Gearing Up: Mayor announces new boulevards at Bike Share launch

Mayor Eric Papenfuse announces the establishment of two bike boulevards during the Bike Share launch on Thursday.

Community members joined city officials this morning for the official launch of the Harrisburg Bike Share, where the mayor also announced a new initiative to encourage motorists to share the road with cyclists.

Speaking from the atrium at Strawberry Square, Mayor Eric Papenfuse said that the city will establish its two bike boulevards in the spring on low-speed, low-traffic streets. A boulevard on Aberdeen Street will connect the Capitol complex and the Harrisburg Transportation Center, and another on North Street will extend from the Capitol to Riverfront Park.

The city will paint both roads with “sharrows,” road signs indicating a shared lane for cyclists and motorists. The signals do not designate the roads as bike-only lanes.

Other than the road signals, the bike boulevards will not receive additional traffic control mechanisms or construction.

Though they may be a small step, the boulevards are part growing bike infrastructure in Harrisburg, Papenfuse said.

“Soon, we will have an interlocking system of bike lanes and bike boulevards in the city,” he said.

He added that the city hopes to create bike lanes on 2nd street when it is repaved and painted for two-way traffic, a project still a few years away.

Harrisburg’s Bike Share has been in operation since last Friday. The program comprises 55 communal bicycles docked at 11 stations throughout the city’s Midtown, Uptown and downtown neighborhoods.

Ryan Riley, president of Communities in Schools Pennsylvania, the organization spearheading the program, said 145 new members have collectively taken 205 trips with the Bike Share since last Friday.

Riley also reported that two docking stations are forthcoming at the Harrisburg Transportation Center. All nine others are already installed and operable.

The Bike Share is sponsored by the Dauphin County Commissioners, Strawberry Square and Highmark. All technical support and bike maintenance is managed by Zagster, a startup that operates more than 100 bike shares across the country.

Riders must pay to use the bikes, which they can unlock through the Zagster phone app. A $25 annual membership gives riders free access to bikes for periods shorter than two hours and then charges $2 for each hour after that. “Pay as You Go” members will be charged $2 for each hour they use a bike.

Users who register in October can get a $10 discount on annual memberships by entering the promo code “rideharrisburg” in the Zagster App.

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“Light at the End of the Tunnel:” city to buy first sinkhole homes next week

Homes on South 14th street have been uninhabitable since a sinkhole erupted in March 2014.


It’s been years coming, but homeowners along a sinkhole-ravaged street in south Harrisburg are about to be relieved of their damaged and destroyed properties.

The city is preparing to purchase 52 homes on the 1400 block of S. 14th Street that were rendered uninhabitable when a sinkhole erupted there in 2014. The first closings are tentatively scheduled for next week, according to Jackie Parker, director of Community and Economic Development, and the city hopes to conclude all the sales by the end of the year.

Parker said that the homes are being appraised at their “pre-event” value, meaning the appraisers will not take the sinkhole into consideration. Certified appraisers hired by the city have assessed home values ranging from $32,000 to $59,000 since they began appraisals 18 months ago, she said.

According to Parker, homeowners have the right to bring in a certified appraiser to challenge the value suggested by the city; to her knowledge, however, no homeowner has done so.

The city has obtained $4.7 million in funding from a variety of sources, including FEMA (though the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency), HUD’s Department of Community and Economic Development, and state Community Development Block Grant funding. Dauphin County contributed an additional $1 million.

All of the money that the city has obtained so far will cover acquisitions and relocations for tenants. Though the city is required to provide benefits to those tenants under state rental law, Parker said that it cannot reimburse homeowners for costs they incurred for emergency or short-term housing. Twenty-six of the properties slated for purchase are rentals.

A small amount of funding will be used to help with demolition. The city plans to turn the area into a green space, but still must secure funding for debris removal and landscaping.

The sinkhole on 14th street ravaged road pavement, sidewalks and lawns when it opened in March 2014, likely due to heavy rains during Hurricane Lee.

Ten homes were condemned, forcing residents to relocate immediately, and other residents moved out gradually as they secured temporary housing.

The city, county and school board have waived property taxes for all of the lots going back to 2014. Since the parcels are virtually worthless, selling to the city is the only path of recourse for most owners. But Parker said that participating in the program is strictly voluntary.

“Right up until the closing, the homeowner can say they do not want to participate,” Parker said. “They do not have to sell.”

The city had to negotiate individual deals with every property owner, and Parker said that each one is accompanied by a lengthy paper trail.
The city must abide by federal guidelines for buying damaged property, conduct title searches for each lot, and take into consideration any problems with deeds, mortgages or outstanding liens.

Parker said that city officials and homeowners alike are happy to see the long process nearing its end.

“Residents have been very patient and great to work with,” Parker said. “Hopefully they see light at the end of the tunnel.”

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

The Weekend is Here!

And what lovely weather we have.

I have zero plans this weekend. Andy’s going out of town for work/hunting, and I threatened to have a banger at our house. These days, that means eating popcorn with the dog while watching garbage television (I like Better Things and The Good Place for home alone watching).

On your list: Oktoberfests galore (I cannot wait to participate next year), National Apple Harvest Festival (bring me some donuts), Harvest Hopfest AT Tröegs??!!

What are you doing this weekend?

(more…)

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Council, police bureau discuss next steps for community task force

Harrisburg City Hall

The creation of a community policing task force took center stage during last night’s City Council work session, as council members weighed several matters facing the city’s Police Bureau.

The task force resolution was submitted as a condition of the $65,000 allocation that council made to the bureau last month, which the department will use to update its stock of protective, or riot, gear. The proposal calls for the creation of an eight-member task force to address community policing initiatives, police training and the creation of a civilian review board.

Council members on Tuesday discussed the specific charges of the task force and a timeline for its work. They also agreed to add another civilian member, bringing the total number of task force members to nine.

Council and Mayor Eric Papenfuse also debated the process for nominating civilian members to serve on the task force, but that process remained unclear by the end of the meeting.

Councilman Cornelius Johnson, chair of the public safety committee, will revise the resolution and submit it to council for a vote on Oct. 24, he said.

Members of the bureau appeared at the meeting to talk about community policing initiatives and challenges currently facing the force. According to Chief Thomas Carter, the department is operating with a high vacancy rate, the result of officers being recruited by other forces.

“A lot of agencies come to Harrisburg and snatch up our guys,” Carter said. “As quickly as we hire officers, other agencies take them from us, and these guys leave for other places.”

Compounding the staffing shortage, crime witnesses are often reluctant to come forward with information, Carter said. As an example, he pointed to the recent shooting on 2nd Street, where a man was shot in the middle of a large crowd.

“People saw the shooting, they witnessed it, but nobody will talk to us,” Carter said. “Even the victims say they didn’t see anything. They won’t say anything.”

Carter also said that the Harrisburg force responds to a high volume of 9-1-1 calls, especially proportionate to its manpower. Since officers are typically running from one call to the next with little time to spare, Carter said, opportunities to go on foot patrol or attend community events are sparse.

Carter and Capt. Deric Moody both said that the bureau needs to work on its relationship with the community. They hope to start that process with a Citizens Police Academy, which will welcome its inaugural class in January. The class of 15 to 20 citizens will meet once a week for 12 weeks to learn about different aspects of policing.

The bureau is also working to launch a Cadet Program to recruit young adults interested in criminal justice careers. Cadets who pass a police physical and medical exam will be given internship-level positions with the bureau and receive HACC tuition credits.

The program will start next summer when funds from the federal Community Development Block Grant become available, Carter said.

More than 15 members of the public turned out for the work session, but only a handful endured the three hours of discussion that preceded the public comment period.

One resident who remained identified himself as a member of the This Stops Today activist group and urged council to abandon the task force and host town hall meetings instead.

“The task force seems like bureaucracy,” he said. “I would skip this and just hear directly from the community.”

Council will reconvene on Tuesday, Oct. 10, for its next legislative session.

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Water Work: CRW starts main replacement project.

Capital Region Water announced today that it has kicked off a $830,000 water main improvement project.

The project will install 2,915 feet of 6-inch diameter water main to improve water quality, service reliability and flow for fire protection in Harrisburg, Penbrook and Susquehanna Township, according to CRW.

Potential impacts of this construction include street closures, parking restrictions, construction noise, temporary water service interruption and temporary roadway patching, CRW said. Project locations are:

  • Swatara Street between 21st Street and 22nd Street, Harrisburg
  • Hoffer Lane between 28th Street and Market Street, Penbrook
  • Hoffer Street between 28th Street and Market Street, Penbrook
  • Motter Street between Hoffer Street and Boas Street, Penbrook
  • Shell Street between Schoolhouse Lane and Rustic Drive, Susquehanna Township
  • Locust Alley between Cloverfield Road and N. 39th Street, Susquehanna Township
  • Rauch Street between Sterling Alley and Plainview Street, Susquehanna Township

Construction already has began at the first location at Hoffer Street between Market and 28th Street, said Andrew Bliss, CRW community outreach manager. He said all pipes will be installed by year-end, with final street restoration in the spring.

Construction hours will be Monday to Friday, 7 a,m, to 5 p.m. This project will not require access to customers’ homes, and additional details will be provided to properties adjacent to the project locations in advance through door-to-door outreach, said CRW.

“This project is just one example of Capital Region Water’s proactive efforts to provide the highest quality water and reliable service while operating our system efficiently,” said CRW board Chairman Marc Kurowski. “We appreciate our customers’ patience while these improvements are made.”

Customers with questions can contact CRW by phone at 888-510-0606 or by email at [email protected].

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Help Wanted: Residents invited to give input on Amazon proposal

Harrisburg and surrounding counties will try to convince Amazon.com to locate its new headquarters on the grounds of the former State Hospital.

Do you have an opinion on Harrisburg’s plan to bid for the Amazon HQ2 project?

If so, county officials and business leaders want to hear it.

The Harrisburg Regional Chamber & CREDC and the Dauphin County Redevelopment Authority are accepting ideas and suggestions from the community as they prepare a proposal for Amazon.com. The online retail company announced last month that it would accept public bids for its second corporate headquarters, which would bring more than 50,000 jobs to a metropolitan area in North America.

Community members can send their input by email to [email protected]. The proposal team asks that all senders sign their messages and include contact information beyond an email address.

Harrisburg officials confirmed last week that are working with Dauphin, York, Lancaster, Cumberland and Lebanon counties to submit a joint, regional bid for the project. The application will pitch the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds off of Cameron Street as the future site of the Amazon campus.

South-central Pennsylvania is already home to a number of Amazon warehouses and distribution centers. The HQ2 project, however, would bring a corporate office similar to the 8.1-million-square-foot headquarters Amazon maintains in Seattle. Amazon says it will invest $5 billion in construction on the new headquarters and claims that the project will lead to tens of billions of dollars of investments in the surrounding community.

“This type of project is a game changer for any region with huge employment opportunities for executives, managers, software engineers, attorneys, accountants and technical/administrative jobs,” said a statement by the Harrisburg Regional Chamber and CREDC, which will lead the application effort.

Applications for the HQ2 project are due to Amazon by Thursday, Oct. 19.

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Golden Night: Spellbound audience crowds in for Salman Rushdie.

People wait in a long line outside of Midtown Scholar Bookstore on Friday to see Salman Rushdie. Photo: Rick Ketner.

“It feels as if we are living in a moment that is stranger than fiction,” said Salman Rushdie, during his Friday night reading at Midtown Scholar Bookstore.

Spending the evening in the presence of such a renowned author was, indeed, surreal.

“An Evening with Salman Rushdie” was part of the Harrisburg bookstore’s author series, in which notable authors, armed with their recent releases, talk about their work, give a reading, and then answer questions from the audience.

Rushdie awed the packed audience with his talk of “The Golden House” and a reading of its first chapter.

“The Golden House” shares the story of the Golden family: Nero and his three sons, as they attempt to escape from their past and start a new life in New York City. Departing from his usual genre, fantasy, Rushdie’s latest novel is a “realist social panorama” that takes place during the Obama administration.

Drawing inspiration from Dickens, Rushdie reveals a tragic comedy of a family of “larger-than-life characters deeply rooted in the real world” through the eyes of a narrator, Rene, a young filmmaker who is obsessed with the Goldens.

Rushdie didn’t think that the novel would have so many parallels to our time and acknowledged that it’s dangerous writing up against the present moment.

“If you don’t get it right…the book becomes worthless,” he said.

However, Rushdie masters this danger, which gives added suspense to the only novel he’s written that “you could call a mystery.”

After the reading, and before sticking around to personalize copies of “The Golden House” and his other novels, Rushdie answered some questions from the audience. Among them: How does he keep up writing?

He answered that there was nothing else he could do. “Writing is hard,” he acknowledged, but “the challenge of it is what makes it so rewarding.”

“Perfection is a fantasy,” he said. “You try as best you can.”

Even though perfection may be a fantasy, I think that fans who attended the sold-out event would agree that “An Evening with Salman Rushdie” at Midtown Scholar came pretty close.

Click here to read more about Rushdie and his work and here for more author events at Midtown Scholar Bookstore.

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Another Vacancy: Hodges resigns from Harrisburg City Council.

Councilwoman Destini Hodges, far right, today announced her resignation.

Destini Hodges has announced her resignation from Harrisburg City Council, the city said late today.

Hodges is giving up her City Council seat to take a job in Louisville, Ky., according to a statement from city spokeswoman Joyce Davis. The resignation will take effect on Friday.

“Councilwoman Hodges said she regretted leaving her position so suddenly, but she has been offered a great professional opportunity through her church,” Davis stated.

Hodges’ resignation marks the second council vacancy in as many months. In August, Councilman Jeffrey Baltimore resigned, and council since selected Midtown resident Dave Madsen to fill that seat until the end of the year.

Hodges, chair of the council’s Parks, Recreation and Enrichment Committee, has served for almost two years. In 2015, she won a two-year seat, but then chose not to run for re-election this year. She also has served on the Harrisburg school board.

Davis said that council has not yet decided how to proceed. Under the Third Class City Code, council has 30 days from the effective day of resignation to make a decision on a replacement. Hodges’ term expires at the end of the year, when she was going to leave the seven-member body.

“We are very excited for Ms. Hodges as she embarks on a new and exciting career path,” said Council President Wanda Williams. “She brought a lot of positive energy to City Council, and we wish her nothing but the best.  Destini is young, ambitious and will be an asset to any team she joins.”

Author: Lawrance Binda

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In With the New: City hires business administrator

Harrisburg mayor Eric Papenfuse and business administrator Marc Woolley appeared in the mayor’s briefing room on Monday.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse announced on Monday that Harrisburg has hired a new business administrator, concluding a two-year search to fill the grant-funded position.

Marc Woolley, an attorney who has worked as general counsel at the Hershey Trust and the Pennsylvania Housing Authority, began his first day of work with the administration this morning. He will direct the city’s Department of Administration and help the mayor manage the city’s budget and finances.

One of Woolley’s major responsibilities will be helping the city determine its next steps in the Act 47 process, a state program for financially distressed municipalities. His $115,000 salary is funded for three years by an Act 47 grant from the state.

Papenfuse said on Monday that he had been performing most of the duties of business administrator to date. He hopes that filling the position will allow him to focus more on strategic planning and community outreach.

Woolley joins city hall just in time to for budget negotiations, which will ramp up in November. Speaking from the mayor’s briefing room on Monday, Wooley said that he’ll spend the intervening weeks acclimating himself to his new role and getting to know the city’s current budget and financial recovery plan.

Papenfuse praised Woolley’s “reforming spirit” and broad experience in public and private administration.

“Marc Woolley brings significant experience in public housing, compliance and financial management that will be a real plus for our city and its residents,” said Papenfuse. “He is enthusiastic about bringing his considerable intellect and talents to help us continue to move our city into a more prosperous future.”

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Waiting Game: Contributions withheld from nonprofits, schools in state budget impasse

The Pennsylvania state budget impasse is preventing millions of dollars in corporate contributions from getting to nonprofit groups and schools.

Kathy Anderson-Martin wants the state to pass a budget.

Since the summer, Anderson-Martin, director of philanthropy at the Salvation Army of Harrisburg, has watched weeks turn into months as the state legislature delays approving a budget for the 2017-18 fiscal year, which officially began on July 1.

Lawmakers have already adopted a spending plan but can’t agree on a revenue package. Until they reach consensus, millions of dollars in tax-deductible corporate donations are on hold, too.

That’s because the budget impasse has stalled approvals for the Education Improvement Tax Credit program, which qualifies businesses for tax credits if they donate to scholarship organizations, educational improvement organizations or pre-K scholarship funds.

Local schools and nonprofits, including the Salvation Army, say that the delayed approvals have paralyzed their planning for future programs and scholarships.

“We can’t receive almost $200,000 in gifts because that program is on hold,” said Anderson-Martin.

According to Anderson-Martin, the Salvation Army of Harrisburg uses EITC dollars to fund its summer youth enrichment program. Last year, the program served 400 children, 130 of whom were in their care all day, every day, for nine weeks while their parents worked, she said.

David Smith, communications director at the state Department of Community and Economic Development, said that the EITC allocations will be approved as part of the state’s final budget agreement.

If partisan gridlock delays that agreement any longer, Anderson-Martin says the Salvation Army might have to scale down its summer plans.

“We can’t wait until January to decide what we’re going to do in June,” she said. “We have to start planning how many kids we’ll serve this summer, and, if that money isn’t there, we have to serve fewer children.”

EITC dollars also fund scholarships to private and religious schools across the commonwealth. The Joshua Group, a nonprofit in Allison Hill, relies on EITC funding to provide low-income Harrisburg students with scholarships to local private schools.

Joshua Group director Kirk Hallett criticized lawmakers for using the EITC program as a “political toy,” and said that the delay could limit Joshua Group’s ability to serve more students.

“The immediate impact is fear,” Hallett said. “This is very frustrating to us, that all this politics ends up affecting our kids.”

Mary Anne Bedhar, principal at Bishop McDevitt High School in Harrisburg, said that “everything is on hold” in the school’s scholarship office until the EITC funds are approved.

If the budget impasse continues through the end of the calendar year, it’s possible that businesses will withdraw their applications for tax credits, thereby reducing the total amount of EITC distributions. Bedhar and Hallett said that’s what happened in 2015, the last time the state endured a long-term budget impasse.

Bedhar reported that Bishop McDevitt lost $200,000 in donations that year, the result of fewer businesses applying for tax credits. She said that the school hasn’t fully recovered from the loss.

The Joshua Group lost about $100,000 in scholarships as a result of the 2015 budget impasse, according to Hallett. He and his staff were able to maintain their operations by approaching private donors, but they weren’t able to take on any new students during that period, he said.

Smith said that businesses withdraw EITC applications every year and declined to draw a connection between application withdrawals and the last budget impasse.

Even so, the program has been perennially popular among businesses. Smith said that the DCED expects to maximize the program allocation this year, just as it did last year when the program budget was $125 million.

The EITC program was signed into law in 2001 by former Gov. Tom Ridge. Companies can apply to give a maximum of $750,000 to an eligible educational organization and receive a tax credit equaling 75 percent of their contribution or 90 percent if they pledge contributions for two years.

Democrats and Republicans have supported expansions to EITC since its inception, according to reporting from PennLive. This May, the House voted 166-26 to pass a $100-million-dollar expansion to the EITC program and a similar program called the Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit.

Critics of EITC say that it promotes school choice, and fear it could lay the groundwork for a school voucher program by directing more students out of public schools.

Hallett, however, doesn’t see the scholarships funded by EITC dollars as a public-versus-private school matter. His organization views education as an anti-poverty program, and he says that jeopardizing its funding will only harm vulnerable students.

“The bottom line is it affected the poor once again,” Hallett said, referring to loss of EITC funding in 2015. “This is me talking on Allison Hill, but, sometimes, I just don’t know what the guys on Capitol Hill don’t get.”

State lawmakers will return to Harrisburg today for a week of negotiations and closed door meetings, according to the AP.

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