Midtown Cinema to host double feature with actor/director Greg Sestero of “The Room”

Greg Sestero at a movie screening event.

Harrisburg movie lovers have a unique opportunity this month to watch a cult favorite film and meet one of its stars.

Midtown Cinema will host a screening of “The Room,” a 2003 movie known for being so bad that it developed a following, and a meet-and-greet with actor Greg Sestero on Nov. 20.

Sestero will return to Harrisburg after visiting the cinema in January for a previous screening.

“I really loved the experience in Midtown,” he said of his last visit. “It’s hard to believe. You make a film that you don’t think anyone will ever see and here we are, people are still watching it and reacting to it.”

“The Room,” a drama by writer and director Tommy Wiseau, is the story of a man whose life is turned upside down when he finds out that his fiancé is sleeping with his best friend. It’s a film that audiences fell in love with because of how bad it is. Almost 20 years later, people are still talking about the movie, Sestero said.

“It’s this lovable, oddball piece of cinema that connects people,” he described. “It’s the perfect amount of cringe.”

Fans of the movie can watch it at Midtown Cinema this month and also meet Sestero and participate in a Q&A about the film.

The event will not only feature “The Room,” but will include a screening of Sestero’s most recent 2021 horror film, “Miracle Valley,” which he directed. “Miracle Valley” is about a couple who are invited to a desert getaway in search of a rare bird. Their trip takes a turn when a sinister force makes them confront demons from the past, present and future.

“Horror has always been my favorite genre,” Sestero said. “I wanted to try something new. I think the Midtown Cinema and Harrisburg crowd will really enjoy watching it.”

In addition to starring in “The Room” and directing “Miracle Valley,” Sestero wrote the book, “The Disaster Artist,” based on his experience on the set of “The Room.” The book was later adapted into a movie featuring actors James Franco and Seth Rogen in 2017. He then wrote and co-starred in “Best F(r)iends” with Wiseau in 2018.

Books, movies and posters will be available for purchase at the Midtown Cinema event.

Also at the screening, Sestero plans to show a teaser trailer of his current project, a film planned for next year about a UFO abduction.

There’s something about the unique experience of watching films with an audience at the movie theater that bonds people together, Sestero said. He hopes that the Midtown Cinema double feature will do the same.

For those who can’t make it to Sunday’s event, a second screening of “The Room” with Sestero will take place on Monday, Nov. 21.

“I had a great time in Harrisburg last time, and I’m looking forward to coming back,” Sestero said.

For more information on Midtown Cinema’s event and to purchase tickets, visit their website.

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Burg Review: Gamut stages “triumph” with ambitious, skillful tribute to Gilbert & Sullivan

Sarah Anne Hughes and David Ramón Zayas

Gamut Theatre opened its 30th season last weekend with “Innocent Merriment; Or, an Evening with Gilbert & Sullivan,” directed by trained opera singer Benjamin Krumreig.

Popular for their distinctively British Savoy operas and operettas, (a mashup of musical, comedy and opera), Gilbert & Sullivan composed 14 operettas. Incorporating a sampling of 28 of the duo’s greatest hits of music and silly skits, yet intentionally skips over the unnecessary element of a continuous plot.

Before the show begins, the stage looks like we’re getting a peek behind the curtain of an old Victorian-era theater, with apparel draped all about the gilded antique furnishings, including two prop trunks with the surname of their producer D’Oyly Carte (get it?) painted on the sides.

This sets the mood perfectly for the ambush of intentionally ridiculous nonsense that characterizes British humor, rife with over-the-top characters, whimsical slapstick, ridiculous storylines, absurd dialogue exchanges and illogical reasoning that tippy-toes down a path of no particular shape.

Here you will find, among other hilarity, foolish choreography, the sort that features grown men playing pat-a-cake and the same sort of slap games you’d see little girls playing during recess.

Unlike traditional opera, you won’t need subtitles to understand it, although some of the speedier scores require listening with a processing speed that runs molto rapidamente than the typical brain. And I would have to ask my dog to translate the lyrics of some of the soprano arias that hit those impossibly high falsetto notes.

If some of these songs were a novel, there would be very little white space. They are that packed, filled with satisfying harmonies, tongue twisters with four-syllable words, and humorous lyrics that still hold up over a century later.

The sole instrument stringing along the merriment is a playful piano. I’ve learned from past performances how talented Nicholas Werner (pianist) is. But I didn’t imagine that his fingers could run a marathon all by themselves. To play over two hours’ worth of Gilbert & Sullivan’s music, heavily laden with 16th and 32nd notes, is the equivalent of doing continuous drumrolls. It’s a demanding gig, and Werner nailed it.

I would rattle off all the notable songs and skits I enjoyed, but the titles are long, my word count is firm, my revered editor is a stickler, and he finds me long-winded enough already. Suffice it to say, the entire cast earned their respective places in this ensemble cast with their impressive singing and acting chops. (One baritone, Matthew Hogan, took the role so seriously that he carved his facial hair into literal Victorian-era chops.)

In addition to the original score, baritones Hogan, Jimmy Kohlmann and David Ramón Zayas treated us to a bonus track: a parody of a Gilbert & Sullivan favorite entitled “I am the very model of a modern-major Shakespeare fan.” This song is the tongue-twister to beat them all. Bravo for their extraordinary memorization and lightning-fast recitation skills. (Lyrics by Mya Gosling, whose works on Shakespeare are worth following into its rabbit hole.)

I am impressed by the number of players making their Gamut debut with this musical: Tony Barber (tenor), Maggie Haynes (mezzo-soprano), Sarah Anne Hughes (soprano), Melissa Janicki (soprano), Latreshia Lilly (soprano), Becky Mease (soprano), Olivia Ramsey (soprano), and Scott Sealover (tenor). If the debuts weren’t mentioned in the program, I would not have suspected. Additionally, the newish Sydney E. Crutcher (soprano) lends her lovely lilting voice to the show and also works for Gamut as a production manager.

Through this production, Gamut Theatre Executive Director Melissa Nicholson said, “We’re dipping our toes for a full-length Gilbert & Sullivan show, seeing how well-received it would be, seeing if people would like it.”

For a little peek behind my proverbial curtain… although I am a fan of opera and musicals, my husband George is not. The one and only time I dared to drag him to an opera, he smuggled a six-pack to the theater to get him through it. But because he regularly and randomly sings all 12 syllables of my full name in 16th and 32nd notes more often than John ever sang about Yoko, I think George would enjoy Gilbert & Sullivan. If my caveman everyman can find something to enjoy in Gilbert & Sullivan’s oeurve, I think anyone can.

Bravo/brava to cast and crew for undertaking this vigorous show. The vocal ranges showcased here (to borrow from my favorite British baking show) are a triumph, with the actors delivering a remarkable amount of comedy, energy and detail in their performances.

“Innocent Merriment; Or, an Evening with Gilbert & Sullivan” runs through Nov. 27 at Gamut Theatre, 15 N. 4th Street, Harrisburg. Find more information at www.gamuttheatre.org.

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Burg Review: A joyous, rollicking evening awaits at Theatre Harrisburg’s “Dreamcoat.”

Theatre Harrisburg continues its 97th season with a comically rollicking musical about the twelve tribes of Israel, written by Tim Rice (lyrics), Andrew Lloyd Webber (music) and Moses (yes, THAT Moses).

Whether you have already seen “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” onstage, any of the movie or television adaptations, or even just Cosmo Kramer strutting through Manhattan while wearing the dreamcoat during a Seinfeld episode, it’s absolutely worth re-visiting to see Theatre Harrisburg’s talented cast sing you Joseph’s story. Director Kristi Ondo and Musical Director Matt Topping maximize the show’s inherent silliness while bringing out the clever.

The story of Jacob’s (Joel Sattazahn) favorite son Joseph (Jeremiah Joel) is set sometime between 2000 and 1600 B.C., but the various music and dancing styles in the play are decidedly 20th century (choreography by Lexi Fazzolari). The story tracks closely to how Moses wrote it in the Book of Genesis. In much the same way Joseph’s coat is patch-worked together from many colors and styles, his life story is set to musical genre arrays that would not otherwise fit together in one space.

Standout musical numbers:

Donning a cowboy hat, Reuben (Sam Krepps) croons “One More Angel in Heaven” (look out, Garth), while his heathen brothers are yee-hawing and line dancing a boot-scootin’ boogie, celebrating the sale of Joseph to the Egyptians. When a weeping Jacob walks back onstage, the music flips to a somber blues number. As soon as Jacob exits stage left, the hoedown is back on.

As Vegas-era Elvis, complete with blue suede shoes coated with sequins, Pharoah (Joseph Chubb) delivers a soulful doo-wop performance of “Poor, Poor Pharoah/Song of the King.” Throwing trajectories of sweat from his forehead onto his groupies lent authenticity to the rock star persona.

The pseudo-French song “Those Canaan Days” had me laughing the hardest. Sung by Jacob’s 11 sons (Sattazahn, Chubb, Krepps, Topping, Andrew Williams, Colvin, Graham Lewis, Tommy Dougherty, Mitchell Young, Francis Dy, Aidan Lacey, and Zacariah Roush) in French accents with intentionally clumsy ballet and flamenco dancing, the singers hang a lovely tenor harmony in the air, sandwiched between oh-so many comedic bits.

In the burlesque number “Potiphar,” Potiphar (Sattazahn) catches Joseph in a compromising shower scene with Mrs. Potiphar (Tori Levine). This is a family show, so the scene is tasteful and PG-rated.

In “Any Dream Will Do,” Jeremiah Joel sang in the beginning of the show in an understated, shoulder-shrugging way, giving the song an “aw, shucks” feel to it. In the reprisal, his voice sounded more confident, full of maturity, of someone who has lived to tell.

Providing the continuity in the story, Beth Darowish (Narrator) projects her strong mezzo-soprano voice. I suspect she would have been able to propel it to the back of the theater, even without a microphone.

The only snag in the fabric of this otherwise fun and flowing show was the ch-chunk in the middle of the action when the actors stopped everything to insert the donation request between songs. While asking for money is as customarily uncomfortable as being asked for money, the abrupt halt made the moment even more so. I much prefer the “Oh, by the way” while everyone is standing in the seating rows, clapping for the finale, and then the actors rush to the lobby with collection baskets.

But in the same breath, the disjointedness of the play’s elements—the diverse musical styles, the wonky dancing slapstick, the humor in the tiniest details—are what weave this performance together to make it so memorable. I mean, where else does a cheerleading pep rally song, the rousing “Go, Go, Go Joseph,” come before and after a steel drum-laden song called “Benjamin Calypso?”

There’s also a jazzy, swingy, brassy, Joseph-y number ear-worming its way through my brain since I left the theater. I may have to see the show again so I can learn the words.

 

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” runs through Nov. 20 at Whitaker Center, 222 Market St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.theatreharrisburg.com.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Hookers Seafood Joint owners Robert Bryant and Kendale Harris

Don’t let this beautiful fall weather go to waste. Get outside, enjoy a stroll around the city and make sure you grab a copy of our November issue of the magazine, which came out this week. But first, get up to speed on the week’s local news, below.

The Bridgeview Bed and Breakfast in Marysville offers a beautiful view of the Susquehanna River and trains crossing the Rockville Bridge. In our magazine story, read about the history of the inn and why it makes a great local getaway.

Small businesses are an important part of Harrisburg, and our editor has learned a lot about them over his years of covering small businesses, speaking with their owners and co-owning one. In his column, read about five things that you should keep in mind the next time you step into a Harrisburg small business.

Columbia, located just 28 miles southeast of Harrisburg, makes the perfect day trip, our magazine story reported. Our writer recommends five stops for a fall day of exploring in the small, walkable town.

Our editor reflects on the history of the news industry in Harrisburg in his editor’s note. While many publications of the past are gone, TheBurg continues to produce high-quality content for the area.

Gamut Theatre is putting music at the center stage in its new show, “Innocent Merriment; Or, An Evening with Gilbert & Sullivan!” With the theater’s new core company member and trained opera singer, Benjamin Krumreig, they will present a major musical production, starting this weekend.

Governor’s Square Apartments, an affordable housing development in Harrisburg, is in the midst of a maintenance and ownership struggle, our magazine story reported. Meanwhile, many residents are stuck in the middle, living in unsafe and neglected properties.

Harrisburg business owners love what they do and, with resilience and spunk, they keep quality up and prices down. While that hasn’t been easy in today’s economic landscape, local businesses are making it work, our magazine story reported.

Harrisburg projects were awarded state grants as the commonwealth announced recipients this week, our online story reported. Among the awardees of the Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program are FNB Field, Harrisburg University and the Pennsylvania STEAM Academy.

Hookers Seafood Joint opened recently in downtown Harrisburg, our online story reported. The shop, located on Walnut Street, offers fried fish, cheesy grits and more.

November events, including the Harrisburg Marathon, 3rd in the Burg and the city’s holiday parade are listed in our Community Corner. For even more goings-on, check out our Happenings column.

The Pennsylvania Department of General Services announced that it will begin its annual “Crow Dispersal Program” on Nov. 8, our online story reported. Throughout the next few months, PA Capitol Police will discharge exploding shells and whistling devices to deter crows from roosting.

Sara Bozich has a Weekend Roundup packed full with fun events. Whether you want to try a 5k run, enjoy local theater or attend a festival, she’s got you covered.

The Susquehanna Art Museum has two new exhibits that, although unique, both feature the traditional art form of ornamentation. In our magazine story, read more about the exhibits, “Fleeting Pleasures: Japanese Woodblock Prints,” and “Deep Roots: Ornamentation and Identity.”

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Get Hooked: Hookers Seafood Joint opens in downtown Harrisburg with fried favorites

Hookers Seafood Joint owners Robert Bryant and Kendale Harris

According to the owners of downtown Harrisburg’s newest seafood restaurant, it hasn’t taken long for people to get hooked on their food.

Within a week from last Thursday’s soft opening of Hookers Seafood Joint on Walnut Street, first-time customers have already returned for more.

Owners Robert Bryant and Kendale Harris of York credit the early success to their mouth-watering food and friendly personalities.

“The food is one thing, but the energy is another,” Bryant said.

During the pandemic, the pair of Philadelphia natives opened their first business, The SteakOut, with York and Lancaster locations, after realizing the need for an authentic Philly cheesesteak spot. They started offering seafood options at The SteakOut, but decided to open another business dedicated to the fried fish and their “renowned” grits. Hookers Seafood Joint was born and opened in York and now Harrisburg.

Based on Bryant and Harris’ previous experience selling their seafood out of a food truck in Harrisburg, they knew there was a market in the city for their dishes.

Hookers specializes in fried fish—flounder, whiting and shrimp—and their gouda cheesy grits.

To perfect their recipes, the pair has spent hours upon hours in the kitchen “burning their taste buds” and “consuming way too much salt,” they said.

“It’s all been from scratch and messing around in the kitchen,” Bryant said.

Outside of their food, Bryant and Harris believe in the power of energetic, entertaining marketing and customer service. You may walk into the shop and hear Harris singing in the kitchen while you’re greeted by Bryant whose charisma is contagious. They’re also very aware of the connotations that come with the name Hookers and aren’t shy about cracking jokes on their social media page. They like being a little edgy and playful with their business.

“To have the good food is the icing on the cake, but to have a good personality is important too,” Harris said.

Hookers is currently open for takeout and delivery and accepting online orders only. Their Harrisburg grand opening will take place on Nov. 17, when they will open for in-store ordering and dining.

Hookers Seafood Joint is located at 405 Walnut St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website or Facebook page.

 

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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! Scroll down or use the menu links to find ideas for your weekend.

For something new: HBG Flea is back at Strawberry Square for the season; I’m having a pre-moving clothes sale. It’s Mustache Mocha Month at Cornerstone Coffeehouse.

Worth noting: Autos & Ales is Friday! Midstate Distillery announced they’re closing their Cameron Street taproom (opening two new locations!) — Harrisburg Beer Runners have a Farewell Run on Sunday.

Things on my agenda this weekend: A cooking class at Cornerstone tonight, hunting widow status engaged tomorrow, a kid’s bday party, and finishing the weekend with a Hershey Bears game (go Pens! Sorry!)

For your weekend planning

    • See what else you missed on the blog

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Things to Do in Harrisburg + Central PA | Weekend Roundup | Sara Bozich

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Top Weekend Recs

    1. Check out AAA’s Pet Costume Contest!
    1. The Best Farmers Markets around Harrisburg
    1. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

    • First Fridays with DJ KYNZ at Zeroday

Saturday

Sunday


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Crow Away: State begins annual crow dispersal to prevent roosting at Capitol

A view of the Pennsylvania Capitol complex

It’s time for Harrisburg crows to take to the sky.

The Pennsylvania Department of General Services (DGS) announced on Tuesday that it will begin its annual “Crow Dispersal Program” on Nov. 8.

Throughout the next few months, PA Capitol Police will discharge exploding shells and whistling devices to deter crows from roosting. The dispersal program will take place daily, between 5 to 7 p.m, and the public should expect to hear noises from the devices.

The methods are approved by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and are non-lethal and not harmful to people, crows, other animals or the environment, according to the state.

According to the DGS, the crow dispersal program helps reduce slipping hazards for pedestrians due to crow waste that can accumulate on sidewalks, especially in wet weather. It also helps reduce the damage from crow waste to buildings in the Capitol complex.

This is the 25th year of the program.

For more information, visit the Pennsylvania Department of General Services’ website.

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Additional Harrisburg projects slated to receive state redevelopment funds

The Harrisburg Senators play at FNB Field.

Three more Harrisburg projects will receive state redevelopment grants, as the commonwealth today announced additional award recipients.

Leading off the list, the city will receive $6 million for upgrades to FNB Field, the city-owned stadium that hosts the Harrisburg Senators minor league baseball team.

According to the application, work will include new field lighting, renovation of locker rooms, a new home team clubhouse, expansion of the existing boardwalk and scoreboard replacement. This would be the first significant upgrade to the stadium in about 15 years, when the city embarked on a two-phase project.

The grant fully funds the city’s request of $6 million for the project under the Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP), a matching grant, reimbursement program that helps fund the acquisition and construction of regional economic, cultural, civic, recreational and historical improvement projects.

The two other projects announced today are:

  • Harrisburg University, $1.75 million, to construct new facilities for applied research, education and workforce development focused on emerging technology sectors in food, agriculture and environmental science. These facilities will house the HU Center for Advanced Agriculture and Sustainability, featuring education and workforce development programs alongside industry-oriented applied research and technical innovation.
  • Pennsylvania STEAM Academy Rooftop Playground, $1.5 million, to transform a portion of the rooftop of its Midtown Academic Building at 1500 N. 3rd St. into a rooftop playground to provide an indoor play area for its elementary and middle school students. A canopy of solar panels will provide filtered light and generate solar energy to partially power the school building.

“I am thrilled to announce these RACP grants that will benefit the region,” said state Rep. Patty Kim, who represents Harrisburg. “Such significant funding means we can continue to invest in Dauphin County, which also means investing in everyone who lives here.”

Last week, the commonwealth announced the first group of RACP award recipients in Harrisburg. These projects included:

  • $3 million to Reily GreenWorks for the development of a 155-unit apartment building with neighborhood-oriented retail on the ground floor at a proposed project at 320 Reily St.
  • $1.5 million to Harrisburg Events Center to complete extensive renovations at the King Mansion at 2201 N. Front St.
  • $2.75 million to Harristown Enterprises for the renovation of the Harristown Agriculture Building, a proposed project at 221-223 Market St.
  • $ 1.6 million to Millworks Historic Campus Preservation for the rehabilitation of 1321 N. 4th St., the planned site of the relocated Millworks Brewery.

Several other projects in Harrisburg applied for funds, but did not receive grants in this round. The commonwealth sometimes announces a second round of RACP funding later in the year or early the following year.

Click here to download a spreadsheet to see all the projects that applied for and received grants in this funding round.

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Come see why SVFCU is ‘Where You Belong’

Advertorial

Banking with a History
Since 1967, Susquehanna Valley Federal Credit Union (SVFCU) has provided financial services to the West Shore and beyond.
Credit Unions are rooted in community. When you decide to join, you are becoming a Member and Owner, not just a number. Every Credit Union Member has equal ownership and one vote regardless of how much money a member has. Credit Unions exist to serve members, not to make a profit. Earnings are returned to our members in the form of lower loan rates, higher interest on deposits and lower fees. The goal is to serve all members well. Every member counts!
SVFCU believes in their core values, being personable, knowledgeable and dedicated to service.

How it all began
In 1967, A group of educators from the West Shore School District made a decision. They decided to start their own credit union. For the first 12 years, the Credit Union operated out of the home of the treasurer and founder. During those first 12 years, services were only offered to those who belonged to Select Employee Groups. The Credit Union soon grew to 1,500 members and $1.2 million in assets.
During the period from 1979 to 1987, the Credit Union moved the business out of the home of their founder and treasurer and served members for several different leased locations. It continued to grow from there. Two smaller credit unions merged with us and we added many new groups to the Credit Union, primarily different school districts in the area. By the end of that eight-year period, the credit union grew to $14 million in assets and around 4,000 members.

Becoming SVFCU
With a community charter on the horizon in the 1990’s, the Credit Union’s name was changed to Susquehanna Valley Federal Credit Union to better reflect its growing membership in the area.
As SVFCU continued to grow, adding more and more members and services, it soon outgrew their building. In December of 2001, operations were moved to the current location at 3850 Hartzdale Drive in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania.
In June of 2008, SVFCU converted to a community charter serving Cumberland, Dauphin and Perry counties.

SVFCU Today
Today as a full service, community chartered federal credit union, SVFCU provides an array of financial services to over 6,000 members.
Wherever you are in your life’s journey, SVFCU can help you fund it.
SVFCU offers members the services you’d expect from a big bank, without the big bank fees and red tape.
You are eligible to join if you live, work, worship, or attend school in Cumberland, Dauphin or Perry Counties or if you have an immediate family member who is a member, regardless of where you live.
CEO, Eric Lundvall, “We have proudly served our community for over 50 years. Come see why SVFCU is ‘Where You Belong’.”
Learn more about Susquehanna Valley Federal Credit Union at svfcu.org or follow us on Facebook or Instagram!

Grand Opening for the Hartzdale Drive Branch in 2001

The home of the treasurer/founder the Credit Union was operated out of for the first 12 years.

Inside the home where the Credit Union was operated out of for the first 12 years.

SVFCU’s current CEO, Eric Lundvall.

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Unfair Housing: Affordable, decent housing comes at great cost to Governor’s Square residents caught in a maintenance, ownership struggle

Britni Lowe walks into her condemned apartment in Governor’s Square. Photo by Dani Fresh.

Three-year-old Stevie bounces around his great grandmother’s small apartment. A kid’s show plays on the television in the living room, but he has no attention for it. Instead, Stevie reaches for the light switch, his small finger flicking it off-on-off-on.

“Stop it, Stevie!” his great grandmother scolds, her phone pressed to her ear. She continues her conversation.

Stevie wanders the apartment and climbs onto an armchair.

Britni Lowe, Stevie’s mom, is unfazed by the distractions. She calmly attends to her son while recounting the recent housing trouble she’s faced.

For six years, Lowe has lived in her one-bedroom apartment on Forrest Street in Harrisburg, only a quick walk from her grandmother Faith’s apartment.

Her apartment is one of over 200 rental units within Governor’s Square Apartments, which includes affordable multi- and single-family properties in the Camp Curtin neighborhood.

While Lowe was happy to have a place of her own, problems with her unit began early on, she said. Over the years, she’s had issues with rodents, leaky windows and cracking along the walls. She’s found mold in the vents, holes in the ceiling caused by nosy squirrels and bricks coming loose on the exterior of the building. Lowe has done whatever maintenance she could on her own, setting out mousetraps and spraying for bugs. But, on the whole, she explained, most of her maintenance requests to the property management went unanswered.

“You become unhappy when your home doesn’t feel happy,” she said. “It makes you feel like you don’t matter here. This has taken a toll on my mental health.”

The trouble with her home reached a peak in August when Lowe came home to a “Condemned” notice affixed to her door. It stated that her building, which includes her apartment and one other, was “found to be unsafe due to damage, decay, dilapidation.” The city’s evaluation form also said that it was “a blight to the neighborhood, a hazard to public health and safety.” She had 60 days to leave the property, it stated.

“I’m in there with my baby,” Lowe said. “I felt hopeless.”

Later that month, Lowe attended a town hall event for residents of Governor’s Square, put on by the Camp Curtin Neighborhoods United group. She stood in the back, Stevie in tow, and voiced her concerns over her living conditions with a room full of other residents with stories like hers.

One of many piles of debris found outside a condemned apartment. Photo by Dani Fresh.

The Meetings

On a Wednesday and subsequent Thursday night, residents of Governor’s Square Apartments filed into the lobby of the PA Fair Housing Council on the corner of N. 5th and Maclay streets. Camp Curtin Neighborhoods United President Laura Harding opened the meeting from a podium, stressing the importance of a solutions-based discussion.

Not only had the meeting drawn the attention of tenants, but of several local officials who joined, including Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams, City Council President Danielle Bowers and other members of council, state Rep. Patty Kim (D-103) and Magisterial District Judge Sonya McKnight. Representatives from the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency (PHFA) and Dauphin County attended, as well.

Comments from residents moved from specific complaints about their apartments to questions about how to withhold rent until issues are addressed. In Lowe’s case, she had urgent questions about where she was supposed to go now. With a shaky, yet firm, voice, she made her case.

However, there was a general air of confusion at the meetings. How did things get to this point? Whose responsibility was it to fix these problems? What’s going to happen next? Questions like these went unanswered, or at least, were left unclear. Even many of the officials in the room were uncertain of the details.

But what wasn’t foggy was that code citations on the properties were stacking up against Governor’s Square. According to Anne Montgomery, director of Harrisburg’s Bureau of Codes, the city has been to court with Governor’s Square “many times” over code citations that weren’t brought into compliance. At the time, Williams said that there were over 100 code citations for the properties. As of late September, the city also had condemned seven Governor’s Square properties, meaning they are structurally unsound, and placarded another 17, which means they are deemed non-habitable.

According to Williams, she’s been hearing of the issues at Governor’s Square for around two years, though some residents say their problems started even earlier.

Early this past summer, Rhonda Mays of the Fair Housing Council of the Capital Region started noticing an uptick in people requesting assistance with issues at Governor’s Square.

“They had a terrible problem with their units being habitable,” she said. “It wasn’t just little things. It was big things.”

When the organization starts seeing a pattern like this, they keep a file to document the complaints. From there, they try to advise tenants on things that could help, such as putting their complaints in writing and making sure property management gets them. Withholding a portion of their rent is another option—although an unpopular one—for tenants. But according to Mays, there’s not a lot that can be done.

“There’s not a whole lot that we can tell the tenants,” Mays admitted. “It’s a matter of waiting out the process.”

There were all those officials and agencies in the Fair Housing lobby during the tenant meetings, but there wasn’t much they could do.

The entity that certainly could do something—the owner—wasn’t there.

Photo by Dani Fresh

Intervention

In the late 1990s, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) foreclosed on a large swath of apartments that it held mortgages on, formerly the Maclay Street Apartments. Instead of auctioning the properties off, they were transferred to the city in 2003, and the Harrisburg Redevelopment Authority (HRA) took the title.

Harrisburg then issued a request for proposals and selected Maryland-based Landex Development to obtain and renovate the 222 rental units known as the “Residences.” The company also would later construct and obtain dozens more properties, call the “Towns.” Landex formed Uptown Partners LP to be the managing limited partner.

To help offset the cost of building affordable housing, HUD awarded the project an “Upfront” federal grant of about $10 million for renovations. Additional funding was obtained through PHFA low income housing tax credits, among other contributions. Landex completed the project in 2012.

Along with the funds came restrictive covenants, requiring the property to remain affordable for 30 years, until 2034.

“They were excited to work with us and built a high-quality project,” said Bryan Davis, director of the Harrisburg Redevelopment Authority. “It was such a huge, positive impact.”

But, these days, Davis was feeling differently about how things were going at Governor’s Square, saying that HRA is “very disappointed in the existing owner.”

In a statement, Uptown Partners acknowledged the issue, saying that they “understand and appreciate the concerns about maintenance issues and the need for capital improvements at the property.”

“We are prioritizing the most important needs and working hard to resolve them as soon as possible,” the company stated.

However, in its statement, the company added that the cost of services, such as water, trash pickup and maintenance, has far outweighed the revenue received in rent. The company claimed that, due to the pandemic, residents “suffered severe financial hardship” and therefore still owe a significant amount of back rent. The statement also noted unexpected costs from chronic illegal trash dumping on the property, among other issues.

“This property is more than 50 years old and was last renovated 15 years ago,” Uptown Partners said in its statement. “We recognize that a significant intervention and a sizable investment are needed to address the residents’ needs.”

Also in the statement, the company noted trying to work with the city regarding the sale of the property. According to Davis, during the pandemic, Uptown Partners put Governor’s Square up for sale, but received no interest from buyers.

Stephen Schuback. Photo by Dani Fresh.

However, within the past year, one interested party has come forth.

Stephen Schuback is a Harrisburg native who has had his eye on Governor’s Square, and he will tell you frankly that he saw it as a good business investment. It was the potential for money-making that brought him back to the city from his home in South Carolina. But as he began interacting with residents, he knew he wanted to help them, he said.

“You’re all important to me,” Schuback assured residents at the first of the two Governor’s Square tenant meetings. “I have the experience to pull this off. Nobody’s going to want to leave if I take over.”

Uptown Partners said that they have an agreement to sell the property to a private group, but would not confirm that Schuback is that “private group.” However, Schuback told TheBurg multiple times that he has a contract with the owner to take over the 222 rental units. Additionally, Davis of the Harrisburg Redevelopment Authority confirmed that they have not had any other serious interest in the property.

Schuback’s resume notes his experience in affordable and market-rate housing development, including a renovation project for an affordable housing development in Akron, Ohio. That one was similar to what’s happening at Governor’s Square, he said.

But returning to Harrisburg holds a different meaning for him.

While his younger years in the city were fraught with drug dealing and other criminal behavior, landing him prison time, Schuback said that, with this project, he hopes to change the way his name is remembered.

“I’d like people to remember me for something more than what I did as a kid,” he said. “I want them to know my family cared about the community.”

 

When Someone Cares

Debbie M. Taylor, is another tenant who, like Britni Lowe, has struggled with maintenance issues for several years.

Taylor, a 67-year-old Harrisburg native, is known as “Gigi” or “the gorgeous granny” around her Governor’s Square neighborhood. She’s friends with her neighbors, especially the ladies in her apartment building, which includes another Debbie Taylor who lives above her. She makes brownies and finger Jello for the neighborhood kids and is friendly with the maintenance men who walk by, calling one “Papa Smurf” for his white beard and asking another if he likes her red-painted toenails.

Taylor loves the people she lives near, but, when it comes to the condition of her apartment, she said that the past two years have “sucked.”

Her screen window was broken for almost a year, and the hallway in her building was never clean. She and the other ladies would regularly scrub it themselves. The grass and landscaping weren’t maintained, and the playground across the parking lot used to look like a jungle, she said.

But recently, things have started to improve, she explained.

Schuback, while still pursuing purchasing Governor’s Square, has, in the meantime, taken to fixing up residents’ units. He has a contract with the owners, he said, to repair and answer maintenance requests on the property. Many residents who had long-unaddressed maintenance issues started to see change.

Linda Manigualt gestures up to her gutters that have been cleaned and repaired recently. Photo by Dani Fresh.

While Uptown Partners wouldn’t confirm that they contracted Schuback to do the work, they said in a statement that, “a number of resources have been engaged to make repairs at the property. We’re pleased with the progress that’s being made. The health and safety of the residents are our top priorities.”

“Since Steve’s been here, everything’s getting better,” Taylor said. “He cares. It’s a different feeling when someone cares.”

According to Schuback, he’s doing the work for free, while the owners pay for supplies.

He has also helped Lowe, who soon will move into another Governor’s Square apartment and out of the condemned building, he said. She’s excited that Stevie will have his own room in the new place.

“I’ll be happy to get us out of here,” Lowe said.

Schuback is confident that the work he is doing will show the city that he is capable of and serious about taking over and renovating Governor’s Square.

While Schuback said that he already has an agreement to purchase Governor’s Square from Uptown Partners, there are approvals he must get to actually obtain the properties.

Because of the HUD Upfront grant that was given to the owners to develop the property back in the earlier 2000s, Uptown Partners and Schuback must get approval of the sale from HUD.

According to the HRA’s Davis, this grant functions more like a loan, which eventually will need to be paid back or forgiven by HUD. If someone wants to purchase Governor’s Square, however, that grant/loan needs HUD approval to be transferred to a new owner. In order to request that transfer, Schuback was required to submit a financial, construction and management plan, among other details, about his proposal for Governor’s Square. He sent that plan in August to HRA, which functions as a conduit for the loan between HUD and Governor’s Square.

If approved by HUD, Schuback would take on $8.8 million in debt from the HUD grant for the majority of Governor’s Square properties—the 222 units.

Davis said that Schuback’s plan is still under review.

Although Harrisburg officials have repeatedly said that the city doesn’t have authority over what happens with the property, the administration has had things to say about the project.

According to Harrisburg Communications Director Matt Maisel, “[Schuback] is nowhere near where he needs to be financially to acquire the property.”

Schuback has proposed a $12 million renovation, estimating that each unit will require about a $56,000 upgrade. However, that budget is a little under half of what the city and HRA claim is needed. A building assessment report ordered by the Harrisburg Housing Authority in 2021 found that $22.5 million was needed to renovate Governor’s Square.

“Whether or not he truly wants to do good by the residents there is entirely separate of whether he can,” Maisel added.

He said that Schuback would not be acquiring the property any time in the near future.

On the other hand, Schuback feels confident in his estimated renovation costs.

“I’m good at what I do; it shows in my work,” he said. “I didn’t think I was going to get this resistance. At the end of the day, I’m going to get what I want.”

HUD Regional Public Affairs representative Sean Callahan said that the department has not received a package with information about a proposed sale from Uptown Partners, something that is required for HUD review. To be approved for the acquisition, a new owner would need to show that they have the capacity to manage the property, Callahan said.

“It does not appear the prospective owner has demonstrated capacity,” he said.

In October, Schuback received notice from the city that he was missing building permits for work he was doing on properties at Governor’s Square. He refuted that he needed them for the repairs he was doing.

“I’m used to getting what I want,” Schuback said. “But I’m starting to lose my patience. At some point, I’ve got to realize that this is futile.”

Schuback said that he has tried to meet with city officials to discuss issues like these, to no avail. Maisel said the city has reached out to him to meet, also unsuccessfully.

Linda Manigault stands out front of her home. Photo by Dani Fresh.

Waiting Game

Back over on Forrest Street, Governor’s Square resident Linda Manigault has accrued a list of maintenance requests sitting largely untouched for two years. Trash piled up behind her apartment, duct tape covered the gaps in her back door frame, area rugs hid the stained, aging carpet and, most recently, a mouse in her kitchen had her running for higher ground upstairs.

She’s thought about moving, but the low rent price has kept her around for years. There’s no way she could find something this cheap, she said.

Manigault’s dream is to move to Georgia. She’s been saving her money. But she knows the housing market isn’t in her favor right now—especially not for affordable housing.

“If I have to wait, at least I want to be comfortable here,” she said.

That’s the unfortunate reality that many low-income residents are living in. Affordable housing is in short supply, and demand for it is high. It’s a reality that’s left residents like Manigault stuck, without options.

“It’s not good,” said Leah Eppinger, executive director of Dauphin County’s housing authority. “There is a large shortage of units and a large population in need.”

The county’s housing authority doesn’t do work in Harrisburg city, which falls to the Harrisburg Housing Authority, which didn’t return calls for comment. But Eppinger’s outlook on the state of the market applies widely, as housing shortages are a nationwide problem.

According to Eppinger, around 3,000 households are on their waiting list for public housing, and their Section 8 housing choice voucher program has been closed to new applicants since 2009 while they’ve worked through that list.

For a family trying to find affordable housing right now, “it’s probably impossible,” she said.

Like many residents, Britni Lowe has thought about moving out of Governor’s Square. She has searched online for other apartments, but has struggled to find affordable options. When she has, they’re often owned by out-of-town landlords, which makes her nervous. Like others who have come to the same conclusions, Lowe has stayed put.

The sentiment around Governor’s Square has improved as Schuback has made upgrades to apartments, cut the grass and cleaned up illegal dumping hotspots, giving residents a sense of hope. But as discussions continue in the offices of city and state officials, the question of what happens next remains.

In the meantime, Governor’s Square families are left stuck in the middle, waiting on an answer.

It’s mid-October, and it’s been over 60 days since the condemnation notice. But Governor’s Square still hasn’t moved Lowe, although Schuback has made some repairs to her building and said he plans to move her to the new apartment soon.

Lowe’s hope is tempered with realism, because she knows that things could change on a whim.

“I’m gonna roll with whatever comes my way because I don’t have no other choice,” Lowe said. “Life is unpredictable.”

 

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