial restitution to the city or may even see jail time. They further agreed that “justice” most likely would take the form of concessions from creditors–either via negotiations or as part of a bankruptcy process.

“Concessions from creditors are going to happen either voluntarily or by force only because, if you step back and look at the overall picture, there’s not enough money to pay them” said Grover. “There’s just not enough money to put on the table to pay them everything they demand, and you couldn’t tax your way out of this if you tried.”

Auchey added that she hopes for yet another form of justice for Harrisburg–political justice.

“I also have a little “j” justice in my mind in terms of the justice as citizens of this city feeling that we have leadership that we can count on,” she said. “That we feel that we have people in place who will have our best interest in mind–and not just power for power’s sake.”

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Protest of Wills: Occupy Harrisburg builds cause, community.

Harrisburg, meet your new neighbors.

Many of them are young, but not all. Many are left-of-center–some way left–but again not all. They’re of all races, backgrounds and religions, or no religion at all.

They’re the not-so-temporary residents of Occupy Harrisburg. And, despite having their Riverfront Park encampment torn down last month by the city, they plan to stick around town awhile, maybe a long while.

“We’ll be here until our leaders listen to us, until they stop cutting backroom deals,” said Nelson Lugo, a 23-year-old Lancaster native. “We’re here for as long as it takes.”

They have passion and principle and a belief that their government has been hijacked by big money and big business. To them, an appropriate motto might be, “out of sight, out of mind,” so they plan to stay visible as long as they can.

Already, the Occupiers have shown some mettle, braving rough fall weather that included a bizarre October snowstorm.

They’ve also braved some hecklers screaming out car windows and a few people who’ve wanted to argue with them. But, all in all, they say that most passersby have been supportive, with a steady stream of passing cars honking approval in front of the protest on the Capitol steps.

Woody Wiest, 29, is another resident of the Occupy Harrisburg neighborhood, and he also spends his days beneath a canopy at the base of the Capitol.

Originally from Elizabethville, Wiest was working in France when the Occupy protests began. Needing to return to the United States to renew his visa, he migrated back to his old midstate stomping grounds, picked up a sign and became an activist.

Here, he’s found a community within a community–a group of like-minded people, as well as many city residents who have been supportive of the cause he’s dedicated to.

“There’s been such a positive response from the people who walk and drive by here,” he said.

Until late November, that warm welcome seemed to extend to official Harrisburg. The city let the Occupiers camp in Riverfront Park without a permit for almost two weeks before a changing course and removing about a dozen tents.

“The city is sensitive to First Amendment rights,” city spokesman Robert Philbin said. “However the encampment (was) in violation of four city ordinances …”

A few days later, the Harrisburg Friends Meeting allowed the group to move its site on N. 6th St., a few blocks from the Capitol, providing room for camping, as well as bathrooms and cooking facilities. The city later approved the site.

Elsewhere in Harrisburg, the Occupiers also have found comfort.

Up N. 3rd Street, Café di Luna has become a gathering place where owner Ambreen Esmail has offered a warm place to escape the chill, encouragement and even some freebies to the new neighbors.

Further up 3rd, some of the first organizational meetings were held at Midtown Scholar Bookstore. This month, the movement plans a series of teach-in events there, including an appearance by controversial activist Bill Ayers on Dec. 14.

“it’s good to see young people so engaged in the community and caring passionately about important issues,” said Eric Papenfuse, co-owner of Midtown Scholar. “I would encourage the public to come to an event here and engage them in conversation.”

Back on the street in front of the Capitol, the city’s crackdown hasn’t deterred the Occupiers. Nor do they seem concerned that they will wear out their welcome from a city that, so far, has been relatively tolerant.

They’re remaining positive and are bracing for winter’s fury.

“No matter what happens, we’ve been successful because we got our message out,” said Lugo.

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