City Council resolves disputes with Mayor’s office, passes 2019 budget without substantial changes.

Harrisburg City Council met tonight to pass the city’s 2019 budget.

One week after disputes with the mayor’s office delayed its scheduled budget vote, Harrisburg City Council tonight approved a 2019 municipal budget that calls for no tax increases and flat spending in the new year.

The budget, which allocates $6.8 million in capital improvement spending and reorganizes city employees into a new departmental structure, is largely unchanged from the one Mayor Eric Papenfuse proposed in November.

Council was originally scheduled to vote on the 2019 budget at its Dec. 18 legislative session.

Council members decided last week to table the budget discussion until they could resolve disagreements over the mayor’s proposals to increase employee salaries and reorganize staff within city hall.

Ultimately, council members did not amend the mayor’s proposed spending for 2019, but they did attach two conditions to their approval of the budget tonight. First, the mayor must provide written justifications for awarding any salary increases greater than 5 percent, and, secondly, must also provide council with quarterly reports of unused salary funds.

Council also amended the 2019 budget to re-institute the director of community and economic development position, a role that was omitted from the city’s organizational chart in the mayor’s proposed reorganization.

The amendment does not carry any new funding, so the city’s 2019 spending plan is unchanged. Councilman Ben Allatt said that the city will seek grants in the new year to pay a salary for a new director.

Council President Wanda Williams said last week that council members wanted to use surplus funds to pay down debt, but that proposal did not come up at tonight’s 20-minute meeting.

As always, the city’s largest operating expenditure in 2019 — $32.7 million — will be on personnel. Debt service and healthcare will eat up $9.8 million and $11 million from the operating budget, respectively.

Even though personnel expenses increased by $500,000 from 2018, Papenfuse said a priority for the 2019 budget is to maintain Harrisburg’s current staff capacity, which his administration has rebuilt after years of austerity.

Rather than add new personnel in 2019, the mayor proposed reorganizing the city’s departments to more closely align with the city council committee structure.

The city’s new organizational chart creates seven city departments to correspond with the seven council committees. The chart dissolves the Department of Community of Economic Development and replaces it with the Department of Engineering and Development.

The reorganization was due in part to the resignation of Community and Economic Development Director Jackie Parker, who left the city in September for a new job in the private sector.

Council’s amendment tonight would place the director of Community and Economic Development in the city’s administrative department, reporting to Business Administrator Marc Woolley.

The duties of the role are not yet defined, and will depend on the skillset of the person who fills the role if the city can fund it, Papenfuse said.

Harrisburg’s 2019 budget also allocates $4.8 million from the Neighborhood Services fund for capital improvement projects, including:

  • $2.5 million for the acquisition of a new public works building
  • $250,000 to outsource the demolition of abandoned buildings
  • $2 million in new equipment for parks maintenance.

An additional $2.5 million in allocations will allow the city to finance its share of grant-funded transportation projects. Among them are:

  • $517,000 to construct new sheltered bike lanes and a traffic circle on N. 7th Street
  • $345,000 to repave two miles of Riverfront Park’s lower riverwalk, a segment stretching from Maclay Street to Shipoke.
  • $270,000 for landscaping and construction to complete the MulDer Square revitalization project.
  • $250,000 to complete the 3rd Street repaving project, which was delayed this year by heavy summer rain.

The budget also allocates money from the city’s general fund to purchase new equipment for other city departments. Those expenditures include $700,000 for the IT department to replace aging infrastructure and purchase off-site data storage.

The police bureau will also receive $150,000 for the purchase of body cameras, a figure that includes $70,000 in unspent funds for the same purpose in this year’s budget.

Papenfuse said the city can expect to see body cameras in 2019, despite initial promises they would be rolled out this year. Police said this fall that it took longer than expected to identify what kind of equipment they wanted.

Councilwoman Shamaine Daniels cast the lone dissenting vote against the budget tonight. After the meeting, she said that she doubted the accuracy of the data that the mayor’s office provided during budget talks in November and December.

Continue Reading

Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend!

Hope you’ve all had a wonderful holiday. We. Are. Tired. As you read this, we’ll be gearing up for Christmas 4 of 4. I also thought I’d get to work luxuriously all week but apparently, I don’t know how a calendar works. Friday we host friends for dinner, then it seemed like a really good idea to go to a cocktail party on Saturday (I know it’ll be fun, I just am feeling my age). Sunday football is blacked out which I’ll cry about, but at least next week I don’t have anything going on. I’ll miss our annual New Year’s Day Party (one of these years I’ll actually write about this — it’s a blast), but Andy has to work.

Anyway. Let’s get some rest, cook some things, and enjoy the final days of 2018! Tomorrow, we’ll be posting the entire team’s New Year’s Resolutions, and we’d love to hear yours, too!

If you’re still here, please do me a solid and take this survey.

What are you doing this weekend?

(more…)

Continue Reading

TheBurg Podcast: Impasse Edition


Hitting the road for holiday travel this weekend? Bring yourself up to speed on Harrisburg political news with the newest episode of TheBurg Podcast.

Lizzy and Larry discuss what’s delaying the city’s 2019 budget, and explain a recent effort to get more local laborers on the new federal courthouse construction site. They finish by previewing a brewing charter school debate, which is sure to take the Harrisburg School Board by storm in 2019.

Stream the episode here, or subscribe to TheBurg Podcast in the Apple or Android podcast apps.

Read more about the topics discussed in this week’s episode:
Harrisburg City Council tables 2019 budget vote, citing “impasse” with mayor’s office.

City council president blocks vote on Federal Courthouse plans, staging symbolic rebuke of hiring practices.

Harrisburg School Board hears charter application for midtown elementary school.

Following church consolidation, Derry Street UMC leaders fight for right to stay in South Allison Hill.

Burg Blog: On Average

TheBurg Podcast is released semi-monthly by TheBurg Magazine. It is recorded in the offices of Startup Harrisburg and produced by Lizzy Hardison. Special thanks to Paul Coolley, who wrote our theme music.

Continue Reading

Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend!

The holidays are here. Hope your shopping is (almost) done. Gifts are wrapped (mine aren’t – when do you do that with a 1-year-old?). We have a full weekend followed by travel and family. It’s going to be a lot. Thank goodness for cbd-infused seltzer.

After a busy workday, I’ll be at Broad Street Market for 3rd in the Burg, picking up pork fat and accouterments for Andy and Jimi to make venison sausage and chorizo on Saturday (with Mexican Oregano from Calicutts). Bo and I will probably hit The State Museum or maybe visit friends in the ‘hood.

Monday, we meet up with friends, as per tradition, at ZerØday — before we hit I-80 for Elk County for Christmas this year. After festivities, we’re back home hitting up my side of the family. Then we cap the week both hosting dinner and attending a cocktail party. OMG I am exhausted typing all of this.

weekend roundup holiday

What are you doing this weekend?

(more…)

Continue Reading

City council president blocks vote on Federal Courthouse plans, staging symbolic rebuke of hiring practices.

Shortly after tabling an anticipated vote on Harrisburg’s proposed 2019 municipal budget, City Council tonight made a symbolic gesture in support of local laborers when it declined to approve plans for a long-delayed federal courthouse project.

Council was scheduled tonight to vote on a proposed land development plan submitted by the U.S. Department of General Services, which is constructing a $192 million federal courthouse on 6th and Reily Streets in Midtown Harrisburg.

Council members said that federal government officials had not shown commitment to hiring local laborers for the project, which broke ground in September and is scheduled for completion in 2021.

Williams pressed federal representatives in December to commit to hire local contractors for the project, particularly women- and minority-owned businesses. But she said they failed to make any commitments to Harrisburg’s local trades workforce.

In response, she used her power as council president to withdraw the land development plan from tonight’s city council agenda.

“We have to make a statement to make a change, and if this is the way me make the statement, so be it,” Williams said. “I will not sit by and allow anyone to keep coming here and developing and not utilize the residents who live in this city.”

The proposal already cleared the city’s Planning Commission in an Oct. 3 vote. City council has 90 days to act on it before it is deemed approved by third-class city planning code, according to deputy city solicitor Tiffanie Baldock.

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse pointed out that failure to act on the land use plan granted it “tacit approval,” and challenged council to vote the resolution down instead.

But Williams said tonight that she would not reschedule the proposal for a vote. She acknowledged that failure to act on the land use plan would not stop GSA from building the courthouse, but said council had to take a stand using whatever means it could

Members of the building trades community addressed council during tonight’s public comment period. They implored council to press for more local and minority representation in development projects, saying such projects provided valuable opportunities for laborers and young people learning new trades.

“It is immoral for the federal government to build a courthouse without using local labor,” said Rev. Frank Hairston-Allen, president of the Harrisburg chapter of the NAACP. “The moral consequence of those jobs that are going to be in the courthouse that will not be obtained by minorities and others in the city is a deprivation.”

Dauphin county commissioner George Hartwick expressed his disappointment that more local minority and women-owned businesses were not being hired for the project.

“That corridor can really benefit from the economic development that’s going to happen in the city, yet we don’t see Dauphin County’s [minority and women] employers, or union based employers, at the table,” Hartwick said. “We want to know where Dauphin County businesses are.”

Council community and economic development chair Dave Madsen said that council has no other paths of recourse to advocate for local laborers, since it cannot compel GSA, legally or otherwise, to award its contracts to certain firms.

“We can’t force them, but we can ask them to come to the table,” Madsen said. “But there’s no legal or procedural mechanism we can use to force them to do the right thing.”

City council did vote tonight to void unused “paper streets” on a lot at Sixth and Maclay Streets in Uptown Harrisburg, just blocks away from the federal courthouse site. The vote clears the way for national car parts retailer AutoZone to consolidate the lots in preparation to build a full-service retail location.

Representatives from AutoZone and the Vartan Group, which owns the 6th Street lot, appeared before council last month to answer questions about their proposed development. Vartan Group CEO Ralph Vartan said it would be Harrisburg’s first, market-rate construction project by a national retailer in decades, other than a dollar store in Allison Hill.

Despite the promise of new development, nobody on council asked AutoZone for assurance that it would hire local laborers.

Continue Reading

Harrisburg City Council tables 2019 budget vote, citing “impasse” with mayor’s office.

Harrisburg city council holds a hearing on the city’s proposed 2019 municipal budget. All seven members voted to table the budget vote until Dec. 27.

Disputes over salary increases and the allocation of surplus funds led Harrisburg City Council to table Harrisburg’s proposed 2019 municipal budget, which is now scheduled for a vote on Thursday, Dec. 27.

The seven-member council voted unanimously to table two bills codifying Harrisburg’s 2019 budget and tax rates. The $70.8 million budget proposed by Mayor Eric Papenfuse in November called for slightly less spending than last year, flat tax rates, and more than $7 million in capital improvement projects.

The budget was the subject of almost eight hours of budget hearings last week, where council members raised questions about the process for awarding salary increases to city officials.

They also scrutinized the mayor’s proposal to reorganize departments within city hall, a move that would have eliminated the department of Community and Economic Development and migrated its programs to other departments.

The reorganization was driven in part by the departure of former DCED director Jackie Parker, who took a job in the private sector in September. Papenfuse said he was unable to replace the private dollars that partially funded Parker’s position, and invited council to apply for a grant from Impact Harrisburg to fund her replacement.

Though the budget hearings last week were relatively uncontroversial, council budget and finance chair Ben Allatt announced tonight that unresolved disputes with the mayor’s office required council to delay action on the budget.

“I am not in a place where we are in agreement between council and the administration,” Allatt said. “Concessions need to be made and we will work towards that end before we vote on Dec. 27.”

Allatt spoke more strongly after tonight’s hour-long meeting ended in a recess. He said that Mayor Eric Papenfuse was “not willing to concede on anything” related to capital spending, salaries and salary increases, and proposed organizational structures.

“We’re at an impasse,” Allat said. “We have a right to appropriate how funds are spent and there is a disagreement over our ability to do that. We have to come to a meeting of the minds and we’re not there.”

Allatt said this is the first time a budget vote has been delayed since he took his seat on council in January 2014.

Council president Wanda Williams also said after the meeting that some of the disagreements were related to proposed uses for the city’s 2018 budget surplus. Council members have advocated using surplus funds to pay down debt.

“There’s a lot of issues we want to address, and one of the things that’s important is the debt,” Williams said. “We have to take our time. They want to hurry us up and pass the budget, and we can’t do that.”

Williams said that council members have been in and out of meetings with city officials over the past few days, trying to reach a resolution.

Papenfuse left the meeting immediately after it recessed and declined to comment by phone tonight.

Council will reconvene at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 27. State law gives them until Dec. 31 to pass a budget.

Continue Reading

State grants medical marijuana permits to two new Harrisburg dispensaries.

Harvest of SouthCentral PA LLC was granted a permit to open a medical marijuana dispensary at 2500 N. 6th Street in Uptown Harrisburg, the site of the historic Camp Curtin fire station. (Image courtesy of Creative Commons.)

Two medical marijuana facilities have been approved to open their doors in Harrisburg in 2019, thanks to permits granted today by the state Department of Health.

Harvest of South Central PA, LLC and Local Dispensaries, LLC received permits to operate sales facilities in uptown Harrisburg and South Allison Hill, according to a press release issued by Gov. Tom Wolf’s office this morning.

In all, the state granted 23 permits to dispensaries across the state as part of the second phase of its medical marijuana program, which was signed into law in April 2016. The new facilities will bring the total number of dispensaries in Pennsylvania to 79.

Once they’re fully operational, the dispensaries can sell state-approved products to card-carrying medical marijuana patients. Pennsylvania dispensaries are currently allowed to stock marijuana oils, pills, topical creams and tinctures, as well dried flower and other plant forms that patients can smoke or vaporize.

The Arizona-based Harvest listed the address of its new dispensary as 2500-2504 N. 6th Street in Uptown Harrisburg, the site of the historic Camp Curtin fire station.

That property is currently occupied by Camp Curtin BBQ. The restaurant’s owners could not be reached for comment today.

Ben Kimbro, director of public and strategic affairs for Harvest LLC, could not confirm any real estate transactions taking place ahead of the dispensary’s arrival.

Kimbro said his company must consider local zoning and permitting regulations when evaluating sites for their dispensaries, as well as proximity to potential patients.

He said the facility will open in 2019, once Harvest has obtained local permits and completed site design plans, and could create up to 20 new jobs.

Harvest employees manage product inventory and consult with patients, Kimbro said. All “patient specialists” receive an intensive education in physiology and marijuana terminology so they can help patients find the best products for their ailments.

Harvest was also granted permits for facilities in Reading, Scranton, Shamokin, Johnstown and New Castle, Pa.

“We see Pennsylvania writ large as a great market,” Kimbro said. “Its population centers, the ages of its population and the patients Pennsylvania has chosen for the program — all of it appeals to us a lot.”

The Lehigh Valley-based Local Dispensaries LLC proposed a location at 137 S. 17th Street in South Allison Hill, an undeveloped lot across from the Hamilton Health Center.

Harrisburg mayor Eric Papenfuse said that city officials have met with representatives from both organizations, and welcomed the news that they would open for business in underdeveloped corners of Harrisburg.

“Their business plans are solid, and both projects will create much-needed jobs while spurring economic development in corridors of the city that need it,” Papenfuse said.

Local Dispensaries could be immediately reached for comment today.

A third applicant from the south-central region, GTI Pennsylvania LLC, was also granted a permit for a new facility in Mechanicsburg.

GTI currently operates RISE Steelton, the closest dispensary to Harrisburg. Dispensaries in Enola and Carlisle opened last year under Phase I of the medical marijuana rollout.

“The permitting of these locations as part of Phase II of the medical marijuana program will ensure more people have access to medical marijuana close to home,” Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine said today. “This step continues the growth of our scientific, medically-based medical marijuana program.”

The Department of Health received 180 applications for its Phase II permits, which it evaluated using a scorecard with more than a dozen criteria.

In addition to business and facility plans, dispensary permit applicants must explain how they will transport, store and secure their product inventory. They must also submit diversity plans and show that their facility will have a positive impact on its community.

Applicants must also pay a non-refundable application fee of $5,000, as well as $30,000 permitting fee and proof of $150,000 in start-up capital.

Pennsylvania’s medical marijuana program allows patients suffering from 21 serious medical conditions – including glaucoma, HIV/AIDS, Huntington’s disease, Crohn’s disease and multiple sclerosis – to purchase marijuana products at licensed dispensaries.

Patients must obtain a medical marijuana identification card from one of 945 approved physicians. About 66,000 Pennsylvanians have active identification cards, according to the Department of Health.

This story was updated at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 18 to include comments from Ben Kimbro.

Continue Reading

Local attorney, non-profit executives appointed to Harrisburg’s financial oversight board.

Democratic state lawmakers have appointed three members of Harrisburg’s newly created Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (ICA), which is charged with overseeing the city’s finances beginning in 2019.

Audry Carter, Kathy Speaker MacNett and Tina Nixon were all appointed to the five-member oversight board this month, according to government spokespeople.

As members of the ICA, they will control a $100,000 annual budget, approve a five-year financial plan for Harrisburg, and review annual budgets and quarterly financial reports for the city through 2023.

Appointing power to the ICA lies with five members of state government: the governor, president pro tempore of the Senate, minority leader of the Senate, speaker of the House and minority leader of the House.

President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati and House Speaker Mike Turzai are expected to make their appointments in the new year.

The ICA was a requirement of House Bill 2557, which allowed Harrisburg to retain its taxing authority for five years after exiting Act 47, a state oversight program for financially distressed cities. The ICA will dissolve when Harrisburg’s taxing authority expires in 2023.

Appointees must live or own a business in the city and must have financial management experience. They cannot work for state government, which significantly limits the number of eligible residents in Harrisburg.

Italian Lake resident Audry Carter was appointed by Gov. Tom Wolf, his spokesman confirmed on Monday. Carter’s resume lists her as the principal of her own consulting firm, which provides management and fundraising guidance in the nonprofit, educational and healthcare fields. She has also managed fundraising campaigns and donor relations programs at hospitals and universities.

She currently serves as the vice chair of the Pennsylvania College of Art and Design and as the president of TheBurg Foundation, which provides marketing grants to nonprofits and acts as a fiduciary agent for several community organizations.

Speaker MacNett, a labor relations attorney at Harrisburg-based Skarlatos-Zonarich law firm, was appointed by House Minority Leader Frank Dermody. A resident of downtown Harrisburg, Speaker MacNett sits on the steering committee of Capital Area Neighbors and is on the board of the Harrisburg Catholic Elementary School.

Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa appointed Tina Nixon, vice president of mission effectiveness and chief diversity officer at UPMC Pinnacle in Harrisburg. Before she joined Pinnacle in 2015, Nixon was the CEO of the YWCA of Greater Harrisburg. Her resume touts more than 25 years of experience in fundraising, marketing and communications in the nonprofit sector.

Nixon was appointed by Gov. Tom Wolf to serve on the Pennsylvania Commission on Women and also sits on the board of the Pennsylvania STEAM Academy, a charter school that has applied to open in the Harrisburg school district in 2019.

ICA members are appointed to serve five-year terms, but they can be replaced if there is electoral turnover among appointing authorities.

The state secretary of the budget and Harrisburg’s finance director will also sit on the ICA as non-voting members.

Once it’s fully populated, the ICA must hire an executive director, who will earn up to a $100,000 salary. The director has 60 days to draft a formal agreement between the ICA and Harrisburg, granting board members broad access to the city’s financial data.

When the ICA and the city enter their agreement, Harrisburg can petition the state Department of Community and Economic Development to release it from Act 47.

Harrisburg officials expect that day will come in spring 2019.

Continue Reading

Harrisburg School Board director Melvin Wilson passes away.

Harrisburg School Board president Danielle Robinson (left) and former director Melvin Wilson (right.)

The president of the Harrisburg School Board choked back tears tonight as she announced that board director Melvin Wilson died over the weekend.

Wilson passed away suddenly on Sunday, Dec. 16, board president Danielle Robinson said. She did not disclose his cause of death.

“He will be missed,” Robinson said during her emotional announcement, which she delivered at the beginning of the board’s December meeting.

Wilson won a seat on the Harrisburg school board in 2015 and was up for reelection in 2019.

During his tenure, he served as the board’s delegate to the Capital Area Intermediate Unit, Harrisburg Area Community College and the Dauphin County Technical School.

A bouquet of flowers lay at Wilson’s empty seat at tonight’s board meeting.

The board recognized him with a prayer and moment of silence, as they also mourned the recent deaths of two students, Kobe Santiago and Donnell Williams, and a member of the district’s teaching staff.

State law requires the Harrisburg School Board to appoint Wilson’s replacement within 30 days. Robinson did not announce any details of the appointment process tonight.

Continue Reading

Following church consolidation, Derry Street UMC leaders fight for right to stay in South Allison Hill.

Derry Street United Methodist Church at 1508 Derry Street is one of 10 Methodist churches in Harrisburg scheduled to close its doors on April 21, 2019.

Derry Street United Methodist Church may draw 80 to 100 worshippers to Sunday morning services on any given week – a far cry from its membership a few decades ago, when many Methodist churches counted hundreds or thousands of congregants.

But by Bill Jamison’s estimate, the church on 15th and Derry streets serves more people now than ever before.

Through its nonprofit Allison Hill Ministries, the church houses a free after-school program and summer enrichment camp for children, a food pantry, clothing closet, parenting and ESL classes and a community garden.

Founded in the 1860s in the heart of South Allison Hill, Derry Street UMC ministers to one of the poorest and most diverse pockets of Harrisburg. Its neighbors are black and brown; they’re immigrants, migrants and refugees speaking Spanish, Arabic, Mandarin; and the vast majority live in deep poverty.

Jamison and other leaders at Derry UMC aren’t sure where these patrons will go under a new plan from the Susquehanna United Methodist Conference, which announced this week it would close church buildings and consolidate its 10 congregations in Harrisburg.

The announcement came after the conference found that fewer than 400 people regularly attend services at any of the 10 congregations in the city, according to conference Communications Director Shawn Gilgore.

In a letter to congregants on Monday, the conference said that Methodist churches have watched their congregations age and shrink in size over the past decade. Combined with the costly upkeep of church buildings, paltry membership rates made it impossible to sustain properties and clergy for multiple congregations across the city.

Conference leaders are asking Harrisburg Methodists to attend the 29th Street Methodist Church in Paxtang, 14 blocks east of Derry Street UMC, while its leaders prepare to dispose of 10 church properties across the city. They expect all those churches, including Derry Street UMC, to close on April 21.

But members of the Derry Street UMC community aren’t sure they can relocate their programs without alienating patrons. They’ll hold a call to action meeting this Sunday, Dec. 15, at 10 a.m. in their church sanctuary.

Representatives from the Susquehanna Conference will be in attendance, Gilgore confirmed, as Derry Street parishioners make the case for keeping their ministries at 1508 Derry St.

“People around here are going to suffer”

The Susquehanna Conference began to develop its consolidation plan this summer, according to Gilgore. Though it was met with some apprehension when it was announced this week, he said that most of the response from the community has been positive.

“We definitely understand this is a bold step,” Gilgore said. “But we want people to know the ministry of the church in Harrisburg is not ending. We need to take a step back and say, ‘In 2019 and in the future, what can we do to best position ourselves in the city?’”

Eventually, the conference hopes to establish a single house of worship with five campuses in uptown, midtown and downtown Harrisburg, Allison Hill and Penbrook, Gilgore said.

These campuses could be located in mixed-use spaces with community partners, rather than traditional church buildings, he said.

Gilgore said that each congregation in Harrisburg has input on the consolidation. But Jamison, who’s worked from Derry Street UMC for 10 years as the leader of Allison Hill Ministries, said his church community was “dumbfounded” by the conference’s decree.

He also rejected the view, expressed in the Dec. 10 letter, that “churches in Harrisburg have neglected to maintain relationships with the neighborhoods we once served,” and insisted that it’s wrong to evaluate a church today based on its Sunday morning crowds.

In its transformation from a place of worship to a neighborhood social safety net, Derry Street UMC exemplifies the trends that churches have followed in recent decades as religious affiliation among Americans has plummeted. Many churches today offer a gamut of programs — such as soup kitchens, 12 Step meetings, parenting classes and day care — that extend far beyond Sunday mornings.

From the basement of Derry Street UMC, Jamison’s Allison Hill Ministries offers an after-school program that serves 32 children every day, as well as a free summer camp that enrolls 40 children a year. Students follow a curriculum designed by Jamison that includes such topics as oceanography, anthropology and Native American history, and take field trips to museums in New York, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia.

Most of the students are enrolled in Harrisburg’s Scott and Melrose elementary schools, which are both walking distance from the church.

More than 170 families patronize the church’s food pantry each month, Jamison said, and a typical Thursday finds 200 people lining up for fresh produce from its Pan Pantry program. People who need food or clothing can sort through donations to the church’s clothes closet. Just this morning, a woman speaking Spanish came to the church basement to retrieve a donated high chair.

“The word I got was, ‘If they are hungry, feed them. If they are naked, clothe them,’” Jamison said, evoking a well-known Bible verse from the book of Matthew. “But that means you have to be where the hungry are. You have to be where the naked will go. We’re here because this is where the need is.”

James Byrd, who stopped by Derry Street today to collect two donated bowling balls from its clothes and furniture closet, said that the church draws most of its patrons from within walking distance. He’s not sure they’ll maintain a relationship with the Methodist Church if they have to travel to 29th Street.

The church counts many seniors among its members, he said, and many of the people it serves cannot afford bus fare or cars. Others may be fearful of venturing to a new neighborhood.

“A lot of people around here are going to suffer,” Byrd said. “How are people going to get to a new location? What will we do for children using after-school programs? I know for a fact this church does a lot for this small community.”

While the Susquehanna Conference counts attendance at Sunday morning services, it doesn’t track enrollment in other church-based programs, Gilgore said.

He added that the Susquehanna Conference supports all existing church ministries and will provide logistical and financial assistance to those that must relocate. They’ve already found a new home for a Camp Curtin Methodist Church soup kitchen in the neighborhood’s YMCA, he said.

Gilgore also said that the conference plans to offer transportation to new church locations under the consolidation plan. Details of those arrangements will be under development throughout the spring.

As Jamison sees it, Derry Street UMC’s location isn’t just practical. He thinks its constancy buoys a population that’s all too familiar with upheaval and disruption.

“Old buildings are a pain, but one of our strengths is that we’ve been on this corner for 150 years. We’re a landmark,” Jamison said. “One of the nice things is that there’s some edifice, some tradition that we can hold on to and find stability – particularly in a migrant community.”

Since the Susquehanna Conference owns the Derry Street church property, its leaders have final say on its fate. Jamison called himself a realist, not a pessimist, and said he isn’t sure the campaign to save the Derry Street church will succeed.

“In my experience, when hierarchies make up their mind, they have the say,” Jamison said. “But we’ll see if I’m right or wrong.”

Continue Reading