Author Archives: Alexandra Jones

The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Santa gifts a toy to Julien, a patient in the pediatric unit at UPMC Harrisburg.

Need to catch up on what happened in Harrisburg this week? We’ve got you covered. Find the latest on end-of-the-year budget meetings and other stories below.

Broad Street Market renovations for the brick building were underway when one of the historic structure’s walls collapsed Monday, our online story reported. 

Dauphin County Commissioners passed the county’s 2026 budget, which includes a property tax hike for the second year in a row. Read the full story here. 

Gov. Josh Shapiro said Harrisburg officials needed to “get their act together” after a wall on the Broad Street Market’s brick building collapsed during its reconstruction, our online story reported. A 2023 fire left the brick building heavily damaged; the city began rebuilding the structure in the latter half of 2025. 

Harrisburg City Council passed its budget Monday night but refused to give a raise to Mayor Wanda Williams and other city officials. Full story here. 

Harrisburg Fire Bureau was awarded $7 million in 2025-26 state budget funds, a $2 million uptick from last year. The jump was celebrated by Gov. Josh Shapiro and others at a press conference, our online story reported. 

Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority wants to send $50,000 to CREDC, which would go toward an economic development plan for downtown Harrisburg, our online story reported. 

Midtown Cinema is showing “The Secret Agent,” a film set in a politically polarized Brazil in 1977; it captivated our movie reviewer. 

Morning Glory, a Hummelstown general store, is a great place to stock up on basics. Learn more about the owner’s commitment to running the business in our magazine feature. 

Sara Bozich has a list of everything going on this weekend—from Harrisburg’s biggest lesbian party to a reindeer bar crawl. Read more here. 

Strand Theatre has been a cultural crown jewel in York for a century. Find out more about the historic venue in our magazine story. 

Sweet T & Greens, an upscale comfort food restaurant, will open where Home 231 once was. According to our online story, it’s slated to open in January next year. 

UPMC Harrisburg received a visit from Santa Claus, who gifted toys to children in the pediatric unit and emergency department. Read the story here. 

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Review board urges Harrisburg mayor to restore top officials’ salaries in 2026 city budget

A financial oversight panel for Harrisburg is urging Mayor Wanda Williams to restore funding for several city positions that City Council defunded earlier this week.

In a letter on Thursday, the Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (ICA) expressed concern over council’s removing salaries from top city employees as it passed the city’s budget for 2026.

In line with its oversight role, the state-appointed ICA must review and make recommendations to the mayor about Harrisburg’s budgetary and fiscal affairs.

“We do not opine on the matters causing this disagreement between the administrative and legislative branches, but we strongly request that a means be found to productively address the matter,” states the three-page letter signed by ICA Chair Doug Hill, “and one which does not reflect badly on the City’s commitment to responsible budgeting, sound administration of City government, and its economic development progress.”

Council members on Monday moved to eliminate salaries for the city’s interim business administrator, project director for business administration and the police bureau’s director of community engagement and relations. They also opted to cease contributions to the interim director of building and housing development’s salary, a position also partly funded through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The letter emphasized that council’s defunding of the business administrator role is illegal because it is “a statutorily-required position,” according to the City Charter. 

It also lamented the elimination of funds for the business administration and building and housing development directors roles, which work on city economic development matters, at a critical time for the city, as Harrisburg continues to struggle with an influx of business closings and vacant storefronts. 

The authority also urged the mayor to restore funding to the roles because, without it, no new people would be able to be hired.

“[F]unding must be restored for 2026 for these positions, in part to meet statutory requirements and in part to affirm the City’s commitment to sound administration, sound financial management, and sound planning for economic revitalization and growth,” the letter said. 

Council members decided to defund the position of business administrator, held by Sam Sulkosky, and the city’s contribution to the position of director of building and housing, held by Gloria Martin-Roberts, mainly because they had been serving in interim positions without council approval.

Council removed funding for the project director for business administration, explaining that they were unhappy with the lack of work being done, specifically around an economic development plan for the city. When it came to the police position, council members said they believed the position was redundant.

Williams has until Dec. 26 to return a signed budget to council or to veto the budget or specific line items. 

“She [the mayor] will be waiting until then to decide,” City Communications Director Mischelle Moyer told TheBurg on Thursday. 

If vetoes are exercised, council would likely return for a session on Dec. 30 or 31 to reconsider the budget.

To learn more about the ICA, visit its website.

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Financial oversight board assigns $50K for downtown Harrisburg revitalization plan

Vacant properties on N. 2nd Street in downtown Harrisburg.

A state-created panel that oversees Harrisburg’s finances wants to put $50,000 of its own money toward revitalizing downtown Harrisburg.

“It is such a spotlight issue with businesses relocating, retail relocating and restaurants closing, so there really needs to be a focus there,” Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (ICA) Chair Doug Hill said of the downtown at a board meeting on Wednesday.

At the meeting, ICA board members gave the authority’s solicitor and authority manager the go-ahead to draft a contract that would give $50,000 in funding to the Capital Region Economic Development Corporation (CREDC) to be put toward an economic development plan for downtown Harrisburg.

Although CREDC, the economic development arm of the Harrisburg Regional Chamber, would control the money, Hill emphasized that the move was in “absolute partnership” with the city. Authority members said they will meet today with Mayor Wanda Williams and a legislative delegation to work through how the economic development plan will be developed.

“Who’s driving the train is a little bit of an open question, but for convenience, it makes sense to run it through CREDC,” Hill said at the meeting.

He further clarified the downtown focus does not indicate a lack of intent to develop a comprehensive economic plan for the entire city.

“That’s certainly part of the project, part of the goal set,” Hill said. “But the first focus, I think everyone’s coming to the conclusion, needs to be on the downtown.”

He said that Pittsburgh did something similar to what the ICA is shooting for—successfully, bringing in a local regional chamber to contract with an outside firm for a development plan. The plan focused primarily on Pittsburgh’s downtown and then the area’s general region. This later attracted additional investments from the state level, Hill said.

“We understand that Governor Shapiro is now engaged and has an interest in having the project move forward,” Hill added of the plan for Harrisburg.

Michael Cassidy, legal counsel for the authority, said that he thought that the ICA had the authority to make such a move because Harrisburg remains under Act 47 oversight.

“It’s my opinion that this authority can enter into agreements, whether with the City of Harrisburg or third parties, such as CREDC, that would be providing services for the benefit of the City of Harrisburg and its financial recovery,” Cassidy said.

Jeffrey Stonehill, authority manager for the ICA, suggested that the contract be written in such a way that the money can be forgiven “as a secondary action.” There would be no reason CREDC would give the money back to the ICA “other than failure to perform,” he noted.

Authority board member Kathy Speaker MacNett clarified that the $50,000 comes from the ICA.

“The ICA has operated on a miserly basis to say the least,” she said. “We have not spent a lot of money and, as a result, we have a surplus.”

She clarified that the ICA believes the plan could help the city.

“We, as the ICA, think this is important enough that we’re willing to put our money where our mouth is,” she said.

To learn more about the ICA, visit its website.

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Dauphin County passes budget with tax increase for second year in a row

From left: Dauphin County commissioners George Hartwick, Justin Douglas and Mike Pries at Wednesday’s commissioners meeting.

Dauphin County approved its 2026 budget on Monday that includes a property tax increase for the second year in a row. 

By a 2-1 vote, the county commissioners passed a $221.9 million general fund budget, which includes a 9.75% property tax hike. The tax increase is lower than the 15% hike initially included in the county’s proposed budget, which was introduced last month.

The spending plan marks a $172,671 decrease from 2025’s budget of $222 million. It includes no new full-time positions, a 2.95% cost-of-living-adjustment for union employees and a $2 million vacancy adjustment.

Commissioner Mike Pries was the sole “no” vote on the budget Wednesday. He told TheBurg this was due to the tax increase.

“We were told there’d be no tax increase for the foreseeable future,” he said.

Last year, the county increased its property taxes for the first time in roughly two decades with a 21.8% hike. Commissioner George Hartwick had said at the time that the county hoped not to raise taxes again in the following year.

At the meeting, Budget and Finance Director Chris Davis said that county departments originally asked for $232 million for next year. This would have required a tax hike of more than 25% to close, he said. 

Hartwick said that he, Chief Clerk Eric Hagarty, and Davis then met with every county department, scrutinized each request, and evaluated the county’s needs versus the county’s wants. The final budget was a result of department negotiations, spending reductions, debt restructuring, vacancy adjustments, and the strategic use of one-time funds, Hartwick said.

“The revised budget reduces the overall cost of county government in 2026 compared to 2025, despite continued inflationary pressures and rising healthcare costs,” Davis told the commissioners.

Hartwick noted that the board also reduced the commissioner’s budget by 11%. 

“What deserves emphasis is not just where this budget landed, but how far it moved,” he said. 

Commission Chairman Justin Douglas also applauded the reductions that led to “a single-digit increase” in property taxes. 

“This is a balanced budget. It cuts costs, it protects jobs, it protects a cost of living increase,” Douglas said. 

“It’s not perfect, but it’s something that I think we’re proud of,” he added.

The county projects to end 2026 with a general fund balance of $13.9 million.

Even with the double-digit tax hike for 2025, Hartwick said that the county is projected to have just 24 days of cash on hand at the end of 2025, which is “well below recommended levels.”

At Wednesday’s meeting, Hartwick said that 50 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties are facing significant fiscal stress and that many are preparing for substantial tax increases.

The commissioner, who has served since 2004, also defended the board’s “deliberate decision” not to raise property taxes between 2007 and 2025.

“Had revenue merely kept pace with inflation, the county would have collected $202 million more since 2007. Had it kept pace with average salary growth, that gap would have exceeded $336 million,” he said. Pries and Douglas were elected in 2010 and 2023, respectively.

Hartwick noted that the cost of delivering county services, human services, corrections, public safety, elections in the courts has consistently exceeded inflation due to rising demand and unfunded mandates. 

“We will continue to work tirelessly to reshape what local government looks like in a post pandemic environment, especially as state and federal partnerships continue to do less and require local governments to do more,” Hartwick said.

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Sweet T & Greens to open in old Home 231 space, will serve “upscale comfort food”

Geno Goodman will own and operate Sweet T and Greens out of the old Home 231 space with his wife, Erin.

Husband and wife team Geno and Erin Goodman are moving their Hershey-based market stand Sweet T & Greens to downtown Harrisburg, where it will become a sit-down restaurant. 

After three years cooking out of a stand at Fresh Market, the Lower Paxton-based couple plans to bring “upscale comfort food” to 231 North St., formerly Home 231, in mid-January. 

“This feels more like home. It just feels like this is where we should be,” said Geno.

The restaurant will be open six days a week, excluding Monday, and the menu will feature steaks, burgers, ribs and crab cakes as well as options for vegetarians and vegans. It will be BYOB.

Their food stand in Hershey has been purchased by another vendor and will change hands as the couple expands to a full restaurant.

“We wanted to absolutely put our full attention into this,” Geno said. “This is definitely a different venture for us.”

A former bar manager at the now-closed Midtown Ted’s Bar & Grill, Geno is enthusiastic about returning to work in the city. He said he and his wife are looking forward to building a rapport with the Harrisburg community.

“We really want to take that serious. We want no stone unturned. We really want to pay attention to what’s going on here,” he said.

According to Geno, the southern-inspired menu at Sweet T & Greens includes foods he and his wife grew up eating.  

“A lot of the recipes come from Erin’s family. Her grandparents had a diner growing up, so she really grew up in the restaurant industry,” Geno explained. “But I’m from the South, so you got to know how to cook when you from the South.” 

Originally from Smithfield, Va., Geno remembers big family meals growing up with pigs’ feet, Haul Maul, chitlins, sweet potatoes and collard greens. When he was 14 years old, he entered the restaurant industry as a busboy at Smithfield Station, an upscale seafood place.

Erin, meanwhile, grew up on a 120-acre farm in Juniata County where making food from scratch was the norm. Erin’s parents and brother raise and slaughter their own pigs for food to this day, although Erin, now a pescatarian, “is not really big into the slaughtering side of it,” according to Geno.

The pair met in 2009 while working at Ruby Tuesdays—Erin as the bar manager, Geno as bartender. They were in their mid-20s, and Geno had just moved to Harrisburg to serve as running back for the professional indoor football team, the Harrisburg Stampede. He recalled working at the restaurant as a second job. 

“She’s a hardcore manager, so I felt like it was good to get in her good graces, and then it just ended up blossoming to something great,” said Geno. 

While the pair doesn’t have any kids together, Geno said, “we do have three children that pretty much grew up together.” 

Their children—the oldest and youngest his and the middle one hers—are now 21, 19, and 15 years old. 

Whether with their family or friends, Geno said the pair enjoys hosting cookouts and gatherings with plenty of “good food” and that ultimately, Sweet T & Greens is an extension of that. 

“It just kind of went hand in hand,” he said. 

Sweet T and Greens will be located at 231 North St. in Harrisburg.

For more information about Sweet T & Greens, visit its website. 

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Santa arrives to visit children at UPMC via MedEvac chopper

Santa Claus arrived Monday to visit children at UPMC Harrisburg ahead of Christmas Day.

Leaving his reindeer and sleigh behind at the North Pole, Santa Claus arrived via Stat MedEvac helicopter Monday to visit pediatric patients at UPMC Harrisburg. 

“This is one of our favorite traditions at UPMC,” said the hospital’s president Elizabeth Ritter, who added that the hospital has been bringing in Santa in the weeks before Christmas for years. 

With a sack full of toys, Santa paid personal visits to children in the hospital’s pediatric unit and emergency department ahead of Christmas Day. 

“We pray that every one of them is better,” Santa said. “We pray that they’re able to enjoy Christmas at home next year.”

Kami Huynh, of Linglestown, has been in the hospital for 10 days with her 6-month-old son, Kai. She emphasized seeing Santa raised her family’s spirits as her son receives treatment for botulism, contracted from an unknown source. 

“I can’t believe he came all the way down here from the North Pole,” Huynh said.  

Santa stopped by Kai’s room to gift him a stuffed animal. 

“Now he can cuddle his little stuffy in his bed while he gets better,” his mother said.

Santa also thanked the doctors and nurses for their work helping the sick children before leaving the pediatric floor.

Santa gifts a stuffed toy duck to Julien, a patient in the pediatric unit at UPMC Harrisburg.

 

To learn more about UPMC Harrisburg, visit its website.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Flights of red, white and blue milkshakes will be sold by the PA Dairymen’s Association at the Farm Show this year in celebration of America’s 250th birthday.

Major headlines this week included Harrisburg City Council’s discussion of a raise for Mayor Wanda Williams and the PA Dairymen’s rollout of this year’s Farm Show milkshake flavors. Find those stories and more below:

Blacklisted Poets meets at HMAC every week to bring poetry to life with readings and has been doing so for 30-odd years, our online story reports.

Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors said that Harrisburg-area home sales and prices both rose in November, according to our online story.

Harrisburg City Council members debated giving Mayor Wanda Williams and other city officials a raise at a Tuesday night meeting. Read what happened in our online story.

Historic Harrisburg Association’s annual Candlelight House Tour will feature the Governor’s Residence, despite an arson attack that prompted extensive renovations, our online story reported.

Historic holiday events can be a fun way to celebrate the season around the city, our magazine story reports.

Police said a Greyhound passenger was killed by the bus he was riding in after jumping out of an emergency exit window during a psychological episode, our online story reported.

Pennsylvania Regional Ballet is making performances of the “Nutcracker” accessible for kids, our magazine story reports.

Pennsylvania Dairymen’s Association announced it will celebrate America’s 250th birthday with a red, white and blue milkshake flight that will be available during the 2026 PA Farm Show, our online story reported.

Sara Bozich has a list of all the best events happening over the next few days in her Weekend Roundup.

Spectrum Spark Society, a nonprofit supporting those with autism spectrum disorder and their families, was profiled in our magazine story.

Susquehanna Chorale conductor Linda Tedford reflects on her last season leading the group’s Candlelight Christmas concert in our magazine story.

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Governor’s Residence will remain on historic home tour, despite arson attack

The Pennsylvania Governor’s Residence will be a stop on the Historic Harrisburg Association’s annual tour.

The Governor’s Residence will be a stop on an annual holiday home tour, despite an arson attack last April that prompted extensive renovations.

The Historic Harrisburg Association announced Wednesday that the residence, which has historically been included on the group’s annual Candlelight House Tour, will remain a stop this year, following “uncertainty as to its inclusion.”

In April, Penbrook resident Cody Balmer lit the mansion on fire. The arsonist firebombed the residence at 2 a.m., targeting Gov. Josh Shapiro, who had just celebrated the Passover holiday with his family. In October, Balmer was sentenced to more than two decades in prison for his crimes.

The self-guided tour offers attendees a chance to walk through a selection of historic homes in Harrisburg at their own pace, using a provided guidebook. The tour will take place Sunday, Dec. 14 between 1 and 6 p.m.. 

Launched in 1973, this marks the Association’s 52nd year hosting the event. HHA executive director David Morrison said the tour is “the oldest and biggest tour of its kind in the Mid-Atlantic region.”

For $20 in advance, or $30 day of, tickets can be purchased online or in-person at the Historic Harrisburg Resource Center.

The Historic Harrisburg Resource Center is located at 1230 N. 3rd St. in Harrisburg. For more information about HHA, visit its website.

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Every Thursday night, Blacklisted Poets group brings words to life off the page

Blacklisted Poets cohost Amy Trout reads a poem at HMAC.

“It’s very bright up here tonight, guys, and it feels really weird,” laughs poet Amy Trout from a dimly lit  Stage on Herr at HMAC.

She shakes it off and puts another hand on the mic.

“Okay, I’m going to read one that I’ve read a few times. I wrote it this spring, but I’ve been really working on this poem, so you’re going to hear it again,” she tells the crowd of 20 on a frigid December Thursday night.

She jumps into verse. Basking in the glow of a fireplace projected floor-to-ceiling onto the wall, people nod along with her, as if to say, “I’ve been there too.” They smile at quirky lines. When she’s read the last word, she hits a bell on the podium to mark the poem’s end.

The echo of footsteps leaving the stage, cloaked by applause, say: It is time for the next speaker.

Trout, and her friend and fellow poet Anna Jones, are the cohosts of Blacklisted Poets, a Harrisburg poetry reading group that meets every Thursday at 8 p.m. In the winter, hidden away in HMAC’s basement. In the summer, out in the open in the venue’s courtyard.

“We accept any kind of poetry, any genre, any form,” Trout says.

Founded by the late Harrisburg poet Marty Esworthy as “the Almost Uptown Poetry Cartel,” the group has been meeting on the same night now for roughly 30 years. In 2021, Trout and Jones took over the group.

They changed the group’s name to mark its new era. Its “Blacklisted” title is a nod to how the group bounced between venues early after the takeover, reading at places like coffee shops, delis or bookstores.

They eventually found a home at HMAC where Trout’s husband, Kevyn Knox, is a manager. Its late hours are a plus for the poets. Because the venue is open until 2 a.m., they can read a bit past their 10 p.m. end time, if needed.

Jones reveres how the group has naturally attracted a diverse following.

“It’s one of the only places in this city where you have people of all backgrounds, all ages, all cultures,” Jones says.

She herself is a transplant from England, who came to Harrisburg in 2008. The following year, she took a class at HACC with Rick Kearns, the current poet laureate of Harrisburg, who suggested she come to the group to socialize with other poets.

As she recalls, doing so marked a big turning point in her life.

“This poetry reading legit saved my life when I first moved to the country,” Jones says.

She’s made countless lifelong friends through the group and regards its continued Thursday night occurrence as a form of tribute to her late mentor, whose values, she says, remain at the group’s core.

“His passion was the fact that poetry is supposed to live off the page. It’s an oral tradition. It goes right back to Beowulf, to the Middle Ages, to stories told around campfires,” Jones says.

She says too many people think of poetry “as just being in books.”

“Saying something out loud is so much more powerful than just writing it down,” she says.

Trout brings up another rule of Esworthy’s—never apologizing for your art. The forum of the readings fosters an energy of acceptance.

Poets at the reading bring life experiences of all kinds to the stage.

One poet tells of a challenging predicament: getting a court summons in the mail, months after a car crash that seriously injured her back. It took her months to physically recover from the wreck. She tells the crowd, in poetic verse, how she is now being charged for drug possession for THC found in her car’s glove compartment. Her boyfriend’s THC by the way, she says.

She worries the charge could impact her nursing license. She curses the male driver who stopped in front of her in a fit of road rage, upending her life.

Another poet examines her past self. Line by line, she wonders if she would have ended up with her abusive ex-husband if she wouldn’t have been sexually assaulted at a teenage party.

Jones says the nature of poetry is that it often brings such emotional subjects to the forefront.

“People talk about holding space—that’s what poetry does,” Jones says.

This offers poets a chance, Trout adds, to get to know each other better and ultimately, offer support.

“Nobody in this room will ever be mean to anybody about what they read or judge them,” Trout says. “If anything, they’re overly supportive of whatever people are reading on-stage.”

Another poet, Abbie, agrees.

“I call this my weekly therapy,” she quips.

When Trout and Jones talk about what Blacklisted Poets means to them, they talk about community. Because people introduce themselves to the crowd when they go up to the mic, it doesn’t take long for people to become “regulars.”

The group is ever-changing. New poets show up every week, some stick around. Some become entrenched in the community.

“We ask everybody their name. We talk to everybody. It’s very community-oriented,” Trout says.

“In the nearly 30 years I’ve been doing this, I get more inspiration for new poems from listening than from anywhere else,” Trout says.

The group boasts several veteran members who have been coming for upwards of 20 years.

“Most of my closest friends in the world came from this poetry reading in one way or another,” Trout says.

After two hours and more than a dozen poets, walking the line between heartbreak and humor, Jones gets up to close out the night. She tells the group how much she appreciates them. She thanks them for coming out and sharing what was on their minds.

“It took bravery, it took strength, it took energy,” Jones says. “This is one of the best parts of my week.”

With that, she introduces the night’s final poem. It’s about her creative path. It winds through lives writing novels, or plays, or designing costumes—that she could never pursue.

“This is about being a poet,” she says. “This is called: ‘I’m not for you.’”

The Blacklisted Poets meet at HMAC on Thursday nights. For more information, visit the group’s Facebook page.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Zeroday Brewing Company’s taproom, located on N. 3rd Street, will close at the end of the month.

Whether you’re looking for the story behind Zeroday’s taproom closure or what happened at the Harrisburg School Board’s last meeting of the year, we’ve got you covered. Find out what happened in Harrisburg this week below. 

Art Association of Harrisburg’s new exhibit displays shots of the city by four area photographers, our online story reported.

Bethesda Mission, Downtown Daily Bread, and Christian Churches United — top providers of homelessness support in the area — all have new leaders who bring vision and values to their work, our magazine story reported.

Bob’s Art Blog profiles a handful of local artists, who are hard at work in their local studios for the holidays in an online story.

Broad Street Market is hosting a tree lighting on Saturday in collaboration with Capital Rebirth and Friends of Midtown, our online story reported.

Commonwealth Monument Project honored the 125th anniversary of Black abolitionist William Howard Day’s death by gifting a bust of the historic Harrisburg leader to the State Capitol, our online story reported.

Harrisburg School Board members hired Roma Benjamin — a longtime employee of the district — as acting principal for John Harris, our online story reported.

“Joy to the Burg,” an annual charity project that raises money for the unhoused by selling an album of Christmas covers by local musicians, returns this year, our magazine story reported.

Sara Bozich has lots on her list for weekend happenings, including the HBG Flea in Strawberry Square. 

Susquehanna Art Museum is hosting an abstract art exhibit by Harrisburg High School graduate Alteronce Gumby, our magazine story reported.

TheBurg’s publisher Lawrance Binda reflected on the ghostly impact of a mostly-remote state workforce on Harrisburg’s small businesses in his December editorial.

TheBurg’s music columnist Skye Cadzow shared her must-see shows of the month in our December magazine.

Zeroday Brewing announced it will shutter its flagship taproom at the end of the month, our online story reported.

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