Student Scribes: Mom, Bullies and a Masked Weirdo

Sweat pours down her back as her thin, scabby legs pump the Huffy up the curving hill. It’s one of those hellish summer days where the air is so heavy with heat that even breathing is a chore. Len curses her mother for sending her on a lighter and cola run. The woman got into another drunken accident, leaving them without wheels for the foreseeable future.

Out of nowhere, the back of her head explodes in pain. The front tire makes a 90-degree turn and flips her over onto the burning pavement. Tiny bits of gravel make their way into her knees and hands as she tries to break her impact.

In a tear-filled blur, she makes out two figures on either side, looming over. The biggest one is Jackson, the 15-year-old seventh-grader, and his squirrely wingman Ben. She feels her face heat up with lingering embarrassment over last year’s end-of-the-year prank. She can still hear the shouts and jeers of the student body as Jackson forced her to push a quarter from the sixth-grade hall through the seventh-grade with just her tongue. She was halfway by the time the faculty got wind, but the damage was done. I will forever be that girl, she thinks.

Jackson readies another rock. “What are you doin’ on our road, freak?”

“I-I, uh…”

The pair starts cracking up. “N-N-Nice stutter loser,” Jackson mocks back.

“She should pay a toll,” Ben says in his nasally voice.

Jackson grabs the collar of her bright orange shirt. Only the toes of her scuffed Chucks are touching the ground. His rank breath smacks her in the face.

“Yea, pay up.”

“I-I got 20 bucks in my pocket. You can have it.”

Len pulls the sweaty bill out of the jean-short pocket and holds it towards the giant boy. She winces as Jackson swipes it from her scratched hand. With a crooked grin, he crumples the bill into the chain wallet hanging off his baggy jeans. The cheaply designed smiley face with its tongue hanging out swings there, mocking her as she soaks in sweat and misery. Despite getting paid, the two stand there seemingly having a telepathic conversation about what other punishment they can dish out. Jackson raises a fist and Len closes her eyes and grits her teeth, bracing herself for an unholy beating.

 Whack!

Jackson yells out in pain. Len falls to the ground in a heap of confusion watching this behemoth get pummeled by a pint-sized kid. There’s a mish-mash of uncoordinated swings and kicks, as Ben tries to retaliate on behalf of his friend. Faster, the newcomer dodges and scrambles to get Len on her bike.

“Go,” the masked kid yells.

——–

A mile or so away, Len steadies her breath as she sits on the corner of the main street gas station. Unable to make her purchases, she strains to keep the tears in.

 Mom’s not going to be happycraphow am I going to get home? Those jerks are really going to be out for me now; there’s no way I can go back that way…

She falls off the curb into the burnt grass behind her. The blinding sunlight fills her closed lids with a muted red glow. Tears escape down her cheek. She lays there pondering what it would be like to have powers, when a shadow falls over her, causing her to sit up in a panic.

“Hey.” Standing there is the masked kid.

“Uh… hey?”

The kid sits on the grass and hands her the 20.

“Oh, wow. Thanks… How’d you get this?”

“No problem… Oh right, I snagged that stupid ape’s wallet after I hit him in the head,” he says with a triumphant grin. “Dude cried like a girl… uh, no offense.”

“It’s okay. I just… I… I don’t know what to say. This is frickin’ weird.”

A nervous laugh escapes her lips.

“The name’s Bruce, by the way. Bruce Wayne.”

Len looks at him in shock. He bursts into uncontrolled laughter.

“Your face! I couldn’t resist. Sorry. But, seriously, my name’s Eric.” He puts his fist out. They bump.

“I’m Len…Why are you dressed that way?”

She looks him up and down. The kid is dressed in nothing but black: black jeans, T-shirt and a badly homemade black mask. The only parts of him that show are his thin, bare arms and pale blue eyes.

“Aren’t you dying under all that?” Sweat drips down her face, collecting in a circle of muted orange on her sodden back and pits. Oddly, the boy doesn’t seem to be soaked.

He shrugs. “Eh. I’m used to it. A hero must never reveal his identity,” he says imitating an announcer’s voice. The shifting pitches in his voice ruin the effect. Eyebrows raised, she just stares.

“Here, check this out.”

He gets up off the grass and fumbles with a satchel hanging on his parked bike (all black), and pulls out a large, heavy looking book. Like a newborn, he cradles it, gingerly handing it over. “Zero to Hero: A Geek’s Guide to Being a Super Hero,” the title reads with a compilation of brightly colored comic legends.

“It’s informative and handy. I used that to beat down that idiot Jackson.”

Len is speechless.

He grabs the book and flips through a few pages. “I’m still in chapter one, where you need to create an image to hide your true identity.” He reads, “…never reveal your true identity, when in hero mode… always have an air of mystery,” he mumbles on.

“You already told me your name.”

His eyes widen as he mouths crap. “Do you want a drink?”

Random, she thinks. Not wanting to hurt his feelings since he did save her life and all, she nods her head yes.

Together, they get up. People pass by, gawking at the awkward pair. A filthy tomboy with a messy, brown ponytail and a short, Goth-clad boy hero.

——–

Two off-brand sodas and a lighter later, the duo finds themselves in the woods. Unsure of how to ditch, Len reluctantly follows him to what he calls his “hideout.” It’s nothing more than an abandoned, weathered shed, about as sturdy as a house made out of cardboard and duct tape. The inside, furnished with plastic patio furniture and (amazingly) wall-to-wall books.

A twinge of surprise crosses Len’s face at the sight of the enormous home library. Some of her favorites jumped out, while most of them she’s never seen. She traces her fingers along the old and new spines. Not in any particular order, the books are thrown on the beaten shelves. Books are stacked one on top of another, lying on their sides, diagonal, basically every which way. Being a little more orderly, Len can’t resist the urge to straighten the thoughtless mess.

In deep thought, she jumps at the first notice of Eric’s presence. How did I forget about him? On edge, she turns to look at him. She forces a smile.

“I knew you’d be impressed. I see you at the library all the time,” Eric says.

“Um, yeah.” Wait, what? Did he just say what I think he said? “I can’t really afford to buy books, so I go to the library a lot,” she answers with reservation.

Eric’s eyes grow wide. “You know, I just remembered something crucial in that book. I need a sidekick! You owe me a favor anyway, so how ‘bout it?”

Afraid of setting him off, she nods. Thoughts of mom, bullies and a masked weirdo overwhelm her. Can this day get any stranger?

Donna Quinn is a senior English major at Penn State Harrisburg.

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A New Future: State Archives Plans Move to 6th Street

Screen Shot 2016-04-25 at 11.21.51 AM

The Pennsylvania State Archives plans to relocate to this site on N. 6th Street.

History soon will have a new home, as the state Archives plans to relocate to a newly constructed building along the 6th Street corridor in Harrisburg.

The building will occupy a three-acre site along N. 6th Street flanked by Harris and Hamilton streets. The $24 million project will occupy almost three complete city blocks, with half of the site backing on to N. 7th Street.

Design is expected to begin soon, followed by a two-year construction phase that should be completed in 2019, said Howard Pollman, director of external affairs for the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.

“We will build a state-of-the-art building,” he said.

StateArchivesProjectSiteFootprintMap

Footprint of the new Archives building.

The commission has been searching for a site for a new building for several years, as the Archives’ current home—a 20-story tower built in the mid-1960s at the Capitol complex—is bursting from more than 450 million documents.

“The building we have here is full,” Pollman said. “We also have issues with environmental concerns.”

The commission will retain and repurpose the tower, perhaps for collection storage, said Pollman.

Several years ago, the Department of General Services identified a site in Susquehanna Township for a new Archives building, said Troy Thompson, department spokesman. However, Thompson said, Mayor Eric Papenfuse successfully lobbied the Wolf administration to remain in the city.

“This is of great benefit to the city,” said Papenfuse. “It’s a terrific story of cooperation.”

The new building will represent a departure from the iconic tower on Forster Street. In addition to a location about a mile away, the structure is expected to be just two or three stories tall, with onsite parking.

Most of the land is owned by the Vartan Group and is already cleared, said Thompson. Land acquisition by the department will continue for the next several months, and the state may acquire a few additional parcels not owned by Vartan, including the American Legion building at Harris and Wallace streets, he said.

“We’re glad that no homeowners will be displaced,” said Papenfuse.

In addition to the state’s historical documents, the building will house the city’s archives, which currently are kept in a building in Reservoir Park that is not climate controlled or readily open to the public.

Papenfuse said the Archives project will continue the slow redevelopment of the 6th Street corridor. Once a bustling working class community, the neighborhood was devastated by the loss of industrial and railroad jobs following World War II.

Decades ago, developer John Vartan began buying and clearing much of the blighted land with the idea of turning into it into a new commercial corridor for Harrisburg. However, Vartan died before he could realize his vision, and his company still owns much of the empty land in the area.

In recent years, the area has shown some signs of redevelopment. The 1500 Condominium building is nearby, as are restaurants Crawdaddy’s and Café 1500, and the building is across the street from the proposed new federal courthouse.

The new Archives building will take the affected parcels off of the property tax rolls. However, Papenfuse said that, together, they currently generate only about $2,500 in revenue for the city. The city will make up that amount in local income taxes by retaining the 26 full-time positions at the state Archives, he said. Moreover, the new building may spur additional development and jobs, as some 2,100 people visit the Archives each year, many to conduct extended research projects, he said.

Residents will get a chance to weigh in on the project during a public meeting on Wednesday, May 4, at 4 p.m. at the city’s Sixth Street Fire Station, 1820 N. 6th St.

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TheBurg Podcast, April 22, 2016

Photo credit: Gem Carryl.

Photo credit: Gem Carryl.

Welcome to TheBurg Podcast, a weekly roundup of news in and around Harrisburg.

To listen to this week’s episode, click here.

April 22, 2016: This week, Larry and Paul discuss an important upcoming vote on the Harrisburg Strong Plan and try to divine what council members are going to do with it. They also discuss how a board nominee navigated an unexpected controversy, and how the city has slimmed down its plans for the 4th of July. Finally, they offer their Most Harrisburg Things this week – a quartet of swans in Italian Lake park, and a farewell to Paul, who recorded today from the Burg Nest for the last time.

TheBurg Podcast is proudly sponsored by Ad Lib Craft Kitchen & Bar at the Hilton Harrisburg.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music. Check out his podcast, the PRC Show, on SoundCloud or in the iTunes store. You can also subscribe to TheBurg podcast in iTunes.

TheBurg Podcast will be on hiatus after this week, but we hope to be back in the future. Stay tuned!

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Something to Spare

Photo courtesy of Big Brothers Big Sisters.

Photo courtesy of Big Brothers Big Sisters.

The ABC West Lane bowling alley parking lot was filled to capacity with cars of all makes and models.

A sea of adults, teens and children swirled around them, their necks lit with glow sticks while they ate pizza, chips and chocolate bars. They walked around in pink shirts printed with a tuxedo pattern on the front and the words ‘Big Brothers, Big Sisters’ on the back. The lights above the lanes went dark when the announcer began to speak. “Are you ready to roll?” she asked. “Are you ready to bowl? Well, let’s knock them down!” With that the fundraiser began. The sound of plastic colliding with plastic echoed above the country music and the participants’ excited chatter.

Since 1981, the Big Brothers, Big Sisters program has provided role models for children, keeping them on the straight and narrow. Their “Bowl for Kids’ Sake” event brings people from Cumberland, Dauphin, Lebanon and Perry counties to raise money for the program. During the three-month-long event, participants set a fundraising goal of $200,000. On good days they can bring in as much as $24,000. Companies such as Mid Penn Bank, AmeriChoice, and Hossome Steak and Sea House provide financial support and help raise awareness about the program. They even supply treats for the fundraisers—Mid Penn Bank, for example, brought cake.

The money supports the program’s best-known service, making matches between ‘Bigs’ and ‘Littles’—adults and the young people they mentor. Each Big and Little team has the opportunity to form lifelong friendships. Researchers have shown that involvement in the program makes participants 46 percent less likely to begin using illegal drugs, 27 percent less likely to begin using alcohol and 52 percent less likely to skip school, according to the Big Brothers, Big Sisters website.

Olahna Lynch, 10, and her ‘Big,’ Alecia Ganter, have been together since last November and love every interaction they have together. Although they haven’t done much outdoors yet, due to winter’s dragging on, they have seen movies and gone to Ganter’s house to make slime and cookies.

“I just think that any kind of positive influence in the community and someone else’s life, someone to talk to, is a great thing. I just want to help,” Ganter said. “As long as I live here I’ll be with Olahna, and I don’t plan on moving any time soon.”

Tyshaun Kearney and Andrew Dickerson, Jr., have been together since last September. The two have played basketball and video games, gone to the movies, and played on trampolines. Kearney’s grades were already exceptional, but they have improved since he and Dickerson were paired.

For Dickerson, his mentorship is truly about being a big brother, and not just a role model. “I don’t have any brothers,” Dickerson said. “For me it’s just trying to be there for somebody who needs a male figure. I’m honored to be able to do this.”

Justin Gourley and Bobby Bamks have been together for only five days but are looking forward to playing sports together and getting to know each other. Bamks plans to do as much physical activity as possible together. “He’s into sports, so am I,” he said.

The night advanced with an energetic atmosphere all the way through. By the time the participants started leaving, the event was estimated to have raised more than $11,000. “Bowl for Kids’ Sake” will continue through the months of April and May.

Tierra Woodford is a sophomore at Capital Area School for the Arts in downtown Harrisburg. To learn more about the “Bowl for Kids’ Sake” event, or to find information about becoming a mentor, visit capbigs.org.

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Council Schedules Vote on Updated Recovery Plan

Finance director Bruce Weber, left, and Act 47 coordinator Fred Reddig at a Harrisburg City Council meeting last August.

Finance director Bruce Weber, left, and Act 47 coordinator Fred Reddig at a Harrisburg City Council meeting last August.

City Council scheduled a major vote on updates to the Harrisburg Strong Plan Tuesday night, setting the stage for the most comprehensive agreement to date on the mix of tax policies, personnel goals and government reforms needed to stabilize the city’s finances.

The state has asked the city to adopt the 115-page update in time for negotiations with its police and municipal employee unions, whose current labor contracts expire at the end of the calendar year.

An affirmative council vote later this month would mark the first time the body has endorsed a comprehensive recovery plan, as opposed to the piecemeal votes for related legislation while the city was under state receivership in 2013.

The updated plan would count on increased revenue from a local services tax hike affecting residents and commuters and would have the city weigh a home rule charter initiative that could make recent earned income tax hikes permanent.

It would also direct a greater portion of any money recovered in lawsuits over incinerator-related borrowings to paying down the city’s current debt load.

At a committee hearing Tuesday night, council members expressed some reservations over the updated plan. Ben Allatt, the budget and finance committee chair, said he would like to see more contributions from the state and less reliance on local taxes, while Council President Wanda Williams said she would prefer to have the home rule charter suggestion removed entirely.

But Fred Reddig, the city’s coordinator under the state program for financially distressed municipalities, said he was “optimistic that the plan is going to move forward” and that his team would be able to take it to court for approval.

The vote is scheduled for April 27.

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A Natural Balance

Photo credit: Gem Carryl.

Photo credit: Gem Carryl.

Last Friday at noon, in a press conference at Italian Lake, the city celebrated the arrival of some seasonal guests—a pair of white swans, soon to be joined by a pair of black ones, that will live at the Uptown park through the end of summer.

“They’re just beautiful animals,” Wendell Hoover, a local realtor and a member of the Friends of Italian Lake neighborhood group, told WGAL. “Just in the last two days I’ve seen so many people stop and take pictures with them.”

The neighborhood group is renting the swans, at a cost of $400, from a Halifax farm. Aside from their beauty, the birds are apparently prized for their sense of turf—an Illinois company, Knox Swan & Dog, rents swans out in teams with a border collie to chase Canada geese off properties throughout the Chicagoland area. (“Got geese? Get rid of them with a Knox Swan & Dog Package,” the website advertises.)

“We actually hope they might limit the geese population a little bit by protecting their turf and their area,” Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse said of the city’s summer visitors. “Sometimes the lake can get overwhelmed with geese. So, we’re thinking this could help create a more natural balance.”

Territorial instincts notwithstanding, the swans did not immediately take to their new digs. Hoover recounted the day the farmer dropped them off, having delivered them in a large dog crate in a minivan. “She’s comfortable with handling swans,” he said. “I would not be. She grabbed them and just threw them in the lake.” They promptly swam to the opposite side and climbed out of the water.

But, Hoover said, the swans “really changed a lot” in the days that followed. “Now they’ll go anywhere. They’re very comfortable. When we put food out there, they come right up.”

By Monday morning, when the two birds glided along the western edge of the lake, they seemed to do so with an air less of exploration than patrol. Wherever the swans drifted, the geese tended to recede. They slid across the water, their necks and their layered wings so still they could almost be mistaken for decoys.

It appeared word had spread sufficiently to draw a few admirers. An amateur photographer, holding up a long zoom lens, snapped shots from the shade of a maple tree. A trio of three older women circled the lake, drawing close enough to the swans for one of them to take a few pictures on her phone.

Syretta Oakes, a preschool teacher at the nearby Little Geniuses Preparatory Academy, off Linglestown Road, led six toddlers in a “nature walk” along the lake’s edge. “I was just so shocked to see the swans,” she said. She remembered how, back in the mid-90s, several swans lived in Italian Lake. But by the time she moved to the city, in 2009, they were all gone. “To see them back is awesome.”

The swans started diving for food on the lake bed, their necks slipping into the water with precision, as if they were threading invisible tunnels. “Guess what?” asked one little genius, speaking more or less in Oakes’ direction. “Sometimes when they’re afraid they go under water.”

Francine Feinerman, who has lived Uptown for nearly 50 years, remembered having swans in the old days, too. “We hardly ever saw geese,” she said. “You saw mostly swans.” According to her, they were removed because young troublemakers were throwing stones at them. “That’s why I’m so nervous,” she went on. “I’m hoping the kids will learn respect.”

During Friday’s press conference, Papenfuse had also asked residents to suggest some names to give the birds during their stay. By the end of the day, Jaime Johnsen, the atrium receptionist in city hall, had drafted a flyer petitioning people to “Name That Swan.” The design, in keeping with the municipal government’s late spirit of thrift, was decidedly lo-fi: a clip-art doodle of a black and white swan, with the digital watermark still visible; some swooping word-processor calligraphy.

“My friend was like, ‘Why do the black ones gotta be late?’” said Johnsen Monday afternoon, in between fielding walk-ins at her desk just inside city hall. “She’s not from here. She was like, ‘That’s racist.’ I was like, ‘No, no, no, no, no.’”

As part of her job, Johnsen also checks the messages on the city’s 311 system and monitors the neighborhood-based social network Nextdoor. Under a post by the city, she reviewed the handful of potential swan names submitted so far: John, Paul, George and Ringo; Ron Swanson; and, facetiously, Swanny McSwanface, inspired by “Boaty McBoatface,” the name submitted in a recent contest to christen a British research vessel, which won handily in an online poll.

“It does make it a beautiful atmosphere down there,” Johnsen went on. She flipped through a couple of photos of the lake on her phone, in which the swans, either because of a photo filter or a trick of the light, appeared surrounded by a soft-focus glow. “It makes it kind of nice,” she said. “The geese all stay to one side. And it’ll be even more beautiful when the flowers come.”

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Independence Day Festivities Set

FireworksWeb

A rocket explodes during last year’s fireworks display in Harrisburg.

Harrisburg will celebrate the July 4 holiday with a one-day event that will include food trucks, children’s activities and music, ending with two fireworks displays, the city said today.

The “Independence Day Food Truck Festival and Fireworks Show” will take place in Riverfront Park on Monday, July 4, starting at 3 p.m., according to the city.

“The Food Truck Festival is sure to be one of our most popular events this year,” said Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “People will be able to enjoy a variety of great food and reasonable prices. We urge everyone to come out and enjoy the fun!”

Musical groups will entertain throughout the event on a live music stage. Children’s activities will include face painting, caricaturists and a bounce house.

Two fireworks shows will conclude the day’s celebration. The Harrisburg Senators fireworks will precede the city’s fireworks festival.

Street parking will be free, and parking will be available for $4 on City Island.

Sponsors of the Independence Day celebration include the Hershey Harrisburg Regional Visitors Bureau, the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency and the Harrisburg Downtown Improvement District.

The city’s Independence Day celebration has changed greatly from year to year. For many years, Harrisburg held a three-day music and arts festival along the riverfront. More recently, the city experimented with formats, reducing the celebration to a single day and emphasizing food and family activities.

For more information, visit www.harrisburgpa.gov/July4.

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TheBurg Podcast, April 15, 2016

Cluck, left, whose term on the board of Capital Region Water expired in 2015. City Council will consider whether to replace him with a mayoral nominee later this month.

Welcome to TheBurg Podcast, a weekly roundup of news in and around Harrisburg.

To listen to this week’s episode, click here.

April 15, 2016: Larry and Paul discuss why a mayoral board appointment, not usually much of a headline-grabber, drew so much attention this week. They also talk about a traffic conversion study, a Senate hearing on municipal distress and cynicism and growth in city businesses.

TheBurg Podcast is proudly sponsored by Ad Lib Craft Kitchen & Bar at the Hilton Harrisburg.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music. Check out his podcast, the PRC Show, on SoundCloud or in the iTunes store. You can also subscribe to TheBurg podcast in iTunes.

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City Activist Faces Loss of CRW Seat

Cluck, left, whose term on the board of Capital Region Water expired in 2015. City Council will consider whether to replace him with a mayoral nominee later this month.

Cluck, left, whose term on the board of Capital Region Water expired in 2015. City Council will consider whether to replace him with a mayoral nominee later this month.

Capital Region Water is poised to mark the end of an era this month, as the Papenfuse administration seeks to replace board member Bill Cluck, an environmental lawyer and city activist who oversaw a turbulent time in the authority’s history.

At a hearing next week, City Council will consider two nominees, Garvey Presley, Jr., and Charla J. Plaines, to the water and sewer authority’s five-member board.

Presley would fill a spot left vacant by Westburn Majors, who surrendered his seat after being elected to Harrisburg City Council last fall. Plaines would replace Cluck, whose five-year term expired in January 2015.

Council will not cast a final vote on the nominations until April 27, the first legislative session after next week’s hearing. But Cluck did not waste time in objecting to his replacement, urging council at a meeting Tuesday night to meet with him and review his record before agreeing to oust him.

Council members “have absolutely no idea” of Capital Region Water’s achievements during his tenure, he said, nor did they fully appreciate how the authority had fought to maintain public ownership in a period of financial crisis.

“We saved this city from privatizing the water and sewer systems,” he said.

He also said he was disappointed by the way he learned of his replacement from Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “There was no communication other than an email,” Cluck said. “I feel disrespected.”

Papenfuse, for his part, said the decision was not personal and that he was grateful for Cluck’s years of service on the board. “I’m a huge fan of Bill’s,” he said. “I consider him an inspirational model to me personally. I think he’s played just an incredibly important role in bringing accountability to Harrisburg and in the city’s recovery.”

He said the nomination was motivated by his goal to bring greater diversity to the city’s governmental agencies and by a desire “not to burn people out” with too many years of service in any one role.

Even if Cluck’s plea finds favor with some council members, it is unlikely he will be able to hold his seat indefinitely. Papenfuse is empowered by law to nominate members to the boards of city authorities with the advice and consent of council.

“This is my decision for sure,” Papenfuse said.

As a board member, Cluck helped the authority weather a period of crisis and profound transformation. He helped usher it through the transition from the Harrisburg Authority, an all-purpose financing vehicle best known for the spectacular incinerator-related debts that pushed the city nearly to bankruptcy, to a service-focused water and sewer authority with stable finances and a new name.

Since the transition, Capital Region Water has earned a series of affirmations, including a top-five ranking for best drinking water in the country from the American Water Works Association and the 2015 Catalyst Award from the Harrisburg Regional Chamber. Most recently, in March, it secured an investment-grade rating on its municipal bonds from Standard & Poor’s.

In 2011, Cluck also helped initiate a forensic investigation into the Harrisburg Authority’s disastrous borrowings to retrofit the city incinerator. At the time, he was one of only three board members, along with Majors and Marc Kurowski, a civil engineer who is currently the board’s chair.

The findings of that investigation have resonated through Harrisburg politics ever since, drawing citations from the city’s first state-appointed receiver, playing a key role in state hearings on the city’s debt crisis and making a cameo in the 2015 grand jury report approving corruption charges against former Mayor Steve Reed.

“We collectively fly under the radar,” Kurowski said Tuesday night, in reference to the board’s accomplishments during his and Cluck’s tenure. “There was a lot of stuff happening in the last four or five years. It was very intense, and for a long time there it was just Bill, Wes and myself.”

Kurowski said he didn’t know either of the mayor’s nominees and was reluctant to inject himself into the city’s politics. But he said that, if Cluck were replaced, he would miss his skills as an attorney and his dedication.

“Bill’s pretty committed,” he said. “He does his homework. I mean, he reads every single word of every single document. We’d miss that. It’d be a shame to not have that aspect on the board.”

Kurowski also said that he thought Presley, an equipment operator at the Derry Township Municipal Authority wastewater treatment plant, might be able to bring “boots-on-the-ground operational experience” to the position.

Papenfuse said that, in addition to seeking fresh energy on the board, he hopes his nominees will further his goal of bringing diverse voices to city entities.

He hoped that Plaines, a reentry coordinator at the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency, would be instrumental in Capital Region Water’s community outreach during a series of important projects in the coming months.

“I think she can be an excellent community advocate and can perhaps assist in the outreach which CRW is inevitably going to need to do as it upgrades its systems,” he said. “I think we need to have people who connect the community in different ways.”

As for Cluck, Papenfuse added that he hoped he would contribute to other city efforts in the future. “I wouldn’t hesitate to appoint him for something else,” he said.

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TheBurg Podcast, April 1, 2016

chief carter

Welcome to TheBurg Podcast, a weekly roundup of news in and around Harrisburg.

To listen to this week’s episode, click here.

April 1, 2016: This week, Larry and Paul talk about the string of recent shootings hitting the police department close to home, with the murder last Saturday of the nephew of Harrisburg Police Chief Thomas Carter. They also discuss Paul’s feature this month on a $16 million fund controlled by the Harrisburg Firemen’s Relief Association. And, as always, they offer their takes on the Most Harrisburg Thing This Week.

TheBurg Podcast is proudly sponsored by Ad Lib Craft Kitchen & Bar at the Hilton Harrisburg.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music. Check out his podcast, the PRC Show, on SoundCloud or in the iTunes store. You can also subscribe to TheBurg podcast in iTunes.

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