An Italian Easter: It gets no more traditional than roast lamb.

From the somberness of Ash Wednesday to the solemnity of Easter Sunday, the Easter season is a very important time in Italian culture.

I have so many memories of that time growing up: endless “meatless” Fridays (lentils, lentils and more lentils), spending more time in church during Holy Week than at home, and our traditional Good Friday dinner out at the long-gone Hillside Café at 13th and Market streets in Harrisburg.

Easter Sunday was a wonderful celebration—a basket filled with beautiful Easter candy from Matangos (still going strong on Catherine Street in Harrisburg and selling real white chocolate), our house filled with the scent of lilies and hyacinths, cannolis lovingly made by my cousin, Sena, and, if the weather was nice, a stroll around Italian Lake in Uptown Harrisburg. Going to church on Easter Sunday always meant a new hat and little white gloves for me. Haven’t times changed?

But the highlight of the holiday for me has always been making traditional Italian Easter food. I once tackled a torta pasqualina, a seven-layered spinach pie made with almost “impossible to roll out” sheets of dough. It took me an entire day. Dessert is usually a ricotta or amaretto cheesecake, but I have given up on making fruited yeast breads shaped like doves.

For many years now, the centerpiece of my Easter dinner has been a roast lamb, in Italian culture a symbol of spring and re-birth. I was fortunate to taste lamb roasted over a wood fire on a cool spring night in Umbria, Italy, several years ago, an experience I will never forget. There is no outdoor oven here at home for me, but a whole lamb roasted in an ordinary oven and fragrant with garlic and rosemary is still one of the most heavenly meals ever. I urge all you ham lovers out there to give Easter lamb a try.

 

Roast Lamb with Potatoes

Ingredients

  • A whole, bone-in leg of lamb (look for young, local lamb if you can and avoid those that are encased in heavy plastic and shipped from halfway across the world)
  • 4-6 cloves of fresh garlic
  • Several sprigs of fresh rosemary, leaves stripped from the branches
  • Extra virgin olive oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 6-8 medium potatoes cut into chunks or about a pound of small, round red or yellow potatoes
  • 2 sweet onions, thinly sliced

 

Directions

  • Preheat the oven to 450.
  • Bring the refrigerated lamb to room temperature and pat dry with paper towels.
  • Finely chop the rosemary and garlic, place in a small bowl with a little olive oil and salt, and mix together to make a kind of paste.
  • With the tip of a small knife, cut ½ inch slits into the surface of the meat. Push a little of the herb mixture into each slit.
  • Brush more olive oil all over the lamb and dust lightly with salt and pepper.
  • Place the potatoes and onions into a heavy roasting pan, drizzle with olive oil, and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
  • Place a cake “cooling rack” over the potatoes and onions and place the lamb, fat-side down, on the rack. (The drippings from the lamb will give the potatoes a wonderful flavor.)
  • Roast for 20 minutes and then reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees. Turn the lamb.
  • Roast about 1 hour longer for medium rare or 1½ hours longer for medium well done. (But use your meat thermometer and roast exactly to your liking.)
  • Transfer the lamb to a cutting board, cover with foil, and let it rest for at least 15 minutes.
  • Raise the oven heat back to 450, and let the potatoes cook until they are crisp and golden brown.
  • Slice the lamb thinly and serve with the potatoes and onions. (For a lovely presentation, place on a platter garnished with sprigs of mint and rosemary.)

I often serve my Easter lamb with whole roasted tomatoes stuffed with breadcrumbs, Parmesan cheese and whatever herbs are leftover. The tomatoes are a lovely contrast to the rich lamb. Asparagus and peas with mint are other perfect accompaniments.

The experts recommend a Chianti classico to serve with a garlicky roast lamb, but our family likes pinot noir with almost all meat dishes. A chilled sauvignon blanc would work too if you love white wine.

Happy spring and “Buona Pasqua” to all readers!

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Are You Happy? “Inquiring Nuns” want to know.

In 1968, two nuns walked the streets of Chicago and asked strangers, “Are you happy?”

The result, as filmed by directors Gordon Quinn and Jerry Temaner in their documentary, “Inquiring Nuns,” is a cinema verité case study for the concept of happiness, with the responses of people from different walks painting a beautiful portrait of Chicago.

For its 50th anniversary, “Inquiring Nuns” is back with a new restoration, allowing another chance for this delightful look into society to connect with modern audiences.

Sisters Marie Arne and Mary Campion are nervous at first, having never done such a thing before. In the first few minutes of the film, they sit in the vehicle as they drive to their first location, wondering aloud what exactly the filmmakers want from their interactions and learning how to use the microphone.

But once the sisters take to the streets, their courage materializes, culminating in a series of great snapshots of the lives of people in Chicago. We see people of all ages, varying ethnicities, at varying locations such as churches, art museums, etc. And as the sisters approach each individual, we see a variety of reactions. Some are guarded at first and then slowly open up, warming up to the question, and some are immediately open and honest.

And then there are those who are guarded the whole time—still answering the sisters’ questions, but with a look on their faces: “What is this for?” “How do they want me to answer?”

This factor is nearly as interesting as the answers they produce, for one might guess that it influences those answers. We hear a lot of responses related to spirituality, and even the sisters’ faces at times reflect the question, “Are you answering this way because we are nuns?”

Reactions aside, the answers that these strangers give are compelling in their own right.

“I look to people,” one woman responds when asked what makes her happy. “People are the only variables, it seems, in the whole life environment, and then the things that are most important. Nobody means much by themselves.”

Some answers are more composed—the speakers have definitely thought about this subject before—and some are more off-the-cuff, formulated as the words slip out of their mouths. There is even a child who, when asked what makes her happy, honestly responds, “I don’t know.” Each answer gives us a different shade of humanity, a different ingredient added to the pot for this living, breathing, evolving recipe for society.

This film is a must-see for those who love studying people. It is hard to describe the satisfaction that such a simple idea put into motion can produce, but suffice it to say that you will enjoy this documentary.

“Inquiring Nuns” begins on April 5 at Midtown Cinema, 250 Reily St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.midtowncinema.com.

 

APRIL EVENTS

Open Screen
Thursday, April 4, 7:30 p.m.

24 Hours of Potter
Friday, April 5, 9:30 p.m., until April 6, 9:30 p.m.

Down in Front! Presents
“Night of the Ghouls” (1959)
Friday, April 12, 9:30 p.m.

3rd in the Burg $3 Movie
“Office Space” (1999)
Friday, April 19, 9:30 p.m.

National Theatre Live
“All About Eve”
Monday, April 29, 7 p.m.

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March News Digest

Primary Field Set

This year’s municipal primary looks to be a hot one in Harrisburg, as Democratic voters face a crowded field for both City Council and school board.

Last month was the deadline for handing in nomination petitions, and numerous candidates filed, according to the Dauphin County Bureau of Elections & Voter Registration.

For council, three, four-year seats are up for grabs.

Three sitting council members have turned in nomination petitions: Danielle Bowers, Dave Madsen and Westburn Majors. This is the first contested race for Bowers, who was appointed last year to fill an open seat following the departure of former Councilman Cornelius Johnson.

The Democratic incumbents will face three challengers in the primary: Christina Kostelecky of Midtown, Brianna Smith of Midtown and Dionna Reeves of North Allison Hill.

No Republican candidates filed to run for council.

In the very crowded primary race for Harrisburg school board, 12 Democratic candidates will vie for five, four-year seats. These include current school board directors Lionel Gonzalez, Lola Lawson, Ellis R. Roy and Patricia Whitehead-Myers, and eight challengers: Jayne Buchwach, Lewis Butts Jr., Ralph Rodriguez, James Thompson, Doug Thompson Leader, Gerald Welch, Cory X. Williams and Steven Williams.

No one filed to run in the Republican primary.

In the only other city race, incumbent Treasurer Dan Miller is seeking re-election for a four-year term. He is unchallenged in the Democratic primary, and no candidate filed to run in the Republican primary.

On the county level, incumbent commissioners Jeff Haste and Mike Pries are running for re-election unopposed in the Republican primary. On the Democratic side, incumbent George Hartwick and challengers Diane Bowman and Tom Connolly are vying for the two Democratic slots.

For other county offices, none of the Republican incumbents have competition in the primary: District Attorney Fran Chardo, Sheriff Nick Chimienti, Clerk of Courts Dale Klein, Recorder of Deeds Jim Zugay, Treasurer Janis Creason, Controller Timothy DeFoor and Register of Wills/Clerk of Orphans’ Court Jean Marfizo King.

On the Democratic side, Cole Goodman has filed for Recorder of Deeds, Tim Butler is running for Treasurer, Brad Koplinski is running for Clerk of Courts and Bridget Whitley has filed for Register of Wills/Clerk of Orphans’ Court. All are unopposed in the primary.

This list is regarded as preliminary pending possible challenges to nomination petitions, which sometimes knocks candidates off of the ballot.

The primary election is on May 21. The winners will continue on to the general election, which is Nov. 5.

 

HU Tower Gets Planning Approval

The Harrisburg Planning Commission last month gave its blessing to a new downtown high-rise for Harrisburg University, a building design that knocks another two floors off of the project.

The land development plan, approved unanimously by the commission, envisions a 17-story building totaling 386,200 square feet of space at the corner of Chestnut and S. 3rd streets.

“I think this is a very good project,” said commission Chairman Joe Alsberry, before casting his vote in favor.

Last year, HU floated a concept for a building exceeding 30 floors, which would have made it the tallest building in the city. Last fall, the height was cut back to 19 floors and now has been approved at 17.

With Planning Commission approval, the land development plan now must be approved by City Council before HU can break ground.

The building consists of three parts: an academic portion that would house mainly health sciences programs, a separately owned hotel and a restaurant. The university envisions a two-year construction period.

In its vote, the city Planning Commission approved the consolidation of the four parcels that make up the building site: 222 Chestnut St. and 24, 26 and 28 S. 3rd St. Currently, 222 Chestnut St., the largest parcel, is a surface parking lot, while the 3rd Street parcels all house 19th-century commercial buildings, which would be demolished during the site-clearing process.

HU’s attorney and architects, who attended the meeting, were satisfied with the approval, with one exception.

As a condition for approval, the city’s Planning Bureau suggested that HU make changes to the building façade so that it would have a more “consistent” design, with less visible concrete.

HU attorney Diane Tokarsky of McNees Wallace & Nurick pushed back hard on the suggestion that design changes were needed.

“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder,” she said. “There would be a significant cost to the university to begin redesigning the façade of the building.”

City Solicitor Neil Grover clarified that the city can’t force the university to change its design.

In the end, HU representatives said they’d willingly continue the conversation with the city, but within limits.

“We would be happy to have further dialogue,” Tokarsky said. “But we need finality. We’re not redesigning this building.”

 

Lead Paint Abatement Continues

Harrisburg is known for its historic homes, which often have such touches as wide moldings, pocket doors and ceiling medallions.

Sometimes, those houses have something else much less desirable—lead-based paint.

Therefore, the city government wants residents to know that it is seeking applicants for its 2019 lead paint remediation program, an effort aimed at lower- and moderate-income owners and renters.

“It’s not just homeowners,” said Franchon Beeks, program manager and interim director of the city’s Department of Building and Housing Development. “We need more tenants and landlords to be aware of the program.”

The program is open to city residents who meet certain conditions, including income requirements (50 to 80 percent of median family income) and having children in the household younger than 6 years old, since eating chipped, lead-based paint can result in learning disabilities and behavioral problems. In addition, the housing unit must have been built before 1978.

Beeks spoke last month during a Harrisburg City Council work session, offering council members a recent history of the program and a look at plans for 2019.

She told council that a federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) “Lead Hazardous Reduction Demonstration” grant for $3.7 million had expired on Dec. 31. However, the city has received notice that the Pennsylvania Department of Health had approved a one-year, $986,245 grant, allowing the lead paint control and remediation program to continue through 2019.

 


Petition Drive for Charter School

A group denied permission to open a new public charter school has begun a petition drive to overturn the decision of the Harrisburg school board.

The board of the proposed PA STEAM Academy needs to gather valid signatures from 1,000 city residents, 18 years and older, to force the matter to the Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas.

“The bottom line is—what’s in the best interest of the kids?” said Susan Kegerise, a former Susquehanna Township school district superintendent and now a member of the proposed charter school’s board. “We’re going to keep going because it’s in the best interest of the kids.”

PA STEAM Academy has until mid-April—60 days following the city school board’s unanimous denial of its charter application on Feb. 19—to gather the signatures for its appeal. If the court validates the petitions and issues a decree, the matter goes to the state Department of Education’s seven-member Charter School Appeal Board, which will make a final decision to affirm or overturn the school board’s decision.

To coordinate the petition drive, PA STEAM supporters have been gathering signatures during city festivals, on 3rd in the Burg nights, in Strawberry Square and at the Broad Street Market, among other places.

In the meantime, PA STEAM is still moving forward with a planned opening for the fall semester, said Carolyn Dumaresq, president of the charter school board and a former state secretary of education.

To do so, board members will need to hire a principal, six teachers and support staff, in addition to accepting the first round of students.

PA STEAM plans to open with 120 students, grades K-2, in Midtown 2 at N. 3rd and Reily streets in Harrisburg. The 115,000-square-foot building is currently occupied by HACC, but the college’s lease expires in 2022, and it is slated to begin moving programs out of the building later this year.

PA STEAM plans to expand on an annual basis, adding a grade level each year until it becomes a K-8 school. It also expects to grow horizontally, so that each grade level eventually would have 80 students.

 

Gaming Grants Announced

The Dauphin County commissioners last month allotted $6.4 million to some 60 projects in its annual disbursal of gaming funds.

Locally, Harrisburg city will receive $203,000 to upgrade its phone system and create an off-site backup storage facility for data such as crime, property, tax and codes information.

Elsewhere in Harrisburg, Hamilton Health Center will receive $115,000 to remove contaminated soil in an adjacent lot to prepare for a planned facility expansion.

“We’ve run out of exam room space, and we want to expand our medical and behavioral health services,” said Jeannine Peterson, Hamilton’s CEO.

Funding for the projects comes from the county’s share of gaming revenue generated from Hollywood Casino at Penn National in East Hanover Township.

The Dauphin County Gaming Advisory Board reviews project requests before sending its recommendations to the commissioners for approval. While 62 projects were funded, another 37 were denied funding.

Other notable projects in the immediate Harrisburg area that were funded include:

  • D&H Distributing for a new and expanded training center: $160,000
  • Tri-County HDC to help fund a $1.4 million project to build 12 townhomes on Adams Street in Steelton: $125,000
  • Steelton Borough for Phase 2 of the Skate Park and for fire department gear and equipment: $94,394
  • Jewish Home of Greater Harrisburg for generator purchase: $70,000
  • The Salvation Army for security system installation: $53,000
  • Camp Curtin YMCA for an affordable housing construction project: $50,000
  • Dauphin County Library System for computer equipment: $50,000
  • Penbrook Borough for sewer interceptor replacement: $50,000
  • Harrisburg Scottish Rite Masonic Theatre for auditorium upgrades: $47,780
  • Cameron Street Boxing Club for facility renovation and equipment: $35,000
  • Breaking the Chainz Inc. for a van: $29,411
  • Harrisburg University for HUE Festival security services: $25,000
  • Theatre Harrisburg for seating and platforms purchase: $25,000
  • Stephens Episcopal School for safety and security improvements: $8,230

Under state law, the county must use the grant funds for projects that help human services, improve local infrastructure, enhance transportation, address health and safety needs, assist with emergency services and further public interest initiatives.

 

So Noted

Charlotte Katzenmoyer was selected last month as the new chief executive officer of Capital Region Water, the Harrisburg area’s water and sewer authority. Katzenmoyer previously served as the long-time director of public works for Lancaster city.

Darla Hoover last month was named artistic director of the Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet, following the death of CPYB founder and Artistic Director Marcia Dale Weary. Hoover previously served as associate artistic director.

Laura Hughes has been named executive director of the Central Pennsylvania Chapter of the American Red Cross. Before joining the Red Cross, Hughes held roles with Spooky Nook Sports and The American Heart Association.

Ron Hetrick last month was appointed WITF’s new president and CEO, replacing Kathleen Pavelko, who has retired. A Harrisburg native, Hetrick joined WITF in 2000 and has served as senior vice president of finance and administration since 2015.

Michael Boyd Menswear will open this month at 2205 Market St., Camp Hill. The men’s clothing retailer operated for many years on N. 3rd Street in downtown Harrisburg before relocating.

Stephen M. Massini will take over as chief executive officer for Penn State Health, it was announced last month. Massini, the current executive vice president, will assume the position upon the retirement of current CEO A. Craig Hillemeier, who plans to step down in the summer.

Tiki T’s Mini Donuts and More is expected to open this month in the ground floor space at the Bogg on Cranberry, a newly renovated apartment building at N. 2nd and Cranberry streets in Harrisburg. Owner Will Horn said that he will offer branded coffee, bagels and waffles, in addition to his signature bags and buckets of miniature doughnuts.

 

In Memoriam

Marcia Dale Weary, the founder and long-time leader of the Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet, died last month at age 82. Born in Carlisle, she founded the Marcia Dale School of Dance in 1955, which later became the nonprofit Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet, now an internationally recognized school of classical ballet. To honor her legacy, donations may be made to the school. Visit www.cpyb.org.
 

Changing Hands

Adrian St., 2474: M. Jones to H. Montoya & S. Flores, $60,000

Boas St., 1954: Family First Financial LLC to M. Brown, $51,500

Briggs St., 1927: Mosca Greene Associates to J. Fider, $55,000

Briggs St., 1931: Front Door Properties LLC to Equity Trust Co. Custodian Gary D. Brown IRA, $33,500

Crescent St., 249 & 306: C. Frater to PD Estate Properties LLC, $56,000

Cumberland St., 120: B. Kephart to Berlin Group LLC, $87,000

Green St., 916: Bricker Boys Partnership to J. Ehring, $95,000

Green St., 1701A: J. & V. Wills to M. Ton, $196,500

Green St., 1947: S. Roeder to J. Howett, $208,000

Greenwood St., 2111: CW Property Management LLC to J. Elias Holdings LLC, $30,000

Hudson St., 1219: B. Messick to R. & P. Michael, $106,000

Manada St., 1915 & 1917: W. & K. Nolt to PA Property Brothers LLC, $83,500

Market St., 2305: DND Enterprises to D. Jordan & A. Knee, $129,000

Muench St., 215: A. Barone to T. & S. Wisyanski, $130,000

Muench St., 216: WCI Partners LP to K. Boyce, $118,000

N. 2nd St., 805: W. Grace to B. Mummau, $165,000

N. 2nd St., 1715: G. Hitz to PA Deals LLC, $72,000

N. 2nd St., 1815: Pharma Enterprises LLC to M. Tenba, $97,000

N. 2nd St., 2143: R. Steele to A. Arnold Jr., $169,000

N. 2nd St., 2534: M. Tuck to A. Massaro, $165,000

N. 2nd St., 2827: J. Prosseda to J. Charles Realty LLC, $349,000

N. 3rd St., 1820: B. & R. Gordon to MMLM Realty & Ian Smith Contracting, Inc., $69.000

N. 3rd St., 1935 & 1932 Logan St.: D. Goodwin to K. & E. Hummel, $245,000

N. 3rd St., 2214 & 2214A: C. Frater to PD Estate Properties LLC, $104,000

N. 4th St., 3022: R. Birch to CNC Realty Group LLC, $123,750

N. 5th St., 3132: Willowscott Investments LLC to R. & D. Corrigan, $137,900

N. 6th St., 1000: A. Antoun to N&R Group LLC, $31,000

N. 12th St., 56: LMK Properties LLC to B. & L. Young, $30,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 611: K. Uhlmann to G. & J. Hellmann, $190,000

Paxton St., 1125, 1150, 1200, 1201, 728 S. 13th St., & 701 S. Cameron St.: Sutliff Enterprises Inc. to Last Enterprises LLC, $7,175,000

Penn St., 915: Penn St. LLC to J. Craig & F. Combs, $60,500

Penn St., 1626: D. Cinelli to H. & D. Brubaker, $139,900

Pennwood Rd., 3243: Consolidated Holdings International LLC to I Deal Cars Holdings LLC, $230,000

Race St., 560: G. & N. Glen to E. Stoltzfus, $108,000

Rolleston St., 1016: C. & R. Wilson to N. Barger, $51,500

Rumson Dr., 2987: G. Marshall to L. Payne, $70,000

Seneca St., 235: D. Ulloa to H. & B. Cook, $145,000

Showers St., 616: S. Clearfield to S. Rinato & M. Siegel, $125,000

S. 14th St., 1443: Harrisburg Housing Authority to City of Harrisburg, $50,000

S. 17th St., 315: N. Bhatti to 2566 Investment Group Inc., $42,000

S. Front St., 621: N. Rados to C. O’Donnell, $122,000

State St., 231, Unit 601: LUX 1 LP to R. Brooks, $184,900

Susquehanna St., 1408: W. Baker to Campus Square Partners, $290,000

Susquehanna St., 1418: W. & C. Baker to Campus Square Partners LP, $30,000

Susquehanna St., 1816: C. Harner to R9 Holdings LLC, $34,000

Susquehanna St., 2118: K. Scott to J. Elias Holdings LLC, $34,000

Swatara St., 2008: C. Woods to Y. Velazquez, $58,000

 

Harrisburg property sales for February 2019, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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Balance & Harmony: The art of Ikebana blossoms in Harrisburg.

For Ellen Kelley, Ikebana isn’t about showing off an artist’s perfection or proficiency.

Instead, the minimalist art of Japanese flower arrangement is more a display of each artist’s “individuality and spirituality,” said the Dickinson Township resident.

“I love it so much that it doesn’t bother me that I’m not that accomplished,” she said. “Perfection is not the goal. Imperfection is part of the art. I find it very calming.”

Kelley is a member of the Harrisburg chapter of Ikebana International, a nonprofit cultural organization dedicated to the promotion and appreciation of ikebana.

In 1956, Ellen Gordon Allen of Washington, D.C., founded the organization, bringing to this country an art she learned while stationed with her husband in Tokyo. Since then, the volunteer organization has spread across the globe to 161 chapters in more than 50 nations, all united through Ikebana’s worldwide motto, “Friendship through Flowers.”

Harrisburg chapter #18 was chartered soon after, in September 1958, and celebrated its 60th anniversary last year. Alice Hartman of Linglestown joined in 1983, making her the chapter’s longest-serving current member. Hartman, 83, said she stayed on because “its purpose matched my purpose.”

“It’s extremely artistic,” she said. “About 50 percent of our charter is artists. I’m an interior designer, and there’s one other. Ten of our people are taking art lessons now. Many are people who are interested in flowers.”

Hartman also likes being part of a worldwide organization like Ikebana International that promotes cultural understanding, as well as the arts, she added.

Ikebana’s origins trace back to 15th-century Japan and Yoshimasa, the eighth Ashikaga shogun, according to Kelley.

Yoshimasa is remembered as a devout Zen Buddhist who embraced all related arts. Floral arts already were prominent in Buddhist temples and practices during this time. Monks who created arrangements as temple offerings are considered to be the first Ikebana artists.

“Ikebana is a very subtle and elegant sort of communion with nature,” Kelley said. “People love its aesthetics and beauty. It’s about going out into nature to find things for your arrangements. In any sort of art form, you have to love the process.”

She discovered Ikebana several years ago when stationed with her husband in Japan. She looked up the Harrisburg chapter after returning to central Pennsylvania in 2006. The club currently has 35 members.

“Ikebana doesn’t take a lot of flowers, so it’s economical,” she said. “A lot of things we use are just twigs and grass. It’s about taking something from your backyard and turning it into something beautiful.”

Ikebana is divided into several schools, or disciplines, in a method similar to martial arts. In Harrisburg, the schools of Ichiyo, Ikenobo and Sogetsu are represented, each with its own style. Proficiency levels range from beginners to masters, with classes taught by a variety of Ikebana experts hailing from Pennsylvania and Maryland.

“Our members come from many backgrounds,” Kelley said. “We have moms, teachers, librarians, a dentist. All came with little or no experience. We help you learn and grow. There is no timeline, no pressure.”

Each year, Harrisburg chapter members display their art at the annual Garden Faire at Fort Hunter Mansion and Park in Susquehanna Township. This year’s event is scheduled for May 5 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

“It’s a great place to see what we are,” Kelley said. “People are full of questions when they see us. They’re used to the Western part of flower arranging. Ikebana is about balance and harmony. It satisfies in a way that intrigues people.”

The Garden Faire also features displays by the Susquehanna Bonsai Club, music, a café, plant and craft vendors, an art show/sale and more. For details, visit www.forthunter.org/events.

Hartman said that the Harrisburg chapter still carries the same purpose as when she joined in 1982, but the generations have changed since then.

“People have a different approach today,” she said. “It’s a whole different atmosphere.”

Hartman worries about the Harrisburg chapter carrying on because its membership is getting older. The club is hoping to attract a new crowd through more public exposure.

“Come when you can,” Kelley said, urging anyone who may be interested. “We don’t take attendance to keep track of who comes to a meeting. Many of our members were still working full-time when they joined. They came when they could.”

The Harrisburg Chapter of Ikebana International meets the first Wednesday of each month from September through May. Most meetings are held at Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, 2000 Chestnut St., Camp Hill. For details, visit www.ikebanainternationalharrisburg.org.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend! idk with this week. It looks up; things go downhill. I’m super productive; kid gets sick again. If someone is well enough, we’re headed to a wine dinner tonight — a prize attained at last year’s Trés Bonne Annèe event. The President/CEO of Wolfgang Puck is the host, and we’re told every wine on the list has been featured on the Wine Spectator Top 100 Wines in the last three years. An event of this magnitude means a low key remainder of the weekend, which is fine by me. April is Beer Week, and May starts a whole host of events, so I can use the downtime where I can get it. Since Saturday looks beautiful, though, I think we’ll be heading outdoors with everyone else.

What are you doing this weekend?

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A 1-Hour Tour: Harrisburg briefs ICA members on the city’s financial crisis, recovery.

Members of the Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority, who met today at Temple University in Strawberry Square.

Members of Harrisburg’s state-appointed oversight board jumped into the deep end on Tuesday afternoon, as the city took them on a thorough tour of its recent financial history.

Bruce Weber, the city’s budget and finance director, gave the seven-member Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (ICA) a presentation that explained in detail how the city suffered a historic financial collapse and the numerous subsequent measures taken to restore it to solvency.

“It’s hard to absorb all the recent past with the city in one sitting,” said Weber, a non-voting member of the board. “This has to be an ongoing learning process for everyone involved.”

Nonetheless, Weber offered a blow-by-blow review that stretched back to the city’s post-war deindustrialization and population loss. His presentation dug into the details of the past decade, including the incinerator crisis, state receivership, the Harrisburg Strong recovery plan, the numerous sources of debt, and the complex lease of the city’s parking system.

“This was a period of survival,” he said at the meeting at Temple University in Strawberry Square. “The city’s survival as we knew it was at stake.”

He also reviewed how, under the current administration, Harrisburg balanced its budget and stabilized its finances. However, the city now faces the loss of 18 percent of its operating budget in 2024, once its extra taxation authority expires.

The state legislature mandated the ICA as a condition for allowing Harrisburg to exit the state’s Act 47 program for distressed municipalities but retain its extra taxing authority for five more years. The ICA is now tasked with developing a five-year financial plan for the city.

“Fixing an 18-percent hole in the budget is very, very hard,” said meeting attendee Dan Connelly, senior advisor at Marathon Capital Strategies, a Haddonfield, N.J.-based financial advisory firm retained by Harrisburg.

Weber was only able to get through about half of his presentation before the hour-long public portion of the meeting abruptly ended. He will continue it at the ICA’s next meeting, slated for April 24.

“We’re so new, we have a huge learning curve ahead of us,” said ICA Chairman David Schankweiler as the meeting wrapped up.

Otherwise, the ICA approved three requests for proposals (RFPs): one for an executive director, one an auditor and one for a website designer.

The ICA also reviewed the timeline for what it needs to do over the next year. Importantly, the city and the ICA must develop a five-year financial plan by May 27 and send an initial report of recommendations to Gov. Tom Wolf and the state General Assembly by Aug. 25.

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Scoot Along: Are electric scooters coming to a city street near you?

A Lime electric scooter parked across the street from the state Capitol today.

Could Harrisburg be hopping aboard the electric scooter craze?

That’s the hope of Shari Shapiro, who brought a few her company’s slender vehicles to the state Capitol today for a test-scoot.

Shapiro said that Harrisburg is one of four Pennsylvania cities where San Francisco-based Lime would like to deploy scooters if the state legislature passes enabling legislation.

Why Harrisburg?

“The uses are in places with a lot of density, where there are a lot of places to go,” said Shapiro, Lime’s director of mid-Atlantic government relations. “Cities should have a good mix of commercial and residential.”

About 30 percent of rides, she said, go to and from public transit and another 20 percent are for running errands and commuting–and Harrisburg has a lot of commuters and dense residential neighborhoods.

“It’s not really a recreational vehicle,” she said.

Rep. Greg Rothman (R-Cumberland) and Rep. Stephen Kinsey (D-Philadelphia) are co-sponsors of a House bill (HB-631) that would allow “electric low-speed scooters” to operate in specified places in the commonwealth. “Low-speed” is defined as not capable of exceeding 20 mph.

The bill cites numerous benefits of electric scooters, stating that they “help relieve traffic congestion, pollution and stress by reducing car trips and increasing access to public transit.”

If the proposal becomes law, Lime would need to enter into memorandum of understanding with Harrisburg in order to operate here.

In recent years, electric scooters have popped up in cities around the nation, and Lime scooters are deployed in more than 90 cities in the United States.

The scooters are dock-less, meaning that users don’t need to pick them up or return them to docking stations. Instead, riders download an app and scan a QR code, which shows them nearby scooters available for rent.

Lime charges $1 to unlock the scooter and 15 cents per minute of ride time. Shapiro said that the company typically returns 5 to 10 cents per ride back to the municipality, though financial terms, if any, would be set in a memorandum of understanding with the city.

Electric scooters haven’t been without controversy, and some cities have even stopped allowing their use because of concerns over safety and charges of being a public nuisance. Most cities, however, have continued to allow them to operate once approved.

“We’re very excited about the possibility of coming to the city of Harrisburg,” Shapiro said.

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Strawberry Square soon will dish up “Curry in a Hurry”

The food court in Strawberry Square

Passage to India long has ranked as a favorite Harrisburg eatery, but, to some, the location has proven to be a barrier between them and their chicken tikka masala or vegetable curry.

Located in Shipoke, the popular Indian restaurant is just a tad too far for most state workers and downtown denizens to venture on a lunch break.

Soon, that will change.

Come early May, new owner Chenna Chakka plans to open an outpost in the heart of the 9-to-5 action—the food court in Strawberry Square—calling it Capital City Curry in a Hurry.

“A lot of our regular customers would like to come to Passage to India for lunch, but they don’t drive or don’t have the time,” Chakka said. “Numbers-wise, it makes perfect sense for us to be there.”

About two months ago, Chakka assumed the helm of the 26-year-old restaurant, taking over from the original owner, Leena Shenoy. Shenoy and her late husband, Vishnu, founded Passage to India in 1993.

Chakka said he met Shenoy about four years ago after he moved to the Harrisburg area. She even helped him establish his first restaurant, Jewels of India, which opened last year in Carlisle, he said.

Then tragedy struck.

In November, Shenoy suffered a serious heart attack and underwent triple bypass surgery. A few months later, Passage to India filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and Chakka took over the day-to-day operation as the new owner. Slowly, Shenoy is spending more time again in the restaurant, but only in her favorite place–the kitchen, Chakka said.

Chakka said that Brad Jones, CEO of Harristown Enterprises, which owns Strawberry Square, had wanted Shenoy to open up in the food court, and then asked the same of him. Specifically, Curry in a Hurry will operate in the former Arby’s location, which has been vacant for about a year.

“This new addition to the food court and Strawberry Square is very exciting and dramatically increases our already fantastic ethnic diversity of Mexican, Italian, Pan-Asian, American, and now Indian cuisine,” Jones said.

If all goes well, Chakka expects to open around May 1, offering several Indian specialties that will be prepared either at Passage to India or at Jewels of India, depending on the day.

Around the same time, Chakka said that he also expects to reopen the Passage to India food stand inside the Broad Street Market, which has been closed for several months.

“These are great opportunities for us to expand,” he said.

Passage to India is located at 520 Race St., Harrisburg, with plans to open in Strawberry Square. For more information, visit www.passagetoindiaharrisburgpa.com.

 

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend! We had an incredible turnout for last night’s Pop-Up Happy Hour at Strawberry Square! Thanks to everyone who stopped by, and of course, huge thanks to our awesome vendors for sharing their goodies with us (stay tuned to our Facebook page for photos later this week). I think tonight, Jimtern and I are doing wings and PIPA, the OG BAE (read: We will drink Tröegs Perpetual IPA alongside Chicago-style hot garlic wings). My weekend is otherwise pretty low key, just hanging with the babe, maybe hitting up a St. Paddy’s Day Parade party (because that’s the real deal, not 3/17), and on Sunday, it’s a birthday party for 3 year-old twins!

What are you doing this weekend?

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Got Parking? Federal government seeks hundreds of spaces for new courthouse.

A rendering of the new federal courthouse

Hey, Midtown Harrisburg—do you have any extra parking spaces? If so, the federal government would really like to hear from you.

The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania today issued a request for information (RFI), asking for options for off-site parking for workers and visitors to the federal courthouse currently under construction at N. 6th and Reily streets.

The 243,000-square-foot, $192.7-million courthouse will have just a few dozen on-site spaces as part of the project–and that’s not nearly enough to serve the hundreds of people who might use the building on a given day.

Therefore, according to the RFI, the court must arrange for hundreds of additional spaces by the time the building opens in spring 2022.

In addition to 11 federal judges and their staffs, the building will house the U.S. Attorney’s office, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, the U.S. Probation and Pretrial Services System and the U.S. Marshals Service.

“The new courthouse operations will include a steady stream of visitors: jurors, legal teams and other court-related stakeholders,” stated a press release from the court today.

This issue came up in December at a Harrisburg City Council meeting, when it became clear that the courthouse’s on-site parking would be vastly inadequate to meet its needs. The federal government does not guarantee parking for its employees or visitors, typically relying on private operators or municipally owned lots and garages to meet demand.

Specifically, the RFI calls for 118 to 174 spaces for court employees and another 150 to 300 spaces for jurors. Parking spaces must be located within an 1,100-foot radius of the site.

The RFI comes with a host of other requirements, including an on-site parking attendant, no stacking or double parking and an elevator for multi-level parking.

If you think you have the right parking stuff, you have until April 15 to respond to the RFI. An email can be sent to [email protected] or hand-delivered to the existing federal building at 228 Walnut St., Harrisburg.

To read the full RFI, visit https://www.pamd.uscourts.gov/sites/pamd/files/RFIPARKING-3-7-19%201.pdf.

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