In the Family: How youth mental health impacts the adult workforce

A mental health crisis among America’s children might not seem like a workplace issue at first glance.

But if your workplace is typical, about 40% of your colleagues are working parents of children under age 18. And as any working parent knows, when your child is not well, the stress and worry of home and family life often come into work with you.

About 1 in 6 children in the U.S. have a mental health issue, such as anxiety, depression, or attention and behavior disorders. If left untreated, the consequences of these issues can range from academic or social struggles to substance abuse or self-harm.

For parents, the health and well-being of a child can affect their own health and well-being – and that can impact their job performance. A 2021 survey of more than 3,000 working parents in the U.S. found:

  • 53% of working parents have missed work at least once a month to deal with a child’s mental health issues.
  • 54% of working parents interrupted their work to address a child’s mental health needs.
  • Working parents under age 40 say they are more likely to choose employers based on access to mental health care benefits and resources.
  • While 85% of working parents think it’s a good idea to discuss children’s mental health, fewer than 1 in 4 have talked to their managers, human resources department or colleagues about their children’s struggles.

That last point is an important one to Karie Batzler, director of behavioral health at Capital Blue Cross.

“We all know issues at home don’t just switch off once we step into the workplace, but we often see a reluctance to talk about how that stress can carry over,” Batzler says. “Employers can play an important role in starting a dialogue around mental wellness, whether it impacts employees or their family members, and employers can help connect their employees to resources that can help.”

Capital Blue Cross, for example, offers resources for both its own employees and its members, including:

  • behavioral health toolkit that employer groups can use to foster a more supportive work environment.
  • A devoted mental health and wellness page on Capital’s website.
  • telehealth resource that goes beyond physical healthcare by offering fast and convenient access to psychologists, psychiatrists and other licensed behavioral health professionals.
  • A mobile app that helps users improve their mental wellness and better address anxiety, depression, and other mental health needs.

Capital also supports its employees through an employee assistance program and volunteer-led employee resource groups (ERGs) that foster dialogue and a sense of connection among employees who share common interests, backgrounds, or demographic characteristics.

No matter the path forward for your company, it can all begin with a simple conversation, according to Batzler.

“Often times, it can go a long way just to tell someone, ‘I’m sorry to hear about what you’re dealing with and please let me know how I can help,’” Batzler said. “Once a dialogue begins, it can pave the way toward seeking help and finding resources to support the employee and their family.”

(For more health and wellness news and information that can benefit your business and employees, visit thinkcapitalbluecross.com.)

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Taylor Chip cookies, produce and homemade chocolate vendors to join Broad Street Market

Broad Street Market temporary structure

Three sweet and fresh new vendors will join the Broad Street Market in the coming weeks. 

Market officials shared on Monday that cookie company Taylor Chip, produce and flower grower Diaspora, and local chocolatier Cherished Treasures will join seven other vendors in the market’s temporary tent structure. 

“The Broad Street Market is thrilled to welcome these three new vendors to the market community, each of whom brings with them a diverse array of products with a loyal following,” said Eric Hagarty, chair of the market’s board. “We are excited for their existing customers to have greater access to their products and for others to have the opportunity to join their legions of fans.” 

Intercourse, Pa.-based Taylor Chip offers its signature big and gooey cookies, as well as coffee and ice cream, at four existing locations in Lancaster County, York and inside the Hershey Fresh Market. 

Cherished Treasures is a family-run business based in Williamstown, Pa., that makes homemade chocolate, candies and snacks.  

According to the market, Diaspora is based in Myerstown, Pa., and has appeared as a pop-up vendor at the market in the past.  

The three new vendors will fill the final open spaces in the temporary tent, bringing the number of vendors to 10. The structure is located across from the market and was built to house vendors displaced by a July fire in the market’s brick building. About two dozen vendors operated in the brick building at the time of the fire, but only seven chose to re-open in the temporary location. 

Market officials have shared that the temporary tent is slated to open by the end of April or early May. 

The market received many applications from businesses looking to secure a spot in the new structure, and the selection process was highly competitive, according to officials. Applicants who were not selected will have the opportunity to be considered for future permanent positions in the market and for opportunities to serve as pop-up vendors, the market shared. 

 

For more information and updates about the Broad Street Market, visit the city’s website or the market’s site. 

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Local officials cut the ribbon on five new affordable townhomes in Harrisburg.

Have you picked up our April edition of the magazine yet? If not, what are you waiting for? This month features lots of great home and garden stories for the spring. Find a few of those stories, along with all of our daily news coverage from this week, below. 

Donate Life Month is celebrated in April to bring awareness to the need for organ donation. In our magazine story, read the story of two neighbors who became connected through a life-saving donation. 

Gardening in the Harrisburg area may begin to look a little different as temperatures warm. In our magazine story, read about how the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s updated Plant Hardiness Zone Map may affect growing locally. 

Home sales in the Harrisburg area were mostly steady while prices rose last month. In our online story, find the specific sales data for Dauphin, Cumberland and Perry counties. 

Homeless encampments along the riverfront in Harrisburg were told by the city to move on, our online story reported. Occupants felt uncertain of where to go next. 

Jessica Malloy loves getting to make people happy through her flower business, our magazine story reported. In the past several years, she has opened Palmyra Greenhouse, along with a traveling flower truck and published a book. 

Kitchen and bath trends are all about modern, sleek and clean designs. In our magazine story, find out more about the latest innovations shaping home remodeling trends. 

Lauren Castillo, a Harrisburg author and illustrator, released her new picture book, “Just Like Millie” this week, our online story reported. The book includes illustrations of some of her favorite Harrisburg places. 

Sara Bozich has a long list of ideas for how to spend your weekend. Find her suggestions, here. 

Tri County Housing, a Harrisburg-based organization, cut the ribbon on five new affordable townhomes in Allison Hill, our online story reported. The homes will be sold to lower-income residents with the goal of providing more homeownership opportunities for city residents. 

“Wicked Little Letters” tells a hilarious but true story from early 1900s Britain, all beginning with a letter. The movie plays at Midtown Cinema this month. Read our review, here. 

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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: Showdown In Chocolatetown Chili Cook-Off; Dills Celtic Festival at historic Dills Tavern Worth noting: I’m really excited about our Plants + Pints lineup for Sunday! Tickets are just $20 and benefit Downtown Daily Bread. Read what else it includes. Things on my agenda this weekend: Youth baseball has entered the chat: Opening day. Maddie & Tae. Plants + Pints. Taking Monday off to tend to my houseplants.

For your weekend planning

  • Plants + Pints tickets are on sale! 30+ vegan/vegetarian vendors — Just $20 benefiting Downtown Daily Bread!
  • See what else you missed on the blog

Below are more options for your weekend.

A Look Ahead

  1. SoMa Pop-Ups return April 18-19 with a “Brunch for Happy Hour” theme – Open to the public!
  2. The SoMa Block Party series kicks off May 23
  3. You can now sponsor the Weekend Roundup! Ask me how! 
  4. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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Tri County Housing cuts the ribbon on new affordable homes in Allison Hill

Tri County Housing and local officials cut the ribbon on five new affordable homes.

Several Harrisburg families will soon receive the keys to newly built affordable homes. 

On Wednesday, Harrisburg nonprofit Tri County Housing cut the ribbon on five new townhomes in Allison Hill, which will benefit lower-income residents.  

“We are turning blight into something right,” said Mayor Wanda Williams, who spoke at the event. “When we can provide safe spaces for people to live, people take ownership of that block. That is how we turn this city around.” 

The five attached houses are located on the 200-block of Hummel Street. Each home is about 1,600 square feet, features three bedrooms, one-and-a-half baths, and a full basement. They are listed for $124,900 to $126,900 each, and three of the five are currently under contract. 

According to Gary Lenker, executive director of Tri County Housing, the organization began acquiring the blighted properties that previously stood at the location in 2015 and demolished them.  

Five new townhomes on the 200-block of Hummel Street.

The new homes add to the five other renovated homes across the street that the organization completed around two years ago.  

Lenker believes that the homeownership opportunity for residents will provide them with “stability and security.” 

Tri County Housing also provides monthly first-time homebuyer workshops, which have become well attended, Lenker said.  

The about $1.3 million project was funded using money from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency (PHFA), the state’s Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP), and the state’s share of federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding, among other sources.  

Inside one of the newly built townhomes on Hummel Street.

Tri County Housing has also proposed constructing five affordable single-family townhomes on an overgrown lot on the 2100-block of N. 4th Street. Each 1,500-square-foot home would include three bedrooms and one-and-a-half baths. 

According to Lenker, this would be Tri County’s first project in Harrisburg outside of Allison Hill, where most of their construction has taken place. 

“We’d like to see this duplicated throughout the city,” Williams said at Wednesday’s ribbon cutting. 

For more information about Tri County Housing, visit their website. 

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Harrisburg area home sales steady, prices up, says latest report

A house for sale in Harrisburg

Harrisburg-area home sales were mostly steady while the median price rose significantly in March, according to the latest report on previously owned houses.

For the three-county area, sales totaled 466 homes compared to 454 in the year-ago period, while the median sales price grew to $272,750 from $246,500, said the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR).

In Dauphin County, 226 homes sold, a decrease of one sale, as the median price increased to $245,000 versus $222,500 in March 2023, GHAR said.

Cumberland County totaled 213 home sales, up from 192 a year ago, as the median price rose to $323,000 compared to $287,450 the prior March, GHAR stated.

In Perry County, 28 homes sold in March versus 35 in the year-ago period, as the median price increased to $245,000 from $230,000, according to GHAR.

The pace of home sales was flat at 33 days, the same as in March 2023, GHAR said.

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Harrisburg author, illustrator releases new children’s book featuring familiar city locations

On the pages of a new children’s picture book, local readers may recognize some familiar places. 

Harrisburg artist and author Lauren Castillo released her new book, “Just Like Millie,” on Tuesday, which features illustrated scenes from the city she calls home. 

Castillo, a Caldecott Honoree, has released several of her own children’s books through the years and has illustrated many for other authors, but her new book is the first that is set in Harrisburg.  

“I’d been itching to place one of my stories in Harrisburg,” she said. “This book was the perfect excuse to feature Harrisburg—the landmarks people know. The book is filled with Easter eggs.” 

Lauren Castillo

“Just Like Millie” tells the story of a shy young girl who is overwhelmed by making friends in a new city. Things change when the girl meets Millie, a rescue dog, who helps her come out of her shell and feel more comfortable meeting new people.  

Throughout the book, the girl, her mom and Millie are pictured in familiar Harrisburg settings like inside Midtown Scholar Bookstore, outside of the Broad Street Market and near Elementary Coffee Co. and Raising the Bar bakery. A Sprocket Mural Works mural is also seen in the background of one page, and the characters are pictured living in a townhome on Green Street. Readers may also see a few friendly faces they recognize as illustrations. 

Castillo said that she has been exploring the city and sketching locations for the book for the past several years in anticipation of featuring Harrisburg in print.  

Her inspiration for the story came from interactions with her friend’s very shy, introverted son who would light up when his dog was by his side. 

“It was that support of his furry buddy that pulled him out of his shell,” she said.  

Castillo also realized that she too was most social when she would take her dogs for a walk. In fact, in the book, Millie is based on her beloved dog, Peanut, who passed away, and another dog in the book is modeled after her other late pup, Keiko. Castillo and her wife have since rescued a new dog. 

Castillo hopes that the book inspires children to step out of their comfort zones and even helps them relate the story to their own relationships with their pets. Castillo also loved the idea of showcasing Harrisburg as a great place to raise a family, as she and her wife are expecting a baby boy in a month and hope to raise him in the city.

On Saturday, April 27, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., Castillo will host a book reading and signing event at Midtown Scholar in conjunction with Independent Bookstore Day. And for those inspired by the story of Millie the pup, Nirvana Animal Rescue will be onsite for the event with dogs and puppies available for adoption.  

“It should be a fun morning,” Castillo said.  

“Just Like Millie” is now available to purchase anywhere that books are sold. For more information about Lauren Castillo, visit her website.  

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Where to Now? Told to leave Riverfront Park, encampment occupants wonder what comes next

Bags are loaded into a Starfish Ministries van.

“Everybody wants us to go to the tent city, where they have too many problems,” said Dan.

Dan was referring to the sprawling homeless encampment near the PennDOT building in south Harrisburg. He spoke as he lugged his belongings from a location upriver to a waiting van provided by Starfish Ministries, which offers support to homeless individuals in Harrisburg.

Along the Susquehanna River, bright yellow field mustard brightened the otherwise dreary day, but it didn’t brighten the mood. On Friday, the city shut down several small encampments in Riverfront Park, including one that took root last fall, located on the overlook behind the old Waterworks building.

I’ve covered three different encampment relocations. The overwhelming air is of resignation, with frustration and fear second. Asking residents if they are in mood to talk, I feel like I’m intruding on a somber experience.

“Sometimes, you don’t have any control of what you can stop,” Jose said.

He, Kiki and I walked along the water. They were on their way to Downtown Daily Bread, a kitchen and shelter in downtown Harrisburg. They had been in the park for just a week and said they might work their way down to the large encampment near the PennDOT building, but needed a tent.

“You can’t blame people for staying in abandoned buildings,” Kiki said. “They want to get out of the cold, or it might rain or snow… Just to have somewhere safe they can lay their head sleeping outside.”

Ray sat on a park bench with his bike and earthly belongings bagged up all around him. He didn’t want to go to the PennDOT encampment because it’s not safe, he said. Here, a mile upriver, at least “there’s lights and cameras,” he added.

Homelessness is dangerous. The small encampment in Riverfront Park provided a mini-camp— fewer people, fewer problems. Dan described the encampment where he’s lived for nine months as peaceful.

“That’s why we stay in the light,” Kiki said. “We stay where the police are.”

They pointed out that Riverfront Park is convenient to Downtown Daily Bread, three-quarters of a mile away, whereas the PennDOT encampment is a 1½-mile walk. They showed me an outlet just below the “Waiting” sculpture—the man on a bench reading a newspaper at Kunkel Plaza—where they charged their phones, a rare street amenity.

“The one thing they need is a safe place to go,” said Lisa Kessler-Peters, unsheltered services program manager at Christian Churches United, who echoed the encampment residents’ notion of the benefits of lighting and cameras. The PennDOT camp is “pitch black,” she said.

When asked how she thought those experiencing homelessness could be better served, Kiki suggested some type of small storage locker to securely store their belongings.

“If they will help us more, it would be a little easier,” she said. “We won’t be so upset every time they make us move.”

Both Kiki and Jose acknowledge the help they do receive in their ability to get showers nearly every day at Downtown Daily Bread, and find suitable, clean clothing from donations. They both take pride in their appearance. By looking put-together, they told me, most people don’t realize that they are homeless.

Where will everyone go? Ray said that his homelessness and coinciding criminal record of trespassing make it hard for him to rent. He said that he’s not going anywhere, so his record will likely get longer.

Dan told me that he’s grateful for the moving help and that he’s heading across the river.

“These are good people,” said John Brassel, as he hiked Dan’s belongings into the Starfish Ministries’ van. “It’s just an unfortunate situation.”

Kiki, Jose and I parted company as they continued toward Downtown Daily Bread, and I walked to my car on City Island. Where they will go is yet to be determined.

“I wouldn’t wish this on my enemy,” Kiki said.

In this story, we used only first names as individuals living on the street typically request that their full names not be used.

For more information on Starfish Ministries, visit www.starfishministries.org.
For more information on Downtown Daily Bread, visit www.downtowndailybread.org.

Susan Ryder has covered several other homeless encampment removals for TheBurg. Click here and here to read her prior stories on this issue.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Broad Street Market

It’s been quite the washout week here in Harrisburg. Despite the rain, we’ve been here to cover the news. While you dry off, catch up on any of our coverage that you may have missed, below.  

April will bring plenty of great concerts to the Harrisburg area this month. Click here to find our live music columnist’s top show picks.  

The Broad Street Market received a donation from Hornung’s LED Lighting, which installed new lighting fixtures in the market’s stone building, our online story reported. The new high-efficiency LED lighting replaces outdated fixtures in the building, cutting down on electric costs.  

Dauphin County announced that it is accepting applications for grant money to support affordable housing development and supportive community services. In our online story, read about who qualifies for funding. 

Gamut Theatre’s Young Acting Company will perform “Cinderella,” with a new twist on the classic tale, our magazine story reported. The show will debut on April 12.  

Harrisburg University announced that masked country singer Orville Peck will come to the city in July, our online story reported. The singer will perform as part of HU’s Summer Concert Series.  

Harristown Development Corp. is celebrating its 50th anniversary. In our magazine story, Harristown officials reflect on the redevelopment work that they’ve accomplished downtown. 

Market Square Presbyterian Church recently announced that Korean-born New York artist SoHyun Bae will display her painting series at the church in April, our online story reported. The exhibit coincides with the church’s 50th anniversary of its Korean congregation.   

The “P” word, parking, seems to be of chief concern to many people in Harrisburg, says our publisher. In his column, he shares his thoughts on the city’s parking minimums for construction projects and how they hinder the development of badly needed housing. 

Our publisher introduces the home and garden-focused April issue of the magazine, here. In his publisher’s note, he shares how TheBurg is often used as an agricultural product. 

Sara Bozich has found all the best events happening in the Harrisburg area this weekend and compiled them, here. 

The temporary tent structure for Broad Street Market vendors has space for three new businesses, our online story reported. Additionally, seven former brick building vendors that were displaced by the July fire, will open in the space as well.  

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Dauphin County accepting grant applications from affordable housing developers, support services

Dauphin County Administration Building

Local affordable housing projects have a chance to receive funding, thanks to a county initiative.

Dauphin County announced on Thursday that it is accepting applications for grant money to support affordable housing development and supportive community services. 

Through the county, organizations can now apply for federal COVID-relief HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME)–American Rescue Plan Act (ARP) funding to construct affordable rental housing or help programs assisting tenants who are homeless, at risk of homelessness or fleeing domestic violence, human trafficking or other dangers. 

The county has about $1.6 million available for construction projects and about $375,000 for supportive services. Eligible applicants include for-profit developers, nonprofit developers and county-designated Community Housing Development Organizations (CHDOs) acting as owners, developers and/or sponsors. 

“The lack of affordable housing is having a ripple effect across the region, leading to a growing homeless population and the resultant impacts on physical and behavioral health, family stability, crime, education, employment and more,” said county Board of Commissioners Chair George Hartwick. “These grants represent a compassionate and fiscally responsible effort to invest in safe shelter and lift up those who are in danger of losing their home or already living on the streets.”    

Applications for the funding are due by May 10 at 4 p.m. 

DCED will hold a Technical Assistance Webinar for applicants on April 17 at 1 p.m. To sign up, please email Debra Laudenslager at [email protected].  

To apply for the HOME-ARP funding, click here. For more information, visit the county’s website.  

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