TheBurg Podcast, Oct. 24, 2014

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

Oct. 24, 2014: This week, Larry and Paul discuss turmoil in the treasurer’s office, the school board’s public meeting on tax abatement, and the recovery plan for Harrisburg’s schools.

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School Board Awards $63,000 Contract To Retired Assistant Superintendent

The Harrisburg school board on Monday night awarded a $63,750 contract to Barbara Hasan, a former assistant superintendent who retired from the district in June, for services as a principal mentor, a position newly created this year.

The contract, under which Hasan will be paid $70 per hour, will be for 25 hours per week of work and is effective Oct. 21 of this year through June 30, 2015.

Two other principal mentors, Lori Dixon and Joy MacKenzie, were hired at last month’s regular board meeting on Sept. 15. Their contracts are for the same hourly rate of $70 per hour, but for a smaller number of hours than Hasan’s, with Dixon slated to work 25 hours per month and MacKenzie 20 hours per month.

Hasan’s contract is between the school district and Hasan Educational Consultant, a firm founded on Sept. 18, according to a business filing with the Pennsylvania state department. The filing lists Hasan as the business owner.

Carol Kaufmann, the school board secretary, said at Monday night’s board meeting that this is the first time the school district has hired principal mentors.

The board agendas for Sept. 15 and Oct. 20 describe the position somewhat differently, with the September agenda referring to “principal mentor services” and the October agenda, which describes Hasan’s larger contract, referring to “support, evaluation, and guidance to Principals assigned by the Superintendent or designee.”

Kaufmann, however, said the jobs had the “same focus.”

After Monday’s board meeting, Superintendent Sybil Knight-Burney said she was “excited” about having the principal mentors, who she said would help principals “in content areas as well as data analysis.”

All three mentors are past principals themselves, said Knight-Burney, herself a past principal. “Being principal sometimes is a very lonely place,” she added. “Sometimes they need that support.”

Hasan, who retired on June 27, has several family members currently employed in the district. Her daughter, Aqila, was promoted in July from high school math teacher to assistant principal at SciTech, a position newly created this year at an annual salary of $87,624.

Another daughter, Ayesha, is a first-grade teacher at Foose, while a son, Bilal, is the district’s federal programs coordinator.

The Harrisburg school district currently employs 10 principals and at least as many assistant principals in its 10 schools, according to individual school pages on the district website.

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TheBurg Podcast, Oct. 17, 2014

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

Oct. 17, 2014: This week Larry and Paul discuss the attempted armed robbery of two Democratic lawmakers in Harrisburg, the clear-cutting of a section of Riverfront Park, debates over the use of the incinerator host fee and Civil War Museum funding, and good news on the arts and culture front in Midtown.

Intro and outro music: “Cadillac Baby,” by Will Batts.

 

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Danger Zones

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Nothing quite lures the shark in a reporter like a crime story, and one this week, though it lacked the scent of blood, offered plenty to feast on.

On Tuesday night, a few minutes before 11 p.m., a 15-year-old boy and a Democratic state lawmaker exchanged gunfire on a residential block in Midtown Harrisburg. According to a statement by the lawmaker, Rep. Marty Flynn of Scranton, he was walking with another representative to an apartment they rent on 2nd Street when the boy approached, pointing a gun at them and asking for their wallets.

Flynn drew a handgun of his own and fired two shots; the juvenile fired one. Then, the statement says, they “ran in different directions.” No one was injured.

Aside from the usual intrigue accompanying a crime, what made the incident so appetizing to the press? First, there was the fact that six people were involved in the incident, four of them minors. Along with the second lawmaker, Rep. Ryan Bizzarro, D-Erie, there were allegedly three additional perpetrators, one of them 15 years old like the shooter, the others 17.

Then there was the interest in the lawmakers themselves—first-termers whose names sound like a Marvel superhero and his alter-ego. Flynn, a former Lackawanna County prison guard, also has a past that includes training in mixed martial arts and boxing.

Capitolwire.com, a subscription news service covering the statehouse, broke the story in the middle of the night, after a reporter picked up a tip while monitoring a late-running Senate session at the statehouse. By Wednesday morning, every newspaper in the Commonwealth was interested, and even some of the seasoned reporters couldn’t help but get caught up in the sensationalism.

“Two lawmakers involved in shoot-out with robbers near Capitol,” ran the headline on Philly.com, suggesting that whatever went down was a good deal heavier than three misfires and a mutual decision to flee the scene.

But the truly sensational headline came in the local paper of record, the Patriot-News, whose front page in the Thursday morning print-edition proclaimed Harrisburg “Dangerous for anybody.” Below the fold—lest the absence of subject and verb confuse readers—a second headline clarifies exactly what is dangerous, and for whom: “Capitol staffers are urged to avoid city streets.”

The lower headline was derived from a quote by Tony Aliano, chief of staff to the Republican Speaker of the House, who, we are told, counseled “representatives seeking advice” in the wake of Tuesday’s incident to “avoid the streets of Harrisburg until they get the situation under control.” What “situation” is being referred to here, I’m not sure; given the lawmakers involved in the shooting were Democrats, I think the “situation” might be the Republicans’ horror that the latest poster-child for the right to carry is a straight-laced former boxer of the opposing party.

But the Aliano quote didn’t come from Aliano. It entered the pages of the Patriot secondhand, by way of the spokesman for the House Republicans, Steve Miskin. Which leads to a question: Did anyone at the Patriot pause to consider whether a secondhand quote from someone barely connected to the incident deserved to dictate the tone of an entire article?

Moreover, on what authority are Miskin and Aliano—not to mention Flynn, whose own quote, “I don’t feel safe walking the streets in Harrisburg,” also graces the story—making pronouncements about crime in the city? To put this another way, would a quote from the city’s police chief belong in a story on the prospects of a Senate bill?

I was at the press conference Wednesday afternoon in city hall at which the mayor and Chief Thomas Carter discussed Tuesday’s shooting. Because I was there, I heard other quotes and facts about the incident which might have earned a more prominent place in the next day’s reporting. For starters, there were the comments from Mayor Papenfuse, who kicked things off by praising what he saw as a case of “excellent police work.” As it turned out, the police department had placed extra officers in the area after a similar incident Monday night, and they apprehended three of the four alleged criminals within five minutes of receiving the 911 call.

Twice in the day after Tuesday’s exchange of fire, I passed by the block where the shooting occurred. The first time was after Wednesday’s conference, when my editor and I took a detour up the street by car. There we encountered a middle-aged couple who live in one of the many well-kept buildings on the block. They had heard the shots, they said, and like many of their neighbors had immediately called the police. They told us one of the shell casings had been recovered from the sidewalk in front of their home. They said they were always impressed by the Harrisburg police, whom they thought deserved more credit. They did not seem the least bit rattled.

The second time was later that night, around 11 p.m., the same time as the shooting the night before. This time, I was in the neighborhood because I live there, a few doors down from the apartment rented by Bizzarro and Flynn. At the end of the block where the shooting occurred is the Midtown Tavern, my neighborhood bar. A small crowd was there, most of them for the Giants-Cardinals game. The shooting, if it troubled them at all, seemed to be outweighed by the $2 drafts on special and the 40-cent wings.

It bears mentioning that the Patriot’s coverage was not totally one-sided. On Thursday afternoon, the online paper ran several follow-up stories, including one with the headline “Crimes targeting random victims still relatively rare in Harrisburg.” Reading between the lines, however, you see it’s a story in part created by the earlier coverage; it includes a comment from the mayor’s spokeswoman, who is quoted as being unhappy with “sensational and misleading” headlines.

In any case, the calculus that led the paper to step out first with headlines like the one in print is all-too-evident on the Web page: the “relatively rare” hook, as of this writing, had drawn six comments and two shares on Twitter, up against the 210 comments and 309 Facebook shares drawn by its “I don’t feel safe” counterpart.

Even the follow-ups, though, point back to the original problem. That the paper should spend further energy on the story just to balance out prior coverage shows what’s really at issue. It’s not simply the harm that front pages like this morning’s do by distorting what it’s really like to live in the city. It’s the good they fail to do, by diverting resources—and good reporters—towards sensation and drama and away from what matters.

Along this line, let me suggest an area of inquiry, inspired by this week’s events, that could use a few more notebooks and pairs of eyes: three of the four juveniles charged in the attempted robbery were students in the Harrisburg school district, where, over the past two years, 247 teachers and 28 administrators have either resigned, retired or been furloughed.

Might this exodus of experience, and its effect on school and student morale, have something to do with the recent state intervention in the district, under which a Republican-appointed official cut benefits and salaries? It almost sounds like a question for a spokesman at the Capitol.

An earlier version of this article referred speculatively to a “news peg” on which a Patriot-News article, “Crimes targeting random victims still relatively rare in Harrisburg,” was based. The phrase “a story the earlier coverage created” has been changed to “a story in part created by the earlier coverage”; the reference to the story’s news peg has been removed.

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Parking Advisory Committee Releases Meeting Summary

The Park Harrisburg Advisory Committee released a summary this week of a private meeting it held on Thursday, Oct. 9, at the offices of the Capital Region Economic Development Corporation, or CREDC, to discuss operations so far in 2014.

It was the committee’s second meeting since new management took charge of Harrisburg’s downtown parking system last year, as part of a deal that removed around $490 million in unfunded debt from the city’s books.

Among the items for discussion were the year’s financials to date, which a press release said “showed moderate profit,” and the installation of automated entrances and exits in garages, expected to begin before the end of the year.

The group also discussed the selection of a pay-by-phone vendor, Pango, whose service is slated to become available to customers in the last quarter of 2014.

The committee’s first meeting, on Feb. 20, was open to the public and was held at the Crowne Plaza hotel downtown. During the meeting, 16 people spoke during public comment, mostly to complain about increased rates and longer hours.

The next committee meeting, scheduled for February 2015, will include “a public session and a private session,” according to the press release.

In addition to representatives of the system’s operator and manager, the committee also includes representatives of the Harrisburg mayor’s office, the City Council president and other stakeholders.

CREDC holds a seat on the committee as a designee of PEDFA, the state financing agency which issued the bonds for the parking transaction last year.

To download the press release, which includes the 2014 financials and minutes of the Feb. 20 meeting, click here.

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Teens Charged in Shooting, Robbery Implicated in Similar Incident

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Harrisburg Police Chief Thomas Carter speaks as Mayor Eric Papenfuse looks on during today’s press briefing on the robbery and shooting involving four teens and two state legislators.

Harrisburg teenagers arrested today in an armed robbery involving a shoot-out with two state legislators have been implicated in a similar crime that took place Monday night at the foot of the Capitol building.

Harrisburg Police Chief Thomas Carter said today that the same four teens would be charged in connection with an armed robbery at N. 3rd and State streets, in which three legislative staffers were robbed as they exited the Capitol grounds.

“I can confirm that it’s the same individuals,” said Carter during a press briefing this afternoon.

Zha-quan McGhee, 15, has been charged with attempted homicide, aggravated assault, robbery, conspiracy robbery and possession of a firearm by a minor after allegedly attempting to hold up state Rep. Marty Flynn (D-Scranton) and Rep. Ryan Bizzarro (D-Erie). His alleged accomplices, all charged with robbery and conspiracy robbery, are Jamani Ellison, 17, Derek Anderson, 17, and Jyair Leonard, 15.

All four suspects are being charged as adults, officials said.

The legislators were accosted as they walked down the 200-block of Herr Street at about 11 p.m. last night as they headed back to the house they rent on N. 2nd Street.

According to Flynn, the pair had a late dinner at a downtown restaurant with several other legislators, then walked with two colleagues back to the Capitol. They were almost home in Midtown when they encountered the teenagers.

McGhee allegedly threatened both men with a handgun, demanding their wallets, said Flynn, who then pulled out his own, legally registered handgun. Carter said that McGhee fired once and Flynn twice, though no one was hit. Three casings and one projectile have been recovered from the crime scene so far, police said.

Officials said that police responded quickly, catching three of the suspects within five minutes of the 911 call. The fourth suspect was arrested early this morning.

Papenfuse attributed the rapid response to the fact that police had beefed up patrols in the downtown and Midtown areas following the robbery on Monday night. About eight additional police were on duty at the time, said Carter.

Papenfuse and Carter both lamented the “foolishness” of how the teenagers behaved, citing the dangerous mix of youth and guns. Three of the four were Harrisburg High School students.

“Don’t mess with guns,” said Papenfuse. “If you mess with guns, you’re going to jail.”

Officials at Wednesday’s press conference also suggested that the suspects had escalated from committing more minor crimes, such as auto break-ins, to Tuesday night’s attempted robbery, but did not provide details about prior incidents.

One of the suspects, Jyair Leonard, wrote on his Facebook page on Oct. 10 that he had been expelled from Harrisburg High. In a comment below the posting, he explained he “snapped” on a principal in the school office. A public relations officer with the district did not return a phone call requesting comment.

Papenfuse added that this incident lends more urgency to the need to reinstate Harrisburg’s school resource officer program, which was suspended several years ago for budgetary reasons. He first made that call last week after a student was sexually assaulted a block away from Harrisburg High School.

The city has drafted a proposal for rebooting the program to present to district officials, Papenfuse said. The school district would be expected to fund the cost of the program, which he estimated would be around $500,000 per year.

Staff writer Paul Barker contributed reporting for this story.

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Clear-Cut of Riverbank Prompts Internal Review

A section of the riverfront embankment that was clear-cut by a private contractor on Sept. 23.

A section of the riverfront embankment that was clear-cut by a private contractor on Sept. 23.

The city is conducting an internal review of its policies on tree removal, following a department head’s decision three weeks ago to approve a private owner’s request to clear-cut about 80 yards of public land along the Susquehanna River.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse, who spoke about the matter after a City Council legislative session Tuesday, said that he learned about the removal only “after the fact” and that he was “not pleased with the level of review” the request received.

According to city officials, Director of Public Works Aaron Johnson green-lighted the removal on Sept. 23 of dozens of trees from an embankment along the river in the 2900 block of N. Front Street.

The request was made by owner Michael Wilson of two mansions across the street from the area, who wanted to improve views of the river for guests at a bed and breakfast complex planned for the site, officials said.

Papenfuse said Tuesday that Johnson gave his approval on the condition that the owner contract with a professional tree service for the removal.

Wilson hired Stoner’s Tree Service to perform the work, according to the mayor’s spokeswoman, Joyce Davis.

The city currently has no process for handling such requests aside from the approval of departmental heads, Papenfuse said, adding that city officials believed the request for the N. Front Street embankment was the first of its kind.

But in the future, he said, the city’s new arborist position, which council voted to fund during Tuesday’s session, would be in charge of reviewing applications regarding tree removal on public land.

Papenfuse also said the city had contacted the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources to seek recommendations for plantings on the embankment to prevent soil erosion.

“There may be some replanting that will occur, but we’re going to let DCNR advise us on that,” the mayor said. “And we may ask the property owner to pay for that.”

Papenfuse also affirmed on Tuesday that the embankment in question formed part of Riverfront Park. The city solicitor, Neil Grover, had previously said he was trying to establish the park’s boundaries, though the fact that the embankment is public land was never in dispute.

Johnson, who has held management-level positions in the public works department since 2004, ran against Papenfuse as an independent candidate for mayor in last fall’s election. Upon taking office, Papenfuse promoted him from his most recent position as deputy director of public works.

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Like Her Successor, Mayor Linda Thompson Targeted Museum Finances, Too

Former Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson.

Former Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson.

Nearly 18 months before Mayor Eric Papenfuse asked the Dauphin County commissioners to suspend payments to the National Civil War Museum, his predecessor, Linda Thompson, took up the issue herself.

In a letter dated Feb. 4, 2013, Thompson asked museum officials to renegotiate the museum’s $1 annual rent payment for the building and artifacts it leases from the city.

The letter was recently made available to TheBurg in response to a right-to-know request.

Thompson’s letter, addressed to museum CEO Wayne Motts, notes that the city “extends its sincerest appreciation and respect to the National Civil War Museum for keeping the history of the Civil War alive in Harrisburg.”

It goes on to explain that, under the terms of the museum’s lease, it was expected the museum would eventually negotiate the payment of “more than a nominal rent” to the city. The letter then cites a section of the lease in which the museum consents to renegotiate rent upon request from the city or City Council after five years, “but only based on its ability to pay.”

The lease was originally signed by former Mayor Steve Reed in April 2001. It is not indicated in Thompson’s letter whether the city tried to initiate rent negotiations on a prior occasion.

The letter ends with a request that the museum contact a senior assistant to the mayor to set up a meeting. “Please be prepared with the necessary financial records, so that the City may assess your ‘ability to pay’ an appropriate rental payment,” it concludes. Thompson’s signature follows.

In its response to TheBurg’s right-to-know request, the city also provided the museum’s reply to Thompson, in a letter from Motts dated March 28, 2013.

“Unfortunately, the Museum is not in a position to pay any additional rent for the foreseeable future,” Motts writes in his reply. He refers to an enclosed audited financial statement for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2012, which he says “clearly reveals the inability of the Museum to pay additional rent at this time.”

Motts apologizes for the late reply, explaining that museum officials were waiting for the 2012 financial statement to be completed.

Motts then goes on to request a payment from the city for capital expenses totaling $106,652, which he claims the city is obligated to pay under the lease. “Accordingly, and considering the Museum’s financial condition, we ask that you please expedite the approval and payment of these items as promptly as possible,” he writes.

Thompson, who was elected mayor in 2009, was defeated by Papenfuse in the 2013 Democratic mayoral primary. She is currently running for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives against incumbent Scott Perry.

The dispute between Mayor Papenfuse and museum officials over the museum’s rent payments and ongoing tax subsidies were the subject of a September feature in TheBurg. Copies of the exchange between Thompson and Motts can be downloaded here.

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City Approved Clear-Cutting on Riverbank

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The denuded riverbank along the 2900-block of N. Front Street in Harrisburg.

A new bed and breakfast is slated to open next year in Harrisburg and, thanks to the city, its guests will enjoy spectacular views of the Susquehanna River.

The city today confirmed that it gave its blessing to a private contractor to clear-cut about 80 yards of embankment on city-owned land along the Susquehanna River on the 2900-block of N. Front Street.

Director of Public Works Aaron Johnson approved the removal of the trees and undergrowth from the hillside and banks of the river after B&B owner Michael Wilson of Lisburn requested permission to clear the area, said Joyce Davis, the city’s director of communications.

The trees and undergrowth, which Davis said were removed by Stoner’s Tree Service on Sept. 23, blocked views of the river from the future B&B across the street.

Wilson purchased two historic mansions at 2909 and 2917 N. Front, once part of the Mary K complex, at auction last April and proposed to develop them into a bed and breakfast. The city’s Zoning Hearing Board approved the proposal late last month.

Wilson did not return a phone call requesting comment on the removal, which included dozens of trees and more than 100 separate trunks, some of which grew in clusters.

Initially, Davis told TheBurg that she believed a permit had been applied for to conduct the tree clearing, but later said that no permit was required for the work.

Neil Grover, the city solicitor, said he was reviewing the circumstances surrounding the tree removal, including whether the area in question was a part of Riverfront Park.

A city parks and recreation ordinance forbids people from damaging or removing trees in city parks, while a separate ordinance requires people to obtain a permit before trimming or removing trees along city streets or highways.

Among the city’s obligations is to ensure that the bank will “hold itself together” after the removal of trees and brush, Grover said. According to Davis, several of the trees were already dead, and stumps were left in to prevent erosion.

Lisa Kasianowitz, a community relations coordinator with the state Department of Environmental Protection, said her agency had not been notified of the tree removal. She added, however, that no state permit would be needed unless the contractor had to enter the river with heavy equipment, if construction were performed on the embankment or if fill material were added.

This story has been updated with the date of the tree removal and the name of the company that performed it.

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TheBurg Podcast, Oct. 10, 2014

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

Oct. 10, 2014: Editor-in-chief Larry Binda and senior writer Paul Barker discuss Mayor Eric Papenfuse’s “State of the City” address earlier this week, along with tax abatement, developments in public safety and the private meeting of the public-private partnership now running Harrisburg’s parking system.

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