Author Archives: Alexandra Jones

The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

“Art in the Wild” installation

It’s been a long week of on-and-off sunshine. Winter just can’t seem to decide if it should stay or go—but we got our first glimpse of spring weather. We hope you got the chance to get outside and enjoy while it was warm!

Our days here at the office have been full of editing stories for next month’s magazine issue and covering the latest around town, including the latest in the lawsuit between City Council and the mayor and the Harrisburg International Airport’s record-breaking travel numbers for 2025.

As always, all weekly coverage is compiled for you below:

Bob’s Art Blog spotlighted two upcoming arts events: the Art Association of Harrisburg’s 100th year celebration and Wildwood Park’s annual “Art in the Wild.” Read more here.

City Council withdrew a contempt motion filed against Mayor Wanda Williams after voting 4-3 to hire the city’s interim director of building and housing development permanently, our online story reported. The contempt motion claimed that Williams had kept the director on staff without council approval in violation of the parties’ settlement terms.

Gamut Theatre’s “King Lear” is a “wild night,” according to our theater reviewer. Get a preview of the play here.

Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors said the Harrisburg-area housing market held steady in February. Both home sales and prices were largely unchanged from a year ago, according to our online story.

Harrisburg International Airport had a record year, according to its top officials. Its plans for growth earned praise at a Dauphin County meeting, according to our online reporting.

Harrisburg school district officials discussed next steps for finding a demolition contractor for William Penn and their lack of interest in extending a current city tax abatement program at their Tuesday meeting.

Our “Family Time” columnist shares tips for raising teenagers in a March magazine story.

PennDOT said construction along Cameron Street may cause delays this weekend. Read more here.

Sara Bozich has compiled the best events of the weekend in her Weekend Roundup, including the Harrisburg Free Store at Broad Street Market. Check out the full list.

Strong Towns hosted a community discussion this week, as part of its ongoing speakers series. Read more in our online story.

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Construction may cause delays along Cameron Street this weekend

Work this weekend will affect traffic on Cameron Street.

Drivers may see construction delays near I-83 in Harrisburg this weekend.

PennDOT announced Thursday that construction crews will install drains and widen roads along Cameron Street between Sycamore Street and Paxton Street on Saturday and Sunday. 

The work will take place between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. both days. During this time all traffic will be routed to the East side of the street.

PennDOT said the work may cause travel delays.

This construction is part of a larger I-83 Capital Beltway Project plan to widen and reconstruct portions of the I-83 roadway, construct overhead bridges at 29th Street and 19th Street, create a new Cameron Street Interchange, and remove the 13th Street interchange.

Other roadway improvements along the Cameron Street, 19th Street and 29th Street corridors will also be made.

The overall project is slated for completion in 2027.

For more information about the I-83 Capital Beltway Project, go to i-83beltway.com.

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Harrisburg International Airport’s record year, plans for growth earn praise at Dauphin County meeting

Harrisburg International Airport

Harrisburg International Airport officials marked the local travel hub’s biggest year to-date at a county meeting on Wednesday.

According to Timothy Edwards, outgoing executive director of the Susquehanna Area Regional Airport Authority (SARAA), 2025 was “a record year” at the airport.

Edwards told the Dauphin County commissioners at their weekly meeting that 814,718 passengers boarded flights through the facility in 2025, a 12% jump from the year prior.

He added that the airport anticipates another record year for 2026. Almost 53% of the airport’s total passengers are from Dauphin, Lancaster and York counties. 

“It’s amazing to see growth,” said commission Chair Justin Douglas. “This kind of growth brings more people to our region.”

What’s more, Dauphin County residents make up about 43% of the airport’s workforce.

The airport, based in Lower Swatara Township, currently has five airlines (Delta, American, United, Allegiant and Frontier) that provide service to 18 destinations, nonstop. Seven of the destinations are international gateways.

SARAA manages and oversees the operation of HIA, as well as three general aviation airports in central PA.

Edwards emphasized that SARAA’s airport system pays for itself, receiving several million dollars each year from an aviation trust fund through the Federal Aviation Administration. Essentially, passengers using the airport pay a small tax on their ticket, which goes into the fund.

“If you do not use the airport, you don’t pay for the airport,” Edwards said.

HIA is one of the “very few transportation facilities in the state” that do not require taxpayer support or any kind of subsidy, Edwards noted.

In addition to bringing travelers to the region, a flurry of hotels, fast-food places, convenience stores and gas stations have popped up around the airport in recent years as a result of its success, noted commissioners Wednesday.

“There’s not too many people that don’t enjoy Harrisburg International Airport when they come there and see the facility,” added commissioner George Hartwick.

The airport also serves as a hub for FedEx and UPS’s global air cargo networks. It processes nearly 120 million pounds of cargo each year, said Edwards. 

He said that the airport plans to expand this side of the business in the coming years. 

The authority is also focused on expanding airline services, he added.

Douglas encouraged airport officials to reach out to the county if they see openings for future partnerships beyond what is already in place.

“We want to ensure that we support the growth and support the economic impact in our region,” Douglas said.

At the meeting, Edwards was joined by incoming Deputy Executive Director Ryan Collins, who will take over in January 2027.

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Harrisburg school officials discuss William Penn demo process, tax abatement

John Reedy Harrisburg School district

Chief Operations Administrator John Reedy speaks on William Penn demolition options

Harrisburg school officials discussed demolition contractor search options for William Penn at a meeting Tuesday night, after voting to demolish the building last month.

The 250,000 square-foot, 100-year-old, neoclassical building could be torn down as soon as this summer. It was last used as a technical school 15 years ago and has sat vacant, deteriorating, since.

Most board members voiced interest in hiring a demo contractor using a cooperative purchasing system, which would speed the process. 

The other option, public bidding, would push the demolition back to late 2026.

Chief Operations Administrator John Reedy explained to the board that the cooperative purchasing program the district has used over the last few years, Keystone Purchasing Network (KPN), “saves a tremendous amount of time” and has produced “high-quality work at a reasonable cost.”

It also allows the district to maintain control over the contractors used, he said.

“Our expectation would be that they are a local company that could get the job done in a timely manner,” Reedy explained.

In an informal 6-2-1 straw poll vote, with board member Brian Carter voting for neither option, the board asked the district to pursue the cooperative purchasing path, over public bid.

The Harrisburg School Board

No interest in one-year LERTA extension

The board indicated Tuesday night it has no interest in joining Harrisburg and Dauphin County in a one-year city tax abatement program extension.

“No one can say definitively if the program is positive or negative for the district,” explained Chief Financial Officer Marcia Stokes of the Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance Program (LERTA) program.

The program incentivizes development and property improvements in Harrisburg.

First implemented in 2015, it offers a 100%, 10-year tax abatement to developers for residential renovations and construction. Under LERTA, commercial and mixed-use projects are also eligible for 50% to 100% abatement.

In a straw poll vote, six out of nine board members said they would rather use 2026 to negotiate LERTA with the city and rejoin the program if it can be adjusted to better benefit the district moving forward. Only one member indicated interest in the one-year extension.

Stokes said 55 of the 73 properties the district has forgiven taxes on through the LERTA program are residential. She expressed concerns that the program may therefore be bringing more children to the district without additional tax dollars. She added that the district cannot determine whether developers would have pursued projects without the abatement in place.

“It is a big decision for the board to make, especially when you consider our position and our amended recovery plan, along with our declining assessed values that are taxable,” Stokes said, indicating that the district’s decision on LERTA will impact it financially at least 10 years into the future.

The district solicitor sent a letter to the city that it does not wish to extend the program and has since been contacted by developers to reconsider, according to board president Rosyln Copeland.

She also expressed concern that the district solicitor had said that the district’s heavy reliance on state aid might be disproportionately hurt by tax abatement programs. 

She cautioned the board that pursuing a one-year extension today would impact the amount of money the district collects from projects built this year for the next decade.

Stokes said that while the city, county and school district have historically been involved in LERTA — the other two are able to continue participating in the program without the district.

“We could do nothing, and they could move forward,” she said. 

At the end of 2025, the district declined to renew the program by issuing a one-year extension after city officials failed to respond in a timely manner to its requests for program changes, it said.

Stokes said the district asked to negotiate changes to LERTA that would make the program more beneficial to the district in December, but received no response.

In December, City Council defunded the position of Jason Graves, the city’s then-director of business development and its LERTA administrator.

Graves had said previously that Harrisburg was working on new LERTA legislation with the Harrisburg School District and, in the meantime, recommended extending the current LERTA program for another year. 

The city approved this extension in December, and Dauphin County approved it in February. The district however, never extended the program, letting its involvement lapse at the end of 2025.

Stokes said that most people’s greatest property tax burden comes from the district, so the city would be incentivized to negotiate with the district to create a more favorable program moving forward. This would involve district Superintendent Benjamin Henry, Stokes, and the district’s solicitor working with the city LERTA administrator and county commissioners to redesign the program.

“What’s the difference on how much we lose out on taxes versus the city and the county?” board Vice President Autumn Anderson asked. Stokes said it was substantially more.

“It wasn’t a benefit to the district. It really pretty much brought construction into the city, which then benefitted the city, but didn’t benefit the district at all,” said board member Danielle Robinson.

Meanwhile, Anderson clarified that the program was an economic development tool.

“The school district is essentially subsidizing development,” she said, questioning whether LERTA brings more people to the city or helps to “ignite or spark” future investments in a city that struggles with closing businesses and blighted buildings.

Harrisburg High School’s John Harris Campus.

More details wanted on potential high school program

The board tabled talk of a contract with a consultant that would help lay the groundwork for a multi-year plan to create a potential new flagship program for John Harris High School, after lengthy discussion.

“We’re not going to move this forward until we get some more information from our administrative team,” said Copeland.

The district asked for more details on plans to use a consultant to create a new business-related career and technical education program (CTE) at John Harris that would begin in the 2026-2027 school year. The idea was first proposed in spring 2025.

While the consulting contract would cost $10,000 or less, in line with the program, the district would also spend $25,700 to outfit a wing of John Harris. 

The area—currently a midsize office and a small classroom—would have a wall removed and be redesigned to be “more of a collaborative space,” according to the superintendent.

“We have kids be able to walk right out of algebra one and into a CTE class,” Henry explained, noting he thinks such a program could improve attendance and that he wants it to be highly visible to the high school’s students.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Hope you’re all enjoying the cloudy day as we gear up for Harrisburg’s annual Ice & Fire Festival this weekend. We’re excited to participate ourselves. In front of our N. 3rd Street office, you’ll find an interactive ice sculpture that will allow you to pose as if you’re on the cover of TheBurg!

This week, we’ve been hard at work solidifying stories for next month’s print issue. On the daily news front, we’ve also been covering the latest stories around town—including an update on how City Council will treat “acting” director appointments moving forward, after settling a lawsuit with the mayor over disputed interim positions.

All weekly coverage is compiled for you below:

Art Association of Harrisburg is turning 100 this year. The organization reflects on its last century in our March magazine story.

City Council discussed new legislation that would stop the mayor from appointing department heads without their approval and clarify how long acting department heads can serve without its approval, our online story reported.

Gamut Theatre’s “King Lear” opens this weekend. Find the behind-the-scenes story of how the theater company put the play together in our March magazine story.

Harrisburg events, including a scavenger hunt celebrating Dr. Seuss’s birthday and St. Patty’s Parade downtown, around the area this March are all available for your viewing here, as seen in our March issue.

Harrisburg happenings at local arts organizations, public libraries, gardens and more are compiled here for your perusal, as seen in our March issue.

Ice & Fire Festival will return this weekend, bringing ice sculptures, food and music to Harrisburg. Read more here.

QTPOC Collective, an LGBT Center program for queer and trans people of color, is fostering community with regular meetups. See more March magazine story.

Sara Bozich has compiled the best events of the weekend in her Weekend Roundup, including PA Home & Garden Show and the Friends of New Cumberland Public Library Book & Media Sale. Check out the full list.

Whitaker Center offers weekend programming for Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts to earn badges. Read more in our March magazine story.

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Local group Strong Towns to host community discussion this week, part of its ongoing speakers series

Strong Towns Q&A with Lancaster City Council member John Hursh (left) beside Strong Towns members Grant Elledge and Brandon Basom

With a series of planned community Q&As, local group Strong Towns Harrisburg is hoping to inspire positive change in the area.

“We’re focused on educating and activating residents of Harrisburg for the sake of the good of the city,” explained Grant Elledge, Strong Towns Harrisburg cofounder. 

Elledge was one of three members who established Harrisburg’s chapter of the local Strong Towns movement in 2022. The national nonprofit has more than 290 chapters across the country, dedicated to growing towns with smart infrastructure decisions.

On Wednesday, he will moderate a discussion with Dauphin County Commission Chairman and U.S. congressional candidate Justin Douglas alongside two other Strong Towns members, who are taking questions from community members ahead of the event.

The event will take place on Wednesday, March 11 at 7 p.m. at Pursuit Coworking. The Democrat will speak to Harrisburg community members about working within bureaucratic systems to create change.

“We all interact with this kind of broader bureaucracy,” Elledge explained. “And a lot of people have experienced—and this isn’t unique to Harrisburg by any means—some frustration of just, ‘I want to see this thing change, but how would I even start going about figuring out how to do that?’”

This Q&A will mark Strong Town’s third speaker in the series. The group designed the series to engage people with elected representatives and other community stakeholders using hopeful, positive conversation.

It previously hosted then City Councilman-elect Rob Lawson and Lancaster City Council member John Hursh as guests.

Justin Douglas

For Wednesday’s event, Elledge said that the group is excited to host Douglas because he has the background to discuss the government at different levels.

He is informed both by his role chairing the Dauphin County Commission and his current candidacy in this year’s congressional election, running to unseat Rep. Scott Perry (R-10).

“He definitely has a unique vantage point,” said Elledge.

Elledge and other Strong Towns members are hoping the conversation will serve as a catalyst.

“We are hoping that people will feel the power to be able to pick up a particular project or a thing that they’re concerned about—whether that’s through the context of Strong Towns or totally unrelated to the rest of the group—and be able to get some traction,” he said.

Future Strong Towns Q&A panels are already planned for May and July.

They will feature Lawrance Binda, publisher of TheBurg, and Richard Farr, executive director of regional public transit provider rabbittransit.

Strong Towns is a national organization that encourages residents’ engagement with their towns for systemic change. To learn more about Strong HBG, visit its Facebook page.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Damien Randell of Damien’s Fried Chicken

It’s starting to look a little like spring, isn’t it? The sunshine is melting away the last of our snow here and (today at least!) you could probably even get away with going outside without a jacket.

Speaking of jackets, you’ll see the new cover of our March issue around town this week. The issue focuses largely on local nonprofits that are making a difference in our region.

On the daily news front, we’ve been covering stories around Harrisburg all week online, too. See below for the latest headlines, which include updates on what will happen to William Penn, City Council’s latest ICE-related legislation and the story of the Broad Street Market’s new fried chicken vendor.

Our weekly coverage is compiled for you here:

Black authors in the Harrisburg area are bringing their perspectives to fiction and nonfiction alike. Read more in our February magazine story.

Bob’s Art Blog highlighted creative leaders of color across Harrisburg this past month. Read more in our February magazine story.

City Council passed legislation to limit the Harrisburg police’s ability to work with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Tuesday, our online story reported.

Damien’s Fried Chicken, a new Broad Street Market stand, is now open for business. Find out more in our online story.

Harrisburg officials, from the school district and Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority, discussed the unique challenges facing Harrisburg’s city and schools Wednesday, our online story reported.

Harrisburg police said homicides were down in 2025 in their annual report, which was released this week. See more trends in our online story.

Harrisburg school board voted Tuesday night to demolish William Penn, a century-old school building that has sat vacant for 15 years. Read more here.

Our Adventure Together columnist explores fungi with her kiddo. For more, see our February magazine story.

Our publisher Lawrance Binda wonders in his latest column: now that Gov. Josh Shapiro has signed on to help revitalize Harrisburg’s struggling downtown, can we look forward to change? Read his March magazine column.

Sara Bozich has compiled the best events of the weekend in her Weekend Roundup, including 2026 Capital Area Polar Plunge at Gifford Pinchot State Park. Check out the full list.

Whitaker Center has opened a new live-animal exhibit, featuring sloths and more. “Survival of the Slowest” explores the world’s slowest-moving species, our online story reports.

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With sloths and other slow movers, live animal exhibit opens at Whitaker Center this week

A chameleon

A new exhibit featuring live animals opens at Whitaker Center on Friday.

“Survival of the Slowest: Counterintuitive Adaptations” will teach visitors how some of the world’s slowest-moving species have adapted to survive using defenses that make speed irrelevant.

Like how rattlesnakes use venom to kill prey so they can eat at their leisure. Or how sloths’ slowness and nocturnal nature sets them up to avoid their main daytime-hunting predator, harpy eagles.

The exhibit boasts 19 habitats containing live animals and plants—this includes the two-toed sloth, green iguana and chameleon alongside dozens of other slow species.

“We know our community is hungry for programming that challenges and inspires,” Mary Oliveira, president & CEO of the center, said. “This exhibition delivers that, and we’re proud to bring it to Harrisburg.”

Oliveira added that the program is sure to spark curiosity and deepen visitors’ connections to the natural world. 

Hands-on encounters and live educator-led presentations will run in line with the exhibit to show visitors how slowness, camouflage, venom, energy conservation and other traits enable entire species to survive.

Produced by Canada’s largest exotic animal rescue organization, Little Ray’s Nature Centres, the exhibit runs Feb. 27 to May 24. The Whitaker Center is open Friday to Monday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

For more information on the exhibit, visit the Whitaker Center’s website.

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Harrisburg officials explore overlap between challenges facing the city, the schools

 

Harrisburg School District officials speak with the Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority.

Harrisburg city and the school district share a unique set of challenges, including financial issues arising from past overspending and a declining tax base, which both were discussed by city officials at a Wednesday meeting.

At the Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority’s (ICA) monthly meeting, board chair Doug Hill welcomed top officials from the Harrisburg school district to present an overview of the district’s finances.

“You have a comparable history to ours,” Hill told district Superintendent Benjamin Henry and Chief Financial Officer Marcia Stokes. “Not identical, but have had some financial issues that you’ve wrestled with, with some success, as has the city.”

While the entities operate separately, both entered into various forms of state oversight around 15 years ago due to unlinked financial management issues. 

As the city was plagued by mounting debt from a failed waste-to-energy incinerator project, the school was almost simultaneously struggling with debt caused by hundreds of millions in school renovations. The state placed the city under Act 47, a program for financially distressed municipalities, in 2010. Two years later, in 2012, the state appointed a chief recovery officer for the school district. Still struggling in 2019, the state appointed the district a receiver.

While the district exited state receivership last year, Stokes emphasized the city and schools’ situations are to some extent linked as the district can not exit financial monitoring until the city itself exits its own recovery status under Act 47.

Hill noted another overlap between the two.

“We are all reliant on some of the same tax bases,” he said.

It’s a tax base that often proves challenging for two entities already struggling financially. Stokes noted during her presentation that in 2011, the district had just under $1.6 billion worth of taxable assessed value. Last year, it dropped to under $1.5 billion.

“Over nearly a 15 year history, where most municipalities are increasing in assessed value, we have continued to decline,” Stokes said.

She added that properties in Harrisburg have a greater percentage of untaxable assessed value than those that are taxable. This is largely due to the sprawling state footprint, an entity that does not pay property taxes. As a high-poverty, underfunded district, Harrisburg schools also rely heavily on state aid. Stokes said 60% of district revenue comes from the state.

“If we made a perfect world and all of our properties in our municipality were taxable, that would be another $49 million per year that the district would be able to generate in tax revenue,” Stokes said. “$49 million every year we never can tap into for a source for supporting education.”

ICA board member Kathy Speaker MacNett said that a big obstacle—in the way of both the city and the district’s retention of a more taxable population—was the reputation of Harrisburg schools.

“Young couples move here, establish home bases, and when kids come into the picture—they go elsewhere,” MacNett said.

Henry said the district was looking to address this problem by sharing more of its success stories.

“We have great schools. We have kids that get scholarships to go off to college. We have some great opportunities for our kids in the community, but we have to get out there and tell the story,” he said.

Marcia Stokes presents to the Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority.

He and Stokes listed a few: the district brought back its musical theater program last year (after roughly two decades without one), started an eSports league, and has secured a fleet of 13 crossing guards to help elementary school students walk to school.

Stokes said in the future the district would be interested in collaborating more closely with the city to go after grants that would be beneficial to both parties and to increase the availability of out-of-school activities for students.

“We need to focus on becoming a suitable choice for the residents within the community and that means improving both our image and our product that we’re putting out there,” Stokes said. “And if we can do that, then I think that’s a contribution we can make into the revitalization of the city itself.”

Henry said that the district works hard every day to make change happen.

“We have to turn the corner on what we’re producing and we are doing this every day. But again, it takes all of us,” he said. “It can’t take the school district in isolation. It takes the whole community to come together in order to move the needle on academics and get people to understand that we have a great city.”

To learn more about the ICA, visit its website.

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Council passes legislation to limit city involvement with ICE

ICE protesters gathered outside of City Council’s Tuesday night meeting earlier this month.

Harrisburg City Council passed legislation last night that limits the city police bureau’s ability to work with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

If signed into law by Mayor Wanda Williams, the legislation would prohibit city officials and employees from inquiring into or collecting information on or retaining people’s citizenship or immigration status, except when required by federal or state law.

“There was an enormous showing for the public to discuss this bill,” said Council Member Ausha Green. “Most residents, members of the public, came out to support legislation, but noted that they would like it to be stronger and to protect the residents of Harrisburg and everyone who frequents our city.”

Earlier this month, council members expressed interest in creating such legislation after residents spoke about their concerns about ICE presence in the city and amidst growing nationwide tensions during public comment.

“We will continue to work on this as this grows, because I don’t think it’s going to slow down any time soon,” council vice president Lamont Jones noted.

Employees would also be restricted from using city funds, personnel, equipment, data, technology, property or facilities to assist in the investigation, detention or arrest of anyone due to an immigration violation.

The legislation would also block employees from giving ICE access to non-public city facilities without a warrant.

Council member Jocelyn Rawls asked if the legislation could be amended to also block employees from coming onto any city facility, but received pushback.

“My thought is even, I don’t want them or anyone walking around the building trying to find people because that’s what I’m nervous about too,” Rawls said.

City solicitor Neil Grover had concerns about such an amendment’s legality.

“The reason you’re doing this is because the federal government has gone down a path that is trampling on rights, and it’s hard not to react back and come up with things to push back,” Grover noted. “But then you’re also trampling on rights, and if any government can tell anybody here they can’t be in a public area, that is the same thing as martial law.”

Rawls ultimately withdrew the suggestion to give it more thought in order to “do it in a way where we don’t get involved in any lawsuits,” she said. 

“We don’t want to lose any more money,” she said.

Under the legislation, employees would also be unable to detain anyone based on a civil immigration non-judicial detainer or administrative request and would not be able to provide advance notice to ICE of release dates, except as required by law.

Police bureau officials have stated that they do not interact with ICE unless called to an incident. They are also required to report to federal agents if they come across someone with an immigration warrant against them.

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