Old to New: Harristown to demo, develop in downtown Harrisburg.

A new office building is expected to rise following demolition of the dilapidated former Coronet restaurant building.

Downtown Harrisburg may soon get its first new office building in many years, as Harristown plans to clear and develop a narrow space off of Market Square.

Asbestos remediation work will begin this week on 21 S. 2nd Street, a small, three-story, dilapidated brick building that once housed the Coronet restaurant on the ground floor, said Brad Jones, president and CEO of Harristown Enterprises. Demolition will follow, he said.

“This building was beyond repair,” Jones said. “Rehabilitation is always our preference when working on an old building, but unfortunately this former restaurant had severe water damage and asbestos and couldn’t be saved.”

Harristown hopes to construct a new, six-story office building next year, with retail or restaurant space on the first floor, once demolition is completed in February 2018. It expects to combine the space with a renovation of the historic SkarlotosZonarich building next door.

 Above: Artist’s rendering of a new office building planned by Harristown.

“If combined with a renovation of the adjacent law firm building, there is great potential to create a wonderful, new, mixed-use office complex with a blend of new construction and renovations,” Jones said.

A.P. Williams, based in Susquehanna Township, will conduct the remediation and demolition.

Harristown purchased the building last month for $150,000 from real estate investor Dusan Bratic, who had owned it about nine years, during which it mostly sat empty.

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Decision Made: Madsen named new Harrisburg councilman.

Dave Madsen (center) chats with fellow council hopeful Brian Ostella at last week’s Harrisburg council meeting.

Dave Madsen is Harrisburg’s newest council member, as City Council today appointed the Midtown resident to a four-month term.

Madsen takes the seat vacated by former Councilman Jeffrey Baltimore, who resigned last month.

Six city residents applied for the position, and City Council named four finalists: Madsen, Brian Ostella, Jennie Jenkins and Joshua Burkholder. In the end, Madsen, Ostella and Jenkins received nominations from council, which selected Madsen, a technician with the state Department of Revenue, by a 4-2 vote.

Council members Wanda Williams, Ben Allatt, Shamaine Daniels and Destini Hodges supported Madsen. Councilman Cornelius Johnson voted for Ostella, and Councilman Westburn Majors voted for Jenkins.

Madsen remained for the lengthy work session that followed his appointment. He is expected to be sworn in before council’s legislative session next week.

This was the second time that council attempted to fill the seat. Last week, council met in a special session to name a new member to the seven-person body. However, because Hodges was absent, no nominee could garner the four votes necessary for the seat.

Madsen will only serve four months. In the November general election, voters will decide who will serve out the remaining two years of Baltimore’s term. Both the Dauphin County Democratic and Republican committees are eligible to nominate one candidate to appear on the November ballot for the seat.

Tomorrow night, the Democratic committee will meet to decide who will be its nominee. Madsen said he also has applied for that nomination.

Author: Lawrance Binda

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Arbour Named New Executive Director of LGBT Center of Central PA

Amanda Arbour

Amanda Arbour has been named the new executive director of the LGBT Center of Central PA, the center announced this morning.

Arbour replaces Louie Marven, who left after a five-year tenure to take a position with the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.

Most recently, Arbour served as the racial justice program coordinator at the YWCA Greater Harrisburg. She earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology and politics from Messiah College and is pursuing a master’s degree of education in training and development from Penn State Harrisburg.

With this appointment, Arbour becomes the Harrisburg-based center’s third executive director.

“I’m proud to be part of this diverse, vibrant and resilient community,” Arbour said in a statement. “I look forward to working with the board of directors, staff, partners, donors and community members to continue providing the safe spaces, supportive services and educational programs that the LGBT Center has become known for.”

Arbour’s past work includes service as the legislative liaison for the Pennsylvania Department of Aging and interim coordinator of local community service for the Agape Center for Service and Learning at Messiah College.

“I am appreciative of Amanda’s evolving understanding and continuous display of ally-accomplice-ship to communities of color, people with disabilities, immigrants, trans-specific issues and more,” said Shaashawn Dial-Snowden, board president, in a statement. “Amanda is a bold, consistent voice in our movement and I look forward to working with her.”

Arbour begins in her new role on Sept. 11. To welcome her, an open house will be held at the LGBT Center, located at 1306 N. 3rd St. in Harrisburg, from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., Friday, Sept. 22.

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Donation drive accepting women’s hygiene items for Harvey victims

Mother’s Subs on 2nd and Maclay streets will host the NOW donation drive until Wednesday.

A local women’s organization is collecting pads, tampons, and adult diapers to send to the Houston, TX area, which was devastated by Hurricane Harvey earlier this week.

The Harrisburg chapter of NOW (National Organization for Women) will run a feminine hygiene drive from August 31 – Sept. 6 at Mother’s Subs at 2101 N. 2nd Street. Community members can donate boxes of pads, tampons, or adult diapers in a drop box inside the restaurant.

“Access to menstrual hygiene products is simultaneously essential to women’s health and an unmet need among the most vulnerable women in our society,” said Tara Shakespeare, treasurer of Harrisburg NOW. “During times of crisis this problem is exacerbated and we are thankful to those who help us meet some of that need.”

When the collection drive ends next Wednesday, the goods will be transported to Bailey Coach Company in York. Bailey Coach has coordinated other relief efforts locally, and next week will deliver clothing, food, and other emergency supplies to a staging area in San Antonio, TX.

Donations can be delivered to Mother’s Subs during their normal business hours: 11 a.m. – 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

Donors closer to York can also bring items directly to the Bailey Coach office, 55 S. Fayette Street, from 7 a.m. – 2 p.m. Tuesday – Thrusday next week.

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Your guide to Kipona 2017

A scene from the Native American pow-wow at Kipona 2014.

Kipona, Harrisburg’s annual Labor Day festival, will bring food, music and high-adrenaline stunts to the city from Saturday through Monday. This year’s event will be held in Riverfront Park from Market Street to Forster Street, with additional attractions on City Island and on State Street near the Capitol.

The city published a full festival guide here with detailed schedules and a city map. We compiled some essential details, including event highlights and parking info, below:

Map of Kipona events (click to enlarge)

EVENT HIGHLIGHTS
Fireworks from City Island will start at 8:15 p.m. on Sunday.

Tight rope walkers will make walks over the Susquehanna throughout the weekend. On Saturday at 2 p.m., wire-walker Alice Herrick will attempt to break the Guinness World Record for the longest wire walk in high heels.

A 28-foot high, 200-foot long zipline will be open on State Street starting at 10 a.m. on Sunday. It’s open to the public for free, but only for one day.

Sample food and watch performances at the Taste of India festival, taking place all day Saturday on City Island.

Making Strides Against Breast Cancer will host a rubber duck race at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Sponsor a duck for $5, or dedicate a pink survivor duck for $8.

The Dick Reese Canoe Race will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Monday.

Throughout the weekend:
More than 45 food vendors will set up shop near State Street and on Kunkel Street Stage (between Market and Walnut streets.) Ice cream tacos, Auntie Ann’s pretzels, crab cakes and more are on the menu.
Witness indigenous cultural demonstrations at the Native American Pow-Wow on City Island.
Enjoy live music at the Market Street Stage, Kunkel Street Stage, and acoustic music tent starting at 11 a.m. each day.
Browse crafts at the Artist Market on Walnut Street
Enjoy face painting, bouncy houses, and entertainment at the Children’s Festival on Pine and South streets.
Enjoy a drink at the Millworks/Zeroday biergarten, adjacent to the Midtown Cinema screening tent in Riverfront Park.
Give your dogs a break at the Doggie Rest Stop near South Street.

ROAD CLOSURES
Front Street between Market and Forster streets, and State Street from 3rd to Front streets, will be closed from Friday evening until Tuesday morning.

PARKING
Parking is free on Sunday and Monday. Regular rates apply for Sept. 2, but use the code LUVHBG in the city meters for four hours of free parking. Alternatively, a full day of parking on City Island will cost $4.

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Come Back Next Week: Battle still on for empty City Council seat.

Brian Ostella (left) and Dave Madsen (center) emerged as the final two nominees for an open Harrisburg City Council seat.

Harrisburg City Council nominated two candidates on Thursday night to fill a vacant short-term seat, but ultimately failed to summon a majority to make a final appointment.

Brian Ostella, a longtime member of the city’s audit committee, and Dave Madsen, a technician with the state Department of Revenue, each garnered a nomination from council members at the end of a special session this evening. But since Councilwoman Destini Hodges was absent, the remaining five members split the ballot 3-2 in favor of Madsen – one vote short of the four-member majority it needed to appoint him.

Council recessed and will attempt another round of voting at 5:15 p.m. on Tuesday with all four finalists back in contention: Ostella, Madsen, former mayoral candidate Jennie Jenkins and former congressional candidate Joshua Burkholder. Council members can nominate any of the four for the seat.

The purpose of Thursday’s meeting was to hear from six residents hoping to replace Jeff Baltimore, a councilman who resigned on Aug. 11, two years into his four-year term. Following procedure set by the city charter, the special session consisted of three rounds to select a replacement: introductions, interviews and nominations.

Each of the six candidates who applied for the position — Burkholder, Jenkins, Madsen, Ostella, Christopher Conroy and Patricia Stringer — was permitted two minutes to address council about their experience and qualifications. Burkholder, Madsen, Ostella and Jenkins were all invited to appear for interviews, but, in the end, only Madsen and Ostella received nominations from council members.

Council President Wanda Williams said that the council tried to reach Hodges by phone for voting, but lost their connection before the nominating round. Hodges wasn’t present because of previously planned trip.

The candidate that council selects on Tuesday will serve through January.

Separately, the Democratic and Republican county committees are allowed to nominate one candidate each to appear on the general election ballot in November for the seat. The winner will take office in January and serve the remaining two years of Baltimore’s council term.

This story was updated to clarify that all four finalists will be back in contention on Tuesday when City Council reconvenes.

Author: Lizzy Hardison

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Red Light, Green Light: City gets approval for Forster St. project, eyes funds for Chestnut St. improvements

2nd and Chestnut streets will receive pedestrian-friendly improvements.

Two busy thoroughfares in downtown Harrisburg could soon become more accessible to pedestrians, thanks to grant applications coming out of city hall.

The city has obtained PennDOT grant money to update crosswalk signals at eight intersections on Forster Street and is also seeking funds to implement cosmetic and practical fixes on Chestnut Street.

Both projects are part of an ongoing push from the city to improve traffic flow and pedestrian access in the busiest parts of downtown.

“Our biggest concern is community accommodations,” Wayne Martin, city engineer, said during a City Council meeting on Tuesday.

Council voted that night to accept $357,150 from PennDOT to replace the traffic signal controls and video vehicle detection technology on Forster Street.

The city will contribute $138,005 from its general fund to construction, bringing the total cost of the project to $461,005.

According to Martin, eight intersections on Forster Street have been linked by the same coordination plan since the 1950s. However, industry standards for pedestrian behavior have changed since then. Today’s standards expect pedestrians to walk 3.5 feet per second, compared with 4 feet per second in the 1950s.

“This will probably better the traffic flow because people won’t be racing from signal to signal,” Martin explained.

The money will also pay for 12-inch pedestrian signal screens to replace the current 8-inch screens.

Council on Tuesday also approved an additional grant application to the PA Department of Community & Economic Development. That grant requests funding for the $1.5 million Chestnut Street Revitalization project, which will repair rough roads, add bike lanes and update ramps and sidewalks on that street.

Chestnut Street connects the city to the 20-mile Capital Area Greenbelt trail and is a hub for train and bus patrons at the Harrisburg Transportation Center. It also includes properties for students, low-income residents, senior citizens and professionals. Martin hopes that the project will make the street more beautiful and environmentally friendly, as well as more accessible to the diverse pedestrians who use it.

In addition to repairing streets and roads, the project aims to add street lamps, trees and ADA-complaint wheelchair ramps.

Author: Lizzy Hardison

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

FREE Party in the Streets tonight!

JOIN us on S. Third St. (Market to Chestnut will be closed) for the SoMa Night Light Pop-Up Party! Bricco, El Sol, Fresa Bistro all feature specials, ZerØday and Boneshire Brew Works will be selling pints, Urban Churn and Popped Culture will have their treats. PLUS, we have live music from Little Brother Band, live artists, magicians and circus performers! A can’t-miss!

Oh hey, it’s Labor Day weekend, which in Harrisburg always equals Kipona. (Psst – the Biergarten is BACK and bigger than before!)

I have one more Fantasy Football draft to go — Have you joined our FREE pick’em league?

What are you doing this weekend?

(more…)

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Untruth and Consequences: The news may be fake, but the costs are real.

Illustration by Rich Hauck

In the city, life is complicated.

Events happen, and, often, their interpretation has more to do with rumor, preconceived notions and faulty facts than with verifiable truths. And media, distant and distracted, often don’t do their job of helping people tie together the strands.

A perfect example occurred this past April 21.

On that day, a shooting occurred in Midtown Harrisburg, near a food truck festival that was part of the city’s monthly “3rd in the Burg” arts and culture event. That much we know for sure.

The emerging narrative went something like this:

  • The shooting was the result of the usual urban criminal activity around some downscale rowhouses on N. 3rd
  • The shooting led to such a drop in business for the food trucks that, three months later, they decamped for the safer suburbs.
  • The shooting and the loss of the food trucks mean that 3rd in the Burg is unsafe or in jeopardy or both.

But what if none of this is true? What if these commonly held beliefs are wrong?

Let’s start with the shooting itself.

At 5:11 p.m., two shots rang out on the 1600-block of N. 3rd Street. As reported by most media, the shooting was down the street from 3rd in the Burg’s food truck festival, which was setting up (it hadn’t actually begun).

At the time, information was sketchy. TV news reporters rushed in, using the food festival as a camera backdrop, as a prop, implying peril. Similarly, a print reporter repeatedly commingled the shooting and the festival. Later pictures showed a young black man, identified as 22-year-old Saivon Waller, sitting on the stoop of the house where the shooting occurred, behind yellow caution tape, being questioned, then arrested, by police.

The public takeaway: another shooting, another crime, a dangerous city. Three days later, Harrisburg police released their official version, unraveling the first string in that narrative. A young woman, they said, was shot in the leg because, as she rushed into Waller’s apartment quickly and unexpectedly, Waller, an Army reservist, said he thought she was an intruder. Waller’s defense claims it was a terrible accident—he and the woman knew each other well, but he did not immediately recognize her as she barged in. For its part, the prosecution does not buy the “all-an-accident” defense, contending that Waller, even if he didn’t mean to shoot this specific person, still intentionally aimed and shot the gun.

Regardless, there was no broader community concern: no drugs, no thugs and certainly no bullets flying around willy-nilly at the food truck fest. But who cared about the real story at that point? The initial, breathless reporting and stand-ups in front of food trucks already had a terrible impact, had been imprinted on people’s brains. From then on, they were likely only to retain the false memory that there was a shooting at 3rd in The Burg.

And, indeed, in July, the food truck festival announced that it was pulling out of 3rd in the Burg, blaming falling business on the April shooting.  So, they were taking their chicken sandwiches and beef burritos across the river, to the relative safety of a church parking lot in the suburbs, setting up a competing event outside Mechanicsburg.

But there was problem with that “news,” too. Back in 2013, when the food trucks first arrived, the lines were so long that it once took me an hour to get a taco. By last summer, long before the shooting, the lines were gone, and I could stroll right up to a truck to order. What had happened? It’s simple really. A few blocks south, the Broad Street Market had begun to open for 3rd in the Burg, and that’s where all the hungry people went.

The market had many advantages over food trucks huddled together in an out-of-the-way parking lot. In the warm weather, it offered music, pop-up vendors, outdoor seating and even free beer and spirits samples. In the cold weather, it had shelter and heat. It was also centrally located, a natural gathering spot with dozens of amazing food options.

But what was bad for the food truck festival was fantastic for 3rd in the Burg. The market’s participation gave the arts event something it had lacked—a central meeting point, a strong core, a heart, if you will. As a result, 3rd in the Burg became more popular (and more fun) than ever.

But, unless you were on the ground in Harrisburg, you didn’t know that. You missed this story and all its complexities. Instead, you probably followed the much simpler, yet untrue, story line: a young thug, a public danger, the loss of a beloved food festival.

Misperception, incomplete reporting, a failure to tie together the many strings of a story.

In the city, life is complicated.

Editor’s Note: In May, Saivon Waller had his bail reduced from $500,000 to $100,000. He was released on bond, and his next court appearance is scheduled for Oct. 5. 

Lawrance Binda is editor in chief of TheBurg.

Illustration by Rich Hauck.

 

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Medical Journey: As he retires, Dr. Domingo Alvear reflects on a long career in Harrisburg, around the world.


People often talk about “finding their calling in life.”

Dr. Domingo Alvear’s began in his native Philippines, inspired by a country-doctor uncle who let his nephew tag along as he made house calls in a bouncing Jeep. Six decades later, Alvear is retiring after both a long career as a pediatric surgeon in Harrisburg and as a founder of the nonprofit World Surgical Foundation (WSF).

“Two things have guided me,” Alvear said. “One is vision and one is legacy. Most doctors—most people actually—have blinders like horses. They don’t want to see what’s on the side. They just want to see what’s in front of them.”

But, Alvear said, there’s a whole world around them that doctors should expose themselves to.

“My advice is to become part of the community,” he said. “Get involved and see where you can contribute.”

 

His Vision
Alvear began his career in medical school in the Philippines, guided by a professor who noticed he had “surgical potential.” A later internship at Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines proved invaluable. It was 1964, and the Vietnam War was escalating. He served an extra year, performing about 3,000 operations on both soldiers and civilians.

Next, he arrived stateside for a residency at Presbyterian Hospital in Philadelphia, where a chance encounter with an infant patient opened his eyes to pediatric surgery. He shadowed the baby’s case and was transferred to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia under pioneering pediatric surgeon C. Everett Koop, who later would become U.S. surgeon general. Rather than returning to the Philippines, where a revolution was underway, he travelled to Harrisburg to set up his practice.

“My mentor from Clark AFB, Dr. Lewis Patterson, was here in Harrisburg,” he said. “He asked me to come, and, well, I stayed.”

In 1973, when Alvear established his private surgical practice serving Polyclinic and Harrisburg Hospitals—now PinnacleHealth—there wasn’t one neonatologist in the Harrisburg region. Today, he’s retiring as PinnacleHealth’s chief of pediatric surgery.

“Dr. Alvear is a pioneer in pediatrics for our community,” says Phil Guarneschelli, president and CEO of PinnacleHealth. “Because of his willingness to come to Harrisburg and grow his career in pediatric surgery, we’ve been the beneficiaries of his vision for better health for children locally and throughout the world. With his leadership, the first neonatal intensive care units in Harrisburg were opened, and thousands of children experienced healing at his hands.”

 

So Many More
Alvear, a longtime Silver Spring Township resident, said he enjoyed volunteering throughout the Harrisburg region, but hoped for even greater impact.

“Service is good, but it doesn’t do anything long term,” he said. “This is why you have to develop relationships and programs to improve care—that’s legacy.”

In 1997, he founded the World Surgical Foundation, which averages three medical mission trips annually to underserved corners of the world. That’s more than 60 trips to at least seven countries, including Alvear’s homeland of the Philippines. He has performed surgeries to correct malformations, cleft palates, abdominal and intestinal issues and more, donating his time and talents to each case.

About 20 volunteers join Alvear on each WSF mission—medical professionals across all specialties. Local (foreign) doctors also often receive training and equipment.\

“Dr. Alvear is a phenomenal surgeon—he does intricate pediatric surgery,” said Dr. Chinh Pham, a general surgeon at Geisinger Holy Spirit. “But he is also very compassionate, organizational and hard-working.”

Pham, a WSF board member, has joined Alvear on two trips, with a third planned this month.

“It’s a huge undertaking to go on these mission trips, with all the logistics,” said Pham. “Travel and airfare, supplies, equipment, paperwork—so many things are involved in surgeries. All things we take for granted when we operate in the U.S., we bring to remote locations.”

Although Alvear is retiring from PinnacleHealth, he may never truly retire from WSF. The organization is sending mission teams to Honduras in September and to Nigeria for the first time in November. Alvear is accompanying both.

“I just had this conversation with my wife,” said Alvear. “She said, ‘Why can’t you stay home?’ And I said, ‘We’ll be home, wherever we are [in the world].’”

A young Honduran girl, Kylin Velez, may be the most memorable of all the WSF patients Alvear has served. Her esophagus was shattered when she was shot in the chest as an innocent bystander to a drug bust.

“I saw her in a clinic in Honduras, and she was skin and bones,” Alvear said. “They wanted me to replace her esophagus, but she wouldn’t have made it.”

Alvear arranged for her to be brought to central PA, where she gained 60 pounds in three months on a nutrient-rich diet at York Hospital.

“Pinnacle allowed me to do a free operation for the first time, to give her a new esophagus,” he said. “She went home after six months. I saw her [back in Honduras] last time, and I hardly recognized her—she’s a beautiful young lady now.”

Then he paused, tears in his eyes.

“There are so many more,” he said. “So many more who need help.” 

The World Surgical Foundation will hold its 20th anniversary gala tribute and fundraiser, “We Are All One People: How the Power of One Can Change the Lives of Many,” on Sept. 17, at Whitaker Center, Harrisburg. The event also will recognize Dr. Alvear’s retirement. For tickets, visit www.whitakercenter.org. For more information on WSF, visit www.worldsurgicalfoundation.org.

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