The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Students from the Nativity School of Harrisburg at Thursday’s ribbon-cutting for their new school.

The local news scene continued its busy autumn this past week, as we tackled government, business and cultural stories. In case you missed any of our coverage, we have it all listed and linked below in our weekly summary.

COVID-19 cases continued to climb in Pennsylvania since hitting a low early last month, according to the commonwealth. We have the latest facts and figures in our weekly update.

Dauphin County distributed some $17 million in CARES Act grants to local governments, businesses and nonprofits last week. Our online story has additional details and a link to all grant recipients.

Gamut Theatre Group continues its run this weekend of “The Zoo Story,” a two-person show. In our magazine story, find out how Gamut staged a fall season, despite pandemic-related restrictions.

Harrisburg is on the verge of settling a longstanding lawsuit over the site of the city’s public works facility. The opposing sides have agreed to a negotiated settlement that should resolve claims over a lease agreement, according to our news story.

Harrisburg City Council received an extensive briefing last week on the city’s draft comprehensive plan. Residents are now free to comment on the plan, says our online story.

Midtown Harrisburg may soon be home to two small apartment buildings. Our online story summarizes the sudden flurry of development proposals around the Reily Street corridor.

Murals are back following a pandemic-induced hiatus earlier in the year. This fall, Harrisburg streets have gotten five new big, public works of art, detailed in our online story.

Nativity School of Harrisburg started a new chapter this past week, cutting the ribbon on its Uptown facility. It’s a dream come true for staff, board members and students, states our news story.

Sara Bozich is fully committed to seasonal activities in her weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg. Check out all the fall fun up her sweater sleeve.

Steve Reed was Harrisburg’s mayor for 28 years and a lifelong collector of art and memorabilia. His estate will now go to auction next month, with many of his collectibles up for bid, says our online news story.

Vivi on Verbeke stole our art blogger’s heart after he stopped in during October’s 3rd in the Burg. Read what Bob had to say about the art and the inhabitants.

Waldo’s & Co. is a bastion of creative spirit in the heart of Gettysburg. Read the unlikely story of how it came to be and how it got its catchy name in our magazine feature.


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New COVID-19 cases continue to climb in PA as weekly, daily totals increase

COVID-19 cases and tests, over time. Source: PA Department of Health

New COVID-19 cases continued a steady climb in PA over the past week, and new diagnoses over just the past 24 hours reached their highest level since the pandemic began.

Since last Friday, the commonwealth recorded an average of 1,641 newly diagnosed cases per day, according to the state Department of Health.

This compares to an average of 1,397 new daily cases last week, and 1,146, 1,011 and 788 new daily cases per day for the prior three weeks, respectively. The department also reports that testing has increased substantially over this time (see chart).

Locally, diagnosed cases are now as follows since the pandemic began:

  • Adams County: 1,062 cases (prior Friday, 971)
  • Cumberland County: 2,391 cases (prior Friday, 2,195)
  • Dauphin County: 4,556 cases (prior Friday, 4,340)
  • Franklin County: 2,081 cases (prior Friday, 1,975)
  • Lancaster County: 9,205 cases (prior Friday, 8,812)
  • Lebanon County: 2,760 cases (prior Friday, 2,495)
  • Perry County: 347 cases (prior Friday, 300)
  • York County: 6,137 cases (prior Friday, 5,708)

Recently, counties that host major college campuses have seen their case numbers rise. The department this week reported substantial increases in Philadelphia, Allegheny and Luzerne counties.

Today, the department reported 2,219 newly positive cases throughout Pennsylvania for the past 24 hours ending at midnight. This is the largest one-day new case count so far, surpassing a spike during the first week of April of around 2,000 daily new cases.

With today’s update, 190,579 Pennsylvanians have now been diagnosed with the coronavirus, an increase of 11,493 over the past week, according to the health department.

The department also reported an additional 168 deaths since last Friday, meaning that 8,625 Pennsylvanians have died from the disease since March. Fatalities totaled 149, 129 and 98 over the prior three weeks, respectively.

Around central PA, COVID-19 fatalities now stand as follows:

  • Adams County: 27 deaths (prior Friday, 27)
  • Cumberland County: 78 deaths (prior Friday, 78)
  • Dauphin County: 192 deaths (prior Friday, 185)
  • Franklin County: 54 deaths (prior Friday, 53)
  • Lancaster County: 472 deaths (prior Friday, 467)
  • Lebanon County: 66 deaths (prior Friday, 65)
  • Perry County: 6 deaths (prior Friday, 6)
  • York County: 199 deaths (prior Friday, 176)

Statewide, Philadelphia County continues to have the most confirmed cases with 36,938 cases. Allegheny County ranks second with 14,687 cases, and Montgomery County is third statewide with 13,428 cases.

PA nursing homes and personal care facilities have been particularly hard hit by the virus. Of total deaths, 5,699, or 66.1 percent, have occurred in residents from nursing or personal care facilities, according to the health department.

In nursing and personal care homes, there are 25,122 resident cases of COVID-19, and 5,455 cases among employees, for a total of 30,577 at 1,039 distinct facilities in 62 counties, according to the health department.

In addition, about 11,906 of total cases in PA are in health care workers.

Statewide, 2,391,447 individuals have had coronavirus tests, with 2,200,868 people testing negative, according to the state health department. Last Friday, the state reported that 2,282,130 people had been tested for the virus.

The state reports a total of 3,756,101 PCR tests, which includes many people, such as health care workers, who have been tested more than once.

Of the patients who have tested positive to date, the age breakdown is as follows, according to the health department:

  • About 1 percent are aged 0-4
  • Nearly 2 percent are aged 5-12
  • About 5 percent are aged 13-18
  • Nearly 14 percent are aged 19-24
  • Nearly 36 percent are aged 25-49
  • About 21 percent are aged 50-64
  • Nearly 21 percent are aged 65 or older.

Most of the patients hospitalized are 65 or older, as are most of the reported deaths, according to the state. However, the health department has emphasized that, increasingly, younger people are being diagnosed with COVID-19.

The health department continued to emphasize that Pennsylvanians should do the following:

  • Wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds or use hand sanitizer if soap and water are not available.
  • Cover any coughs or sneezes with your elbow, not your hands.
  • Clean surfaces frequently.
  • Stay home to avoid spreading COVID-19, especially if you are unwell.
  • Wear a mask whenever out of your house.

For more information, visit the PA Department of Health’s COVID-19 website.

Currently, we are providing a COVID-19 update weekly, each Friday, or as breaking news warrants.

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New chapter for Nativity School, as ribbon is cut on Uptown Harrisburg facility

Lavelle Muhammad, Nativity School’s executive director, gets ready to cut the ribbon today flanked by, from left, state Rep. Patty Kim, Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse, board member Sheri Phillips and state Sen. John DiSanto.

In sixth grade, Anthony Lester struggled with reading, but his English teacher at Nativity School helped him improve. Now that he’s in eighth grade, what’s his favorite subject?

It’s English.

“I like that the school pushes you harder to work better,” he said. “It’s like a family group. If you need help, you can talk to your teachers. If you have problems going on at home, you can talk to Mr. Muhammad or Coach DJ about it.”

He means Executive Director Lavelle Muhammad and Dean of Students Demond Bates at Nativity School of Harrisburg, the all-boys, faith-based, nondenominational middle school embarking on a new chapter. On a misty Thursday morning, school and government officials cut the ribbon on a new space – the first that the school can call its own.

The facility at 2101 N. 5th Street, purchased from Zion Assembly Church, allows expansion of enrollment in sixth, seventh and eighth grades, plus the addition of fifth grade starting in 2021-22.

Nativity School educates and mentors inner-city and at-risk middle-school boys from low-income families. Academic help and life guidance continue while alumni attend high school and college. Attendance is free, and tuition is paid to local private high schools.

“We’ve got to make sure they graduate,” said Muhammad. “Most of them don’t come back to talk about academics. They come back to talk about life. At that age, there’s really not a lot of fathers. We have to kind of stand in place as the fathers.”

Nativity students at today’s ceremony included Jaden Garnes, Omar Ibrahim, Anthony Lester, Ty’Myr Wilkerson and Jhameer Tucker.

The new facility is a dream made real since the school’s founding in 2001, said Sheri Phillips, board member and, in Muhammad’s words, “the backbone of Nativity.” Students first attended school in space shared with the St. Francis of Assisi Church soup kitchen – sometimes stepping over homeless people sleeping on the floor.

Moving to the Camp Curtin YMCA provided access to classrooms, gym and cafeteria, but space limitations restricted expansion, Phillips said. Around 2018, Zion members expressed their support for the school by agreeing to sell their classroom space. After settlement in March 2020 and renovations begun in April by Weidner Construction Services, the school opened on time.

“This is just the beginning for us,” Phillips said.

The project was a community effort, said state Rep. Patty Kim, who admitted to “falling in love” with Nativity when her chief of staff’s son attended. Students “deserve the best” in a school space, and so do faculty, “who worked so hard day in and day out, loving the kids, caring for the kids, praying for the kids,” she said. “This can be a model for the rest of the school district. It can.”

Harrisburg needs Nativity School’s emphasis on conflict resolution “through intellect and education rather than through violence” and on community service, said Mayor Eric Papenfuse.

“The mission of Nativity School is one that benefits all of us,” Papenfuse said. “It’s one we can be incredibly proud of, and it’s one that is now secure by finally finding a long-term home.”

Before the ceremony, eighth-grader Omar Ibrahim cited community service – picking up trash around the YMCA on N. 6th Street, helping Homeland Center residents play bingo or decorate gingerbread houses – as one of his favorite things about Nativity School.

“I like how we’re not distracted,” he said. “I like how we get a better education. I like how we get to do a lot of stuff in the community to help people.”

Nativity School offers a lifeline to young men and provides a model for lawmakers trying to “change the bureaucratic problems” of state-level education, said state Sen. John DiSanto. “We need to reimagine education, we need to reengage, we need to reach the youth, and we need to continue to demonstrate the positiveness within the city and in the communities of poverty that are really challenged.”

Inside the school (currently on a hybrid weekly schedule of classroom and remote learning) are five classrooms, cafeteria, and a former sanctuary converted to gym and auditorium. For the first time, alumni returning for guidance or a place to do homework have a lounge, complete with foosball.

Current students have already embraced the school as their own.

“It makes me feel more of a great person,” said eighth-grader Jaden Garnes. “I know I’ll learn more stuff and get a better education.”

The school offers students “a place that we can call home,” said Bates, the dean of students and basketball coach. Nativity School staff balance education with life guidance, letting students know “that you can make a mistake and recover,” he added. Expanding to fifth grade presents the chance to touch students even earlier, when they can build stronger defenses against peer pressure.

In a moment of serendipity, a passing motorist stopped to ask about the hubbub and the blazer-clad students. Awed by what he learned, he told Muhammad that Nativity School was exactly what he wanted for his kids and would enroll them next year.

Muhammad admits to not realizing how much work was needed to convert the space to classrooms, but now, like that passerby, he’s in awe.

“This is incredible,” he said. “I’m looking at my office like, ‘This is amazing. I can’t believe this.’”

Nativity School of Harrisburg is located at 2101 N. 5th St., Harrisburg. For more information and to support the school, visit their website.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

There are plenty of things to do this weekend around Harrisburg and central PA. Things on my agenda this weekend: relaxing with a cider, safe visits with friends, working on my holiday wish list, checking more items off my central PA fall Bucket List.

For your weekend planning:

Below are ample options for your weekend, whether you’re laying low (there is no shame in the stay home game!) or venturing out.
Are you on the email list? In addition to getting this weekly update loaded with things to do each weekend around Harrisburg directly in your inbox, I load it with a bunch of other fresh, original content. Sign-up here. I also recommend following me on IG.

Top Weekend Recs

  1. RG Hummer now has a second location at West Shore Farmers Market
  2. Got Cider? Ploughman Cider delivers to your door.
  3. Tattered Flag is now shipping beer and spirits faster than Prime!
  4. Watch Poured in PA: The Series
  5. Shop online with Meeka Fine Jewelry.
COVID-19 Disclaimer: As always, please click through the links or call ahead to get the most up-to-date information about venues and/or events below. It should also go without saying, but I’ll say it — Mask up, follow the rules, and be nice. And tip extra!

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


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House Call: One of Harrisburg’s oldest buildings undergoes “paneful” examination

Restoration expert John Lindtner examines a window in the Haldeman Haly House as Karen Cullings, executive director of the Dauphin County Library System, looks on.

John Lindtner raised the question: Does it make sense to replace a window that has survived 200 years with one that might last 30?

“They say, in my world, that the greenest window is the window that’s already built,” he said as he diagnosed the health of a 200-year-old window. “It doesn’t make sense to fill up the landfill with these windows.”

The window restoration expert did, though, have a word about the storm windows that appeared to be approaching the half-century mark.

“You have my blessing to replace the storm windows, because I believe the storm windows can be improved,” he said.

Lindtner was inside the library of the Haldeman Haly House (pictured), the Governor’s Row home called by architectural historian Ken Frew one of Harrisburg’s top-five most historic buildings.

Lindtner’s visit on Wednesday was a “house call” sponsored by Historic Harrisburg Association, funded with a gift from the Auchincloss Family Fund. He was there to advise Dauphin County Library System on the feasibility of restoring the windows of the circa-1812 home that the library acquired in 2019 to expand its programming, community, and administrative space.

The 5,458-square-foot house at 27 N. Front Street was built by Stephen Hills, architect of the first Pennsylvania State Capitol, and was home to Sara Haldeman Haly, whose bequest in 1896 seeded the Dauphin County Library System. The library system is running a capital campaign to raise $3.5 million to renovate and link the building to its McCormick Riverfront branch next door–the original branch built on the site of Sara Haldeman Haly’s garden.

“This building came to us like manna from heaven in a lot of ways because not only is this, obviously, right next to our library, but there’s a really important shared history here,” said Dauphin County Library System Executive Director Karen Cullings.

The Haldeman Haly House’s soaring, arched front windows face the Susquehanna River, Market Street Bridge and City Island. The north-facing side windows overlook the library roof, buildings along and behind Walnut Street, and–peeking above it all–the dome of the state’s 1906 Capitol, the second replacement of Hills’ creation, burned in an 1897 fire.

With the exception of a north-side sill rotted by water damage from broken spouting, the windows definitely merit restoration, said Lindtner, founder of Chester County-based Building Preservation Services.

“There’s absolutely nothing wrong with this window,” he said. “There’s just a lot of paint on it from close to 200 years.”

With weather stripping and good storm windows, which can be custom-made to fit unique shapes such as the Haldeman Haly House’s arches, a restored window can achieve respectable energy efficiency, he said.

Historic windows endure because they were built with old-growth timber, he added. “To replace these windows would be very much a mortal sin.”

The library has been advised to cover the windows for the winter, said Cullings. Lindtner concurred–with one caveat. Don’t seal too tightly.

“You want to have some opportunity for it to vent in the event it gets wet,” he said. “If it gets wet and can’t dry out, you’re creating a bigger headache.”

When panes need to be replaced, the “wavy glass” of the handmade age can be replaced with salvaged historic glass or even glass new-made with characteristically wavy touches. As Lindtner and Cullings investigated a top-floor room under the home’s dormered windows, Lindtner decided not to try to open one that housed a wasp nest.

“See what you inherited?” he asked Cullings.

“I know,” she said. “It’s lovely.”

Historic Harrisburg Association Executive Director David Morrison called the Haldeman Haly House the most historic house on Governor’s Row for its history across multiple centuries.

Cullings declared the building in “not that bad” shape, in need of cosmetic work but otherwise stable. She promised to “make it beautiful again,” like the historic library next door. Restoring the windows suits that theme.

“We definitely want to be able to preserve as much of it as we can,” she said. “Obviously, we have to deal with budgets, and we’re a nonprofit, but we’re hoping we’ll be able to preserve all of it, if we can. I like to feel like I’m honoring the heritage of it. I don’t want to be doing things to it that are going to make it look asymmetric and out of whack with what the original designers had in mind.”

The Harrisburg Architectural Review Board will Zoom-meet at 6 p.m. Nov. 2 to consider the library’s request to remove some non-original additions and build a connector between the Haldeman Haly House and the McCormick Riverfront branch library.

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Developer unveils plans for 2 Midtown apartment buildings, additional construction planned

A rendering of the apartment building that Seven Bridges Development plans to build at N. 4th and Calder streets.

A Harrisburg-based developer today unveiled a plan to build two small apartment buildings in a suddenly hot development area in the city.

Seven Bridges Property Development held a public event at the site of one of the proposed development parcels at Calder and N. 4th streets, where it wants to construct a nine-unit building.

The company also has plans to construct a 12-unit building a block away at Calder and Marion streets, said Ian Wewer, director of development and operations for Seven Bridges. Both buildings would contain one-bedroom apartments ranging from 700 to 900 square feet.

Wewer said that Seven Bridges plans to begin the land development approval process in November, with an appearance before the city Planning Commission. The project’s land development plan also must be OK’d by City Council.

Seven Bridges hopes to break ground in the spring and anticipates a three-to-five month construction timeframe for the 4th Street building, followed by a similar timeframe for the other building, Wewer said. He projects monthly rents in the $800 to $1,000 range, with two “workforce” units that would rent for about 80 percent of the market rate.

The grassy lot where Seven Bridges Development hopes to build at N. 4th and Calder streets.

The Harrisburg Redevelopment Authority currently owns the land, but has granted Seven Bridges “potential developer” status for 60 parcels throughout the MarketPlace neighborhood, a 14-block area just north of the Broad Street Market.

Wewer said that his company considers these two buildings to be the first of many, as they would like to build on other empty lots in the neighborhood.

Earlier this year, another developer, Midtown Development LLP, believed that it had secured the rights to build on these lots. However, the HRA later asserted that Seven Bridges continued to have potential development rights through the end of the year.

The HRA did give Midtown Development “potential developer status” for 106 parcels in Capitol Heights, a neighborhood north of Reily Street that has experienced little development in over a decade after the original builder, Baltimore-based Struever Rouse Homes, abandoned the project in 2009.

Chris Bryce, a Midtown Development principal, said that his Harrisburg-based company plans to begin building single-family town homes soon on the lots.

The Reily Street corridor has become a development hotspot now that the new federal courthouse is rising at the corner of N. 6th and Reily streets. The 243,000-square-foot building is slated for completion in summer 2022.

At a meeting on Tuesday, the HRA approved “potential developer” status to another group that wishes to build in the immediate area.

A partnership called KevGar Holdco LLC wants to build the “Judicial Office Center at Midtown” on 40 lots, 25 of which are currently owned by the HRA, between Reily, Boyd, Fulton and N. 5th streets. The project would consist of a five-story, 75,000-square-foot office and retail building, along with a five-story parking garage with 420 parking spaces.

At the HRA meeting on Tuesday, company principal Kevin Baird, a Philadelphia-area businessman, said that a portion of the garage likely would be reserved for courthouse users, though most would be available for other parking customers. His partner in KevGar is Gary Nalbandian, a founder of both Lemoyne-based NAI CIR realty brokerage and Mechanicsburg-based Metro Bank.

To help finance the project, KevGar has put in an application for $3.7 million state Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP) grant. The commonwealth is expected to announce 2020 RACP grant recipients soon.

Following the HRA meeting on Tuesday, Baird declined further comment except to say that the project is still early in the development process.

“It’s all a big ‘if’ right now,” he said. “A lot of things need to come together.”

Last year, the state awarded a $2 million RACP grant to another proposed project in the immediate area. GreenWorks Development wants to construct a 135,000-square-foot, 135-unit apartment building, along with street-level retail, at 320 Reily St., which is currently a parking lot.

The project has not yet gone through the city’s land development approval process.

The Seven Bridges event on Wednesday was well attended, including by people who live in the neighborhood.

“I want property values to go up, and I know that new construction will do that,” said resident Pat Edwards. “There needs to be a happy medium for making the city better.”

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Dauphin County commissioners award emergency funds to businesses, nonprofits, governments

Part of the Midtown Harrisburg business district

The Dauphin County commissioners today approved the distribution of $17 million in emergency grants for pandemic relief.

The federal CARES Act grants will go to 20 municipalities in the county, 190 small businesses and 57 nonprofit groups, according to the county.

“This critical funding will help lessen the financial burden and keep the doors of many businesses and nonprofits open,” said commissioner Mike Pries, who oversees the county’s Office of Community and Economic Development (DCED), which administers the grant program. “It will also help local governments with the unanticipated costs associated with coronavirus, from purchasing personal protective equipment and technology for remote work to covering police and first responders’ salaries.”

The distribution includes $2.83 million for Harrisburg city, $150,000 for Visit Hershey & Harrisburg and assistance for many small businesses and nonprofits, including restaurants, shops, arts groups and professional organizations.

Businesses located in the county with less than 100 employees—or companies in the tourism industry with less than 500 workers—were eligible to apply for up to $35,000, or 25 percent, of operating expenses, whichever was less. Nonprofits were eligible if they delivered services in the county.

Although businesses and nonprofits that received a Paycheck Protection Program or Economic Injury Disaster loan could still apply, the amount of funding previously received was considered in awarding grants.

“The small business community, the backbone of our economy, has sustained a massive blow in recent months,” said board Chairman Jeff Haste. “Restaurants, hotels, salons and other small businesses have been hit hard by state’s shutdown and continued restrictions, leaving many struggling to recover.”

Click here for a complete list of award recipients.

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Harrisburg, Brenner agree to settle dispute over Public Works facility

Harrisburg’s Public Works Department site on Paxton Street

A years-long disagreement over a Public Works facility lease appears to be coming to a close, as the parties have agreed to settle their disputed issues.

At a work session on Tuesday night, city Solicitor Neil Grover told Harrisburg City Council that the city had reached an agreement to pay $725,000 to MEB Partners and Brenner Motors to settle outstanding rent, tax and repair issues arising from a three-year lease of the Public Works Department site on Paxton Street.

“We never disputed that we owed some rent and that we owed taxes related to a reimbursement, ” Grover told council members at the end of the four-hour work session. “It really was just a question of the amount that we had in dispute with each other. So, this is a fair resolution to a long problem that arose from a lease that was negotiated very quickly.”

For many years, the city’s Public Works Department was located on the site of the city incinerator in South Harrisburg. The department had to relocate quickly after the incinerator was sold in 2013 to the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority.

The city eventually opted for the former home of Brenner Motors on the 1800-block of Paxton Street, signing a three-year lease with the expectation that it likely would purchase the property.

However, the city stopped paying its $16,000-a-month rent in 2017 after negotiations to buy the property stalled over price. MEB and Brenner then sued the city, and the case eventually went to mediation.

Council still must approve the agreement, which may happen during next week’s legislative session. Grover said that he was awaiting some “final language” from the opposing side.

Reached by phone, Brenner attorney Adam Klein said that his client looked forward to resolving the issue.

“I think both sides are happy to put this behind us,” he said.

The agreement announced on Tuesday night solves only the outstanding issues related to the lease. It does not resolve the continuing disagreement over the fair value of the land.

In 2018, the city initiated eminent domain proceedings, taking the property a year later. It paid $2.2 million, which, following an appraisal, the city deemed to be fair compensation. The city and Brenner, however, remain at odds over the price.

“There is a dispute in the court about the just compensation for the eminent domain, which is separate,” Grover said.

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Harrisburg opens window to receive comments for draft comprehensive plan

The clock has begun to tick on the final stage of Harrisburg’s proposed comprehensive plan, with residents encouraged to review the plan and make comments.

During a virtual work session on Tuesday night, city planning Director Geoffrey Knight offered an extensive presentation of the plan to City Council, an event that kicked off a 45-day public comment period.

The city, Knight said, has set up an email address specifically to receive public comments on the plan. That address is [email protected].

“I want to thank everyone for all their hard work on this document. We’re eager to get it approved,” said council member Dave Madsen. “But we have to do our due diligence and take a hard look at it and get that feedback from the community.”

The city’s current comprehensive plan dates back to 1974, though it’s supposed to be thoroughly reviewed and rewritten about once every 20 years.

In 2014, the city began the process of creating a new plan, but met numerous delays, including a protracted dispute with the consultant hired to draft the plan. Last month, the city Planning Commission unanimously passed the plan, sending it to council for final approval.

According to Knight, the city already has received numerous public comments and questions on the 246-page document, even though the official public input window just opened. The 45-day comment period expires on Dec. 4, unless council decides to extend it.

After the comment period expires, council would need to hold at least one public hearing before voting on the plan.

City Solicitor Neil Grover said that council has the authority to make changes to the plan before voting, including the possible inclusion of some or all of the public comments.

“You can accept it as is. You can amend it. You can accept part of it. You can reject the whole thing,” he said. “So, you’re really starting the next phase of this process.”

On Tuesday night, Knight summarized the plan on a chapter-by-chapter basis, which includes such topics as land use, housing, mobility, parks, energy and cultural resources.

“Updating this plan will be important in helping to guide land use decisions,” Knight said. “Hopefully this plan . . . will help guide projects that come through the land development plan process, will help us establish policies going forward and will help us go out for grants in the future.”

Knight stressed that, even after the plan is approved, the city can make updates to it over the years.

“It really should be seen as a living document,” he said.

Council member Westburn Majors inquired about a federal lawsuit filed in June by the Harrisburg-based Office for Planning and Architecture and its majority owner, architect Bret Peters, who the city hired in 2015 to draft the comprehensive plan.

In 2017, Peters and the city had a falling out over payment and the release of several chapters of the draft plan to the city.

In his lawsuit, Peters alleges that the city owes him $109,754 for his work and that the city therefore is violating his copyright by using his work product. The lawsuit further seeks to stop the city and its current consultant, Maryland-based Wallace Montgomery & Associates, from using this work product.

On Tuesday, Grover said that he couldn’t comment publicly on specifics of the ongoing litigation, but said that the lawsuit shouldn’t stop the process of completing the comprehensive plan.

“From our view, unless a judge says otherwise, it doesn’t affect what you’re doing,” Grover told council. “It’s a public document paid for with public money, and it’s what’s best for the city.”

Several council members emphasized the importance of fresh public comment, since the comprehensive planning process dates back six years. Majors, for instance, said that many people who live in the city today may not have been in Harrisburg when the original public meetings were held years ago.

“I want to make sure there’s an opportunity for those folks to provide input,” he said. “I look forward to receiving comments from the public and really digging into this plan at another time.”

Click here to view Harrisburg’s draft comprehensive plan.

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Former Mayor Reed’s collectibles, artifacts to be auctioned at estate sale

This work by sculptor Michael Garman will be part of next month’s estate auction.

Long-time Mayor Steve Reed may be Harrisburg’s most famous collector.

Next month, you’ll have the opportunity to claim an object from his personal collection, as Cordier Auctions & Appraisals holds a two-day estate sale.

“It really is an honor to be entrusted with the Reed estate,” said David Cordier, founder and owner of the Harrisburg-based auction house. “Mayor Reed was a somewhat controversial figure in Harrisburg, but the significant progress to Harrisburg during his tenure speaks to his success as a leader.”

The online-only sale will take place Nov. 1 and Nov. 15, with pre-bids beginning on Oct. 26.

Reed died in January following a long battle with prostate cancer.

During his 28-year mayoral tenure, Reed collected thousands of artifacts for five museums he hoped to build in Harrisburg. He succeeded in building two—the National Civil War Museum and the Pennsylvania National Fire Museum.

Reed bought most artifacts with public funds, and, years after his tenure, he was arrested on numerous theft-related charges, as hundreds of artifacts were discovered in his home and at a separate storage site.

In 2017, he was given probation after pleading guilty to 20 criminal counts relating to the artifacts found in his possession. At his sentencing, he blamed an oversight while packing up his office for possession of these artifacts.

The two-day, online auction will sell items from Reed’s personal collection, some of which reflect his love of collecting and some from his long political career.

According to Cordier, auction highlights will include a “vast array” of militaria from the Revolutionary War through Desert Storm, baseball collectibles from local and national teams, vintage and modern political memorabilia, African and ethnographic arts, local collectibles, art, and a large collection of historic ephemera in addition to southwestern, western and Native American artifacts and collectibles.

For more information, visit the Cordier website. Images courtesy of Cordier Auctions & Appraisals. Pictured above: a 41-inch tall Awatoui kachina, which will be part of the estate sale.

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