Obituary: Sloan Auchincloss

It is with tremendous sorrow that we share the news of the passing of Sloan Auchincloss.

For many years, Sloan and his wife Susan have been great friends of TheBurg, as well as supporters of many other organizations and causes in the Harrisburg area. Sloan will be greatly missed by us and by countless others in our community. TheBurg would like to express our deepest sympathies to Susan, their children, their extended family and their many friends.

Following is Sloan’s obituary:

Samuel Sloan Auchincloss of Harrisburg passed away on April 27, 2018. Born in New York City on April 2, 1942, Sloan, was the youngest son of Samuel and Lydia (Garrison) Auchincloss. He was a graduate of Boston University, B. S. Public Relations, in 1965, and in 1966 earned a master’s degree in Public Relations from American University. Sloan served three years in the U. S. Army as a commissioned officer, rising to the rank of Captain, including one year in Vietnam, where he earned a Combat Medical Badge, Bronze Star and Army Commendation Medal. In 1969, he joined the Harrisburg branch of Xerox Corp. as a sales representative, and, in 1973, became an account executive for local ad agency, Edward C. Michener Associates.

In 1975, he married Susan Johnson of Bay Head, N.J. The couple started their own marketing communications company in 1984, Auchincloss & Auchincloss, Inc., from which they retired in 2005.

Active in professional societies, and community service organizations at various times, Sloan was either a member of or held a board position in Harrisburg Lions Club, Harrisburg Rotary, Historic Harrisburg Association, Harrisburg Chapter American Marketing Association, Harrisburg Chapter Public Relations Society of America, Marketing & Communications Agency Network, Kidney Foundation of Central Pennsylvania, St. Stephen’s Episcopal School, WMSP-FM, Capital Region Economic Development Corporation, Project Forward Leap, Susquehanna Art Museum, PA Downtown Center, Capital Area Transit, Rockhill Trolley Museum and Harrisburg Chapter National Railway Historical Society.

Surviving Sloan are Susan his wife of 43 years and their children and spouses: Lloyd Brian Auchincloss (Sue) of San Jose, Calif., and Elizabeth Auchincloss Strickler (Rob) of Elizabethtown, as well as his stepdaughter Leah Peak (Barry) of  Valrico, Fla. Grandchildren are Josie Peak and Cora and Samuel Strickler.

Memorial service will take place at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Cathedral, 221 N. Front St., Harrisburg, on May 1 at 11 a.m. Burial will be private and at the convenience of the family. Arrangements are being handled by Myers-Harner Funeral Home, Camp Hill. 

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions are welcome at either of the following:

St. Stephen’s Episcopal School
215 N. Front St.
Harrisburg, PA 17101

Rockhill Trolley Museum
P. O. Box 1601
Allentown, PA 18105

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Six Harrisburg tracts nominated for federal tax incentive program

The census tracts nominated for Harrisburg’s Qualified Opportunity Zones

Six census tracts in Harrisburg have been nominated as potential investment sites under a new federal program aimed at spurring development in low-income communities.

Gov. Tom Wolf announced this week that he nominated 300 low-income census tracts across the state as Qualified Opportunity Zones, a status created under the 2017 federal tax reform bill. The U.S. Department of Treasury is expected to approve all QOZ designations by May, according to a statement from the governor’s office.

Six of Harrisburg’s 14 census tracts were included in Wolf’s submission. The potential investment zones encompass the city’s downtown area south of Forster Street, South Harrisburg, South and Central Allison Hill and the neighborhoods along the city’s Cameron Street industrial corridor.

The QOZ program aims to stimulate investment in low-income communities by providing tax breaks to private investors.

The program, which is still under development by the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service, will defer or reduce capital gains taxes to anyone who invests in funds supporting businesses, real estate and other ventures in Opportunity Zones.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse was cautiously optimistic about the incentive program on Tuesday, when he announced to City Council that Harrisburg tracts had been included in the governor’s submission.

“It’s an interesting concept,” Papenfuse said. “We don’t quite know what it will mean yet. The [federal government] needs to determine benefits, but it’s exciting.”

Papenfuse said that the recommended zones aligned with the city’s current development efforts, including the MulDer Square revitalization project and the Paxton Creek reclamation in the industrial corridor.

To qualify for QOZ status, a census tract must either have at least a 20-percent poverty rate or a median family income less than 80 percent of the statewide or regional median income. Papenfuse said that all of Harrisburg’s eligible tracts made Wolf’s list.

In total, almost 1,200 tracts across the state qualified for the program.

“We are hopeful this new incentive will bring much-needed investment to many distressed areas across the commonwealth,” Wolf said in a statement.

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Recovery Zone? Daystar briefs neighborhood, prepares for zoning battle, with plan to move downtown.

Daystar Center for Spiritual Recovery hopes to move into this building at 123 Forster St., Harrisburg.

An Allison Hill-based halfway house is hoping to locate to downtown Harrisburg, proposing to convert an historic mansion to a 40-bed facility for recovering substance abusers.

Daystar Center for Spiritual Recovery held a community meeting on Wednesday night to outline its plans for 123 Forster St., a facility that would house as many as 40 men taking part in its residential treatment program.

Executive Director Fern Wilcox addressed about 30 neighbors, attempting to ease anxiety over issues such as safety, trash and loitering.

“We do what we need to do to always be a positive force in the community,” she told the room of concerned residents.

Daystar, a faith-based recovery program of the United Methodist Church, currently runs a 25-bed residential treatment facility from three attached townhouses on the 100-block of N. 18th Street. However, growing demand for its publicly funded services exceeds it ability to provide them from its current location, according to the organization.

“There’s enough of a need that there needs to be more beds, and Daystar is there to fit that need,” said Jeffrey McCombie, Daystar’s attorney.

The circa-1930 building was built as a private residence on Front Street, gaining some notoriety in the 1950s, when it was moved about 100 feet to its current location as Forster Street was widened. It now backs up to the parking lot of the East Shore YMCA.

Most recently, it housed Justice Works Youth Care, as well as offices for the Harrisburg-area YMCA, with an apartment on the top floor. The current owner, Pittsburgh-based HEIT Holdings, bought it in 2014 and now has it on the market for $675,000.

Daystar wishes to buy the 11,690-square-foot building and undertake a six-month renovation to turn it into a residential treatment center. However, the sale is contingent on zoning approval from the city.

To that point, Daystar and the city’s Planning Bureau currently disagree over the zoning status of the Forster Street building. Daystar believes it should be able to operate its facility there by right, with no additional zoning approval needed. Therefore, it’s appealing the bureau’s decision that requires it to obtain a variance in order to open.

At Wednesday’s meeting, residents did not question the need for Daystar’s services, given the opioid epidemic. But many expressed worry about the facility’s possible impact on the neighborhood. These concerns ranged from potential increases in crime to men congregating and smoking outside, especially since the building is fully exposed on three sides and has no yard space.

Daystar representatives attempted to ease these worries, saying that their clients are fully screened, closely supervised and choose to be in the program. Clients also must hold down jobs and demonstrate a desire to improve their lives, Daystar said.

“Our clients work in the community,” said Ronald Sloane, the program director for spiritual recovery. “We help clients integrate back into society after treatment.”

Nonetheless, several residents raised questions after Wilcox mentioned that the Allison Hill facility has had problems with drug dealers targeting clients.

“We are inundated on Allison Hill,” she said. “They cannot walk one block without being asked for drugs.”

Wilcox said that she hoped that the new facility would prove to be a safer environment, but some residents feared that the drug dealers might follow Daystar, exacerbating an existing problem downtown.

“I’m not supportive,” Jeremiah Chamberlin, who owns an apartment building and lives nearby, said following the meeting. “I don’t that believe that the neighborhood has the resources to deal with it.”

Wilcox told residents that there have been very few problems at the Allison Hill facility, and a check of police records seemed to bear that out. According to a city police source, there have been just a few calls to the facility over the past two years, “none serious.”

For many years, Marsha Banks has run her nonprofit, Amiracle4sure, directly across the street from Daystar’s Allison Hill facility. She said that she has experienced no major problems with Daystar, with the possible exception of men, including staff members, frequently gathering outside to smoke.

“Back in the day, they used to have better supervision,” she said. “But, for the most part, I feel they’ve had a good impression on the neighborhood.”

That said—she believes Daystar residents could be more active, and once were, in offering to help around the neighborhood.

“The old administration used to run a tighter ship,” she said.

In addition to a safer environment, Daystar wants to move downtown because of better proximity to public transportation, as residents don’t have cars, and, especially, to jobs, said staff members.

“They’re here because they want to change their lives,” Sloane said. “Our level of care offers them a chance to come here and develop life skills so they cannot be a burden on society.”

Daystar is scheduled to appear before the Harrisburg Planning Commission on May 2 and the Zoning Hearing Board on May 9, in city hall. Learn more about Daystar at www.daystarrecovery.com.

Disclosure: Lawrance Binda, TheBurg’s editor-in-chief and article author, lives near the proposed facility.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend!

Harrisburg Beer Week is still in full effect. Join us tonight and get Amped Up with Little Amps + Pizza Boy Brewing at Strawberry Square.

Join us! »

Plus, Saturday is the sold-out Little Big Beer Fest at The National Civil War Museum. What a great fest to be a Designated Driver for, though — live music from Shine Delphi, take in the Museum, craft sodas from Boneshire Brew Works, Elementary Coffee cold brew, food from Weis Markets (plus you can buy beer treats that won’t intoxicate you from Raising the Bar) — annnnd, the DD ticket ($10) costs less than regular Museum entry fee!

Be a hero – Be a Designated Driver »

Cap off Harrisburg Beer Week with us at Water Golf on City Island for our Mini Golf Tournament with Harrisburg River Rescue. $100/4-person team gets you adult bevs along the course, your mini golf game, plus music, door prizes, and an after party with Arooga’s next door at Skyline Pavilion.

Register your team now »

What are you doing this weekend?

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3 Weeks Later: Free parking earns favorable reviews from HBG restaurateurs.

The heart of Harrisburg’s downtown restaurant district.

Three weeks ago, when free evening parking kicked in for downtown Harrisburg, restaurateurs weren’t sure what to expect.

Would free dinnertime parking make any difference—would it bring customers back? Or would it be a false hope, a pricey lead balloon?

The early reviews are in, and they’re encouraging.

“The two past weekends, we’ve showed strong numbers—much stronger than before,” said Nick Laus, owner of two downtown restaurants, Cork & Fork and Burger Yum.

Beautiful spring weather may have contributed to the flock of diners, Laus said, but he believes some of the credit lies with the free daily parking after 5 p.m., which began on April 2, from State Street to Chestnut Street.

“I do believe it has helped,” he said. “It’s brought people back downtown.”

Down 2nd Street, restaurateur Steve Weinstock told a similar story, reporting an increase in business for his establishments, Stock’s on 2nd and Carley’s Ristorante.

“It’s been a couple of weeks, and we’ve definitely seen an increase in happy hour and early dinner,” he said. “Customers are thrilled about it (parking).”

The issue, Weinstock said, is more complex than patrons simply not wanting to pay $2 an hour, the previous rate for street parking from 5 to 7 p.m. Some customers, especially older ones, were uncomfortable with the digital meters, he said, while others were scared off by the possibility of a $30 ticket.

“I think it’s more the issue of dealing with the machines and the aggressive ticketing,” he said.

Next door, Brian Fertenbaugh, owner of Café Fresco Center City and Level 2, agreed that the issue has been bigger than needing to pony up a few bucks to park. He believes that people found the meters to be intimidating and difficult to use compared to simply pulling into a space in a surface lot in the suburbs. The mobile app was supposed to help solve this, but it’s proven to be unreliable, he said.

“It’s just been inconvenient,” he said. “Now that it’s convenient to park on 2nd Street, I believe it’ll turn around.”

Still, it may be awhile before people permanently shake off three years of bad publicity and bad experiences, he said.

“I think it will take some time,” he said. “I feel like downtown Harrisburg will become an option again.”

Todd Vander Woude, executive director of the Harrisburg Downtown Improvement District, said he heard positive things among his members at a recent board meeting. His group led the effort to raise the $270,000 necessary to pay Park Harrisburg/SP+ for the loss of revenue during the 5 to 7 p.m. timeframe for a year, contributing $50,000 towards the effort.

“I would have to say that everything is going well,” he said. “As we get into it a little bit more, we’ll have to see what difference it makes number-wise.”

Laus and Weinstock both said that they hope the negative narrative surrounding going downtown has eased as the parking barrier has been removed.

“It really affected us for three years,” Laus said. “Now, this last couple of weeks, judging by the numbers, people are really coming back.”

 

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Habitat for Humanity nabs volunteer partnership, plans affordable housing building spree.

Habitat for Humanity volunteers raise a house frame. (Creative Commons.)

Seven days, three houses, and 160 volunteers.

That sums up an upcoming building blitz by Habitat for Humanity of Greater Harrisburg, which plans to construct new affordable housing units with a sought-after volunteer corps in June.

Habitat for Humanity has won a competitive partnership with WoodsWork, a youth-led mission group from Maryland. The faith-based group partners with one Habitat for Humanity affiliate each year to assist on a large-scale building project.

This year, they decided to send their services to Harrisburg, where 160 teen volunteers will construct three affordable housing units on Swatara Street over the course of five work days. They’ll spend two additional days exploring the city.

The trained volunteers will arrive in Harrisburg in June with their own food and medical crew in tow.

“They’re essentially like an army,” said Yinka Adesubokan, executive director of Habitat for Humanity, at tonight’s City Council legislative session.

Habitat for Humanity is partnering with Tri-County Housing Development for the June project. The three housing units will be part of HDC’s Mount Pleasant development, which comprises 10 new houses in a blighted area near Swatara and N. 16th streets.

Tri-county HDC hopes to build three more homes after the June construction, bringing the total number of affordable units in the development to 16.

In addition to construction, volunteers will also assist local neighborhood groups with beautification projects.

The WoodsWork volunteers will stay at West Shore Christian Academy in Camp Hill and travel to their construction sites each day. HDC Director Gary Lenker explained that the nonprofits had to arrange accommodations for the WoodsWork volunteers. He said that schools in Harrisburg could not meet the needs of the volunteer corps, which include sleeping space, showers and a cafeteria.

Lenker said that the free labor provided by WoodsWork would generate significant cost savings for the local nonprofits. Tri-County HDC has previously paid as much as $160,000 per unit to construct the homes in its Mount Pleasant development, which all have four bedrooms and 3.5 baths.

By reducing the amount of paid labor, Lenker estimates that construction costs will clock in at just under $100,000 per unit—much closer to the homes’ selling price.

The teen volunteers will complete most of the construction on the new homes, but local volunteers will add mechanical components and interior finishes later in the summer, Lenker said.

The nonprofit leaders touted the fact that the projects will be completed without any financial assistance from the city. But they did have some requests of council and the administration, including street closures surrounding the work sites and security fencing to protect equipment left out overnight.

“It would also be nice not to have to pay for building permits,” Lenker said.

Leaders from Habitat and HDC will meet with city hall officials tomorrow to go over some of their requests.

In its legislative session tonight, council also approved a building project by Bethesda Mission, which plans to raze and rebuild its women’s shelter on 20th Street. The project is expected to double its capacity for its recovery programs.

Council also approved a grant agreement with PennDOT that will finance $1.5 million in repairs to the city’s crumbling river walk.

Council will reconvene for a work session on May 1 at 5:30 p.m. Councilmembers will hear a presentation from the Harrisburg Police Bureau about public safety issues, including speeding vehicles and pedestrian safety. The Public Works Department will also give a presentation about proposed revisions to the city’s sanitation ordinance.

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School Board may have violated state transparency law, expert says.

The Harrisburg City School District Administration Building at 1601 State Street.

When the Harrisburg School Board recently voted to rescind a controversial decision on its superintendent, it didn’t just take residents by surprise.

It also may have violated state laws that govern public meetings, according to one attorney and public access expert.

Last week, the board voted 5-4 to rescind its March decision to open a search for a new district superintendent. The action was added to the April agenda and immediately went to vote following a motion by board director Tyrell Spradley.

The vote took place without an opportunity for public comment, which raises serious questions about the board’s compliance with the state Sunshine Act, said Melissa Melewsky, media law counsel at the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association.

Pennsylvania’s Sunshine Act governs the proceedings for public meetings of any government body. Among other requirements, it states that all public agencies must provide an opportunity for residents and taxpayers to comment on an issue before a decision takes place.

“There’s really no exception to that rule,” Melewsky said. “The public was not given the opportunity to participate in the process, and that right is guaranteed. That creates a significant Sunshine Act issue.”

The board did hold its requisite public comment sessions at the beginning and end of the meeting. But the motion to rescind was raised and passed just after the start of the meeting, before the floor opened to public comment on agenda items.

As a result, audience members did not have the chance to comment on the rescission before it went to vote.

According to Melewsky, the board should have called for public comment before taking any action on Spradley’s proposal.

“All they had to do was say, ‘Here is a proposed action, we will accept comments,’ and then proceed with the vote,” Melewsky said. “Whether they get comments or not, that opportunity for the public has to exist.”

Board Solicitor Samuel Cooper did not respond to requests for comment on this story, but board President Judd Pittman said that his colleagues moved the motion before any public comment could take place.

“Everyone was caught off guard,” Pittman said.

The board’s possible non-compliance does not invalidate its vote. But Melewsky explained that the board could uphold its obligation to the public by holding the vote again, this time after hearing comments.

Elected officials don’t typically change votes based on public comment, she said, but courts have ruled that they deserve the chance to do so.

Stuart Knade, senior director of legal services at the Pennsylvania School Boards Association, said that it’s up to board members to hold themselves accountable for Sunshine Act compliance.

PSBA offers training for new board directors that includes a two-hour orientation on legal matters, Knade said. However, he estimated that only one-third of board members across the state take advantage of them.

Knade added that solicitors can help board directors police their Sunshine compliance.

At the end of the day, though, it’s a citizen-enforced law, according to Melewsky. Any citizen attending a public meeting has the right to raise an objection at any time to a perceived Sunshine Act violation.

“There is no state agency that polices compliance,” she said. “It’s up to the public to make officials follow the rules.”

This article was edited to make clear that members of the public did not have the chance to comment on the rescission before it went to a vote.

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Burg View: Harrisburg’s School Daze

You’ll have to forgive the residents of Harrisburg for a certain case of whiplash.

On Monday night, the city school board voted 5-4 to retain the district’s long-serving superintendent, at least for another year. Minutes later, board members sat through a crushing report on the district’s dire financial condition.

In fact, the district’s finances are so bad, the board was told, that years of deficits are projected, even if the district imposes the maximum allowable annual tax hikes.

How do we make sense of this?

The short answer—it doesn’t make sense.

But the problem isn’t just financial. The poorly performing district has shown scant academic improvement since Superintendent Sybil Knight-Burney was hired in 2011. In fact, it consistently has fallen far short of academic goals imposed by the commonwealth, meaning it probably will stay in the state’s recovery program for troubled school districts past its scheduled exit in June. Nor is the appointment of a state receiver for the district out of the question.

Meanwhile, over just the past year, the district has experienced crisis after crisis, including high teacher turnover, mass student suspensions, a faculty revolt over abusive students, a supervisor who admitted stealing almost $180,000 from the district, and the bizarre, administration-led investigation—at the district’s expense—of two of its own school board members (who just happened to be vocal critics of the superintendent).

Indeed, Knight-Burney has her strong supporters, who believe the system has shown some improvement during her tenure. They often cite a district-wide curriculum management plan, restoration of full-day kindergarten and a few, rather isolated academic bright spots. So, I guess, it’s not all bad news.

But, after seven years, “not all bad news” is weak sauce for students struggling to get by, for teachers who feel besieged in their own classrooms and for city property owners who, evidently, are looking at rising tax bills as far as the eye can see.

Apparently, though, it is good enough for the five board members who voted to retain Knight-Burney, who earns $179,208 annually, for the 2018-19 school year.

We’ll have to see if any board members change their minds come July, when city residents receive their new tax bills. So far, residents have shown remarkable patience as they wait for city schools to improve, but nothing erodes good will faster than a tax shock. Will they sit idly by while being asked to pay more to support an administration that clearly is not succeeding?

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Happy Weekend!

‘Tis the season — Harrisburg Beer Week is here. Official events all start tomorrow. Please send coffee and LaCroix.

Tomorrow also is 3rd in the Burg, so if you’re not splurging on the VIP Party, get thee to Broad Street Market or any of many other fantastic events happening throughout the city.

What are you doing this weekend?

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HACC restores arts offerings in response to complaints from students.

HACC student Allanah Green works in the glassblowing studio at HACC’s Harrisburg campus. HACC administrators recently announced that they would reinstate five arts electives, including one glassblowing class, that had previously been cut from the fall course catalog. Photo by Dani Fresh, reprinted with permission. 

Following weeks of complaints from students, Harrisburg Area Community College (HACC) has decided to reinstate arts courses that had previously been cut from the fall course catalog.

HACC President John Sygielski announced in a statement this morning that five of the six classes that were cut from the department in March will return for the fall semester.

HACC announced on March 23 that it would not offer six of its art elective courses—two ceramics courses, three glassblowing courses and one introductory silkscreen printing course—in the fall semester. The announcement came three days before course registration opened.

Students immediately pushed back against the administrative decision. A petition calling for HACC to restore the courses had garnered more than 20,000 signatures by April 18. Written by a group of HACC students, the petition argues that HACC offers an affordable, high-quality arts education that’s unrivaled in the area.

Jennie Baar, dean of academic affairs at HACC, told TheBurg earlier this month that HACC administrators were holding meetings with students to discuss their concerns about the reduced course offerings. Apparently, they took those concerns to heart.

“We heard you, and we listened,” Sygielski said in his statement.

According to Baar, administrators initially cut the elective courses from the fall catalog with the intent of bringing them back in the future on a rotating schedule. They were flagged for removal after HACC switched to a new financial aid administration software, which alerted them to a number of courses that were not part of degree programs.

Under new federal financial aid guidelines, students may not pay for non-degree courses with federal aid dollars. As a result, HACC administrators decided to remove the arts electives, as well as some electives in other departments, to prevent the misapplication of financial aid.

However, Sygielski acknowledged in his statement that many students in the associates program in fine arts were willing to pay out of pocket for the classes.

These students told TheBurg that higher-level elective courses offer the opportunity to hone their skills and build portfolios for applications to four-year arts degree programs.

Today, they expressed relief at HACC’s decision to reinstate the courses.

“I’m glad we were able to work with the administration to get to a solution and bring back a majority of the art classes,” said HACC student Alexis Reisch, who wrote the petition defending the arts programming.

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