Author Archives: Alexandra Jones

With high rankings, Harrisburg High School eSports players prepare for statewide tournament

Harrisburg eSports club members prepare for the PA Cup

Two Harrisburg High School eSports teams are headed to compete in a statewide playoff competition later this week.

The PA Cup tournament, hosted by Harrisburg University, will take place Friday. 

Both eSports teams play Marvel Rivals, a six-versus-six combat game. Based on past qualifying rounds, Harrisburg’s varsity team, “Phoenix,” is seeded in first place. Its junior varsity team, “Cerberus,” is seeded fourth.

Jadiel Ayuso, 17, Phoenix team captain, is eager for the playoff and confident in his team’s abilities.

“What I’m looking forward to is winning,” said Ayuso.

The senior, who has received an offer to attend HU for eSports coaching and team management, described the meet as a chance to highlight the importance of Harrisburg High’s eSports programming. 

“Participating in the PA Cup not only proves that if we give people these spaces, they can be successful, but it lets people show off skills that they wouldn’t usually be able to show,” he said.

Run as a “club” that runs practices similarly to a sports team, Harrisburg High School’s program has only been active for one year.

Students in Harrisburg High School’s eSports club with teacher Kelsey Rittle (front right)

John Harris technology teacher Kelsey Rittle started the program. 

Rittle, who teaches AP Computer Science Principles and intro to video game design, said participants must meet academic eligibility requirements, “no different than the football team.” 

In addition to eSports training, she said the program teaches kids leadership, communication and decision-making skills.

“They’re learning responsibility and reliability,” she said. “If you flake on your team, when you’re one of six people, then there’s nobody to replace you and that’s a problem.”

Superintendent Benjamin Henry added that the program opens doors for students to explore potential careers in technology, STEM and competitive gaming.

“For many of our students, this is not just an extracurricular activity—it is a bridge,” he said.

Students in the club travel to the John Harris campus for practice. In addition to pulling from the flagship high school, team members come from SciTech, Cougar Academy and the Harrisburg Virtual Learning Academy.

Ash Perry, 17, team captain of Cerberus, joined the club to make friends. There’s a social aspect to the sport because you’re working collaboratively, the junior explained.

“You have that synergy, so that you can work together,” Perry said.

Fellow Cerberus member Eduardo Rodriguez Hernandez said the part of the PA Cup that he most looks forward to is simply participating.

“The aftermath celebration, that’s probably going to be one of my favorite moments,” the junior said.

eSports club members prepare for the PA Cup

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Front Street gym finishes installation of synthetic turf for training, classes

Triple P Fitness’s newly installed turf

Triple P Fitness has installed 3,300 square feet of turf training space along its riverfront North Front Street property.

The synthetic turf’s installation was completed last week over the course of five days. It will expand the space the gym has available to run classes and training programs, according to Noah Parsons, Triple P’s owner.

The personal training gym’s plans to use the outdoor space for strength training will bring with it new “outdoor” equipment, like tires and sleds, Parsons said.

Triple P also plans to offer yoga and HIIT classes along the riverfront in the space. 

“Something that can’t really find anywhere else,” Parsons said.

The installation of turf along the waterfront property was approved through the Harrisburg Zoning Hearing Board as a “special exception” in August 2025. The gym opened its doors in 2023 with the goal of helping people achieve their fullest fitness potential.

Parsons said the gym plans to start using the turf late next week, as the weather warms up, and will begin introducing its new classes in the coming weeks.

Triple P Fitness owner Noah Parsons

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Mortgage lender asks court for foreclosure, sheriff’s sale of HMAC

Harrisburg Midtown Arts Center

A mortgage lender has filed a complaint to foreclose on the Harrisburg Midtown Arts Center (HMAC) and pursue a sheriff’s sale of the property.

According to Dauphin County court documents, filed last week, the owners of the entertainment venue, operating as 1110 HBG, have defaulted on a $3.72 million commercial property loan and now owe a mortgage lender $7.9 million.

According to the documents, the outstanding balance of the loan is due in full on June 1, 2026.

The out-of-state mortgage lender, HIF V Lender, signed an agreement with 1110 HBG in 2019, when the venue changed ownership following a bankruptcy filing. One of the new owners, Chris Werner signed, as an authorized member of 110 HBG LLC, the 2019 promissory note and mortgage attached to the complaint.

Per the agreement, 1110 HBG was to make $33,325/month mortgage payments for the property. 

HIF V charged a 10.75% annual interest rate, the documents state, and could demand full payment of the loan, and its interest upfront at any time, upon default of the loan, through an acceleration clause.

However, 1110 HBG defaulted on the terms of the loan in October 2019, just a few months after the mortgage began in July, according to court documents. The lender then began charging a 14.75% default interest rate, bringing the monthly payment up to $45,725/month for the building.

Since October 2019, the complaint noted, “Borrower has remained in continuous default, having made only sporadic payments and failing to cure the arrearages, as reflected in the payment history.”

Between 2019 and 2021, the owners of HMAC paid the lender around $398,271, according to the filing. 

The HMAC owners made semi-regular payments in 2019—underpaying some months and overpaying others. They then failed to make any payments between February of 2020 and September of 2021, a time period that overlapped with Pennsylvania’s pandemic-era business shutdowns.

In October 2021, HMAC made its last payment to the lender to date – a lump sum of $150,000, documents state, adding that the lender has not received a payment in the years since.

According to HIF V’s complaint, the HMAC owners’ unpaid loan principal sits at $3.72 million, and it owes an additional $3.32 million in late fees. An additional $864,249 in administrative fees, legal fees, pre-paid fees, and extension fees bring its total owed to HIF V up to $7.9 million.

HIF V took over HMAC’s mortgage in May 2019, taking over from the venue’s original lender, Hershiser Capital Finance.

The original owners of the venue, a company called Bartlett, Traynor & London, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2019. However, one founder, John Traynor, has stayed on as an advisor for the current owning partnership.

HMAC announced its closure in February, after stating it couldn’t procure essential operating licenses from the city because it hadn’t paid its entertainment taxes. City Solicitor Neil Grover said, at the time, that he couldn’t disclose the amount of unpaid entertainment taxes HMAC owed.

He also said that the HMAC had not paid its trash bills. Later in February, Capital Region Water filed a municipal lien against the venue for $14,200

The venue also owes more than $78,000 in unpaid property taxes to Dauphin County.

The property is located at 1110 N. 3rd St. in Midtown Harrisburg.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

State Sen. Patty Kim

It’s the best week of the month: 3rd in the Burg! 

We hope you’ll get a chance to stop by some of the local establishments that stay open late tonight. 

Plant Family, the Plant Witch, Wake and Bake all have extended hours. Historic Harrisburg, too—it’s opening its doors for “Artistic Expressions,” its (free admission) annual high school art exhibition. And, in honor of Earth Day, the Civic Club of Harrisburg will be open late to run seed planting, painting and artistic workshops.

Once you’re out and about with your friends and neighbors, you’ll need some conversation fodder… maybe chat about what’s been happening in the local news? All our weekly coverage is compiled for you below.

Bob’s Art Blog spotlights local artists in this week’s piece, including acrylic painter Annika Koser and woodworker Kelly Anoka.

City Council appointed a new business administrator, Antonio Megna, on Tuesday, filling a position that has been vacant for months.

Dauphin County commissioners approved a list of annual gaming grants this week, after making additions to and subtractions from the Gaming Advisory Board’s original recommendation list.

Eden Village Harrisburg announced Thursday that the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR) awarded the group $75,000 for its tiny home project planned on S. Front Street.

Harrisburg’s annual Ride of Silence bike ride will take place on May 20 alongside a “ghost bike” display at the state Capitol, to pay tribute to cyclists killed or injured while riding.

Harrisburg-area home prices inched up in March, according to a report by the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors.

Harrisburg-area state and county representatives spoke out against federal government action, following reports that several Bhutanese community members from central Pennsylvania had been detained.

Harrisburg School District received a $6.5 million quote to demolish William Penn; it was presented to school board members Tuesday night.

Historic Harrisburg Association announced on Wednesday it will present the developers of Walnut Street Commons and The Lowengard building with preservation awards next month.

Our food columnist has a delicious asparagus recipe that will help you say ‘hello’ to spring.

Rebuilding Together of Greater Harrisburg is getting ready for its annual “Event Day” on the last Saturday in April, repairing houses in Cumberland, Dauphin and Perry counties for low-income homeowners.

Sara Bozich has compiled the best events of the weekend in her Weekend Roundup, including Glass Blowing at City Island. Check out the full list.

Theatre Harrisburg and the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra will share the stage this spring, performing a concert version of “Follies” by Stephen Sondheim at the Forum Auditorium.

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State, county politicians draw attention to ICE detention reports within Bhutanese community

State Sen. Patty Kim spoke at Thursday’s event.

Harrisburg-area state and county representatives spoke out against federal government action on Thursday following reports that several Bhutanese community members in the region had been detained.

“These green card holders are being penalized despite taking the right pathways to citizenship,” said Justin Douglas, chair of the Dauphin County commissioners, who was joined by state Sen. Patty Kim and Rep. Dave Madsen at the press conference.

Youraj Koirala, board chairman of the Bhutanese Community of Central PA, said that he’d gotten calls from several families this past Saturday who told him their loved ones had been detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). 

“Two individuals were taken from their families,” Koirala, also an attorney, said. 

He indicated that both individuals had previously served time, sentenced for crimes, but had “faced the consequences of the legal system of the United States.”

“Now, months or years after the completion of their sentencing, these folks have been punished, yet again, for the same crimes but now harsher, now facing the possibility of removal,” he said.

Koirala emphasized that immigrants have legal rights when it comes to warrants.

Attorney Youraj Koirala, board chairman of the Bhutanese Community of Central PA

Koirala was joined Wednesday by Robin Gurung, co-founder and co-executive director of Asian Refugees United.

“I want to believe that humanity still exists, but what ICE is doing is not humanity,” Gurung said.

He added that “at least 20” Nepali-speaking Pennsylvania community members have been deported to Bhutan without due process.

Madsen spoke at the event about his personal experience getting calls about ICE. He said his neighbor, a landscaper, had recently asked him for help with a Guatemalan friend, Tomas, who had been detained.

“Tomas was walking in Cumberland County, was stopped, found out that he was undocumented, and then he was detained and put in the detention center,” Madsen said. “He was given hardly any food. He was put in the detention center that was way overcrowded, without a bed, stuffed into buses. I saw Nate, who is a central Pennsylvanian white man that grew up on a farm, fighting for and working with Tomas’s family to figure out what’s going on, like it was his own son.”

Madsen expressed interest in broader immigration reform and concern for the two Bhutanese individuals recently detained, as did Kim.

“I am committed to do everything in my power to bring these individuals home with their families,” Kim said.

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Dauphin County awards gaming grants with slight changes to original list

Commissioner George Hartwick

Dauphin County Commissioners on Wednesday approved the awarding of $10.4 million worth of gaming grants as they were put forth by the Gaming Advisory Board last week.

Elsewhere, they made changes.

After tabling the approval of gaming grants last Wednesday due to concerns about the selection and funding process, the commission upped the grants of several organizations recommended by the board. Each had requested more funds than the board allotted. 

The seven groups included local food pantries, iron and plumbers unions, and religious groups. 

Commissioner George Hartwick said he went back and reviewed the board’s recommendations for “gaps” in food insecurity, affordable housing and workforce development funding ahead of recommending the $120,000 total in increases.

“My approach today is guided by simple principles in a time of rising costs and economic pressure,” Hartwick said. “We must prioritize food security, affordable housing and job creation—the foundational needs of the residents that we serve.”

The commissioners also voted 2-1 to tack on an additional $595,000 of gaming grants for groups that applied for funds but were not selected by the board. Money for these grants will come out of the county’s unrestricted funds.

Pries said the county has around $16 million in unrestricted gaming funds right now to pull from. 

“We certainly don’t want to raid that, but $595,000 to go to organizations that Commissioner Hartwick has just listed, I think is a very fair and equitable distribution,” Pries said.

Douglas thought differently. 

“This is ultimately our savings account,” he said, noting that he could not support the additional grants. The county has to make difficult decisions to avoid additional property tax increases at this time, he said, referencing the county’s failure to raise property taxes for a 19-year stretch that ended in 2024.

Commission Chair Justin Douglas

Gaming grants redistribute a portion of gaming revenue from the Hollywood Casino at Penn National to Dauphin County nonprofits, municipalities and businesses. Restricted gaming grant funds cannot be used for county tax relief purposes, while unrestricted funds can. 

“I have supported recommendations of the Gaming Board except the recommendation to go over budget,” Douglas said.

The commissioners also eliminated $281,187 worth of grants from the prior list, removing awards for the Dauphin County Public Safety for facility enhancements ($244,187) and the Steelton Borough of Police for a co-responder program ($37,000.) Funds have been secured for both projects by other means, they said.

Pries requested the county solicitor’s office to take a thorough overview of gaming law and review conflicts of interest provisions. 

“This, I believe, will lay the groundwork for meaningful reform,” Pries said.

Three of the Gaming Advisory Board’s five members, all newly appointed in 2025, resigned after last week’s failure to approve the grants.

Among Wednesday’s approved grants, the Capital Area Greenbelt was awarded $75,000 to buy land and a right-of-way in South Harrisburg from construction material supplier Pennsy Supply to relocate the Greenbelt trail.

The Harrisburg Green Alliance, a nonprofit conservancy launched earlier this year, received $25,000 to beautify Riverfront Park and city entrance points along N. Front Street and at S. 2nd and Paxton streets.

The Capital City Sports Group, which owns and operates the City Islanders, was given $50,000 to rehabilitate City Island’s Skyline Sports Complex.

Money for facility upgrades and repairs was awarded to the Harrisburg Area YMCA, the Harrisburg City Bureau of Fire, the Historical Society of Dauphin County and the Civic Club.

All Harrisburg-based gaming grant awards are listed below:

  • AKA Foundation of Central PA—6th annual “It’s About You” community event, financial literacy programs, literacy program—$5,000  
  • All You Can—Program for at risk students that provides essential life skills, trade skills and certifications—$10,000
  • Amiracle4Sure—A community for people to have access to clean drinking water, restrooms and showers—$10,000
  • A New Tomorrow—Purchase a 15-passenger van and hire a full-time driver—$17,250   
  • Beacon Clinic for Health and Hope—Expand access to diagnostic testing and upgrade office infrastructure—$30,000
  • Beahive Affordable Housing Outreach—Affordable housing development project—$50,000
  • Bethany AME Church—Roof replacement, renovations—$25,000
  • Boys & Girls Club of Harrisburg—Safety and infrastructure upgrades at Angino and John N. Hall Clubhouse (HVAC and ventilation upgrades, bathroom renovations, new door awnings, reinforced entry doors and fencing)—$40,000   
  • Breadcoin—Distribute tokens to Harrisburg human service, shelter and faith-based non-profits—$20,000
  • Brethren Housing—Transitional housing, individualized case management, renter education and community resources—$50,000
  • Capital Area Greenbelt Association—Acquire a 1.3-acre tract and a 0.4 acre right-of-way from Pennsy Supply to relocate the Greenbelt Trail in South Harrisburg—$75,000
  • Capital City Sports Group—Rehabilitation of Skyline Sports Complex at City Island—$50,000   
  • Cathedral Parish of St. Patrick—To restore, enhance and improve lighting—$50,000
  • Contact Helpline—Enhance and strengthen IT infrastructure—$22,656
  • Dauphin County Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA)—Recruit, train and supervise community volunteer court-appointed special advocates for children—$30,000   
  • Downtown Daily Bread—Facility Upgrades—$35,000   
  • Gather the Spirit for Justice—Repair/replacement of door locks and installation of a defibrillator—$30,000   
  • Greater Zion Missionary Baptist Church—Repair sidewalk along Progress Avenue (Phase 1)—$22,650 
  • Handles’ Helping Hand Foundation—Construct four single-family homes on Market Street—$50,000
  • Harrisburg Area Food Pantry—Meet the demand for emergency food supplies for community—$50,000   
  • Harrisburg Area YMCA—Modernize existing facility to improve safety, functionality and service capacity—$75,000   
  • Harrisburg City Bureau of Fire—Critical upgrades to bedroom and bathroom facilities at Fire Station #1—$250,000   
  • Harrisburg Cougar Midget Football Association—Purchase new football and cheer equipment—$49,341
  • Harrisburg Green Alliance—Revamp the city entrances at N. Front Street and at 2nd & Paxton Street and enhance River Front Park—$25,000
  • Helping the Harrisburg Family—Care and essential distribution and related transportation expenses—$23,125   
  • Historic Harrisburg Association—Procurement of contracted services to design, develop and install new HVAC system—$30,000   
  • Historical Society of Dauphin County—Restore, repair and renovate the grounds of John Harris-Simon Cameron Mansion—$35,000   
  • Ironworkers Local 404—Critical training materials and equipment upgrades—$50,000
  • JT Dorsey Foundation—Support organizational capacity through marketing and programming—$10,000   
  • Justice House of Hope—Purchase and installation of security camera system at Justice House of Hope—$6,000   
  • Kicks 4 All Foundation—Year-round equipment aid program—$15,000  
  • Latino Connection Foundation—New construction of three townhomes—$50,000
  • Latino Hispanic American Community Center—Funds to hire a dedicated case manager—$50,000   
  • LGBT Community Center Coalition of Central PA—Installation of shower, roof replacement, HVAC system—$50,000   
  • Market Square Presbyterian Church—Upgrade to the functionality of church kitchen—$25,000   
  • Messiah Lutheran Church—Removal of damaged concrete sidewalk and 97 feet of slate curbing on 6th Street—$25,000   
  • Mount Olive Baptist Church—Roof replacement—$50,000   
  • Neighborhood Dispute Settlement—Expand mediation services and community outreach training and upgrade office infrastructure—$2,500   
  • Neighborhood Football Club—New uniforms and advanced sports analytics tools—$10,000   
  • Open Stage—Debt relief on facility upgrades, and construction and outfitting of recording studio—$10,000   
  • Operation Light of Hope Disaster Relief—Purchase drone, emergency response trailer and relief supplies—$25,000   
  • Organization of Hindu Religion and Culture—Replace outdated HVAC system—$50,000   
  • PA Council of Churches—Replacement of hot water heater—$25,000   
  • Planned Parenthood Keystone—Harrisburg Health Center upgrades —$40,000   
  • Plumbers & Pipefitters Local Union 520—Maximize weld training space —$50,000   
  • SOAL: SavingOurAncestorsLegacy—Enhance public safety, accessibility and public engagement—$25,000
  • South Central PA JUDO Foundation—Purchasing two full mats to be used for different locations—$15,000   
  • St. Mark Coptic Orthodox Church—Installation of fire alarm system and replace HVAC—$70,000   
  • St. Mark’s Evangelical Lutheran Church—Regulation size multi-use court for basketball, pickleball and tennis—$50,000   
  • St. Paul’s Episcopal Church—Lighting and security system upgrades—$25,000   
  • St. Stephen’s Episcopal School—Replace school’s failing heat sources—$30,000
  • Summit Terrace Neighborhood Association—Upgrades to 3-bedroom apartment—$50,000  
  • Tec Centro Capital Region—Purchase equipment such as Amatrol trainers, trade related equipment, tools and supplies—$50,000   
  • Technology4Me—Purchase computer provisions for students, veterans and elderly—$18,500   
  • Temple Ohev Sholom—Replace two HVAC systems—$75,000   
  • The Civic Club—Complete exterior restoration of Fleming Mansion—$26,700   
  • The Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church—Restore church edifice and remodel church parsonage—$50,000
  • The Martin Luther King Baptist Church—Replacement of current roof —$75,000
  • The Nativity School—Purchase new appliances, classroom equipment and furniture and dedicated STEM lab—$75,000
  • The Salvation Army—Funding to make facility more accessible and secure—$35,000
  • The South Central PA Sickle Cell Council—Expand sickle cell education, patient and family support services—$25,000
  • TLC Work Based Training Program—Replacement of gym floor and installation of electric partition—$125,000
  • Tri-County OIC—Provide reliable transportation to ensure students can access classes—$50,000   
  • Tri-County Regional Planning—Review and update comprehensive plan—$75,000
  • Trinity Preschool of Harrisburg—Creation of a functional kitchen for students—$15,000   
  • Unite Central PA—Low-cost or free transportation services for children and youth—$25,000   
  • Wildheart Ministries—Create nine new affordable homeownership units and three commercial spaces—$50,000
  • Zembo Shriners—Replacement of existing roof system—$75,000

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Theatre Harrisburg, Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra collaboration to open next month

the forum

The Forum

Theatre Harrisburg and the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra will share the stage this spring at one of the city’s most historic venues.

On May 30 and 31, the pillar Harrisburg arts organizations will present a concert version of “Follies” by Stephen Sondheim at the Forum Auditorium on the State Capitol Complex.

“This has been a few years in the making,” said Theatre Harrisburg executive director Lorien Reese Mahay of the collaboration.

The special, two-day only production was designed to celebrate Theatre Harrisburg’s 100th season and highlight both legacy institutions from the 1920s.

Reese Mahay said the group is looking forward to bringing the musical to life with Maestro Stuart Malina, conducting a world-class orchestra.

“This is a huge thing for us,” said Reese Mahay. “Ever since I first heard the symphony, I was like, ‘Wouldn’t it be incredible if we could get artists of this caliber to collaborate with us on one of our musical performances?’”

The musical tells the story of a group of showgirls reuniting on the stage of their old theatre one last time—a tribute to the past. “Follies” also serves as a tribute to Theatre Harrisburg’s own legacy in the Capital region.

“This was a musical that we used to open at the Whitaker Center back in 1999 when we were coming in as their resident theater company,” said Reese Mahay.

Some of the performers from that production will return to play older characters in this year’s encore, she added, alongside others.

“All of the singers that we’ve cast are all incredible members from our community,” said Reese Mahay. “We have professional performers as well as volunteers.”

After the concert wraps, Theatre Harrisburg’s 100-year festivities will continue on May 31 with Theatre Harrisburg’s 100th Anniversary Gala at the Willows at Ashcombe Mansion. 

The gala, which starts at 4:30 p.m., is Theatre Harrisburg’s annual fundraiser. It also serves as an excuse to bring people together to celebrate the theatre production’s legacy, said Reese Mahay.

“What I love the most—when I ask people about what they think Theatre Harrisburg means in the community—is that I consistently hear that it’s a home for people,” she said. “That they feel like they’re coming home.”

For more information on Theatre Harrisburg, including their 100th anniversary season and events, visit www.theatreharrisburg.com. For tickets to “Follies,” visit theatreharrisburg.com/follies-and-festivities.

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Harrisburg School District considers $6.5 million quote to demolish William Penn

Chief Operations Officer John Reedy

The Harrisburg school district could end up spending around $6.5 million to demolish William Penn, according to a Tuesday night presentation by a district official.

Chief Operations Administrator John Reedy told school board members that the district has received a $6.2 million bid from the Gordian Group to raze the building, plus quotes for the removal of asbestos discovered during the demo process ($200,000) and on-site airborne asbestos testing during demolition ($100,000).

“We want to ensure that the air around the building is safe for the middle schoolers,” said Reedy, referencing the neighboring Camp Curtin school.

The demolition of the 100-year-old building, pitched to begin this summer, would take an estimated six to eight months to complete.

While some asbestos removal was completed in 2023, after a fire collapsed a roof over part of the building, this removal was based on a 1997 asbestos survey that proved incomplete. Reedy estimated about $1.1 million had been used for this prior removal that they had assumed “covered all the asbestos.”

Reedy said that an asbestos audit conducted at William Penn last week revealed that the building’s windows are glazed with asbestos. There is also asbestos on a portion of the roof, he said, and asbestos tile hidden under a layer of regular tile in a portion of the 15-year vacant building.

Another quote is in the works for later this month on asbestos removal services needed prior to demolition, Reedy said.

School district administrators

Also included in the price of demolition is the preservation of about 20 facades from the building, including carved words and gargoyle statutes. They would be preserved for future projects, said Reedy, to commemorate William Penn. At least 300 bricks from the building will be preserved for members of the community, he added.

The price also includes testing to confirm that the soil at the filled demolition site would be supportive enough to put another building where William Penn stood, if ever needed.

Proposed contractors on the project include Lobar Associates (project manager), Gundy Excavating (demolition contractor), the Baxter Environmental Group (asbestos removal contractor) and Dirty Dog Hauling (debris removal).

Board members are expected to vote later this month on whether to accept the demolition bid.

The Harrisburg School Board

Proposed summer upgrades for Lincoln Elementary, located in Allison Hill, will also be up for a vote at the school board’s next meeting.

The administration has proposed using $1.8 million from the capital reserve fund to paint the interior of the building and install new stair treads, LED lights, ceiling tiles, bathroom partitions and a new gym floor.

Board members unanimously approved a comprehensive academic plan Tuesday, as is required every three years by the state’s education department.

Presented by administrators during the meeting, the plan set goals for Harrisburg, including getting math proficiency levels for grades 3 to 8 up to 16% and English language arts proficiency levels up to 26% over the next three years. It also set a goal of increasing student attendance across the district from 49% to 52% by 2029.

Board President Roslyn Copeland indicated that, moving forward, the board wants school board members attending in-person, rather than online. Board members Jamie Johnsen, Danielle Robinson and Ellis Roy joined Tuesday’s meeting virtually.

Board member Terricia Radcliff was absent from the meeting.

School Board President Roslyn Copeland

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

The Tri-County Association for the Blind building, bought by WebFX for possible future use

Read more about WebFX’s expansion into another mansion on Front Street, a new fare system coming to Harrisburg’s public transit this summer and more—all compiled for you below:

April’s happenings at local museums, parks, art galleries and more are all listed for you here, as seen in our monthly magazine.

Chavis Law Firm’s owner emphasizes the importance of creating a will for your family, in our April magazine story.

Dauphin County commissioners declined to approve a list of annual gaming grants, citing concerns about allocation and alleged misuse. Read more here.

Dauphin County is seeing turnover in top economic positions, according to our online story.

Harrisburg Catholic Worker hosted a press conference to call for the release of Omar Viadurre Luis, a Harrisburg asylum seeker, from an ICE detention center. Read more in our online story.

Our “Musical Notes” columnist has compiled all the best bands coming to the area this month. Click here to see the lineup, as seen in our April magazine

Our publisher paid tribute to his late neighbor in his editorial this month—a quirky, community-minded man, who loved his leafblower. Read more, as seen in our April issue, here

Rabbittransit plans to roll out a new, account-based fare system this summer that will allow riders to tap to pay with cards or phones, our online story reported.

Sara Bozich has compiled the best events of the weekend in her Weekend Roundup, including Plants + Pints at Strawberry Square. Check out the full list.

WebFX got almost $1 million in state money this week and plans to expand its campus into another Front Street mansion; it also purchased another building on N. 2nd Street for possible future use, our online story reports.

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Rabbittransit to roll out new bus fare payment system for Harrisburg this summer

RabbitPay card (Image courtest of Rabbittransit)

Your morning bus ride may soon get a little easier.

This summer, Rabbittransit is planning to roll out a new fare collection system for its Harrisburg fleet. 

The system will offer users the ability to pay for rides with either physical “RabbitPay”cards or their phone, by using a new mobile app. They will be able to tap either at orange terminals—located at the fare station just inside buses—to pay.

According to the public transportation provider’s executive director, Richard Farr, the new system will be account-based, allowing riders to purchase fares or fare passes online as well as at ticket vending machines.

The account-based system also will offer riders more security, in that if they lose their physical RabbitPay card, or cash reserved for their fare, they will still be able to pay for a ticket through their phone.

“Very rarely does someone lose their phone,” said Farr.

Farr acknowledged that Rabbittransit’s current mobile app has deficiencies that the new system seeks to improve upon—like having to launch the app before the bus comes because it takes a while to load. Plus, he added, “if you decide not to ride after you activated it, you’ve lost the ride.”

By comparison, the new system will only take fares off of users’ accounts if they touch the orange payment terminal inside the bus.

The new system seeks to improve upon Rabbittransit’s current card system, wherein if users bend or lose their card, they lose their fare. 

“With the account-based system, if you lose your card, you don’t lose your rides,” Farr said.

Users will still be able to buy any pass packs they’ve become accustomed to on this system. It will also feature “fare capping”—a system allowing riders to pay as they go through single-ride fares until they reach the price of a larger pass.

Farr said Rabbittransit plans to send street teams out across Harrisburg in mid-July to help its users sign up for and learn to use the new system.

All riders will get a free RabbitPay card once, he said. If they lose it, they will have to pay $3.50 to replace it.

Farr emphasized Rabbittransit is looking to move away from cash fare payments, although it will always accept them.

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