Harrisburg proposes funds to assist Governor’s Square, weighs police advisory board appointments

Harrisburg City Council meeting on Tuesday.

Harrisburg may make a financial investment towards improving conditions at a dilapidated and neglected affordable housing development in the city.

City Council on Tuesday weighed the potential of Harrisburg contributing $250,000 to help get the Residences at Governor’s Square apartments back to livable and city code-conforming conditions.

Governor’s Square owner Uptown Partners LLC filed for bankruptcy in May 2023, following years of residents’ complaints about their quality of life, as well as hundreds of city code violations and condemnations. The bankruptcy case has been hung up in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania since then, as parties have struggled to find a buyer that had sufficient funds and that could get necessary approvals from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

In October 2024, Uptown Partners, the city and other parties to the case agreed to have the Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas appoint a receiver to manage the property. Attorneys for Uptown Partners have previously stated that the company doesn’t have the money or the desire to maintain and retain possession of the property.

The city has since petitioned the court to appoint Harrisburg-based Midtown Property Management as receiver. Although, a county court judge will have the final say.

However, seed money is needed to allow the receiver to begin the process of creating a restoration plan and beginning work, which is where Harrisburg comes in. If approved by council, the city would provide the receiver $250,000, which, as currently stated in the proposal, would eventually need to be paid back to the city.

“It’s a fairly big lift that we are undertaking, but there’s no one else taking it,” said City Solicitor Neil Grover.

Grover noted that there will likely be more proposed allocations of city funding for the receivership in the future.

Over 20 of Governor’s Square apartments are condemned, and the city has issued hundreds of code violations on the properties. About half of the over 200 units are vacant.

The seed money would come from city funds that were originally awarded to Harrisburg through the federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) for COVID relief. More specifically, the money would be drawn from the $8 million that council designated for affordable housing support.

According to Grover, if the money is approved by council at its next legislative session, a court order on the Governor’s Square receivership could potentially come down next week.

Also on Tuesday, council discussed taking a step towards kick-starting the years-delayed first meeting of a board that was created in 2020, shortly after the death of George Floyd and subsequent nationwide Black Lives Matter protests.

In November 2020, council approved creating a Citizen’s Law Enforcement Advisory Committee (CLEAC) to review actions of the Harrisburg Police Bureau. The approval came after months of community meetings and council discussions and revisions to the bill. Under the bill, council would appoint five board members, the mayor two, and then the board itself would select two which council would approve.

However, the board has yet to meet.

In March 2023, council appointed Brent Miller, Quinton Davis, Adrian Selkowitz, Gia Johnson and Lakichia Carrier to the board. However, the board cannot function without all seven appointees, according to Grover.

Before making its appointments, council members had stated that they wanted to wait to introduce all appointees, including the mayor’s, at once, but that Mayor Wanda Williams had not made her appointments.

On Tuesday, council proposed an amendment to the CLEAC bill that would give them the sole power to appoint the seven initial board members, taking away Williams’ power to appoint.

“It’s been going on since 2020. I just feel as though we are doing the right thing by at least trying to move this forward. It’s not that we don’t want to work with the administration,” council member Ralph Rodriguez said. “We just feel as though we had great people appointed, the board was nearly finished, and to wait numerous years just for one or two appointments is just a bit ludicrous.”

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Pennian Bank Assists Area Nonprofits with Unique Program

Mifflintown, PA – Pennian Bank’s Local First Program is a unique way to assist local nonprofits with donation dollars simply by encouraging people to do their banking.

The Local First Program, launched in 2020, allows Pennian Bank customers to designate eligible checking or savings accounts to participating nonprofit organizations. Once a participating organization reaches 20 supporters, the Bank will make quarterly donations based on a percentage of the average balance in the supporters’ accounts.

“As a community bank, we have a commitment to the areas we serve, just like area charitable organizations,”says Scott Fritz, President and CEO of Pennian Bank. “Our local nonprofit organizations are providing more for our communities than ever, but are struggling with donations. That is where the Local First Program can help. It’s a cost-free, easy way for our customers to give back to their community.”

Fritz stressed that money is never taken out of the customer’s account. The Bank simply uses the balances as the basis to calculate the donation amount that they will make each quarter to the non-profit.

“We currently have 18 participating in the program across three counties, with eight of them receiving quarterly donations,” says Heather Miltenberger, SVP, Director of Marketing for Pennian Bank and an administrator for the program. “People find it hard to believe they can support their favorite local organizations just by doing their banking with Pennian and at no cost to them. However, we believe in finding unique ways to support our community and the Local First Program is one of them. Pennian is able to give back to these deserving organizations, all because of the support of our customers.”

In addition to donations, Pennian Bank assists participating organizations with marketing materials and social media promotions. With limited staff and resources, many organizations aren’t able to prioritize marketing. Offering this assistance as needed is another way Pennian Bank serves as a partner for the program.

While monetary donations are important for charitable organizations, Pennian Bank also believes in community involvement. Staff regularly participate in volunteer work with impactful organizations in the area. A team at Pennian Bank works with organizations to create group volunteer opportunities for staff, as well as encourage participation in community initiatives outside of working hours.

“We feel it’s important for our staff to have the chance to participate with organizations to see their good work first-hand and truly see the impact they have in our communities,” says Candace Hoffman, SVP, Director of Human Resources for Pennian Bank and part of the team that helps create these volunteer opportunities.

Organizations that are interested in learning more about the program can visit pennian.bank/about/local-first-program. Pennian Bank customers wanting to designate their eligible accounts, or new customers wanting to see what organizations are supported can also visit the website. From there, visitors can view a list of organizations or complete a supporter form. This can also be done by visiting any Pennian Bank office location.

About Pennian Bank
Headquartered in Mifflintown, PA, Pennian Bank has been serving the community since 1864. There are 11 offices located in Juniata, Perry, Dauphin and Cumberland Counties. Pennian Bank provides deposit, lending and cash management services for both individual and business customers. For additional information about Pennian Bank and the holding company, First Community Financial Corporation, please visit pennian.bank. Pennian Bank is Member FDIC.

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Harrisburg opens roller skating rink for the month, testing ways to bring more events to City Island

Roller skating on City Island last weekend. Photo courtesy of the City of Harrisburg.

Harrisburg is offering the community a new way to have fun this month on City Island.

For the month of March, the city is hosting roller skating in the carousel pavilion, as a way to try new initiatives to better utilize the large island.

Roller skating kicked off this past weekend in the pavilion, which is located in front of the FNB Field stadium near the island train station parking lot. Skating will continue every Friday and Saturday through March 29.

“We heard a lot from the community asking for more fun things to do on City Island,” said Emma Simpson, community events coordinator for the city. “We are really excited to offer this.”

Family skate hours will take place from 6 to 7:30 p.m. with an adult skate from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Admission is $5 and skate rentals are $2. Chips and water will be available for $1 each.

Harrisburg owns the pavilion space on the island, renting it out as well, and purchased roller skates for the rink. They also made some updates to the pavilion’s polished concrete floor to fix cracks and make it safe for skating. Funding for the skating came from a sponsorship from Explore HBG and the Parks and Recreation Department’s events budget, Simpson said.

Simpson said that the first skate was a success.

“It went really well. Everyone was having a good time,” she said.

There will also be special themed nights for St. Patrick’s Day weekend and a “glow skate” on March 21 and 22.

While the rink is only slated to be open for the month, due to scheduling conflicts with the pavilion, Simpson said that the city may host pop-up skating events in the summer.

In another attempt to test a fun concept for City Island, Harrisburg will host an Arcade Night at the island’s old arcade building on April 26. From 5 to 9 p.m., the community can play games like Skeeball, Pacman, Donkey Kong and air hockey for free.

Harrisburg plans to rent about 12 arcade games for the night.

Simpson sees both the skating and arcade night as pilot programs to gauge community response and engagement. She said they are constantly receiving and considering community feedback that they get at parks and rec events, through surveys and that they see on social media.

And with the recent increase in the number of staff in the department, Simpson said that they have a higher capacity for implementing new ideas.

For more information on upcoming Harrisburg Parks and Recreation Department events, including roller skating and Arcade Night, visit their Facebook page.

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Adventure Together: While on the hunt for signs of spring in Harrisburg, our writer happens upon fun for families at a community center, park and library

My kiddo and I were strolling through Riverfront Park, searching for the snowdrops and daffodils that will soon wrestle their heads above the dirt, when we spotted a sign that read, “All Welcome.” Curious and encouraged, we crossed Front Street to enter the building attached to the sign. This is how we happened upon storytime at The LGBT Center of Central PA.

The first Saturday of every month, our local LGBT Center hosts its storytime for youth ages 0 to 10. The event is free and open to all, with attendance especially encouraged for queer parents and allies. The center’s executive director, Amber Roadcap, who is also a children’s book author, hosts the storytime. Leaning into her expertise, Amber engages the kids with thoughtful questions about themes in the books and how they may relate to a listener’s own life. A book we heard was about a vacation, so children shared their most recent trips then discussed ways to show gratitude for opportunities to experience new things. Post-storytime, there is a craft for kids correlating to the book selections, with Legos and coloring pages available for even more entertainment after that.

The LGBT Center’s Storytime room has colorful, comfy velvet cushions to relax on while you listen, though (in my opinion) the highlight is free coffee for parents and Broad Street Market donuts to share. The next LGBT Center of Central PA storytime is scheduled for Saturday, April 5 at 11 a.m.

 

 Natural Fun

Since our quest for early spring flowers hadn’t yet been fulfilled, we headed to the recently redone Crown Point Park in Susquehanna Township. New construction elevated this play place from a basic park to a ninja-tastic obstacle course. The playground is now equipped with a ropes zone, an embankment slide, multi-kid springer, standing spins and cup spinners, accessible swings and a gaga ball pit (bring your own ball). There’s also a reservable covered picnic area that was a popular spot for birthday parties last summer.

If we get March snow, the hill behind the park is decent sledding with a gentle slope. Down the hill, toward the woods, there’s a pile of rocks, logs and sticks that are excellent for imaginative play. During our visit, we constructed a castle, made a pretend fire, “cooked” berries with moss, then pretend-ate our meal out of curved bark bowls.

Across from Crown Point Park is Logan Farm Park, which has undergone a massive vegetative transformation due to invasive vine growth. Young conservationists should know that removing dead tree canopy is beneficial for new forest growth and longevity. They can see evidence of this natural resource maintenance work on the trail. Kids can count newly planted trees, identifying them by the deer resistant coverings on their trunks. Eagle Scouts had a large impact on Logan Farm, with one forging an In & Out Trail offshoot toward Paxton Creek and another Eagle Scout building bluebird boxes then placing them near the trail. As we passed the bluebird boxes, we listened for bird calls and talked about how cute all the baby birds that will be hatching soon will be.

 

Education, Imagination

To learn more about springtime baby animals, education is at your fingertips with the Dauphin County Library System. DCLS is more than just books, hosting an incredible lineup of programs and community events. We participated in a program where kids designed catapults, built castles (with or without dragons), then had an epic cotton ball fight with their creations. Programs that should be on your radar are Superhero Academy (youth) Tween Dungeons and Dragons, and Anime Club (teen).

Grown-ups, the library doesn’t forget about us, hosting multiple book clubs and events to encourage thoughtfulness and community. I joined the Reading the Rainbow Book Club when I first moved here and connected with a wonderful group of people, some of whom have become real friends. The Mamas ‘n Dramas Book Club debuted recently with “The School for Good Mothers,” a novel that’s now on my 25 “Best Books Ever” list. Books On Tap is another recently started club, with folks meeting at Rubber Soul Brewing in Hummelstown on the second Tuesday of each month.

A day that started out so simple, just me and my kiddo enjoying Riverfront Park, transformed into another adventure filled with excitement, learning and discovery. Like the snowdrops and daffodils that cluster together against the still chilly air, we all can grow by exploring and gathering in our communities, sharing space and blooming brightly in collective.

For more information on the LGBT Center of Central PA’s storytime, visit www.centralpalgbtcenter.org/once-upon-a-rainbow-storytime.

Crown Point and Logan Farm Park is located at 2451 Walker Mill Rd., Harrisburg.

To find out more about Dauphin County Library System’s programs and events, visit www.dcls.org/eventscalendar.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Broad Street Market town hall event.

Harrisburg’s Ice & Fire Festival takes place this weekend, showing off all that the city has to offer. Take this time to explore and maybe even stop by our office to take a picture with our Burg ice sculpture. First, catch up on this week’s news, below.

The Broad Street Market was the topic of conversation at a town hall meeting held by the city this week, our online story reported. Residents packed the room at the Historic Harrisburg Association Resource Center to share their ideas and concerns about the market rebuild.

City Council refused to confirm Harrisburg’s appointment of Samuel Sulkosky as the city’s business administrator, our online story reported. Council members said that they had concerns over his employment history and “hostility” towards them.

Erica Rawls, a local realtor, has a passion for helping first-time and underserved homebuyers. In our magazine story, read about the importance of diversity and representation in the field.

Harristown Enterprises has cut the ribbon on a new apartment building in downtown Harrisburg, our online story reported. Walnut Street Commons will offer four units, each with two bedrooms and two baths.

The Head and the Heart will perform in Harrisburg in August as part of the Dauphin County Live Concert Series, our online story reported. The new series revives live music in Riverfront Park, previously hosted by HU Presents.

March events in Harrisburg include everything from music to food to theater. Find a full list of events in our Happenings section and a listing of special one-time events in Community Corner.

Sara Bozich has lots of fun events lined up for this weekend, here.

Small business ownership is already hard, but it’s becoming even more challenging in downtown Harrisburg. In his column, our publisher shares suggestions for how to support local businesses.

Thrive Housing Services provides apartments for young adults experiencing homelessness, our magazine story reported. The organization has recently opened a new apartment building, with another on the way, to address the significant need.

“Voices of the Eighth, Part III: Hallowed Ground” continues the story of Harrisburg’s Old Eighth Ward, a historic Black neighborhood that was demolished. In our review, find out more about Sankofa African American Theatre Company’s production.

W. Justin Carter was a Harrisburg attorney and early leader of the NAACP. In our magazine story, find out more about the social justice advocate and community leader.

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I-83 construction will begin to impact large Harrisburg homeless encampment

An encampment on S. Front Street near I-83.

Work will soon begin on a part of PennDOT’s I-83 expansion project that will impact Harrisburg’s largest homeless encampment.

The encampment, located in south Harrisburg near the PennDOT building, may be subject to loud noises, water runoff and other construction impacts of drilling and construction work from March 3 to 28, the city announced this week.

Harrisburg has long been aware that the encampment would eventually be impacted and likely need to relocate due to PennDOT’s impending construction on the highway and the on-ramp that is near the encampment. For over a year, city officials have told the public that they are working on a long-term plan to address the issue, though no formal plan has been shared.

Unhoused community members have occupied the area along S. Front Street for a long time. However, the encampment grew significantly following the city’s closure of an encampment under the Mulberry Street Bridge in 2023. Additionally, in recent years, Harrisburg has called for unhoused people to move out of encampments along the Capital Area Greenbelt and Riverfront Park.

According to Harrisburg Communications Director Mischelle Moyer, there are over 100 people in the encampment.

On Friday afternoon, one woman said that has lived at the PennDOT encampment for a year, having moved there after the city made her leave Riverfront Park, where she previously stayed in her tent. She’s aware that this encampment will need to vacate at some point, but said that the city hasn’t shared any information with her community. As the self-described “camp mom,” she said she is in the know on the happenings of the encampment, but said that, as far as she knows, everyone is in the dark.

They were made aware about the drilling, she said, but only found out the date that it would begin yesterday. As far as future construction or long-term plans go–she has heard nothing from city or PennDOT officials, she said.

“We just need to know when we have to be out and where we have to go,” she said. “We want answers.”

Moyer said that the drilling in south Harrisburg is the start of phase one of construction on I-83 that will impact the encampment. She said that officials have visited the encampment to inform people of the upcoming work.

“State, county and city representatives have visited the encampment multiple times to ensure the first phases of this project are as unintrusive as possible to our unsheltered community,” Moyer said.

On Friday, several people at the encampment told TheBurg that they had not seen or spoken with city officials.

Moyer said that she believes only about three people will need to move their dwellings as a result of the drilling construction and noted that nonprofit groups are already helping them do that.

Additionally, the construction could produce loud noise in the area, water run-off, freeze hazards and standing water. The city is offering earplugs to people and sharing information on local shelters where people can go. The Labre Mental Health Clinic, 2600 N. Front St. offers shelter Tuesday and Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., and the McCormick Riverfront Library is open to the public Monday through Saturday, the city noted.

“Officials and the engineering firm spoke directly with homeless individuals who will be the most affected by the work, i.e. those who must shift their shelter because they are located in designated reconstruction space,” Moyer said. “These same officials were out twice to mark specific areas affected by the drilling with white and pink spray paint. So the residents of the encampment have known well in advance what will be happening where.”

Moyer said that she does not know when PennDOT’s next phase of construction will take place or how it will affect the unhoused.

PennDOT was not able to provide immediate comment on the construction.

“At some point, the entire encampment will be affected,” Moyer said. “However, the city has been working diligently with the county and the state to come up with a viable solution that is beneficial to everyone involved.”

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At packed town hall, Harrisburg residents hear plans, voice concerns for Broad Street Market restoration

An overflow crowd packed into a meeting about the Broad Street Market on Thursday night at the Historic Harrisburg Association Resource Center.

Vendor Tito Tep told a town hall on restoration of the fire-damaged Broad Street Market that his fellow vendors are ready to “march through this and hang in there.”

“We definitely want the historical specs – the windows, the doors, etc., etc. – but we also want to modernize the facility,” he said. “I’ve been there for a long time, and it’s hot. It’s 110 degrees cooking in there in the summer. In the wintertime, sometimes it’s 45 degrees and the vendors are working in there, trying to serve the community.”

Plans for restoring the Broad Street Market’s brick building, half of it destroyed by fire on July 10, 2023, remain top priority for the city agenda and for upgrades to the overall market space, city officials said at Thursday night’s meeting.

In the standing-room-only audience of about 90 people, vendors, residents and Midtown businesspeople said they want more input into those plans for vendor space, dining areas, historic windows, and the proposed enclosure bridging the brick and stone buildings. The meeting was held at the Historic Harrisburg Association Resource Center, across the street from the market.

Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams addressed residents at the meeting.

City officials constantly stressed that plans are in their early stages. Promising to “making it happen,” Mayor Wanda Williams said she was committed to transparency and was there to listen to the community.

“My administration is fully committed to see the brick building restored and thriving once again,” she said. “That is our first and foremost priority. We are not moving forward with any other plans until we ensure that the heart of this market is rebuilt stronger and safer than ever.”

Delays in launching reconstruction were caused, in part, by the city insurer’s extended investigation of the fire’s cause, which kept the city from taking control of the building until December 2023, said Harrisburg Fire Chief Brian Enterline. Endemic procurement delays and silence to the initial call for contractors’ bids exacerbated the problem, he said.

Plans for the restored brick building from York-based Murphy & Diffenhafer Architects suggested dining areas shifted to the east side and a new mezzanine for patron seating on the west. Modular stalls could be adapted to accommodate the comings and goings of large, medium, and small vendors, said architect Rebecca McCormick.

Mechanical, electrical, plumbing, safety, security and fire suppression systems will be updated. The aging and fire-damaged mortar is being analyzed to determine best treatments to “preserve the longevity of the building,” McCormick said.

The exterior “will be preserved to look like the historic building,” McCormick said.

Replacement windows and doors will retain their historic appearance but be modernized for energy efficiency, although the building’s distinctive clerestory windows could not be replicated faithfully because “it is nearly impossible to get a fully divided light, like you had historically, on an insulated window, so there’ll be, probably, a simulated divided light,” she said.

An audience member pushed back against cutting corners on historical accuracy.

“It’s not that it doesn’t exist,” she said. “It’s just that it costs more.”

Some in the crowd also disputed the need for the proposed central pavilion to enclose and shade the market’s courtyard, suggesting trees or a pergola.

Harrisburg Facilities Director David Baker noted that an enclosure could provide more than space for additional vendors.

“We’d be remiss not to look at this as an opportunity for community space,” said Baker, offering ideas for rentals, family gatherings or weddings that could benefit vendors providing catering. Such rental options, he added, would be determined by the Broad Street Market Alliance board.

“There is so much opportunity that we could utilize a middle space like this for, because we don’t have a particular building set in stone,” he said. “We don’t have a particular look set in stone. It’s a placeholder for possibility.”

Attendees asked for improved communications and public avenues for input.

“How will community input be taken in, and how will we know about what’s going on with the market plan?” asked nearby resident Paul Gellerman.

Another attendee noted that stakeholders learn about developments from news stories.

“We’re made aware of things that are happening but aren’t necessarily given time to give feedback or have that conversation,” she said.

Baker repeated that vendors could take their thoughts and concerns to Tep, who would be a liaison to city officials. Tep, well-received by the crowd, said that vendors have been in touch with Baker and have seen the architect’s plans. He called the prospects for revitalization “exciting.”

Baker said that a 13-member committee meets regularly, not in public, to discuss market progress. After the meeting, Williams told reporters that she welcomes public involvement.

“I wish they would have had input sooner, really,” she said. “I wish they would have come to me and had input. I’ve always stated that I would be available to anyone who had concerns about any issues within the city of Harrisburg.”

Williams said that she doesn’t want “committee on top of committee of committee on top of committee telling us what we need to do, how to do it, when to do it.”

“I’m the CEO of the city of Harrisburg, and we don’t need 36 voices telling us what we need to do,” she said. “We just need to comprise it of 13 people. Now, if you want to add two or three people from the meeting tonight, I have no problem with that, but no one has stood up to say they were interested in being on that committee. If you have the names, please give them to me, and I don’t have any problem putting them on that committee.”

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Indie band The Head and The Heart return to Riverfront Park with revived summer concert series

A well-known indie-folk band will take the stage in Riverfront Park this summer, the first show in a revived outdoor concert series.

The Head and The Heart is slated to perform on Saturday, Aug. 2, as part of the Dauphin County Live Concert Series, with special guests Wilderado and Marfa.

“It’s a great day for Harrisburg to have concerts back on the riverfront,” said Dave Niedbalski of promoter/producer Grand Rising Curations. “The Head and The Heart return to town after their previously sold-out performance.”

The band played the Riverfront Park stage in 2023 as part of the previous HU Presents summer concert series. They’re touring in support of “Aperture,” the band’s sixth album.

Earlier this month, the Dauphin County commissioners allotted $250,000 in county tourism dollars to revive the concert series, which is slated for the weekend of Aug. 1 to 3.

“We are beyond excited to welcome The Head and The Heart to kick off the Dauphin County Live Concert Series,” said series organizer Frank Schofield. “This series is about bringing world-class live music to our community and attract people from all over to Harrisburg.”

According to Schofield, more concerts will be announced to fill out the weekend of live music.

Tickets for The Head and The Heart go on sale Friday, March 7, at 10 a.m. Visit this link to sign up for pre-sale access. For more information on Grand Rising Creations, visit their website.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

 

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA!

 

What you’ll find ⤵️

For something new: Benaiah’s Wood Fired Kitchen reopens tonight Worth noting: Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra POPS features A Night at the Movies: Spaced Out! Saturday and Sunday. Things on my agenda this weekend: A kid’s bday party; snow tubing

For your weekend planning

Below are more options for your weekend.

A Look Ahead

Jon Taffer | VIBE | Harrisburg Regional Chamber

  1. Grab your (exclusive discounted) tickets to Harrisburg Regional Chamber’s VIBE featuring Jon Taffer on April 29
  2. Check out the full Strawberry Square Music Series lineup here
  3. Pet owner? Harrisburg has got you.
  4. Grab tickets for the food event that feeds people — April 6 in Harrisburg!
  5. Are you on my email list?
  6. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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The Last Ward: In a few years, the Harrisburg State Hospital site will be radically transformed

Photo courtesy of Phil Thomas

John Pufnak got a call from city police. He was fire marshal for Harrisburg State Hospital, so somebody wanted him to know that a patient was directing traffic at the busy intersection of Cameron and Maclay streets.

“The cop said he was doing a darn good job,” Pufnak remembers.

Harrisburg State Hospital hasn’t housed a patient since 2006, but those who tell the story of the historic, 300-acre campus always come back to the people.

By 2029, 400 or 500 people will return to the campus—state employees resettled in shiny new laboratories where they will conduct public health and food safety testing, plant disease diagnostics, air- and water-quality tests, and criminal justice investigations.

The Pennsylvania Department of General Services plans to restore four historic State Hospital buildings and demolish the rest to make way for two gleaming labs. The site’s friends acquiesce to progress while mourning the loss and sharing tales of love, pain and unauthorized use of fire extinguishers.

 

Family

The staff tagged Pufnak with the affectionate nickname “Fire Marshal Bill,” from Jim Carrey’s “In Living Color” character.

“It was a family,” said Pufnak, of Lower Paxton Township, now retired. “No matter what department you were in, it was that close. It wasn’t like working for a company. You worked with everybody.”

Naturally, there were days when people acted up. Pufnak got the call when a patient turned a water-pressure fire extinguisher on the nurses’ station, giving everyone there a heavy-duty super-soaking.

“They weren’t happy, but all I could do was replace the fire extinguisher,” Pufnak said with a laugh.

Today, Pufnak leads a group of former employees that convenes to share memories. He has toured the closed buildings, lamenting their deterioration caused by time and vandals.

“If our nurses could see this, they would cry,” he said. “These were more than their patients. They were their kids. Most of them said, ‘These are our kids.’ That’s how close these people were.”

 

A Site Transformed

The state needed a modern, adaptable replacement for its scattered laboratories used by the departments of Health, Agriculture, Environmental Protection and Conservation and Natural Resources, said DGS spokesperson Eric Veronikis. Pennsylvania State Police forensics, serving federal, state, and local law enforcement statewide, also needed a centralized crime lab.

Among the state-owned sites explored, the Harrisburg State Hospital grounds offered a chance to “repurpose a commonwealth-owned property.” By consolidating research capabilities, the project eliminates the costs of five different acquisition and construction processes, which allows the state to invest more in construction of a higher-quality building, Veronikis said.

Construction on the $325 million, 300,000-square-foot joint laboratory is slated to begin in early 2026. Phase 2, including the PSP lab and historic restorations, begins later in 2026, and all phases conclude around 2029.

DGS will demolish 35 hospital buildings, but remnants will linger in preservation of the Administration Building, Chapel, Dixmont Cottage and Dix Museum. All will be repurposed for administrative, training and meeting spaces for the joint-laboratory agencies.

 

Modern Use

The Pennsylvania State Lunatic Hospital was founded in 1851, in an age of reform, when “personal problems became social problems,” and states devoted institutions to the specific needs of people who were mentally ill, deaf and blind, or “feebleminded,” said retired Millersville University history professor Dennis Downey.

The Pennsylvania state legislature founded its Harrisburg hospital on the “compassionate care” principles advocated by reformer Dorothea Dix. She left her imprint on Harrisburg State Hospital through therapeutic pursuits for patients. Bowling alley. Reading rooms. The wondrous image-projection lamps known as “magic lanterns.”

But in time, ideas of incarceration as a waystation toward rehabilitation evolved into “more coercive warehousing of people,” Downey said. Harrisburg State Hospital kept growing, but overcrowding was always a problem, and deinstitutionalization became one of the solutions.

And then, he said, the question became, “What do you do with these large institutions once you close them?”

In the case of Harrisburg State Hospital, DGS “sought and received input from officials, organizations and other stakeholders with a demonstrated historic preservation interest in the former Harrisburg State Hospital site,” Veronikis said. The buildings saved from demolition were selected for their historical significance, existing condition and suitability for rehabilitation into modern use.

I asked Downey: Is something lost to history when only a partial site is preserved?

“That’s a subject for broad community discussion,” he said. “Not any one person or one entity has an answer. How can it be meaningfully used to not only preserve history and the memory of the people but also meet current needs?”

 

The Grounds

As Historic Harrisburg Association Board President Jeb Stuart once noted, the Harrisburg State Hospital campus “retains its original topography and park-like setting, a place of profound beauty . . . (that) reinforces the hospital’s historic significance as a place meant to uplift the spirits of those who lived and worked there.”

The redesigned complex will “embrace the landscape,” with a new, natural green area of native trees and meadow plantings to complement the arboretum and grounds, said Veronikis.

Pufnak so rarely used his state vehicle assigned for getting around campus that he got a “use it or lose it” lecture from the garage supervisor. But Pufnak preferred strolling the grounds. It was where patients held picnics, the Patton arboretum blossomed every spring, and the portion of the Capital Area Greenbelt crossing Asylum Run hearkened back to the early 20th-century City Beautiful movement plan for a parkway ringing the city.

The Greenbelt and arboretum will remain open and accessible “throughout the project,” Veronikis said. At completion, additional walking paths will be accessible from the Greenbelt. The ballfield visible from Cameron Street and open to local leagues, currently including cricket, softball and volleyball, will also remain available and “as it is for the foreseeable future,” he said.

 

City on the Hill

Urban explorer Phil Thomas sees the story of Harrisburg State Hospital in the details. Nicer trim in the men’s wards than the supposedly identical women’s wards. Therapeutic heat lamps left in a dark corner. Tile-walled rooms for water therapy. Isolation rooms for agitated patients. Storage cabinets still marked, “Leather restraints.” Books and VHS tapes in the rooms.

Thomas, of Hanover, is an amateur photographer who has been drawn to HSH since it closed for residents. On his own time, and his own dime, he documented the site’s architecture, history and deterioration for his “City on the Hill” website and Facebook page (hsh.thomas-industriesinc.com).

Although every project, alteration and closing came down to money, Thomas believes, “for the most part, the people wanted to do good. They wanted to help. Harrisburg was a home for the employees and the patients. I’ve heard from former employees who said HSH stands for ‘home sweet home.’”

Thomas worried that further neglect could have caused the loss of structures to fire—as seen just this past December—or collapse. He credits DGS for going “above and beyond” to preserve four landmark buildings when leveling the whole site would have been cheaper and easier.

“Those are staying, and they’re staying mostly original, which is great and will definitely lend itself better to history and people becoming interested in the place than if it was just a plaque in the yard,” he said.

 

Facing History

Why preserve the history of American institutionalization?

“History is something that happens to people,” said Downey, quoting Arnold Toynbee and C. Vann Woodward. “We have to remember that history is not some dead carcass of facts. It’s something that happens to people.”

To understand where we are today, we have to understand where we came from, he added.

“It’s not just memories but having tangible reminders,” he said. “These sites can serve a public good in reminding us that many of the challenges and problems that we face today have a deep, rich and complex history behind them. A key is to reuse at least some portion of the sites, not only as a memorial but as a way to instruct the public and also lawmakers who won’t know anything about this.”

Veronikis notes that stakeholder suggestions for memorializing the site’s history “have been incorporated into the project design as much as possible,” including plans for an educational memorial marker and incorporating salvaged architectural features into the landscaping.

Thomas pictures a sculpture made from the convalescent building’s copper cupola. His friend Pufnak is glad that the site’s key buildings will remain in state hands and restored for use. He has asked the architects to incorporate their designs with artifacts from the original buildings.

And, Pufnak says, he has a salvaged memento of his own. It’s a water-pressure fire extinguisher, just like the one that a patient turned on the nurses one soggy day.

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