Harrisburg school board weighs factors for next school year’s budget

Board member Jaime Johnson examines the budget presentation.

Ahead of its final budget vote at the end of the month, the Harrisburg school board heard a presentation Tuesday night from the group that created the district’s receivership exit report last year.

The outside financial advisory firm Public Financial Management (PFM) gave the presentation following the district’s approval in late May of a $227.7 million proposed budget. This budget, which proposes a 3% property tax hike, is now in its public review period. 

Senior PFM officials projected that slightly higher property tax rate hikes than currently in the budget, 3.7% annually or 3.85% annually after this year if the district sticks with its current budget, could ensure the district will remain financially balanced in the coming years. 

Casting projections as far as eight years out, PFM advised board members to be aware that salaries and benefits make up the largest chunk (50.9%) of its annual general fund expenditures. The next largest portion of expenditure is charter school tuition (16.2%).

Brianna Unegbu, a senior managing consultant at PFM, emphasized that the presentation was given “to help the board think through potential tax increases and to consider potential stressors on the budget.”

With state funding making up 67% of the district’s total revenue, Harrisburg will be sensitive to any increases or decreases in allocation from the state. Other potential stressors could include union contract negotiation or, with the district’s multi-million Capital Improvement Plan, the growing cost of construction.

Saraya Louissaint, a senior managing consultant, said factors that could improve the district’s projections long term included: real estate tax increases, increases of state funding or if the district is able to slow or contain growth in charter school enrollment. Real estate taxes make up 19.2% of the district’s general fund revenue.

Board members and administrators previously expected PFM’s recommendation on the tax hike to be higher than the 3% included in the proposed budget done by the district’s Chief Financial Officer Marcia Stokes. 

“We are actually using it not in isolation, but as a comparative analysis with an analysis that our district had done,” explained board member Annie Hughes.

Stokes’ numbers are based upon numbers that she sees live on a regular basis and will be finalized in the coming weeks, while PFM’s numbers are based on more restrictive numbers in the district’s monitoring plan.

The final budget will be approved June 30. 

On Tuesday night, the board also approved a one-year contract extension for Assistant Superintendent Dr. Marisol Craig and two contracts to increase cafeteria space at Camp Curtin.

Dr. Marisol Craig

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

Continue Reading

All Aboard: Pride of Susquehanna will host beer, princess and murder mystery cruises next month

Pride of the Susquehanna, 2026

The Pride of the Susquehanna Riverboat is debuting a new craft beer cruise and bringing back two of its most popular themed cruises in July, following its two-year hiatus.

Kicking off on July 10, the season begins with an official launch party featuring the beer production tour company Brewery Tours. During the two-hour cruise, guests will enjoy beer tastings served in a souvenir glass, along with light snacks.

Two previously successful cruises are also returning.

The Princess Fairy Cruise, one of the riverboat’s most popular family-friendly activities, will return on July 13. Alongside pizza, ice cream and drinks, passengers ages 12 and under can participate in interactive activities and crafts.

On July 31, the Murder and Mayhem dining cruise returns, where passengers become detectives in solving a murder mystery. Uncovering clues and sharing notes with other guests is encouraged. The winner gets a reward.

Melissa Snyder, administrative manager for the Pride, said the riverboat offers passengers a unique way to experience the city during the summer months.

“Cruising on a summer night with a beautiful view of the Harrisburg skyline from the river—there’s absolutely nothing like it. It’s a very unique experience to enjoy with family and friends,”  Snyder said.

According to Snyder, the Pride of the Susquehanna Riverboat is one of only six remaining authentic paddleboats in the country and attracts visitors from 75% of Pennsylvania’s counties and 65% of U.S. states. In 1987 and 1988, the driving system for the Riverboat was built exclusively on-site using local resources, labor and funds.

As the Riverboat is regulated by the U.S. Coast Guard, its lead captain is certified and joined the crew after serving in the Navy.

“It’s not just a cruise on the river. There’s so many options we offer onboard for people of all ages. There’s something for everyone,” Snyder said.

For booking tickets and more information, visit the Pride of the Susquehanna website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

 

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

Harrisburg Fringe Festival will celebrate creative minds with an artsy lineup in July

Harrisburg Fringe Festival 2023. Photo by Dani Fresh.

The wacky, weird and wonderful will all take the stage at an upcoming festival.

The fourth annual Harrisburg Fringe Festival will take place July 16 to 19 at multiple art venues across the city.

The festival celebrates a wide range of artistic expression, including dance, spoken word, theatre, comedy, drag, music, visual arts and more.

“It’s not a typical theatre festival where audiences are already familiar with the plays,” said Brianna Dow, president of 717 Arts, the festival organizer. “It offers the chance to step outside your comfort zone and experience something that could change your life.”

Harrisburg Fringe Festival is a project of 717 Arts in collaboration with organizations and venues like Open Stage, Midtown Cinema, YPOC Harrisburg, Gamut Theatre, The Millworks, Culture & Co., The State Museum of PA, and the list is growing.

Over the past twenty years, Dow has been involved in producing arts events and contributing her organizational skills to create a platform for artists.

Kyle Bertone, the visual arts chair and mixed media artist, emphasized the impact of the city’s artistic scene.

“As someone who moved here from Massachusetts, this is a great way to experience the arts without having to go to a big city like Philly or New York,” said Bertone. “The arts community in Harrisburg is here; it’s thriving.”

Family-friendly fringe shows will take place on July 17 and 18, as well, featuring performances, workshops and kids’ activities.

Volunteers from the community help make this festival possible by serving in roles such as box office staff, ushers, house managers and more. Additionally, they are compensated with free tickets for their participation.

For regular festival attendees, a button is required for each person attending the festival and allows them to purchase as many show tickets as they choose.

All ticket sales go toward the independent artists and can be purchased online or at the door if seats are available.

For tickets and more information, visit the Harrisburg Fringe Festival’s website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

Continue Reading

Local playwright shares U.S. and family history in upcoming show “QUILL-ADELPHIA”

Quill-adelphia graphic

Cindy Dlugolecki, a 76-year-old playwright from Mechanicsburg, has a remarkable family tie to the U.S. Constitution — her first cousin six times removed, Jacob Shallus, served as the calligrapher who handwrote the historic document.

Her original musical, QUILL-ADELPHIA, will showcase this history next month at Gamut Theatre, coinciding with the United States’ 250th anniversary.

The show describes Shallus’ journey from a PA Assembly assistant clerk under Pennsylvania President (equivalent to a modern-day governor) Benjamin Franklin to a calligrapher for the Constitution. Additionally, the musical highlights female activism and humor within the songs.

“This show was primarily written to honor the man whose name was never included in the history books,” Dlugolecki said. “Secondly, I’d like people to become acquainted with the Constitution, recognize when it is being violated, and to treasure our democracy.”

Dlugolecki said she began the writing process nearly a decade ago in 2016, researching through Arthur Plotnik’s book, “The Man Behind the Quill.” She later purchased the dramatic rights to the book.

Chris Purcell, the show’s composer and a music professor at Harrisburg Area Community College, said, “I hope the audience’s political awareness is raised, and they are left feeling like they had an entertaining and uplifting experience.”

The musical is sponsored by the American Association of University Women Harrisburg Branch and will premiere on July 12 at 2 p.m. at Gamut Theatre in Harrisburg. Anyone who wears red, white, or blue will receive a free gift.

Ticket prices are $30, with proceeds benefiting AAUW’s mission to support the education and advancement of women and girls by helping to meet those needs on a local level.

To purchase tickets for QUILL-ADELPHIA, visit their website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

Continue Reading

Camp Curtin staff explain middle school consolidation challenges at special board meeting

Camp Curtin

Camp Curtin Middle School sign

Educators expressed concerns about an ongoing plan to consolidate Harrisburg middle school students Tuesday night.

Numerous teachers complained of increased behavioral issues and large classroom sizes at Camp Curtin (grades 6 to 8) at a special Harrisburg school board meeting. The district is three years into a plan to consolidate most of its middle school students onto the campus.

While under state receivership in 2023, the district began phasing Rowland Academy, an office building-turned-school located in Allison Hill, out of operation, sending what would have been Rowland students to Camp Curtin, located in Uptown. 

According to the Department of Education, Camp Curtin enrolled 815 students for the 2025-2026 school year.

Over the last three years, Rowland has stopped accepting lower grade levels. Its last class of eighth graders graduate to high school at the end of the week. Rowland, according to the Department of Education, had 155 students this year.

Richard Bender, a teacher who supervises in-school suspension and works with children to reflect on poor behavior, said that since his room opened two-and-a-half months ago, he has seen 526 visitors. 

“Can you imagine, if my room had been open the entire school year, the number of students—the traffic that I would have had?” Bender said. 

The top behaviors students were sent for included class disruption, skipping, physical aggression, fighting, and defiance and disrespect, he said.

Chantal Maddox, teacher at Camp Curtin

Chantal Maddox, teacher at Camp Curtin

Chantal Maddox, a teacher at Camp Curtin, said, in presentations to fifth grade students, they often expressed fear of Camp Curtin based on what they’d heard from older kids.

“Every single child said the same thing, ‘It’s scary over there.’ ‘They fight over there.’ ‘It’s dangerous over there,’” said Maddox. “I had to smile, and I had to say ‘It’s OK, we’re going to ensure that you’re safe.’”

Board Vice President Autumn Anderson clarified that the board was dealing with two interdependent, but related topics Tuesday: developing a plan to fix issues that have arisen at Camp Curtin and deciding whether to close Rowland, which would have no allocated course catalog, students, staff or budget money next year, if open.

“To move forward with doing anything towards Rowland for next school year, we would have to staff that school completely,” said Superintendent Benjamin Henry.

Harrisburg School Board

The meeting was expressly held to hear members of the community speak on the consolidation and closure plans. With the district out of receivership as of last year, board members will vote on June 30 whether to close the Rowland Academy building.

District administrators reminded the public Wednesday that Rowland was originally recommended to be phased out of operation because a facility study estimated that it needed $12 to $14 million of building improvements. 

A recent assessment of the building, said Chief Operations Officer John Reedy, clocked closer to $25 million for needed HVAC, windows, paint and generator work.

Meanwhile, the district has put more than $11 million into improving Camp Curtin’s building in the last several years. In anticipation of it becoming the district’s flagship middle school, the 1952 building has undergone HVAC work, gymnasium, auditorium, kitchen and bathroom upgrades. It is also set to undergo a partial roof restoration and convert an enrollment center into several more classrooms this summer.

Superintendent Benjamin Henry

Superintendent Benjamin Henry

Reedy said that Camp Curtin’s total building capacity is 1,400 but that it would only aim for an 80% capacity of 1,120 students, which would allow the district to have around 25 students per class.

However, teacher Jayme Prokop told the board that, this year, there were 31 students in her homeroom and that she knew of eighth grade classrooms with 36 students in it. 

Several Camp Curtin staff members expressed concern that the district was following consolidation plans without checking in with the staff or making decisions without fully understanding the city’s neighborhood dynamics.

Board member Danielle Robinson likewise wondered if bringing children from two sections of the city is unfair to teachers.

“The kids are at war with each other right now. What sense does it make to put all of them in one school?” Robinson said.

Board member Danielle Robinson

Board member Danielle Robinson

Board member Doug Thompson-Leader expressed hope that Camp Curtin’s new principal, Ryan Jones (hired last month after serving at Marshall Math and Science Academy), might be able to establish an environment that helps discourage bad behavior.

Henry said Jones is currently reviewing Camp Curtin’s course catalog. More information on Camp Curtin will be provided at a June 23 board meeting.

In the meantime, Henry said that he took notes on the community’s concerns. 

“I’m taking everything down, jotting it down, so we can address it,” he said.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Amber Barnes LGBT Center

Amber Barnes speaks at the press conference

It was a busy week in Harrisburg as the city gears up for the summer. If you missed any of the TheBurg’s daily coverage, we’ve wrapped it up neatly for you below:

Art Association of Harrisburg’s long-time President Carrie Wissler-Thomas will retire in September after leading the group to its pivotal position in central Pennsylvania culture.

Bob’s Art Blog celebrates the “merry month of May” and looks ahead to June.

Denim Coffee will open its third downtown Harrisburg location next week with a ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday morning.

CPC Film Series returned to the Capital Blue Cross Theater last Friday with a triple-feature event celebrating the work of Central Penn College alumni. 

Gamut Theatre’s “As You Like It” offers a boisterous, touching night of free Shakespeare at Reservoir Park, according to our theatre reviewer.

Harrisburg Area Community College’s board of trustees approved a resolution Tuesday giving the institution permission to sell or lease seven buildings it owns across central PA.

Harrisburg Young Professionals on Thursday announced the return of its Italian Lake Concert series, which brings live music to the park each month this season.

LGBT Center of Central PA received a recognition from Dauphin County officials Monday, who celebrated the start of Pride Month.

Market Square Concerts has announced it will present its Summermusic series with a special emphasis on American musical contributions for the country’s 250th birthday throughout July.

Our publisher Lawrance Binda recounts how TheBurg plays a role in building community in his June publisher’s note, inspired by a speaking engagement with Strong Towns Harrisburg. 

Pennsylvania Downtown Center, in partnership with the Capital Region Economic Development Corporation (CREDC), announced they will be hosting several public workshops in June after releasing the results of a downtown Harrisburg perception survey.

“River City Stories” is returning to the Harrisburg Fringe Festival this July with a fresh lineup of original films inspired by life in the city.

Sara Bozich has compiled the best events of the weekend in her Weekend Roundup, including SoMa PinFest. Check out the full list.

SoMa PinFest is returning to downtown this Saturday, mixing old-school games with a summer block party.

Source the Space, a creative studio in New Cumberland, is combining forces with Thoughtfully Sustainable, an online STEM and sustainability education platform for a sustainability-themed kids summer camp.

TFEC is now accepting applications for Community Impact Grants, which are put toward projects impact communities for the better.

“Unapologetically Us,” an LGBTQ+ art exhibition in Harrisburg, is bringing together 40 pieces from 12 artists for Pride Month.

Visit Hershey & Harrisburg unveiled new materials to spotlight the Harrisburg Arts District Thursday, including an updated print map with new destinations and a fresh audio walking tour.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

With the help of a federal grant, Harrisburg is conducting a city-wide tree inventory

trees harrisburg riverfront

Trees along the Susquehanna riverfront

Harrisburg began its first city-wide tree inventory in at least a decade this week.

An urban forestry management company with certified arborists is conducting a census of trees across the city over the next month or so, according to Harrisburg forester Cody Legge. 

After the inventory is complete, the city will identify where tree maintenance—including removing, pruning or planting— must be completed.

“They’ll do all the streets first, and then double back to do our parks,” said Legge, noting the contractors will work their way across the city at their discretion.

The work is funded through a $2 million federal “TreeVestment” grant through the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service. The grant is designed to bolster urban tree canopies. 

The vast majority of the money has been set aside for tree work, said Legge, which, between maintenance, removal and plantings, can be costly to perform.

Legge said he expects that the vast majority of city trees may need to be pruned, either to remove routine deadwood or to resolve clearance issues. This would include city trees between sidewalks and curbs that are technically in the public “right of way.”

“There’s quite a bit of conflicting issues with tree limbs being just a little too low on the streets or the sidewalks,” Legge said. 

He added that a handful of “risky” trees may need to be removed, but the grant dictates that anywhere the city removes a tree, a new tree must be planted in its place. He has also advised the contractor to take note of stumps or divots in the ground where the city could replant a tree where one clearly was in the past.

Legge estimated that the last tree inventory for Harrisburg was conducted around 2016.

This one will be a little different in that previous tree inventories were conducted by volunteers, he said, while this one uses certified arborists. This inventory is also unique in that it will also include trees in city parks while past inventories did not. 

A smaller portion of funds from the TreeVestment grant will go toward community outreach efforts, Legge said, such as engaging with kids at the Harrisburg School District through the science-based tree planting program, “Roots to Rivers.” 

Overall, Legge said he is excited about having an updated tree database to work from and to potentially add more trees to the city’s canopy.

“It just makes a city more livable,” he said. “Far too often you go down a street and there isn’t any greenery. It is fairly bleak and hot, and not awfully pleasant. If there are trees to provide shade and greenery, it’s a mood booster.”

TreeVestment was funded by the federal Inflation Reduction Act.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Why Low-Commitment Digital Spending Appeals to Consumers in a Tighter Economy

As household budgets come under more pressure in Harrisburg and beyond, consumers are becoming more selective about how they spend their disposable income.

There has been an online reaction to this trend, as digital services have moved in the opposite direction. This is in order to become more appealing — to stay relevant to consumers. Now they are offering smaller or more affordable payment options for entertainment and online tools.

This combination of tighter budgets and shrinking one-time payments has caused digital spending to remain relevant. However, consumers must still pay attention to how much they spend online. In this article, we’ll examine the trend and explore how users can remain in control.

What Low-Commitment Spending Looks Like in Practice

Low-commitment spending can refer to a broad range of payments, especially depending on the income group. However, to provide a broad definition, low-commitment spending usually refers to small payments (e.g., $5 to $15 at a time). These payments are optional, and in this article, we are focusing on online ones.

These digital spends might include one-off content unlocks, app upgrades, game credits, or affordable e-commerce purchases, or short-term access passes. As you can see, many of them revolve around the gaming or entertainment sectors.

What separates these mini payments from older and larger models is that they aim to engage users without requiring them to make a big payment that they stop and think about. This might sound slightly predatory, but it remains true. Developers and business owners strive to make the payment process simple and attractive so that users confirm the deal without too much stress.

Isobel Coughlan, Online Casino Expert at Mr. Gamble explained that “No matter whether the potential payment is $2 or $30, it’s always advised that you stop and cross check the spend against your budget. These apps make it easy to pay without thinking. This is easy and seamless, that’s true. But always put your financial well-being first.”

How Economic Pressure Is Changing Spending Habits

The economy is tighter than ever before, and this fact remains true around the world. One trend that financial analysts are spotting is that consumers are prioritizing flexibility — and this is a trend directly caused by the cost-of-living crisis.

For instance, rather than committing to multiple subscriptions for different games or streaming services, many prefer to pay only when they actively use a service. This could be renting a $3 movie rather than paying monthly for Amazon Prime if you know that you do not have time to tune in every day.

Flexible spending, as evident above, reduces perceived waste and gives consumers a sense of control over monthly outgoings. And control is always a driving factor when it comes to topics of economics!

This mindset is seen outside of film and TV services. In gaming and iGaming, free trial games and trusted small deposit casino sites are more popular than expensive one-time purchase options.

When Flexibility Starts to Replace Ownership

Some argue that this flexible mindset is not a good thing because it leads to a drop in ownership. In response, some consumers are starting to hoard CDs and physical media while rejecting giants like Spotify. They do not want to pay for temporary use. But it must be noted that this is still a small subset of users.

For many, short-term access is often enough to meet their needs. This goes across entertainment, gaming, music, and even some productivity tools used within the workplace.

The Psychology Behind “Small Wins” in Spending

As we have explored before, low-cost digital purchases often feel less risky, and therefore, consumers feel more in control when hitting the buy button. And this is true even when they are repeated frequently.

Hesitation is reduced, and consumers are happier because they have got a ‘great deal.’ Sadly, this is not always the case. It’s more of a psychological fallacy.

Over time, this psychology and mindset can create a negative spending pattern where payments are based on small decisions without any thought, rather than sensible spending that references budget and affordability.

This creates a quasi-trade-off.

Low-commitment and cheap spending feel manageable. Perhaps it is manageable for some time. But then it becomes harder to track and stay on top of. Suddenly, you have spent multiple lots of $10 every week and have a surprise $300 bill that you don’t remember racking up.

Mindfulness and vigilance are critical here. You must make sure to check your budget before making all of the little purchases. It can help to set a dedicated entertainment budget to really stay in control.

The Outlook

Economic pressure is set to unfortunately continue, and so consumers must plan accordingly. With this pressure, we are likely to see more low-commitment payment models, and these will grow online and in-person. In response to this, we urge consumers to become extra mindful, and for business owners to be as transparent and honest as possible about value and payment plans.

Sponsored Content

 

Continue Reading

Burg Review: Gamut’s “As You Like It” offers a boisterous, touching night of free Shakespeare at Reservoir Park

Image courtesy of Gamut Theatre

Come hither, ye Shakespeare-curious, and get theself yonder to a place called Reservoir Park, where tyrants rant, siblings squabble and lovers cavort.

Okay, no more faux Shakespeare. 

But forsooth, even if you know little about William Shakespeare himself, you owe yourself a summer night under the stars for “As You Like It,” the delightful 2026 “Free Shakespeare in the Park” performance by Gamut Theatre Group.

Gamut has assembled a strong and talented cast for one of Shakespeare’s more heartfelt plays. The usual fare of mistaken identity and gender-bending disguise blends seamlessly with genuine emotion, complex relationships and honest comedy.

The play begins with audience interaction, when a balladeer and cast members stroll from the Reservoir Park bandshell’s grassy slope onto the stage, leading a revolution (apparently unsuccessful) against the tyrannical regime.

We’re in a post-apocalyptic city. 

In the shadow of a golden, copper-rimmed dome, the ragged have-nots suffer, and the elegant haves have. Graffiti that mars the walls attests to opposing sides of a brotherly power struggle: “Long Live Duke Fred” and “Free Senior.”

Duke Frederick is played by Gamut veteran Preston Schreffler with snarling menace. 

Frederick’s wronged brother, Duke Senior, exiled into Arden Forest, is also played by Schreffler as a kind, compassionate leader exhorting his band of loyal lords to enjoy the beauty of nature and make room for two hungry wayfarers.

Then, the plot thickens. 

Good ol’ Fred has not only banished his brother to the wilderness—he boots his own niece, Rosalind (under the threat of death, mind you) just for her association with her father. (Boo, hiss.)

But Rosalind and her devoted cousin, Celia, turn oppression into empowerment.

They flee to Arden, with Rosalind disguised as a man and Celia playing the man’s peasant sister.

Eleanor Mund plays the brave, quick-witted Rosalind with bottomless spunk while offering glimpses into the peril of her balancing act between her male persona and female self.

Also in Arden, we find the noble Orlando, our handsome hero. He’s escaping from a sister who has withheld his inheritance, arranged his (failed) assassination in a wrestling match and threatened to burn down his house around him. (Boo, hiss.)

From here, let’s just say that people cross paths and complications ensue. 

The production’s designers—Calian Byard, scenic; Tristan Stasiulis, lighting; Noah Smull, sound; Victoria Wojciechowski, costumes; Becky Arney, props—then guide the action seamlessly from the city to rural Appalachia. 

Foresters and hikers in brown and olive green greet the visitors. Farmers in overalls live off the land and guide tenderfoots through the woods. Our characters have the space for self-reflection, and in upheaval, find themselves changing in unexpected ways.

The fleeing cousins’ “motley fool” is the character Touchstone, who evolves from urbane and vain to downright feral while chasing his true love, the shepherdess Audrey.

With their saucy interplay, Touchstone, played by Alex Winnick, and Audrey, played by Hope Mackenzie, turn the act of collecting campground trash into a flirtatious romp.

But my personal favorite pairing of the night belonged to Silvius, played by Eliezer Garcia Montoya, and Phebe, played by Aréanna Hope Kroll. 

Silvius, besotted for Phebe, has a gullible, nonchalant aura that dovetails with the sharp-edged Phebe. We all know those couples, and even though we wonder, ‘What gives?’, Shakespeare and this production confirm that, when love enters the picture, this combination just works.

Directors Kim Greenawalt and Emily MacLeod keep the pace brisk, efficiently using the scenery and outdoor setting to move the action along uninterrupted. 

Sound designer Smull composed tunes for Shakespeare’s lyrics, while other songs were written by cast members Winnick, Mackenzie and Diego Esmolo, ably playing the balladeer Amiens. The tunes are melodic and suited to the moment, from folk-song protest to a “Hey Nonny” so jaunty you’re singing along by the second chorus.

As Orlando, Brendan Wolf is endearingly earnest but determined to overcome the misfortune thrown his way and the shyness that keeps him from professing his love for Rosalind (remember, he thinks she’s a man named Ganymede). 

Victoria DeBernardis plays Celia, Rosalind’s cousin, with full Kardashian flair—a privileged A-lister who defies her despotic father and flees into exile with her beloved cousin.

DeBernardis’ drama-llama death throes when she’s starving, absolutely starving, are a hoot, and when love appears, she falls so hard that you can almost see the haze as everything else fades into the background.

A tip for playgoers: Before the show, brush up on the short scene synopses in Gamut’s online program. The plot can get convoluted, and some of the Shakespearean language strays beyond our ken, but knowing what’s happening lets us concentrate on the touching moments, the funny lines, and the expert jostling of a finely tuned cast. 

That’s why we ache when the smitten Rosalind, giving Orlando a necklace after his successful wrestling match, confesses, “Sir, you have wrestled well and overthrown more than your enemies.”

The speechless Orlando can only stand mystified that he could wrestle a murderous brute to defeat while wondering “what passion hangs these weights upon my tongue?”

Have no fear about our many lovebirds. “As You Like It” is a boisterous and touching entry in Gamut’s long-running Free Shakespeare in the Park series, an idyllic forest reverie where all’s well that ends well.

For more information on “As You Like It” by the Gamut Theatre Group, visit their site. Performances run June 5 to June 20. Admission is free. Donations are accepted. 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!

Continue Reading

Results of survey show support for downtown revitalization; community workshops announced

Harrisburg. Photo by Michael Yatsko

The results of a recent survey show that community members are ready and excited for a downtown Harrisburg renaissance, officials say.

The Pennsylvania Downtown Center, in partnership with the Capital Region Economic Development Corporation (CREDC), announced the results of a survey that garnered thousands of responses and showed support for revitalizing downtown.

“What came back was both encouraging and clear-eyed: strong pride in the city’s architecture, riverfront and cultural assets, alongside real frustrations around parking, everyday retail, safety and business climate,” according to the Revitalize Downtown Harrisburg website.

Building on the interest shown by the survey response, CREDC and the Pennsylvania Downtown Center will host a series of workshops later this month to share further ideas for downtown.

According to survey responses from over 4,000 people, five strong themes emerged, which will be explored in the workshops.

One of the top findings of the survey was that people are interested in making downtown a place for everyday life, with a grocery store, pharmacy, and places to meet basic needs.

Other themes included overcoming the barrier of parking downtown, improving perceptions of safety and cleanliness, supporting business development, and creating energy through more housing, events and activities.

About half of the respondents were city residents, 45% worked downtown and 43% said they support downtown restaurants on a weekly or monthly basis. Additionally, 20% said they wanted to be involved in the downtown revitalization project.

Upcoming June workshops will give people the chance to have their voices heard again. Topics will include quality of life, public spaces and economic vitality.

“These workshops are essential to gaining valuable input from across a broad spectrum of our community, including those who live, work and visit downtown Harrisburg,” said Ryan Unger, president and CEO of the Harrisburg Regional Chamber and CREDC. “With the help of our partners and with the passionate ideas of community members and key stakeholders, we can truly breathe new life into downtown Harrisburg.”

The workshop series will take place on the following dates:

Quality of Life Workshops:
The focus of these sessions will be on how Harrisburg can be a more desirable place to live for everyone – from young professionals to families to retirees. 

  • June 18 – 1 to 3 p.m., Harrisburg High School—John Harris Campus, 2451 Market St.
  • June 18 – 6 to 8 p.m., Harrisburg High School—John Harris Campus, 2451 Market St.

Public Spaces Workshops:
The focus of these sessions will be on creating more vibrant and welcoming gathering spaces downtown for people of all ages and abilities.

  • June 23 – 1 to 3 p.m., Camp Curtin Academy, 2900 N. 6th St.
  • June 23 – 6 to 8 p.m., Camp Curtin Academy, 2900 N. 6th St.

Economic Vitality Workshops:
The focus of these sessions will be on how Harrisburg can be a leading economic engine, supporting thriving businesses both today and into the future.

  • June 25 – 1 to 3 p.m., Harrisburg High School—SciTech Campus, 215 Market St.
  • June 25 – 6 to 8 p.m., Harrisburg High School—SciTech Campus, 215 Market St.

Workshops are free and open to all.

For more information, visit the “Revitalize Downtown Harrisburg” website.

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg!   

Continue Reading