Monument Project honors Black abolitionist William Howard Day, 125 years after his death

Commonwealth Monument Project director Lenwood Sloan speaks at the ceremony as Harrisburg historian Calobe Jackson, Jr. listens.

Celebrating a historic Harrisburg leader, the Commonwealth Monument Project unveiled a bust of 19th century abolitionist and educator William Howard Day Wednesday to be displayed in the Pennsylvania Capitol Complex.

The bust was presented to the Capitol in the building’s East Wing on the 125th anniversary of Day’s death. It was gifted, alongside a bronze map of the Old Eighth Ward, which Lenwood Sloan, director of the monument project, hopes will hang in close proximity.

Among his many accomplishments, Day (1825-1900) was elected as Harrisburg’s first Black school board president in 1891. Educated at Oberlin College, where he earned both bachelor’s and master’s degrees, Day was the only Black graduate in his 1847 class. He went on to be a journalist, teacher and avid civil rights advocate for African Americans.

Lenwood Sloan, director of the monument project, said Wednesday that it was important to continue to honor Day in “remembrance of who we are, what we are, where we have been” and “how far we have to go.”

He brought together speakers of multiple generations to celebrate.

“We are the past, present and future of our cause,” Sloan said.

Jamar Thrasher, president of Kennedy Blue Communications, noted he admired Day for being an avid pursuer of freedom and education, although both were difficult for Day as a 19th century Black man.

“To this day, that persistence and that love for education still lives — what he did on the school board, what he did throughout Harrisburg, and ultimately, what he did throughout the entire world,” Thrasher said.

William Howard Day’s commemorative bust.

Sloan said the idea to honor Day came from local historians and community leaders Calobe Jackson, Jr. and Sharonn Williams — both long involved in African American historical projects throughout the region. PA Sen. Patty Kim presented Jackson and Williams with proclamations at the ceremony to honor them. Jackson’s congratulated the historian on turning 95 years old earlier this year.

The Commonwealth Monument Project also presented a wreath for Day’s grave to Elizabeth Jefferies, with the Pennsylvania Hallowed Grounds project. The grounds project works to preserve African American cemeteries.

Day is buried at Lincoln Cemetery, Harrisburg’s oldest surviving Black cemetery.

To learn more about the Commonwealth Monument Project, visit this site.

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Gettysburg Choral Society’s Annual Christmas Concerts

The Gettysburg Choral Society will present a pair of Christmas concerts entitled “In dulci jubilo” (“In sweet rejoicing”) on Friday, December 5th at 7pm and Saturday, December 6th at 3pm in the chapel of The United Lutheran Seminary, 61 Seminary Ridge, Gettysburg, PA 17325. The chorus will perform timeless Christmas favorites such as “Carol of the Bells,” “Do You Hear What I Hear?” and more. Featuring soprano Amanda Peters, the program will also include several recitatives, as well as choruses from Handel’s “Messiah.”

Joining the chorus’ regular accompanist Erin Petrella, guest organist Peggy Haas Howell will perform several organ classics based on “In dulci jubilo” and accompany several chorus numbers. Ms. Howell has performed throughout Europe and the United States. She is the National Vice President and Councillor for Competitions and New Music with the American Guild of Organists. Additionally, she is the organist and choirmaster at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Lynchburg, Virginia and director of Cantate, a community choir for children and youth. Her lengthy career as a recording artist, recitalist, teacher and church musician was best summed up by Cleveland’s The Plain Dealer when it aptly described her as a “play-anything virtuoso.” No stranger to Gettysburg, Ms. Howell never fails to mesmerize audiences with her technical wizardry at the console on the chapel’s magnificent Andover pipe organ.

Her contributions to “sweet rejoicing” will include “Variations on in dulci jubilo” by Denis Bédard, as well as a pair of Bach chorale preludes (BWV 729 and BWV 608) based on the historic tune. In addition to her mini-recital, Ms. Howell will accompany the chorus on several selections, including Philip Ledger’s spirited arrangement of “Good Christian men, rejoice.” Resplendent with playful organ accompaniment, the work celebrates the genesis of the ancient carol’s tune while presenting the hymnic English derivative of the text.

As always, the performances will conclude with the audience joining in a joyous sing-along, accompanied by organ and chorus as the sounds of Christmas reverberate throughout the chapel.

The Gettysburg Choral Society, Inc. is a nonprofit 501©(3) organization composed of auditioned singers who utilize their talents to pursue excellence in choral music performance. The concerts are free and no tickets are required. Tax-deductible contributions are appreciated to help defray concert-related expenses. An offering will be collected.

Additional information is available at gettysburgchoralsociety.org

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Harrisburg school board hires acting principal for John Harris, reviews amended budget

The Harrisburg School District gathered Tuesday, Dec. 2 for a reorganization and general meeting.

At its last meeting of the calendar year on Tuesday, the Harrisburg School District Board hired an acting principal for Harrisburg High School-John Harris Campus.

Beginning Wednesday, longtime school district employee Roma Benjamin will temporarily fill the post, which has seen significant turnover in recent years.

Former John Harris principal Christopher Sattele, who began in October 2024, is leaving the district for another position. Superintendent Benjamin Henry said the district will conduct a national search this February for a permanent principal.

“We want to have a little bit more time to go through the process of finding a more permanent person for this role, versus moving someone in immediately,” Henry said of the appointment.

The district approved Benjamin’s employment contract, including a $138,000 salary, with an 8-1 vote. School board member Danielle Robinson voted no. She did not note her reason.

Prior to this role, Benjamin had been working as a support supervisor within the district. She served as principal at Rowland Academy last year, but was placed on administrative leave in February after being accused of harassment for allegedly shoving a 13-year-old student. The case has since been closed.

Board member Jaime Johnsen noted that at a community meeting with board members and the John Harris community, community members reacted to the idea of Benjamin filling the acting role “very” positively.

Board member Brian Carter confirmed with the superintendent that the board would get quarterly updates from Benjamin on the state of John Harris and expressed concerns about whether the high school needs to implement additional student safety measures, as its last principal indicated.

“We will have to have some tough conversations around safety at the high school,” Henry acknowledged.

Board vice president Autumn Anderson echoed this.

“I do think that it’s time for us to revisit that and start building out a plan of what the safety and security looks like. And the sooner we can do that, the better,” she said.

The board also used its last meeting of the year to review its general budget for 2025-2026 with updated state funding numbers. The district had previously estimated what state subsidies it expected to receive due to Pennsylvania’s lengthy budget impasse, explained Chief Financial Officer Marcia Stokes in a presentation during the meeting.

“This is really as a result of the state’s delay,” she said of the budget amendment.

Stokes further explained that the state budget, which passed Nov. 12, had added an additional $3.2 million to the district’s general fund budget, bringing its total to $216.3 million.

For the 2025-26 school year, the state gave Harrisburg $88.1 million for basic education, $8.7 million for special education, and $18 million in grant funding.

“This presentation actually makes me a little happy,” said Robinson.

One negative Stokes noted, however, was that because the budget did not pass in June, the district lost out on more than $400,000 in interest on the state money.

“That is definitely money we will never be able to recoup,” Stokes said.

She added that the Pennsylvania Department of Education has yet to release tuition rates for cyber and charter schools, which will ultimately impact the budget as well.

Prior to the board’s general meeting, the board moved unanimously to retain Roslyn Copeland as board president and Anderson as vice president at its annual reorganization meeting. They will serve in these roles through 2026.

Magisterial District Judge Hanif Johnson also swore in Carter, Copeland, Johnsen and Robinson for additional four-year terms. Board member Annie Hughes was sworn in for an additional two-year term. All were reelected to the board in the November general election.

School board member Brian Carter was sworn in for another four-year term.

As the school district exited state receivership in June, this school year marks the first time since 2019 that board members have full voting power.

For more information about the Harrisburg School District Board of Directors, visit their website.

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Opening this week, photography show captures Harrisburg with local eyes

harrisburg moon

Michael Yatsko took this featured photo from Wormleysburg.

Get ready to see the city through a different lens – or, should we say, four different lenses?

The Art Association of Harrisburg’s hyper-local, four-man photography show “All Access Harrisburg” is opening Friday, Dec. 5. It features 80 shots, roughly 20 a piece, by photographers William Hicks, Dr. Eliseo Rosario, Ron Steficek and Michael Yatsko.

“It’s centered around Harrisburg and her inhabitants,” said Nathan Foster, the association’s director of exhibitions.

Many photos spotlight well-known city landmarks.

Multiple shots of the Broad Street Market’s stone building offer the viewer a friendly, familiar sight. Photographer Hicks also captured the brick building’s post-fire devastation with two large aerial shots of the dilapidated structure, taken by drone.

Hicks said his photos in the exhibit mark a reexamination of the place he grew up after returning from Bangkok, Thailand, where he lived from 2019 to 2024.

“It was a difficult transition coming back,” he said, particularly because a lot had changed during the pandemic. 

When he came home, he noticed small businesses struggling and the city’s noticeable absence of state workers, now working remotely.

“It just seemed like Harrisburg had lost some of its charm that it used to have,” he said. “That’s what I was searching for in these photos. Reminding myself it is still a beautiful place, even though it feels different.”

Yatsko said many of the shots he submitted are a tribute to his love for the city.

He’s particularly proud of a shot that took years of planning to line up: one of the sun shining through the Star of David atop Beth El Temple. He used sky-tracking apps to find out when the sun would be directly behind the Jewish synagogue’s Star, narrowing it down to a two-day time span.

“When you do all the planning, sometimes the weather just doesn’t work out, or I’m not available, but this one actually worked out perfectly,” he said.

Another well-planned photo features a large crescent moon glowing behind the State Capitol’s dome. For this shot, Yatsko tracked the moon’s stage and location and shot it between 2 and 3 a.m. along S. Front Street in Wormleysburg.

“In order to make the moon appear super big like that, you have to get as far away from the subject as possible,” he explained.

In intimate, black-and-white shots, many of Steficek’s images feature the people of Harrisburg themselves, often in well-known locations. One captures a train passenger waiting on the wooden benches at Harrisburg’s train station; another, a spectator on a bench at Riverfront Park.

“He’s really good at this subtle portraiture,” explained Foster, who curated the exhibit.

Rounding out the show, photographer Rosario, a retired pediatrician, brings environmental shots, including two bald eagles flying along the river and a foggy island in the Susquehanna River.

“He’s excellent at capturing nature photography,” Foster said, also complementing Rosario’s use of color saturation.

Ultimately, Foster hopes that viewers will take a sense of community away from the exhibition.

“Harrisburg is beautiful, even with all our problems and differences,” he said. “We can all recognize certain landmarks and feel pride in being here or being from here.”

For Yatsko, a shot of the Subway Cafe exemplifies such pride. 

The local pizza joint wasn’t a subject he would have gravitated toward, he explained. But someone had asked if he had a nice photo of the building — which was, to them, a sentimental spot.

“A girl reached out. Her best friend’s grandfather, he had just passed,” Yatsko said, explaining the pair used to go to dinner there together weekly.

He set out to get a shot that would reflect this significance after a rainstorm. The resulting work shows the restaurant’s reflection through the puddles in the street.

“She was so happy,” he said, noting the photo proved surprisingly popular with others, too. “It’s not normally something I would go out and photograph, but people really responded to that.”

The “All Access Harrisburg” flyer features William Hicks’ drone shot of Fulton Bank.

“All Access Harrisburg” is available to view Dec. 5 to Jan. 8. The Art Association will host an opening reception for “All Access Harrisburg” on Friday, Dec. 19 from 5 to 8 p.m. For more information about the Art Association, visit its website.

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Bob’s Art Blog: Five Golden Rings and a Partridge (and a Saint Bernard)

“It’s that special time of year…all bundled head to toe” (Michael Buble’)

Santa and the elves are busy in their workshop and a half dozen or so artists I know are hard at work in their home studios putting their signature touches on art gifts perfect for the holidays. No matter which one you celebrate be it Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa or Festivus (“Seinfeld” anyone?) this special group has gifts to go. Happy holidays to all.

The very first artist I ever profiled was Millworks Kelly McGee Curran, she of the ringlet tresses cascading down upon her. Hippie generation of the late ‘60s immediately came to mind. I thought here is the quintessential flower child. With Kelly’s ethereal dream like paintings silently and reverently espousing a simple, yet profound truth, that we are all connected to our Maker and to all that He has created. The rivers, the mountains, the fish that swim in the sea, and the animals that walk this earth, everything of meaning is intertwined. Of Native American lineage, a commonality we share, her art embraces ancient wisdom handed down from generation to generation. Kelly is one with nature and is guided by its spiritual thread that forms a perfect circle of love branching out from her New Cumberland studio. Her 6-year-old daughter has taken up paint and canvas following in mom’s brush strokes. Kelly recently reflected, “I now know one can make art anywhere at any time…even with a little one running around. One easel in the room has now joyously become two and any room will do dependent on the light. Our large picture window opens to a world outside full of inspiration. My younger self that stands before me is painting rainbows, still lifes and spider suns.” Kelly summed it up quoting Wilco: “Just paint what you feel, don’t let anyone say it’s wrong.” Contact [email protected].

We had the distinct pleasure of attending Pamela Black’s opening night reception for her one woman show at Cafe 1500 in its spacious layout years ago. Filling the restaurants many walls, it was obvious that here was an artist fully assured delivering her signature style as a five-course meal. To grow as an artist, one must break away from the walls of restraint and explore new paths seeing where those take them. For Pamela Black, her light-filled studio in her Carlisle home gives her a newfound zeal for painting and creating worlds of enchantment that have become her calling card. Equally recognized as a muralist of grand proportion, her outsized works have adorned businesses and public spaces throughout the region. Once a Millworks mainstay, she finds peace and serenity in her happy place. Always true to her beatific signature style of color and movement, Pam’s offerings today take on advanced theories reaching beyond her highly successful oeuvre. A potent point and counter point of perspective is added lending soft and wispy layers in nuanced terms. Visually, they take on a life of their own, floating across the canvas to their final destination. Pamela recently divulged, “My creative practice involves constant experimentation, exploration and serves as a source of meditation, which is rooted in abstraction. Working primarily with acrylics and watercolor, each painting begins without a fixed outcome, and rather a feeling or memory. My in-home art studio is filled with natural light…the space is light, and energy influences the rhythm of my practice allowing the freedom to move about the room in an intuitive way. Having my art studio within my home creates a seamless connection between daily life and my artistic process.” Contact [email protected].

Amie Bantz is always reinventing herself, which keeps her ahead of the curve. An influencer, trend setter, bon vivant, and world traveler, she dials up tomorrow today. A vital part of the AAPI community, she now resides in the Red Rose City of Lancaster. Having hit the “pause” button on her traditional art, she is now “working heavily in art direction…primarily with photo, video and graphics.” Over the years, she has toured with her “Lunch Box Moments,” a visual tour de force nodding to her Asian American upbringing, to working for Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, to years in her studio at Millworks—she knows no boundaries. In her new role as an art director, she already has formed the final frame in her mind’s eye. She recently shared, “For anyone who has followed my work, it’s no secret that I rarely stay tethered to one medium—’artist’ has always meant different things to me. In one season, producing a body of oil paintings; in another creating a traveling installation and hosting workshops. In this season, it’s the art direction of ‘shoots’ and developing visual content. I’ve still been playing with composition, color and storytelling, but these days through video and photo production. Some days, I feel like an imposter, a painter posing as a director. Other days, art direction feels like the truest expression of what I’ve been working towards all along. Every medium—paint, installation, digital design—feels like a step that led me here.” Contact [email protected].

Artist, illustrator and art instructor Susan Benigni-Landis subscribes to the school of plein air painters, of which she is a well-known practitioner of the art. Her studio, more often than not, is found in the great outdoors. From rivers and streams to forest and glens, with mountainside meanderings all for good measure, lead to canvases contemplatively considered when capturing the moment right before her eyes. That perspective places the audience side by side with the artist. Realism realized. Landscapes and the milieu surrounding her are Susan’s trademark, and art that like the seasons keeps changing and evolving. The artist from her actual studio revealed, “Nature and my travels inform my art. I like to work from ‘life’ plein air, still life or live figures. At times, I use photo references to create larger pieces always trying to capture color, light and moments of beauty. I work mainly in oil but also work in pen and ink and watercolor sketches. Contact [email protected].

Since the day I came across portraitist Alana Beall on my IG thread, I was enamored with her portrait of Edger Allan Poe. We share a love for animals, dogs, horses and any other four-leggeds you might find on a farm that she shares with her husband and kids. Renown for her paintings of celebrities like Marilyn Monroe, Wednesday Addams and other Hollywood stars, she is equally adept at story telling through the images in her paintings. Her studio is found on the family homestead in Monkton, Md., where her art reflects that sense of inner peace, calm, inspiration and creativity, feeling right at home. The artist says that she finds “Inspiration in dreams, meditation and animal messages, and images that I come across that evoke a certain feeling. I usually paint with acrylic using the Stauvet palette to keep my paints for a few days. Glazes are my favorite addition. Starting a new painting, I go into ‘The Big Picture’ and free flow the strokes at a faster pace leaving the details for last.” Contact [email protected].

From her studio loft in Hershey, Millworks expat Joan Maguire is still basking in summer’s ebb and flow of seaside scenes. Her memories conjure sea turtles, koi fish and mojitos from her Cuban adventures. The last is a nod to her latest escapades over two years establishing artistic connections with a small group of artists who are internationally known. As a driving force among the Hershey/Hummelstown coterie of artists, Joan is always breaking new ground with projects-a-plenty. Joan’s philosophy is, “The perfect day is getting up early before the birds wake and watch the sunrise—then go upstairs to my studio and paint with the morning light. It lifts my spirit to create whatever the subject may be. To go a whole day without painting leaves a void in my heart.” Joan wants to share that her studio will be open weekends for gift buying through Dec. 20. Contact [email protected].

P.D. Murray formerly of Chicago, Mexico City and Midtown’s Millworks now creates his madcap melodramas out of a Scottish Brigadoon named Bonny Cala, the appellation he and his wife Amy affectionally call their domicile. Sounds like something out of a fairytale. Paul’s painterly patois nods to his embrace of fauvism that’s reflected in his art. His style, in his own words, is that “of a child perfected over 64 years of living like my hair is on fire.” The man, the artist, the myth, the legend, and today the king in his castle, found in an attached building to Bonny Cala, working out of a light filled loft as the world tilts around him, spinning wildly out of control. In the professor’s words, “My artistic process is simple, I make a glorious mess of pure color and then attempt to redeem it. It’s like I paint myself into a corner and then use parie dolia and intuition (or sometimes desperation!) to find forms, figures, or phrases to commit to and gradually develop. My studio supports this approach, in that it’s a chaotic, rock and rolling rats nest of paint on the floor and walls with lots of materials, books, beer and Cheetos lying around.” We visited Paul’s atelier shortly after he was settled in. With rappelling gear, carabiners and grappling hooks in hand, we climbed the parapet to the top as the service elevator was unavailable for use—a Viennese touring ballet troupe was stuck inside-alas! We lived to share the experience and were ever so grateful to partake of the medicinal spirits the Saint Bernard rescue dog had in his barrel. As far as it containing brandy or whiskey, that is purely the stuff of legend and so is P.D. Murray. Contact pdmurray.art.

 

December Events

Hear ye, hear ye! You Art Invited!! Sunday, Dec. 13 from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Celebrate the holidays at the Champagne Fundraiser Brunch. $65 per ticket, the Civic Club Event of the Season. Contact Contrena Baltimore, president, for more info.

3rd in the Burg Friday, Dec. 19 Opening reception 5 to 8 p.m. for the exhibit at “All Access Harrisburg.” A quartet of photographers point their cameras at our beloved capital city. The show focuses on the people, places, and things found in and around metropolitan Harrisburg. View the escapades of Billy Hicks, Dr. Eliseo Rosario, Jr., Ron Steficek and Michael Yatsko. The exhibit runs through Jan. 8.

2026 Sneak Peek: Arts on the Square Gallery @ Market Square Presbyterian Church, located at 20 S. 2nd St. The new exhibit opening the arts season at the church is “Faces and Places,” works by Mindy Deardorff and Sherryl Heberlig. Deardorff is a hyper realistic portrait artist who works primarily in graphite and charcoal. Heberlig is a self-described street photographer/documentarian who traffics in black and white film as well as in color. The exhibit runs through April 19. Come out and join the opening reception and meet the artists upstairs at the gallery on Sunday, Jan. 18 from 12:15 to 1:30 p.m.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Muralist Katie Trainer works on a window at Bacco Pizzeria and Wine Bar.

Happy Thanksgiving! As always, we’re thankful to our readers, our Community Publishers and each and every Friend of TheBurg for supporting our local news operation. Catch up on our weekly coverage below. 

Amma Jo, a boutique store, will reopen in Strawberry Square downtown on Dec. 4, our online story reported.

Bella Sicilia Bakery & Deli is a new Italian restaurant scene offering authentic tastes of Sicily and Italy, right in Camp Hill, according to our magazine story.

Capital Region Water announced Harrisburg residents will pay about 6% more for water and sewer next year, our online story reported.

December issue of TheBurg dropped last week, and our publisher welcomes readers to our annual issue focused on holiday fun. He even hints that a gift of Burg merch might be the perfect stocking stuffer.

Downtown Harrisburg is covered in festive, holiday window paintings thanks to artist Katie Trainer, our online story reported. Harrisburg and the DID collaborated to provide the paintings to business owners at no cost. 

“Emmett Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas,” new from Open Stage, is a family-friendly show worth seeing this holiday season, says our reviewer. The show runs Nov. 22-Dec. 23.

Governor Dick Park and Tower allows a person to time travel in Mount Gretna, according to our arts writer Bob in his magazine story.

Harrisburg City Council this week pitched a $127.4 million budget for its operations next year, our online story reported. The budget included a proposed $20,000 raise for the mayor, a post which has not seen a raise in 20 years.

Harrisburg parks are in the midst of major renovations and upgrades, thanks to a $13 million grant that the city must use before year-end, our online story reported. The upgrades span four parks.

Harrisburg School District will start outsourcing its payroll operations to a third party, our online story reported. The board also cast votes concerning Hill Farm’s management and John Harris’s spring musical.

Peacock Alley Boutique and Collective is a new consignment shop in New Cumberland that grew from a close friendship, our magazine story reported.

Sara Bozich has a full list of things to do this holiday weekend, including holiday markets and Christmas light shows. Find her compiled list here.

Strawberry Square will host various musical groups during lunchtime this holiday season, our online story reported. The musical performances are free to attend and will take place on the UPMC stage. 

Susquehanna Art Museum is celebrating a decade in its permanent home on N. 3rd Street in Midtown with a celebratory exhibit, our online story reported. The exhibition is open Dec. 3 — Feb 15.  

Uber rides are offered free through Nov. 29 through a renewed Sober Ride Home program, our online story reported.

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Harrisburg water/sewer rates set to rise about 6% in 2026

Recent utility work in Harrisburg

Harrisburg water and sewer customers will pay about 6.3% more for service in 2026, according to new rates set by Capital Region Water (CRW).

On Tuesday, the CRW board approved its new rate structure, which will increase the monthly bill for the average residential customer by $6.06, from $95.76 to $101.82, according to the Harrisburg-based utility.

“The CRW team carefully considered these rates to strike a balance between covering necessary operational costs and providing fair and equitable charges to customers,” CRW said, in a statement. “This ensures that critical drinking water, wastewater and stormwater services and infrastructure remain reliable and safe for the entire service territory.”

Broken out, the 2026 rates are as follows:

  • Water charge: $11.63 per 1,000 gallons (average increase of $2.47 per month)
  • Wastewater charge: $11.43 per 1,000 gallons (average increase of $3.18 per month)
  • Stormwater charge: $7.18 for most residential customers (increase of 41 cents per month)

According to CRW, the 2026 budget focuses on critical areas such as “infrastructure improvements, water quality initiatives and environmental stewardship,” as it continues a decades-long effort to reduce wastewater flowing directly into area waterways during rain events.

Last year, the average monthly bill for CRW customers in Harrisburg rose by 3.7%.

For more information on CRW, visit www.capitalregionwater.com.

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Accessory boutique to reopen in downtown Harrisburg

Dewberry Alley in Strawberry Square

A familiar business will soon return to Strawberry Square.

AMMA JO, an accessories showroom, will hold a grand opening in downtown Harrisburg on Dec. 4, marking the third time the storefront has operated in Strawberry Square.

The boutique will offer handbags, accessories, gifts, art and home accessories at its location inside the Market Street entrance of Strawberry Square.

“We are returning to the downtown because we enjoyed our previous experience in Strawberry Square, and we feel that the energy is coming back to the downtown experience – we want to be a part of that!” said owner Amma Johnson.

AMMA Jo will host its grand opening at 11:30 a.m. on Dec. 4.

“We’re thrilled to welcome Amma Johnson back to the downtown,” said Brad Jones, president of Harristown Enterprises, which owns Strawberry Square. “Amma has a fantastic brand and is an inspiration for other retailers and small businesses here in Harrisburg.”

For more information about AMMA JO, visit their website.

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Harrisburg School District to hire outside firm for payroll; approves extension for group’s use of Hill Farm

The Harrisburg School District board on Tuesday

At a meeting Tuesday night, Harrisburg School Board members moved to eliminate the district’s payroll coordinator position and begin running payroll services through an outside firm.

After much discussion, board members voted 7-2 to immediately begin using EDM Financial for employee payroll. The company estimated the cost would be $80,000 to $89,000 per year for its services, which will be billed hourly and extend through Dec. 31, 2026.

Chief Financial Officer Marcia Stokes explained that the move would save the district an estimated $45,000 and help streamline the payroll process.

However, Chief Recovery Officer Lori Suski, the district’s former state-appointed receiver, cautioned the board Tuesday about the estimate.

The district, which exited receivership in June, is still on a tight leash financially as it is monitored by the state.

“I just want to make sure that it doesn’t exceed $89,000 because, obviously, there would be a lot more costs incurred, considering the fact that we are not reducing personnel to offset this cost,” commented Suski, who continues to advise the board.

Up until this point, a single school district employee had overseen all payroll operations. In line with bringing on EDM, the board moved 8-1 to eliminate the employee’s payroll coordinator position. It then voted unanimously to create a new staffing accountant position for the same employee.

According to Human Resources Director Marlena Lang, the employee’s salary as payroll coordinator fell between $71,000 and $96,000 and will remain the same in her new role.

Board members Ellis Roy and Brian Carter questioned the payroll’s outsourcing.

“My biggest thing is: Is this cost effective for the district?” asked Roy.

Carter, the lone ‘no’ vote for eliminating the payroll position, questioned why district employees couldn’t continue to do payroll themselves.

“Shouldn’t we be cross training our employees to do these jobs, so we don’t have to outsource anything?” Carter said.

Stokes added that having payroll people “who service other districts” could help Harrisburg improve its process, which is currently “a pretty heavy lift.”

“This is just a payroll accountant, who is hired through EDM,” she said.

Stokes clarified that the district can get out of the contract with EDM “with very little notice,” if payroll services end up costing more than expected.

In another decision, the board approved extending a license agreement with Harrisburg-based Wildheart Ministries in a 5-3 vote. The organization will continue operating the Hill Farm, located on district-owned property at 18th Street and Eugene Alley, through November 2028, using the land to grow food and provide educational opportunities for students.

Board members Danielle Robinson, Carter and Roy voted ‘no,’ while board member Annie Hughes abstained from the vote, as a member of Hill Farm’s advisory board.

The district also unanimously greenlit several other contracts at the meeting.

One contract continued a dual enrollment agreement with Temple University that gives qualifying 11th- and 12th-grade students, with a GPA of at least 3.0, the chance to take college courses for both high school and college credit. Per the contract, Temple will offer a range of classes, including those on interpersonal communication, mental illness, special education, and child and teen development. Additional classes will examine hip hop and young adult books through lenses of race and identity and the importance of college.

Additional contracts approved a total of $2.1 million for roof restorations for four school buildings: Foose Elementary, Lincoln Elementary, Camp Curtin and SciTech. The work will be done by Tremco Roofing and Building Maintenance.

The board also approved $3,879 for John Harris High School’s spring musical. The amount will cover licensing and materials to run three performances of the one-act musical “Once on This Island” between March 27-29, 2026.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

 

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA!

What you’ll find ⤵️

For something new: If I were going to be in town, I wouldn’t miss A Charlie Brown Jazz Christmas with The Eric Mintel Jazz Quartet at The Englewood.

Worth noting: Post-Thanksgiving Holiday Markets, Yam Yam at XL, lots of turkey trot-type stuff

Things on my agenda this weekend: OOO to Pittsburgh through Saturday, then SoMa Christmas Market!


🆕 Quick Weekend Links: ThursdayFridaySaturdaySunday


New + Noteworthy

you know, ICYMI

Sara’s Top Picks

for the group chat

Wednesday | Thanksgiving Eve

Thursday | Thanksgiving

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


Extras

  1. Coronet Park to open in early 2026. If you want to check it out, make sure you’re on my email list.
  2. Want to share an ‘extra’? Email Sara with interest! 
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