The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Harrisburg residents shared opinions on a State Street project at a public meeting on Thursday night.

Our June issue of the magazine came out this week with a focus on all things summer! Grab a copy at one of our many distribution locations and remember to catch up on our daily news coverage, below.

Anita Harris, a former Harrisburg journalist, shares stories from the city in the 1970s in her new book, “The View From Third Street: Ani and the Harrisburg Independent Press.” The book includes reporting on Hurricane Agnes and the Vietnam War, among other historical events, our online story reported.

The Capital Area Greenbelt has lots of stops and sights to offer, our magazine story reported. There are cultural landmarks, restaurants and coffee shops, historical landmarks and, of course, beautiful nature scenes.

Gamut Theatre’s free Shakespeare in the Park is back with shows in Harrisburg’s Reservoir Park, our magazine story reported. “The Winter’s Tale” runs from June 3 to 18.

Harrisburg presented a new proposal for a State Street project at a public meeting on Thursday, our online story reported. At the meeting, residents viewed the draft plans and voiced their opinions with city officials and engineers.

Highmark Wholecare, Harrisburg Housing Authority and Latino Connection kicked off their Healthy Steps Walking Program with the goal of encouraging people to create healthy habits this summer, our online story reported. The program emphasizes walking, healthy eating and addressing health concerns quickly.

Impact Harrisburg has assisted the city with street repaving, sewer upgrades and grants for businesses during the pandemic, among other initiatives. However, the organization is now at a crossroads. They must either find more funding or suspend services. Read more in our magazine story.

June events are in full swing this month. Find plenty of fun summer activities in our Community Corner and our Happenings sections.

June is our editor’s favorite month for all the warm outdoor activities that it brings. Luckily, this month’s issue of the magazine has numerous stories about ways to spend the summer month, he says in his editor’s note.

The Paxton firehouse in Shipoke may be repurposed as a facility for Harrisburg’s unhoused, our online story reported. Dauphin County and the city are weighing the vacant building as an option for a day center.

Sankofa African American Theatre Company’s “Crowns” spotlights the stories of Black women, our magazine story reported. The show runs through June 26 at Open Stage in Harrisburg.

Sara Bozich has the perfect list of activities for a warm weekend in the Harrisburg area. Find it, here.

Tri-County Housing Development Corporation announced that it will move its office to N. Front Street in Harrisburg, our reporting found. It will also partner with the Pennsylvania Housing Financing Agency (PHFA) to provide homeownership courses to clients.

WB Music Therapy in Harrisburg helps meet clients’ needs through one-on-one sessions, catered to their musical preferences. In our magazine story, read more about the organization and how it impacts patients.

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Harrisburg residents march against gun violence, discuss social injustice at town hall

Ralph Rodriquez of All You Can Inc. (front) and residents march against social injustice and gun violence.

For Ralph Rodriguez, discussing the topic of gun violence is extremely important, because it’s one that hits home for him.

Rodriguez, founder of All You Can Inc., has lost friends to gun violence and knows the impact that the issue has on the community.

“It’s not too taboo to talk about,” said Rodriguez, who is also a Harrisburg City Council member. “It’s our current reality, and we have to address it.”

On Friday, All You Can Inc. and Be a Man Inc. held their third annual March Against Social Injustice and Gun Violence, along with a panel discussion. In the morning, a group gathered at the state Capitol steps for the march, which led them to the Heinz-Menaker Senior Center for a town hall event.

The first march took place in 2020 around the time of the death of George Floyd and subsequent Black Lives Matter rallies. Hundreds of people showed up to the march, including Gov. Tom Wolf and Harrisburg Police Commissioner Thomas Carter.

Ralph Rodriguez speaks at the town hall event at the Heinz-Menaker Senior Center.

While Friday’s crowd was smaller, Rodriguez and other speakers stressed the importance of the event, despite the number of attendees.

“Gun violence is a big deal, not just locally, but nationally,” he said. “Gun violence has been very prevalent in our nation lately, but it is not a new thing. We have to pass on the message of positivity and what it looks like to come together.”

Some speakers talked about ways to address the issue, such as through increasing gun restrictions, using the power of your vote and increasing access to community resources and social services.

“We will never stop fighting for our community,” said Shavonnia Corbin Johnson, political director of the Pennsylvania Democratic Committee. “From the rocks of a damaged community, a flower can bloom, and it must.”

To learn more about All You Can Inc., visit their website. For more information about Be a Man Inc., visit their website.

 

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Harrisburg shares new proposal for State Street project, residents offer input at public meeting

Harrisburg residents shared opinions on a State Street project at a public meeting on Thursday night.

Proposed plans for a State Street construction project were on the table for discussion, literally, at a meeting with residents on Thursday.

Local residents roamed the Harrisburg School District Administration building, looking at draft proposals and sharing their opinions with city officials and representatives from Dawood Engineering, Inc., which provides services to the city.

“Their input matters,” said Percy Bullock, project manager for the city. “That’s why we stopped the whole project. This is their opportunity to speak.”

In April, Harrisburg began construction on the State Street corridor as part of a years-long planning process, started in 2019, to make the road safer for motorists and pedestrians. However, within a few weeks, the city issued a cease and desist order for the project after residents expressed concerns. At a City Council meeting, many specifically took issue with planned changes to parking and the addition of a bike lane, which some said would go unused.

Harrisburg decided to go back to the drawing board with its plans for the street and give community members the chance to voice their opinions. Thursday’s public meeting was the first of three set to take place this month.

At the meeting, residents were able to view and comment on a new draft design, as well as on specific aspects of the design, such as bicycle traffic features, parking and the size and number of traffic lanes.

The new draft design includes narrowing the current traffic lanes from 12 feet to about 10 feet in an effort to slow traffic, Bullock said. The current 12-foot lane size is the standard width of a highway lane, not that of a neighborhood street, he explained. The plan also would create a 3-foot buffer area between parking and traffic lanes to allow motorists more room when getting in and out of cars.

“Ultimately, it’s a safety project,” said Scott Bechard, senior transportation planner at Dawood Engineering. “We want to keep parking, but make the road safer for pedestrians.”

Other features of the draft plan include updated and additional signage, better-defined bus stops and school drop-off zones, bump-outs at certain crosswalks and updated traffic signals. It would also add “sharrows,” markings to signal to drivers that the road is shared by bicyclists.

Long-time State Street resident Arbie White-Davis was opposed to the initial plan for the roadway that she lives along. She didn’t like the project’s original design to restrict parking during certain high-traffic hours of the day in order to free up a lane for motorists. She also didn’t see the need for the planned protected bike lanes.

However, with the new draft proposal in front of her, she expressed satisfaction.

“I like the new plan,” White-Davis said. “I like that it makes it safe for me to get in and out of my vehicle.”

Council member Jocelyn Rawls was happy to see the new direction for the project, as well.

“It looks good to me,” she said. “I’m happy that parking will not be interrupted. I like how it encompasses everyone’s concerns.”

Several local bicycle riders also showed up to see how the new proposal integrated a multimodal aspect.

“I’m OK with the shared road,” said Dick Norford, a Capital Area Greenbelt Association board member. “I think they’re very wise to narrow the lanes. We are not dissatisfied with the proposal.”

The final proposed plan will need to be approved by PennDOT, as it is a state-owned road.

The next public meeting will take place on June 6 at the Kappa Omega fraternity house at 2020 State St. It will have a similar open-house-style format. The last meeting will be held again at the school district building on June 22, where officials will present a final draft proposal that incorporates public feedback, Bullock said.

“We’re not here to fight them,” said resident Jemir Isom. “We are here wanting them to hear us. I think our voices should be heard.”

 

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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: Lots of theatre performances and tasting-type events. Build your own weekend!

(Still) Worth noting: Check out my private Facebook community, Cheers Harrisburg. You can join the convo here.

Things on my agenda this weekend: Neighborhood yard sale, market visit, maybe a date night?

Don’t forget to support your local brewery! Click here to find one near you.

For your weekend planning

Below are options for your weekend.

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

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Top Weekend Recs

  1. Save the date for ‘Secret Gardens & Neighborhoods’ tour
  2. Mark your calendar (and be sure you’re subscribed to my email) for HU’s Summer Concert Series
  3. Subscribe & save with Broadway Series at Hershey Theatre
  4. Make travel plans (with a discount + perks)
  5. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


What are you doing this weekend around Harrisburg? Let us know on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.

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Highmark Wholecare, local organizations kick off program to encourage healthy habits for seniors

Highmark Wholecare and local officials cut the ribbon on the Healthy Steps program.

This summer, local organizations hope residents take a step in the right direction towards healthy living. 

On Wednesday, Highmark Wholecare, Harrisburg Housing Authority and Latino Connection kicked off their Healthy Steps Walking Program with the goal of encouraging people to create healthy habits this summer.

“We get folks more active,” said Erin Moore of Highmark Wholecare at a kick-off event at the Jackson Tower. “It is preventative for diseases down the line.” 

The 12-week program encourages participants to incorporate three specific habits into their daily lives: walking, healthy eating and addressing health concerns quickly.

During the 12 weeks, participants can attend seven engagement events at the Harrisburg Housing Authority that will include giveaways, classes, demonstrations and tips. Some of these presentations include the importance of mindfulness and sun safety. 

Most of the classes will take place at the Jackson Tower, one of the Harrisburg Housing Authority’s residences for low-income senior residents. Several seniors have already signed up for the Healthy Steps program, whether it be for dance classes or the healthy snack presentations.

According to George Fernandez, founder and chief executive officer of Latino Connection, the organization has a long history of working with others in the community to improve the health of Harrisburg residents.

“We bring the resources to our residents,” Fernandez said. “It is important to reach the communities often forgotten about.”

Rep. Patty Kim (D-103) was also in attendance and showed her gratitude for the organizations behind the program that are making an effort to get people healthy. 

“These are my residents,” Kim said. “Thank you for caring for them.” 

For more information about Highmark Wholecare, visit their website.

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HIP History: Former Harrisburg journalist publishes book about the city in the ’70s, in time for anniversary of historic flood

An issue of the Harrisburg Independent Press from 1971

Anita Harris hasn’t lived in Harrisburg for years, but the memories of her time here have always had a hold on her.

Harris’ experience as a young reporter in the city during the 1970s shaped her career and life and is a story she constantly revisits. It’s a tale that Harris recently released in her memoir, “The View From Third Street: Ani and the Harrisburg Independent Press.”

“These are stories that I’ve always wanted to write,” she said. “It was a very important part of my life, and I learned so much. I wanted to return to that.”

The book follows Harris as a 23-year-old reporter with the Harrisburg Independent Press (HIP), which she and her college friends founded in 1971 and ran until 1980. The publication’s office, as alluded to in Harris’s book title, sat at 1004 N. 3rd St., now the site of the Urban Churn scoop shop.

Within her book, Harris shares stories of reporting on local issues like poverty, housing, criminal justice and politics. She also discusses historic events that HIP covered at the time, such as the Vietnam War, Hurricane Agnes and the Trial of the Harrisburg 7. The latter refers to an incident in which a group of nuns and priests stood accused of conspiring to kidnap then-U.S. National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger and blow up underground heating tunnels in Washington, D.C.

The book release coincides with the 50th anniversary of the 1972 flood in Harrisburg, which HIP reported on extensively during the time.

Beyond memorializing historic incidents in Harrisburg’s history, Harris shares her own experience at a time when societal norms for women’s roles were changing. She recalled dealing with sexism and navigating varying expectations placed on women from different generations.

“This was a very formative period in my life and in the lives of many women,” she said. “I needed to explore that.”

Anita Harris

After her time in Harrisburg, Harris went on to report for Newsday, WRFM Radio and MacNeil Lehrer (now the NewsHour) of PBS. She taught journalism at Harvard, Yale and Simmons universities and authored two non-fiction books. She currently serves as managing director of the Harris Communications Group in Cambridge, Mass.

The similarities that Harris sees between the current political climate and that of the 1950s were a driving force behind her inspiration for the new book.

“It struck me that there were parallels with divisions in society between now and then,” she said. “By examining the past, I thought I could help find some answers and solutions to what’s happening now.”

Readers can dive into Harrisburg’s history, as seen through Harris’ youthful eyes, in her book. She hopes that those outside of the city will find the stories helpful, as well. She believes that Harrisburg served as a microcosm of what was happening around the nation at the time.

Within the pages of the book, Harris gives readers a look at some of the news that HIP covered and its impact on the community. She explained that, since HIP was an independent paper, residents were more willing to entrust them with sensitive stories.

Third Street in Harrisburg in 1972. Photo by John Serbell, published in the Harrisburg Independent Press.

“You could really make a difference,” she said. “We were able to cover some of the most amazing stories.”

While much of Harris’ reason for writing the book was to flesh out her own experiences and get them down on paper, she hopes that her book also influences readers. Harris hopes that her story of making a difference encourages younger generations and serves as a way for them to use lessons from history to inspire future progress.

“I’m hoping this will be of interest to future generations to help them understand what it was like then and to give them energy to stand up,” she said. “If we can understand what happened, it may provide insight needed for each of us to move forward.”

To purchase “The View From Third Street,” find the book on Amazon.

 

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Tri-County Housing Development to move office, offer new homeownership classes

The TCHDC has announced that they are moving offices to Front Street, as well as offering a new program.

Tri-County Housing Development Corporation (TCHDC) has good news for Harrisburg-area residents, as well as for the future of the organization.

Last week, TCHDC announced that it will move its operations to a new office on N. Front Street in downtown Harrisburg on Wednesday and become a partner in a state homeownership counseling program.

The organization will move from its current location on the 1500-block of Derry Street to a first-floor office in the Pennsylvania Housing Financing Agency (PHFA) building at 201 N. Front St.

PHFA also approved TCHDC to join its Comprehensive Homeownership Counseling Network in its Level Up Program. The program works with nonprofit organizations to help them create their own housing counseling programs. 

For years, Harrisburg-based Tri County Community Action offered a similar service to nonprofits, until ending it this past June. PHFA’s program now fills that gap in services.

“We’re actually the first organization in the program,” said TCHDC Executive Director Gary Lenker. 

Lenker said that he is happy to have a service like this return to the area. 

“It will provide another opportunity for homebuyer counseling,” Lenker said. “There is a real need for it, and we’re excited to provide that service.”

According to Lenker, the office’s move to the PHFA building goes “hand-in-hand” with TCHDC’s decision to participate in the homeownership program. 

“They have a really nice community room that we can use for homebuyer counseling,” Lenker said.

The schedule for the homebuyer counseling classes has yet to be finalized.

Lenker said that the courses will fit with the organization’s mission “to provide affordable housing to persons and families throughout the city and in surrounding areas.”

To learn more about Tri County Housing Development Corporation, visit their website.

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Burg Review: Hats off to Sankofa’s “Crowns”

An off-Broadway production by Regina Taylor, Sankofa African American Theatre Company’s “Crowns” is more than a hats-off to an icon of the cultural experience that is the Black church. “Crowns” is a high-energy, foot-stomping, clapping, hum-along gospel musical that will have you fanning yourself once it heats up the house.

In this fish-out-of-water story, we first meet our protagonist Yolanda (Jasmine Graham), who has been transplanted from Brooklyn to South Carolina to live with her grandmother, Mother Shaw (Regina Gail Malloy) after the murder of Yolanda’s brother, Teddy. Yolanda wears Teddy’s red baseball cap in remembrance of him.

Although this is the main plot, a secondary story emerges as a frontrunner–the tradition of Black church hats and the strong women who wear them. These same women embrace Yolanda as an extension of the larger church family.

“Crowns” unfolds in vignette form, rotating narratives between characters. The hats become the vehicle for telling the story, which isn’t so much plot-driven as it is an archetypal study. The narratives bring out a microcosm of Black church archetypes situated around their hats, a veritable pecking order of the First Lady pastor’s wife, the Elders and on down the line.

These women treat church as an important event. They stress looking your best to go meet the King, imparting an involved set of “Hat Queen Rules” to strut their “hattitude.” Church hats are a competitive status symbol, setting an example of modesty, hearkening back to wearing headdresses worn in the fields and to African women adorning their heads. Hats are a connection to becoming one with all that was and ever will be.

The sternest (and funniest) delivery of the rules comes from the pastor’s wife, Mabel, (Diane Hetes), who would sooner lend out one of her children than to lend a hat.

Executive Artistic Director Sharia Benn invites us “to hear stories about our culture that center, uprise and uplift communities, with a goal to educate, to be real about the issues that confront us.”

As part of our education, we learn that the tumultuous Civil Rights movement led to hats falling out of everyday fashion. But they are a must for special occasions. The hats we wear to weddings and funerals carry the history of the milestones in our lives. We find as much joy as we do sorrow in the tapestry of the hats themselves. The hats represent sacrifices, becoming cherished family heirlooms the ladies pass down before they pass on.

The hats become personified, whether they are nodding approval, flailing with the Holy Spirit, or swaying to heavenly hymns—28 hymns, to be exact. You would find any song in the score of “Crowns” in any church with threadbare hymnals with yellowed parchment pages.

In no definitive order, these are the standout songs:

All the cast collaborates in the rollicking “Battlefield” and “Yonder Come Day,” the latter of which is a dance-in-the-aisles song to get converted to.

Like a cross between a funeral dirge and a jazzy nightclub, “Wade in the Water” is an outpouring of love by the entire congregation for one mourning parishioner. “Take My Life and Let it Be” has such lovely harmonies, and the cast sings all the verses. “I Got a Crown” and “Amen” are two hymns that pull your emotions from the floor up.

Velma (Latoya Dallas) belts out the classic, “His Eye is on the Sparrow,” with a look and style reminiscent of Whitney Houston from her early career. The arrangement is beautifully unpredictable.

Jeannette (Breanne Sensenig) sings a touching rendition of “Take Me to the Water,” sporting eyelashes thicker than the velvet on her Bergère hat.

For a woman of a certain age, Malloy has some pipes to match her glamorous hats, delivering solos “In the Morning” and “None but the Righteous.”

Although the poster would have you believe differently, there is a “Man” (Steven Ross) in “Crowns.” He sports a fedora and intones his bass range in “Mary Don’t You Weep.”

I tip the brim of my own black feathered hat to the talented cast, whose singing blew me away. My only tiny issue is that the two-hour show has no intermission. (This old church lady needs one.)

My plus-one and I wore our own church hats to the opening night of “Crowns,” sitting in the front row for the full experience. I stand at about 5-foot-nothing, so I doubt I blocked anyone’s view. Director Sharia Benn said to us, “You’re gonna be all up in it performing, just like church.” Worry not, dear readers. My vocal competence lies somewhere between the caterwaulings of Yoko Ono and Ethel Merman with a head cold, and I would never do anything to publicly embarrass TheBurg.

Even if you don’t own a hat, or (like me) “only have one hat because I ain’t got but one head,” the theater will still welcome you. In the words of Mother Shaw, you can strut yourself on in.

Sankofa African American Theatre Company’s “Crowns” runs through June 26 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information and tickets, visit www.openstagehbg.com/show/crowns.

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Cycle Sites: There’s plenty to stop and see while breezing around the Capital Area Greenbelt.

Fort Hunter Mansion and Park

Harrisburg’s best-kept secret may be a 20-mile trail first conjured up by City Beautiful planners in 1902 that finally became a reality over nine decades later.

Today, the Capital Area Greenbelt takes riders and walkers not only through nature, but also through cultural landmarks, past sports fields, near restaurants and coffee shops, and by a myriad of historical landmarks.

The Tour de Belt returns this year on June 5 to celebrate the trail while also raising funds to help maintain and improve the Greenbelt. While it’s exhilarating to join hundreds of riders (nearly 1,000 typically ride) on the loop around the city, the secrets of the trail can be discovered more easily on solo or small group rides.

The adventures can kick off from a number of trail locations, but a good starting point is the trailhead off of Derry Street near the City Line Diner. It’s just a few blocks down from The Tiger Eye Coffee Shop (3418 Derry St.), which welcomes Greenbelt traversers with a bike rack, outdoor seating and a variety of tasty drinks and treats.

Most of the trail is either paved trails or gravel roads, so bicyclists, joggers and hikers can largely avoid city streets. Beginning at Derry Street, riders encounter some hills, particularly on the ascent into Reservoir Park that starts out gently, but gradually becomes steeper and steeper until—gasp! The Civil War Museum and various statues and fountains welcome riders to the summit. From there, it’s literally downhill for a bit.

One of the more “secret” areas on and near the Greenbelt includes the East Harrisburg Cemetery off of Herr Street and Edgemont Road. The trail winds to the west of that, bringing riders out near the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds, where they have a choice to take a short detour to Veterans Park in Susquehanna Township off of Elmerton Avenue. Along with a playground, sports fields, and tennis courts, the park also has monuments to World War II, Korean War and Vietnam War veterans.

Take some time to tour around the former hospital campus, which first opened in 1845 and is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It’s as pleasant as it is creepy with interesting architecture, climbing kudzu and flashbacks from the psychological thriller, “Girl, Interrupted,” which was filmed there in 1999, launching Angelina Jolie’s career.

Depending on when one is riding, it might be possible to take a brief stop to enjoy some cricket at the Lower Field park at 2301 N. Cameron St., where Pennsylvania United Cricket Association matches are played.

A pedestrian tunnel takes riders under Cameron Street, coming out in front of the Farm Show Complex, where the Greenbelt parallels the busy thoroughfare until turning onto Wildwood Park Drive, then through the HACC campus before following Industrial Road to Wildwood Park.

Not only does the trail become more scenic with the lake, cattails, croaking frogs and singing birds, but it also gets hillier and more challenging as it wraps around the lake with installations from the outdoor exhibit, “Art in the Wild.” The exhibit surprises trail users with splashes of color, unusual shapes and creative integrations with nature.

Soon after exiting Wildwood Park and cruising down Linglestown Road, riders have a choice to detour off the original loop onto a recently completed expansion that follows N. Front Street on a paved path along the river to historic Fort Hunter Park.

Bikers can stop for food at multiple mini-markets and fast food restaurants as well as bar food at The Boro and steaks at the Glass Lounge along this stretch. Getting back on track on Linglestown Road, bikers will take a right onto Kaby Street by the Donald B. Stabler Memorial Park and enjoy the quiet residential streets of Susquehanna Township before returning to the hubbub of Front Street along the river.

Views of wildfowl and bridges, art and sculptures, and historic buildings like the state Capitol—as well as the possibility of a side trip to City Island via the Walnut Street Bridge—are well worth the busyness of the path as trail users travel south through Harrisburg, eventually coming out by the PennDOT building.

Phoenix Park rises along the river past the building, including a construction site that will be the home for the future Tiny Homes Veterans Village. Gravel trails then loop riders near the Lochiel Hotel, a big, yellow curiosity with a checkered historic past. From there, the Greenbelt parallels Cameron Street until it crosses over just past 13th Street by the Dauphin County Recycling Center.

This area of the trail that follows Spring Creek between 19th and 28th streets offers wild solitude in the middle of urban chaos. The trail here (and also off Derry Street) includes StoryWalk cards sponsored by the Dauphin County Library System, offering children playful interaction. It also provides the only access to the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, an 11-foot jet-black obelisk in a memorial garden.

Sculptures, flowers and native plants sprout up in the Five Senses Garden off N. Harrisburg Street. Not far after drinking in the garden’s splendor, the trail challenges bikers to safely cross over Paxton Street and wraps along City Park Drive and Derry Street before depositing them back onto the safety of a dedicated trail at the Paxtang Parkway.

That riders can escape to nature hidden along the river, through parks and within the city proper, is a treasured legacy from the early 20th century planners. This emerald necklace is a true urban gem.

For more information on the Capital Area Greenbelt, visit www.caga.org. The Tour de Belt takes place June 5, beginning from the HACC campus at 9 a.m.

 

Bike It, See It

Numerous sites and stops dot the 20-mile Capital Area Greenbelt loop. Long-time CAGA and Bike Harrisburg member Dick Norford, who offers tours around the Greenbelt, drew up a list of 39 interesting things to see along the way.

    • Paxtang Park
    • Reservoir Park
    • National Civil War Museum
    • Harrisburg East Cemetery
    • Harrisburg State Hospital
    • Farm Show Complex
    • HACC
    • Wildwood Park
    • Fort Hunter
    • McCormick Island
    • Jewish Community Center
    • Italian Lake
    • Scottish Rite Cathedral
    • Harrisburg Obelisk
    • Governor’s Mansion
    • Pennsylvania National Fire Museum
    • Broad Street Market
    • Riverfront Park
    • Peace Garden
    • Myra Lloyd Dock House
    • Little Roundtop Rock
    • Sunken Gardens
    • YMCA
    • Civic Club of Harrisburg
    • Kunkel Plaza
    • City Island
    • Market Street Bridge
    • Pennsylvania State Capitol
    • Old Governor’s Mansion
    • Dauphin County Courthouse
    • Harris Cameron Mansion
    • John Harris Gravesite
    • UPMC (Harrisburg Hospital)
    • Dock Street Dam
    • Lochiel Hotel
    • Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
    • Five Senses Garden
    • Spring House
    • The Rutherford House

Dick Norford offers private bike tours of the Capital Area Greenbelt. You can reach him at [email protected].

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A Lasting Legacy: Why did the Jewish Federation decide to buy the former Dixon Center–and what comes next?

The Jewish Federation of Greater Harrisburg envisions a lap pool and convertible ‘gymatorium’ for Duncan Hall on its new Grass Campus.

“It takes one second to walk on the campus and be inspired by what’s happening here, and a lot of people felt that immediately.”

Abby Smith, president of the Jewish Federation of Greater Harrisburg, is giving TheBurg a tour of the Alexander Grass Campus for Jewish Life. Seen through her eyes and ebullience, the reimagined but still-vacant space—most recently known as Dixon University Center—truly does seem to hum with activity.

Abby Smith

“Our current campus just doesn’t reflect who the Jewish community is,” she said. “We didn’t look on the outside how we are on the inside—this very philanthropic, community-minded set of organizations in this not-that-spectacular space. This lives up to who our community is.”

The Jewish Federation is “planting a seed” that will radiate throughout central Pennsylvania, said Benedict Dubbs, president of the campus designer, Murray Associates Architects.

“It is not just limited to the Jewish culture,” Dubbs said. “That opportunity for education, that opportunity for engagement, that sense of community is so much more now because of the size and the relationship of the campus to the surrounding neighborhoods and the surrounding community.”

  

Past and Future

The Jewish Federation of Greater Harrisburg encompasses several initiatives supporting Jewish life and overall community wellbeing, including the Jewish Community Center and Brenner Family Early Learning Center. Other groups, including Jewish Family Service of Greater Harrisburg, rent space from the federation as they carry out collaborative missions.

Since 1958, the center of the region’s Jewish community has been the JCC at 3301 N. Front St. Today, the building buzzes, beehive-like, with yoga classes, childcare, Jewish education, music recitals, lectures, film festivals, senior lunches, summer camps, religious observances, board meetings and busy staff.

And like a beehive, the space is crammed beyond capacity. News in August 2020 that Pennsylvania’s State System of Higher Education was selling its six-acre, underutilized Dixon University Center three blocks down Front Street set off a cascade of activity. Calls to backers. Board votes. Dialog with tenants and stakeholders. Preparing a bid. Finally, accepting the gift that made it all possible—backing from the Alexander Grass Foundation to help buy the $4.56 million site.

The foundation president, Elizabeth Grass Weese, and her brother, Roger Grass—children of the late Rite Aid founder and philanthropist Alex Grass—appreciated the site’s self-sustaining business model, said Smith. They also liked “the idea that their dad’s legacy could be connected not just to such a beautiful campus and Harrisburg’s Jewish community but to future generations, as well. Alexander Grass was a huge part of how Jewish Harrisburg was on the map nationally, and this puts us back on the map.”

Sandy Cohen, past president of the JCC and the Jewish Federation, is co-chairing fundraising for the new site. He attended kindergarten in the JCC, when the building was new and marked a new era for Harrisburg’s Jewish community as it moved from the Midtown building that now houses H*MAC.

Cohen “grew up in that building,” the social hub where kids bowled and danced, he said.

“Someone built that for us,” he said. “It’s now 65 years later, and our current building—it needs a lot. The Grasses did this for us. Giving back to the community, I can’t say no. If someone did it for us, I want to do it for that next generation, for generations to come.”

 

Room to Grow

With the October 2021 announcement that the federation had submitted the winning bid for the site, the Grass Campus was born.

“While we did not have requirements for the use of the property, we believe the Jewish Federation’s plans are a good fit for the location and the community,” said PASSHE spokesman Kevin Hensil.

Programs Director Terri Travers envisions a space that strengthens community ties through expansion in fitness and recreation, summer camp, children’s theater and senior living.

“We’ve already been able here at the ‘J’ to have some intergenerational programs, but I really see us being able to expand our offerings,” she said. “The sky’s the limit. We want to make sure we’re serving the needs of the community for generations to come.”

A vision of better serving the entire community is driving the transformation, said Smith. Plans tuck existing uses and programs into the campus buildings constructed, mostly, in the early 20th century for the original site developer, Harrisburg Academy:

  • Education. The early childhood center, currently in the JCC basement, will no longer flood with tropical storm mud but with light flowing through tall windows into rooms made more spacious by knocking down walls. Silver Academy, Harrisburg’s Jewish day school, will move to Duncan Hall, across 2nd Street from the main campus.
  • Senior and wellness programming. Clinical space already equipped with sinks and floor drains—and in one room, an eye wash station—create possibilities for partnering with a health care organization.
  • Spaces campus-wide for conferences, meetings and gallery showings. An ornate hall could host recitals and lectures. Duncan Hall’s “gymatorium” will have a sleek stage and backdrops that convert a new basketball court into event space.
  • Office space for federation staff. Travers said that she finally will have separate storage for the program detritus cluttering her current office—water bottles, boxing equipment, keychains and a Slip ‘N Slide “that looks pretty darn fun.”
  • A 15,000-square-foot fitness center on the administration building’s second floor. Whether on cardio equipment or the balcony just meant for yoga and tai chi, members will have serenity-inducing views of the quadrangle and river. A lap pool will be part of the gym complex in Duncan Hall.
  • Jewish Family Service in the former PASSHE chancellor’s home. JFS offerings include clinical counseling and therapy, adoption and foster care, refugee resettlement and food assistance. Clients will be invited to wait in a glass-enclosed solarium that is Smith’s favorite room on the campus. “When you’re coming in for social services, to be in a home is just special,” she said.

The grassy quadrangle bordered by campus buildings and Front Street will remain unspoiled. For one thing, there’s a parking garage underneath. For another, it’s just beautiful, and the Jewish Federation likes it that way. Smith envisions neighborhood residents walking their dogs. Dubbs sees outdoor lectures and movie nights. A volunteer committee of landscapers and arborists is developing plans for the site, including the early learning center’s garden-to-table curriculum.

“Within Judaism, there are so many values that connect back to the earth,” said Smith, citing the Tikkun Olam teaching of a “responsibility to heal the world. It is within our tradition to care about the spaces that we inherit on the earth.”

Other volunteers are offering their expertise to develop IT schemes or address security. “I think they just need to be asked,” said Smith, a volunteer whose day job is president and CEO of Team Pennsylvania. “Just give them the opportunity to step up.”

Within that volunteer cadre, Cohen and his wife, Marcia—who led development of the JCC’s childcare in the early 1980s—see young leaders emerging.

“I’m now the old guard, but I’m happy to see that younger people are stepping up to take leadership roles,” Cohen said. “They’re enthusiastic about it. They’re excited about it.”

Much of the office space will be ready for occupancy this year. Completion of the early learning center and the gym will stretch into 2023, but “hopefully, early 2023,” said Smith. Programs are expected to continue uninterrupted through the transition.

The master plan allows flexibility to meet current needs while adapting to future, unseen developments, said Dubbs.

“If this is a very large book, I think we are in the early chapters of something that will write itself over many years and decades, and it will become better and better,” he said.

Just like the JCC today, much of the Grass Campus will serve the non-Jewish community, said Smith. After all, the conversion also embodies the Jewish value of tzedakah, “an obligation to giving back.”

“We’re here for generations to come, but in a way that better serves the community, that better connects to the community,” she said. “To me, with what we’re able to do on this campus, it changed the future.”

For more information on the Jewish Federation of Greater Harrisburg, visit www.jewishharrisburg.org.

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