An Easier Cross: Harrisburg takes steps to make 2nd and Chestnut pedestrian friendly

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

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

A busy intersection in downtown Harrisburg will receive a pedestrian-friendly facelift in the coming year, a project designed to ease the flow of traffic and improve safety.

Last night, Harrisburg City Council unanimously approved a resolution to use a Pennsylvania Department of Transportation grant to fund updates to 2nd and Chestnut streets. Construction will start this summer, said City Engineer Wayne Martin.

“This intersection has a lot of incoming traffic on 2nd Street which continues onto Chestnut Street to go garages, and a lot of pedestrian traffic walking from garages to places of employment,” Martin said.

Curb extensions called bump outs will give pedestrians a shorter distance to cross the street. A narrower road causes drivers to slow down, Martin said.

These drawings prepared by Wallace Montgomery show the initial plan for 2nd and Chestnut streets.

These drawings prepared by Wallace Montgomery show the initial plan for 2nd and Chestnut streets.

“Bump outs are a common method for calming traffic,” he said. “It should have that same effect of calming traffic that just got off the highway.”

Councilman Cornelius Johnson said updating this intersection near PinnacleHealth and the Crowne Plaza will play a crucial role in slowing traffic in all of downtown.

“This intersection has always been a constant issue for pedestrians with the influx of traffic coming from the interstates,” he said.

Under the plan, stoplights will be timed so that pedestrians will have a five-second head start to cross the street, which will make them more obvious to motorists.

The new ramps will be accessible to individuals with disabilities per the Americans with Disabilities Act.

“It may not be pedestrian overpasses, but it’s a start,” Councilman Westburn Majors said at last night’s council meeting.

The originally proposed plans included a protected bike lane connecting Riverfront Park’s Capital Area Greenbelt with the Harrisburg Transportation Center at 4th and Chestnut streets. The project’s funder, PennDOT, citing parking requirements, did not approve the bike lane, which took inspiration from lanes in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, Martin said.

The updates to this intersection echo the pedestrian-friendly updates coming to 3rd Street in April. A portion of 3rd Street will be repaved for the first time in 20 years thanks to a different PennDOT grant.

Capital Region Water may use the 2nd and Chestnut project as an opportunity to implement a portion of its Community Greening Plan, a citywide beautification project that manages storm water, Martin said.

“A drainage analysis is being done to see if there is an opportunity to provide for community greening,” he said.

Author: Danielle Roth

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Burg Blog: Strong Message

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Steve Reed talks to the press after yesterday’s plea deal was announced.

“This sends a strong message about public corruption.”

So said Rebecca Franz, the deputy attorney general who led the state’s case against former Harrisburg Mayor Steve “Careless Packer” Reed.

And I immediately thought, ah yes, the old “message” word, the last refuge of a prosecutor trying to blow sunshine up a failed case—and save face for her office.

Yesterday, Reed, claiming he accidentally took home about $18,000 worth of historic documents while packing up his office years ago, agreed to a plea deal. Come Friday, he’ll likely be sentenced to probation, which led me to wonder what Franz meant by, “This sends a strong message about public corruption.”

What’s that strong message exactly? To do it?

Engage in a multi-decade abuse of power? Treat the people’s money as your own? Carry out crazy financial schemes? Mobilize a government to satisfy your bizarre fixations? Drive a city into a fiscal abyss? Get caught red-handed with your purloined old-timey treasures?

Do it—you’ll get off lighter than your average shoplifter.

However, afterwards, I actually discovered a silver lining to this profound lack of justice. Talking and texting with city residents, I found some outrage out there—and rightly so. But, for the most part, people seemed to greet the news with a collective, bemused shrug.

How is this good news?

The people of Harrisburg have moved on. Time doesn’t stand still and, while, for some, Reed’s 28-year reign may seem like yesterday, it’s practically ancient history to many others. Since Reed’s 2009 primary loss, Harrisburg has changed so much that it’s no longer his city, and we’re all the better for having been freed from his obsessive control and smug paternalism.

Now, we endured quite the ordeal to get here. When a dictator falls, power lies in the streets, as the saying goes. And, while Reed’s successor, Linda Thompson, couldn’t do much with it, she knew enough to step aside and let the professionals handle the catastrophe. Their solution was hardly perfect, but it was OK enough to help stabilize the city, which allowed the far more competent Papenfuse administration to carry on with reconstructing the municipal body.

But, really, Harrisburg never stood still. As the public sector imploded, the private sector stepped up, even during the city’s darkest days. So, Harrisburg today hardly resembles the top-down Reed era of grand, destructive projects and tacky tourist attractions. It’s being rebuilt from the bottom up, preserving what remains of its historic character, by developers and businesspeople looking primarily to repopulate the city and grow the market.

Since Reed left office, Harrisburg has become more youthful, vibrant, welcoming and diverse. Businesses have moved in, the economy is deeper, and the recovery is more sustainable. We can go forward with bettering our lives without needing to bow low to a city hall strongman and under the constant threat of bone-crushing debt. Yes, there’s always something to argue about around here—it’s hardly nirvana. But the trend is positive, and it seems maintainable.

On Friday, Franz may well repeat her vacuous statement about “sending a message.” She might even add what I half-expected to hear yesterday—that tired old cliché that, “It’s now time to move on.” However, she needn’t say that. In Harrisburg, we already have.

Author: Lawrance Binda

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Reed Guilty: Longtime Mayor Pleads to 20 Theft-related Counts

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Former Mayor Stephen Reed gives his statement with his lawyer, Henry E. Hockeimer.

Former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed today pleaded guilty to 20 counts of receiving stolen property, ending a decades-long saga that began with one man’s ambitious vision for a series of museums throughout the city.

To a surprised courtroom, Reed’s lawyers announced that he had accepted a plea bargain with the state that dropped most of 112 criminal counts in exchange for pleading guilty to two felony and 18 misdemeanor counts. The proceedings lasted less than an hour.

“He’s charged with misappropriating public tax dollars and using them for his own personal gain,” said Deputy Attorney General Rebecca Franz, the lead prosecutor. “This sends a strong message about public corruption.”

This story began back in the 1990s, when Reed and several associates began buying and shipping back to Harrisburg thousands of artifacts for a series of museums he wanted to build in the city. After Reed left office, the city auctioned off most of the items. However, in June 2015, state investigators found some of the artifacts in Reed’s Cumberland Street home and in a nearby storage facility.

A month later, the state charged the seven-term mayor with almost 500 criminal counts, including charges of theft, bribery and evidence tampering. However, the court threw out most of those, determining they violated the statute of limitations because they had occurred too long ago.

Reed called the proceedings “gut wrenchingly humiliating.” He stuck to a script with defense lawyer Henry E. Hockeimer of Philadelphia-based Ballard Spahr by his side. Reed said he personally purchased similar items when the city purchased artifacts. These items got mixed up while moving out of the mayor’s office, he said.

“How they got into some box when moving out seven years ago? I still do not know,” he said. “My guess is that they were thrown in with a bunch of similar things in the haste of getting everything packed.”

He said he takes responsibility for these 20 counts.

The artifacts, valued at more than $18,000 total, included documents, letters and other Wild West relics connected to Native American groups and famous figures such as Buffalo Bill.

A $3,500-value brochure about Geronimo, a late-1880s Apache leader, landed Reed one of two felony counts. A $2,500-value letter from a Missouri convict earned him another felony.

Items worthy of misdemeanors included a check that Oklahoma outlaw AJ Jennings signed and a photograph of an infantry group from Montana. None of the 20 items appear to originate from Pennsylvania.

Reed’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for Friday afternoon. He could face up to 101 years in prison per standard issuing. However, his actual sentence will range from probation to nine months in a county jail, Franz said. Reed, 67, has stage 4 cancer, but appeared healthy at the trial.

City Solicitor Neil Grover said Harrisburg will submit a formal written statement to the prosecution outlining their request for the sentencing length.

“The city is a victim of the crime,” he said.

Reed’s attorney said they still seek the return of the artifacts that Reed did not plead to. Franz said the Office of Attorney General will not return the artifacts.

Franz said the plea deal came together over the last couple of days.

“The fact that the defendant came into court today and entered a plea of guilty achieves justice,” Franz said.

Author: Danielle Roth

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Sister March: March, rally in support of women’s rights slated for Saturday in downtown Harrisburg.

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Marchers will take a route that will take them by the state Capitol.

From time to time, national issues play out on the streets of the Pennsylvania state capital in the form of protests, rallies and speeches.

Saturday will be one of those days, as the Women’s March, Harrisburg, will offer support and show solidarity with marchers in more than 600 cities around the world, including the Women’s March on Washington, which inspired the local events.

“My co-organizer and I couldn’t make it to the Washington, D.C., rally, and we looked online to see if there was one in Harrisburg and there wasn’t,” said Elizabeth DeKok of Harrisburg.

So, two days ago, DeKok and her friend, Emily Hibshman, registered the Harrisburg event, the 12th affiliated march just in the commonwealth.

Marchers will assemble at 10 a.m. at Kunkel Plaza at State and Front streets for a rally. They’ll then walk a route that includes Front Street, Market Street, N. 3rd Street and back down State Street to the plaza. DeKok said she expects several hundred people to march based on RSVPs on the main march website and responses from the Facebook event.

DeKok said that she felt the need to participate based upon what she sees as misogynistic statements by President-elect Donald Trump, who will be inaugurated tomorrow.

“When you have a man say horrible, degrading things and then become president, it unleashes the inner rage in you,” she said.

Harrisburg resident Anne Chappelka said that she and her husband, Roger, will be among the marchers on Saturday. She said that they felt compelled to march because the future seems so uncertain and “frightening.”

“I’m distressed at Washington right now,” said Chappelka, 83. “I’m worried about healthcare and social security. It’s everything.”

In Pennsylvania, marches are slated for a dozen cities, including, in central Pennsylvania, Lancaster, Selinsgrove and Lewisburg, in addition to Harrisburg. As of this afternoon, organizers say that more than 1.3 million people have registered to participate in “sister marches” worldwide outside the main event in Washington, D.C.

According to the main website, the marches were established in direct response to the divisive presidential campaign and are intended to “send a bold message to our new government on their first day in office, and to the world that women’s rights are human rights. We stand together, recognizing that defending the most marginalized among us is defending all of us.”

“Marching for civil rights took a long time, but it worked,” said Chappelka. “I think we have to do that again now.”

For more information about the Women’s March, Harrisburg, visit the Facebook page: Women’s March on Washington-HBG Sister March (https://www.facebook.com/events/674557009371234/), www.womensmarch.com or email [email protected].

This story has been updated to include a change of meeting place and route.

Author: Lawrance Binda

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

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We’re continuing a low key January, and I don’t have much for plans but there are some things on my to-do list.

I’d really like to get out to see Gamut Theatre’s Choose Your Own Adventure The Play: Space Vampire at some point (performances Friday through Sunday).

Friday, of course, is 3rd in the Burg, and we’re double-dating to Alvaro’s for a low-key evening of great Italian food (BYOB of course). Saturday is the highly anticipated Lyrical Gangster release at Zeroday, so I’ll need to stop there for sure.

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And Sunday is reserved for Steelers football, of course. This week’s menu will feature South Philly Hoagies because I am tired of cooking!

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Schools Update: Educators share successes, concerns with Harrisburg School Board.

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A surprise awaited students at Scott Elementary School when they returned from winter break. Their science laboratory, which they use for STEM lessons, received a fresh coat of paint and decorations, thanks the brothers of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity.

This “great gift” excited the students and teachers, said Eugene Spells, Scott Elementary School principal in a presentation to the Harrisburg School District Board meeting Tuesday night.

Harrisburg Education Association President Jody Barksdale also spoke to the board, following up HEA’s concerns regarding support for students and teachers.

“Students ask me, ‘When are we going back to the science lab?,’” said Spells.

The laboratory will be dedicated next month to African American biologist Ernest Everett Just in recognition of his groundbreaking research and humble beginnings, Spells said.

The fraternity brothers, who attended the meeting, mentor about 40 boys in kindergarten through fourth grade twice a month.

“Having men come in and work with young boys is important. So many of the teachers and mentors they already have are women,” Superintendent Dr. Sybil Knight-Burney said.

Last week, the kids and mentors spoke about dreams. Soon, the kids will learn how to tie ties, Spells said.

During the public comment section, Barksdale asked the board to raise hands to indicate if they read the more than 100 letters she delivered to them in December. Students and teachers wrote these letters to show board members what daily problems they face.

Board President Danielle Robinson said she “read each and every one” last month. Tonight, about half of the board members raised their hands.

Robinson told Barksdale the board is putting together a plan together, which they will work on during an executive session meeting next week.

Barksdale said a response from the school board has taken longer than expected.

“It’s good to know things are progressing,” she said.

The academic achievement expectations created by the state-imposed Recovery Plan are unrealistic, she said.

“We are trying to give real-life examples of why it’s difficult to achieve those expectations,” she said.

The Recovery Plan outlines goals and initiatives for all aspects of the district, including finances, workplace development and education.

The education goals show large gaps to fill. For example, the graduation rate should reach within two percentage points of the state’s average, 84 percent, according to the 2016 version of the plan. For this school year, the district is required to have a graduation rate of 74 percent, when 52 percent of students graduated in the 2014-2015 school year.

Chief Recovery Officer Dr. Audrey Utley said the district has completed about 60 percent of the Recovery Plan’s initiatives. Next month the CRO will complete a semi-annual report that will outline the remaining initiatives to attain in the recovery process.

Author: Danielle Roth

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Another Go: Harrisburg City Council member Ben Allatt announces bid for re-election

 

Ben Allatt sworn into his first City Council term in 2014.

Ben Allatt was sworn into his first City Council term in 2014.

City Council member Ben Allatt announced his bid for a second term today via a Facebook Live video in front of the Broad Street Market, pledging to work to continue Harrisburg’s financial recovery.

“I’m proud of the record I have in working for more financial accountability, increased communication among our leaders, and also government transparency,” he said. “These are themes I want to build on going forward.”

A Democrat, Allatt won his first four-year term on council in 2013 and currently chairs council’s Budget and Finance Committee. He said in a press release that he has immersed himself in “understanding the intricacies” of the state-mandated financial recovery plan, the Act 47 process, municipal finance and the state laws pertaining to local government.

Speaking on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, he cited the civil rights leader’s legacy of equality and service as something he doesn’t “take lightly.”

“I think the lesson for all of us is to figure out how we can work together to serve our community,” he said.

City Councilman Jeff Baltimore will serve as his campaign chair. Caleb Wright, Sawyer Neale and Julian Salinas also are serving on his campaign team.

Allatt works as the associate vice president of human resources at Harrisburg University of Science and Technology. He graduated from Messiah College and has lived in Harrisburg since 2001, according to his website.

Four, four-year council seats are at stake for the May 16 primary. Allatt is the first council incumbent to announce for re-election. Incumbent Destini Hodges will not run again in order to pursue a magisterial district justice seat.

Author: Danielle Roth

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

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We’re kicking off the weekend tonight with a belated holiday gift exchange (and pizza and memes, of course).

I’d love to catch some local theatre this weekend, so I’ll be looking to do that one evening this weekend. Otherwise, I’ll be hitting up the HACCbrew release at Zeroday on Saturday.

Sunday, of course, is playoff football ahead of the Zeroday v. Ever Grain Battle of the Brewers at Grain + Verse!

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Mayor Eric Papenfuse Announces for Re-election, Defends Record

Mayor Eric Papenfuse announced his bid for re-election today.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse announced his bid for re-election today.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse announced his bid for re-election today, listing his accomplishments and vowing to heal rocky relationships with everyone from PennLive reporters to the National Civil War Museum board.

Standing in his Midtown campaign headquarters before a giant sign reading “Together We Can,” Papenfuse stated that he is proud of the city’s improvements under his tenure, citing achievements in economic development, public safety, fiscal responsibility and civic engagement. He said that he’s running for re-election to continue to make progress in these four areas.

“I can say for certain that Harrisburg is on the right track, and I believe the majority of residents feel that way as well,” he said.

So far, Papenfuse faces two declared opponent for the Democratic nomination, former City Council President Gloria Martin-Roberts and previous mayoral candidate, Lewis Butts. PennLive has reported that Johnny Baer, a Dauphin County prosecutor, might be interested in running on the Republican side.

During the half-hour announcement and press conference, Papenfuse defended his record as mayor, including the sometimes pitched battles he’s waged with City Council, the National Civil War Museum and PennLive coverage.

“On any point, you can bring up where there’s been a controversy, I think it’s always been fought with the interest of Harrisburg taxpayers in mind, and I think we are in a position to move toward a good solution,” he said.

Papenfuse said that he said does not regret the battles, which he stated are based on principle and the interest of taxpayers.

“Politics is a contact sport,” he said. “That’s what had to be done. But in the end, you need solutions. So, judge me in the end if I get a good solution.”

He dropped one such political battle today, ceasing his self-imposed ban on speaking directly to PennLive reporters.

He said he believed that had made his point about PennLive’s anonymous commenters and what he calls negative stories. As an olive branch, he selected PennLive reporter Christine Vendel to ask the first question during the press conference portion.

Much of the announcement, however, was to tout his record on fiscal and economic issues.

He said he ran for election in 2013 to help Harrisburg get out of Act 47, a state program to help financially distressed municipalities. Though the city is not out of Act 47, Harrisburg is on much stronger financial footing, he said.

Harrisburg’s balanced budgets and a 2017 budget investing in capital improvements are “no mean feat,” he said.

“Some of this seems mundane, but the city is just returning to normalcy,” he said. “We don’t want to go backwards to dysfunction, to cronyism, to outright corruption, which is what defined Harrisburg not too long ago.”

He cited a $3 million grant to revitalize Allison Hill’s MulDer Square and federal funding for South Allison Hill residents affected by sinkholes as two examples of the millions of state and federal funding he has secured. And, today, he announced a $1 million grant to repave Harrisburg’s decrepit river walk.

Papenfuse also touted his record on crime, saying that major crimes had decreased during his term. But he added that the city has ongoing challenges recruiting and retaining officers. Currently, there are 19 open positions in the Bureau of Police.

“[This is the time to] put our stamp of Chief Thomas Carter’s leadership on new training and engagement with public,” he said.

Papenfuse said the problems facing the police department – recruitment and community tensions – are national issues. With Act 47 constraints still in place, the city cannot do more financially to support the police department, he said.

A new group of officers soon would be coming in and learning community-policing strategies, which would help build positive relationships with residents, he said, adding that he was proud that Harrisburg remained calm last year following a police-involved killing.

Another achievement, he said, was working to lower street parking rates 5 to 7 p.m. weekdays and providing four free hours of parking Saturdays with the Pango app. 

“These things wouldn’t have happened unless you were fighting and pushing against a system which is basically controlled by business interests,” he said.

Internally, Papenfuse said his campaign already has raised about $40,000. Many people have contributed to his campaign, he said, including members of Harrisburg Capital City PAC, the same political action committee that helped fund his first mayoral election.

He also re-hired Andrea Krizner as campaign manager. Harrisburg-based MFStrategies and the national firm, The Strategy Group, also support his campaign.

Disclosure: Alex Hartzler, a founder of Harrisburg Capital City PAC, is publisher of TheBurg.

Author: Danielle Roth

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Smooth Ride: Harrisburg’s Historic River Walk Set for Repaving

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Harrisburg’s crumbling river walk soon will be repaired.

Broken pavement, holes, dirt and weeds—a jog along Harrisburg’s historic river walk can be an exercise in trying not to trip and fall down.

That, however, will soon change, as the city learned today that it will receive a $1 million federal grant to repave the entire walk–11,000 linear feet–from Shipoke to Maclay Street.

Last year, the city applied for the Transportation Alternative Program (TAP) grant, designed to assist and promote non-motorized transportation. Today, PennDOT, which administers the U.S. Department of Transportation grant, announced $33 million in awards to fund 51 sidewalk, trail and other projects throughout the state, including the two-mile Harrisburg project, the only one funded in Dauphin County.

“This is a terrific means to encourage biking and walking,” said Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “Right now, the walk is uneven and a hazard.”

Papenfuse said he expected work to take place during the course of the year, starting once the weather warms up. The project will be limited to the walk and the top step, he said.

Papenfuse said he hoped to identify additional funding for the remaining steps that lead down to the river, but that work is not part of this project.

The century-old river walk has been damaged repeatedly by floods and also has been a victim of neglect, with much of the original concrete patched haphazardly over many decades. Two years ago, the city used some of the federal money it received following the severe 2011 flood from Tropical Storm Lee to repair a section of the walk in Shipoke, which was the most severely deteriorated.

Papenfuse made the announcement following tonight’s brief City Council meeting. During that meeting, council unanimously approved a new, two-year contract with Local 521 of the American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, which represents about 300 non-uniformed city workers. That contract provides for a 1 percent raise and a $1,000 bonus for all workers in both 2017 and 2018.

“We’re happy to be in a position to be able to offer these bonuses, which hasn’t been done in a long time,” said Papenfuse. “The bonus concept is good because it rewards our workers without a long-term pay obligation.”

 Author: Lawrance Binda

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