Free Primary Care Clinic To Open in Uptown Harrisburg

Ruth Stoll in one of the examination rooms at the new Beacon Clinic at 248 Seneca St.

Ruth Stoll in one of the examination rooms at the new Beacon Clinic at 248 Seneca St.

Uptown Harrisburg will get a new health care provider next week, as Beacon Clinic, a free, faith-based primary care facility at the corner of Seneca and Green streets, prepares to open its doors on March 3.

The clinic, which has taken over a hallway in the rectory building behind St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, will initially be open Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3 to 7 p.m.

Beacon will provide preventive care and counseling to uninsured and underserved adults, including the homeless, the working poor, immigrants and prisoners in transition, said Ruth Stoll, a nurse and member of the clinic’s board of directors.

The opening represents the culmination of four years of fundraising, planning, and scouting for a location. “It’s here, finally,” Stoll said at a preview breakfast program at the facility Thursday morning. “We’re really here.”

Stoll, who was a parish nurse at St. Paul’s for six years, said the idea for the clinic sprung from conversations with a new pastor there, who sought to take the church’s ministry “beyond the walls of the church” and into the community.

Since then, the clinic’s supporters have registered Beacon as a 501(c)(3) non-profit, procured the necessary medical equipment and installed a medical director, a nurse practitioner and an interim executive director as its three part-time staff members.

They have also taken surveys of residents in the area, in which, clinic representatives said on Thursday, a third of respondents indicated they had no insurance and received no health care except from emergency rooms.

“There’s a huge need in the community,” said Rev. Willie Dixon, the pastor at Wesley Union AME Zion, nearby at 5th and Camp streets, who worked with the clinic in the early days of planning. “This is a community that feels it’s been underserved for many years. So this will be a real encouragement to them.”

Beacon now occupies a suite of rooms, each bearing a fresh coat of mint-green paint, along a timeworn tiled hallway off the church’s Green St. parking lot. There are two examination rooms, a reception room, a counseling room and an office.

Among Beacon’s services will be counseling, assessment of patients, referral to other providers and management of chronic illnesses like diabetes. The clinic is equipped to perform simple laboratory work like blood tests and urinalysis, but will have no drugs onsite and will not dispense medication.

The goal in the initial period after opening will be to “aim small, miss small,” said David Froehlich, a doctor and Beacon board member, with the hopes to grow and expand as additional needs become known and resources become available.

“Harrisburg is really the world,” Froehlich added. “You don’t have to leave the country to take care of the world. If we don’t take care of our own community, what can we say?”

Some of Beacon’s medical equipment was donated by retired doctors. A retired dentist donated an entire dental suite, though the clinic does not yet have the capacity to provide dental care.

But Beacon is still looking for additional equipment, including a television and cart to help educate patients, desks and chairs, a laptop computer and projector and an i-STAT system for onsite blood analysis, Stoll said.

The clinic, which aside from the three part-time staff members is manned entirely by volunteers, is also looking for people who can donate time to the facility.

Stoll, addressing the faith-based aspect of the care, said the clinic would seek to communicate to patients that their “bodies are a temple of the Holy Spirit, and they need to take care of themselves.”

Rosalie Baker-Lambeth, a Camp Hill-based acupuncturist and Beacon volunteer, said she didn’t have to look far to find neighbors in need of care. Pointing to a vase of flowers, she related a story from the grocery store where she had recently purchased them.

“The woman at the checkout asked if they were for my husband,” Baker-Lambeth said. She explained that, in fact, she was buying them for a free clinic. “I said two sentences about the clinic. And she said, ‘Oh, I could use that. I could that.’”

 

 

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Judge Suspends City Gun Laws

Attorney and plaintiff Justin McShane.

Attorney and plaintiff Justin McShane.

A Dauphin County judge has ordered Harrisburg to stop enforcing three of its gun-control ordinances, while leaving two others in force.

Judge Andrew H. Dowling, in a 12-page opinion Wednesday morning, found that the three ordinances—prohibiting gun possession in a park, by a minor and in a mayor-declared state of emergency—violate the state’s Uniform Firearms Act, which preempts certain local government ordinances regulating firearms.

The act forbids municipalities from regulating the “lawful ownership, possession, transfer or transportation” of guns and ammunition for purposes that are not considered illegal under state law.

Two other city ordinances, requiring owners to report the loss or theft of guns and prohibiting the discharge of guns within city limits, do not overstep the bounds of state regulations and can therefore remain on the books, Dowling wrote.

The order partly granted and partly denied a request for a preliminary injunction by the plaintiffs in the case, the gun-rights organization U.S. Law Shield and two of its members. Under a preliminary injunction, which is an extraordinary measure issued prior to a final determination, a judge finds that plaintiffs have a right to relief from a present harm and that they will be ultimately likely to prevail.

Dowling’s order is the latest development in one of two lawsuits filed against the city this year, after the passage last fall of a state law granting standing to membership groups to sue municipalities over their gun-control ordinances.

Under pressure, a number of cities and towns repealed their ordinances, but several others, including Harrisburg, decided to fight back.

U.S. Law Shield, whose mission, according to its website, is “preserving 2nd Amendment rights for all legal gun owners in our country and ensuring legal representation” for its members, filed its complaint against the city on Jan. 13.

Another group, Firearm Owners Against Crime, filed a complaint Jan. 16. That suit, which raised a question regarding owners’ rights under the U.S. Constitution, was removed to a federal court last week.

Both suits were brought on behalf of the groups as well as certain of their members, some of whom are Harrisburg residents and some who are not.

Harrisburg also argued that Act 192, last year’s state law amending the Firearms Code, was unconstitutional. Dowling declined to rule on this issue, saying constitutional questions are the purview of the Commonwealth Court.

The city had additionally asked Dowling to stay the proceedings until a decision was reached in a complaint filed by three other Pennsylvania cities—Philadelphia, Lancaster and Pittsburgh—challenging the law’s constitutionality.

Dowling declined to do so, however, saying the “timing and effect” of a Commonwealth Court decision was “uncertain.” The state preemption clause, and not the constitutionality of Act 192, was at issue in the present case, he added.

On Wednesday afternoon, attorneys with the McShane Firm, the law firm representing U.S. Law Shield, celebrated the ruling at a press conference at the firm’s Susquehanna Twp. offices.

Justin McShane, an attorney as well as a U.S. Law Shield member and individual plaintiff in the suit, called the ruling a “great victory” and urged Harrisburg officials to stop spending money on a “dead loser” of a lawsuit.

McShane said his firm’s legal fees, which Act 192 would oblige the city to repay, are “approaching six figures.” Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse should “simply wake up” and “stop being Don Quixote,” he added.

Papenfuse, reached Wednesday afternoon, declined to give detailed comments on Dowling’s opinion, saying he had been preoccupied with a long meeting about parking enforcement and had not yet had time to review it thoroughly.

He did say, however, that he believed Act 192 would be found unconstitutional, and added he was “disappointed” in Dowling’s decision not to stay the proceedings until the Commonwealth Court had a chance to rule on the law.

Other aspects of the ruling, such as the leaving in place of the reporting and discharge ordinances, he said he found “encouraging,” however.

Asked about the state’s preemption clause, Papenfuse referred to separate laws and rulings empowering the city to place “reasonable regulations” on gun use as well as to take actions “protecting the public health and safety.”

McShane, however, described the ordinances as ineffective “feel-good laws” that had no meaningful impact on the use of firearms by criminals.

Dowling expressed a similar view in his ruling, arguing that, while Harrisburg’s laws date back decades, it “would be difficult to argue with any degree of conviction that gun violence within the City of Harrisburg has decreased during that time.”

Dowling then suggested that the city might more effectively use community policing to fight gun violence and that such violence has societal causes that Harrisburg may not be able to combat.

“Instead, gun violence is associated with a confluence of many risk factors including mental health, decline in parenting and values, violence depicted in movies and other sociocultural factors,” he wrote.

To read Judge Dowling’s order, click: Judge Dowling Ruling, Feb. 25, 2015.

This story has been updated with an additional information explaining that the judge’s ruling is a preliminary injunction and not a final determination, as well as an additional quote from Mayor Papenfuse.

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Over It

A scene from "Over It," at the Central PA LGBT Center.

A scene from “Over It,” at the Central PA LGBT Center.

The invitation popped up on my Facebook page. It read “Over It.” Over what? Global warming, snow, 15-degree temperatures? Clues developed as I read on.

“Join the cast and supporters of ‘The Vagina Monologues’ as we present ‘Over it,’” a dramatic presentation of an essay against rape and domestic violence, Feb. 13.

To be completely honest, two things scared me about this event. First, the “V” word. I have liberal leanings, but, when it comes to female body parts, I swing quickly to the conservative side. Blame it on Catholic school or growing up in a family that just didn’t talk about that stuff. I can’t say the word “vagina” without cringing a little inside.

Second, the anger and possible man-hating I thought I could encounter. Coming from a family with five brothers, raising three sons, and having a husband who has proved himself a wonderful partner, teammate in life and confidant, man-hating hits close to home for me.

Despite my concerns, which, by the way, were based not on any personal experience but only on media exposure, I wanted to attend this event. New experiences are good for us. They shape us, grow us and give experiences on which to form informed opinions and perspectives.

My friend and I carpooled together and navigated the Harrisburg parking meter system–a system that I’ve contributed about $100 to this year, because, in Harrisburg, if you are one minute late on your meter, you will be found and fined accordingly! I digress. That’s a rant for another blog.

We entered the LGBT Center on 3rd Street to standing room only, except for the dreaded front seats. Well-lit and cheery, the space had art on the walls and light, hardwood floors. The diverse group consisted mostly of women with a smattering of men.

The event began with a discussion around local violence against women, such as the death of Karlie Hall, a young Millersville student, recently killed, allegedly by her boyfriend. Then came a video about 1 Billion Rising, an event of which I was completely unaware. This campaign shines light on and seeks to end the violence perpetrated against 1 billion women and girls around the world.

It began with images of women and girls being harassed, beaten and mutilated. No gratuitous images of victimization, but images that captured the feelings of helplessness and pain. Then came the “one.” These same women and many others stand up to their abusers and, with one finger held high in the air, make a statement against gender-based violence, presenting a portrayal of unity and voice.

Then abruptly the “monologues,” based on an essay by Eve Ensler, began. An audience member stood up and said firmly, “I’m over rape.” Another woman rose and described rape’s “soul splintering” effects. A third emphatically communicated the lifelong, life-altering consequences of rape. The monologues continued with one woman after another asking difficult questions. Why do women blame themselves? Why does society blame them for the crime against them? Why do men who are accused get a free pass?

One question left a big impression on me. The good men out there: “Where the hell are they?” Why don’t they come to our aid?

The feelings expressed included anger, but, more importantly, frustration and disappointment at humanity for not standing up for those who need it.

Afterward, I introduced myself to a number of the performers and employees of the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence, so full of energy, enthusiasm and passion. I shared a personal experience of having unwanted sexual advances made toward me by a trusted father figure. I shared how my first thought after that experience was, “What did I do?” I shared how the second thing I did was immediately tell a trusted friend. Everyone shook their heads in understanding. I teared up.

We talked about what keeps women quiet about their abuse—shame. Shamed people deny and ignore. Shame tries to force silence because it assigns culpability. Women, however, are not responsible for their abuse.

I talked to Demora, a state employee by day and director of Harrisburg’s upcoming presentation of the “The Vagina Monologues” by night. I asked her why she’s participated in this event for the past seven years.

With great feeling, she said it was about healing. As women, we have a habit of hiding things. She said that we’ve all been raped in some way, if not sexually then emotionally or spiritually. If not by a man then by society or by life. That women hide their wounds and “The Vagina Monologues” brings those hurts to the surface so they can heal. I wanted to yell, “Preach it!”

Despite the weighty conversations, people smiled and laughed, drank some wine and ate cupcakes. This place and event were about unity, trust, about understanding and support. No mommy wars here, no facades. What I would have missed, had I succumbed to my unfounded misgivings. I left with a bolstered spirit and some new friends. One thing hasn’t changed though. I still can’t say the “V” word.

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TheBurg Podcast, Feb. 13, 2015

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

Feb. 13, 2015: This week, Larry and Paul talk about selling off undeveloped forest near the DeHart Reservoir, a proposal to invest in south Allison Hill and the demolition of the Riviera Hotel, one of the last old buildings standing on its Uptown block.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music. You can find his podcast, the PRC Show, on SoundCloud and in the iTunes Store.

TheBurg Podcast can be downloaded by clicking on the date above or by visiting the iTunes store. You can also access the podcast via its host page, here.

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Riviera Razed: City Demolishes Historic, Blighted Hotel

Workers today continued demolition at 1742 N. 6th, the former site of the Riviera Bar and Hotel.

Workers today continued demolition at 1742 N. 6th St., the former site of the Riviera Bar and Hotel.

The city continued demolition today on the Riviera Hotel, an abandoned bar and rooming house at the corner of 6th and Kelker that rapidly deteriorated after a 2010 fire and recent series of collapses.

Dave Patton, codes administrator for the city, said the demolition work was bid out to Swatara Township-based Arney Brothers, Inc., for $24,549.

Demolition began on Monday and will probably take a couple of weeks, he said.

Patton also said the owners of the Riviera, Marion and Diana Nicklow of Hershey, have agreed in court to a plan to pay back the city for demolition costs.

The demolition concludes a troubled run for the Riviera, a three-story yellow brick building with faded, blue-gray paint on the window trim and the first-floor façade.

County property records show that the Nicklows purchased the building in March 1999 for $80,000.

They filed for bankruptcy protection in 2009, after defaulting on a business line of credit for the Riviera and a mortgage on a separate property, according to court records.

In June 2005, the Patriot-News reported that a man and a woman were found dead in a room there after another resident noticed a foul odor. Charles Kellar, then the city’s police chief, told the paper it appeared the woman had died weeks before the man.

More recently, Patton recalled discovering a homeless man living on the second floor, who appeared to have gained access via a fire escape. The building was condemned in May 2010 after a fire, Patton said.

riviera2

A Google Earth satellite photo, dated Sept. 6, 2013, shows a gaping hole in the roof of the building, the sole standing structure on its side of the 1700-block of N. 6th Street. Most of the surrounding blocks, once home to rows of attached buildings, are also largely barren, emptied of their Victorian-era structures.

Patton, who said he sought bids for demolition when the north wall began to appear increasingly unsound, recalled witnessing the damage last summer after a further collapse of the roof into the basement.

“It looked like a meteor just came down through the roof,” he said.

The Nicklows have pled guilty to three property code citations so far, Patton said.

“It’s been a long journey with this structure and owner,” he later added, “but fortunately we are nearing the end.”

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With Vote on Land Sale Approaching, Officials Still Have Questions

A map of Capital Region Water land around the DeHart, with the parcel proposed to be sold at right, in purple. Courtesy of Capital Region Water.

A map of Capital Region Water land around the DeHart, with the parcel proposed to be sold at right, in purple. Courtesy of Capital Region Water.

Before they support the sale of land in Clarks Valley, above the reservoir that supplies Harrisburg’s drinking water, the folks at Capital Region Water would like some assurances on exactly how well the land will be preserved.

That was the sense conveyed by some comments at the second of two public hearings on the proposed sale, which took place last night at the Dauphin County Agriculture and Natural Resources Center in Dauphin.

Under the proposed sale, the federal and state governments would partner to conserve the land in perpetuity while also generating short-term revenue for Capital Region Water, the city’s water and sewer authority.

The Department of Defense would put up about 75 percent of the $1.1 million project cost, through a federal program for creating permanent buffer zones around military installations.

Fort Indiantown Gap, a National Guard training facility neighboring the parcel, would apply for the funding, while the state Game Commission would ultimately take ownership of the land, a 383-acre parcel above the DeHart Reservoir.

The deed would include a restriction preventing development of the land, enforceable by the federal government, plus a promise to protect the watershed.

The Conservation Fund, a national environmental charity, would facilitate the transfer.

Tanya Dierolf, Capital Region Water’s sustainability manager, said during the presentation that the authority’s goals for any sale would be threefold: to protect the water, to generate revenue and to manage the authority’s natural resources.

Yet some of the most pointed questions after the presentation came from Capital Region Water officials, who challenged the notion that the commission would be a better steward than the authority.

David Nowotarski, the authority’s chief financial officer, at one point asked why the proposed deed restriction couldn’t contain a clause prohibiting drilling, referring to reports that the Game Commission had in recent years relied on drill leases for revenue.

The DeHart parcel, the purchase of which would link two existing tracts of state gaming lands, does not sit atop the Marcellus Shale, the rock formation tapped for natural gas in recent years with hydraulic fracturing and other drilling methods.

It does, however, sit above the Utica Shale, a formation a few thousand feet deeper than the Marcellus, a point Nowotarski raised after the meeting.

David Mitchell, the land management supervisor for the Game Commission’s southeast region, said the deed would contain language providing for watershed protection.

But Kyle Shenk, the Conservation Fund’s Pennsylvania representative, said the addition of language about drilling and mineral rights could affect the appraisal of the parcel, possibly reducing the amount Capital Region Water could get for it.

Specifically, if the parties were to insert language retaining Capital Region Water’s mineral rights and its right to enforce the restrictions, as Capital Region Water at one point requested, that would change the amount the Conservation Fund could pay for the parcel.

“Our appraiser would have to do a whole new report,” Shenk said.

Dan Galbraith, the authority’s superintendent at the DeHart Dam, also questioned whether the Game Commission would take better care of the land than the authority.

“Who’s a better steward than the owner?” Galbraith asked, adding the land could become a source of revenue in the form of timber sales.

Capital Region Water, formerly the Harrisburg Authority, did realize some revenues from timber sales in the past, but has stopped selling timber until it adopts a new forest management plan, according to Andrew Bliss, an authority spokesman.

Joshua First, introducing himself as a Harrisburg resident who owns 1,500 acres in Clarks Valley, said the deal had his full support.

The Game Commission “are spectacular, A-plus stewards,” said First, who said he hunts and traps on state gaming lands. “My question is, why are we doing only 383 acres? Why aren’t we doing the whole watershed?”

A vote to move forward with the agreement of sale is scheduled for Feb. 25. A board vote in favor will commence a 150-day due diligence period during which all parties can continue to review the proposed sale.

The authority has also commissioned a consulting engineer’s report from Herbert, Rowland and Grubic regarding the sale, which will review whether the transfer would materially affect bondholders as well as what forest management options are possible for the area, Bliss said.

Capital Region Water is asking for public input, which should be submitted at capitalregionwater.com by Feb. 18.

This story has been updated with clarifying information from the Conservation Fund about how proposed changes to a deed restriction would affect the land’s potential sale value.

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TheBurg Podcast, Feb. 6, 2015

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

Feb. 6, 2015: This week, Larry and Paul discuss Harrisburg’s defense against lawsuits over its gun control ordinances and the pros and cons of city living.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music and whose own podcast, the PRC Show, is available on SoundCloud and in the iTunes store.

TheBurg Podcast can be downloaded by clicking on the date above or by visiting the iTunes store. You can also access the podcast via its host page, here.

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Parking Advisory Meeting Scheduled for Feb. 24

The next advisory committee meeting for the Harrisburg parking system will take place Tuesday, Feb. 24 at downtown’s Crowne Plaza hotel at 6 p.m.

The meeting will include an annual review of the parking system and discussion of community programs, according to a press release.

The meeting will be open to the public and the press, who are being asked to send questions in advance for consideration by the committee.

Questions should be submitted by email to [email protected] by Feb. 19.

Park Harrisburg took over parking operations last year, after Harrisburg signed a long-term lease of its on-street and off-street parking as part of a state workout of its historic incinerator-related debt.

The advisory committee has representatives from various parties to the workout deal, including the mayor’s office, City Council, the state Department of General Services and PK Harris Advisors, Inc.., an affiliate of Trimont Real Estate.

The group has no decision-making power, but does pass on recommendations to the system’s operators.

The Feb. 24 meeting will be the group’s third. The previous meeting, on Oct. 9, was private, but the first meeting, on Feb. 18, 2014, was open to members of the public, 16 of whom spoke at the microphone, mostly complaining about rates and hours.

As of Wednesday, the committee had not decided whether it would hear comments at the meeting itself or only consider those sent in advance, according to John Gass, Trimont’s director.

“We are considering whether we will allow additional questions at the public meeting so have not concluded on that point,” Gass said. “If we receive a large number of questions, we will probably not take additional questions.”

Park Harrisburg’s operator, SP+ Municipal, is an operating division of SP Plus Corporation and operates more than 4,200 parking facilities with over 2.1 million parking spaces, according to the release.

More information on Park Harrisburg’s parking operations can be found at ParkHarrisburg.com or by calling 717-234-2274, Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

 

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Harrisburg Mayor OKs State’s Verizon Workout, Reluctantly

On Tuesday night, Harrisburg City Council voted 6-0 in favor of an agreement with Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp., the bond insurer familiarly known as AGM, to help the city avoid default on a $41.6 million debt that starts coming due in 2016.

The settlement represents a last, critical piece in a complex negotiation to resolve the debt in a way that would keep Harrisburg’s finances stable, a year and a half after the city adopted a state-sponsored plan to avert bankruptcy.

Council’s vote, however, passed the settlement to Mayor Eric Papenfuse, who on Friday had a message for the folks who brokered it: he’ll sign, but he isn’t happy.

In a 770-word open letter to Fred Reddig, Harrisburg’s coordinator under the state oversight program for distressed municipalities, Papenfuse critiqued what he saw as the deal’s numerous flaws, saying Reddig’s team had put “enormous pressure” on him to sign the documents before he had time to review them thoroughly.

The mayor attacked the city’s share of the proceeds from the deal, saying they ranged from  “anemic” to “disappointing.” He accused the coordinator of having failed to consider the city’s best interest, and blasted an energy contract that wasn’t publicly bid. And he claimed he’d been threatened with the loss of $5 million in annual state funding if he didn’t sign off on the deal.

Several of the involved parties did not return calls on Friday. But a few who did stuck up for the arrangement. Steven Goldfield, a financial advisor to Reddig, said the state Department of General Services, whose 17-year downtown lease is a key piece of the transaction, “bent over backwards” to make things work for the city.

And Brad Jones, the CEO of Harristown Development Corporation, the manager of the downtown properties involved, said he and his colleagues “really feel like we’ve been thrown under the bus.”

Under the arrangement, Harristown had assumed the risk of a new loan and had waived its customary management fee, Jones said. The deal was difficult, he added, but “we did the best we could.”

The deal is the culmination of two years of negotiations to resolve an outstanding debt burden from a city-backed borrowing in 1998.

That year, the city sold three office towers in Strawberry Square to the Harrisburg Redevelopment Authority, at the same time guaranteeing around $24 million in bonds the authority issued to finance the purchase.

Some of the bonds were secured by rent payments from the Commonwealth, which is under contract to lease office space in two of the towers through 2025.

But about $7 million of the original debt was secured by the rent in a separate tower, whose primary tenant, Verizon, was set to depart in 2016.

Under the terms of the original debt issue, the only security for the bonds beyond tenant payments was city tax revenues, meaning that the empty office building would leave Harrisburg on the hook for the full principal and interest on the original debt, for a total of $41.6 million.

In September, the state Department of General Services agreed to pick up where Verizon lets off, with a 17-year lease that will pay off a portion of the city’s obligation each year, for a total of around $11 million through 2033.

As a condition of that lease, however, the Commonwealth required renovation of all three buildings, which Harristown agreed to undertake by way of a $16 million retrofit, financed with a guaranteed energy savings contract with Siemens.

In turn, the lender for the retrofit, First National Bank, required the settlement agreement with AGM that council voted for Tuesday, which would provide some assurance that the Strawberry Square assets wouldn’t get tied up in litigation in the event of a city default.

The mayor’s complaint about the no-bid contract was a reference to Siemens, which Jones acknowledged was awarded the contract without a bid. But, Jones added, Harristown was not a government entity and was not required to seek bids.

Additionally, Jones said, Harristown chose Siemens because the company had already done no-fee work auditing the energy consumption of the Strawberry Square facility, which he described as having high maintenance costs and being badly in need of upgrades.

The mayor ultimately signed the agreement around noon on Friday, he said. But in his released statement, and again at a press conference in the afternoon, he explained he did so “not because I think it is a good enough deal for the residents of Harrisburg, but because I feel the consequences could be worse.”

Reached by phone Friday, City Councilman Ben Allatt, the budget and finance committee chair, said he sympathized with the mayor’s remarks, describing the ultimate arrangement as “the lesser of two evils.”

Allatt pointed to some of the expected benefits of the state lease, including the parking and restaurant revenues that should be realized from the addition of around 900 workers to the downtown scene.

He also expressed frustration over feeling that many negotiations have been “forced on the city” in the course of the state’s intervention, saying Papenfuse “is always right to push back” on contracts that may not be the best deal for the city.

“Are we really getting the best deal? At the end of the day, it’s hard to say,” Allatt said. But, he added of the coordinator’s team, “I don’t think they were negotiating in bad faith for the city. I think there was no easy scenario.”

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Harrisburg Gets a Lift as Uber Launches in City

Surrounded by media, Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse gets set to take the first ride in our area in an Uber car.

Surrounded by media, Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse gets set to take the first ride in our area in an Uber car.

 

Got a car?

Then you might be able to go into business for yourself, as the Uber ride-sharing service launches later today in Harrisburg.

Company General Manager Jennifer Krusius joined Mayor Eric Papenfuse to announce the arrival of Uber, which uses a smartphone application to link drivers and riders. The service goes live at 5 p.m.

Papenfuse touted Uber’s “ease of use” for riders, as well as the opportunity for drivers to earn extra income. He then took the ceremonial first Uber ride.

The cost to use the service is a $2 base fare, then $1.75 per mile and 25 cents per minute. Anyone who signs up for Uber will receive two free rides valued at up to $25 each, said Krusius.

Harrisburg is at the center of this area’s Uber territory, which runs west-to-east in a peanut-shaped design that goes from the western Carlisle suburbs in Cumberland County to Palmyra in Lebanon County. Besides Harrisburg, the territory includes such places as Mechanicsburg, Camp Hill, Linglestown, Hummelstown and Hershey.

The state has approved a two-year license for Uber, which began in a few large American cities before extending service to smaller metropolitan areas and even foreign countries. Some people believe that Uber threatens the long-established taxi industry, which, unlike Uber, is heavily regulated by government.

To find out more about Uber, including how to use the app and become a driver, visit the company’s website.

Senior writer Paul Barker contributed to this story. 

 

 

 

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