Student Scribes: “What I Learned from Studying the Capital Region Ex-Offenders Coalition”

Growing up in Harrisburg, I dreamt about going to college in Hawaii, sitting on the beach studying.

I was sure that’s what I wanted to do. Instead, I got accepted at Penn State Harrisburg and pursued a computer science major for a few years. This semester, I took a course outside my major. Called “The Sociology of Deviance,” it instantly caught my attention in an unexpected way because the course introduced me to the work of the Capital Region Ex-Offenders Support Coalition.The CRESC is a coalition group based in Harrisburg that aims “to coordinate services that assist ex-offenders with successful re-entry which promotes public safety.”

I have witnessed many of my friends in Harrisburg encounter difficulties reintegrating back into society after a conviction. Many people who get incarcerated and later released seem to get their name replaced with the label “criminal.” The people assigning this label associate it with no other qualities or traits, only those relating to the crime they previously committed. This labeling contributes to the recidivism rate.

The United States has one of the highest recidivism rates in the world, with an average of 67 percent of released offenders returning to prison within three years. Recidivism is more likely to occur among those who remain with the same lifestyle they had before incarceration. Many prisoners are released in the same, if not worse, financial position they were in before they got incarcerated. This limits the housing options for released offenders, which leads to their migration back to the same neighborhood as before with the concentrated lack of opportunities and abundance of illegal temptations that increased their criminality in the first place.

And what about a career? With limited skills to obtain a well-paid job, many newly released offenders have one of two options: go back to school or acquire a blue-collar job. Over half the time, the school option hits a dead end because financial aid and college acceptance can be denied based solely on whether or not the student has a felony on their record. That being said, many turn to the low standards of the factory or restaurant industry. Along any application process, they come across the dreaded question, “Have you ever been convicted of a felony?” Although it has been said time and time again that this question only serves the purpose of informing the employer, it results in discrimination. Coalition groups like the CRESC have come to realize that, instead of blaming the released prisoner for returning to a life of crime, society must come together to reduce the need to turn back to crime.

Staying to finish school at Penn State Harrisburg has allowed me to discover this coalition group and come to fall in love with its vision. I did not feel that way at first, because I didn’t think I was capable of making a change. I knew I needed to help people like this, but I never knew where or how to get started. But as I took my “Sociology of Deviance” course, I knew this was the reason I had stayed at Penn State Harrisburg. I’ve always wanted to “change” the world, and here I discovered the major that would allow me to first and foremost study the diverse people that make up the world I intend on changing. I soon remembered my true passion.

The Sociology and Criminology Department at Penn State Harrisburg has given me the support and mentors I need in order to gain confidence in my dream and myself. The type of support and influence one receives from their environment undeniably influences the outcome of dreams and goals, and I am glad I found an environment that, instead of doubting me, guided me. I knew how passionate and reputable my professor was, when I heard him say to me, “My legacy is not in the articles or papers I publish, but in the students that I can guide in the right direction to be able to go out and change the world.”

Leslie Avila is a double major in sociology and criminology at Penn State Harrisburg.

 

Continue Reading

Lifeblood of HBG: Neighbors help neighbors, thanks to the Central Pennsylvania Blood Bank.

screenshot-2016-11-29-12-11-33An hour of time can save three lives.

That’s the message of the Central Pennsylvania Blood Bank, as each donation to the blood bank may benefit three separate patients—all of them local.

“The unit of blood we collect when you’re donating is called a whole blood unit,” explained spokesman Jay Wimer. “That’s put into a centrifuge and spun down into three components. The red cells will go to one patient, the plasma to another and the platelets to a third. That’s why we say, ‘One donation, three lives.’”

The blood bank’s model of donation and distribution keeps almost all donations in the area, with blood sent out only when there’s a real need.

“We’re part of a large consortium of small blood banks who are called on when something happens like the shooting in Orlando,” Wimer said. “We’re on alert and connected so we can share resources if there’s an emergency need, but most of what we collect in the region is staying in the region.”

The organization has supported the immediate needs of the community for more than six decades, created by a team of Harrisburg doctors in 1953.

“Ground had just been broken on a hospital in a cornfield in Hershey,” Wimer said. “With that, and the technology becoming a reality at the time for things like operations, transplants and transfusions, they knew they needed a local blood program.”

That need has grown more significant with the growth of the region’s population and medical centers. Today, the blood bank is responsible for supplying 15 hospitals, where more than 120,000 units of blood and blood products are transfused annually.

“The blood needs in this region are basically constant,” Wimer said. “We’re holding about seven blood drives a day, seven days a week, probably 363 days a year.”

It’s vital to have a continual, fresh supply of blood because of the short lifespan of the platelet, which is only good for about five days after donation.

“If we don’t have blood drives on a Monday, five days from then we may not have a single platelet,” he said. “We pretty much have to be going all the time.”

Despite the near-daily blood drives, Wimer said that shortages are a continuing problem, not just in the Harrisburg region but throughout the country. Shortages can be especially critical around the holiday season and during harsh winters.

“Only about 5 percent of the population donates, and there are a lot of people who need transfusions,” he said. “The current statistic is that one in every five people entering a hospital will need a transfusion. I can’t think of a time when we’ve said, ‘We have enough, let’s take a break.’”

Much of the need stems from the variety of medical conditions that make transfusions a necessity.

“The red cell is used in transplants and trauma,” Wimer said. “Plasma is used for burn victims and trauma patients who are in shock. Platelets are predominantly used for people dealing with cancer. The game of chemotherapy is it’s poison, and the goal is to kill the cancer before it kills the patient. In doing so, it knocks down our platelets.”

In addition to 12 donation centers across Dauphin, Cumberland, Perry, York, Adams, Lebanon and Lancaster counties, the blood bank runs mobile drives using five bloodmobiles, which visit area events, companies, libraries and schools. The schools, Wimer said, represent the highest concentration of donors.

“These 16- and 17-year-olds are coming out and doing this on a pretty regular basis, even though they’re sometimes nervous about it, and they always make it through,” Wimer said. “If you’re ever concerned about the future of humanity, all you have to do is come to a high school blood drive and you’ll be like, ‘I think we’re going to be OK.’”

To learn more about the Central Pennsylvania Blood Bank, visit www.cpbb.org.

Author: Kate Morgan

 

Continue Reading

Student Scribes: “Legos, Novels and Chicken Parmesan”

It’s Monday morning and I hate my life.

I’ve finally hit the snooze button enough times that now my leisurely walk into the office will be a dead sprint and my hair may or may not get washed.

Breakfast will be the stale coffee I get while exchanging forced pleasantries with the morning person from marketing.

Collapsing into the chair in my cube with three walls, I grit my teeth as the stack of paper already on my desk flips me the bird. It’s 8:03 a.m., and I hate my life.

And I will spend the next eight hours hating my life.

Finally, I make it home after sitting in traffic inching my way along for 45 minutes. I’ll make dinner and have a glass of wine and maybe watch some TV. But then what—go to bed just so I can wake up at the butt crack of dawn to do it all over again?

How many of us feel this way? Spending our days wishing that they would be over just to go home and wait to do it all over again. We suffer through the mundane, day in and day out, for what? A house, a car, food, clothes and drinks at happy hour? But surely that’s not what we are living for; we are not all here on this earth to simply exist.

What is it that makes your eyes sparkle like the ocean you visit maybe once a year? What is it that makes you feel like you are you and that is enough? What is it that makes you feel alive? Got it? Ok good, do more of THAT.

I have such a problem with the way our society puts so much stress on what someone’s paycheck is. We don’t care so much that you can make the best chicken Parmesan on the face of the earth or that you love to play badminton or that you love trashy romance novels; we care about what kind of car you drive or where you buy your clothes. In case you haven’t noticed, “money can’t buy happiness” is pretty true. Then why do we continually try to reverse that rhetoric, thinking maybe, just maybe, another dollar an hour will do it? I think that the world would be a completely different place if each and every one of us simply said, “hell with it” and worked a little bit less. Maybe you’d start a rock band or become a poet; maybe you would even spend hours making Lego statues. Regardless, I would be willing to bet that most of us, given the opportunity, would turn from the computer screen for a life of meaning and adventure.

Maybe I’m a radical, overly optimistic thinker, but I truly believe that we are all so different that, if each of us pursued the passions we were born with, our world would not only survive, it would thrive. I am suggesting that ours is not simply an “I hate my job” problem; it’s an “I hate my life” problem. So, my message to you is: love your life. Love those around you deeply and openly, smile at strangers, take your time throughout the day to see the beauty in our world and, most importantly, find what makes you love being here, alive in this moment, and just freaking do THAT.

Heidi Hornemann is a sociology major at Penn State Harrisburg.

 

Continue Reading

Administration Focuses on Capital Improvements with Proposed 2017 City Budget

 

Mayor Eric Papenfuse last night proposed a $65 million budget for 2017, a spending plan meant to address several critical capital improvements.

A Harrisburg police officer demonstrates a Taser at last night's city council meeting.

A Harrisburg police officer demonstrates a Taser at last night’s city council meeting.

The budget, a nearly $6 million spending increase from last year, includes $2.5 million for a new public works facility, $127,754 for police body cameras and Tasers and $90,000 for Reservoir Park’s band shell.

City council will hold public meetings on the budget on Dec. 7 and 8. Council is scheduled to vote on a 2017 spending plan at its Dec. 13 legislative session.

Papenfuse began his annual budget discussion with some good news. The administration estimates an end-of-year 2016 city cash balance of $12 million, as, the city underspent its budget this year and received an estimated $64 million in revenue, $4 million more than the initial budget.

Come 2017, Papenfuse projects $65 million in revenue, with increases coming from parking enforcement, local services taxes, increased business licensing fees and code inspecting fees.

The annual business license fee will increase from $40 to $50 as of Jan. 1 2017. Papenfuse called parking payments “essential revenues for city sustainability.”

Papenfuse projects personnel, health care and pension to be the main sources of increased spending in 2017, up nearly $3 million.

Maintaining and building capacity

As part of the budget, six management positions will be upgraded or reclassified, Papenfuse said. This includes a health and ADA compliance officer; the director of business and resource development; and a solid waste logistics and composting manager.

The general fund will support one new traffic engineer technician and three new codes officers. The codes officers will pay for themselves, Papenfuse said, with fee increases and by helping the city tackle a backlog of rental inspections.

Harrisburg parks would see increased maintenance and cleaning under the proposal. Papenfuse proposed six new parks maintenance laborers, one parks maintenance secretary and one park ranger.

Capital Investments

Last night, Papenfuse proposed reserving half of the $12 million in current savings as a nest egg and spending the other half on capital improvements.

Under the budget proposal, $2.5 million would be set aside for the purchase of a new public works facility site, one of the city’s highest priorities. A composting site would receive $120,000. About $2.3 million would fund new equipment and vehicles.

“Our needs exceed our resources,” said Papenfuse about capital projects, adding that the department heads identified the most pressing needs for capital investments.

Reservoir Park would receive $90,000 to resurface, paint and repair the band shell. Currently, consultants are creating a master plan to best utilize the park. The public identified the band shell as a need during the first public meeting.

The bureau of police would receive $215,000 for four patrol vehicles, $79,920 for body cameras and $47,834 for Tasers out of a total $497,834 allotted for police capital improvements in the proposed budget.

The proposed budget gives $130,000 to the Bureau of Fire to replace a straight truck and upgrade inspector vehicles.

Papenfuse proposed other infrastructure spending for projects such as traffic signal upgrades, accessibility improvements per ADA requirements and streetlights.

“These should have been improved on long ago,” Papenfuse said.

Future of Act 47

The budget is only sustainable with revenue from the taxing powers from Act 47, Papenfuse said.

He sees a few options to keep the revenue generated from Act 47 taxing powers.

The city could team with other small cities and push for state-level legislative change. With a tax-adverse Republican majority in state legislature, increasing municipal taxing powers may be a long shot, he said.

Alternatively, City Council could initiate a “home rule” process and create a new city charter, like Carlisle did last year. Home rule municipalities are not bound by municipal codes created by state laws. Rather, home rule municipalities decide municipal matters – property taxes, personal taxes – in a city charter.

A third option would be if the state legislature abolishes school property taxes, Papenfuse said. Then Harrisburg residents might see an increase in city real estate taxes.

“We have to come up with a solution to get us out of Act 47,” he said.

Investments in Policing

At the meeting, Papenfuse said officers need more non-lethal options, but do not have access to them. Therefore, he proposed new Tasers for every officer and the deployment of 303s on every shift.

A 303 is an impact device shoots lead paintballs. With an extended range of 55 feet, the 303s can mark individuals for apprehension in a protest.

Body cameras for every officer and two proposed new positions—a public safety information technology specialist and a crime analysis—will promote transparency, Papenfuse said.

“I think it will build confidence from the public with the police. With transparency comes trust,” Papenfuse said.

He said he realized that the police need a wider range of non-lethal options following his review of the case of Earl Shaleek Pinckney, who was shot to death in August by Harrisburg Police Officer Tony Elliott. Last night, Papenfuse added that, he agreed with District Attorney Ed Marsico that Elliott’s actions were justified.

Under the budget proposal, officers would receive more training, updated technology and repairs on their building.

In 2017, two new police officer positions will open, in addition to the 17 the police department is currently looking to fill. Papenfuse proposes incentives, like paying back training costs upon resigning, to encourage new hires to stay with the bureau.

Next meetings:  

Public budget meetings will be held at 5:30 p.m. Dec. 7 and 8 at City Council chambers.

City Council is expected to amend and vote on a 2017 municipal budget on Dec. 13 at 6 p.m.

See the full proposed budget. 

Author: Danielle Roth

Continue Reading

Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

article header

Happy Thanksgiving Eve! As has become tradition, you’re receiving the Weekend Roundup a day early to include tonight’s shenanigans.

I would L<3VE to go see The Dirty Sweet tonight; however, I’m a little intimidated by cooking my first bird tomorrow. If I can get things ready, I’m game, but we’ll see.

WR1123

Usually, I’m traveling all over the place, but this year Andy and I decided to have Thanksgiving together(!) at home. I’m even contemplating my own “turkey trot” around the neighborhood (Or maybe we’ll just walk the dog?)

We’re sticking around on Black Friday, and on Saturday we’re going to the Penn State v. Michigan State game – Brrrrr.

What are you doing this weekend?

WR1123 (1) (more…)

Continue Reading

Harrisburg School Board Moves Forward with Organic Composting Project

The Harrisburg School District met on Nov. 21.

The Harrisburg School District met on Nov. 21.

One man’s trash is another student’s educational opportunity.

Or at least that’s the reasoning of the Harrisburg School Board, which approved a resolution to support the installation of an organic waste composting facility at last night’s meeting.

The resolution allows the school district to start working with the city to develop and operate a facility for educational and operational uses at its property at 1901 Wayne Ave.

“The authentic learning opportunities are boundless,” said board Director Judd Pittman.

The district currently uses the Susquehanna Township property, near Capital Region Water, for bus and leaf storage, said Solicitor Samuel Cooper. The district is mandated to use the land for an educational purpose, Cooper said.

“This is a golden opportunity for students to learn about composting and other environmental aspects,” he said.

The district is still in a preliminary planning phase for uses for the composting facility, which also will be accessible to city residents.

A waste analysis completed last year showed that food waste created most of the weight of the garbage the school district disposed, Pittman said. The school pays for trash disposal by weight, which means a composting facility for food waste will reduce the cost for the school.

The city approached the school board with this idea about a year ago. The next steps to further the project are approval from Susquehanna Township’s zoning board and possibly a period of public input, Cooper said.

“It is normal procedure that the public will have a chance for comment,” Cooper said.

More news from the Nov. 21 school board meeting:

  • Superintendent Dr. Sybil Knight-Burney led attendees in a moment of reflection for Shanice and Destiny Johnson, school children who died in a recent fire.
  • The district is working with law enforcement to adapt HACC’s active shooter procedure.
  • Chief Recovery Officer Audrey Utley said the district is creating “action plans” to address staff absenteeism and a task force to strategize how to minimize teacher absenteeism.
  • The board approved 21 budget transfer items; five requests for facility use; seven fundraiser requests; 10 fiscal items regarding contracts or agreements; and personnel appointments, promotions, resignations and tenures.
  • Harrisburg Education Association President Jody Barksdale gave five letter-sized envelopes filled with stories from staff and students to board President Danielle Robinson. “You don’t have the opportunity to come in and see what prevents us from teaching,” Barksdale said. The letters detailed persistent struggles teachers face on a day-to-day basis. Barksdale urged the board to offer mental health support students dealing with grief, poor coping skills and sexual abuse.
  • Karl Singleton, senior advisor to Mayor Eric Papenfuse, urged the board to employ staff and sign contracts with people of color and women. He noted that he saw few people of color and women working on recent construction at the district’s baseball field. He invited board members to a Dec. 14 session on reducing negative police and minority contact.

Author: Danielle Roth

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

Giddy-up: City Island’s Newest Tenant Welcomed with Ribbon-cutting Today

South Mountain Carriage Company has operated at City Island's Carriage House since May.

South Mountain Carriage Company has operated at City Island’s Carriage House since May.

If anyone is looking to get rid of a sleigh, tell Mayor Eric Papenfuse.

City Island’s newest tenant could use one.

After successful summer and fall seasons operating out of City Island’s Carriage House, the South Mountain Carriage Company and Papenfuse officially cut the ribbon today.

“We love being here and hope everyone enjoys it as much as we do,” said Cynthia Michaud, co-owner alongside husband David Binner of South Mountain Carriage Company

Since May, South Mountain Carriage Company offers horse-drawn carriage rides around City Island, Riverfront Park and other Harrisburg neighborhoods from noon to dusk most Saturdays and Sundays.

“You both have brought such energy to the island. You recognize the wonderful asset we have here and I think that your perspective and your experience is contagious,” Papenfuse said to the owners.

south mountain carraige ribbon cutting

Mayor Eric Papenfuse put out a public call for a sleigh, as the carriage company enters winter.

Papenfuse celebrated the installation of a new modern roof, costing the city and private funders more than $28,000 to install. The neighborhood group Friends of City Island played a crucial role in the renovation, Papenfuse said.

The previous tenant, Fred Lamke’s Harrisburg Carriage Company, left City Island’s carriage house in tattered conditions. The city booted the company in January after five years of unpaid rent and eight years of operating without a permit. The company accrued more than $6,000 of debt to the city since 2010 when the company stopped paying a $100 monthly rent.

Before South Mountain Carriage Company moved in, cobwebs, dust and dirt covered the barn. “You couldn’t even tell there were lights,” Papenfuse said.

Michaud said they spent more than 60 hours with a ShopVac cleaning up the space. Now, the space, cleaned up and organized, can comfortably accommodate their two draft horses and a miniature pony named Banjo on the weekends.

Now that the roof has been fixed, Michaud looks to improve the rest of the barn, provided they can raise enough funds. Michaud said that the windows need repairs, the walls could use fresh paint and lights need replaced.

Michaud and Binner have been operating in central Pennsylvania since 2014. The husband and wife team has five adult children, but no grandchildren yet.

“So we spoil our horses,” Michaud said.

For more information about South Mountain Carriage Company, visit their Facebook page.

Author: Danielle Roth

Continue Reading

Holiday Hoopla: Harrisburg’s Annual Parade Set for Tomorrow

ParadeWeb

Put on your Santa hat and grab a hot cocoa–it’s almost time for Harrisburg’s annual holiday parade.

The 2016 parade, with a theme of “Making the Season Bright,” steps off tomorrow at noon from City Island with a long line of bands, floats, balloons, vintage cars and, of course, Santa. Participants will march up Market Street, turn on 2nd Street, make another turn on North Street, then follow Front Street back.

“This year’s parade will be very exciting,” said Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “We are anticipating a large crowd to join us along the parade route for this year’s holiday parade.”

Besides the marchers, food trucks will set up on Market Street between Front and 2nd streets.

Free parking will be available at the Market Square garage  from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., which is sponsored by PSECU. In addition to free parking in the garage, parade attendees can utilize the Pango App and get up to 4 hours of free street parking using the “LUVHBG” code.

The Market Street Bridge will close at 8:15 a.m. on Saturday. Parade participants will be able to enter City Island from the West Shore. N. Front Street will close at 10 a.m. from Forster to Market streets. 2nd Street from Chestnut to North streets will be closed from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Traffic will detour east on Forster Street to N. 7th Street, south on 7th Street to Walnut Street, west on Walnut Street to N. 3rd Street, south on 3rd Street to Chestnut Street back to Front Street.

After the parade, the festivities move to Strawberry Square for hot chocolate and the awards ceremony. Trophies will be awarded to the top dance, step and drill team units, and cash prizes will be given to the top high school marching bands.

“I would like to especially thank our title sponsor, the Hershey Harrisburg Regional Visitors Bureau and our gold sponsor, PSECU.” Papenfuse said. “Without their support, we would not be able to put together this wonderful event.”

Author: Lawrance Binda

Continue Reading

No Cigs Here: Harrisburg Playgrounds Go Smoke-Free

45 new signs mark Harrisburg's parks and playgrounds as tobacco-free zones

45 new signs mark Harrisburg’s parks and playgrounds as tobacco-free zones. 

 

Starting today, 45 new signs will mark Harrisburg’s playgrounds as “tobacco-free zones,” reminding park-goers that young lungs are playing.

The statewide “Young Lungs at Play” initiative aims to eliminate the exposure of second-hand smoke to children in public places. Those who violate the tobacco-free zone will be subject to a $50 fine.

“Even a brief exposure to second-hand smoke can be dangerous,” said Deborah Brown, president and CEO of the American Lung Association of the Mid-Atlantic.

Roughly 11 percent of Harrisburg’s infants, children and teens have asthma. About 7 percent of adults in Harrisburg have chronic lung conditions, Brown said.

Harrisburg joins the ranks of cities like Philadelphia and Pittsburgh in implementing this initiative in its 27 parks and playgrounds, said Dr. Loren Robinson, deputy secretary of health promotion at the state Department of Health.

The YMCA and the American Lung Association approached Mayor Eric Papenfuse in September to propose the “Young Lungs at Play” Initiative. It passed City Council quickly.

“All of us in positions of leadership in the city feel that our youth are this important and that this initiative is essential to everyone’s health and wellness,” Papenfuse said.

Papenfuse’s proposed budget includes paying the salary for a second park ranger to enforce park rules including the tobacco-free zones. He will propose his budget at Tuesday’s council meeting.

Author: Danielle Roth

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

article header

It’s Beaujolais Day!

I have no idea how I’m going to fit in everything I want to do this weekend. It’s 3rd in the Burg, it’s the weekend before Thanksgiving — there is so much cool stuff going on.

Tonight, I’m off to one of my favorite events, a Chef’s Table at Garlic Poet. This one, however, is wine-focused — a first for the restaurant, which until this time featured semi-regular beer dinners (always outstanding).

WR1117-blog

Tomorrow I have a few “to dos” on my list, including Negroni Nitro Night (what) at Elementary Coffee and shopping at Stash.

Saturday, gym and market, natch, but I also work but I also wanna go to St. Boniface for their Mosaic can release (what)!!

Sunday, the stinky Steelers aren’t on TV, but I’ll probably hunt them down — or maybe skip it and just go shopping in Camp Hill. The choice is yours.

What are you doing this weekend?

(more…)

Continue Reading