Home sales fell, prices held steady in May in Harrisburg area, says report

A house for sale in Harrisburg

Home sales slumped but prices held firm in May in the Harrisburg area, according to the latest report on previously owned houses.

For the three-county region, 533 houses sold in May compared to 670 in May 2022, as the median sales prices rose slightly to $264,000 from $260,000, according to the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR).

In Dauphin County, 258 homes sold, a decline from 320 in the year-ago period, as the median sales price was nearly steady at $234,200, GHAR said.

It was a similar story in Cumberland County, where sales totaled 240 housing units compared to 322 a year ago, while the median price rose a bit to $299,950 from $291,000 in May 2022, according to GHAR.

Perry County saw 31 home sales, a gain of five from a year ago, as the median sales price dipped to $217,129 compared to $243,000 the prior May, stated GHAR.

The pace of sales slowed, as the “average days on market” rose to 25 days versus 16 days in May 2022, GHAR reported.

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Bob’s Art Blog: Better Nate than Lever

Behind the Scenes at the AAH

How many art assistants do you know that now have two blogs written about them? Years ago, my editor surprised me with christening my “art musings,” calling them Bob’s Art Blog. The first one was titled “Illustrated Man,” all about Nate Foster, gallery assistant and art instructor at the Art Association of Harrisburg who operated like a stealth missile behind the scenes.

Flash forward to spring 2023 and Nate has his day as guest curator at the esteemed institution for a stellar show in the upstairs gallery entitled, “Correlated Cultivations.” As viewed through the lens of artists Young Won, Earle Rock and Marina Radanovic, curator Foster cultivates more than just a passing-glance correlation by doing some heavy lifting experimentally with his placement of their works. Allowing for maximum exposure, Nate assigned entire walls for each of the trio, providing spatial distancing like a sommelier’s decanting a fine wine to breathe. The impact achieved is dramatic and deliberate as the paintings simmer and shimmer exquisitely all on their own.

This blog, though, is as much about relationships as it is about art. When a team approach is used democratically, given assignments to challenge and inspire, there is a greater chance for a successful outcome. At the AAH, a handful of operatives work closely in sync under the educated eyes of CEO Carrie Wissler-Thomas and gallery curator, Rachel O’Connor. The latter, now well into her seventh year as curator with a talent beyond art exhibits, is mentoring the team. More than a trickle-down effect, O’Connor elevates the concept to a grand design, sharing her expertise in mounting a show to pass that knowledge on to the assistants. Working closely with her are Jonathan Frazier, Tien Tran and Rachel Haas-Gutin, gallery assistants, and Randy Miller, webmaster. Mr. Foster paid his dues as an assistant and recently overhauled the association’s sales gallery. The result is noteworthy in that the new look is creating great interest and boosting sales of the members’ works. With that came a promotion to gallery sales manager and an opportunity to guest curate this art exhibit.

The artists bring their own worlds to the upstairs gallery, highlighting a-show-within-a-show premise and presence. When an entire room is dedicated to depicting detailed destinations, a narrative unfolds, allowing for insider’s perspective as to what the artist may be all about.

Young Won arrives at the jumping off point where the sky meets the horizon with her adroitly articulated works on paper. The educator/artist is intentional in her approach and a master technician as segments meet, coalesce and cohabitate in a community of texture, template and time. The end results may seem to overlap but exist in a seamless, transitory state…cohesive and controlled yet never contrived.

Paper on Paper by Young Won. Photo: Jana MacGinnes

 

Painting by Earle Rock. Photo: Jana MacGinnes

Earle Rock, as the name may suggest, works in larger-than-life personas and portraits, capturing special moments in time of his “studies” at the peak point when all comes together for personal triumph and permanence presented in the rendering for posterity. Whether person, place or thing, Rock makes it his through color and contrast, contextualizing character with drama and depth.

 

 

 

 

Painting by Marina Radanovic. Photo: Jana MacGinnes

Marina Radanovic brings her personal upbringing to the canvas, having grown up with religious iconography surrounding her from Byzantine statuary to the realms of phantasmagoria. Often, her self-portraiture straddles both worlds, the temporal and the eternal…the secular and the sacred. In a modern-day presentation, musician friends form the focus for her paintings.

The trio’s collective body can easily stand apart, yet, when taken as a whole, “Correlated Cultivations” theme, like the AAH’s closely formed relationships, forms an ellipse like rings around the sun.

PS: As for me, this blog is “better late than never.” With just 10 days left, get to the AAH this Friday for 3rd in the Burg and tell them Nate sent you. The exhibit closes June 22.

 

Penned to Purr-fection at CALC

The last school bell just rang, signaling the end of another year. Parents have already made summer reservations for vacations or stay-at-home adventures.

As for the kids, they will romp and play for at least 48 hours and then “I’m bored” will resonate far and wide. Thank goodness young and old alike will have summer’s pastime close at hand. Books provide escapism at its best and, for those under the age of 12, illustrations paint a picture of what’s to come. Carlisle author and illustrator of children’s books, Amy June Bates, has just the ticket for summer getaways for young minds. A one woman show, “By The Book,” features four of her favorites showcased with a reading nook and interactive components for all ages in the Carlisle Arts Learning Center’s GB Stuart Gallery. With two decades under her belt, her national reputation includes print making. The exhibit’s focus are illustrations from “The Big Umbrella,” “When I Draw a Panda,” “And I Paint It,” and “The Boy and The Sea,” providing plenty of insouciant charm. Special “By the Book”-related activities, including crafts and games, are a featured attraction on Saturday, June 24, in the gallery during Summer Fair. Guaranteed to be a real page turner, the exhibit runs through July 29, just before August arrives, signifying back-to-school time.

In the upstairs gallery artist, Cheryl Kugler, took the hundred-day challenge and drew 100 cats up for adoption through rescues. As of this writing, 60 drawings are left for sale with proceeds benefiting Loving Care Cat Rescue and Nobody’s Cat Foundation through July 1. Meow!

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UPMC launches Minutes Matter campaign to promote medical emergency training, education

A Community LifeTeam EMS staff member shows Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams how to perform chest compressions on an infant, during a press conference on Monday.

In a medical emergency, a few minutes could mean the difference between life and death.

That’s the message that UPMC is sharing with its Minutes Matter campaign, in partnership with Harrisburg, to provide emergency training and education to the public.

“This collaboration will make a difference in our community,” said Lou Baverso, president of UPMC. “It will impact those who may be first on the scene in an emergency and want to know how to help. […] And most importantly it will save the lives of those experiencing an emergency.”

The initiative, which UPMC announced during a press conference with the city on Monday, will provide online and in-person training and resources on how to attempt to save the life of someone experiencing cardiac arrest, uncontrolled bleeding, opioid overdose or a mental health crisis.

Officials aim to empower people who may become bystanders in a health crisis situation. The training will also provide assistance to healthcare professionals by allowing bystanders to intervene until EMS arrives on the scene.

UPMC is working with local churches, organizations, schools and other community partners to host training events. The sessions will include education on tools like CPR, bleeding control and Narcan administration.

Training and education are also available on the Minutes Matter website.

Barry Albertson, director of operations of Community LifeTeam EMS, shared examples of the impact that training provides. While only one out of 10 people experiencing cardiac arrest will survive if bystanders do not assist, five out of 10 will survive if bystanders have training and use CPR and an Automated External Defibrillator (AED), he said. Additionally, he shared that using Narcan when someone is facing an opioid overdose reverses the overdose in 80% to 90% of cases.

“This training impacts everyone,” said Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams. “This is not the time to bury our heads and pretend like this does not happen. You can be the one to save their life.”

To learn more about Minutes Matter and to find training resources and a list of events, visit their website.

 

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Burg Review: Theatre Harrisburg takes the first-place trophy for the hilariously skewed, “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee”

Theatre Harrisburg caps its 97th season with the laugh-riot musical comedy, “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,” directed by Thomas G. Hostetter.

Within the first scene, it’s clear why both the original production and writers Rebecca Feldman and Rachel Sheinkin won so many awards, including a T-O-N-Y. Not only are the original pieces of the script hysterically funny, but you’ll find enough juicy additions and walk-on characters that make Theatre Harrisburg’s production different every time you see it. (And yes, this play is worth seeing multiple times.)

With the exception of a cameo appearance by Jesus, the entire cast of majestically awkward misfits amp up the weird with every scene, every line. This ensemble comedy is character-driven, with each of the exceptionally talented actors bringing forth their characters’ own brands of peculiar.

Set in a school’s gymnasium somewhere in Putnam County, we meet spelling bee coordinator and former champion Rona Lisa Peretti (Beth Darowish). Darowish brings her stage mom persona and her lyrical gifts to her character’s three-time signature song, “My Favorite Moment of the Bee.”

In this reviewer’s favorite moment of the bee, the cocky Chip Tolentino (Mitchell Young) sings “My Unfortunate Erection/Distraction” while dressed as an Eagle Scout. An excellent vocalist, Young communicates both his frustration and his inspiration through said song, stamping the show’s content PG-13, at best.

The most unabashedly eccentric bee contestant is Leaf Coneybear (Zach Roush), a fidgety, homeschooled boy who makes his own clothes. Bringing an adorable quality and a childlike approach to his role, Roush plays on the audience’s heartstrings with his song, “I’m Not That Smart.”

With his regrettable fashion sense and pocket protector, William Barfée (Joseph Chubb) plays a conceited nerd who does a bizarre dance that helps him spell. Chubb lays the intense dork persona on thick, singing through his nose about his “Magic Foot,” probably the most uncomfortable show tune I’ve ever heard (in a good way).

Equally intense, but more internally conflicted is overachiever Marcy Park (Skylar Gunning). In her strong voice, Gunning interprets the pressure Marcy feels in her songs, “I Speak Six Languages” and “Marcy’s Epiphany,” with a formidable energy that carries all the way through the play. Also feeling pressure to win, but from external sources, Logainne Schwartzandgrubeniere (Tessa Arnold) has a drive to win ethically. For a little lady, Arnold commands her stage presence, delivering a powerfully voiced feature song in “Woe Is Me,” about her two fathers pushing her.

The lonely Olive Ostrovsky (Laney Dixon) may look like an ordinary elementary student on the surface, but her delivery of the song, “My Friend, the Dictionary,” and her quirky mannerisms make her character fit right in this eclectic bee. Dixon portrays Olive with a sweet shyness and a quiet longing as she straddles her worlds and searches for someone – anyone – to connect with.

In the play’s only poignantly sad moment, Darowish plays the emotional cameo role of Olive’s Mom, a woman reaching out to her young daughter across the miles when she could not physically be there. Standing on the other side of the world is Olive’s Dad (Manny Wilson). The parents pull their daughter back and forth while beautifully harmonizing the heartfelt, “The I Love You Song.” All three actors show their range between comedy and drama during this touching scene.

As a parolee doing his mandatory community service, Mitch Mahoney (Manny Wilson) is the only “cool kid” in the room, although he is an adult begrudgingly serving his duties as “comfort counselor.” As each speller is eliminated, Mahoney produces a juice box and an obligatory hug, consoling each child after their long walks of shame from the microphone. Together with the mostly unsympathetic VP Douglas Panch (Glenn Muir), I half expected oompa-loompas to appear from under the bleachers to boo and shoo away the bad spellers.

This is not the sort of production where you can sit back and relax. You may find your name drawn to be part of the spelling bee, or even a bee audience member singled out on the floor of the gymnasium. If you don’t take home the trophy, you’re in good company. All but one student leaves with the reminder that they may be good, but they weren’t good enough.

Whether you yourself were a word nerd who read the dictionary for fun, a poor speller eliminated on your first turn at the mic, or an overly self-assured speller (like this reviewer) who forgot the “O” at the end of H-E-L-L-O during the fourth-grade parochial school spelling bee finals, your ticket stubs can be your participation trophy for two hours of laughing.

The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” runs until June 25 at the Krevsky Center, 513 Hurlock Street, Harrisburg. For more information on show times and tickets, https://theatreharrisburg.com/shows/the-25th-annual-putnam-county-spelling-bee/

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Veterans Outreach of Pennsylvania, city and state officials ceremonially broke ground on “Veterans Grove.”

Have you read our June issue of the magazine yet? If not, what are you waiting for? Snag it at one of our distribution locations or view it online. But first, catch up on our news coverage from the week, below. 

TheBurg learned this week that we won 24 Keystone Media awards, a peer-reviewed contest sponsored by the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association Foundation, our online story reported. This included the prestigious “Sweepstakes” award for the best performance statewide in our category.

Elementary Coffee Co. partnered with the Harrisburg Asian American Pacific Islander (HAAPI) group to release “HAAPI Mornings,” a Vietnamese-inspired coffee, our online story reported. Elementary introduced the coffee in May, in celebration of AAPI Heritage Month, and will offer it through June.

Gamut Theatre’s Free Shakespeare in the Park recently kicked off and the theater company delivered an exciting show, our reviewer said. The show, a bloody take on royal history, takes place at Reservoir Park through June 17.

Harrisburg City Council discussed the use of its federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds and set a date to vote on the use of the money, our reporting found. Council President Danielle Bowers also responded to Mayor Wanda Williams, who called out council for not yet having voted on the proposal.

Harrisburg crews worked to clean up fallen trees and debris after a destructive storm tore through the city last weekend, our online story reported. According to Harrisburg Fire Chief Brian Enterline, the wind and hail storm hit neighborhoods like Uptown and Midtown the hardest.

The Harrisburg School District proposed a 2023-24 budget of $219.8 million, including a 3.25% property tax hike, our online story reported. According to officials, the district hopes to use the increased tax dollars to support the future of its vacant William Penn High School.

The Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra announced its “Summer Series,” five free performances over the July 4 weekend, our online story reported. The shows will take place at outdoor locations in Dauphin, Cumberland, Perry and Lebanon counties.

The Jewish Film Festival will take place over four days in Harrisburg and feature six movies, mostly all produced in Israel. In our magazine story, find out what to expect and why the festival is so important to the community.

June is full of opportunities to see great live music in the Harrisburg area. Find out what artists and bands are headed to the area, here.

Mayor Wanda Williams held a press conference this week to urge Harrisburg City Council to vote on the administration’s proposed use of the bulk of its federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds, our online story reported. Williams said that she presented her proposal to council a year ago and is concerned that the city is running out of time to spend the money.

Messiah Lutheran Church in Harrisburg will launch a series of organ recitals to raise funds to restore its 1918 Moller pipe organ, our magazine story reported. Besides garnering money for the organ restoration, the church wants to open their doors and show people the grandeur of the building.

Our publisher has a few Harrisburg-related pet peeves to share, in his June column. Find out what bothers him and see if you agree, here.

Sara Bozich has a long list of ways to spend your weekend in Harrisburg. Click here to find out what’s going on in and around the city.

Summer events will soon kick off in Harrisburg and the city has quite the lineup of activities for adults and kids. In our online story, find out about what’s happening, from silent discos to swimming to live music.

Veterans Outreach of Pennsylvania ceremonially broke ground on its tiny home village for homeless veterans in Harrisburg, our reporting found. The organization will construct 15 tiny homes at 1105 S. Front St., along the riverfront past the PennDOT building.

Wellness boutique C.R. Blooms cut the ribbon on its new location at the Shops on 3rd, along the first block of N. 3rd Street in Harrisburg, our online story reported. The boutique will offer facial treatments and wellness products, including teas, silk robes, cleansers, facial masks and more.

 

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Apartment project near new federal courthouse breaks ground in Harrisburg

Vice Capital and local officials ceremonially break ground on Savoy 48, an apartment project planned for Harrisburg.

Harrisburg is closer to seeing a new development project come to fruition.

The “Savoy 48,” an apartment building planned for the 1500-block of N. 6th St., ceremonially broke ground on Friday.

Harrisburg-based developer Vice Capital, owned by LeSean McCoy, former NFL running back and Harrisburg native, plans to construct a 48-unit apartment building with first-floor commercial space.

“I’m so excited,” said Mayor Wanda Williams. “Our greatest days are ahead of us. I support him [McCoy] through and through.”

The property, near the new federal courthouse building, formerly housed three rundown buildings, before developers demolished them recently to make room for new construction.

The four-story, 46,000-square-foot building will include studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments, 10 of which will be affordable by federal standards. There will also be a rooftop deck and fitness center.

While developers do not yet have tenants lined up for the 6,000-square-foot commercial space, they plan to bring in several businesses, possibly including a restaurant or office space, according to Ryan Sanders of Vice Capital.

The total cost of the project is around $9.5 million, which includes funding from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency and Dauphin County.

The project was approved by Harrisburg City Council in March.

“We are really looking forward to continuing to push development from downtown to Midtown to Uptown,” said Jonathan Bowser, founder and CEO of Wormleysburg-based Steel Works Construction, the general contractor on the project.

According to Bowser, construction will begin in the fall and is slated to be complete by the fall of 2024.

LeSean McCoy, owner of Vice Capital, speaks to the press during the ground breaking ceremony.

McCoy shared how his interest in giving back to his hometown led him to become involved in real estate.

“Now that I have the opportunity, with this platform, to make a difference, why wouldn’t I?” McCoy said. “I just want to try and bring the community together.”

He also said that he plans to hire local minority-owned and women-owned contractors and business owners to participate in the project.

Vice Capital has proposed another apartment project, JMB Gardens, on the 2200- and 2300-blocks of N. 6th Street. This would include the construction of five rowhome-style buildings, on several currently vacant lots, featuring a total of 41 affordable units and a community center.

According to Sanders, once the plans for JMB Gardens receive council approval, Vice Capital hopes to break ground in August.

“Leaving a legacy, being impactful—that’s something I really wanted to stamp my name on,” McCoy said.

Savoy 48 will be located near N. 6th and Harris streets in Harrisburg. For more information about Vice Capital, visit their website.

 

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Harrisburg School District proposes 2023-24 budget with tax hike to support future of William Penn building

Harrisburg School District Lincoln Administration Building

The Harrisburg School District recently announced an updated proposed 2023-24 budget, which includes a tax increase.

At a May 23 board meeting, district officials discussed a proposed $219.8 million budget, with a 3.25% property tax hike.

When the district first shared its proposal in April, it did not include a tax increase. However, the approved 2022-23 $223.8 million budget, passed last June, did include a tax hike.

According to the district, the increase would specifically support the future of the district’s long-vacant and blighted William Penn High School.

“There’s been a lot of discussion and a lot of ideas brought forth about the future of William Penn,” Dr. Marcia Stokes, chief financial officer for the district, said. “No matter what we decide to do with the building, there’s going to have to be some type of investment.”

While Stokes said that the district doesn’t yet have a finalized plan for William Penn, the money would create a fund for whatever officials decide to do with the building in the coming years, whether that may be to demolish or renovate it.

The increase would bring the property tax millage rate from 30.78 in 2022-23 to 31.78 in the coming fiscal year. This would generate about $1.4 million, according to Stokes.

“I just have a bit of reservation around a tax increase for something specific that we still don’t know what we want to do with,” said board director Steven Williams. “Without a clear definition of what our intentions are, I find it hard to support something like this.”

The school board must approve a tax increase, exercising the one major power it holds under state receivership.

Other changes since the district first proposed the budget include an increase in money being spent funding tuition for students attending charter schools, as more students have recently transferred to charters. The district also updated staff salaries and medical insurance rates. Officials also added extra funds to support a contract with the city for the employment of crossing guards, among other changes.

The proposed 2023-24 budget would also utilize $35.5 million in federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funds for expenditures like salaries, recruitment and retention bonuses, HVAC replacements and Steele Elementary School renovations, among other things. According to Stokes, this may be the last district budget to incorporate ESSER money, as it is scheduled to end in September 2024.

Stokes said there will likely be additional changes before a vote on the final budget, on June 27.

 

For more information, visit the Harrisburg School District’s 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: Denim Coffee opens its Mechanicsburg shop on Saturday Worth noting: Dauphin County’s Proudly PA! Festival is Saturday; HHA Garden Tour is Sunday! Juneteenth celebrations kick off. Things on my agenda this weekend: weirdly, nothing … ?? I’m sure I’ll figure something out

For your weekend planning

Below are options for your weekend.

A Look Ahead

  1. Add to calendar: Iron Bridge Music Festival (it’s free!) on June 16-17
  2. Sly Fox is in SoMa this month! Don’t miss our special 3rd in the Burg | Juneteenth event with YPOC and HYP
  3. Market on Market, downtown Camp Hill’s farmer’s market, is now Tuesdays through October
  4. Be sure the full SoMa Block Party Series is on your calendar (next one is June 29)
  5. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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Summer events heat up in Harrisburg with live music, swimming and kids programs

Jeff Washington of Harrisburg’s Parks and Recreation Department talks about summer activities at a press conference.

Summer events in Harrisburg are about to make a splash.

The city announced on Wednesday all the various summer activities Harrisburg has to offer, including swimming, live music and even dancing on the riverfront.

“Our parks and recreation team has put more effort into our summer programs than ever before,” said Mayor Wanda Williams.

Harrisburg shared both its own programming, as well as many other events taking place throughout the city this summer.

Most of the city’s events are geared toward youth and are free to the public. From June 12 to Aug. 4, residents ages 6 to 14 can participate in the free Summer Parks Program, which includes crafts, sports, swimming, field trips and a provided lunch. The program takes place at parks across the city.

Harrisburg will also provide free tennis classes from June 12 to Aug. 11 to residents in the age groups of 6 to 12 and 13 to 17 years old.

For children who want to get creative, the city has partnered with the Art Association of Harrisburg to offer free weekly art classes in the Reservoir Park pavilion. The classes will run from June 7 to July 26 for age groups 5 to 9 and 10 to 15 years old.

The Jackson Lick pool will open to the public on June 10 and will be open from Tuesdays to Saturdays from 12 to 6 p.m. Visitors can pay daily rates or purchase pool memberships. On every Saturday at the pool, the city will host free Aqua Zumba classes at 10 a.m., starting June 17. Free swimming classes will also be offered for ages 5 to 17, from July 11 to 21.

Movie nights are back, with Harrisburg’s free weekly showings at Reservoir Park, starting on June 30 with “Encanto.”

Outside of city-sponsored events, there are lots of other summer activities happening in Harrisburg.

Harrisburg University has its Summer Concert Series coming to Riverfront Park, featuring bands like Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, The Roots, The Head and the Heart and Mt. Joy.

“We’ve put together a pretty exciting run again this year,” said Frank Schofield, HU’s director of live entertainment, at the press conference.

With a unique twist on listening to music, the Harrisburg Riviera Dance Club will host weekly silent disco parties in Kunkel Plaza on N. Front Street.

Another event to get you moving is UPMC’s “Healthy Harrisburg” Summer Fitness Series, offering dance and fitness classes from June 17 to Aug. 26.

In downtown Harrisburg, Sara Bozich Events has monthly block parties coming to the SoMa neighborhood, featuring live music, beer and food trucks.

Additionally, Free Shakespeare in the Park recently kicked off in Reservoir Park and will present showings of “Richard III” through June 17.

“It’s going to be the best summer we ever had,” said Matt Maisel, the city’s communications director.

For more information about Harrisburg summer programming, visit their website. For all other events, click the links embedded in the story.

 

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Harrisburg City Council sets date for American Rescue Plan vote, responds to mayor’s criticism

A past Harrisburg City Council meeting

Harrisburg is getting closer to deciding how it will use millions of dollars in federal COVID relief funding.

On Tuesday, Harrisburg City Council discussed using the bulk of its share of American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds for affordable housing, a spray park and home repair services for low-income and elderly residents, among other uses.

Earlier on Tuesday, Mayor Wanda Williams, at a press conference, called out council for not yet voting on her proposed spending plan.

Council President Danielle Bowers responded at last night’s council meeting, stating that Williams had mischaracterized, at the earlier press conference, how long it had been since council was given the proposal, as well as how many ARPA public meetings Williams and city administration held. At the press conference, Williams said she held seven public meetings, but Bowers said the city only held five.

“That is embarrassing, sharing incorrect information,” Bowers said. “Mayor Williams, we are wide awake and take our responsibility as elected officials in this city very seriously.”

At Tuesday’s meeting, council asked questions of the city administration and discussed a proposal to use $28.1 million of the city’s total $47 million from ARPA.

Council has already allocated $15.6 million for replacing the HVAC system in Harrisburg’s Public Safety Building, providing one-time bonuses to uniformed personnel in the Harrisburg Fire Bureau and Bureau of Police and to reimburse the city for lost revenue during COVID.

An additional, about $4 million has not yet been earmarked for allocation by the city.

Council is slated to vote on the ARPA allocations at its June 27 legislative session.

 

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