Harrisburg City Council and the administration are once again at odds over the Broad Street Market, this time over an emergency decree that helped jumpstart the stalled reconstruction of the brick building.
On Monday, three council members co-signed a letter questioning the July 23 decree, in which the city declared a health emergency, due to a report of rats inside the burned-out building.
“This declaration, made without prior public notice, has raised significant questions among the Council and our constituents, particularly regarding transparency and process,” states the letter signed by council President Danielle Bowers and members Lamont Jones and Jocelyn Rawls. “We believe the manner in which this emergency was handled may have circumvented City Council’s fiduciary responsibilities . . .”
The letter then lists seven questions that address such issues as when the administration first heard of the presence of rats, the specific threats to public health, how contracts were approved to mitigate the issue and why council was not asked to vote on specific contractors.
The market’s brick building partially burned down and was closed in a July 2023 fire. The historic building sat untouched for over a year until the emergency declaration, which launched a series of contracts to clean out the interior, perform shoring-up work and conduct lead abatement, among other projects, all performed without council approval.
In response to council members’ letter, the administration late Monday issued its own statement asking “members of Harrisburg City Council to stop coming up with ways to delay construction.”
“I find it disheartening that the same three members of Council who voted against starting work on the market in May, are continuing to do what they can to delay construction,” stated Mayor Wanda Williams. “The ability to expeditiously declare a State of Emergency at the site of the Market’s Brick Building allowed us to not only quickly address the rat issue, but start construction on a building City of Harrisburg residents wanted to start months ago.”
In her response, Williams did not say if the administration would, or would not, answer council members’ specific questions, but stated that she had the legal right, under the commonwealth’s Third Class City Code, to declare the emergency and thus suspend standard bidding rules.
In May, council rejected the first major contract relating to the market rebuild, a construction manager, before reconsidering and narrowly approving the hiring of Harrisburg-based Alexander Building Construction. It will need to approve many additional vendors, including a project architect and engineer.
Click this link to read the full text of City Council’s letter: Broad Street Market – Site Emergency Letter r
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