Tag Archives: Bill Cluck

Harrisburg Council confirms CRW appointments, delays action on financial advisor, downtown parking

Harrisburg City Council tonight

Harrisburg City Council approved four of the mayor’s board appointments tonight but bucked his will on two other pieces of legislation, including one that would bring free evening parking to the city’s downtown business district.

The city’s legislative body appointed Garvey Pressley, Crystal Skotedis, Alisa Harris and Andrew Enders to serve on the board of Capital Region Water. Skotedis and Pressley are current board members. Enders and Harris are newcomers, replacing vice chair William Cluck and board director Daryl Walters.

CRW’s board approves all contracts, budgets and strategic plans for the city’s water/sewer authority. All of the board appointees were nominated by Mayor Eric Papenfuse and endorsed by current board chairman Marc Kurowski.

Council also confirmed the appointment of Shannon Gority, a former CRW executive director who stepped down last year, as a member of the city’s Zoning Hearing Board.

In other action, council sparred with the mayor over a resolution to hire a financial planner for the city, which would allow it to enter into negotiations with one of its creditors and potentially secure a lower interest rate on loan payments.

Papenfuse said that Ambac Insurance Corp., which the city agreed to pay $125 million over a 20-year period as part of its 2013 debt deal, has expressed interest in re-negotiating the terms of the city’s debt payments. Due to requirements under the federal Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, however, the city can’t enter those negotiations without a financial advisor.

Last year, the city issued an RFP and convened a selection committee to choose an advisor. The selection committee unanimously picked Fairmont Capital, which was recently restructured as Marathon Strategic Advisors LLC. The firm, based in New Jersey, is not yet incorporated in Pennsylvania.

Papenfuse explained that Marathon’s senior advisor was favorably recommended by Marita Kelley, the city’s Act 47 financial oversight coordinator. But Kelley’s word alone wasn’t enough for council members, who said tonight that they would not approve the contract with Marathon until they were able to consult two additional references.

Papenfuse warned council that delaying the vote would delay the negotiations with Ambac, which could, in turn, jeopardize favorable interest rates.

“Interest rates will continue to go up,” he said. “This is time sensitive, and to delay even a few more weeks could end up costing the city in the long run.”

Council members rejected the allegation that they were delaying a potential loan restructuring. They claimed that they were applying the same level of due diligence as they would for any city contract.

“We’ve been burned by consultants before,” said Councilwoman Shamaine Daniels.

Council also delayed voting on a deal that would eliminate parking enforcement in Harrisburg’s downtown business district from 5 to 7 p.m. The deal calls for Harrisburg, the Dauphin County commissioners and the Harrisburg Downtown Improvement District to pay a combined $270,000 a year to Park Harrisburg, the private company that manages Harrisburg’s parking assets.

The agreement originally called for a three-year term, but council proposed adopting it as a one-year trial period. Council President Wanda Williams recommended delaying the final vote until the county commissioners could discuss and agree to the single-year term.

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April News Digest

Road Plan Revealed

Harrisburg last month unveiled a plan to make major improvements to 6th, 7th and Division streets.

City Engineer Wayne Martin, along with consultant Craig Bachik, presented the results of a study to improve traffic flow and safety along those three major city arteries, a plan that includes adding traffic circles, building pedestrian bump-outs and increasing green space.

Martin said the plan was designed with pedestrians, bicyclists and motorists in mind, in that order.

The study was funded by a $27,000 grant from the Harrisburg Area Transportation Study, with an $8,000 matching grant from the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA). It came about because PennDOT requested a study before the city proceeds with a plan to return N. 2nd Street to two-way traffic from Forster to Division streets, said Martin.

The proposed improvements include constructing a series of roundabouts at busy intersections, including at N. 7th and Division, N. 7th and Reily and on N. 6th Street in back of the Broad Street Market. Division Street would be redesigned as a boulevard, with a strip of green space in the middle of the road.

The proposal was created with input from “major impactors” along those roads, such as PHEAA, D&H Distributing and Vartan Group, said Bachik of New Cumberland-based Navarro & Wright Consulting Engineers. Neighborhood groups were not consulted, but the public will be able to have a say once the plan is presented to City Council this month, he said.

The improvements would cost about $30 million, said Martin, though the work likely would be done in pieces as transportation funding was secured.

Besides easing traffic, the improvements would help beautify the corridors, while boosting pedestrian safety, especially on N. 7th Street near PHEAA, said Martin.

 

 City Nominates 2 for CRW

City Council last month considered two city residents nominated by the Papenfuse administration to the board of Capital Region Water.

Garvey Presley Jr. and Charla J. Plaines appeared before council April 19 to discuss their qualifications to serve on the five-member board.

A confirmation vote was scheduled for April 27, after press time. If confirmed, Presley would fill one open seat while Plaines would fill a seat currently held by Bill Cluck.

Cluck, an environmental attorney whose five-year term expired in January 2015, urged council to think twice before replacing him, pointing to Capital Region Water’s financial turnaround and investment-grade bond rating under his tenure.

His plea seemed to find favor with some council members, such as Westburn Majors, who served with Cluck on the board before taking office this past January. “I think it would be a complete disservice if we don’t keep him,” Majors said.

Yet Mayor Eric Papenfuse, who is empowered to nominate board members with the advice and consent of council, said it was time to add fresh faces to the board to achieve greater diversity in membership and help with community outreach.

Plaines, a reentry coordinator at the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency, said she felt her skills were suited to making sure diverse voices in the community were more fully engaged in the authority’s decisions.

Presley, an equipment operator at the Derry Township wastewater treatment plant, said he had been interested in environmental work for most of his life and that his employment history made him a “natural fit” for the board.

 

Recovery Plan Brought to Vote

City Council scheduled a major vote on an updated Harrisburg recovery plan last month, setting the stage for the most comprehensive agreement to date on the mix of tax policies, personnel goals and government reforms needed to stabilize the city’s finances.

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

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

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

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

The vote was scheduled for April 27, after press time. But Fred Reddig, the city’s coordinator under Act 47, said he was “optimistic that the plan is going to move forward” and that his team would be able to take it to court for approval.

 

Demolitions Begin

Harrisburg began razing condemned houses last month, vowing to accelerate the pace of demolitions.

The city is on pace to remove about 30 blighted structures this year, far more than in recent years due to a beefed-up sanitation staff. In past years, demolitions were often delayed as workers were pulled off jobs to assist in trash pickup.

Most demolitions are slated for properties in the Allison Hill and Uptown neighborhoods. In all, Harrisburg has several hundred condemned properties.

 

March Home Sales

The spring real estate market was off to a solid start in March, as sales ticked up compared to last year.

Regionally, sales totaled 647 units in March, 10 more than in the year-ago period, according to the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR). The median price was down slightly to $155,000, but average days on the market plummeted to 86 from 106 last year.

Sales rose to 233 units from 202 on a year-over-year basis in Dauphin County. They fell slightly in Cumberland and Perry counties.

The median sales price in Dauphin County fell a bit compared to last March, to $136,000 from $139,000, though rose by about $5,000 per unit in both Cumberland and Perry counties, to $179,950 and $139,950, respectively, said GHAR.

 

So Noted

Harrisburg last month was awarded a $155,522 federal grant to help reduce crime in the Camp Curtin neighborhood. The Byrne Criminal Justice Innovation Grant will allow the city and several community partners to launch an initiative to lessen crime as part of a larger revitalization effort in the area, according to Tri County Community Action.

Harrisburg Area YMCA has purchased the historic Millers Mutual Group building at Forster and Front streets for $750,000. The Y made the purchase mostly to acquire land for more parking for the East Shore Y next door, but also plans to move its headquarters into the building, according to a joint press release. Millers Mutual stated that it will lease back the building from the Y until it can relocate to larger offices.

Park Harrisburg began booting vehicles last month to better enforce parking penalties on motorists with three or more outstanding warrants. The parking operator long planned to start a booting program, but was delayed until it could develop technology that would allow it to access city parking records, said the company.

Journal Multimedia, a homegrown, Harrisburg-based company that publishes the Central Penn Business Journal, was purchased last month by industry behemoth GateHouse Media, the owner of hundreds of daily, weekly and specialty newspapers. In addition to its flagship publication, Journal Multimedia publishes Central Penn Parent, Lehigh Valley Business and several other titles. It also has related custom publishing and events businesses.

 

Changing Hands

Briggs St., 225: S. & C. Aichele to B. Brock, $179,500

Brookwood St., 2619: R. Santangelo to B. Sweger, $57,500

Derry St., 1323 & 1325: U. Patel to T. & K. Yameogo, $85,000

Duke St., 2435: J. Smith to F. Zeray, $45,000

Fulton St., 1738: Secretary of Housing & Urban Development & Information Systems Network Corp. to PA Deals LLC, $65,250

Green St., 1925: W. Gonzalez to B. & A. Christensen, $216,500

Green St., 2416: F. Seidlich to J. & P. Manjon, $150,000

Green St., 3113: C. & B. Stone to B. Baker, $159,900

Green St., 3121: J. Meadowa to 8219 Ventures, $70,000

Logan St., 1619: L. Blanton & R. Parr to C. Grim, $89,000

Manada St., 1924: B. Vazquez to P. & T. O’Connell, $36,000

Market St., 1912: Secretary of Housing & Urban Development to Rogue Enterprises, $36,500

N. 2nd St., 2215: V. & J. Books to T. & J. Whye, $229,500

N. 2nd St., 2615: Secretary of Housing & Urban Development to TBF Properties LLC, $75,000

N. 2nd St., 2842: Arthur A. Kusic Real Estate Investments to T. Cook, $60,000

N. 3rd St., 3005: D. Bartolet to G. Dutson, $40,000

N. 4th St., 3015: D. Travitz to F. Gresson, $86,000

N. 5th St., 1738: CNC Realty Group to M. Meads, $85,000

N. 6th St., 3138: M. Naranjo to J. Crossett & M. Hochstetler, $50,000

N. 15th St., 1328: L. Mitchell to A. Rodriguez, $38,000

N. Front St., 805: Millers Capital Insurance Co. to Harrisburg Area YMCA, $750,000

N. Front St., 1013: M. Santalucia to B. Rota, $148,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 206: J. Feather to C. Wilson & K. Thompson, $85,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 604: Riverview Manor Association LP & Brickbox Enterprises Ltd. To D. Baker, $230,000

Paxton St., 1000: Sutliff Enterprises & K. Damitha to PinnacleHealth System, $3,600,000

Rose St., 933: F. Clark to GKX LLC, $235,000

Showers St., 581: R. Ross to M. Terry, $97,000

Showers St., 624: K. Hood to K. Kearn, $86,000

S. 13th St., 243: E. & A. Martinez to N. Srayi, $32,000

S. 18th St., 1117: Vanderbilt Mortgage & Finance Inc. to J. Frias, $30,535

S. 29th St., 630: P. Over to J. Guzman, $46,600

State St., 124: C. Smith to TKP Investments LLC, $175,000

State St., 1520: Federal National Mortgage Association to A. Moore, $31,000

Susquehanna St., 2136: Secretary of Housing & Urban Development to L. Marrazzo, $31,125

Swatara St., 2142: G. & J. Trump to R. Chowdhury & A. Nasrin, $49,500

Verbeke St., 232: K. Bentzel to Afterkey Property Solutions LLC, $60,000

Wyeth St., 1406: PA Deals LLC to J. & Y. Oskam, $113,900

Harrisburg property sales for March 2016, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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TheBurg Podcast, April 15, 2016

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

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

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

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

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

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

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City Activist Faces Loss of CRW Seat

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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TheBurg Podcast, Oct. 2, 2015: Talkin’ Trash and Trees

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

Oct. 2, 2015: Larry is away this week, so Paul hits the road to talk trash and trees. Next week concludes a series of meetings Harrisburg’s environmental advisory council has put on at various sites around the city. You’ll hear from the council’s Bill Cluck and Rafiyqa Muhammad, city arborist Erik Josephson and recycling coordinator John Rarig about the latest initiatives and regulations in the areas of trash, recycling and tree maintenance. The last “Talkin’ Trash and Trees” meeting will be held at the public works center, 1820 Paxton St., next Thursday, Oct. 8 at 6:30 p.m.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music. Check out his podcast, the PRC Show, on SoundCloud or 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.

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Teens Clean Streets, Sharpen the Saw in Summer Program

Kevin Porter, one of five interns who worked with 45 area teenagers in a summer environmental jobs program that ended Friday.

Kevin Porter, one of five interns who worked with 45 area teenagers in a summer environmental jobs program that ended Friday.

Harrisburg’s streets are a little cleaner, and the pockets of some its young people lined with a little hard-earned cash, thanks to a summer environmental program that wrapped up Friday with a lunchtime ceremony on Allison Hill.

The four-week program, administered by the Harrisburg Housing Authority, brought together 45 area teenagers and five college interns with a schedule of green projects, leadership classes and visits with local business owners.

Participants pulled weeds and cleared flower boxes at neighborhood gardens, picked up trash from city streets and the riverfront, and picked and washed vegetables for delivery to a soup kitchen, among other projects.

They also took a leadership class centered on the book “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens” and went to a series of “learning lunches” at area restaurants, whose owners spoke to them about topics like etiquette and what it’s like to run a business.

The program paid a $1,000 stipend to each student and intern, in checks handed out alongside certificates at a closing ceremony that packed the upper floor of Rookie’s, a Derry Street bar and restaurant and site of one of the program lunches.

It was funded with proceeds of a $1-per-ton charge on waste dumped at the Harrisburg incinerator after members of the city’s environmental advisory council lobbied for City Council President Wanda Williams to include it in this year’s budget.

Bill Cluck, a member of the advisory council, said he’d been initially disappointed to see the jobs program left off the budget proposed by Mayor Eric Papenfuse, given what he saw as the success of a 25-student pilot program last summer.

Council ultimately voted to double the program’s budget to $60,000. The money funded the stipends plus $10,000 to cover administrative costs of the housing authority, which provides affordable housing in its 1,700 apartments citywide.

“I am certainly proud of all of you,” Williams told participants. “I see we have 50 this year. Next year in my budget, we’re asking for 100.”

On Friday, applause and laughter greeted students as they stood one at a time to share stories from the program and pick favorites from a list of habits like “put first things first” and “begin with the end in mind.”

“The one that spoke to me most was ‘sharpen the saw,’” said Airian Chester, a ninth-grader at Dauphin County Technical School. “Because I’d come home and say to my mom, ‘They had us walking everywhere!’ But then, the next day, I’d be refreshed and ready to go.”

“The kids started off real quiet. They didn’t really know each other,” said Kevin Porter, a program intern who will be a senior this year at Millersville University. “You could see the program was actually helping change these kids’ personalities.”

 

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October News Digest

Treasurer Turmoil Continues

Harrisburg’s newly appointed treasurer stepped aside last month after the city learned that he had filed for personal bankruptcy.

City Council selected accountant Timothy East in late September to fill the post left vacant following the resignation of former city Treasurer John Campbell. East was one of six applicants deemed qualified for the office and one of four ultimately nominated by members of council.

East did not reveal the 2011 bankruptcy during his interview before council. The issue arose later when he needed to be bonded for the job. He was never sworn in.

The city now must re-start the process of selecting a city treasurer.

Campbell resigned in early September following his arrest on charges of theft from two nonprofit organizations unaffiliated with the city. The new treasurer will fill out the remainder of Campbell’s term, which runs through next year.

Note: An October news digest article about the city treasury incorrectly attributed a comment to the controller’s office, saying the office had reviewed the treasurer’s books and “found no anomalies.” To date, the controller’s review of treasury, involving questionnaires about treasury’s internal controls, has not yet been completed.

 

Arborist Position Created

Harrisburg soon will have someone looking after its trees, as City Council approved the new position of arborist.

The post, which will pay no more than $50,000 a year, including benefits, will be funded by the city’s Host Municipality Benefit Fee Fund, money that Harrisburg receives for being the host site of a regional waste facility, namely the incinerator now owned and operated by the Lancaster Solid Waste Management Authority.

The arborist will help ensure the health of the city’s extensive tree canopy. Among the arborist’s first jobs: the removal of about 200 dead trees identified in the city’s recently completed tree inventory.

In addition to hiring an arborist, City Council approved other administration priorities for the Host Fee Fund: $55,000 for a portable road salt shelter; $32,000 for liners for several leaking trash trucks; and $25,000 for charges relating to the city’s comprehensive plan.

Before the allocation, the city’s Host Fee account totaled about $400,000, according to Bill Cluck, chairman of city’s Environmental Advisory Council. The city should receive another $100,000-plus into the fund soon, said Cluck.

The city receives $1 for every ton of trash processed at the facility. The money then is set aside for environmental projects.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse admitted that the spending from the Host Fee Fund had been ad hoc this year. However, he said he would propose a 2015 budget that will set priorities for use of the monies going forward.

 

School Resource Officers Urged

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse last month urged the city school district to reinstate the school resource officer program, saying it would help make the student environment safer.

The administration has drafted a proposal for rebooting the program, which was suspended several years ago by the school district for budgetary reasons. The administration’s proposal would cost about $500,000 a year, the cost borne by the district.

He made the proposal following the sexual assault last month of a student just a block away from Harrisburg High School. He reiterated it after four teenagers, including three high school students, were arrested for allegedly trying to hold up two state assemblymen on a Midtown street, an altercation that resulted in gunfire between the suspects and the lawmakers.

 

Collection Agency Hired

Harrisburg last month agreed to hire a collection agency to recover some of the back business taxes and fees owed to the city.

City Council voted unanimously to engage Pittsburgh-based eCollect Plus to collect delinquent taxes such as the business privilege tax, business license fee, mercantile tax, zoning review fee, health license fee, amusement tax and parking tax.

The company’s fee will range from 20 to 25 percent of the amount recovered. However, it must recover at least $376,000, which is 10 percent of the city’s average business and mercantile tax collections over the past three years, to receive any compensation.

eCollect specializes in tax collections for Pennsylvania municipalities. Its client list includes Chester, McKeesport and Hanover Township.

 

HMAC Gets Funding

After years of trying to secure financing, the owners of the Harrisburg Midtown Arts Center have received the funding that they believe will allow them to complete the renovation of the expansive arts space.

Michael Giblin, an HMAC principal, confirmed that he and his partners—John Traynor, Gary Bartlett and Chuck London—closed on financing that will allow them to add a restaurant, a 700-person entertainment space and a rooftop bar to the building at N. 3rd and Herr streets. The restaurant will be designed and managed by Rehoboth Beach, Del.-based Highwater Management.

HMAC opened in 2009 with a single entertainment space and bar called Stage on Herr. However, the project remained uncompleted after hitting funding snags as banks scaled back lending in the wake of the financial crisis. The facility has been on the sheriff’s sale list numerous times over the past five years, though was never publicly auctioned.

The century-old building was originally Harrisburg’s Jewish Community Center. It later housed the city’s Police Athletic League. It had sat empty for many years before Traynor, Bartlett and London bought it from the Harrisburg Redevelopment Authority in late 2007.

 

SAM Opening Set

The Susquehanna Art Museum has set Jan. 16 for the opening of its new building in Midtown Harrisburg.

SAM will debut the 20,000-square-foot facility with an exhibit titled, “Open: Icons of Pop Art from Niagara University.” The show will feature art on loan from the university’s Castellani Art Museum, including works from such seminal mid-20th century figures as Andy Warhol, Robert Indiana, Marisol and Roy Lichtenstein.

The new museum includes the original, fully renovated Keystone/Fulton bank building at N. 3rd and Calder streets, plus an addition built in the former bank parking lot. It also will feature the Doshi Gallery for Contemporary Art, a sculpture garden and a new mural by Messiah College professor Daniel Finch.

For the past several years, SAM has been without a permanent home, mounting exhibits in a gallery in the State Museum. It long exhibited in the Kunkel building downtown before that building was redeveloped.

 

Enterline Appointed Chief

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse last month named department veteran Brian Enterline as the new chief of the city’s Fire Bureau.

Enterline had been acting chief since his appointment a year ago by former Mayor Linda Thompson. He has served for 14 years with the department.

 

Heavy Equipment Bought

Harrisburg last month purchased two pieces of heavy equipment: one for road maintenance and the other for firefighting.

City Council approved the lease/purchase of a new Case 580 SN Loader Backhoe from Mechanicsburg-based Groff Tractor and Equipment. After a trade-in of an existing backhoe, the net sales price will be $47,425, amortized over 60 months.

Council also OK’d an intergovernmental agreement to buy a 1984 Sutphen Pumper Fire Engine from Swatara Township. The used pumper will cost $3,500.

 

Changing Hands

Adrian St., 2252: Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. to E. Waters, $58,000

Adrian St., 2445: C. & T. Phillips to G. Goneste & G. Niguse, $70,000

Adrian St., 2459: M. Sopp to B. Rotta, $70,000

Barkley Lane, 2524: J. Paul to Codi Tucker, $53,200

Bellevue Rd., 2042: L. & S. Freeman to D. Miller & M. Heagy, $91,000

Brookwood St., 2610: Scottsdale Commercial Partners LP & Brickbox Enterprises Ltd. to University Park Plaza Corp., $230,000

Capital St., 1200: J. & D. Fuhrman to 8219 Ventures LLC, $70,000

Elder St., 821 & 808 S. 26th St.: GR Sponaugle & Sons Inc. to AIS Property Management LLC, $939,500

Green St., 1900: WCI Partners LP to J. Bovender & J. Van Horn, $192,500

Green St., 1938: WCI Partners LP to I. Brea to O. Sanchez, $201,000

Green St., 2133: D. Ware to M. Brown, $40,000

Hale Ave., 420: V. Ly to Luckylan Properties LLC, $30,000

Harris St., 205: Arthur A. Kusic Real Estate Investments to J. Heinly, $100,000

Herr St., 256: C. Wilson to N. Hench & R. Wetzel Jr., $125,000

Hillside Rd., 109: L. & K. York to W. Morgan Jr. & A. Winans, $254,900

Hoffman St., 3133: S. Harvey to M. Sobkowski, $62,000

Hoffman St., 3235: Harrisburg Television Inc. c/o Allbritten Communications to WHTM Acquisitions LLC & Revac Inc., $598,400

Holly St., 1823: J. Johnson to S. & D. Fenton & Exit Realty Capital Area, $56,000

Hudson St., 1152: PA Deals LLC to Amboy MAA Properties LLC, $104,000

Kensington St., 2241: F. Marsico to L. Murphy, $40,500

Kensington St., 2400: M. Eck to R. Murphy, $49,000

Lewis St., 101: R. Alexander to T. Arora, $75,000

Market St., 2048: S. St. Clair Jr. to R. Monzon & L. Trinh, $35,000

North St., 216: E. & R. Maff to R. Lamberson, $75,000

N. 2nd St., 1307: B. Winpenny to V. McCallum, $68,900

N. 2nd St., 2101: JAD Development to SMKP Properties LLC, $229,000

N. 3rd St., 1126: Cornerstone Realty Management LLC to BCG Holdings LLC & Lehman Property Management, $310,000

N. 3rd St., 1200: Cornerstone Realty Management LLC to Keuka LLC & Lehman Property Management, $575,350

N. 3rd St., 1626: C. Hoffman to C. Grilli, $119,000

N. 4th St., 1630: PA Deals LLC to M. & J. Leahy, $48,000

N. 4th St., 2032: M. Stransbaugh to A. & A. Gault, $81,000

N. 12th St., 54: D. Schubert to J. Achenbach, $44,000

N. 19th St., 43: Kirsch & Burns LLC to LMK Properties LLC, $52,669

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 202: C. Shoemaker to R. & A. Chappelka, $185,000

Reel St., 2719: J. Eby to E. Tilahun, $51,000

Reily St., 255: C. Ruegsegger & S. Kauffman to E. Harman, $139,000

S. 19th St., 901: L. Zaydon Jr. to CSP Group LLP, $285,000

S. 19th St., 1101: PA Deals LLC to Amboy MAA Properties LLC, $98,000

S. 27th St., 701: Fannie Mae to A. Brinkley, $87,900

S. Cameron St., 535: J. Strohecker to Capitol City Holdings LLC, $175,000

Susquehanna St., 1622: D. Remm & E. Goshorn to R. & G. Harris, $116,000

Wilson Parkway, 2600: A. Sias Jr. & S. Gibbs to M. Cabrera, $50,000

Harrisburg property sales for September 2014, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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Capital Region Water To Share Costs of Next Sinkhole Study

Capital Region Water, Harrisburg’s water and sewer authority, will split with city government the costs of an expanded sinkhole survey in the area of S. 14th Street, following a 2-1 vote Wednesday morning that marked the first non-unanimous vote of the authority’s current three-member board.

Board members Bill Cluck and Westburn Majors, who voted in favor of the spending, said that, although they both wrestled with the decision, they ultimately came to view the expense as an investment to protect authority assets—namely, water and sewer pipes that could be damaged by further sinkhole activity.

“This is not the same as buying artifacts,” Cluck said, referring to the often-criticized expenditure of authority dollars on Civil War and other museum artifacts during the administration of former Mayor Stephen Reed. “I think this is a shared responsibility to address an unprecedented situation.”

So far, the authority has dedicated about $271,000 to help deal with the effects of the sinkhole that opened last March, displacing residents from at least nine homes and imperiling the homes and finances of several more. The money was directed towards street repair and towards repairing a water main that the authority says was crushed in the sinkhole collapse. It also paid for half the costs of an initial $38,200 study of the street’s sinkhole activity, board chairman Marc Kurowski said.

Kurowski cited the commitment of these funds in explaining what he described as his “tough” decision to vote against the measure.

“‘Tragic’ is not too strong a word for what folks are dealing with down there,” he said before casting his vote. But, he added, he felt a “little bit nervous” about spending any additional Capital Region Water funds, which ultimately come from ratepayers and are meant to be spent providing water and sewer services.

The study is expected to cost $43,700 and will cover a larger area than the original geologic investigation, completed last week by the Camp Hill-based engineering firm Gannett Fleming and unveiled at a City Council committee meeting last Thursday.

That investigation, which focused on the 1400-block of S. 14th Street between Magnolia Street and Cloverly Terrace in south Harrisburg, identified five potential fractures in the limestone and 11 potential voids in the soil beneath the surface of the street. It concluded there was a high probability of future sinkhole activity in the area, which city engineer Wayne Martin described Tuesday as having one of the worst sinkhole problems he has seen in his 20 years as an engineer.

Following the Gannett Fleming report, Mayor Eric Papenfuse indicated last week that his administration would seek state and federal aid to help cover the cost of mitigating the area’s sinkholes, which would far outstrip the city’s ability to pay. “This will take millions of dollars, and the city doesn’t have that,” he said. Martin has estimated the cost will be between $1 and $3 million, though he said the estimate was preliminary and could change substantially depending on the results of the expanded survey.

Where the city would find such outside assistance is not clear. Joyce Davis, the mayor’s spokeswoman, said Tuesday that Papenfuse meets routinely with both state and federal lawmakers with whom he is exploring possible routes to receiving aid. Among these lawmakers is state Sen. Rob Teplitz, who said by phone Tuesday that he had put in a $24 to $25 million capital request to address sinkholes across the city, although this did not include the recent development on 14th Street.

The state, however, has funding problems of its own, and Teplitz acknowledged that it might not want to set the precedent of helping Harrisburg when other local governments also face sinkhole-related problems. “I have the request in,” he said. “I’m not necessarily holding my breath waiting for it in the short-term.”

A governor can also petition the federal government for aid with natural disasters, though that prospect looks even less likely. To qualify for aid under federal law, a disaster must surpass the capacity of both state and local governments to address it, a spokesman for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, explained. He was unaware of any case of a sinkhole being declared a natural disaster, thus qualifying for federal aid, in the past four years.

The potential threat of sinkholes has led to increased interest recently in sinkhole insurance, according to Andrew Enders, a third-generation insurance professional at Enders Insurance Associates in Harrisburg.

Sinkholes have long been identified as an issue in the central Pennsylvania region, but the concern for insurers was traditionally focused on areas outside Harrisburg, including Palmyra, Hershey, Annville and Hummelstown, Enders said.

Sinkhole insurance is excluded from a typical homeowner’s insurance policy and must be “bought back” in an addendum to the policy, Enders said. In addition, coverage typically only applies in the event of structural damage to a home—and not in the case of a sinkhole simply opening on a property, which an owner may be required to remediate himself.

In the Harrisburg housing market, sinkhole insurance typically costs an additional $60 to $150 in premiums per year, Enders said. (Enders Insurance Associates is one of TheBurg’s community publishers.)

In addition to the expanded survey, the city has sought to fund a $16,900 preliminary-design study to come up with options for mitigating the area’s sinkhole problems. On Tuesday, the Capital Region Water board declined to vote on a motion to fund half of this third study, which Cluck described as “premature.”

“If we’re gonna do fact-finding, let’s do that first,” Cluck said, explaining his preference to see a completed second study before funding an additional inquiry into mitigation options.

The motion, initially tabled by the board, was ultimately removed from the agenda completely after a procedural question was raised by the board’s legal counsel.

Harrisburg City Council was expected to take up the question of spending on the sinkhole surveys at its legislative session Tuesday night, following a statement to that effect by council members at last week’s committee meeting. But, as of this writing, the relevant legislation had not been sent to the city clerk and would possibly not make the evening’s agenda, according to the clerk’s office.

 

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Water Rescue: How a volunteer board and a new director reclaimed a public utility.

Water_Rescue_3 Water_Rescue_2

In the middle of Clark’s Valley, between the ridges of Peters and Stony mountains, is a 6-billion-gallon lake that supplies Harrisburg with its drinking water. Known as the DeHart Reservoir, it was named for William T. DeHart, a city councilman who oversaw its creation in the late 1930s, and who died in 1947, in the last year of his third term. Four-and-a-half miles long, with a surface area of 650 acres, it releases between 8 and 9 million gallons of water to the city each day, roughly the quantity that would be needed to fill 13 Olympic-sized swimming pools.

On a recent Thursday morning, I stood with Dan Galbraith, the DeHart’s superintendent, on top of the stone-and-earth DeHart Dam and looked out over the reservoir. Galbraith wore a sky-blue T-shirt displaying the name of his employer—Capital Region Water, the city’s water and sewer authority. We were joined by Mike Deily, CRW’s director of operations, and Andrew Bliss, its community outreach manager. Underneath us, 90 feet below the surface of the lake, water was rushing through a steel-reinforced concrete pipe, beginning its downhill journey toward the city, over a distance of some 24 miles.

Galbraith has lived on the site for the past eight years, in a caretaker’s house just below the dam. I asked what it was like to live there. “Did you ever see ‘The Shining’?” he said. The remoteness has a lot to do with the reservoir’s pristine condition, which is why, during my visit, Deily and Galbraith went out of their way to emphasize the close watch kept on the facility. To our left was the spillway, a wide concrete chute that carries reservoir overflows to Clark’s Creek below. As we drove down from the dam, Galbraith pointed out a camera in the trees. “We already got you under surveillance,” he said. Deily, a biology major, noticed a cluster of butterflies fluttering around a trickle on the spillway floor. “Let me point out all the Lepidoptera species,” he said, and proceeded to identify each one.

Life at the DeHart has persisted, more or less unchanged, since its construction. The surveillance is new, and there are now Internet servers for transmitting flow data. The water treatment process has been upgraded, too—instead of getting a dose of chlorine just outside the reservoir, water from the DeHart is subjected to a battery of chemicals at a filtration plant downstream. But the basic function of the reservoir is the same. Water rushes out; some gets diverted to keep Clark’s Creek flowing, and the rest runs down to the city.

Capital Region Water, by contrast, has undergone a metamorphosis. In March, following a vote by City Council, its name was officially changed from the Harrisburg Authority—an entity best known for the nearly $400 million in debt related to the Harrisburg incinerator, which almost bankrupted the city and prompted an unprecedented state intervention.

In addition to the new name, Capital Region Water got a new logo: a pair of interlocking water droplets, which seem to reflect a much-simplified identity. As part of the state’s recovery plan for the city, it has shed the incinerator and the associated debt and refocused its mission on water and sewer services. At the same time, it has undertaken an ambitious project to map, through the use of robots, the condition of the city’s sewers. It has also absorbed two city bureaus, increasing its staff from nine to 86 people. And in April, two-and-a-half years after losing its credit rating, it reentered the capital markets with a refinancing that will save its ratepayers around $2 million per year.

The recovery plan contained many controversial provisions: the lease of the parking system and an accompanying increase in rates; a hike in local taxes and concessions from city unions; settlements with various creditors. The creation of Capital Region Water invited little public controversy, perhaps because, on the face of it, nothing fundamentally changed. A locally controlled water and sewer system remained under local control. And yet, without the efforts of a handful of people, it might have turned out very differently.

The home page of Capital Region Water’s new website, which launched at the end of June, includes a “community promise” from Shannon Williams, the company’s CEO. “Water is clear,” it begins. “And so should be our intentions.” To the left is a smiling portrait of Williams, who has signed off at the bottom of the pledge by invoking the company’s motto—“From raindrop to river.”

Williams grew up in Altoona, in Blair County, where her mother was a county commissioner for 28 years. She considered becoming a teacher or going into political science, but she liked her advanced physics course, and she wound up pursuing an engineering degree. After graduation, she took a full-time job at Herbert, Rowland & Grubic, eventually moving to their office in Harrisburg.

One day, she got a call about a City Council meeting. Council was interviewing new appointments to the Harrisburg Authority, and her firm, which was doing work for the Authority, asked if Williams would go observe. Not long after Williams’ visit to council, an engineer at the Authority retired, and Williams jumped at the opportunity. “It was right here,” Williams said. “We chose to live here, my husband and I, and we really love it.” She took the interim position, and in January of 2009, the Authority hired her full-time.

When Williams first arrived at the Authority, her primary project was to be contracts manager for the 85 outstanding contracts attached to the incinerator upgrade. But she was also quickly introduced to the Authority’s peculiar relationship with the city. Part of that relationship encompassed the water system, which the Authority still owned, but which the city’s bureau of water operated. Under the management agreement, the Authority was supposed to establish the annual water budget, including user rates. Yet the city effectively controlled the budget, which included large administrative fees.

Michele Torres, then the Authority’s executive director, assigned Williams to review the relationship. “My very first day here, she said, ‘Read through these documents. Find out what they say,’” Williams told me. “And it was often a theme of ours to talk about the ways things should be, the way the agreements say they are, and then the reality.” Initially, she saw herself as simply getting the lay of the land, but she soon developed a sense that the city wasn’t adhering to the letter of the agreements. She and Torres began to ask questions. What justified each line item in the city’s proposed budget? Where was the money going?

They weren’t the only ones trying to untangle the Authority’s complicated relationship with the city. In early 2007, amid mounting criticisms of the incinerator financings, a faction within City Council had tried to wrest control of the Authority from Mayor Stephen Reed, then in his seventh term. In February, they overrode a mayoral veto, granting themselves the power to appoint members to the Authority board. Reed challenged them in court, and lengthy litigation ensued.

The legal question concerned an interpretation of the city’s charter and the law governing municipal authorities. But documents filed in the case give a sense of larger issues. In one memorandum, council’s lawyers took aim at mayoral control under Reed, whom they accused of treating the Authority “as his own personal funding source for pet projects,” including his so-called “Wild West” museum. Another document, the sworn affidavit of the Reed-appointed board chairman, concerned Eric Papenfuse, an appointee of council’s who had been a vocal critic of such “pet projects” of Reed’s. Within a day of his appointment, according to the affidavit, Papenfuse went to Authority offices and “aggressively made demands” for various Authority records.

The more Williams and Torres studied the stipulated agreements, the more they sensed that something had gone seriously wrong with the Authority’s mission. She felt that, as owner of the water and sewer facilities, the Authority was accountable for how they were used, even if the city actually operated them. “At the end of the day, it comes back to the Authority,” she said. “So, we need to make sure things are done properly.”

 …

The Harrisburg Authority began its life in 1957, as the Harrisburg Sewerage Authority, a government agency created with the purpose of financing projects related to the city’s sewers. In forming the Sewerage Authority, the city relied on the state Municipalities Authorities Act, legislation first passed in 1935, and replaced in 1945, permitting the creation of municipal authorities as a means to secure public-project funding.

An authority’s primary financing vehicle was the revenue bond, a form of debt secured not by taxes but by charges to users. To borrow for the construction of a sewage treatment facility, the authority would pledge, in essence, a piece of the monthly bills of the facility’s future users. As outlined in a 2002 white paper by the state Department of Community and Economic Development, the reliance on user charges helped protect authority projects from the exigencies of city government. Where a tax increase might be politically impossible, user charges could achieve “a more equitable distribution of the burden of government” by tying rates to actual consumption. At the time, they also gave an authority access to debt that was unavailable to a local government under state law.

In 1987, Harrisburg amended the Sewerage Authority’s articles of incorporation, converting it to the Harrisburg Water and Sewer Authority. Its purpose was still broadly within the confines of the original authority: borrowing for public projects that now encompassed drinking water as well as sewage.

Then, in 1990, things started to become convoluted. That year, the city modified the authority again, changing it to a “general purpose” authority and rechristening it the Harrisburg Authority. Not long afterwards, in 1993, the Harrisburg Authority purchased the city incinerator, arranging for a series of bond issues to finance the acquisition.

On the surface, the debt was like the debt of the previous authority—it was in the form of revenue bonds, secured by charges to the incinerator’s users. But the debt was also only marginally related to the incinerator’s actual operations. In a $40 million bond issue that year, for example, $7.5 million went towards construction on the incinerator, while nearly $27 million went to the city itself, as a portion of the cost of purchase. The purchase price, in turn, went to refund the city for any number of expenses. In a May 22, 1995 letter to City Council, then-Mayor Reed provided a list of projects to be repaid by the “sale proceeds from the transfer of the Harrisburg Waste-to-Energy Facility.” The list included everything from playground renovations to laser printers to Sig Sauer pistols for police. It went on for 15 pages.

By these and similar maneuvers, the city converted the Harrisburg Authority to something much broader than a financer of public utilities. “General purpose authority,” in fact, was more apt than was perhaps intended. The Authority had become a kind of credit card for the general purposes of city government.

Capital Region Water’s “raindrop to river” motto skips over the steps in the water system that don’t make for pleasant slogans. On its way to the river, what enters homes as drinking water must leave those homes as waste.

The same day as my visit to the DeHart Dam, I toured the Advanced Wastewater Treatment Facility, a circuit of tanks and settling pools along the river, near the city’s southern edge. The AWTF’s superintendent is Jess Rosentel, who had prepared for our arrival by stashing glass jars of sewage at various stages of treatment throughout the plant, like Easter eggs.

A tour of the AWTF shows pretty quickly why, as a method of waste disposal, toilets are superior to, say, a hole in the ground. The average intake of the facility is 22 million gallons per day—most of which, whatever image the word “sewage” conjures, is water. “What you wash off with, it’s a little bit of dirt, but it’s not much,” Rosentel said. He held up a jar of cloudy water, floating with a few visible flecks. This was “primary influent,” sewage in the condition in which it reaches the plant, minus heavy grit like rocks and pebbles that washes into storm drains when it rains. The ratio of solid waste to water in primary influent is 100 parts per million.

In the 1950s, wastewater treatment was a physical process. The sewage was moved through pools slowly enough for solids to settle to the bottom. Treatment at the AWTF still begins this way. We passed along a catwalk between tanks of mostly clear water, where automated skimmers, like long windshield wipers, crept along the top and bottom, sweeping away sludge. In their path over the water’s surface, these skimmers catch floating solids, like grease, which the facility gets quite a bit of. At the end of a tank, I watched a skimmer come up against a cloud of grease and nudge it into a weir. Then the skimmer flipped under the surface, like a swimmer at the end of a pool, and headed back along the bottom.

Rosentel picked up another jar. The flecks were gone, but the water was still cloudy. In the 1950s, he said, the process would have stopped there: the cloudy water would be disinfected with chlorine and sent to the river. Then, starting in the 1970s, with environmentalists pushing for more stringent standards, the government began requiring the removal of dissolved pollutants, too.

The secondary treatment of wastewater is biological—what Rosentel referred to as “how Mother Nature removes solids.” Naturally occurring bacteria are added to the sewage, where they feed on pollutants like ammonia nitrogen and phosphorus and convert them to solids that can settle to the bottom. Normally, this process would require more space than the AWTF, hemmed in between the river and railroad tracks, possesses, so the facility produces high-purity oxygen in a tower on-site to help speed the activity of the bacteria.

Once the bacteria have digested the pollutants, the sewage is sent to enormous cylindrical clarifiers, where the mixture can settle while rotating vacuums suck sludge up from the bottom. Between the two rows of clarifiers, Rosentel held up a final jar. A cloud of brown solids had sunk to the bottom, and the top was almost crystal-clear.

 …

In late 2010, the Harrisburg Authority set in motion a series of events that would dramatically alter the course of the city’s recovery. That spring, the Supreme Court had finally issued its opinion on the question of board appointments, finding that the mayor had the power to appoint members with the advice and consent of council. The result was that existing board appointments, which had been made by council, were declared void. Linda Thompson, who had been on the council side of the complaint when it was filed, was now mayor—yet rather than simply repeat the appointments, she decided to revisit them.

In the ensuing squabble with council, two of the former board members got through: Bill Cluck, an environmental lawyer and activist, and Marc Kurowski, a civil engineer. As a two-member board, they were short of a quorum, and they spent most of the summer unable to do official business. On one occasion, they even had to file an emergency petition with the county for permission to renew an expiring insurance plan. Finally, in September, council consented to a third nominee: Westburn Majors, a government relations specialist at a downtown firm.

Of the three, Cluck had the deepest knowledge of the Authority’s history. A graduate of Penn State, with a law degree from Temple University, Cluck had moved to the city in 1991 to help open the Harrisburg office of Saul Ewing, a Philadelphia law firm. In the early 1990s, he and a colleague, Doug Schleicher, represented a York landfill in litigation over Dauphin County’s solid waste plan. In the course of the litigation, Schleicher took the deposition of Dan Lispi, a city employee who was project manager for the incinerator. “And my antennae went up,” Cluck told me. “I just made a mental note that something wasn’t kosher about this facility.” In 2000, he left Saul Ewing and started a private practice, in part to free himself up to be more active in the community, and to keep a closer watch on the incinerator.

In the fall of 2010, the three-man board solicited proposals for a forensic investigation of the incinerator financings. City Council and some members of the public had been calling for an investigation for some time, and the board was eager to obtain one, though its members had somewhat different motivations. “Bill had some opinions, because he had been pretty deeply entrenched in it, so he thought it might be going in a certain direction,” Kurowski told me. “To me, it was very important that it was a fair reporting, and wasn’t just, ‘Hey, this is a splashy headline, let’s go find somebody to hang by their ankles in the town square.’”

The team that was chosen included Doug Schleicher, Cluck’s former colleague, and Steve Goldfield, a financial advisor at Public Resources Advisory Group and, like both Schleicher and Cluck, a Saul Ewing alum. During the team’s presentation, Schleicher explained that Goldfield, an expert in public finance, would offer an “inside perspective” on the Authority’s bond issues, helping to “shed light on the kind of advice the Authority was entitled to” and “the protections and guidance it should have received.”

Their forensic audit wound up being a foundational document for the entire recovery process. By the time it was completed, in January 2012, the city had entered Act 47, the state program for distressed municipalities, and City Council had rejected financial recovery plans submitted by both the state-appointed coordinator and the mayor. As soon as the audit was finished, the board sent a copy to David Unkovic, who recently had been appointed the city’s first receiver.

The day he got the audit, Unkovic was holding a public forum to solicit input as he tried to draft a more palatable plan for recovery. As Cluck tells it, Unkovic went home that night to read the audit and couldn’t put it down. “It was like reading one of those mystery novels, up til 4:30 in the morning,” Cluck said.

The audit, Goldfield told me, confirmed for Unkovic the “complicity” of Dauphin County and the bond insurer, AGM, in the incinerator debt. “You couldn’t say this was the city’s problem, and the city needed to fix it,” he said. “This was a partnership going in, and it needs to be a partnership going out.” (Unkovic declined to comment about his tenure as receiver.)

The audit was foundational in another sense, too—the story it told about the incinerator debt laid the groundwork for subsequent investigations. When the state Senate held hearings on reforming the local government debt laws, Goldfield, with his summary of the audit’s findings, was the first to testify. He was also first out of the gate for the current grand jury investigation of the incinerator financings, for which he gave testimony lasting seven hours.

Whether the audit will contribute to any criminal or civil litigation, he said, remains to be seen—but there should be little doubt about why it exists. Numerous bodies had called for a forensic investigation. “But nobody did it,” Goldfield said. “It was the Harrisburg Authority that did it.”

Telling the story of the incinerator debt, and how the Authority’s ability to borrow had been abused, was only one half of the path toward its rehabilitation. The board and Authority officials also had to confront the question of what the agency would become.

One possibility, especially in the early stages of Act 47, included the privatization of water and sewer services. The looming debt had created a kind of fire-sale atmosphere; as Williams tells it, the initial attitude was “monetize everything and plug this hole.” Among the assets, the DeHart Dam, a pristine watershed surrounded by undeveloped woodland, would have been particularly valuable. But Williams and others were concerned about what a sale of public utilities might mean for customers.

“The level of investment that needs to be put into this system is so large that my concern was that, if it were sold to a private company, the rates would go through the roof,” she said. “They have to make a profit to give back to their investors.”

In January 2012, she gave a presentation to Unkovic and his team. Since before the city entered Act 47, Williams and others at the Authority had contemplated turning it into a “true operating authority”—an expert operator of the water and sewer systems, as opposed to a pass-through entity for city financing. In her presentation, Williams raised this possibility again. If the various components of the utilities could be combined, and the Authority could take over their operation, then a major burden could be lifted from the city while retaining local control.

Following the presentation, the receiver’s team began looking at the possibility of a long-term lease of water and sewer, along the lines of what would ultimately happen with city parking. There were two main objectives: ensure the efficient delivery of vital services, and, if possible, obtain some form of ongoing monetary benefit for the city. In February 2012, the receiver and the Authority issued an open-ended request for qualifications, explaining that the receiver’s goals were settling the city’s long-term debt as well as achieving long-term stability. Proposers, it said, were “strongly encouraged to provide creative solutions.”

Then, in late February, a major development took privatization off the table. Among the sewer system’s customers are six suburban municipalities, collectively producing about half of the wastewater flowing to Harrisburg’s treatment facility. In 2009, these municipalities, suspecting excessive charges by the city, hired legal counsel to investigate.

As it turned out, much as Williams and Torres had suspected with the water budget, the sewer budget had long included inexplicable fees. “The city would include line items in their budget, but when we looked, there were no supporting activities,” Scott Wyland, who represented the municipalities, told me. By law, whatever rates the city collected for sewer usage had to be used for sewer-related purposes. But an increasingly large portion of the city’s sewer budget—58 percent of it in 2009, Wyland said, up from 4 percent in the 1970s—was devoted to “administrative fees” and “other contracted services.” Alleging that the city had overcharged his clients by $25 million over a 10-year period, Wyland applied to intervene in the receivership proceedings in Commonwealth Court.

“That kind of completely hit the reset button,” Steve Goldfield, who was then the financial advisor to the receiver, told me. The receiver’s lawyers, concurring with Wyland’s analysis, determined that the type of lease they had in mind wouldn’t be permitted under the sewer-revenue laws. (Ultimately, the receiver reached a settlement with the suburban municipalities, which agreed to $11 million in offset credits distributed over the next seven years.)

Meanwhile, the receiver and his advisors were gaining confidence in Williams and the Authority board. The idea of converting to an operating authority, with an exclusive focus on water and sewer services, seemed like an increasingly viable option. Goldfield related a story about his local school board, which took a chance on a young principal who turned out to be a “superstar.” He and William Lynch, the receiver who replaced Unkovic after his resignation, held Williams in similar esteem. “Bill said to me before I said to him, ‘I think she could be a superstar,’” he said.

“I’ve always tried to do whatever I can to further the goals,” Williams told me. “As we were moving through everything, I just had that one singular goal, which was to get this as a true operating authority, and to improve those operations.” On Aug. 26, 2013, the receiver filed his recovery plan for the city, which was nicknamed the Harrisburg Strong Plan. Among its provisions was the creation of the new Authority—an operator of the water and sewer systems, free of the incinerator’s bad name and bad debt, under the control of a locally appointed board.

Once Harrisburg’s wastewater has been clarified, it can be returned to the river. But the sludge is only beginning its useful life. On their journey out of the plant, the bacteria are stored in a building where, for a time, they keep digesting, producing methane that the Advanced Wastewater Treatment Facility can capture and use to produce energy. In addition to powering two boilers, which heat the buildings on the complex in winter and keep the digesting room at 95 degrees, the methane powers a 400-kilowatt generator that sells electricity back to the power grid. Rosentel estimated the bacteria’s total energy production to be the equivalent of around 1,000 gallons of gasoline per day.

When digestion is finished, the water is removed, and two products remain. One is what Rosentel referred to as “cake”: spongy, black, virtually odorless clumps of sludge, which are collected and hauled away by farmers for use as fertilizer. Currently, the AWTF pays farmers to take the cake, though the facility is contemplating some additional treatment upgrades that could improve the fertilizer to a point where it can be sold. The other byproduct is ammonia-rich water, which is used to jump-start the growth of new bacteria.

A couple of weeks after my tour of the facilities, I met with Williams in the Capital Region Water offices, on Locust Street downtown. It had been a busy month: the week before, she had attended the American Water Works Association’s annual conference in Boston, where Capital Region Water had been given a 10-Year Director’s Award for consistently exceeding federal standards for drinking water quality. Harrisburg’s water also entered a taste-test competition, where it placed in the top five of 31 competing utilities.

We talked about the many things underway at the new authority. The updated website would be going live later that week, and it would include an interactive cartoon map tracing the water’s progress, per the company motto, from rain to river.

We talked about the upgrades to the sewage treatment plant. In 2009, the state Department of Environmental Protection imposed new caps on the pollutants that could enter the river in treated wastewater. An early achievement of Capital Region Water was securing financing for the necessary plant upgrades, which will cost an estimated $50 million.

We also talked about the recent refinancing of some of the outstanding debt. Williams pointed out, as I had noticed some days before, that water bills were now directed to a post-office box in Philadelphia. The address corresponded to a temporary lockbox for user payments while the city completed its transfer of billing services. As a condition of its refinancing of the debt, Amalgamated Bank had required an agreement that the revenues would circumvent city coffers.

I thought about something Mike Deily, the director of operations, had told me on our drive down from the reservoir, about the cuts he made to the sewer budget each year under prior administrations. “They put spending and revenue freezes on us because they were using our revenues to supplement the general fund revenues,” he said. He recalled the frustration of going to conferences, and seeing the technologies other utilities were using, and then coming back to Harrisburg and having no capacity to employ them.

Before I left, I asked Williams about something I’d wondered at the Advanced Wastewater Treatment Facility. If the treated wastewater is clean enough to enter the river, and the river is clean enough to be treated as drinking water, wasn’t it possible to treat the treated wastewater, and essentially drink our own sewage?

Williams nodded. Some places experiencing drought, like certain cities in California, were already contemplating just such a program, she said. But Harrisburg wouldn’t need anything like that in the foreseeable future—the DeHart could provide plenty of water, and much more efficiently.

“People have clean water, but they take it for granted,” she reflected. “It’s a cool profession. You can go anywhere in the world, and people will need clean water.

But,” she added, “there’s no place I’d rather be.”

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Teen Summer Jobs Program Gets Council Go-Ahead

Riverfront cleanup, along the lines of last month's knotweed-whacking along Riverfront Park, is one of several environmental jobs envisioned in the summer program.

Riverfront cleanup, like last month’s knotweed-whacking in Riverfront Park, is one of several environmental jobs envisioned in the summer program.

City Council voted Tuesday night to approve a $35,000, six- to eight-week summer jobs program for Harrisburg teenagers, to be paid from “host fee” funds the city receives as the host of a privately operated trash incinerator.

The program, which was proposed by the Harrisburg Housing Authority in late May, will aim to recruit 25 teenagers, ages 13 to 16, to work on environmental projects across the city.

Under the proposal, each teen will be paid a $1,000 stipend for his or her work, which could include things like litter collection, riverfront cleanup, garden competitions and healthy eating initiatives.

The remaining $10,000 of requested funding will go towards administrative costs like marketing, insurance and transportation, the application says.

On Tuesday night, council members voiced some concerns about the program’s execution before finally voting 6-1 to approve it. Among their concerns was the projected $10,000 in administrative costs, which Councilwoman Shamaine Daniels suggested should have been covered already in the authority’s mission and budget.

Daniels wound up casting the sole vote against the project’s approval.

Council members also worried that the program would be starting too late in the summer to be successful. Bill Cluck, the chairman of the Environmental Advisory Council, which makes recommendations to council for use of host fee funds, said the EAC voted to recommend the program on June 5, in the hopes the administration would place it before council at the June 10 legislative session.

Cluck added that the proposal represented a “pilot program” that could be improved and expanded next summer, depending on how it goes this year.

Councilman Jeffrey Baltimore, who was appointed earlier this year to complete the term of the late Eugenia Smith, said Tuesday that he wanted to ensure the program would target teenagers in public housing.

Cluck said this was a priority shared by the housing authority. According to its application, the authority will “heavily promote participation in the program within its public housing communities,” but “would not limit participation to teens living in public housing.”

At its June 5 meeting, the EAC also recommended 10 other environmental projects to be paid for with close to $100,000 of host fee funds. The administration and council, however, have not yet taken action on those recommendations.

The host fee, a $1-per-ton payment to the city that is meant to offset the environmental cost of having an incinerator within city borders, first became available to Harrisburg in 2006, when a private company, Covanta Energy, took over operations at the Resource Recovery Facility on S. 19th St.

For several years, however, the city received the payment in-kind, in the form of rent-free facilities with free heating on the incinerator grounds, which housed former Mayor Stephen Reed’s vast collection of museum artifacts, among other things.

In 2012, under the direction of the state-appointed receiver, the facility replaced the in-kind contributions with cash payments of the host fee. The receiver’s final recovery plan, which was approved by a state court last fall, included a directive to use host fee money for environmental projects, to be approved by council and the mayor upon recommendations from the EAC.

Jack Lausch, the director of administration of Capital Region Water, which formerly owned the incinerator as the Harrisburg Authority, estimated that host fee payments from the facility should total around $300,000 per year.

In early May, the budget director, Bruce Weber, reported that the city had received $355,000 in host fees so far. The next quarterly payment is due in mid-July.

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