June Editorial Cartoon: 5G Jungle
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Greater Harrisburg's Community Magazine

The 2021 Harrisburg Mural Festival began last weekend with artists painting planters on Allison Hill.
The 2021 Harrisburg Mural Festival kicked off over the weekend, with local artists beginning work on large planters in the Allison Hill neighborhood.
In all, 20 Harrisburg-area artists will paint the planters through June 20, when the planter component will wrap up.
“Connecting with local artists has been extremely rewarding,” said Meg Caruso, co-founder and president of festival organizer Sprocket Mural Works. “There is an amazing amount of talent here. Not only do the artists have the opportunity to express themselves, but they’re doing it in a very public way through art that will uplift the community for years to come.”
The planter art project is being conducted in partnership with Tri County Community Action. In addition, staff and volunteers of the Giant Co. filled more than a dozen planters with soil and flowering plants along Derry and Market streets.
“Beautification projects like this are key to community development,” said Danielle Krebs, communications manager for Tri County Community Action. “It provides an opportunity for community members and organizations to get involved and work together while instilling community pride for the residents.”
Planter artists range in age and ability, from students to longtime Harrisburg residents like Althea Lynn King, 42, who designed a planter depicting “mom squad”-themed artwork.
“Being a mom of young Black boys, with everything going on in the world, you have fear, but you also know when moms come together, they love and protect kids,” said King, of her artwork. “Even though it’s a small project—for me, it’s huge. My love for Allison Hill started because I attended church here for many years, and Allison Hill was always my favorite neighborhood in Harrisburg.”
Sharnee “Artzbeat” Burnett, 23, a recent graduate of Pennsylvania College of Art and Design, said her planter murals focus on race relations.
“I wanted my work to speak on how we are all the same, even though our skin colors are different, and we all have different features,” Burnett said. “At the end of the day, we are all here trying to live our lives. I love to help make the community more colorful and happy.”
The 2021 Harrisburg Mural Festival is Sprocket’s third biennial summer festival. The majority of Sprocket’s 45 murals were created during the 2017 and 2019 festivals by local, regional, national and international artists. This year, rather than a concentrated 10-day mural festival as in the past, Sprocket is organizing continuous, summer-long mural projects popping up throughout the city.
Other components of the 2021 Harrisburg Mural Festival include:
Pocket Park: Harrisburg’s Patrick Alley is set to be transformed into a pocket park. Dozens of volunteers, along with the community group Friends of Midtown, recently cleaned the unused alleyway of litter and weeds and planted a garden featuring native, pollinating plants donated by Manada Conservancy. Next, murals featuring honeybees, sponsored by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, will be added, beginning in July.
Recycle Bicycle: A fundraising campaign just concluded, in conjunction with May’s National Bike Month activities, to help fund a mural at Recycle Bicycle Harrisburg’s new Allison Hill location. Harrisburg-based artist Ralphie Seguinot, who painted the mural at the nonprofit’s previous location, will re-imagine that original design into a new mural beginning in July
Celebrating Black Lives: A steering committee of community members is meeting to begin planning a “Celebrating Black Lives” mural.
For more information on Sprocket Mural Works, visit their website. Potential volunteers, sponsors and others should contact Sprocket at [email protected].
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Harrisburg is one step closer towards a construction project designed to make the city more pedestrian friendly.
At a City Council work session on Tuesday, City Engineer Wayne Martin announced a grant that Harrisburg will receive to extend the Boyd Street “Urban Meadow” to the new federal courthouse area.
The city was awarded the $700,000 grant from the state Department of Community and Economic Development’s Multimodal Transportation Fund Program to support Harrisburg’s “Courthouse Connection Multimodal Project.”
Currently, a walkway for pedestrian and bicyclist use runs along Boyd Street, from N. 3rd to Fulton streets. Under the Courthouse Connection project, pavers would extend the path from Fulton to N. 6th streets, near where the federal courthouse is being built.
The city would also add about 50 angled parking spaces on Reily Street between Logan and Fulton streets.
The walkway would be exclusively for pedestrian and bicycle traffic and include lighting and landscaping.
Council also discussed a proposed development project that would transform the former location of the Salvation Army Harrisburg Capital City region into 16 apartments. “The Lofts” building would contain one-bedroom and two-bedroom market-rate units. Wormleysburg-based Integrated Development Partners is seeking approval for the project, which has already received zoning board approval.
Additionally, council considered a development project to construct six town homes on Allison Hill at Hummel and Kittatinny streets. Tri-County HDC plans to demolish a building currently on the property and construct affordable housing.
The project received a $500,000 state Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program grant.
“We are anxious and excited to get this project started in a very challenged neighborhood,” said Gary Lenker of Tri-County
The project is part of the South Allison Hill Safety Plan, a partnership between several nonprofit organizations that aim to make the neighborhood safer.
Lenker said the team hopes to break ground on the project late this summer.
Also up for a vote next week is a proposal to transition Monroe Street, between Verbeke and Herr streets, from a two-way street to one-way. According to Martin, this has been a request of the Harrisburg School District for years, which hopes to improve the flow of traffic.
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For many, June 1 marks the informal start of summer and our entry into the long-awaited beach and vacation season.
But did you know that June 1 is also World Milk Day?
To mark the occasion, Feeding Pennsylvania and the PA Dairymen’s Association kicked off a partnership with Weis Markets to encourage milk donations to area food banks.
At the Enola store, Weis announced a donation of $10,000 in milk for the Central Pennsylvania Food Bank and pledged a total of $50,000 in milk donations.
The Weis donation will be distributed to five of Feeding Pennsylvania’s members where Weis Markets are located: Central Pennsylvania Food Bank, Helping Harvest, Philabundance, Second Harvest Food Bank of NEPA and the Lehigh Valley and the Weinberg Northeast Regional Food Bank.
”No one in Pennsylvania should be denied access to nutritious food, including fresh milk, especially the over half a million children in our commonwealth who are facing hunger every day,” said Jane Clements, executive director of Feeding PA.
On average, Feeding PA’s food banks serve nearly 2.2 million Pennsylvanians annually, yet during the first three months of the COVID-19 response, food banks served more than 5.5 million people.
“We are grateful to have outstanding community leaders such as Weis Markets behind our state’s number-one industry and once again helping us to provide fresh milk to children and families in need to tackle hunger,” said Dave Smith, executive director of the PA Dairymen’s Association.
Throughout the month of June, Weis customers can round up their payments at checkout counters to support the effort. Also, Weis will host the PA Dairymen’s “Milkshakes on the Moo-ve” truck during pop-up events in their parking lots.
Milkshake sales benefit Pennsylvania ag-related charities, along with Feeding PA’s “Fill a Glass with Hope” fresh milk program for families in need. Outdoor PA Dairymen’s milkshake pop-ups are as follows:
“We know that milk is a cornerstone of a nutritious diet for kids and families and is in high demand at area food banks,” said Ron Bonacci, vice president of advertising and marketing for Weis Markets. “We’re grateful to the Pennsylvania Dairymen’s Association for their commitment to fighting hunger and supporting the dairy industry.”
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Let the summertime events begin!
In just a few weeks, Pennsylvanians can enjoy music, friends and drinks at Dauphin County’s Proudly PA festival at Fort Hunter park in Harrisburg.
“The state is so vast in its resources,” said Michelle McKeown, Dauphin County Parks and Recreation program manager. “We have fantastic wineries, breweries, distilleries and musicians. This brings all of those together in a fun event that highlights the best PA has to offer.”
The event on June 12, sponsored by the Dauphin County Commissioners and M&T Bank, will be the county’s first big event post-COVID. Proudly PA replaces the Music and Wine Festival, which was postponed last year due to the pandemic.
This year, McKeown expects people will be ready to get out and enjoy all the event has to offer, in a safe way.
Pittsburgh-based Uprooted Band, featuring Michael Glabicki of the ’90s band Rusted Root, will headline the event. Bands Gentleman East, Cold Spring Union, Big Boy Brass Band and artist Olivia Farabaugh will perform as well.
Nine wineries, distilleries and breweries from across the state will pour drinks at the event. People will have the chance to try places they would’ve had to travel to, all in one location, McKeown said.
Food trucks will park on the premises as well and offer eats like pizza, nachos, sandwiches, coffee and ice cream. Various other vendors will set up on site as well.
Tickets for Proudly PA are $25 in advance and $35 at the door. The event runs from 12 to 8 p.m.; gates open at 11 a.m. People are encouraged to bring chairs and blankets to sit on.
Past Dauphin County festivals have drawn crowds of up to 2,500 people, McKeown said. However, Fort Hunter Park has plenty of place to spread out and safety precautions will be in place, she said. Fully vaccinated guests are not required to wear face masks for the event.
Additionally, the county will hold its annual BrewFest on July 17, also at Fort Hunter park. Attendees can try from over 60 craft beers while listening to music from artists Dan Wolff and John Beacher. Local breweries, Zeroday Brewing Co., Boneshire Brew Works, Appalachian Brewing Company and others, will sling drinks.
“I think people will feel comfortable outside,” McKeown said. “It’s definitely exciting. People are really itching to get out.”
For more information on the Proudly PA festival, visit their website. To learn more about the BrewFest, visit their website.
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“The name of the place is I like it like that…come on, let me show you where it’s at…”
For this 3rd installment of an intimate art preview, the name of the place is Millworks. And like the authors of this hit song from the ‘60s, the Dave Clark Five, Millworks is now featuring a different quintet comprised of diversely talented artists, as varied as their menus offerings. View this new show through June 13 on the main lobby wall. Come out this Saturday, June 5, for “First Saturday,” where many of the artists will be working in their studios.
Starting within the group is a quartet of women artists. Kristen Fava is a well-known name about town, having worked with TheBurg for six years. Known for her letterpress printing designs, she melds old world skills through the use of historical equipment in a precise manner that brings modern-day results to a finished format. In addition, she designs publication illustrations for clients as varied as the Kennedy Center and the Washingtonian magazine. Kristen is the founder and owner of Rexmake, a local printmaking business started in 2016. Her products can be appreciated on stationery that can be seen and purchased at Millworks studio 210. Ms. Fava is a talented graphic designer with years of multimedia experience. Her art is featured immediately upon entering the foyer. “Drawing” from a palette of neutral shades of tan and gray, Fava creates magic with works on paper that are soothing to the eye, maintaining focus within her crystal-clear vision. (Pictured: mixed media by Kristen Fava)
Elaine Elledge of Studio 212 minds her p’s and q’s like “the student of beauty” she is, advancing printmaking with pen-and-ink to paper as her prescribed medium. It often lifts her to the clouds in a dreamlike state. Her “p’s” include precision, poetry and parachutes. As for the “q’s,” Elaine quietly quantifies quality quintessentially. She is influenced by the German tradition of scherenschnitte to street art—religious symbolism to fantasy stories that inform her works of the human condition. Universal struggles shared by her own emotions and loss provide positive outcomes through her prints, lifting her spirit and those around her. Her art, buoyant and boundless, is like flying in a hot air balloon. Her art lifts me to lands uncharted. And like her art illustrates, she parachutes to a safe landing every time. (Pictured: mixed media by Elaine Elledge).
There is art and there is fine art. That is meant not to diminish the art of any modality or person working within the discipline. The only difference is fine art speaks to a practitioner of consummate skill and accomplishment. Yachiyo Beck falls into that category of artists. Her art ascribes to aesthetics and beauty as influenced by Asian art, with an emphasis on the natural. Beck’s paintings unfold as a most delicate flower opens up to the transformational changes in nature. Fine art is distinguished as unique to applied art or decorative art. Yachiyo’s works are representative of the intrinsic beauty she creates with her brush. In the vein of past masters like Georgia O’Keefe, Beck’s studies evoke exquisite refinement. She is an award-winning painter who works primarily in watercolors and oil. Working from Studio 320, she portrays still lifes, florals, landscapes and portraits with equal aplomb locally and on an international stage. (Pictured: watercolor by Yachiyo Beck)
Another award-winning artist, Linda Benton McCloskey, elevates the art of painting to immeasurable heights as she has mastered the craft in so many forms. Her love of creating through varied approaches encapsulates cold wax, encaustic, contemporary and abstract art and oil paintings. The artist states, “I paint because not to paint is unthinkable. Painting completes me and truly is my life’s passion.” A member of the International Society of Experimental Artists, she is recognized worldwide. Linda provides knowledge well beyond her fine art paintings in that she continues the thread through instructional workshops. In depth detail and execution are all part of her visual repertoire. She gives way to the process of creation, allowing for shape and movement to flow freely. Her work can be admired in Millworks studio 103 and in galleries nationwide. (Pictured: “Hopscotch” by Linda Benton McCloskey).
Ending with the only gentleman in this quintet is Richard Souders, retired art teacher from the Harrisburg School District. His career spans instruction at the Riverside Arts Magnet Program and Harrisburg High as well as the prestigious Pennsylvania Governors School for the Arts when it was located at Bucknell University. Initially forging interests in clay and fiber, Souders today delves into a recently developed love of street photography. This fascination is certainly where the action is, with so many side avenues. Adept at candidly capturing casual conventions, Souder’s street art turns into an intersection of ingenuity. His photos hit the bulls-eye every time. With bachelor’s and master’s degrees in art education from Kutztown University, Richard holds both ed cred and street cred as part of his resume. You can find Souder’s works on the upper level gallery at studio 317 and can be viewed on his Instagram page @streetseen9.
SAM Goes To Extremes with Persephone
If you are traveling to and through a rough neighborhood, it is advisable to bring a friend along. In my 70 years of living, I have heard the stories of the toughest neighborhood known to man. It starts with an “H” and ends with double “L’s”—you get the picture. To venture there would be an undertaking of Herculean proportion. So imagine two women going forth in a collaborative journey that took one year to complete. The narrative arc of the Greek goddess, Persephone, inspired a dualistic, multi-layered art opus. The exhibit is on view now in the main lobby at the Susquehanna Art Museum. Artists Elody Gyekis and Joanne Landis “paint on each other’s works and alternate the roles of both artist and Persephone. They explore the themes of birth and death, love and renewal, separation and reuniting, mother and daughter and the seasons of the year.”
Through their work, the artists celebrate the universal theme of the power of women in exploring feminine archetypes and mythologies that reflect current themes. In the end, the 12-panel panoramic exhibit is a testament to two women and their collaborative process. These artists share their journey of creation in an artist’s talk and tour at Susquehanna Art Museum on Sunday, June 13, at 3 p.m. This is an event you won’t want to miss, so reserve your spot today.
You Saw It There First—A Real Jim Dandy
It isn’t everyday that the New York Times features a Harrisburg artist. So, one can only imagine the surprise felt when, on May 13 in the Style section of the paper, I recognized a local name, Jim Caufield. Mr. Caufield was selected among a handful of other artists who had submitted a work of art made over the past year during the pandemic. He “envisioned it as a fantasy place with no rules or recipe.” In fact, “an antidote for the times” (no pun intended) Caufield relied on found and natural materials as an extension of his role as a board committee member for Friends of Wildwood’s “Art In The Wild.” Jim has been a driving force in this annual celebration of environmental engineering for the nine years it has been in operation. With 124 installations accounted for in AITW’s rich history, he borrowed the naturalistic refrain from the annual event in creating his craft. As a retired architect, it was an easy transition for Caufield to shift from design to builder with his “Rustic Magic” creations. His 16-inch tall creation, an abode, reflects a rustic wooden cottage full of charm in its finished rendering. Caufield’s piece was one of 26 nationwide selected for the article bringing recognition to a local artist for his creative work. If you are a fan of AITW, you can bring a bit of it indoors with one of Jim’s dandy art pieces. From the small to the tall, whimsical abodes to light fixtures, e-mail Jim at [email protected]. You can also view his creations through Fine Art America. (Pictured: “Not Gingerbread 1” by Jim Caufield).
HBB in HBG
In local artist news, Millworks adds a new team of artists to the roster in June at the restaurant/brewery/art studios. Zack Rudy and Garrick Dorsett comprise the Huckle Buckle Boys, outsider artists who march to their own beat. Moving from their West Shore locales to the city, they will be sharing space in studio 318 with Reina Wooden upstairs at Millworks. Look for more HBB news later this month in Bob’s Art Blog. (Pictured: “Where We Met”).
Except where noted, most photos in this story are by Jana MacGinnes.
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Rev. Joshua Brommer, Bishop Ronald Gainer and David Rushinski, the principal of Harrisburg Catholic Elementary School, break ground for the Cathedral Education Center.
The June issue of the TheBurg magazine came out today and includes all things summer. Pick up a copy and start making your summertime plans! First, catch up on any of this week’s local news that you may have missed, listed and linked, below.
Alyssa Thomas, a 2010 graduate of Central Dauphin High School, is one of the top players in the WNBA. When the 2021 season unfolds early this summer, it will mark her eighth season with the Connecticut Sun. Read about Thomas in our magazine article.
Camp Hill soon will be the site of a new mural, which will be unveiled at the Downtown Camp Hill Association’s “Summer Soirée” on June 5, according to our online story. Expect music, art, food and fun at the block party along Market Street.
Cathedral Education Center broke ground this week in downtown Harrisburg, our reporting found. The project will renovate the Harrisburg Catholic Elementary School on Liberty Street and the Shanahan Center on North Street and create a unified parochial school.
City Island soon will be the site of a new destination business, the Harrisburg Beach Club, according to our breaking news story. Two local businessmen are combining forces to offer drinks, food and fun along the waterfront, also putting the 100-year-old bathhouse back into public use.
The Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) of Dauphin County launched a fundraising campaign to support their efforts of helping foster care youth. Board President Lori Serratelli said that they hope to double the number of children they can assist, our reporting found.
Dauphin County rolled out a new effort to reach the local homeless population with COVID-19 vaccines, our online story reported. A mobile vaccine clinic, provided by Latino Connection, will hit the streets to educate and assist vulnerable residents.
Harrisburg School District identified Eric Turman as the finalist in their search for a new superintendent, our online story reported. Turman, the principal of Reading High School, will likely be announced as Harrisburg’s next superintendent next month.
Josie’s German Market & Café in Mechanicsburg serves up authentic sauerbraten, goulash, rouladen and other German dishes, our magazine story reported. Read more about the family-run shop that has been operating for over three decades, here.
Normalcy—what a concept. Our editor looks forward to a post-COVID summer full of Harrisburg fun in his Editor’s Note.
Open Stage delivers a powerful tribute to Judy Garland in their new show “Over the Rainbow.” Our theater reviewer recommends the show to Judy fans and music lovers alike.
Rolling Acre Hemp Farm in Carlisle is just about as central PA as it gets. In our magazine story, read about the CBD and CBG production process and how Rolling Acre seeks to educate people about the benefits.
Sara Bozich has a list of summer-y events for your weekend, including Artsfest, returning this year on City Island.
A Wolf administration official has another important post, as she was appointed to fill a seat as a Harrisburg School Board director, our online story reported. Jennifer Wilburne, chief of staff and press secretary to Pennsylvania First Lady Frances Wolf, has accepted the position.
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A warm summer day, a frosty cocktail in hand, a beautiful view of the sparkling water.
Cape May, N.J.? Rehoboth Beach, Del.?
Sure, but also, coming soon—Harrisburg, Pa.
This weekend, signs will unfurl announcing a new business on City Island, the Harrisburg Beach Club, which is expected to open in July.
“We want to create a new destination at the point of City Island,” said Adam Maust, one of two area businessmen behind the project.
Maust, owner of the Harrisburg-based consulting firm, A Mighty Group, said that he came up with the idea last year while walking around the island and seeing the mostly empty beach area, which he considered to be a neglected gem with great potential.
He approached his friend and fellow Harrisburg-area entrepreneur Bryan Donovan and, together, they hashed out a business plan to put the area back into use.
The pair is leasing the mostly shuttered City Island Bathhouse from the city, as well as the beach area in back of the building. Following renovations and upgrades, visitors will be able to rent a chair and umbrella, buy drinks and food, and socialize and relax. The city currently does not allow swimming from the beach.
Much of the beach area will remain outside of the Harrisburg Beach Club space, but even the part they’re renting will remain open to the public, Maust said.
“There’s no charge to enter,” he said.
Built in 1921, the bathhouse marks its centennial this year, but has been mostly closed for a long time. The partners plan to use just the first floor for now, renovating the bathrooms and changing rooms.
Outside of the building, the club will feature two bars serving Pennsylvania beer, wines and spirits. They will offer beer from six local breweries on tap, as well as their own signature beer, Maust said. Food trucks will be on site for snacks and meals.
They plan to beautify the area with plants and flowers and fix and upgrade the existing sandboxes. The bars and other infrastructure are being built to be easily removable in case of flooding, Maust said.
Maust and Donovan both said that they hope their venture will help reinvigorate City Island as a destination. Over the years, the island has lost many of the small, tourist-oriented businesses once sprinkled around the 1-mile paved loop.
“Our vision is to bring people to the island to help other vendors there,” Donovan said. “This could be a catalyst for other things starting in the future.”
Maust said that he envisions the Harrisburg Beach Club as a four-season destination, with cool- and cold-weather activities, such as an artificial skating rink, supplementing the summer high season.
He said that he believes that people will be attracted by the uniqueness of the location, including the views of the Susquehanna River and city skyline.
“People will enjoy meeting up at an enchanted spot in the city,” he said. “We’re hoping to add value to spending the day on City Island.”
The Harrisburg Beach Club will be located at the point on City Island, Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.harrisburgbeachclub.com.
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Summer is right down the road, literally, in Camp Hill.
The Downtown Camp Hill Association will host its annual “Summer Soirée” on June 5, featuring a day of shopping, dining, music and art.
Camp Hill will shut down Market Street from 2 to 9 p.m. and invite the community to shop and enjoy entertainment from local bands and plein air artists. They also plan to unveil their new #ThriveHere Camp Hill mural at Reager & Adler law firm on Market Street.
“This is an opportunity to roll out our welcome mat and boast everything Camp Hill has to offer,” David Reager, owner of Reager & Adler and sponsor of the mural, said in a statement. “Adding an art component and an outdoor mural brings visitors and is a magnet for younger generations. It’s another reason for people to relax and linger downtown as long as they wish.”
There will be 17 plein air artists, including Julie Riker, who created the mural in her Camp Hill studio. The artists will have two hours to paint scenes around Camp Hill that will face the judges for a chance to win cash prizes. The pieces will then be sold.
“I hope the community will enjoy walking around and seeing all the works being created and get excited about bringing arts into the community,” Riker told TheBurg.
Additionally, there will be a Kids’ Art in the Park event, dining specials and a solar telescope event at Willow Park. The Camp Hill Fire Department will provide hotdogs, hamburgers and root beer floats. Visitors can also purchase food from #Hoagies and Smoke & Pickles food trucks.
In front of The Watershed Pub restaurant, Funktion will play an outdoor concert at 5 p.m. Bands Side of Yams and Shea Quinn will perform earlier in the day.
“The pandemic revealed a level of resilience that many of us didn’t realize we had,” said Anne Deeter Gallaher, owner of Deeter Gallaher Group and DCHA board member. “The mission of DCHA supports an entrepreneurial ecosystem that helps everyone #ThriveHere.”
The Downtown Camp Hill Association’s Summer Soirée will take place on June 5 from 12 to 9 p.m. For more information, visit their Facebook page.
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So long, Chuck.
Give my regards to Jim and Elaine and Paul. You were never real friends anyway—hadn’t seen you since high school.
Increasingly, I’ve been purging my social media accounts of toxic people—or, at least, people who use technology for toxic purposes. Occasionally, I’ll delete them entirely, though more often I “unfollow” them, which is the digital equivalent of putting my fingers in my ears and chanting, “la, la, la.”
Have a political opinion you just have to share? Want to air another grievance? Posting one more conspiracy theory or flimsy allegation?
Sorry, I’m no longer part of your little captive audience.
Since social media reared its head, I’ve been a reluctant user. I joined Facebook about 15 years ago after my niece repeatedly urged me to. I signed up with Twitter when we launched TheBurg in 2008; ditto Instagram.
Honestly, if it weren’t for my job, I would remove myself entirely from all these platforms. Sure, I would lose a little bit of information, but I’d find something else—more inner peace. I might even pick up the telephone and speak to people more often.
1870s technology? Dial me in.
Social media, of course, didn’t start out as the 10-headed monster it’s become. It seemed rather benign at first, with the potential to even improve our lives and our links to loved ones.
However, millions of privacy breaches, billions of lies, trillions of smears, many violent riots and a few actual genocides later, even the social media giants have come to realize that they have a huge problem on their hands.
Instead of bringing out the best in our nature, social media often has brought out the worst. Or, maybe more fittingly, people with ill intent have hijacked it, discovering a shockingly ill-informed and incurious populace vulnerable to believing just about anything.
But what does this have to do with the usual subject of my monthly column—our fair, shared city of Harrisburg?
Unfortunately, Harrisburg is not immune from this pestilence. Several well-followed groups, set up originally to inform and foster community, increasingly have devolved into forums for rumors, accusations, arguments and division.
During the recently concluded mayoral campaign, one candidate’s surrogate actually threatened to sue several city residents for defamation during an online fight. Suing your own electorate—a novel campaign strategy indeed.
But that’s just a single incident. In recent months, many honorable, well-meaning individuals and organizations have been smeared online—earnest people who work hard and try their best every day to do good for this community.
And, if this happens to you, what do you do?
Do you ignore it, hoping it’ll just pass? Or do you respond and defend yourself, thereby opening you or your organization up to even more attacks, more slander? I wish I knew the best answer to this question.
Perhaps one day, the U.S. Congress will strip the legal protections enjoyed by the social media behemoths and force them to follow the same liability rules as your dinky community newspaper. But, until then, it’s up to us, as a community of people, to act kindly towards each other online.
When it comes to social media, I personally follow a few rules, which I thought I would share in case anyone finds them useful.
First, I refrain from criticizing anyone or anything on social media. I try to remember that this isn’t a private conversation I’m having at a bar. It’s a quasi-public forum, and my offhand opinions could cause real hurt and do real damage. Depression, anxiety and even suicides have been linked to social media attacks. And, yes, while Mark Zuckerberg currently can’t be sued for the dangerous nonsense spread on his platform, I—and you—can.
Secondly, I make sure that my facts are right. There’s an old cliché in journalism that says, “If your mother says she loves you, check it out.” Call me old-fashioned, but I still believe in the power of reliable, factual information over rumor, conjecture and commentary.
Thirdly, when I have an issue with someone, I contact them and try to resolve it—personally. From time to time (thankfully, not too often), I’ve been targeted online for something TheBurg has published, as all editors have been. And I’ve wondered—if people are so upset with me, why doesn’t anyone contact me? Not a single phone call, email or visit. Please stop by. I’m open to listening, learning and trying to resolve any problem.
Lastly, I limit my exposure to social media. In so doing, I may be breaking a cardinal rule of today’s journalism—mouth off on Twitter as much as possible. But, for me, the costs vastly outweigh the benefits, in terms of productivity, peace of mind and the good use of my limited time on this planet. Twitter fights? No thank you. Besides, people do not need to hear my every half-baked thought. Once a month, in this space, is more than enough.
Social media was supposed to help bring us together, but it often does just the opposite, spreading misinformation and creating division. In my life, I’ve adopted ways of coping. However, I am concerned about this community—that the virtual acrimony is becoming real.
Lawrance Binda is co-publisher and editor-in-chief of TheBurg.
Illustration by Rich Hauck.
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