Harrisburg council approves Broad Street Market budget adjustment, grant applications for parks, roads

Broad Street Market brick building

Harrisburg has allotted more money towards the Broad Street Market rebuild.

City Council on Tuesday approved increasing the budget for the brick building rebuild after last week’s discussion in which city officials explained unforeseen costs.

Council approved funding about $3.2 million in change orders for the market, which officials said has brought the total project cost from $20.8 million to $23.7 million.

A majority of the change orders came from the collapse of one of the brick building’s walls during construction, and the related foundation and shoring work to stabilize the structure, explained Project Manager Debbie Reihart.

To cover the costs, Harrisburg pulled money from its Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) fund and anticipates around $3 million in additional insurance reimbursements.

A few residents during public comment expressed their concern with the city using CDBG funds that could go to grassroots organizations and public infrastructure projects. However, council member Lamont Jones said that the city needs to keep the rebuild project moving and that council is actively trying to work with the mayor.

“We want to make sure that these works get done in our city, so we have to find some type of common ground,” Jones said. “Me personally, I don’t agree with the $23.7 million spend on this one brick building. However, we are in the midst of this, and we cannot stop this project at this moment because it will cost us more and more and more money.”

Also on Tuesday, council approved three grant application submissions for park and roadwork projects.

The largest ask is for the U.S. Department of Transportation for $4.3 million to improve safety on Division Street, from N. 2nd to N. 7th Street. The project would aim to incorporate traffic calming features, crosswalks, traffic signal upgrades, sidewalk and ADA upgrades and bike lanes.

The Division Street project is still in the early stages and has yet to go through the design phase, according to City Engineer Joel Seiders.

The city will also submit a grant request to the PA Department of Community and Economic Development for $250,000 to support the Capital Area Greenbelt Association’s relocation of the Greenbelt in South Harrisburg. The money would support lighting and safety measures.

Finally, the city will request $250,000 from DCED for redesign and upgrades at Vernon Street Park in South Allison Hill.

Council also approved allocating additional money to several grant allocations in the city’s Host Municipalities Fund and General Fund. The following organizations have been named as potential awardees.

  • Harrisburg Housing Authority—Summer Youth Program, $200,000
  • Pop’s House—July Music Series at Reservoir Park, $25,000
  • Civic Club of Harrisburg—City-wide Juneteenth Celebration, $20,000
  • Harrisburg Cougar Midget Football Association—youth football and cheerleading programs, $60,000
  • Evolve Youth Trades Academy, $25,200

Including these allocations in the budget typically allows the mayor to award up to the designated amount to each organization. However, council amended the resolution designating the funding to include a requirement that each organization make a presentation at a council meeting before funds are released. The amendment also added that any of that money that is not used can be reallocated to other organizations.

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Food, Music, More: PA Greek Fest returns this weekend for 54th year

For some, it’s the most-anticipated annual event on the central PA calendar.

The three-day PA Greek Fest returns this weekend for its 54th year, with food, music, activities and, yes, more food, held, as always at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral.

“We went to welcome everyone—not just to the festival, but also into our beautiful Cathedral during their visit,” said Rev. Fr. Michael Varvarelis. “Our Cathedral tours will inspire you, the Orthodox Christian bookstore will educate you, and the food and drink will entice you, and the hospitality will overwhelm you.”

According to organizers, Greek cuisine and pastries will be on offer, as will Greek music, dancing, groceries and more.

Available dishes will include favorites like roasted lamb shank, moussaka, pastitsio and Greek salads, among others. There will be a gyro and souvlaki stand and sweets such as baklava and loukoumades.

Besides the abundant food, the Olympic Flames Dance Troupe will showcase colorful costumes, traditional music and dancing.

New this year: the festival is offering free shuttle service from the Highmark parking lot at 1800 Center St. in Wormleysburg. The shuttle will drop visitors off right at the festival, a welcome development due to the typically large crowds and parking concerns.

As always, a portion of the festival’s proceeds will be donated to area nonprofits. In 2025, organizers donated to over 30 different groups, including the Capital Area Coalition on Homelessness, Veteran’s Outreach of PA and the Central PA Food Bank.

PA Greek Fest takes place May 15 to 17 at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral, 1000 Yverdon Dr., Camp Hill (Wormleysburg). For more information, visit www.PAGreekFest.com.

 

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From Central Penn to Sydney: College coach qualifies for world marathon stage

Coach Kelly Smith at the Philadelphia Marathon

Long before the starting gun fires and the crowds begin to roar in Sydney, Australia, Central Penn College’s cross-country Coach Kelly Smith is already putting in the work most people never see.

Smith recently earned a coveted bid to the Sydney Marathon—an achievement that places her on one of the sport’s biggest international stages. While balancing motherhood, coaching, and daily life, Smith continues to attack each morning with the grit and determination that have defined her running journey for years.

Central Penn College’s Athletics intern and basketball player Khalil Dukes checked in with her about the upcoming opportunity.

 

Q: What inspired you to take on the marathon distance again?

I grew up around running.  It was part of the fabric of my childhood. My parents were champion runners in the late 1970s and 1980s, so some of my earliest memories are of standing at race finish lines waiting for my mom. I probably knew that a marathon was 26.2 miles before I even learned my ABCs.

I ran my first marathon as a junior in college, but I’ll be honest, I approached it all wrong. I trained in basketball shoes, fueled myself with pizza and Miller Lite, and ran in the peak summer heat. It was a tough, humbling experience, and by the end of it, I swore I’d never run again.

And for about 10 years, I didn’t.

I found my way back to running in a much more lighthearted way. My husband’s company sponsored a local Turkey Trot 5K, and he signed us up. That race reminded me that running could actually be fun. From there, I started training for half marathons, and eventually, I felt ready to take on the marathon distance again, this time with intention and discipline.

Crossing that finish line was completely different. I felt strong, prepared, and genuinely proud.  It was like rediscovering something that had always been part of me.

That experience sparked a bigger goal: to run the World Marathon Majors. I was accepted into Berlin in 2021, followed by Tokyo and Chicago, and suddenly running became a way to see the world.

One of the most meaningful milestones in that journey was the London Marathon in 2024. I completed it while 20 weeks pregnant with my son, and crossing that finish line with him is something I’ll carry with me forever. It wasn’t about time or performance—it was about resilience, perspective, and what really matters.

I was also selected for Sydney and New York City in 2024, but chose to defer as I prioritized recovery postpartum to avoid risking injury. That decision reinforced an important lesson for me about balance and long-term thinking.  This year, I’m picking that journey back up.  

Fun fact – I don’t actually love the marathon distance. I haven’t quite mastered it yet. In recent years, I’ve really come to enjoy the 5K. There’s something about pushing hard for a shorter period of time that plays more naturally to my strengths as a runner.

But I keep coming back to the marathon because it’s difficult. It challenges me in ways that nothing else does, both mentally and physically. It’s a puzzle I haven’t solved yet, and that’s what keeps me curious and motivated.

I know there’s a way for me to put together the right race one day, and until then, I’m committed to the process. I show up, I prepare, and I give it everything I have on race day. My last marathon was a full send, and it didn’t go the way I hoped, but that’s part of racing.

For me, it’s about continuing to show up, learn, and grow.  I’m a mother now, and I’m a different runner than I used to be, but in many ways, I’m stronger. I have more perspective, more discipline, and a deeper sense of purpose behind why I run.  Yes, I’m older, but I fully believe my best running is still ahead of me.  I trust the work I’m putting in, and I’m excited about what’s still to come.  Bring on Sydney!

 

Q: What does training look like for you now?

To be honest, this marathon training cycle looks very different from my previous ones. I’m currently working through a disc injury in my back while also navigating postpartum recovery, so I’ve had to adjust my expectations. I know I won’t be able to log the same volume or intensity that I have in the past.

But instead of focusing on those limitations, I’ve shifted my mindset toward what I can do. I’m prioritizing physical therapy, building strength in the weight room, and being intentional about recovery so my body can heal properly. And when I do get out for runs, I’m less focused on pace and more focused on appreciating the opportunity to be outside and train for something meaningful.

Sydney may not be the “comeback race” I once imagined, but it represents something even more important. It’s a milestone in a different sense – one where my son will be there to watch me cross the finish line. That perspective has made this journey just as meaningful, if not more, and I truly can’t wait for that moment.

 

Q: What has been the most challenging part of training so far?

Time is definitely the biggest challenge. Since becoming a parent, the days feel shorter, and I’m constantly finding ways to fit training into an already full schedule.

What’s made it possible is having an incredible teammate in my husband, Brian, who supports me fully. We’ve learned how to make running fit into our lives as parents instead of competing with it. For example, some of my long runs become “destination” runs where I’ll finish at a local park where Brian and my son are waiting. It turns into family time, so I’m not sacrificing those moments.  I’m building them into the process.

I also remind myself that distance running isn’t just about mileage, it’s about recovery too. Prioritizing rest with a one-year-old isn’t always easy, but it’s something I’m intentional about, even if it looks different than it used to.  I try to do daily yoga, stretching, or foam rolling.  And it’s turned into a bit of a family activity.  My son is fascinated by my massage gun and thinks it’s the best “toy” in the house. It definitely keeps things light and reminds me not to take any of it too seriously.

At the end of the day, running is meant to add to my life, not take away from it. With the right support and a flexible mindset, I’ve been able to keep that balance.

 

Q: What advice would you give someone preparing to run their first marathon?

It doesn’t matter how fast you go; what matters is that you go. Show up, stay consistent, and put in the work. Talent can only take you so far; it’s consistency that drives real progress.

That means showing up on the days you don’t feel like it, running in less-than-perfect conditions, and building the habit of doing the work anyway. Progress doesn’t happen all at once.  It comes from stacking small efforts over time. Set realistic milestones along the way, whether that’s running one mile without stopping or building up to 30 minutes. Those checkpoints help you stay grounded and give you something to celebrate.

It’s also important to be honest about the process – most runs won’t feel amazing and that’s normal. But every so often, you’ll have a day where everything clicks and it feels effortless. Hold onto those moments. When motivation dips, they’re a powerful reminder of what you’re capable of.

Try to remove the pressure of pace or a specific finish time and focus instead on the experience of training. There’s real value in simply being able to move your body and commit to a goal. Over time, you’ll start to see just how much stronger—physically and mentally—you’ve become.

And when you take on something like a marathon, you’re doing something truly challenging. It requires discipline, resilience, and belief in yourself. Stay patient, trust the process, and keep showing up.  Above all else have a full, unwavering belief in yourself that you can do it.

So, as Coach Smith prepares to take on the world stage in Sydney, she does so with more than just personal ambition pushing her forward. She carries with her the pride of a small college community that has watched her lead, inspire, and persevere through every mile. What makes this journey so special is the reminder that impact is not measured by the size of a school, but by the heart behind it. From Central Penn to Sydney, the entire Central Penn College community will be cheering her on every step of the way. This time, her home fan base can feel even bigger!

 

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Owners of Black art-focused café to open “upscale” sports bar in former Crawdaddy’s restaurant

Jameson Christopher and Sachiko Baez in front of the future location of Slice.

When Sachiko Baez thinks about what Harrisburg needs, she envisions a sports bar.

But it’s not just any sports bar that she has in mind; it’s elevated, upscale and inviting.

This is exactly the atmosphere she and partner Jameson Christopher plan to bring to their new business venture, “Slice,” a bar and restaurant coming to the former Crawdaddy’s Restaurant on N. 6th Street.

Slice will be Baez and Christopher’s second Harrisburg business after Coda Rouge, a brunch café featuring Black art, that opened in early 2024, also on 6th Street.

Crawdaddy’s closed in January this year after over a decade in business.

According to Baez, for much of its lifespan, Crawdaddy’s was owned by her uncle, whom she came to help with his business towards the end of the pandemic.

“I’ve always been interested in that space,” she said. “I always envisioned a sports bar.”

Baez said that Slice, her father’s nickname, will be reminiscent of upscale sports bars in bigger cities, something she didn’t see locally.

“You’ll feel like you’re in a big city, but this is your neighborhood,” Baez said.

Baez said the bar will pay homage to the local sports scene and local legends, with athletic-themed art and décor.

“We want to represent the Harrisburg talent,” she said. “There’s so much sports talent that came out of Harrisburg.”

The restaurant’s menu will offer elevated sports bar food for lunch and dinner hours.

The team also wants Slice to be a hangout spot for the community. They will have billiards, possibly golf simulators, live music, and of course, sports games on T.V.

Slice is slated for a soft opening at the end of June.

“Everybody’s welcome,” Baez said. “I just want it to be fun.”

Slice will be located at 1500 N. 6th St. A website for Slice is still in the works. For more information about Coda Rouge, visit their website.

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Civic Club of Harrisburg to host annual show, market during Artsfest to highlight newer, local artists

Artsfest at the Civic Club 2025

An upcoming show will let the community get a taste of the area’s up-and-coming artists.

During Artsfest over Memorial Day weekend, the Civic Club of Harrisburg will host local artists in its riverfront building, helping newer artists get their foot in the door.

“We are attracting people who don’t generally do shows,” said Reina 76 Artist of Harrisburg, the event organizer. “We offer the opportunity to be part of something larger.”

This will be the fifth year that the Civic Club has hosted the event, this year bringing 35 vendors who will show and sell their wares from May 23 to 25. There will be videography, jewelry, fine art, woodwork, fashion, photography and more, including returning and new vendors.

Reina said she helps guide newer artists on how to set up a vendor stand, how to market themselves and engage with the public. The experience, she said, helps build their confidence.

“It’s like the training wheels,” she said.

While the main Artsfest includes a juried selection process and entry fee, the Civic Club’s show is a low barrier to entry. Some artists who started in the Civic Club have eventually gone on to be selected to vend at Artsfest, Reina said proudly.

Artsfest in the Civic Club 2025. Pictured: Jemar Sweets.

The event also gives the public the chance to view the historic Civic Club building and grounds, Reina said. The club also hosts a wine garden outside during the festival.

Contrena Baltimore, president of the Civic Club, said that the event serves as a “cultural gathering.”

“The Artsfest, for us at the Civic Club, is not just an event, it is a returning breath,” Baltimore said. “A yearly gathering where art, people and place remember each other.”

Reina is especially excited about the community that the art show is forming in Harrisburg.

“I’ve always wanted to build a community of artists,” she said. “We need that in the city full-time. We need that collective and camaraderie throughout the year.”

Each day of the festival, the Civic Club show will be open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

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Community Comment: Something Is Changing in Harrisburg—and It’s Happening in the Spaces Between

The back patio of Agape Elixir Bar

If you’ve spent any time in Harrisburg lately, you may have noticed it.

People are lingering a little longer.

Working outside of their homes more often.

Meeting up in places that aren’t quite work—and aren’t quite home either.

It’s not a new concept. It’s a return to something familiar.

Third spaces—those in-between environments where people can gather, focus, and connect—have always existed. Libraries, parks, cafés, and community spaces have quietly carried that role for generations. What’s changing now isn’t their existence—it’s how intentionally people are seeking them out again.

And across Central Pennsylvania, those spaces are becoming easier to find.

Take the development of Coronet Park, for example. Designed as a public space where people can walk, sit, gather, and spend time outdoors, it reflects a growing recognition that communities need more than just homes and workplaces. They need shared environments, places where people can exist without an agenda, whether that means meeting friends, letting kids play, or simply enjoying a moment outside.

At the same time, local businesses are continuing to shape how these third spaces look and feel indoors.

Coffee shops like Little Amps Coffee Roasters and Elementary Coffee Co. have long offered reliable places to work, study, and meet. Spots like Wake & Bake Café bring a more laid-back, community-driven feel—places where you can just as easily settle in as you can stop by.

Each offers something slightly different, and together they create a network of spaces people move between depending on what they need that day.

Some days call for energy and background noise.

Others call for something quieter. Something that lets you focus without feeling cut off.

That’s where newer spaces are starting to fill in the gaps.

In parts of the SoMa district, places like Agape Elixir Bar offer a different kind of flexibility. You’ll find people working at a dedicated laptop bar, others tucked into couches for longer stretches, and—when the weather cooperates—guests spread out onto an outdoor patio that feels just removed enough from the street to focus, but still connected to the energy of the city.

It’s a subtle difference, but it matters.

These kinds of spaces don’t push you to move faster or stay shorter. They adapt to how long you need to be there.

Even the menus in some of these environments reflect that shift. Alongside traditional coffee, there’s a growing presence of drinks designed for steadier focus or a more balanced kind of energy—options that support long study sessions or extended work blocks without the highs and crashes people have come to expect.

Again, nothing revolutionary. Just… intentional.

And that’s really what defines this moment.

Across Harrisburg and the surrounding areas, third spaces aren’t being reinvented—they’re being rediscovered, refined, and, in some cases, expanded. Outdoor parks like Coronet Park offer open-air connection. Coffee shops continue to anchor daily routines. And newer concepts quietly experiment with how comfort, productivity, and atmosphere can coexist.

For a smaller city, that evolution carries weight.

Because what makes a place feel livable isn’t just where people sleep or work—it’s where they go in between. It’s the ability to step out of the house without needing a plan. To find a seat, open a laptop, meet someone, or sit alone without feeling out of place.

Those are the spaces that build familiarity.

The ones that turn strangers into regulars.

The ones that make a city feel like somewhere you belong.

And in Harrisburg, they’re starting to show up in more ways than one.


The Rimes Family is the owner of Agape Elixir Bar, located at 23 S. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website.

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In Memoriam: In honor of Ross Willard, founder of Recycle Bicycle, committed advocate for bike riding, safety

Ross Willard

Over the weekend, Harrisburg lost one of its most dedicated and charismatic public advocates, Ross Willard.

Ross was the founder and force behind Recycle Bicycle, which gave away hundreds, perhaps thousands, of bikes over the course of the past 25 years—mostly to people who, otherwise, couldn’t afford them. He also taught bicycle repair and safety, and pressed, often against considerable odds and opposition, for bike-friendly streets and infrastructure.

Around Harrisburg, it was hard to miss Ross. Sure, he spent hours nearly every day in his bike workshop on Allison Hill, but he also was a constant presence on city streets and at events. At annual riverfront festivals, he’d gladly babysit your bike as you enjoyed your day, and maybe even tune it up in the process, leaving it in better shape than when you dropped it off.

We often encountered Ross at public meetings for road and bridge projects, where he made no bones, before city and state officials, about the need for bike lanes and accessibility. Sometimes, folks listened; too often, they did not. But that never deterred Ross from forging ahead, in his determined, pointed style, ready to wage the next battle.

We were delighted to call Ross a friend of TheBurg.

I’ll never forget the day, nearly a decade ago, when Ross appeared unexpectedly at our door, shortly after we moved into our current offices on N. 3rd Street. He welcomed us into our new space in the most Ross-appropriate way possible, with a gift of a reclaimed and fully repaired bicycle, which we deemed “TheBurg Bike” and still have.

Fittingly, we saw Ross for the final time just last week, as he stopped by our office to remind us of Bike Month events, including the annual “Ride of Silence,” which will take on special meaning this year.

Ross leaves us with a remarkable legacy, one that I’m certain now will be taken up by other members of Recycle Bicycle. Nonetheless, it surely will take the Harrisburg community, and the area’s biking community, time to rebound from the loss of such a committed, caring man, who was unmatched in his dedication and generosity.

To honor Ross, we are reposting a profile that we published back in 2014. Some of the details are outdated, but the piece still captures the style and spirit of this singular man and his uncommon commitment to the cause of safe, affordable, accessible biking.

For more information and to donate to Recycle Bicycle, visit their website.

 

Hey, Bike Dude! Recycle Bicycle’s Ross Willard is Harrisburg’s go-to bike guy.

By Missy Smith

Ross Willard has some serious energy. When I recently visited his Bike Warehouse on a rainy Saturday, I was ready to go with my camera and a list of questions that I hoped to have answered about his non-profit organization, Recycle Bicycle.

After getting introductions out of the way, he jumped right in about the building we were standing in, a dim, damp, yet expansive warehouse that was donated to his organization to use as a repair shop. He told me about the countless bikes that go through triage at the warehouse and the importance of teaching people how to fix their own bicycles. About the personal transformations that people experience through the organization. About the self-sufficiency, empowerment and public service that the organization provides.

After a thorough tour of the warehouse, I had quite a lot of my questions answered without having to ask. Willard is passionate, animated, relentless and strong-willed about a free public service that strives to keep the city’s bikers safe—so much so that he left a corporate job on an early buyout to repair bikes.

 

Moral Dilemma

Fourteen years ago, Willard encountered the personal resolve that would fuel the all-volunteer Recycle Bicycle community. As part of a food drive to feed people in Harrisburg, he acted as security for the group’s food van and became disturbed by all of the kids who would pass by on the street, pushing bicycles without brakes on the tires. “I faced a moral dilemma,” he reflects.

He remembers thinking that people who didn’t have access to enough food wouldn’t necessarily face the imminent threat of death. “But kids going through the intersection without breaks, that scared me.”

So, he began setting up shop at intersections throughout the city with a little bike repair bag and waited for people with bikes that needed a little love. Recycle Bicycle volunteers would also crash block parties with large crowds, where they would set up a makeshift street repair shop. That small repair bag became a toolbox, which became a chest, then later a van, then a trailer and finally, the Bike Warehouse, where Recycle Bicycle has operated for five years.

Within 15,000 square feet, Bike Warehouse is jam-packed with tires, wheels, brakes, chains, pedals, you name it. Most of the bike parts are donated or removed from bikes that are no longer suited for riding. These parts go toward the repair or the building of bikes, and the scrap metal is recycled.

“We’re here to help people build their own bikes,” says Willard. “We are a do-it-yourself shop that costs you nothing, but you have to invest in helping.”

Willard doesn’t believe in taking someone’s bike and merely fixing it. Instead, Recycle Bicycle provides the tools and expertise to help people learn how to fix their bikes for themselves, at what he calls his “teaching warehouse.” One of the greatest advantages that the organization provides is a sense of empowerment.

“Kids will be savvier when dealing with mechanics later in life,” Williard explains. “They will know what questions to ask.”

Other people come in to donate their time, helping with repairs, in sort of a work-share program, during which they can earn a bike after putting in the allotted number of hours.

“Recycle” is key in the organization’s name. Willard is able to supply free bikes to the Harrisburg community because the parts that go toward repairs have been recycled from other bikes. Excess parts get shipped to other bike organizations throughout Pennsylvania and the world.

“We recycle everything: steel, aluminum, boxes [that held] parts that people donated, water bottles,” Willard says. Any scrap metal that the organization collects, it recycles for cash that goes toward the purchase of tools.

Obviously, biking in an urban community, in and of itself, is a natural way to conserve resources. Within his organization, Willard not only demands bike safety, but he takes a strong stand on ecologically friendly habits and ways of life.

“Let’s live on a bike in the city and be ecologically correct,” he says. “We spend too much money on gas and oil. [Recycle Bicycle] is ecologically correct, and we help prevent too much car use.”

 

Not a Toy

Volunteers provide an integral component to the organization. When I visited the Bike Warehouse, I met Greg Chiesa of Camp Hill, who was hard at work repairing bikes. By day, Chiesa works for the commonwealth and, in his spare time, he gives to the bike-building cause.

“I’ve always loved bikes, fixing them, riding them,” says Chiesa, who says he didn’t know about Recycle Bicycle until he started looking for a place where he could donate biking equipment. Before volunteering with the organization, he says, “I was always into ‘the new.’ But now, I ask, ‘Can I fix it or recycle it?’”

While Recycle Bicycle reuses most of the frames and parts to build new bikes, some bike frames beyond repair are stowed away in their own special room at the Bike Warehouse. He and his team paint the unsalvageable bikes white and break out the “ghost bikes” once a year during the “Ride of Silence,” in which they display the bikes as a memorial to the Pennsylvania bikers who died while riding in that particular year.

One particular bike that hangs within the warehouse, just beyond the entrance, leaves visitors with an uneasy feeling and a resonating lesson. It is painted in the innocent pink-and-white pattern of a child’s bike, but has mangled wheels that offer a grim picture of what happened. Willard explains that the owner was a young girl who crashed with an oncoming motorist and lost her life.

“I use it as an illustration that [a bike] is not a toy, but a vehicle that can be deadly,” Willard explains.

The smashed bike serves as a stark reminder that bike safety is important, and it paints a clear picture of why Willard is so impassioned about his volunteer service to the community.

Screenshot 2014-04-30 10.24.05He says that the organization needs more dedicated volunteers like Chiesa who have the serious desire to keep Harrisburg’s biking community safe.

“I don’t want the kids to die. I want people to learn that it’s dangerous out there,” he says. “We need more volunteers who understand that. They have to have my heart. I didn’t burn out because I’m hyper.”

His charismatic and entertaining personality, his fiery drive to make bikers safe and his non-profit repair shop have made Willard a popular sight in Harrisburg. He jokes that, when he isn’t riding a bike, people will recognize his vehicle, run up to him and ask when the warehouse is open. Some nights, he will pass through rough parts of the city and, “Out of the shadows, I’ll hear, ‘Hey, bike dude,’” he laughs.

“We are the best guys in town, and we feel good about it,” says Willard. “With whatever power you’re given, use it correctly.”

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Harrisburg seeks to fight illegal dumping with summer cleanups

City Council member Ralph Rodriguez, along with city and local officials, announced Hot Spot Saturdays at city hall.

This summer, a community event will tackle a hot city issue.

Harrisburg City Council member Ralph Rodriguez and Mayor Wanda Williams on Monday announced this year’s Hot Spot Saturdays, an effort to address illegal dumping.

“The message is: we don’t want your waste any longer,” Rodriguez said, at a city hall press conference.

The cleanups, which the city has hosted for several years, utilize volunteers help to clean up hot spots for illegal trash dumping across the city. With equipment provided by the city, volunteers will clean alongside public works employees. The city has also partnered with LCSWMA for disposal, at no cost to the city, Rodriguez said.

In the past three years of Hot Spot Saturdays, volunteers have cleaned up about 200 tons of trash, Rodriguez added.

Director of Public Works Dave West also shared that the city continues attempting to catch illegal dumpers by utilizing cameras in hot spots.

This year’s Hot Spot Saturdays will take place at the following locations, with the following partners, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.:

  • May 16—Allison Hill cleanup, Wildheart Ministries, meetup at 333 S. 13th St.
  • June 27—South Side cleanup, Dauphin County Recycling Center/Center for Employment Opportunities (CEO), meetup at 1710 Hanover St.
  • June 25—Shipoke cleanup, Capital Region Water, meetup at 547 S. Front St.
  • 29—Midtown cleanup, Friends of Midtown, meetup at 1830 N. 5th St.
  • 19—Uptown cleanup, Camp Curtin YMCA, meetup at 600 Woodbine St.

“A clean city does not happen by accident,” Williams said. “It happens when people decide that pride still matters.”

For more information, visit the city’s website.

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Home sales up, prices steady in latest report on Harrisburg-area housing

A building for sale in Harrisburg

Harrisburg-area home sales inched higher in April, according to the most recent report on previously owned houses.

For the three-county area, 525 houses sold compared to 501 in April 2025, as the median sales price remained nearly unchanged at $290,000, according to data from the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR).

In Dauphin County, 233 houses sold in April, a drop from 253 in the year-ago period, while the median sales price increased to $279,900 from $264,261, GHAR said.

Cumberland County had 251 homes sales, up from 205 the prior April, as the median sales price rose to $319,000 from $315,000, GHAR stated.

In Perry County, 38 houses sold versus 34 in April 2025, while the median sales price dropped to $271,562 from $292,450, according to GHAR.

The pace of home sales slowed, as “average days on market” rose to 37 days in April from 33 days in the year-ago period, GHAR said.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

City Island Arcade

Happy Friday, Harrisburg. Finish the week strong by catching up on our news coverage.

Mark your calendars for Wednesday, as our publisher and editor-in-chief, Larry Binda, will be speaking with Strong Towns about TheBurg’s place in the city and how our local news outlet came to be.

Check out the full weekly news haul below:

Harrisburg announced plans to reopen the arcade on City Island later this month. It previously closed in 2019.

Harrisburg officials said Tuesday that the total estimated cost to rebuild the Broad Street Market has risen from $20.8 million to $23.7 million, partly due to the collapse of a wall on site this winter.

Harrisburg Police Bureau launched a new mental health tool, offering residents a new way to seek assistance with mental health issues.

Harrisburg specialty coffee shops and roasteries Little Amps Coffee Roasters, Elementary Coffee Co. and Denim Coffee took TheBurg behind the scenes to share how they roast their beans.

Indiantown Gap National Cemetery in Annville will host its annual Armed Forces Day Echo Taps ceremony next weekend.

Midtown Cinema will soon show the movie “Blue Heron,” which traces the story of a family and a childhood on the rocks. Here’s what to expect from our movie reviewer.

Our editor introduced TheBurg’s May dining issue with his monthly publisher’s note, praising the city’s food and beverage offerings.

Sara Bozich has compiled the best events of the weekend in her Weekend Roundup, including the first of a new Tiny Park Concert Series in Coronet Park. Check out the full list.

St. Nicholas Serbian Orthodox Church in Steelton will host the Serbian Singing Festival, celebrating 100 years of Serbian choral music in North America, over Memorial Day weekend.

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