State government in the “Spotlight,” as nonprofit newsroom launches in Harrisburg

The staff of Spotlight PA gathers for a meeting. Photo credit: Vicki Vellios Briner/Special to PennLive

The news industry may be in decline, but a new reporting venture in downtown Harrisburg seeks to inject life into the coverage of state government and politics.

From a newsroom on Market Street, Spotlight PA has assembled a team of 10 investigative journalists to offer in-depth coverage of everything from environmental policy and labor regulations to campaign finance issues and lobbying activities.

This nonprofit was born out of the Philadelphia Inquirer, which then partnered with several of the commonwealth’s leading news organizations: the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PennLive/The Patriot News, PA Post and LNP Media Group/The Caucus.

“It’s been a long time since a lot of state departments, agencies and commissions have had dedicated reporters watching out for what’s going on,” said Editor-in-Chief Chris Baxter. “That’s where the idea for Spotlight was born—to fill that void.”

With the decline of newspapers across the country, statehouse reporters often have been the first to get cut, frequently leaving state government officials unaccountable, Baxter said. To help fill the void, organizations like Spotlight are trying a new model—the nonprofit newsroom.

The concept is spreading. Just in Harrisburg, two other nonprofits have sprung up over the past year to offer state government/accountability journalism: PA Post and the Pennsylvania Capital-Star.

Baxter explained Spotlight’s mission as twofold. They first seek to bring accountability back to the state through investigative reporting, while being a resource for and collaborator with other media across the commonwealth. All of their content is available to other state news organizations.

“Why is it beneficial to have reporters from five different outlets covering the exact same daily story and then not having the bandwidth to do the work that really can make a difference and make a change?” Baxter said. “It just doesn’t make sense to me to do that anymore.”

The team of 10 originates from Spotlight’s partner organizations as well as the New York Times, PBS, the Santa Fe New Mexican and other nonprofits. Each reporter is assigned a news beat—a grouping of state departments and agencies to focus on.

Baxter noted that Spotlight is paying special attention to the business of drug addiction treatment in the state, the state police and any story that involves taxpayer dollars. Since they’ve started publishing in September, the team has written about the lack of racial data in state police records, Harrisburg Area Community College cutting mental health counseling and dark spending by state lawmakers.

“It’s really nice to work at an organization that is dedicated to the journalism that has a specific focus,” said Investigative Data Reporter Daniel Simmons-Ritchie, who was nominated by PennLive to join the Spotlight team. “This whole experiment just gives me a lot of hope.”

As a nonprofit newsroom, Spotlight relies on a grant from the Lenfest Institute for Journalism, which owns the Philadelphia Inquirer, as well as funds from supporting organizations and individuals. To receive this support, the public must see journalism as critical to a functioning state and democracy, Baxter said.

He described Spotlight as a chance for “hand-to-hand combat”—journalism that is close to the people.

“That’s what I love, and that’s what I think journalism has to offer on the state level,” he said. “The fact that there’s such a massive void here, it just made me feel very eager and responsible to fill that space.”

Spotlight PA is located at 225 Market St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.spotlightpa.org.

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Coming to HBG: Alt rockers The Revivalists

The Revivalists

Another major musical act will land in Harrisburg soon, as the Revivalists have an early spring date set at The Forum.

Harrisburg University (HU) today announced that the New Orleans-based eight-piece bluesy rock band will play in the beautifully restored theater in March, part of a major East Coast and Midwestern tour.

Fronted by singer and guitarist David Shaw, the Revivalists were formed in 2007, soon gaining a reputation for powerful songs with sharp hooks that combine contemporary sounds with guitar- and brass-based rock reminiscent of the 1970s and ‘80s.

The band’s most recent single, “All My Friends,” from their 2018 album, “Take Good Care,” reached No. 1 on the adult alternative chart. In 2016, a previous single, “Wish I Knew You,” also reached the top spot on that Billboard chart.

In addition to Shaw, the band consists of Zack Feinberg [guitar], Andrew Campanelli [drums], George Gekas [bass], Ed Williams [pedal steel guitar], Rob Ingraham [saxophone], Michael Girardot [keyboard, trumpet] and PJ Howard [drums, percussion].

The HU concert series increasingly has attracted major acts to Harrisburg. On Nov. 30, the globally acclaimed acoustic duo, Rodrigo y Gabriella, will play the Forum, and, on Dec. 20, roots icon Jason Isbell will stop by for a concert.

The Revivalists will play March 4 at the Forum Auditorium, 500 Walnut St., Harrisburg. Tickets go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. For more information and tickets, visit the concert series’ website.

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Harrisburg district to launch new after-school program for 3rd-, 4th-graders

Susan Sneath, the Harrisburg school district’s chief academic officer, gave a presentation on charter school costs during Monday night’s business meeting.

The Harrisburg school district plans to launch a new after-school program meant to give an academic boost to third- and fourth-grade students.

Near the end of Monday night’s school board/business meeting, officials announced that the district will leverage a $470,000 federal grant to start a multi-faceted program that will include after-school learning, educational and support services and a free dinner, Monday through Thursday, to qualified students in those grades, said Susan Sneath, the district’s chief academic officer.

“We will be serving eligible third- and fourth-grade students based on data, based on what they need, following a very specific daily schedule to ensure that not only are we targeting their academic needs in the afternoon, but we’re also including some emotional and social skills training,” Sneath said.

The U.S. Department of Education’s “21st Century Community Learning Center Program” is meant to offer extra assistance to students in high-poverty and low-performing school districts.

Sneath said that 545 third- and fourth-grade students in the district qualify for the program, which will begin at the end of November. Enrollment, which is optional, will be on a first-come, first-served basis as the funding level can accommodate only 420 to 450 students, she said.

At the meeting, Sneath said that the district chose to target those two grade levels because of their importance in the educational and social development of children.

“The research is very clear that, if we can get our children up to grade level, by the time they’re at the end of their 3rd-grade year, their chances for a successful graduation from high school increase significantly,” she said.

Chris Celmer, the district’s acting assistant superintendent, said district staff analyzed how best to leverage the grant in a way that met federal mandates and responded to the needs of the community.

“There are very stringent guidelines for the 21st Century Program, and we will follow them 100-percent to the tee,” he said. “That’s really what led to the change in the program, as well as targeting the program for the betterment of certain students that need that extra assistance.”

Sneath said that this program, while limited, represents a return to all-day academic and support programming for Harrisburg students.

“There used to be in this district quite a comprehensive after-school program,” she said. “However, the funding for that has diminished significantly. So, we have to rethink the way that we target that school intervention.”

In other meeting news:

  • Sneath gave a presentation saying that the cost of tuition paid by the district to charter schools has increased significantly in recent years, rising from $11.1 million in the 2016-17 school year to $14.8 million in the 2018-19 school year. Most of the increase was attributable to greater payments to cyber charter schools.
  • Celmer provided a treasurer’s report that stated that the district had a general fund balance of $41.5 million as of Sept. 30. He also said that the district will kick off budget planning for the 2020-21 school year with a workshop on Nov. 12 at 6 p.m. at the Lincoln Administration Building.
  • Receiver Janet Samuels approved an updated contract with Lemoyne-based realtor Landmark Commercial Realty for the sale of the former William Penn High School campus. The district has the property, which includes the large, blighted school building and about five acres of land at Italian Lake, on the market for $2.5 million.
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Bob’s Art Blog: 3rd on 3rd

The oil painting, “Nelsted Concrete Plant,” by Valeri Larko, at the Susquehanna Art Museum

At one end, the Susquehanna Art Museum spans most of the block. At the other, a cluster of shops, services and spaces comprise a charming collective.

Friday’s 3rd in the Burg felt like Halloween came early this year. Like dutiful “trick or treaters,” we went door to door, and we must have passed the test. As it turned out, it was all treats and no tricks, with some surprises along the way. The best of which was when stepping out of our first stop, we were swept up in a flurry of fleet-footed faithful, following the Sprocket Mural Tour up 3rd to view the latest installations. Whoosh! For a second, this group of 20 to 30 flew by like “The Flash.”

That first stop, the Nyianga Store at 1423, proved to be a great jumping off point for art. A native of Cameroon, the proprietress, Chantal Nga Eloundou, was espousing the merits of her all-natural shea butters while handing out samples to visitors stopping by. It was her first 3rd in the Burg opening. The colorful shop, “where fashion meets nature,” is filled with art, clothing, jewelry, leather goods and much more, presented in a rainbow of colors regal and rich, all created by artists from her homeland.

Artwork at the Nyianga Store on N. 3rd Street, Harrisburg.

“Stretching” to 1417½ , we met up with our unofficial tour guide, the “Quicksilver Quixote” of 3rd Street, Erika Malorzo, the force behind commUnity yoga space. She has provided Harrisburg with a wellness space for all the right reasons. Beyond the “pay what you can” philosophy, she also subscribes to the altruistic anthem of community caring in that, for the community at large to be healthy, “it must be based on people’s love and concern for each other” (Millard Fuller). The art there was on the yoga mats filled to capacity, chilling out to Chelsea Caroline and her daughter Selah Bowman’s entrancing escapism on the handpan drum.

A quick pause for sweet sustenance at Dalicia Bakery and Coffee Shop at 1419 allowed us to meet the owners Ajla and Samra Alic behind the counter while taking in the local art on their walls (pictured, the alley courtyard at Dalicia). Malorzo stepped away from her entrepreneurial duties long enough to escort us to Hertrich Fine Art at 1421. After all, she knew the secret passage. Going in the door leading to Ten Toes Shoes, a men’s footwear store, also gave entry upstairs to a whole new world where owner Michael Hertrich waxed poetic on collecting fine art. Settling in amongst the gallery full of visually virtuosic paintings and photographs set the tone for his discourse.

Hertrich made a cogent argument for being a conscientious collector. Art, like any other luxury commodity, should be its own reward for the purest of reasons—a deep appreciation for the object. Hertrich was enthusiastically engaging and enlightening in his frank discussion about his life’s passion of collecting art. The eponymous gallery provides art from classical to contemporary with the emphasis skewing to the latter. Hertrich, a successful art dealer with a 30-year run in Pittsburgh and an artist himself, moved to Harrisburg, opening the gallery in August. He brought with him a stable of Steel City artists and wants to do the same for Harrisburg. For now, Linda Benton McCloskey and Kevyn Knox hold an inside track upstairs. Both Harrisburg artists, Benton McCloskey is ensconced at Millworks and Knox has works at H*MAC.

An evening out on a crisp fall night, exploring a section of the 1400-block on N. 3rd Street, made for a treat of an evening. Delicious baked goods at Dalicia Bakery, exotic art both wearable and wall worthy at Nyianga Store, catching the “Om” vibe at commUNITY and being educated in the world of fine art at the newly opened Hertrich Gallery were all treats and no tricks.

PS
Sunday afternoon at the Susquehanna Art Museum completed the 3rd “Street” in the Burg weekend. Artist Valeri Larko with her hybrid plein air paintings, fused with her love of abandonment, presented a guided tour of her works for SAM patrons in the lobby gallery. Her work is on view through Nov. 17. A shout-out to arts local “band on the run,” as the Harrisburg Sketchers’ final week at the SAM in the DeSoto Family Vault runs through Oct. 27. A group of impromptu artists, the Sketchers bring a street scene symposium that contrasts with Larko’s studied style of specificity. Thirty-five years of painting the urban landscapes that hide in plain sight of New Jersey and the Bronx has afforded Larko an insider’s cache of commerce. She “trades” in what most would view as unremarkable points of (dis)interest. Abandoned lots, parks and buildings speak to her from the highways and byways that exit to nowhere. She seeks them out amongst the graffiti grafted onto geographical gateways, making “tags” glamorous and galvanizing in the same breath. In the end, Larko states that she “finds beauty in the every day; the extraordinary in the ordinary.”

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The Week that Was: News and events around Harrisburg

Volunteers clean out the new home of Recycle Bicycle.


From arts to business to community happenings, this past week had something for every news consumer around Harrisburg. We summarize it all below in case you missed any of our coverage.

American Craft Week came to the Harrisburg area last weekend, with a three-artist show at One Good Woman in Camp Hill. See what our arts blogger had to say about the trio of exhibits.

Capital Region Water received a $13 million, low-interest loan from the state that will allow the utility to implement green infrastructure projects in Harrisburg. Find out more about the timing and types of projects from our news story.

Doggie Delights debuted in the Broad Street Market, offering home-baked treats for your hungry pooch. Find out who they are and what they offer from our online story.

Harrisburg City Council listened attentively to a presentation on Capital Region Water’s proposed stormwater fee, as well as a smattering of public comments. CRW officials and Mayor Eric Papenfuse then exchanged views on the city’s stormwater problems. Drink in the details here.

Harristown Enterprises is making changes to a downtown building proposal, splitting the project between residential and office space. The plan is now for 30 apartments in an existing building and several floors of offices in new construction next door. Read the details here.

Midtown Cinema has a treat for all you “Troll” fans—a double feature, plus a guest actor appearance. This “bad” movie has garnered a large cult following, and, if you’re wondering why, you’ll need to read our monthly film review.

Recycle Bicycle is homeless no more, as the nonprofit has purchased a permanent headquarters on Allison Hill in Harrisburg. The long search has ended, and it’s exactly where the group wants to be. Find out the details here.

Rock Lititz keeps expanding, recently adding a hotel to the mix of music-related businesses in the picturesque borough. For all the details, read our feature story from our October issue.

Sara Bozich has SoMa on her mind as she recounts the goings-on around town this weekend. But there’s something fun to do wherever you find yourself in the Harrisburg area. Check out her many ideas here.

Steelton announced that it has sold its water system to a company that also has expressed interest in Harrisburg’s. Read more about this major water player in central PA in our online story.

Do you receive TheBurg Daily, our daily digest of news and events? If not, subscribe here!

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Who’s a Good Vendor? Doggie Delights debuts in the Broad Street Market

Owner Donnie Farner stands amidst the treats at Doggie Delights in the Broad Street Market.

Walking through the brick building of the Broad Street market, you’ll find a stand full of dog treats that come in various shapes, sizes and colors—and an owner who’s tried them all.

“I have to make sure it tastes good,” said Donnie Farner, co-owner of Doggie Delights.

The gourmet treat shop opened earlier this month in the Broad Street Market, having already operated in the West Shore Farmers Market for 15 years. The husband and wife duo—Donnie and Kelly—make all their products from home and, Donnie said, use only the freshest ingredients.

Farner assured me that there’s nothing at the stand that a human couldn’t eat, and I could’ve almost guessed just by looking at them. Baskets and dishes were bursting with doggie delicacies iced with colorful, yogurt-based spreads and filled with peanut butter or cheese mixtures. Pumpkin pie, pizza, snickerdoodle and toasted cheese are just a few of the flavors they offer for hungry pups, but their most popular is the “Blueberry Woofle.”

In addition to their sweets, Doggie Delights carries a variety of bones, antlers, jerky and other bagged snacks.

The Farners make made-to-order cakes for holidays, birthdays and adoption days, so no four-legged friend is left out of the celebration.

They scoop treats into a simple white bag with a stamped-on logo, but Farner assured me that they are highly recognizable by their furry consumers.

“Whenever our long-time customers carry the bag in, the dogs know they’re getting a treat,” he said.

For years, Patti Little has been shopping at Doggie Delights for her “granddog,” a silver lab, who she admittedly spends more money on than herself.

“She loves everything I give her from here,” Little said. “She knows when mimi comes with the bag.”

Not only do the Farners have their two market stands, but they added a food truck to their business within the past year. Every Saturday since April, Farner has worked on the “Street Treats” truck, attending festivals like Harrisburg’s Woofstock and Kipona, Humane Society fundraisers and Make-a-Wish Foundation events.

Since the dogs can’t come into the markets, the owners wanted to go where the dogs were.

At the food truck events, Farner loves getting to meet all of his canine customers in person, but in the market, it’s not unusual for him to spend upwards of 10 minutes exchanging “oohs” and “awws” over pictures of his own and his customers’ fur babies.

The display case at Doggie Delights

Not only do the owners look to satisfy the dogs of market-goers, but they also care for dogs in local shelters. All of their leftover treats go to shelters like Molly’s Place and Speranza Animal Rescue in Mechanicsburg.

The husband and wife’s passion for dogs shows through the six days they spend baking each week and the 200 to 400 pounds of flour they typically go through in that time. And, although their Broad Street Market stand is smaller than the one on the West Shore, it holds a special place in Farner’s heart.

“I’m going to be here until they wheel me out,” he said that he once told the Broad Street Market manager.

At the end of each day, the Farners head home to their Chihuahuas, Rosie and Remy, and their pit bull, Truman. After about eight years of owning the dogs, Farner was still excited to show off their pictures to me. Dog people are a different breed, he admitted.

“Do you ever not smile?” someone once asked Farner. “Dude, I sell dog treats,” he replied.

Doggie Delights is located in the brick building of the Broad Street Market in Harrisburg and on the lower level of the West Shore Farmers Market in Lemoyne. For more information, visit their website.

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CRW receives $13 million state loan, will begin greening projects Uptown, Allison Hill

This catch basin in front of the Broad Street Market in Harrisburg was recently installed as part of Capital Region Water’s green infrastructure program.

Capital Region Water is in line to receive a multi-million-dollar state loan that should provide a boost to its ongoing battle against stormwater runoff.

Gov. Tom Wolf’s office announced on Wednesday that Capital Region Water (CRW) would receive a $13-million, low-interest loan for green infrastructure projects in several Harrisburg neighborhoods, including South Allison Hill and Uptown.

“On behalf of Capital Region Water’s board of directors, we wish to express our gratitude for the financial assistance provided through PENNVEST,” said Charlotte Katzenmoyer, CEO of CRW. “This funding will help Capital Region Water protect public health and the environment while offsetting the financial burden placed on our customers.”

CRW’s loan from the Pennsylvania Infrastructure Investment Authority (PENNVEST)  constituted a fair chunk of the $98 million in water infrastructure funding announced on Wednesday by Wolf’s office. In all, 11 counties received funding for a variety of drinking water and wastewater projects.

In Harrisburg, the loan, which carries an interest rate of 1 percent, will allow CRW to initiate two major projects next year, said Tanya Dierolf, CRW sustainability and strategic projects manager.

The first project will take place in the heart of Allison Hill around the intersections of Derry, 14th and 15th streets. There, CRW will install a variety of green infrastructure, including tree trenches, planter boxes and catch basins, along with new, ADA-compliant ramps, Dierolf said.

These improvements are expected to capture 50,750 gallons of stormwater per year, she said.

The second project planned for 2020 will take place Uptown near the Camp Curtin YMCA. That project will include planters, bumpouts, inlets and catch basins, as well as new ADA-compliant ramps, Dierolf said.

This project is expected to capture some 100,000 gallons of stormwater a year and result in four additional green acres in the neighborhood, Dierolf said.

From 2021-24, the loan will fund additional stormwater projects in Uptown Harrisburg and near the Paxton Creek, she said.

CRW is under a partial consent decree with the U.S. Department of Environmental Protection to slash pollutant levels flowing into area waterways. Much of the problem lies with Harrisburg’s obsolete combined sewer system, which allows untreated stormwater and wastewater to flow into the Susquehanna River during moderate and heavy rainfalls.

CRW plans to invest $315 million over the next 20 years to upgrade its sewer system and install green infrastructure, which is a major part of its plan to reduce stormwater flows through its system.

Dierolf said that CRW’s plan includes implementing 50 acres of greening throughout the city, which should capture 20 to 40 million gallons of stormwater per year.

In central Pennsylvania, in addition to CRW’s loan, several projects in Lancaster County were funded, including a $11.2-million loan to Lancaster city to upgrade a wastewater conveyance system. Like Harrisburg, Lancaster is under a federal consent decree to reduce pollutant flows into local waterways.

“PENNVEST funding has provided much-needed financial assistance to Pennsylvania’s communities for decades, but as the need for costly infrastructure improvements continues to grow, so must our responsibility to be a commensurate partner in those investment increases,” Wolf said, in a statement.

For more information about Capital Region Water, visit their website.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend!

As I’m writing this, I’m sipping a Willamette Valley Pinot Noir (my go-to) and listening to Leon Bridges Radio on Spotify. Dark chocolates are within reach. It appears a chill and relaxing night, but man, what a week. Again! We have a busy start to the weekend, hosting a private event simultaneously with this month’s sip @ soma featuring South County Brewing! The latter, of course, repeats tomorrow for 3rd in the Burg festivities (visit our neighbors at Stash/Dandy for a fall-perfect vintage steal or even a Halloween accouterment!). On Saturday, I’m either doing yard work, cleaning my house or doing something with the kiddo while husband is in the woods. I am, by all accounts, a hunting widow until the holidays. Because it’s been such a chill easy time (that’s sarcasm babes), I decided to host a clothing swap with some friends on Sunday. I think it’ll be lovely, actually, and I can’t wait for snack eating and catching up amid re-shopping our digs. (I’m just dreading making time for the prep.)

What are you doing this weekend?

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At council meeting, Harrisburg mayor, CRW face off over stormwater fee

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse, left, follows along as Capital Region Water officials delivered a presentation to City Council on the proposed stormwater fee.

Capital Region Water took its case for a stormwater fee to Harrisburg City Council on Tuesday night, explaining how and why the utility expects to implement the new fee starting Jan. 1.

At the beginning of a 2½-hour meeting, Charlotte Katzenmoyer, CEO of Capital Region Water (CRW), explained the proposed fee to council members, which she said was necessary to pay some of the cost of improving the city’s obsolete sewer infrastructure.

“We have to upgrade our system and reduce stormwater flows,” she said. “There is a lot of deferred maintenance, so we have a lot of catching up to do.”

In June, the CRW board voted to launch a process that may culminate with a separate stormwater fee at the beginning of 2020. Under the plan, most residential customers would pay $74 a year, or $6.15 with each monthly bill, though larger residential and commercial property owners would pay more, depending on the amount of impervious surface on their land.

Currently, stormwater costs are included in the wastewater portion of a customer’s monthly bill. CRW officials have said that, with a separate stormwater fee, wastewater rates should rise more slowly than they have in recent years.

CRW is under a partial consent agreement with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to reduce the flow of pollution into area waterways. Much of the problem is due to the city’s obsolete combined sewer system, which discharges untreated wastewater into streams and the Susquehanna River during moderate and heavy rainfalls.

To help address the issue, CRW plans to spend $315 million to upgrade the sewer system and implement green infrastructure over the next 20 years.

CRW officials told council members that the stormwater fee, which will raise $5.2 million a year under the proposed rate structure, was a more equitable way to pay for system upgrades than through the wastewater portion of the bill, as owners with more impervious surfaces on their properties would pay a greater amount under the plan.

Questions from council members focused mostly on the residential cost, how customers would afford the new fee and if it would rise over time.

“[Customers] are already struggling to pay their bills, right?” said Councilwoman Shamaine Daniels.

CRW officials stated that the proposed rate was determined through a financial analysis, taking into account the projected cost of upgrades over 20 years and what the average city resident could afford.

“That’s still a large cost that will have to be borne by the city of Harrisburg residents,” said Councilman Westburn Majors.

Following CRW’s presentation, Mayor Eric Papenfuse criticized CRW for proposing a stormwater fee absent a final agreement with the EPA. He said that, in the end, the proposed fee might not cover the improvements mandated by the federal environmental agency.

“We’re spending $315 million on a plan because that’s what we can afford, but it doesn’t solve the problem,” Papenfuse said. “If we want to get to 95-percent compliance, or whatever the EPA mandates, we don’t have a plan that works for us, by your own admission.”

Katzenmoyer said that the $315 million investment would reduce wastewater flows into the Susquehanna River by 82 percent. She projected a total cost of $600 million to be in full compliance, with a timeframe of 65 years to achieve that.

“We don’t know how long we will have, true,” she said. “But it’s more than 20 years, but probably less than 65.”

CRW board Chairman Marc Kurowski said that discussions with the EPA indicate that the federal agency is aware that Harrisburg is a relatively poor city and needs a lengthy time period to achieve a 95-percent compliance rate. He also said that CRW didn’t want to wait for a final agreement with the EPA due to years of deferred maintenance to the system.

“The challenge is that the improvements need to get done,” he said. “The wheels have to be in motion. To wait to implement the fee until the consent decree says this is what you need to do, it’s too late.”

Papenfuse further said that he believes that too much of the burden will fall on Harrisburg’s lower-income residents, especially renters, since landlords presumably would pass on the fee to their tenants.

Katzenmoyer said that CRW plans to offer larger property owners, such as apartment building owners, credits for reducing the amount of impervious surfaces on their land, which could lower their overall burden.

Hanging over the meeting was a notice that the city issued in late July asking private water companies to respond to a request for information. Four companies responded and are being interviewed by the administration, though Papenfuse has repeatedly stated that the meetings are “preliminary” and don’t mean that the city intends to sell the water/sewer system.

Several Harrisburg residents spoke at Tuesday’s meeting, all critical of any attempt to privatize the system.

“Parking, water, what’s next?” asked one N. 4th Street resident. “If we end up putting the system in private hands, we don’t have the ability to collaborate like we would between public entities.”

Allison Hill resident Evelyn Hunt warned that she doesn’t want the city to sell its water assets for short-term financial gain.

“I don’t want the city of Harrisburg get a lump of money like a Lotto winning,” she said. “Then these people have more and more control over us.”

To date, CRW said that it has collected about 80 comments on its proposal to implement the stormwater fee. The comment period, which was extended a month, ends on Oct. 22.

Nonetheless, Papenfuse urged CRW to put the plan on hold for the time being.

“It’s not like wait forever,” he said. “Why not work with the city and work with the council, to get the final solution in place and implement a fee that solves the problem instead of guessing ahead of time?”

To read more about CRW’s stormwater fee proposal and to leave a comment, visit their website.

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Bob’s Art Blog: OMG ACW OGW

Charlie Feathers’ table at One Good Woman

All right, kids, it’s a Saturday morning, so get your magic decoder rings out to decipher this message.

In 1934, the radio show, “Little Orphan Annie,” sponsored by Ovaltine, used this format to send a cryptic challenge for listeners to solve. This art blog headline reads, “Oh my gosh,” “American Craft Week” at “One Good Woman” in Camp Hill.

The two—crafts and the establishment—have gone hand-in-hand since founder and 20-year proprietor, Holly O’Connor, sold the tea and coffee emporium to owners of the past four years, Michele Koch and Mechelle Webster, who, last Saturday, were found at their newly built flagship store, anchored at 1801 Market St.

American Craft Week truly signifies the arrival of the fall season with its celebration taking place nationally the first two weeks of October. One Good Woman culled local talent with a threesome of artists, each a master craftsperson in their respective fields.

The one good woman, prolific painter, Gail Walden Coleman of Mechanicsburg, draws on a color palette she perfected creating sublimely elegant, multi-faceted necklaces and earrings. She has taken that expertise and transferred it to canvas now using acrylics and oils (pictured). The end result delivers a cornucopia of color with dramatic destinations left up to the imagination, informing a final narrative. Coleman’s work can be viewed at the Art Association of Harrisburg in its “Hope, Memory and Pride” exhibit that runs Oct. 18 through Nov. 21. In addition, her work will be featured at the Cornerstone Coffeehouse in December.

 

Master wood-turner from Liverpool, Toby Bouder, selects his woods based on the strength of their intrinsic properties. Bouder draws from a forest of trees including ash, elm, maple, oak, holly, hemlock and boxwood. Their inherent beauty comes through in the aging process and in his rendering on the lathe. The dyes used, comprised of primary colors, red, yellow and blue, mix to provide unique transformations, as the wood never reacts to the dyes quite the same twice. Bouder’s works (pictured) can be viewed at the Pennsylvania Guild of Craftsmen show at the All Star Sports Complex in Gettysburg the weekend of Nov. 16 and 17. His collection will also be part of the Odd Ones Bazaar on Nov. 30 at the Millworks in Midtown.

At a coffee and tea purveyor (OGW), of course, the Mad Hatter would be there. This time, it in the guise of artist Charlie Feathers, who held court at his table dressed for Alice and friends—all customers of One Good Woman. Teapots of all varieties clamored for attention (pictured top) while Charlie grinned like the Cheshire Cat. An artist who eludes the trappings of a label, Feathers always colors outside the lines, blurring reality and fantasy with a dollop of whimsy on top. A painter, sculptor, potter, clothier and jeweler with his Bootleg Collection of wearable art, his works adorn H*MAC on a rotating basis. Charlie’s offerings have been featured at the Susquehanna Art Museum and Metropolis Collective and are among an upcoming group at the Art Association of Harrisburg with his collaborator, Reina Wooden. In addition, Charlie is the featured artist at H*MAC for 3rd in the Burg on Nov. 15.

American craft is alive and well in central PA as viewed last Saturday in Camp Hill. One Good Woman in this edition has featured its crafts collective as part of its repertoire. Discover for yourself and be sure to look for these artists at galleries, art associations and events near you taking place this autumn.

One Good Woman is located at 1801 Market St., Camp Hill. For more information, visit their website.

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