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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Harrisburg releases “Vision Zero” plan, with a goal to eliminate pedestrian fatalities

City Engineer Wayne Martin spoke at today’s introduction of Harrisburg’s “Vision Zero” action plan.

Harrisburg has one of highest rates of pedestrian fatalities and injuries in the nation, a ranking that the city hopes to reverse with its new “Vision Zero” action plan.

Surrounded by public officials, Mayor Eric Papenfuse today introduced the city’s approach to improving road safety, especially for pedestrians and bicyclists.

The plan’s action items are wide-ranging and long-term, with the ultimate goal of eliminating vehicle-related deaths in the city by 2030.

“This is a fundamental commitment to safety for all street users,” Papenfuse said. “It really is a transformative document.”

Harrisburg has a long way to go to reach its goal of zero fatalities.

Over the past five years, 19 pedestrians, bicyclists and motorcyclists have died on city streets, and another 105 have suffered serious injury, according to the report. In central Pennsylvania as a whole, pedestrian deaths have skyrocketed over the past 20 years, from eight in 1998 to 23 last year.

Vision Zero is a nationwide road safety effort that has been adopted by many cities. Harrisburg initiated its own program last year, following a rash of pedestrian deaths on a short stretch of State Street in Allison Hill.

The “action plan” released today offers a look at why the city opted to create a Vision Zero plan, the process leading up to it and the steps it expects to take to implement it.

The report particularly focuses on the plan for the first year, listing numerous steps and action items for evaluation, education, engineering and enforcement.

Several projects are already in the works.

Last year, the city began its “rapid response” project along State Street, upgrading lighting and traffic signals, among other actions.

Going forward, in conjunction with PennDOT, the city plans more extensive changes to the wide, state-owned road, which, at times, stretches to seven lanes. These include reducing the number of travel lanes, adding a sheltered bicycle lane and redesigning crosswalks.

When the changes to State Street are done, commuters likely will experience “a few extra minutes” of travel time, but the result will be a much safer road for non-motorists, Papenfuse said.

“This is the epitome of rebalancing roadway use,” said city Engineer Wayne Martin.

The project is intended to serve as a pilot, so that changes can be measured and evaluated.

“We’re going to real-time test these concepts and measure these concepts before we make them permanent,” Papenfuse said.

The process of converting much of N. 2nd Street, from Forster to Division street, back to two-way traffic also is underway.

Last year, the city held a public meeting to explain broad concepts and get resident input, a meeting attended by more than 100 people. The project is currently in the design phase, and another meeting will be held this spring or summer to update residents on the project, Papenfuse said.

Other major road projects, which will incorporate pedestrian safety concepts under Vision Zero, include constructing a roundabout at the intersection of Mulberry and Derry streets at MulDer Square (construction in 2020) and reconstructing N. 7th Street from Herr to Reily streets, adding a roundabout, a cycle track and two mid-block pedestrian crossings, among other changes (construction from summer 2019 to fall 2020).

The city also would like to reconstruct two other high-accident intersections, one at Forster and Front streets and another at Cameron and Maclay streets. In both cases, concepts were developed last year, and the city currently is seeking funding for final design and construction.

“Fundamentally, what we’re talking about here is a guiding document for the city of Harrisburg,” Papenfuse said. “This is correcting a failed auto-centric approach to urban planning.”

For more information on Vision Zero and to read Harrisburg’s action plan, visit www.visionzerohbg.org.

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Citing population shifts, Dauphin County urges Harrisburg to adopt new ward, voting maps

The Ward 4 polling station in Harrisburg

A Dauphin County official made a pitch on Tuesday night to change and streamline Harrisburg’s ward map, a plan that would slash the number of wards in the city by two-thirds.

Jerry Feaser, the county’s director of the Bureau of Registration and Elections, briefed City Council on a proposal to cut the number of city wards from 15 to five.

He cited several factors for the proposed change, including population shifts that have created uneven voter distributions in the city and an effort to ensure that polling places are compliant with the U.S. Americans with Disabilities Act.

“I am here to respectfully ask that the city and the Dauphin County Bureau of Registration and Elections work together on a plan to make improvements to the voting districts that comprise the City of Harrisburg,” he said.

Under the county’s plan, cutting the number of wards also would reduce the number of voting precincts in the city, which now stands at 28. Instead, each of the five wards would have five precincts, for a total of 25.

Over four decades, Feaser said, 42 election districts were whittled down to the current 28, as populations kept changing and shifting.

“We have arrived at a situation where some of the district lines just don’t make sense,” he said.

For examples, Feaser cited the fact that busy State Street bisects Ward 8 and that Hall Manor sits in two different wards.

He further said that the five new wards then could be used by the Court of Common Pleas to create new magisterial district judge boundaries.

The current Harrisburg precinct map (left) and Dauphin County’s proposed map (right)

Feaser’s presentation was one step in what could be a drawn-out process.

City Council would need to approve the appointment of a five-member commission, which would firm up a new map that may or may not comport with the county’s current proposal. Both council and the county commissioners then would need to approve the map. Lastly, it would go before voters for their approval.

Feaser emphasized that his plan was just “a starting point.”

“The creation of ward lines is totally within the authority of the city,” he said.

Feaser said that a plan probably would not finalized and ready for a vote by residents until the November 2021 general election. It made sense, he said, to wait for the results of next year’s U.S. census, which could significantly alter the population count and the distribution of residents within the city. Therefore, the first use of the new ward map wouldn’t take place until 2022, at the earliest.

“There really is time to absorb this and think about it,” said city Solicitor Neil Grover.

Even if the ward map isn’t changed, Feaser told council that his office will need to reconsider where some residents cast their votes, as a number current polling stations cannot be made ADA compliant and/or because several buildings may not be available any longer for voting.

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Tensions mount at Harrisburg school board meeting, as debate over solicitor gets heated

The Harrisburg school district’s administration building

A Harrisburg school board meeting devolved into a shouting match on Monday night, marked by a disagreement over the hiring of an in-house solicitor for the district.

During a discussion on fiscal matters, board President Danielle Robinson brought up the board’s desire to hire an in-house solicitor, framing the issue as a way to save money.

According to Robinson, the district currently works with some four different law firms and pays $800,000 to $1 million a year in legal fees.

“In the next three years, we’re going to be broke as a district,” Robinson said. “We’re going to be bankrupt as a district. This is a way for us to possibly save some money.”

The move was not, she said, a criticism of the board’s current Solicitor Samuel Cooper, who works for an outside firm, Philadelphia-based Dilworth Paxon.

Robinson said the district had two applicants and that she worked with Superintendent Sybil Knight-Burney, as well as the district’s business manager and HR director, to have an initial discussion with the two candidates. The board then met with the two applicants and asked questions of them.

Although Robinson did not publicly confirm who the candidates were, she was questioned if one was Harrisburg attorney James Ellison, a former school board solicitor and long-time political player in the city.

“However anyone on the outside feels about these two applicants does not matter to me,” Robinson said. “The decision lies with this board. We have to become a strong board to make our own decisions.”

The district’s state-appointed Chief Recovery Officer Janet Samuels then expressed her frustration that the process the board used — a request for qualifications advertised in a local newspaper— was not adequate. She said that the district needed to seek out candidates from other firms experienced in representing school districts.

Robinson then accused Samuels of trying to slander a candidate.

“As the chief recovery officer, your job is to make sure we’re in line with the recovery plan, not to tell these board members what to do and who to vote for,” Robinson said.

After a verbal sparring match between Robinson and Samuels, Cooper appeal for calm. Cooper, who would likely need to stay involved to finish up ongoing legal work, asked everyone to maintain respect and civility.

“Conduct yourself with decorum and do the business at hand,” he said. “If you want respect from our citizens sitting here who spend their time coming here thanklessly that aren’t getting paid for it either, show them some respect too.”

Eventually, the board decided to table the vote. The issue was tabled with no specific date, meaning, Robinson said, that it could come up during the next public voting meeting or at the board’s next regularly scheduled meeting in April. If board members decide to accept new bids for solicitors, they can look at other candidates. If not, they will move forward with the two candidates they have, Robinson said.

For her part, Samuels said she was not surprised by Robinson’s reaction. She said that she gave the board information on possible solicitors in the Harrisburg area who were well-versed in education law, as well as information on how to appropriately select a solicitor. She said she wants to focus on the “great things” that can happen with the district instead of any “baggage” that comes with hiring a particular firm.

“There should be a standard of excellence in place in this district, whether it’s educating children or selecting a board solicitor,” she said.

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HU sets July ground-breaking for new academic tower, hotel

Harrisburg University expects to break ground on its new academic tower and hotel in midsummer, the university confirmed today.

Spokesman Steven Infanti projected a late July start date for the 17-story, $135 million project at the corner of Chestnut and S. 3rd streets.

Infanti said that university expects a two-year construction period, with a grand opening slated for summer 2021, in time for the 2021-22 academic year.

Two weeks ago, the Harrisburg Planning Commission unanimously approved the project (rendering above), which had been scaled down from 19 to 17 floors, about half the height of the original plan. The land use plan still must be approved by City Council.

Infanti expects the building to house at least 1,000 new students and a health science education center for nursing, pharmaceutical sciences and other health-related programs. It also will have classrooms and training space for advanced manufacturing and interactive media programs, he said.

The 386,200-square-foot building consists of two other portions: a hotel and a restaurant. Owners and operators for these have not yet been announced.

Four parcels 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.

Alex Wing of Stantec is the lead architect for the project, supported by Harrisburg-based Reynolds Enterprises Inc. and The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co., based in Baltimore.

For more information about Harrisburg University, visit www.harrisburgu.edu.

 

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Burg Review: Boxer Charles Feathers opens knock-out exhibit at HMAC

It was only fitting that the old Police Athletic League (PAL) building was the backdrop for bantamweight Charles Feathers’ art show at the House of Music, Arts and Culture (HMAC) for 3rd in the Burg on Friday.

Feathers (pictured left) shook the very foundation with his show, which defied description. Everything from stylized ray guns to an apocalyptic wedding dress–including his signature “Bootleg” creations, presented in a no-holds-barred, knock ’em to the canvas style–made for a singular art exhibit.

Before venturing to the upstairs gallery, a laid back jazz duo put down an extra chill vibe on slide trombone and keyboards. The duo, Jim McFalls and Steve Rudolph, respectively, set the tone for a Mardi Gras ambiance in the downstairs bar and restaurant. As a visual backdrop behind them, hand-painted boxing gloves in a nod to the old PAL were on display.

A decade ago, the PAL building was reincarnated as HMAC and, preceding that, it housed the Jewish Community Center. Just off the elevator upstairs, an oversized, multi-colored yarn llama, replete with a cobalt blue saddle and gold suede harness, set off alarms for the riot of color alone. The police, one felt, could have been called in to save “the jumper,” an outsized plaster zebra (10 feet tall) as it perched precariously atop a questionable ledge while hanging onto a wedding veil in one hoof. Behind it was the aforementioned wedding dress with “burnout” patterns from a futuristic nuptial scene.

Otherworldly creations from Feathers included a metal-winged motorcycle jacket fit for a biker angel emblazoned with the “Bootleg” stamp. In a different vein, suspended from the ceiling, was a twisted metal sculpture hoop festooned with peacock feathers. In promoting the “feather fantasy,” Feathers made metal viewing glasses (sans lenses) adorned with peacock plumes outrageously placed across the frames or spinning out of control, extending the temples well beyond the wearer’s head. All the better to view “Planet Charlie” up close.

Artist and HMAC co-owner Gary Bartlett added three installations on the upstairs stage that complemented the avant garde work of Mr. Feathers. One installation spanned across either end of the stage, comprised of air duct vent tubes lit inside with multi-colored bulbs, giving the effect of an underground happening entitled, “American Dream/American Nightmare,” depending on the viewer’s point of view. Bartlett added two separate mannequin forms—one featured pieces from a shredded red Japanese lantern and gauzy material, and the companion piece was a torso adorned with scrabble letters.

What Feathers references in his “Bootleg Creations” is the imprimatur shark, which, in large part, is a tribute to the long-time collaboration with his dearly departed friend and co-creator, Dan Kalbach. Feathers carries on his legacy through the many iterations of “Bootleg,” an artistic genre in its own right.

What makes the body of work represented in Feathers’ oeuvre is the skill presented in diverse media—a potter, a sculptor, a photographer and, most of all, a visionary from another realm. His art is best seen and appreciated up close with clear eyes and an open mind. Whimsy is a large part of Feathers’ lexicon but so is romance and fantasy. All of this together makes Feathers a knockout artist. The evening was a TKO.

Be sure to view Feathers and Bartlett’s works at HMAC through April 17, before it leaves its orbit headed to another solar system.

The House of Music, Arts and Culture is located at 1110 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.harrisburgarts.com.

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Burg Blog: 2 Lives, 2 Streets

Harrisburg City Council in session this week

Not every Harrisburg City Council meeting has fireworks.

This past week, for instance, the legislative session lasted less than a half-hour, as the agenda was small, and the few items on it were non-controversial or sent into committee for later discussion.

However, there were two resolutions, passed unanimously, that I feel should be noted. Both memorialized a community member, recently deceased, whose lives now will be recognized on the streets where they lived.

They led very different lives, and, as well, had very different fates.

The first resolution honored Dennis Green, who, as a child, lived with his family on the 1100-block of Walnut Street. He would go on to star as a halfback at the University of Iowa.

Green never played in the NFL, but later worked his way up the football coaching ranks, first on the college then the professional level. In 1992, he became the head coach for the Minnesota Vikings, becoming just the second African American head coach in the league. He coached the Vikings for an impressive 10 years, then spent several more with the Arizona Cardinals and as an ESPN analyst.

He died last July, more than a decade after retiring from football.

“Mr. Green was a phenomenal resident of the city of Harrisburg,” said Councilman Westburn Majors. “Mr. Green would come back to Harrisburg and helped to guide our athletes.”

The second resolution honored a woman whose impact remained more local to Harrisburg but was profound nonetheless.

Jacqueline Black was a lifelong city resident, spending some four decades in her house on the 300-block of Emerald Street, where she raised a family. Then, last June, tragedy struck.

Her house caught fire, and she died in the blaze, but not before helping three of her grandchildren escape out of a second-floor window. Without her action, those children may have perished, as well.

“Ms. Black was my friend, and she made an impact as a strong matriarch,” said Council President Wanda Williams. “She was a special angel.”

To honor Green, council passed a resolution recognizing the 1100 to 1300 blocks of Walnut Street as “Dennis Green Way.”

To honor Black, council passed a resolution recognizing the 300-block of Emerald Street as “Jacqueline Black Way.”

The streets will retain their official, existing names, but also will be designated by their new names.

Green and Black were two Harrisburg natives who impacted many over the course of their lives, whether on the national stage or the local one. They now will be honored on the streets where they lived.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend! It is a wild weekend ahead (for you guys, though I am thinking about putting some Irish Cream in my coffee on Sunday) with 3rd in the Burg, sip @ soma, and St. Patrick’s Day, which apparently is celebrated ad nauseum. I’m getting a massage today for the first time in well over a year, and tonight it’s a meeting + sip. Saturday, we’re going to see Tig Notaro at Whitaker Center!

What are you doing this weekend?

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