State Sale: Report released on future of Harrisburg State Hospital.

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The vast former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds should hit the market next year.

The state should move quickly to sell the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds, potentially transforming the lightly developed area into a mix of commercial and residential uses, while preserving some of its historic structures and open spaces, according to a report just sent to the General Assembly.

The 161-page report by Lancaster-based RGS Associates recommends selling the entire 295-acre property as a single package at first. If a buyer can’t be found after a 180-day bidding period, the state should consider breaking up the land into four separate, saleable parcels, the report states.

“The Department of General Services fully supports the top recommendation to sell all four parcels together in order to put forth the most appealing opportunity for potential developers and enable them to develop the property in a way that will be most beneficial to the community,” said state General Services Secretary Curt Topper.

Nearly all of the land lies in Susquehanna Township. Only five acres is in Harrisburg proper. The RGS report recommends putting the property on the market in the first quarter of 2018.

The vast property, which extends in a meandering, broken path from N. Cameron Street to I-81, is best suited for a mix of commercial and residential uses, such as houses, businesses and hotels, said the report. However, RGS recommends putting in place a restrictive covenant to preserve three of the most historic structures on the property: the dedication stone for the original 1851 main building, the 1854 Dixmont Cottage and the 1854 Dix Library.

“These buildings represent the significant movement Dorthea (sic) Dix led in establishing facilities across the state and country for the care of the mentally ill and emotionally challenged individuals,” according to the report.

The state also should place a “high priority” on protecting and preserving other Victorian-era buildings that form the Beaux Arts core of the State Hospital campus, the report states.

Moreover, Harrisburg’s five acres off of N. Cameron Street should remain undeveloped, as much of the property lies in the floodplain.

The report includes an appraisal, which gives the 132-acre parcel containing most of the State Hospital buildings a current negative value of about $8 million. The value is negative due to the high cost of asbestos abatement and demolition of existing structures. However, the value would improve to negative-$950,000 if the state made certain improvements before selling, such as utility separation and substantial asbestos abatement.

The report makes clear that the state should try to sell the four parcels together to reduce the complexity of the transaction and to mitigate the negative value of the State Hospital parcel.

The state still occupies some buildings on the grounds. However, it plans to move its remaining 800 workers to new office space before the property is put on the market.

“We look forward to working with the Pennsylvania General Assembly to get the DGS Annex off of the commonwealth’s inventory and back onto the local tax rolls where it can contribute to the economy,” Topper said. “In addition, the sale would free up the $5 million in annual carrying costs associated with the DGS Annex and allow those taxpayer dollars to be put to better use elsewhere in state government.”

To read the full report, visit https://www.dgs.pa.gov/Documents/Real%20Estate%20Forms/DGS_HarrisburgAnnex_FinalReport_02-14-2017.pdf

Click here for our prior feature story on the future of the Harrisburg State Hospital.

Author: Lawrance Binda

 

 

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Parking Tweeked: More free spaces, but changes come with a cost.

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A Park Harrisburg worker assists a customer with a meter in downtown Harrisburg.

There’s some good news for folks who need to stop downtown briefly to pick up a coffee, dry cleaning or a snack.

Park Harrisburg has announced that it will expand a program that allows 15 minutes of free parking in downtown Harrisburg.

Last year, under pressure from the city administration and business owners, Harrisburg’s parking operator agreed to permit a quarter-hour of free parking in four loading zones along busy N. 2nd Street. Starting Wednesday, that program will be expanded to 26 zones throughout the central business district.

“This solution was developed based on feedback provided by business owners in the CBD,” said Chris Sherman, an SP+ senior vice president. “The solution has been a success, making an expansion of the program the logical next step.”

Neither SP+ nor Park Harrisburg immediately stated where those zones would be, but they will be marked by signage. In addition, curbs in the zones will be painted white.

For this carrot, though, there’s also a stick.

Starting Wednesday, Park Harrisburg will stop permitting those using a credit card to buy only a half-hour of parking. Credit card users must purchase at least one full hour of parking, which costs $3 downtown and $1.50 in Midtown and south of downtown. Afterwards, they can extend their parking sessions in half-hour increments.

When using coins, motorists can continue to buy parking in smaller amounts. For a quarter, parkers get five minutes of time downtown and 10 minutes elsewhere.

For more information about Park Harrisburg’s rates, visit www.parkharrisburg.com.

Author: Lawrance Binda

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

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From a month of almost nothing to a packed weekend. Tonight, join us at the GK Visual office in Midtown for some free live, local music.

Friday will be low-key, maybe a movie, then Saturday is the usual Next Step Performance workout followed by my weekly visit to Broad Street Market (I’m excited to pick up my first CSA share from North Mountain Pastures).

After, maybe a trip to The Great American Outdoors Show.

On Sunday, I’m thinking an at-home brunch — but later, we’re doing note for Valentine’s Day.

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What are you doing this weekend?

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Up or Down? School Board to vote on new arts charter school at next meeting

The former building for Bishop McDevitt High School has sat vacant since 2012.

The former building for Bishop McDevitt High School has sat vacant since 2012.

The former home of Bishop McDevitt High School may become an arts-centered charter school, pending a vote by the Harrisburg school board.

On Feb. 21, the board is slated to decide whether to grant a charter to the newly formed Arts to the Core Charter School. The school incorporates music, dance, visual arts and theater into teaching core curriculum to kindergarten through eighth-grade students, said Richard Caplan, president of Arts to the Core.

“[The arts are] an attraction for kids going to school,” he said. “The arts cater to a lot of different learning pathways. Some kids learn better by physically doing things.”

If approved, Arts to the Core will open in September for the 2017-18 school year. More than 500 children from the Harrisburg School District have pre-enrolled. The school would accept 300 students from a lottery system to fill the first kindergarten through fourth grade classes, he said.

Students do not need to demonstrate artistic ability to attend the school.

“We essentially write off their talents if we don’t try to encourage them,” said Caplan, whose academic background is in the arts.

A Lancaster-based attorney, Caplan pursued music degrees before receiving his law degree from New York University. He said he “grew up in a family of educators” and has served for 10 years on public school boards in Lancaster County.

Caplan modeled the Arts to the Core school after the North Carolina Arts Council’s A+ charter school program. He said this approach is successful with inner-city children.

“The teachers find it much more exciting to teach because it’s more creative for them,” he said. “The parents love it because the kids want to go to school instead of being coerced to go to school.”

Jim Thompson, vice president of the school board, said he supports the Arts to the Core school and the arts-centered approach.

“I think it’s a good idea. I’ll ask them if they’ll let me come in and draw,” said Thompson, an architect. “To me, having an arts charter school as a feeder program to CASA makes a lot of sense.”

He said the community has reacted positively, most saying that it will be a good use of the iconic, 115,000-square-foot building at 2200 Market St. The building has sat vacant since 2012 and has been subject to vandalism since the private Catholic school relocated to Lower Paxton Township.

“I’m sensitive to community input,” he said, adding that he would not approve the charter just because it would put the property back into use.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse also supports the Arts to the Core school, saying that the school would encourage young families to stay in or move to Harrisburg.

“There’s probably no more important issue in terms of Harrisburg’s recovery,” Papenfuse said.

An increase in population, he said, is vital to re-energizing the city and boosting the tax base.

“We have seen growth among young professionals in various sectors,” he said. “A lot of times, young people will move to the city, enjoy city living and all that it has to offer, but, when it comes time for children to become school age, they have concerns.”

Students would attend the nonprofit school for free. The district would pick up the tab, at an estimated $1 million per 60 students. The school could apply for state and federal funds, as well. As a nonprofit, the school also could accept public donations.

Laws around charter schools restrict the school board from considering cost when voting on the proposal.

“Theoretically, [the district] should save that million dollars by not educating those children,” Caplan said.

Superintendent Dr. Sybil Knight-Burney, citing legal restrictions, declined to comment on the charter school.

Caplan brought the idea to the school board last November after a difficult search for urban school buildings in York, Lancaster and Chester counties led him to the former Bishop McDevitt building.

The building, built in 1930, needs renovations, including a new boiler, a security system and accessibility updates per the Americans with Disabilities Act, he said. This construction will take four to six months and cost more than $2 million, an expense Caplan said he will pay out of pocket.

Arts to the Core will complete the purchase of the school from the Harrisburg Catholic Diocese contingent on the charter’s approval from the school board, he said. If the board approves the charter, Caplan said he will move ahead with renovations and hiring staff. He said 12 people have expressed interest in heading the school.

For more information about the Arts to the Core Charter School, please visit the Facebook page.

Author: Danielle Roth

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Petitioning Party: Democratic candidates to hold open house

City Council members Shamaine Daniels and Wanda Williams

Center: City Council members Shamaine Daniels and Wanda Williams

For the past few months, Harrisburg’s local political scene has been almost as dormant as the barren dogwood trees that line parts of Front Street.

But, as spring approaches, the atmosphere seems to be warming up, with several fundraisers planned, including a multiple-candidate petition-signing party hosted by city Treasurer Dan Miller.

On Feb. 19, Miller will hold the party at his house, and eight Democratic candidates are expected to attend, including incumbent Council President Wanda Williams and mayoral challenger Gloria Martin-Roberts.

“This event is welcome to anyone who wants to sign petitions for Democrats who are good candidates for office,” Miller said. “You can talk to [the candidates], have some stuff to eat and drink, and discuss whatever you’d like.”

The list of participating candidates includes Martin-Roberts, who is challenging Mayor Eric Papenfuse, and council incumbents Williams, Shamaine Daniels and Ben Allatt. Council challenger Dave Madsen also is expected to attend. Four of city council’s seven seats are up for grabs.

Other expected attendees are Lori Serratelli for judge, Diane Bowman for Dauphin County prothonotary and incumbent Charlie DeBrunner for city controller. Miller himself is running for re-election as treasurer.

To run for office, completed petitions must be turned in by March 7. The primary election is May 16.

Miller said this event is not an endorsement of these candidates.

“These are people who I know who are running,” he said. “It doesn’t mean that I wouldn’t endorse these people. I’m just trying to help them out, frankly.”

Those interested in public office need 100 signatures on petitions to run. This can be a long process of going door to door to collect signatures.

“It doesn’t sound that bad, but the thing is this that they all must be Democrats, registered [to vote] and signed correctly,” he said.

Those who are not registered to vote can register at the event.

Miller will be sending out invitations to his Uptown neighbors who are registered Democrats. The event is open to anyone who is interested in supporting these candidates.

“I don’t want people to feel intimidated because maybe they don’t know me,” he said.

For more information about the open house, visit the Facebook event.

Author: Danielle Roth

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History for Sale: Harrisburg’s Zembo Shrine Put on the Market

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The stunning Zembo Shrine

One of Harrisburg’s most unique historic buildings is up for sale, as the Zembo Shriners have placed their iconic temple on the market.

A few weeks ago, the Lemoyne-based Bill Gladstone Group listed the 62,621-square-foot building for sale for $950,000.

The building, at N. 3rd and Division streets, long has been home to the Shriners, the Harrisburg affiliate of the international fraternity that follows Masonic principles. In addition to serving as meeting space for the society, the building may be best known throughout central PA for hosting the annual Zembo Shrine circus, in addition to many other large-scale events.

“It’s been a kick in the gut,” said Michael T. Govora Jr., a past potentate of the Zembo Shriners. “But we simply can’t afford to do it anymore. It’s a matter of manpower and money.”

Govora said that aging and declining membership, as well as increasing costs for such expenses as property taxes and utilities, are forcing the sale. Moreover, the Shriners want to make certain that they’re able to continue with their principal mission—raising money for 22 children’s hospitals.

“We’re looking at this as a positive,” Govora said. “We’re looking for our fraternity to be fruitful for years to come and not run out of money keeping something we can’t afford.”

The local organization currently has about 2,200 members, he said, down from about 10,000 four decades ago.

Built in 1928-29, Zembo was designed in the Moorish Revival style, with flourishes of Art Deco, by noted local architect Charles Howard Lloyd. The Shriners selected Lloyd’s design following a heated competition involving some of Harrisburg’s best-known architects, according to “Building Harrisburg,” Ken Frew’s history of the city’s architecture. Zembo cost about $1 million to build.

Both Govora and Gladstone said that it may take awhile to sell the cavernous stone-and-masonry building, given its unique design and features, which include rooms full of dazzling, imported tiles, a large auditorium, a 120-foot minaret and 300 parking spaces.

“So much history is attached to it, so many events have been held there,” Gladstone said. “To their credit, they realized that the time had come to sell.”

David Morrison, executive director of Historic Harrisburg Association, described Zembo as “the second-most iconic building in Harrisburg after the Capitol.”

“It’s played a huge role in the community,” he said. “A lot of events have taken place there over so many years–presidential candidates, important performers. So, its history is unique.”

Morrison said he expects another institutional user would be most interested in the property.

“Across the street, you have the William Penn campus,” he said. “That makes it a unique district, and the centerpiece is the Zembo center.”

As for the Shriners, Govora said that sale of the property will help them survive as a group and continue their mission. They may ask the buyer to lease back meeting space to them or they might find another, smaller location in the Harrisburg area.

“There’s no need for people to get too nervous because we’re not going anywhere as a fraternity,” he said.

To learn more about sale of the Zembo Shrine, visit https://billgladstone.com/Listings/Commercial/Sale/2801_North_Third_Street/2801_North_Third_Street.html.

Author: Lawrance Binda

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

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Okay, campers, rise and shine, and don’t forget your booties because it’s COOOLD out there!

Happy Candlesmas, or Groundhog Day! My long and everlasting love for quaint Pennsylvania charm comes honestly. I’ve probably told you this, but my college friend’s dad is the Fair Weatherman, and my senior year of college, we went to Gobbler’s Knob with him for the weekend, and I wrote about it for The Holcad, my college newspaper, which let me have a column about whatever the hell I felt like writing about.

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I’m excited to get together with some friends I haven’t spent much time with recently. I think Roots is (finally) on my agenda, but I haven’t planned beyond that (maybe some live music on Friday).

Don’t forget, Steelers Nation, #RiseUp on Sunday. Defeat Evil Belichick.

What are you doing this weekend?

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Burg Blog: Pay for Stay

Photo by Dani Fresh

Who would want to leave this beautiful city? 

How much would you pay to boot John Micek out of Harrisburg?

That’s a question that PennLive’s opinion editor himself has been asking his readers in a couple of cheeky columns over the past few days.

The offer isn’t a serious one, but seems mostly designed to have a little fun with central PA’s conservatives, who, sufficiently aroused, are dutifully driving traffic to our area’s website of record.

Micek’s facetious proposal made me wonder something. How much would readers of TheBurg pay to keep me in Harrisburg?

Don’t worry. I’m not going anywhere. TheBurg just finished up a great year, and we have some exciting plans for 2017 (return of TheBurg Podcast, anyone?). And, well, you know, I still have so many great thoughts to think about this city and its place in the universe.

But I bring up Micek’s column because, often, people ask me how they can support what we do at TheBurg. It seems they feel a little guilty that, each month, they get a high-quality magazine packed with great local journalism at absolutely no cost. Many readers have said to me, “I would pay for this!”

We actually do accept subscriptions, and some folks have taken us up on that. However, we tend not to promote it much, mostly because, to cover our expenses, it’s somewhat pricey. But, if you are interested in receiving a hard copy of TheBurg delivered right to your mailbox each month, you can do that by clicking here.

We also have a donation program, in which you can contribute anywhere from $1 on up to show that you appreciate what we do. For that, there’s a link at the bottom of our home page, or you can click here.

Lastly, you can encourage a company you work for or do business with to advertise in TheBurg or, better yet, become a Community Publisher. Major companies and organizations in central Pennsylvania have become Community Publishers because, while they wish to support us, they aren’t traditional advertisers—or they want to increase their level of commitment.

Following the recent presidential election, major newspapers, such as the New York Times and the Washington Post, reported a flood of new subscriptions, both in print and online. People, it seems, were finally realizing that real, responsible journalism costs money—a lot of money—and someone needs to pay for it.

The same holds true on the local level. Yes, our monthly magazine is free and always will be, as we feel a responsibility to make TheBurg available to everyone in the greater Harrisburg area. However, we greatly appreciate the support of the community. Perhaps that support takes the form of a gracious compliment, which I’m often lucky to receive, but maybe it’s financial support, as we always want to do more in print and on the web, and that takes resources.

So, no, I’m not going anywhere. Nor, I suppose, is Micek. But, in my case, I hope that the fact I plan to stay right here in Harrisburg, leading TheBurg team, causes you not to fume, but to smile.

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.
Photo by Dani Fresh

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“1 Billion Percent Grassroots”: Immigrants Solidarity Demonstration coming to Capitol

CapitolWebLast weekend, demonstrators gathered in airports and urban centers across the country in response to President Donald Trump’s travel ban on refugees and those from seven Muslim-majority countries.

Now, two Harrisburg-area grassroots organizers are bringing the idea to Harrisburg.

This Sunday, more than 700 people are expected to gather for a rally and march in support of immigrant rights and solidarity, according to the organizers.

“We just want we want to convey solidarity,” said co-organizer Joy Manbeck. “There are people who support immigrants, and we are not going to judge immigrants.”

Demonstrators will gather at 2 p.m. on the Capitol steps. Then speakers, including representatives of the American Civil Liberties Union and the Movement of Immigrant Leaders in Pennsylvania, will address the crowd, said the organizers. A march of about a mile will follow.

Manbeck said that she and co-organizer Katherine Lugaro have organized about seven peaceful demonstrations together in the past two years.

“We’re 1 billion percent grassroots,” she said.

Lugaro said she expects Sunday’s march to draw a “larger than normal” crowd than other demonstrations they’ve organized.

Both women said they’ve seen an increasing number of local people interested in progressive activism since the middle of last year.

For instance, more than 300 demonstrators gathered near the state Capitol the Friday after Election Day, and more than 1,000 gathered for the recent Women’s March, a progressive worldwide demonstration in response to Trump’s inauguration.

Manbeck said that, since November, at least 20 friends and acquaintances in the area have reached out asking how to get involved.

“Trump is definitely, ironically, uniting us in some ways,” she said.

Manbeck said she became an activist nearly two years ago after working for the Sen. Bernie Sanders campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Lugaro has been organizing since she was 15, she said, when she co-founded the minority student union in high school.

“We are trying to get Harrisburg activated,” Lugaro said.

To learn more about the protest and how to participate, visit their Facebook event

Author: Danielle Roth

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Response Time: Amid a polarizing political climate, a local grassroots group responds to hate and works to bridge divides.

A mother of four elementary schoolers, Amina Anjum relies on her weekly trips to Costco to buy staples for her family.

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“I mostly get milk, bread, eggs, the routine,” she told me. “Snacks for the kids.”

Typically, she shops quickly. She’s in and out in less time than her children’s hour-long enrichment classes. She slowed her pace when I tagged along on the busy Wednesday between Christmas and New Year’s Day.

We met in the parking lot. I stood, watching cars circling the lot unable to find a space, and I told her on the phone I was wearing a gray sweater and purple earrings.

“You’ll be able to tell it’s me,” she said.

Amina wears a hijab, a visible marker of her faith. I spotted her quickly as she crossed the crosswalk in my direction. The hijab, a traditional Muslim headscarf, makes her stand out, she said, sometimes leading to looks of fear, shock or even innocent curiosity. In recent months, since the presidential election, those reactions have increased, she said. Her friends have experienced hostility, too. One man asked her friend if she had a bomb (she didn’t). A few people have tried to tug the hijab from behind, a fear for Amina.

For the past several months, a local grassroots coalition, Community Responders Network (CRN), has been busy responding to what it sees as a growing number of incidents that threaten or intimidate others. Samia Malik, CRN co-chair, said that those who spread hate have “become emboldened,” no longer as hesitant as they once were.   

During the campaign, now-President Donald Trump spoke out against many individuals and groups, mocking a disabled reporter, generally calling Mexican immigrants criminals and flirting with the idea of a Muslim registry.

“His political rhetoric was scary,” Malik said. “But was it only the political rhetoric? Was it always there, and there were covers pulled over it, and as soon as the politicians started to say this, then the covers came off?”

Locally, hateful events flanked election night. A neo-Nazi group rallied on the state Capitol steps the Saturday before the election. The day after the election, a few students at York County School of Technology celebrated by shouting “white power” and carrying Trump signs. The York Daily Record reported that some students left early because they felt unsafe.

The York Tech story reached national attention, with CBS, CNN and other outlets picking it up. Since the election, the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights advocacy nonprofit, tracked a spike in hate- or bias-related incidents. In the month after the election, between Nov. 9 and Dec. 12, SPLC counted 1,094 incidents, 51 of which reportedly happened in Pennsylvania.

“In so many of the bias incidents that we know of in Pennsylvania and across the country, the actor has referred to Trump,” said Ann Van Dyke, the chair of CRN’s Rapid Response committee.

In late November, Steelton’s Islamic Society of Greater Harrisburg received a letter from “Americans for a Better Way.” The author wrote, “There’s a new sheriff in town—President Donald Trump,” and that Trump will do “what Hitler did to the Jews.”

This letter wasn’t unique. Mosques in five states received this same letter. On top of that, about 37 percent of all incidents directly referenced Trump, his campaign slogans or his sexual assault comments, per the SPLC’s report.

This is the type of incident that CRN, under the umbrella of the YWCA Greater Harrisburg, responds to and tries to prevent through education since its founding in 2008.

Malik, the organization’s co-chair, first heard about the letter when she had a house full of guests celebrating Thanksgiving. She alerted Gov. Tom Wolf’s office, state Rep. Patty Kim and the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission, which investigates hate crimes.

Later that week, city and state officials held a press conference. “They gave us so much support,” Malik said. “They said this will not be tolerated here.”

But come time for Sunday school, some families did not feel safe going to their place of worship. Normally, about 100 children attend. Some parents teach. Some stay to chit-chat. Others drop off the young ones and pick them up in the early afternoon.

Ann Van Dyke. Photo by Dani Fresh.

Ann Van Dyke. Photo by Dani Fresh.

CRN helped gather about 50 people from the interfaith community to stand around the building while families entered the mosque. Supporters carried signs that said things such as, “You belong. Be strong. Be blessed.”

“We are like a clearinghouse. We go ‘foo’ and get it out,” said Van Dyke, while making a ‘woosh’ motion with her hands.

She said that her group often acts as a catalyst to get the message into the public realm. “It’s not like CRN wants the credit for anything,” she said.

We Need You

I drove around the bends of a long driveway to arrive at YWCA’s hilltop location. Cars occupied every space. I parked on a side street in the Allison Hill neighborhood and followed a few others looking for CRN’s “Call to Action” event.

As I entered the building, a cheery greeter welcomed me. Upstairs, I entered a packed house. I took a seat at one of the 12 circular tables. At the 6 p.m. start time, more than 100 people filled the room. A dozen stragglers pulled up chairs. Some stood around the edges of the meeting space.

I chatted with the man sitting next to me, a Philly native turned Harrisburg transplant. He said he came out to the event because the election rhetoric shocked him. He wanted to do something locally about it.

Many in the crowd seemed to feel the same way.

After the Nov. 8 election, at least six people reached out to CRN to join its 20 active members, said co-chair Margee Kooistra. Now, the new faces flipped through CRN fliers, including a membership form.

“We are here tonight because each of us is concerned about the rise of hate, bias, and that has increased across our nation in our many, many communities over the past two-plus months,” emcee Shaashawn Dial-Snowden said to the crowd.

Most people stayed for the entirety of the two-hour event. Potential new members mulled over how they saw themselves in the organization—helping with education, response or in an ad hoc committee created to handle the election backlash.

Listening to each presenter, I gathered that CRN could use as much help as it could get.

Van Dyke put it this way: “We need you.” Then she paused. “We really need you.”

During the second half of the meeting, our tables turned into a facilitated discussion about local instances of bias and intolerance. My table consisted of a father and daughter, two friends, two women who came alone and a CRN volunteer.

The volunteer passed out six colors of sticky notes. She instructed us to write down what we or CRN could do to create a more loving community. We had six semi-academic categories to brainstorm for: crisis responding, safety planning, reporting, mobilizing allies, safe spaces and healing.

Around 8 p.m., we put our sticky notes on the six sheets of paper at the front of the room. I read a few as attendees mingled after the meeting. A handful of people filled out membership paperwork.

Themes of communication and education echoed in the rainbow of sticky notes behind the podium.

A pink note in capitalized letters read, “COMMUNICATION IS KEY.” Another read, “Reach out to neighbors in the community. Get to know the unknown.” 

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Not Alone

“This is exclusive to Costco members and only found in the Costco store,” said an employee positioned behind a white booth. She offered passing customers small plastic containers of tuna quinoa salad.

Amina and I took the samples and continued walking passed the stacks of canned tuna.

“The finest albacore,” the employee called out.

Amina pushed the cart down the frozen food aisle. We passed a woman shaking her head, as if wrestling with a difficult thought. She looked in Amina’s direction, locked eyes with me, then looked at Amina again, still shaking her head. Amina gave her a smile.

After the woman passed us, I ask Amina about her.

“I don’t think she did that at me,” she said.

“I wasn’t sure,” I said.

Most of the discomfort Amina feels when she’s out stems from the “look,” a mix of fear and shock that strikes people’s faces when they initially see her.

This doesn’t always happen. But, when it does, she tries to be positive.

“If I’m giving them a smile, I get a smile back,” she said.

Much like Amina smiling at a frowning shopper, CRN tries to turn hate incidents into a way to bridge divides.

For example, CRN helped organize a “unity rally” to divert attention from the neo-Nazi group rallying in Harrisburg the weekend before the election. The Unity Rally, a day of celebrating diversity, brought about 400 attendees into Harrisburg High School’s auditorium, twice as many as at the hate rally, Van Dyke said.

“I walked in and went, ‘Woah.’ Because you can feel good will,” she said. “When people applauded, it was like you were being hugged.”

Van Dyke spent 33 years with the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission. She followed hate groups across the state, organizing communities against the groups as she went town to town.

In her retirement, she took the helm on CRN’s rapid response team. “Which is rarely rapid. I always say that,” she said.

We chatted over omelets and coffee at one of her favorite diners. Her words took on an energetic, quick tempo.

When CRN members hear of a hate incident, they alert the rapid response team. The team works with individuals targeted by the incident, “Simply to say ‘You are not alone,’” Van Dyke said. Then the team takes the proper steps to report and try to correct the incident.

Recently, a West Shore business owner put an Islamophobic sign in his window, which offended, saddened and outraged Muslim clientele shopping at neighboring stores.

Van Dyke contacted the business owner and the landlord, who took down the sign. The state’s civil rights law, The PA Human Relations Act, says that businesses are legally obligated to take reasonable measures to create an unbiased environment for the public.

Van Dyke received four emails from strangers in the Muslim community thanking her. Someone even sent her a bouquet of roses.

“I was honored, humbled and saddened,” she said.

The business owner was furious that he could not hang the sign. His outrage did not stop two women in the Muslim community from bringing him cookies and peace-making conversation.

“Maybe in a month or so, we will go to say, ‘Hello, how are you doing? We meant no harm,’” Malik said.

Walking with You 

We stood in the snack aisle. Amina flipped over a tin of chocolate cookies.

“Thirteen grams? That’s a lot,” she said to herself as she put the product back on the shelf.

“Chocolate is my weakness,” she admitted.

We have nearly looped back to the cash registers. Nearing the end of our shopping trip, Amina’s cart was full of staples like bread and bananas. A sampling booth convinced her to buy some salsa. She picked up a “Harry Potter” boxed set for her 10-year-old daughter who loves to read.

I asked her about the looks she received today.

An older man’s eyes curiously followed her as she walked. In the checkout line, a woman’s face turned hostile when Amina turned around. I noticed that a few employees offering samples directed their pitches toward me, though Amina showed interest in purchasing the items.

As a white woman, I’m not 100-percent versed in the language of microaggressions, small, daily incidents of bias, sometimes unconsciously performed. But I thought the shopping trip was pleasant, and Amina, charming and friendly.

“Another thing that makes them feel comfortable is, I guess, because I’m walking with you,” she said.

“I guess that makes people feel good, that two people can be friends,” she added. “It doesn’t have to be two women with hijabs. It can be an American and myself.”

For more information on the Community Responders Network, including how to become a member, visit the YWCA Greater Harrisburg’s website: www.ywcahbg.org.

Author: Danielle Roth

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