Tag Archives: City Island

February News Digest

Budget Passed Again

For a second time, Harrisburg has passed a 2016 budget, which was largely unchanged from the version approved last year.

By a 6-1 vote, City Council last month OK’d a $60.4 million spending plan that adds 36 new positions, most in a newly created Neighborhood Services division. Councilwoman Shamaine Daniels was the sole member to vote no, stating that she believed the budget total was too high.

Council passed a budget in December, but reopened it a month later after three new council members took their seats. The new version is almost identical to the original, but it does give raises to a handful of city workers pending a study of pay equity in city hall.

The budget factors in about $3 million from a planned tripling of the local services tax (LST) to $156 per year for each person who works in Harrisburg and earns more than $24,418 annually. At press time, council still needed to approve the LST increase.

Commonwealth Court Judge Bonnie Leadbetter, who must approve changes to the city’s financial recovery plan, already has signed off on the tax hike.

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse regards the LST increase as a way for commuters to contribute more to the city’s financial stability and to fund improved services, particularly for sanitation and road maintenance.

 

Stolen Firearms

Three antique guns were stolen from the National Civil War Museum in Reservoir Park last month, taken from an NRA-sponsored exhibit there.

A pair of Colt revolvers, dating to 1860 and 1861, was owned by the city, while an engraved Henry rifle from 1861 was on loan from a private donor, according to museum CEO Wayne Motts.

All three firearms were claimed to have once belonged to Simon Cameron, a Harrisburg native who served as President Abraham Lincoln’s secretary of war at the beginning of the Civil War. They were on display together as part of a “Guns & Lace” exhibit that was sponsored by a $25,000 grant from the National Rifle Association.

Police Capt. Gabriel Olivera confirmed that the thief made entry by breaking through a window and then breaking into the display case to remove the guns. The theft was not detected until hours later due to an apparent failure in the museum’s alarm system. Olivera added that the precise nature of the security lapse was not yet clear.

Olivera said surveillance footage captured images of a male thief, but that the images are not clear and that police are not yet releasing them because they “would not be of any use.” Police have not ruled out the possibility of an inside job, Olivera said.

The city released the following information identifying the weapons:

  • A .44 caliber M1860 Colt Army Revolver with serial number 11708.
  • A .36 caliber Colt M1861 Navy Revolver with serial number 1825.
  • An M1860 Henry Repeating Rifle with serial number 115, manufactured by the New Haven Arms Company and engraved with the word “Cameron” on the receiver.

 

Council Rethinks Pot Penalties

Harrisburg’s marijuana laws may soon change as City Council last month introduced a bill to reduce penalties for possession of the drug.

The city administration’s proposal would change possession from a misdemeanor to a less-serious summary offense and ease penalties to $100 for a first conviction and $200 for a second. After a third offense, possession again would be considered a misdemeanor crime.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse supports the change, saying too much city police time is occupied by low-level drug cases. He said he also doesn’t believe the change would encourage drug use, a charge leveled by some opponents.

At press time, a council committee was slated to consider the issue for further action.

 

Serious Crime Declines

The rate of serious crime in Harrisburg fell significantly last year, the Police Bureau said last month.

“Part 1” crimes declined by 17 percent in 2015 compared to 2014, the police said. These crimes include murder, rape, assault, burglary, theft and arson.

Of these, robbery fell from 283 to 228 reported incidents; assault decreased from 1,328 to 1,233 reported incidents; and theft dropped from 1,235 to 875 incidents.

Harrisburg tallied 19 homicides in 2015, the same as in 2014. However, three of those murders were categorized as self-defense, meaning that criminal homicides actually went down.

 

New Home for City Islanders 

The Harrisburg City Islanders will make FNB Field (formerly Metro Bank Park) their home stadium for the 2016 season.

The city-based soccer team will play 10 home matches at the City Island ballpark, which also is the home stadium for the Harrisburg Senators. Another five home matches will be played at Clipper Magazine Stadium in Lancaster.

For the past two years, the Islanders have been looking to move out of the Skyline Sports complex, also on City Island, because the team considered it too small and lacking in basic amenities, such as bathrooms.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse said that the city, which owns the stadium, may benefit financially through increased ticket, sales and parking fees, especially if the move leads to greater attendance at Islanders’ matches.

Separately, First National Bank last month announced the stadium would be renamed FNB Field, as F.N.B. Corp. recently merged with Metro Bank’s parent company, Metro Bancorp.

 

Housing Sales Improve

The Harrisburg area continued to see improvements in housing sales, the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR) reported last month.

Region-wide, sales totaled 557 units in January, compared to 501 in January 2015 and 448 in January 2014. The median price increased to $152,000, $4,000 more than in the year-ago period.

In January, Dauphin County tallied 185 sales at a median price of $134,000, compared to 177 units and a $132,000 median price in January 2015.

In Cumberland County, 201 units sold for a median price of $174,000 against 179 units at a price of $160,800 in January 2015, GHAR said. Perry County sales were also up, totaling 27 units for a median price of $147,000 versus 18 units at a price of $144,950 for the year-ago period, according to GHAR.

 

So Noted

Bricco, a downtown Harrisburg restaurant, plans a series of events and specials to celebrate its 10-year anniversary. These include special pricing, dining events and a new menu. For all the details, visit www.briccopa.com.

 

Changing Hands

Berryhill St., 1249: R. Eisner et al to E. Graves, $37,000

Berryhill St., 2116: Secretary of Housing & Urban Development to M. Wijaya, $31,000

Cumberland St., 1322: E. Brinkman to D. Brotz, $114,900

Derry St., 2416: S. Moose to I. Class & Y. Aguayo, $45,000

Derry St., 2513: L. Parker to R. Tortorelli, $59,900

Edgewood Rd., 2300: B. & C. Mark to T. Paradise, $195,000

Green St., 1425: M. Araujo to J. Miller, $95,000

Green St., 1701A: R. Myers to J. & V. Wills, $180,000

Green St., 2959: D. Jamieson to D. & V. Moore, $202,900

Hoffman St., 3214: M. Angelo to J. Gantt & H. Mahmood, $109,900

Hunter St., 1609: T. Vo to D. Vo, $160,000

Kelker St., 422 & 434, 1821 Fulton St. and 1820 N. 5th St.: Hamilton Health Center to Christian Recovery Aftercare Ministry, $250,000

N. 2nd St., 321 & 209 South St.: B. Hattingh to VMV Smart Solutions LLC, $425,000

N. 2nd St., 1509: J. Tang to Vortex Properties, $105,000

N. 3rd St., 3205: Secretary of Veterans Affairs to H. Pontius, $42,000

N. 4th St., 3211: J. Kardisco to D. Cameron, $89,000

N. 17th St., 1001: Miracle Group Inc. to E. Price, $80,000

Parkside Lane, 2906: R. & V. Eaton to R. & K. Riley, $210,000

Penn St., 1522: S. Faridi to M. Lindsay, $133,000

Regina St., 1414 & 2139 N. 4th St.: SNL Realty Holdings & Touch of Color to NJR Group LLC, $71,500

Rudy Rd., 1916: R. Wagner to J. Burno, $53,000

Rudy Rd., 2413: J. Boutselis to PA Deals LLC, $55,000

Rumson Dr., 2586: PA Deals LLC to J. Tucker, $80,000

S. 19th St., 14: C. Butler to M. Martinez, $45,000

S. 25th St., 729: R. Wylie Jr. to 729 25th Street LLC, $170,000

S. 26th St., 733: T. Navas to E. Lowe & S. Fuentes, $72,000

State St., 213: Douglas, Hassler & McKillop to Legion Premier Properties LLC, $247,000

Susquehanna St., 1725: M. Gojmerac & C. Roma to B. & K. Martin, $94,000

Verbeke St., 309: S. Rosso to R. Green & D. Govender, $113,000

Wyeth St., 1406: A. Van Dyke to PA Deals LLC, $82,000

 

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

Continue Reading

January News Digest

Williams Named Council President

Wanda Williams will serve another term as president of the Harrisburg City Council, council members decided last month.

Williams was the only council member nominated for the position and received unanimous support.

Councilwoman Shamaine Daniels was elected council vice president by a 4-3 vote, narrowly besting Councilman Jeffrey Baltimore.

The vote was taken during the council’s reorganization, held with each new term. The reorganization followed the swearing in of three new council members: Cornelius Johnson, Westburn Majors and Destini Hodges. Baltimore, who has served for almost two years, took the oath for his first full term.

Council also announced the following committee chairmanships for the 2016-17 session:

  • Administration: Wanda Williams
  • Budget and Finance: Ben Allatt
  • Building and Housing: Shamaine Daniels
  • Community and Economic Development: Jeffrey Baltimore
  • Parks, Recreation & Enrichment: Destini Hodges
  • Public Safety: Cornelius Johnson
  • Public Works: Westburn Majors

 

Council Re-Opens Budget

The Harrisburg City Council last month began reconsideration of the 2016 spending plan passed in December.

The $60.7 million budget added 36 new positions, about half in a newly created Neighborhood Services Division, funded through city trash bills.

The administration also has proposed tripling the local services tax (LST) to $3 per week per worker. The Commonwealth Court must first approve the hike, which then must be sanctioned by council.

Council re-opened the budget to accommodate input from three new council members, who were sworn in last month. A vote on a revised budget is expected this month. 

  

Free Downtown Parking

The Papenfuse administration last month announced a novel plan to allow free, short-term parking in select loading zones in downtown Harrisburg.

Under the plan, people are able to park for 15 minutes for free in eight zones located on N. 2nd Street between Walnut and Pine streets. This will help customers who want to stop briefly to make a quick purchase or pick up food from restaurants, said Mayor Eric Papenfuse.

For the past two years, shop owners have complained that the cost of parking—$3 per hour—prevents customers from frequenting their stores.

The 15-minute time limit would be strictly enforced, said Papenfuse. After 15 minutes, parkers would face tickets with standard fines for parking in a loading zone.

 

Parking Breaks to Continue

An experimental plan that lowered some parking rates in downtown Harrisburg will continue this year.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse said that there are no plans to stop the program that lowered rates by $1 per hour on weekdays from 5 to 7 p.m. and provided four free hours of weekend parking through the Pango mobile app.

Papenfuse said that the changes were deemed successful because they didn’t lower meter revenue for parking operator, SP Plus.

Meanwhile, rates for garage parking for motorists without monthly passes increased last month to $9 for two hours, up from $8.

 

School Board Set

The Harrisburg school board is back to full strength as members last month selected community activist Alan Kennedy-Shaffer to join the body.

Members voted unanimously to appoint Kennedy-Shaffer, who also is a member of the Dauphin County Democratic State Committee. The seat was vacant after the sudden resignation in November of former board President Jennifer Smallwood.

Kennedy-Shaffer is a co-founder of the community group Harrisburg Hope and, last year, was forced to drop out of the primary race for City Council following a successful challenge to his nominating petitions.

 

Police Bureau Changes

A long-time Harrisburg police officer was promoted to captain last month, as five new officers also were sworn in.

Twenty-year force veteran Gabriel Olivera was named captain of the criminal investigation division, most recently serving as a sergeant in that division after rising through the ranks.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse also swore in the following new officers:

  • Christopher Palamara
  • Wesley Feduke III
  • Corre Sommers
  • Adrienne Monroy
  • Daren Sharp

 

Bar Denied License

Harrisburg denied a Midtown bar both business and health licenses last month, though the bar has remained open pending an appeal.

The Third Street Café appealed the denial to the city’s Tax and Appeal Board. Dauphin County Judge Andrew Dowling also issued an order so the city could not fine the bar for operating without a license until the board issues a decision.

The city last year ordered business licenses revoked for three bars it considered troubled. The Royal Pub closed immediately, and the Taproom shut on Dec. 31. The Third Street Café chose to fight the revocation of its 2015 license and now is opposing the denial of a 2016 license.

 

New Pumper Approved

The Harrisburg City Council last month voted to buy a new, $480,000 pumper for the city’s Fire Bureau.

The vote was unanimous, but made contingent upon receiving a matching grant from the Harrisburg Volunteer Firemen’s Relief Association.

To pay for the pumper, the city had previously allotted $160,000, and another $90,000 was made available last year through a budget reallocation.

 

So Noted

The Harrisburg Carriage Company vacated the carriage house on City Island last month following the receipt of eviction notices by the city. The city and the company could not reach agreement over long-standing issues such as the payback of five years of delinquent rent, making fixes to the dilapidated stable and properly accommodating several horses.

Harristown Enterprises last month began a three-month project that will replace the escalator in Strawberry Square. The $350,000 project had been in the planning phase for the past two years, with the Dauphin County Industrial Development Authority providing a $100,000 loan to help finance it, said Brad Jones, Harristown president and CEO.

Zeroday Brewing has expanded its hours as it enters its second year of operation. The Harrisburg-based brewery is now open Tuesday through Sunday and until midnight on Friday and Saturday.

 

Changing Hands

Alison Ct., 3: M. Malinov to D. Patrick, $69,000

Barkley Lane, 2511: V. & D. Rodriguez to K. Clement, $59,000

Boas St., 418: Newlands Asset Holding Trust to PA Deals LLC, $74,250

Chestnut St., 2405: T. & A. Sawyer to W. Majors, $140,000

Croyden Rd., 2778: Secretary of Veterans Affairs to PA Deals LLC, $38,000

Forster St., 1612: N. Combs to S. Mason, $82,900

Fulton St., 1405: A. Pagano to PA Deals LLC, $83,000

Green St., 1400: P. Misivich to S. Weiland, $118,900

Green St., 2245: Y. al-Refae to J. Smith, $56,000

Green St., 2952: S. Gassner & J. Morris to N. Williams, $185,000

Hamilton St., 271 & 275: W. Grace & J. Hadfield to K. Ayres & A. Gupta, $189,585

Herr St., 217: S. Grovers to K. & V. Land, $50,000

Industrial Rd., 3400: Exeter 3400 Industrial LP to Big Box Property LLC & Exeter Property Group, $17,600,000

Kensington St., 2153: Bank of New York Mellon Trust Co. NA to H. Marca, $31,000

N. 2nd St., 400: GSO Real Estate Inc. & Realty Management Associates LLC to Murphy & Laus Real Estate LLC, $240,000

N. 2nd St., 2127: J. Livingston to A. Graffius, $84,500

N. 3rd St., 1700, L57: Bank of America NA to J. Cody, $75,000

N. 6th St., 1408: Secretary of Housing & Urban Development to PA Deals LLC, $82,250

Norwood St., 947: C. & M. Morgan to PA Deals LLC, $32,000

Penn St., 1204: M. Mekilo & U.S. Bank N.A. to C. Wagner, $109,000

Penn St., 1317: L. Stickley to M. Wilkins, $62,500

Penn St., 1523: E. Jones & J. Lindgren to T. Smith & K. Leighton, $147,000

Reservoir St., 73: G. Neff to H. Rentas, $38,900

Rumson Dr., 353: A. Skillman to W. Assefa, $62,000

Rumson Dr., 2574: PA Deals LLC to R. Reeves, $80,000

S. Front St., 631: K. & A. Gulotta to A. Poindexter, $150,000

Harrisburg property sales for December 2015, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

Continue Reading

City Snow Relief Expected to Hit Half-a-Million Mark

IMG_2828

Passersby try to push a car out of a snow bank on Sunday night in Midtown Harrisburg.

 

Clearing the 30 inches of snow that last weekend’s storm dumped on Harrisburg is expected to cost the city about $500,000, officials said today, just hours after ending the declared snow emergency and opening emergency routes like 2nd and 7th streets once again to parked cars.

The costs include city laborers working overtime shifts as well as special contractors the city hired to work 24 hours a day, transporting piles of snow from the streets to a collection site on City Island.

Trash service will continue to be suspended through the end of the week, with sanitation workers diverted to the snow-clearing efforts, said public works director Aaron Johnson. The city is asking residents to dig out a path so that workers can access their trash and recycling bins once service resumes next Monday, Feb. 1.

Johnson also reassured residents that they would be allowed to dispose of more than a single toter’s worth of garbage, the usual limit under city policy, given the week of missed pickups. “We’ll take everything you put out there,” he said.

Officials said they were optimistic that both Dauphin County and the state would pass the thresholds required for disaster relief funding, which would reimburse large portions of the costs of dealing with the snow.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse thanked city workers and private contractors for their efforts over the past several days, as well as Gov. Tom Wolf and PennDOT, who deployed vehicles to clear 2nd, 7th and Market streets. He also thanked residents for the “spirit of community” they demonstrated in shoveling out their streets and sidewalks in their neighborhoods.

The mayor urged people to continue clearing their walks, noting that the city was lenient in the wake of the storm but that it would begin to cite owners who neglected to remove snow and ice from their property. Property owners are responsible for clearing any sections of sidewalk falling within their parcels under city code.

Continue Reading

Hear the Cheers: Harrisburg Marathon reconfigures to be “mini-Boston” event.

Screenshot 2015-09-28 10.13.17Imagine the sidewalks of 2nd Street lined with crowds of people. Their cheers flood the street as sweaty, worn runners pull all the strength they have left to cross the finish line of the Harrisburg Marathon.

“We really envision a new, re-energized marathon,” said Tom Gifford, race and marketing director for the Harrisburg Area YMCA. “It’s going to be a new experience, even for people who run in Harrisburg all the time.”

It took about five months and 50 different course drafts to plan the route for the Nov. 8 marathon, set to kick off at City Island and take runners on a flatter, more scenic route, Gifford said. The old route, which wrapped through HACC and Wildwood Park, was fine but produced some issues with truck traffic, hills and industrial scenery, he said.

With the natural beauty of the Susquehanna River as a backdrop and the Capitol building in the line of sight, the Harrisburg Marathon will feature Harrisburg’s treasures. By sticking to Front Street almost the whole way to the I-83 on-ramp, runners can enjoy the open road and the flowing river beside them.

Certain areas also will feature two-way runner traffic to help eliminate areas where some runners could end up running on long stretches alone, Gifford said.

“Running with people is often all you need to keep going,” he said. “It’s tough to get that juice when you’re alone and later in the run.”

The race will finish on 2nd Street this year, as opposed to its old end point on City Island. Arooga’s, the finish line sponsor, will feature specials for marathon participants. Gifford hopes that other Restaurant Row businesses will join in the celebrations by offering their own specials and welcoming tired, famished runners and their supporters inside.

Hilton Harrisburg, the official host hotel, is also just two blocks from the finish line and offers a late checkout for race participants, making it a convenient way to really submerge yourself downtown—or quickly escape to a cold shower after the race, Gifford added.

“Having a downtown finish is one way of giving our small town race a big city feel,” Gifford said. “The race is a qualifier for the Boston Marathon, so why not give people a sample of what a big city race can feel like?”

Joy of Moving

Dr. Richard Rayner of Aspire Health, which has sponsored the race since 2011, sees it as a great way to get the community moving as a whole.

A runner himself, Rayner believes some marathon participants might miss the challenge of Wildwood Park’s hills, but will swap out the disappointment with the chance to improve their time for a chance to run in the Boston Marathon.

One of the things he appreciates about the Harrisburg Marathon, especially for patients who aren’t crazy about running, is the relay option. The Team Aspire running and walking group encourages people to keep moving, no matter the distance or pace, and walking the relay is a great way to get started, he said.

“Mostly we want people to begin to know the joy of moving,” Rayner said. “It’s one of the best things about this life. All runners know that there are times when running that you wonder why you are doing this—it doesn’t feel good at the time. However, the overall good feelings that it produces in your life are well worth the effort. We want people to feel that they too can be athletes no matter what their age or abilities.”

So far, it looks like participation numbers will be close to last year’s count—about 1,300 runners, Gifford said, but the YMCA hopes that grows as word of the revamped race spreads. Social media posts about the new route reached more than 30,000 people, he said, and many comments showed excitement for the changes.

“We want the race to grow, but it’s also important we keep that small town vibe,” Gifford said. “I think the coolest thing is making the race feel like it’s more about Harrisburg and celebrating all that this city offers and the great people who accomplish amazing things here.”

 

The Harrisburg Marathon will take place on City Island on Nov. 8. Walkers start at 6:30 a.m. and runners/relay participants will start at 8 a.m. Registration is available through Nov. 3 online or during packet pickup times. For more information, visit www.ymcarun.com or call 717-232-9622.

Continue Reading

Most Kipona Activities Return to Riverfront Park

A scene from the pow-wow at last year's Kipona.

A scene from the pow-wow at last year’s Kipona.

The city administration today announced details for the upcoming Kipona festival, stating that many activities will return to Riverfront Park.

The three-day festival, held yearly over the Labor Day weekend, will feature many events familiar to Kipona, such as canoe races, a kid’s festival, music, food and vendors.

Kipona will revert to its traditional format of most events taking place along the waterfront in Riverfront Park, while such activities as the Native American pow-wow and the karate tournament will be on City Island.

Last year, most activities migrated across the Walnut Street Bridge to City Island, leaving only a handful of vendors in Riverfront Park.

Hours will be Saturday, Sept. 5, and Sunday, Sept. 6, noon to 9 p.m., and Monday, Sept. 7, noon to 6 p.m. Fireworks will take place on Sunday. The Harrisburg Senators also will play games all three days.

“We will have food and live music all three days in Riverfront Park,” said Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “And we’re not forgetting about the children. There will face painting, balloons, caricaturists and even the Cobblestone Players to make this a true family festival.”

Street parking will be free on Sunday and Monday. Parking will be available throughout the festival on City Island for a flat rate of $3.

 

Continue Reading

Free Ride: One City Island business hasn’t paid rent in more than 5 years. Is Harrisburg finally ready to crack the whip?

Screenshot 2015-06-27 12.18.26In 1975, Fred Lamke, the son of a Harrisburg police officer and graduate of John Harris High, graduated from Point Park University in Pittsburgh with a journalism degree and returned to the city to look for a job.

“It was the kind of economy just like we just had,” he recalled, in an interview in 2013. He had an offer to work as a reporter for a local radio station, at $110 per week—or to drive a beer truck for more than double that amount. “So I took the job in the beer business,” he said. He spent a few years in the industry, later working as a manager and a salesman, before eventually buying a tavern off Paxton Street with his family.

One day, Lamke, who had minored in business, approached his father with an idea. “I said to my father, ‘You know what Harrisburg doesn’t have? Harrisburg doesn’t have any horse-drawn conveyance.’ He said, ‘Were you drinking?’ I said, ‘Well, yeah, I was drinking.’ He said, ‘Well, go sober up.’” But Lamke continued to nurse the idea, convinced it could work in the city. He eventually befriended an Amish man at a carriage auction who agreed to give him driving lessons. After a year and a half of training, he bought a horse and a vis-à-vis, a style of carriage in which passengers sit facing each other on opposite benches. In May 1984, Lamke registered the Harrisburg Carriage Company with the state corporations bureau.

Over the next few years, the business grew. By the summer of 1991, according to an article in the Patriot-News, the company had five horses and three carriages. That April, it had also moved to a new home—a carriage house newly constructed on City Island, which Lamke shared with the police department’s mounted patrol. In the several years prior, then-Mayor Stephen Reed had made the revitalization of the island, which he once described as a “long unused and blighted 63-acre land mass,” a major priority. A visitor pamphlet from the early 1990s highlighted the many facets of the island’s revival: a riverboat, a miniature golf course, a nature walk, the Senators baseball team. Among the photos was a shot of the carriage house at sunset, a crisply painted white carriage in the foreground being drawn by a sleek brown horse.

The company is the city’s only horse-drawn carriage service, and three decades after its founding, it remains something of a Harrisburg institution. It maintains an active Facebook page, where it posts photos of the occasional customer, most often a bride and groom or a couple who just got engaged on the ride. In September, one of Lamke’s carriages bore the coffin of Elijah Massey, a retired city police captain, in his funeral procession. “Fabulous people and lovely horses,” one person wrote in a five-star review. “Harrisburg is a beautiful location for a ride along the river.”

Yet the company’s relationship with the city, especially in recent years, has been far from ideal. Last month, in response to inquiries by TheBurg, the city furnished several records relating to the company. Together, they reveal a history of complacency and neglect dating back at least seven years. Lamke’s operating permit expired in 2008, making Mayor Eric Papenfuse’s administration the third in a row that has failed, at least so far, to renegotiate or renew it. The terms of the permit are generous—for the use of the carriage house, a nearby “corral and staging area” and multiple personal parking spaces, all of which were constructed and maintained at city expense, the Harrisburg Carriage Company pays a monthly fee of $100. (As a point of reference, the monthly rate for a single City Island parking space is $125.) Nonetheless, in 2010, after Mayor Linda Thompson took office, Lamke stopped paying this fee; he is currently more than $6,000 in arrears.

Part of the problem is a willful confusion of government and business functions. Lamke has been a city employee for nearly as long as he has provided carriage rides—he started working as Harrisburg’s animal control officer in 1985. He appears to use the carriage house as a remote office; both of the city’s animal-control trucks are frequently parked outside, whether or not he’s on duty. The city dissolved its mounted patrol unit in 2008, and since then Lamke has had exclusive use of a property that was once shared with a public entity. Papenfuse, contrasting Lamke’s permit with those of other City Island vendors, described it as “singularly problematic.” You “shouldn’t have a city employee renting from the city. Shouldn’t have a city employee in contract with the city for a private enterprise,” he told me. “That’s wrong.”

Last month, TheBurg reported on efforts to revitalize City Island. This year, the Papenfuse administration has reopened vendors’ permits, raising questions about the proper relationship between businesses and a government that wants to encourage them. The Harrisburg Carriage Company offers a case-in-point of how that relationship can go awry.

Among the records produced by the city were two letters addressed to Lamke from 2013, the last year of the Thompson administration. The first was dated Jan. 22 and signed by Brenda Alton, Thompson’s parks director. In the letter, Alton wrote she was “making a personal effort to inform myself about the businesses on City Island.” She noted Lamke’s expired permit term and the delinquent payments, but didn’t make any demands, aside from gently requesting a meeting. The second letter was signed by the city solicitor and dated in June. It described Lamke as “in default” and included language about the city’s right to evict. It’s not clear whether this second letter was ever sent; the version the city provided appears to be a draft.

“That one did not get resolved,” Alton, who left the city in early 2014, told me. “I worked with the police department, tried to get information, tried to work with Fred Lamke. I just couldn’t figure out what the relationship was.” Alton said that, in an effort to be “fiscally responsible on behalf of my department and the citizens,” she had tried to go through all of the island permits and ensure they were up-to-date. In many cases, she found the written permits unclear and gradually learned that several of the vendors had “verbal agreements” with the prior administration. She said that, in most cases, she was able to resolve her questions, but in the case of the carriage company it was “difficult to get the answers I needed.”

To some extent, the city may also have been falling short of its own obligations. The carriage house has badly deteriorated from the gleaming facility in the pamphlet from the ‘90s—the paint is peeling and dingy, vegetation sprouts from the gutters, and there’s a substantial hole in the roof, patched with plastic bags and moldering plywood. Inside, thick cobwebs hang from the rafters. It’s not obvious from the permit who should be held responsible. On the one hand, the permit refers to the company’s duty to repair any damage it causes, but on the other, it’s explicit that the house is city property and that it has been constructed at the city’s “sole expense.” Additionally, the city has neglected the fenced-in paddock the company uses for the horses’ exercise. Jenise Mattern, who volunteers at the stables six days a week, said a missing section of fence, drainage ditches leading from the ballpark and unchecked weeds have made the paddock unsuitable for the horses. “The city doesn’t keep up with it,” she said. The horses “need to get out for their health.”

This has also raised concerns about the safety and well-being of the horses. In May, I got an email from Annie Leguennec, an area resident who was worried the horses were being confined “inside their stable day and night.” A few days later, she posted complaints on the company’s Facebook page, challenging it over whether the horses received adequate time outdoors. The company, which currently keeps a total of eight horses, replied that it exercises them both in the City Island paddock and at a farm in North Annville. “For the safety of the horses, we only use the paddock on the island when there aren’t many people around,” the company wrote. (Aside from general animal cruelty provisions, there are no state laws regulating commercial providers of horse-drawn carriage services. A spokesman for the state public utility commission, which regulated the industry until 1990, said Lamke was issued a certificate in 1984 that was subsequently cancelled in 1989, after Lamke “was found guilty of failing to file his annual reports.”)

In June, after failing to reach him through visits to the carriage house and through Facebook, I reached Lamke by phone. It was around 8:30 in the evening, and he asked me to call him back in the morning, when he could give me his “full attention.” The next morning, he told me he “really can’t talk about anything.” “I’m just not permitted to talk,” he said, citing “longstanding city protocol.” I told him my questions concerned his private business, not his work as a city employee. He demurred, saying he could get fired for talking. (Joyce Davis, the city’s communications director, said there was no such prohibition; when I mentioned Lamke’s claims to Papenfuse, he said simply, “That’s not true.”)

When I first asked Papenfuse about the Harrisburg Carriage Company, he said he’d had conversations with Lamke as part of a “comprehensive review” of all the permits on the island. He described the expired permit and delinquent payments as a “bad situation” that his administration had inherited, though he also said, with regards to the city, “I don’t think we’ve lived up to our responsibilities, either.” He added that he saw the “concept of carriage rides” as a “good thing for Harrisburg.” “I think the city has some interest in hopefully preserving that,” he said. “I think once it’s gone, it’s going to be unlikely it will ever come back.” He also said he was still collecting information and asked me to follow up.

Several days later, I asked him about the company again. This time, Papenfuse said the city was on the brink of sending a letter—Lamke would be asked to fully repay his delinquent fees within 30 days or else cease operations on the island. The city would devote the proceeds to restoring the carriage house, he said, with the understanding that it needed to receive timely rent in order to keep up with maintenance on its end. Meanwhile, Lamke, like the other vendors, would be given a one-year permit renewal until new terms could be negotiated. Neil Grover, the city solicitor, referred to these permits as “holding the status quo” while the city examined the island’s economics and plans for future development.

When I spoke to Alton about the island, she expressed regret that she hadn’t been able to make more progress there. “I always thought City Island could be more and could be bringing in more revenue,” she told me. She blamed herself, saying she never seemed to have enough time, but she also thought the vendors bore some responsibility. “Everybody seemed to want their piece of the pie, but they failed to remember it was the city’s property, that some revenue needed to come back to the city.” She said she believed the island could be an attraction like Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, if it just had the right development. “But we never had the opportunity to look forward,” she said. “We were always putting out fires.”

Continue Reading

TheBurg Podcast, June 12, 2015

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

June 12, 2015: This week, Larry and Paul discuss a pair of hires discussed at Tuesday’s night’s City Council meeting and the future of City Island, the city’s gem in the middle of the Susquehanna.

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.

Continue Reading

Treasured Island: Many people have high hopes for the future of Harrisburg’s City Island. But can its players paddle in the same direction?

Screenshot 2015-06-01 08.41.10One evening in March 1986, Mike Trephan was at the reception for his own wedding, at Catalano’s bar and lounge in Wormleysburg, when he got a call from then-Mayor Steve Reed.

“He says, ‘Michael, the river’s coming up,’” Trephan recalled. “‘You’ve got to move—’” Trephan knew what Reed was talking about: the hull of what was to become the Pride of the Susquehanna riverboat, a hulking metal frame that was perched on a City Island beach, unmoored. For the past year, Trephan and a group of local businessmen had been working to build an old-fashioned passenger boat to augment the city’s riverfront attractions. Trephan, who had recollections of taking a ferry to City Island as a child, called it “an old memory becoming a new dream.” He got off the phone and, along with his wife, headed for the island.

Rising waters had imperiled the project once already. Months before the wedding, the river had torn the boat from where it was docked on the west shore, wedging it against a pier of the Market Street Bridge. The disaster prompted a Patriot-News reporter to liken the riverboat to the Titanic—a display of hubris that was doomed to failure. But the hull was rescued and relocated to the island, and Trephan, after coaxing more positive coverage from the paper, kept the project and its capital campaign alive. On his wedding night, he got to the boat before the swelling river did. “And who shows up and helped us? Mayor Reed,” Trephan said. “We were all dressed up, but we got the boat tied up. I think he’s the one that brought ropes over, if I’m not mistaken.” The boat stayed anchored to the island.

The riverboat was just one piece of City Island’s transformation under Reed. For nearly a century, the island had been a recreational site for city dwellers, following the 1890 construction of the Walnut Street Bridge. According to Eric V. Fasick’s “Harrisburg and the Susquehanna River,” a collection of images of the river published earlier this year, the newly granted access led the city to develop bathing beaches, playgrounds and baseball diamonds there. By the time Reed took office, however, in 1981, the island had fallen out of use and acquired a reputation for prostitution and cruising. Trephan called it “disheveled,” though, he hastened to add, it “wasn’t as bad as people say it was. It just wasn’t developed.”

All that changed under Reed. In 2010, giving an interview for a local history project, Reed recounted his search for an enterprise that would have a “catalytic effect on changing the image and perception of the city.” “You needed something that had universal appeal,” he said. Waterfront investments, he went on, were “almost no-brainer types of developments. Once you do them, people will come. You build it, they will come.”

Trephan got involved after talking to the mayor during Kipona, the city’s riverfront festival over Labor Day weekend. Trephan had charted helicopters for the festival, and, as he and the mayor observed the long line of people waiting for a ride, Reed asked about other ways to improve the riverfront. Trephan ventured a suggestion for a ferry. That idea blossomed into the campaign for the riverboat, which Trephan spearheaded, along with other acquisitions—a railroad circuit and steam train, purchased from a bankrupt Vermont millionaire; an antique carousel. The crowning achievement was the construction of a new ballpark and the acquisition of a minor-league franchise.

Trephan, now in his seventies, looks back on the redevelopment of City Island as an emblem of Reed’s vision and follow-through. “He was a doer,” he said. “People knew that if he said he’d get something done, he would.” More than that, though, he recalls it as a story of political and geographical unity. The mayor “didn’t give a shit what your political party was,” he said. In the case of the Pride of the Susquehanna, he “probably got that done with 80 percent Republican help.” Trephan wanted the boat to be a project of both shores, and, when it came time to incorporate a nonprofit to manage it, he lobbied for the name to include “Harrisburg Area,” as opposed to just “Harrisburg.” (In a history of the riverboat, which Trephan put together in 2007, he wrote that it “might have been the first time that the east and west shores ever came together on a community project.”)

The renaissance on the island has largely endured. The Senators still play ball in the stadium, now dubbed Metro Bank Park. The Pride of the Susquehanna is paddling into its 27th year. But in recent months, both the private sector and local officials have begun looking to improve its offerings. Much as it did in 1986, when its mayor showed up to save a stranded boat, the city is considering what sort of businesses can flourish there, and how the government should help.

 

 

Last November, a group of land-use experts met over two days in downtown Harrisburg to contemplate City Island’s future. The Urban Land Institute, a global nonprofit, had convened them to tackle a question: was the island was being used to its full potential?

Urban Land Institute panels are meant to provide planning advice, as the institute puts it, “in an atmosphere free of politics or preconceptions.” Susan Baltake, the executive director of its Philadelphia council, which oversaw the City Island panel, told me the institute “gives cover to elected officials, who don’t want to be the ones telling constituents what to do.” The panel, which included lawyers, engineers, designers and real estate and construction professionals, among others, toured the island and interviewed 51 “stakeholders” representing the various constituencies with interests there. The result was a report that George Asimos, a local real estate attorney for the law firm Saul Ewing, and the panel’s co-chair, said he hoped would be “an informed, open-minded, no-agenda catalyst for action.”

The report affirmed the island’s present recreational use, while highlighting its immense potential. It called for a form of centralized management and urged the city to develop a long-term master plan. Among other ideas, it recommended pursuing additional programming at the island’s sports facilities and exploring winter activities and a year-round restaurant. It strongly urged the city to work with the City Islanders, a professional soccer team, to improve their stadium, which is underwhelming, despite the view of the Harrisburg skyline from its bleachers. The report also included a few of what Asimos called “blue-sky ideas,” including a “Museum of the Susquehanna” to celebrate the river’s ecology.

“City Island is a well-loved place,” Asimos told me. “It is unique and tremendous in its location, and in the fact that you can walk and drive to it.” But, he noted, the island’s amenities are “not planned in a uniform way.” The island didn’t have a consistent signage system, and the natural resources were integrated haphazardly. “It’s crying out for a unified master plan,” he said. Brad Jones, the president of the downtown development nonprofit Harristown, which led the request for the Urban Land Institute study, said the panel learned that vendors shared more or less the same wish list. They wanted the island to be “clean, safe and beautiful,” and they would like “maybe a little more marketing.”

Where does city government fit into these objectives? In 1984, before the rapid development of the island under Reed, the city petitioned the Urban Land Institute for a similar report. This time, the request came not from the city but from Harristown, with the backing of the Dauphin County commissioners and the regional tourism bureau. The difference is small, but it may say something about a divergence in priorities. Since Mayor Eric Papenfuse took office, he has clashed with these entities over spending on development and tourism. Though he was interviewed for the report, he took little interest in it. “I don’t think it told us anything we didn’t already know,” he told me, describing it as “one of those things the county likes to spend money on.” (Dauphin County paid $15,000 for the study.)

More to the point, Papenfuse has begun his own examination of the island, focusing less on potential for future development and more on the status quo. The city recently engaged a contract lawyer to go through the city’s permits with island vendors. The Urban Land Institute report recommended giving vendors longer permits, to encourage investment—yet the city recently notified vendors that their permits would be extended provisionally, for one year only. Jackie Parker, director of the city’s Department of Community and Economic Development, which encompasses the parks division, said she expected ultimately to renew them. But, she added, “We’re taking a look, because they’ve been on the books for a very long time, so we felt, and so did the vendors, that there were some things in there that they’d like to discuss and, you know, make some changes.”

Opening the permits may simply be about ironing out wrinkles; most of them date back a decade or more. But it may also reflect a deeper reconsideration of the vendor-city relationship. Under some permits, the city pays the vendor’s electric bill. Many contain a profit-sharing provision—if the vendor earns above a certain figure in a given year, a percentage of those profits goes to the city. But the city has rarely, and perhaps never, collected money under the provision. (One city official suggested such profit-sharing was never meant to be enforced, but rather was a way of making permits for private use of city-owned land more politically palatable.) Vendors, meanwhile, have found the one-year term puzzling. “As a business owner, how do you take a one-year permit to the bank to get a loan?” one vendor asked me.

These concerns are especially prevalent in the case of the asset that dominates the island—the minor-league baseball stadium. The city renovated the ballpark in 2007, matching an $18 million state grant with $18 million in borrowed money. (Around the same time, Reed sold the Senators to a private investor for $13 million, representing quite a coup, as the city had paid less than $7 million for the team a decade before.) Reed claimed that, under the deal, the city should expect ongoing revenues from the ballpark of $500,000 per year. In fact, the city now loses money on the stadium, largely because annual debt payments on it exceed the year’s rent and tax revenues by around $200,000. One city official described the arrangement as a “naked put—the city has all the downside.”

More worrying to Papenfuse, the stadium permit requires the city to pay for facility upgrades, potentially at very high cost to taxpayers. “You have a major scoreboard outage, you have an elevator go down, and you could suddenly have a million dollars in a year that the city’s on the hook for,” he told me. The Senators are supposed to pay the city a portion of parking revenues and stadium naming rights, but the city hasn’t received the money for about a year now, because it’s been siphoned off to pay for repairs. Papenfuse has been meeting with Mark Butler, a local businessman who bought the team earlier this year, and said he feels optimistic about the negotiations. He called the team “good partners” and pointed to its nearly $400,000 annual lease payment, which he acknowledged was costly. “From their perspective, they have the highest lease payments of any team in the league,” he said. “But from our perspective it doesn’t work, and the city can’t fill the gap.” (Butler did not respond to requests for an interview.)

The Urban Land Institute aspires to apolitical advice, but it is difficult to sever political considerations from the use of public land. Asimos, though he said the mayor’s task force didn’t come up during the panel, said the “fact that City Island is still costly to the city” did. In the fall, absent a renegotiated ballpark permit, Papenfuse will go before City Council and ask members to budget for the stadium’s capital repairs—and thus balance the city’s island subsidy against other spending priorities. I asked him what his long-term goal was for the island. “I’m not sure we can achieve it, but the goal is to get it to be—it doesn’t need to make any money for the city, but it shouldn’t be a financial liability to the city,” he said. “And right now, it’s a huge financial liability, with a sort of question mark for how high it can go.”

 

On a Thursday in early May, around noon, three men in red T-shirts and matching pants left a small, gray shed on the island, near the Walnut Street Bridge, and climbed into a Department of Corrections van. An escort drove them past the stadium towards the beach at the northern end. There, behind the putting greens of a miniature golf course, they spread out at a picnic table for lunch.

Jeff Palkovic opened Water Golf in 1990, making him one of the island’s longest-running attractions. A few years ago, when the city was nearly bankrupt, Mike Trephan organized Palkovic and several other businessmen into a loose committee to help take care of the city’s parks, including the island. A fellow board member of Trephan’s worked in corrections, and she connected the group with a community work program at the Camp Hill prison. Since then, Palkovic said, he has spent hundreds of hours working with the prisoners to maintain the island—cutting back overgrowth, painting facilities, even clearing a walking trail on the west shore.

These efforts raise the question of what the proper relationship is between city government and private businesses, particularly private businesses that rely for their livelihood on public land. The island is a city park, and it falls to the city to maintain the public areas. When the city can’t afford the maintenance, how far should businesses go to keep up appearances on their own? Trephan, who approached former Mayor Linda Thompson with the offer to help early in her term, said she initially seemed suspicious of his motives. Trephan told her he wanted to help because the parks were “what our forefathers left us, and it’s up to us to keep them going.” “All of a sudden, she completely changed her demeanor,” he recalled. “I only had 10 minutes with her—we sat there for an hour, hour-and-a-half talking.” After their meeting, he said, Thompson “helped me anywhere she could.”

Vendors have more recently taken the initiative in marketing and promoting the island. For the past year, they have held monthly meetings to discuss issues ranging from the island’s appearance to branding, signage and security. They meet either on the riverboat or at a ballpark conference room and are typically joined by the city’s parks and recreation director, at least for part of the time. Jackie Parker compared it to a downtown merchant’s association—“they really are starting to work together as a group, which is cool,” she told me. But the businesses also seem to want to ensure their insights and experience are respected. “I want to work as partners with the city,” Steve Oliphant, who owns Susquehanna Outfitters, which rents watercraft and offers river tours, told me. At the same time, he added, the parks administrators were newcomers, while most of the vendors had been on the island for 10 years or more. “They should be coming to the businesses that exist and working as partners. We want to help, too. Have input. Not feel like decisions are made in our absence, and they’ll tell us how that works out.”

“I think the city and the mayor are so overwhelmed with trying to fix things,” Palkovic told me. “There’s a hundred things to do and they can do 10 things.” Still, he reminisced about an earlier era of cohesion, when the island, under aggressive city management, seemed to pick up momentum. Each new vendor drew visitors to the island, and, as a result, everyone’s business improved. Tina Manoogian-King, the longstanding parks and recreation director under Reed, “ran it with an ironclad fist,” he said. “But you know what? You knew what to expect and you knew it was gonna be really, really good.” She was especially ardent about vendors cleaning up trash. To this day, after fireworks displays on the island, Palkovic goes around with a blower to clean up fallen debris. “And I have no problem with that,” he said. “Because I want the island looking good, so when you come, you’re impressed.”

Speaking to vendors and city officials, I wondered how much Papenfuse’s approach to the island was informed by his views on Reed’s legacy. His approach to the National Civil War Museum set one kind of precedent. When he asked the county to cut its funding, he described the museum as a financial waste that should never have been constructed. What Reed saw as a worthy investment, Papenfuse now saw as a crippling obligation. I asked him—did he feel the same way about the stadium and the Senators? “I think it’s distinct,” he told me. “Because there’s no question the Senators bring a benefit, and that perhaps at one time you could make an argument that a city or municipality could subsidize a sports team.” When it came to City Island, it wasn’t that he didn’t see the value of the investment. It was that he believed he had a more pressing obligation to the bottom line. “When we have debt that we absolutely have to pay, and we’re hundreds of thousands of dollars short on a yearly basis,” he said, “we don’t have the luxury of looking at the soft economic impact of that. We have to come up with real numbers.”

Last month, on a nearly perfect spring night, I went to a Senators game. I was early, and while I waited for my wife and our friends, I stood near the gates and watched a crowd stream in from the parking lots and over the bridge. The first time I’d seen the Senators play, before I moved here, I found the experience charming—the kids’ contests between innings, the ads for local businesses on the Jumbotron, the lights strung up on the Walnut Street Bridge. Now, though, it struck me as an emblem of a much more complex legacy.

I thought of something Mike Trephan told me. We’d been talking about the uniqueness of Harrisburg’s riverfront, and the beauty of the island, but had gotten sidetracked on his estimation of the Reed years. He was aware of the incinerator and related borrowings that, late in Reed’s tenure, wrecked the city’s finances. He would entertain the suggestion of bad governance, but he didn’t doubt for a second the mayor’s motives. “Everything he did, he did for the city,” Trephan said. He paused a moment, then set these thoughts aside. “Ah, it’s a great place, City Island,” he said, as if it was all that mattered.

 

Continue Reading

River City: From ferry to festivals, the Susquehanna has defined Harrisburg.

Screenshot 2015-06-01 08.26.38Before there was Harris’ Ferry, there was a shallow plateau allowing Native Americans to ford the Susquehanna River. Trails led to and from the eastern and western shores. The landings weren’t called Shipoke or Lemoyne then, but they were made to order for the trading post and ferry established by entrepreneurial pioneer John Harris.

A new book by Eric V. Fasick, “Harrisburg and the Susquehanna River,” begins at that beginning, starting with the ford in the river and chronicling the centuries-long relationship between a capital city and its shallow, sometimes sparkling, occasionally cranky waterway.

The book, from Arcadia Publishing’s “Images of America” series, draws largely from the Historical Society of Dauphin County’s archives. As chair of HSDC’s collections committee, Fasick has special insight into the rich trove.

“I knew what was upstairs,” he says. “I knew what we had.”

The history of residents’ interactions with the river is a history of moneymaking, says Fasick. Ferries, toll bridges, dance halls, sports, festivals, dredging for waste coal washing down from northeast Pennsylvania—it’s all there in a book that explores the Susquehanna’s waters, islands and bridges from Colonial days to the 1990s.

As the book recounts, before City Island became the focal point for mid-river fun, there was Independence Island, near what is now the Harvey Taylor Bridge. Ferries would carry guests to a dance hall fashioned from a rolling rink transported to the spot.

“They had an old coal chute they set up for kids to slide down into the lagoon,” says Fasick.

Around 1900, the city of Harrisburg acquired its own island, known originally as Turkey Island and then called by the names of a succession of owners. One island owner, John J. Hargest, had been well known for the vegetables he grew and sold in Market Square.

The newly named City Island became home to a bathing beach, originally restricted for male use by city officials who said they had “witnessed the antics of Atlantic City and Coney Island.” Until urban flight and the coming of municipal pools, it was a popular cool-down destination for residents and a revenue generator for the city.

“The push from the city was to keep people in town,” said Fasick.

In a generations-spanning coincidence, Fasick realized after publication that the cover photo his editor chose—scores of men, women and children enjoying a dip in the river—included his great-grandfather and great-grandmother or her sister.

Rises, Falls

Fasick, steeped in local history and river culture, was born in Harrisburg and grew up in Lemoyne. He works at the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board and serves on the HSDC board. He has been published in history journals and authored another Arcadia book, “Tropical Storm Agnes in Greater Harrisburg.”

As Fasick’s river chronicle shows, the Susquehanna’s role in the life of the region rises and falls with the city’s fates. Beginning in 1900, the City Beautiful movement did the river a favor, leading to construction of riverfront walkways, dedication of parklands and an end to raw sewage pumped directly into those sparkling waters.

People responded by celebrating life on the water. Festivals, whether they were called Water Carnival or Kipona, originally included participatory races. Residents competed in the fastest freestyle, swiftest canoeing or the unique talent for swimming while reading a newspaper without getting it wet. Really.

But the general intimacy with the river from those days has dissipated.

“We want everything sterilized to the point where we don’t want to be in that perceived filth,” he says.

City Island activities have included football games, track meets, concerts and gardening. The one constant through all the years—at least, since around 1893—has been baseball, and, when photos lacked identification, Fasick turned history detective.

For one long shot from center field, he spent more than 35 hours and used such clues as arched lettering on a player’s uniform, a coach’s distinctive jacket, and the overcoats worn by spectators to conclude that it was Sept. 22, 1904. On that cool day, the Harrisburg Athletic Club defeated the visiting Washington Senators, led by Hall of Fame pitching legend Walter Johnson.

“I was trying to date the photos and, really having no background on baseball at the time, I thought it gave me a good groundwork to start with this one,” says Fasick.

And in a photo from Sept. 25, 1919, when the Boston Red Sox came to town, is that Babe Ruth approaching first base? There’s no proof, but Fasick says the big guy in baggy breeches played that day, and that stiff-backed running stance sure looks familiar.

“I think it’s Babe Ruth,” says Fasick. “I put my proverbial rear end out there on that one saying it’s Ruth, but I really do think it is.”

“Harrisburg and the Susquehanna River,” by Eric V. Fasick, can be purchased at several local bookstores and online. A book-signing will be held to coincide with the opening of the “Susquehanna River Islands” exhibit, June 14, at the Historical Society of Dauphin County, 219 S. Front St., Harrisburg. Information is at www.dauphincountyhistory.org.

Continue Reading

The Risk of Winning: Harrisburg, place your bets.

Screenshot 2015-04-29 00.32.24My mother once told me about her first gambling experience.

She was 21, newly married, and she and my father spent an afternoon at a racetrack in New York.

An elderly, grizzled denizen of the track sat next to them and noticed my mother’s increasing frustration as she lost race after race.

“It’s good that you lost,” he told her after the day’s program was over. “This way, you won’t come back.”

The old guy was onto something. He understood the allure of gambling, even if he couldn’t resist it himself. Once in, it’s hard to get out, as the gambler keeps trying to relive the thrill of the big win, hoping it will happen again.

When I look back at the history of Harrisburg, I see bets all over the place. The Reed administration was a 28-year, high-stakes game, one that followed the pattern my mother was warned about.

Former Mayor Steve Reed had some significant early victories, betting big and coming up with a winning hand on things like attracting a minor league baseball team to Harrisburg and deciding where to locate a new downtown hotel.

In those early days, he seemed to win even when he lost. Reed never got his hydroelectric dam across the Susquehanna built, but invested the project’s $391 million at a higher interest rate than was paid out to municipal bond-holders, earning enough money to build a baseball stadium and make other improvements to City Island.

Over time, though, the odds turned against him, as they do every gambler. By the 1990s, his overspending and refusal to raise taxes began to catch up, requiring constant scrambles and financial gimmickry to fill budget holes. His $6 million revolving loan fund never bore much fruit, with many businesses refusing to pay back their loans. And his big economic development initiative, building, in his words, “five nationally scaled museums,” thus turning Harrisburg into a museum mecca, largely flopped at a very high cost.

Reed’s biggest mistake, however, was a classic gambler’s error—chasing your losses. Faced with a broken-down incinerator, Reed kept doubling down on a bad hand, taking greater and greater risks to make back the money he already had sunk into it. He couldn’t bring himself to abandon the project and eat the losses when they reached $50 million, $75 million, $100 million. Finally, hundreds of millions in the hole, he was removed from the table by the city’s voters.

But why am I revisiting the Reed years?

In March, now-Mayor Eric Papenfuse made a wager of his own. He placed a bet that some tweaks to Harrisburg’s hated parking system would deliver more people to downtown businesses, some of which say they’ve suffered after the cost of on-street parking doubled last year and paid parking was extended to Saturdays.

In a deal with Park Harrisburg, “happy hour” rates were cut by $1 an hour and, through the Pango mobile app, parkers can get four free hours on Saturdays. To pay for this, Harrisburg staked up to $285,000 in unspent hotel tax funds set aside for marketing, money that will be used to cover any losses that Park Harrisburg might incur because of the lower rates.

Papenfuse believes that the cost to the city will be “much, much less” than the amount committed, perhaps nothing. In a best-case scenario, lower rates will lead to more customers and greater revenues for Park Harrisburg, which might lower parking fees permanently.

In general, I don’t believe in taking undue risks with taxpayer money. However, I think that Papenfuse’s bet is a good one, as it has limited downside and potentially significant upside. In a way, it reminds me of the dam-money arbitrage from Reed’s early years. Both men were faced with what appeared to be intractable problems—the decrepit, embarrassing state of City Island for Reed and onerous parking fees for Papenfuse. Both then employed highly creative solutions that also made financial sense.

Now, Eric Papenfuse is no Steve Reed. While quite confident, he lacks Reed’s dismissive arrogance and take-no-prisoners approach to governing. While a risk-taker, his risks, so far, have been calculated and limited. He shows far more respect for the public dollar and seems less likely to become addicted to the allure of creative financing. I also don’t think Papenfuse will serve in office for nearly three decades, which compounded the severity of the errors that Reed made.

Nonetheless, it’s worth remembering that there’s danger in a winning bet. The peril is over-confidence, in believing in your own infallibility, of thinking that great victory requires great gamble, of wishing to relive the rush of the big score.

So, we’ll see what happens with Papenfuse’s roll of the dice. For the sake of Harrisburg, I hope it pays off and, by this time next year, we’ll have lower parking rates, more customers downtown and $285,000 still sitting in the bank. Unlike my mother’s acquaintance from the racetrack, I can’t silently root for failure, even if, as the old man knew, when it comes to gambling, we often win most when we walk away dejected the first time out.

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

Continue Reading