Tag Archives: City Island

Musical Notes: Hot Town

As much as we want to enjoy the warmth and sunshine forever, summer eventually has to come to an end. What you might not know is that, even though you might be returning from vacations and getting back in the swing of work, there’s still plenty of entertainment to unwind with in Harrisburg this month. There are lots of fests, shows and parties to close out the summer in style.

On Aug. 2, Dauphin County hosts its Cultural Fest on the corner of 2nd and Market streets downtown for a free night of dance, musical and cultural performances, headlined by Sheila E. After that, SoMa has its summer block party on Aug. 29 at Blackberry Tech behind the International House. Expect a chill evening in one of Harrisburg’s coolest neighborhoods, complemented by local food and beverages and featuring a performance by DJ Cashmere. Next up, XL Live hosts its End of Summer 90s Jam on Aug. 30. Prepare to dance your face off to the tunes of DJ Sizzors, back again after his hot DJ set for Vanilla Ice.

To round it all out, don’t miss a true a Harrisburg tradition with the 103rd annual Kipona Fest from Aug. 30 to Sept. 2, taking place on the riverfront and at City Island. If you haven’t been before, check out the food, live bands, canoe races, festival of colors, powow and even an annual “Duck Derby” rubber duck race in our own Susquehanna River to benefit Making Strides Against Breast Cancer. Whew, there’s still lots to do!

 

THE SOUL REBELS, 8/16, 8PM, XL LIVE, $15
When they’re not on tour, the Soul Rebels can be found every Thursday night in their favorite hometown venue: Le Bon Temps Roule. Luckily for us, they’re coming to XL Live for quite an unforgettable performance. Since 2009, this musical tour de force of New Orleans has made an international name for themselves as an eight-piece, genre-bending brass group. Starting out sans name, “Soul Rebels” stuck thanks to Cyril Neville, who bestowed it on them when they opened for his performance at the well-known Nola venue Tipitina’s. Since their start, they’ve rocked many solo shows, collaborated with famous artists like Marilyn Manson, Metallica and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, opened for Lauryn Hill, Cee Lo Green, Kanye West and Snoop Dogg, just to name a few, and they’ve also performed on several television networks like CBS, HBO and NBC. Come on out to appreciate their musical energy and a soulful style that just won’t quit.

 

FINDING FREEDOM FESTIVAL, 8/17, 11AM, FNB FIELD $10-20
City Island is a staple for summer fun in Harrisburg, so it’s the logical place for the ultimate local band festival of the season. Featuring 10 bands, the Finding Freedom Festival at FNB Field starts at noon with the M80s and ends at 9 p.m. with Maiden America. It’s organized by Just for Today Recovery, a local nonprofit from Lemoyne that aids local recovery communities and veterans, with proceeds from this all-day concert going towards purchasing instruments and other musical accessories for their Recovery Through Music program. If you’d like to help those suffering from addiction or just want to sample some local talent, this show’s the one for you. Be sure to hit the concessions stand throughout the day for optimal festival food.

 

JAY PHARAOH, 10/23, 7PM, THE FORUM, $25 FOR PUBLIC, FREE FOR HU STUDENTS*
This is another one of my “not quite a musician but still quite noteworthy” shoutouts. Thanks to Harrisburg University’s concert series, the triple-threat actor, rapper and comedian Jay Pharoah is coming to the city. Best known for his work on NBC’s comedy sketch show “Saturday Night Live,” he’s famous for his impressions of former President Barack Obama, Kanye West, Jay Z and countless others. He got his start with stand-up comedy and was a regular cast member on SNL from 2010 to 2016. Since then, he’s appeared in some films like “Lola Versus” and “Ride Along” and is even in the works of his first album alongside record producer Myles William. Since this is HU’s “Welcome Back Show” for the fall semester, tickets are free for students. You don’t want to miss a night of delightful laughs and impressive impressions with this iconic SNL alum.

*Editor’s Note: the Jay Pharaoh show, originally scheduled for Aug. 28, has been changed to Oct. 23. 

Mentionables:

Exmag, Aug. 3, XL Live;
Joe Olnick Band, Aug. 3, River City Blues Club;
Sean Rowe, Aug. 9, Greystone Public House;
Liliac, Aug. 9, H*MAC Capitol Room;
Shrimp Ryan’s Jig Band, Aug. 9, The Millworks rooftop;
Blues Cruise on the Riverboat, Aug. 11, Pride of the Susquehanna;
Opera in the Park, Aug. 11, Italian Lake;
The Queers, Aug. 17, H*MAC Stage on Herr;
Tommy D. Trio, Aug. 24, River City

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Feast Then Fireworks: Annual Food Truck Fest returns to Harrisburg for July 4

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse today introduced the city’s July 4 celebration in Riverfront Park.

It’s almost that time of the year when Riverfront Park is filled with music, food and, of course, fireworks.

Starting at 3 p.m. on Thursday, the banks of the Susquehanna River will become home to more than 40 food trucks, bands, vendors and more for the annual July 4th Food Truck Festival.

“We are ready here in the city for our annual Fourth of July Food Truck Festival and Fireworks,” said Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “It is, as always, a one-day, free event, and we are expecting at least 35,000 visitors for this amazing event.”

Food favorites such as Soul Burrito, Artisan Pizza, Potato Coop and Mad Dash are returning this year, as well as the always-popular Farm Show milkshakes. New this year are Cactus Blue Mexican, selling tacos, chimichangas, nachos and other favorites, Marsico’s A Taste of Italy and Bananarama with frozen, organic banana whip sundaes.

For the first time, the festival will hosts a wine garden next to Kunkel Plaza. Guests can enjoy wine from five wineries including 5 Schmucks Winery, Winery at Hunters Valley and J&P Winery. There will also be acoustic music played by Keith Goldstein and Alex Alegria in the garden.

Four music acts will perform on the live music stage near the Market Street Bridge between 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. This year’s lineup includes Shrimp Ryan’s Jig Band, Justin Angelo Band, Lost Love Horizon and Time Bomb. The Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra is also returning to the festival. At 7:30 p.m., the orchestra will perform in Reservoir Park’s band shell.

“It’s a phenomenal concert, completely free,” said Devan Drabik, director of Explore HBG. “And the view of the fireworks [at Reservoir Park] is phenomenal. So, we encourage you to check that out, too.”

The Kid’s Zone will be packed with many activities for children, including free face painting, arts and crafts and balloon art. Staring at 5 p.m., kids will also get the chance to take photos with Wonder Woman and Captain America.

Fireworks will begin at 9:15 p.m. and last for around 30 minutes. According to Scott Elliott, director of communications for the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency, 1,000 firework shells are expected to launch during the show.

Street parking will be free for the day. Parking is $5 for those who wish to park on City Island and $10 at the Market Street Garage from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Recycle Bicycle will have a free stand for those riding their bikes to the event.

Guest will also get to experience the newly cemented lower river walk, a $500,000 project that started a few months ago. Though the walk is not 100-percent finished, Papenfuse stated that the area right across from City Island is available for people to sit and watch the fireworks.

Attendees can also grab hold of a “foodie guide” to plan out their festival experience.

“We’re hoping for wonderful weather. We know we’ll have an incredible family-friendly day,” Papenfuse said. “I hope you can all come and join us on Thursday, July 4, to celebrate Independence Day in our great capital city.”

The July 4th Food Truck Festival is Thursday, July 4, from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. in Riverfront Park, Harrisburg, with fireworks following. For more information, visit harrisburgpa.gov/july4th.

 

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Fit Takes Flight: The sky’s the limit at 2nd annual Thrive Fit Fest.

Photo by Symmetry Co. Photography

June 22, according to Ashley Mentzer, will be “the best fitness day ever.”

Except, when she says it, it sounds like “ev-aaahhh.”

Mentzer, organizer of the 2nd Annual Thrive Fit Fest, said that fitness should be approachable and fun. She pointed to a publicity photo.

“This is what fitness looks like—all different shapes and sizes and body types,” she said. “We’re real people.”

Mentzer, 29, a New Cumberland native, is transforming Capital City Airport’s 16,000-square-foot hangar into “a hub for central PA’s fitness and wellness community.”

More than 60 fitness, health and wellness professionals will converge at the daylong festival to offer sample classes, demos, workshops and info—to help attendees’ health and wellness goals get off the ground.

“You can come whether you’re a fitness junkie or a fitness newbie and find something that challenges and interests you,” said Mentzer, owner of Thrive Fit Co., Harrisburg.

Crunch Fitness, Harrisburg and York, will kick off the day’s main stage festivities with a dance party-inspired workout. Additional main stage offerings include matte Pilates with Mechanicsburg’s Absolute Pilates, yoga with Lemoyne’s Central Penn Health Studio, an arms and abs-focused boot camp with Mentzer’s own Thrive Fit Co., and barre with Mechanicsburg’s and Lancaster’s Pure Barre.

“We were also on the main stage last year, and it was amazing to see so much buzz and energy,” said Laura Deitch, owner of Pure Barre Mechanicsburg and Lancaster.

Deitch said that barre is “inspired by ballet” to tone all areas of the body—upper, lower and abs. She launched Pure Barre two years ago but said that events like Thrive Fit Fest help her to continue raising awareness about barre’s benefits, as the low-impact workouts are accessible to all.

“One of the things that makes me most excited is the community aspect, having conversations with people and giving them the opportunity to try a class at the same time,” Deitch said. “The more we educate people about their options, the better their chance to live their best, healthiest life.”

 

Energetic, Engaging

The 2015 south-central Pennsylvania community needs assessment led by Penn State Health, which is Thrive Fit Fest’s presenting sponsor, found that one-third of residents are obese and about half participate in aerobic physical activity. Health providers listed “poor eating habits” as the top “risky behavior,” with “lack of exercise” close behind.

Shawnna Smith, a nurse at Penn State Health Medical Group Mechanicsburg who is also a certified personal trainer, is on the front lines of area health care.

“Some people understand the link between health and exercise; others have resistance,” Smith said. “So, part of our job is to get to the bottom of why they have that resistance. Exercise and fitness, if you find something you like, doesn’t have to be a chore.”

Besides Thrive Fit Fest fitness offerings, Penn State Health will provide blood pressure screenings, Orange Theory will offer a heart rate workshop, and the Healthy Grocer and Harvest Seasonal Grill will participate with food demos, recipes and nutritional information.

Additional activities will involve prenatal health and fitness, foot scans and workouts on two additional stages. Swag bags given to all attendees will contain numerous free passes or special rates at participating studios and businesses.

June is the perfect time to evaluate fitness goals, Mentzer said, because New Year’s resolutions have likely fallen by the wayside. So, fitness studios generally have lighter attendance, which can mean more focused attention and dedicated time for those who enroll.

About 500 people attended last year’s inaugural event at FNB Field on City Island, including Harrisburg resident Nada Walton, who brought her 11-year old daughter. A former competitive swimmer whose fitness routine now includes running, Walton said she enjoyed investigating cross-training fitness options.

“My daughter and I rocked out to a POUND workout,” she said. “I had never heard of it. We used drumsticks called ripstix, and the instructor [from Carlisle’s Fit Forward] was energetic and very engaging. My daughter was smiling the whole time.”

Walton and her daughter also enjoyed making peanut butter, painting kindness rocks and learning about York Barbell.

Fit Fest tickets are $25. Proceeds benefit the Warrior Princess Project of PA, an organization that collects gently used and new sports equipment and distributes it to area girls (and sometimes boys) to encourage athletic activities. Donation boxes will be located at Fit Fest.

Mentzer said that she was inspired to create Fit Fest after noticing a worldwide trend in fitness festivals, such as the U.K.’s Balance Festival. She predicts that 2019 attendance will double to 1,000 attendees. She has even bigger dreams for future Thrive Fit Fests, including community CPR training, a 5K and “bigger and better” collaborations between fitness studios.

“Removing walls and connecting health and wellness providers in one location takes the competition aspect away and helps people make life-altering health choices,” Mentzer said. “We don’t have to work against each other. Together, we can achieve the ultimate goal of getting people healthy.”

 

Thrive Fit Fest takes place on June 22, 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., at Capital City Airport, 210 Airport Rd., New Cumberland. For more information, visit www.thrivefitfest.com.

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From Stump to Art: More wood sculptures coming to Harrisburg waterfront.

Brad Heilman at work this morning, carving a wood sculpture from a dead tree.

An old tree destined for the wood chipper is now becoming a work of art along Harrisburg’s riverfront.

With the help of the Harrisburg Riverboat Society, artist Brad Heilman is creating intricate carvings in a hulking stump in Riverfront Park, with a second planned for City Island.

According to Riverboat Society Chairman Jeffrey Tinsman, members heard that the city was planning to dispose of the remnants of some dead trees and decided to step in and make art out of them instead.

“We’re going to preserve these trees for years to come and enhance the grounds with beautiful artwork,” he said.

Heilman’s first chainsaw carving, which is located between Walnut and Locust streets along the riverfront, is a depiction of fish that are native to the Susquehanna River.

The second carving will feature a 40-foot bat, 20-foot baseball glove and a 15-foot baseball next to City Island’s FNB Field, home to the Harrisburg Senators. According to Tinsman, the piece will commemorate the seven athletes who were born in Harrisburg and made it to the Major Leagues.

“As more of these trees fall, we are hoping to carve them into artwork,” Tinsman said.

Heilman started carving trees 19 years ago. As a kid, he loved to draw and then worked as a tree trimmer for 22 years. Now, he gets to combine the two.

Ten years ago, he worked with Harrisburg to create the Susquehannock Native American carving that’s now a familiar site next to the Walnut Street Bridge.

“This is all I do,” he said. “I get to carve all year round.”

The project is also designed to be a moneymaker, with donations going to support the Susquehanna River School, a class on the Pride of Susquehanna where students learn the history of the Susquehanna River, natural wonders and aquatic life.

“Every $10 we raise gives us an opportunity to provide an education cruise for one city school student free of charge,” Tinsman said.

For almost 21 years, the school has provided hands-on activities for students K-12 from certified teachers. According to Jason Meckes, executive director of the Harrisburg Riverboat Society, the school has already taught more than 25,000 students.

Tinsman and Heilman expect the Riverfront Park carving to be finished by Artsfest weekend starting on May 25. The second carving on City Island will be ready by the Kipona Festival in September.

“We’re just trying to do something for our community,” Tinsman said. “We love our city and want to see it enhance and grow and bring art to trees that were being disposed of.”

For more information on The Harrisburg Riverboat Society or the Susquehanna River School visit harrisburgriverboat.com. To see more of Heilman’s work visit his website at www.bdhcustomchainsawcarving.com.

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The Price Is Right: And so is essentially everything else.

Illustration by Rich Hauck.

Recently, the Washington Post ran a story in its weekly real estate section with the following headline:

“Looking to buy a home for $200,000? Here’s what you can expect to find.”

Among the offerings: a 550-square-foot efficiency in Southwest D.C. (with a co-op fee of $819 a month), an 896-square-foot, two-bedroom duplex in drab Landover, Md., and a 451-square-foot studio (with a Murphy bed!) in Alexandria, Va.

Hmm.

So, I scurried over to my Realtor.com app and undertook the same exercise for this area.

Last month, for around $200,000, I could buy a fully renovated three-bedroom, three-bath, 2,100-square foot Victorian-era townhouse with river views in Harrisburg; a four-bedroom stone stunner (another Victorian) a few blocks east of downtown Lancaster; or a gorgeous 2,100-square-foot, three-bedroom Queen Anne near Dickinson College in Carlisle.

Suddenly, I felt like a rich man.

Yes, I love D.C., lived there for many years. But, at this point in my life, I really don’t want to live in a place where, with a little stretch, I can touch my bed, my kitchen table and my bathroom sink all at the same time.

Now, one could argue that, fortunately, I don’t have to. I have a job here. So, I can be all smug in my spacious rowhouse down the street from the state Capitol.

Yeah, but the thing is—so could a lot of people. Plenty of workers in the D.C. area telecommute, and some could swap their government, professional or services jobs for similar ones here. They may earn less on average, but probably not that much less.

Let’s look at some numbers.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 2017, the Harrisburg/York/Lebanon CSA (combined statistical area) had a median housing unit value of $184,100 and median household income of $63,296—a differential of less than 3x.

In contrast, the Washington/Baltimore/Arlington CSA had a median housing value of $363,100 and a median household income of $89,181—a differential of greater than 4x.

But even these numbers understate the difference between the two areas.

The sprawling DC/Baltimore/Arlington CSA reaches far outside the core metro area to include portions of West Virginia, western Maryland and, for some reason, Franklin County, Pa.—much lower-priced areas that drag down the median housing value.

In fact, inclusion in the same CSA may be the only thing that Chambersburg and Chevy Chase have in common.

What I’m saying is this: I see a misalignment of the market—the market for people.

Just down the road from here, there’s the D.C./Baltimore metroplex, which is a fantastic place. But it’s incredibly congested and wildly expensive.

But not far away, on the other side of the Mason-Dixon line, the lower Susquehanna Valley is neither congested nor expensive. It doesn’t have a big city, but it has several charming small cities, lots of countryside, scenic mountains and even some nice suburbs, if that’s your thing.

So, why aren’t more people here?

My inkling is that folks simply don’t know about this area—it’s not on their radar. It sure wasn’t on mine. I lived in the mid-Atlantic my entire life and, before I moved here, I couldn’t have told you the difference between Harrisburg, Harrisonburg and Hattiesburg.

I’m not certain who’s to blame for this information gap, but I’ve often thought that the six or seven counties of the lower Susquehanna should combine forces to brand the area—let the world know that it exists and that it offers a high quality of life.

A friend of mine—a big baseball fan—recently drove up from the D.C. suburbs to take in a game on City Island. While watching the Harrisburg Senators play, he told me that he was making plans to retire from his long-held job with a U.S. government contractor. In retirement, he didn’t want to stay in crowded, sprawl-y northern Virginia.

So, he was looking for a cute, walkable college town, somewhere in the mid-Atlantic, with good craft beer, affordable housing and easy access to the outdoors. He was considering Charlottesville, Va.

“No,” I blurted out. “You want to live in Carlisle.”

“Where’s that?” he asked.

I told him. So, on his way back home, he took a detour off I-81, walked around the historic town and fell in love.

Alternatively, I suppose, he could retire in the gentrifying D.C. neighborhood known as Hill East, which is also a nice place. There, a new, white-walled condo building just went up. Prices start at $679,000 for a one-bedroom unit and go to $2.9 million for two bedrooms (condo fees, $626 to $1,500 monthly).

It’s located right over a busy hardware store.

 

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

 

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Watching the River Run: Susquehanna Greenway Partnership works to create happy trails, happy people.

For 500 miles, the mighty Susquehanna River glides peacefully through rolling mountains and sleepy towns, past wildlife and wilderness, beneath cloudless skies and towering bridges of stone and steel.

From Otsego Lake in New York to Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay, its glistening waters serve as the scenic backdrop for Kipona, Artsfest and the Pride of the Susquehanna riverboat, offering up the picture-perfect setting for picnics, boating, fishing, jogging and more.

Flowing in two main branches in a loosely drawn “Y,” the river has quietly connected the past to the present, the north to the south, the east to the west and the young to the young-at-heart.

Those connections fuel the mission of the Susquehanna Greenway Partnership (SGP), says Executive Director Corey Ellison.

“It’s all about connecting people,” said Ellison, an Alabama native who has backpacked and rock-climbed her way through Australia and other must-see points in the great outdoors.

She views the Susquehanna as the ideal natural accessory for recreation, economic development, history, culture and a healthier lifestyle.

“Studies consistently show that people want walkable, bike-able communities,” Ellison noted.

Embracing open space also attracts economic development and an influx of vibrant young people, raising the region’s quality of life and beauty quotient, she said.

 

Greenways & Blueways

The group’s seeds were planted in the early 2000s, when then-Gov. Tom Ridge challenged the state Department of Transportation and the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources to examine the potential of the commonwealth’s greenways. From there, a committee of 120-plus members developed the Pennsylvania Greenways Action Plan, and the Susquehanna Greenway Partnership was born.

Its charter was signed on City Island in Harrisburg with representatives from the state, federal, city and county governments on hand, along with local advocacy groups. Funded largely by state funds and foundation grants, SGP underscores the importance of greenways and “blueways,” as the march of development bulldozed over suburbia’s vast open spaces.

The strategic action plan, released in 2006, recommended the formation of a nonprofit. That same year, a board of directors was appointed, and SGP became a 501c(3) organization.

Since then, the partnership has been working to build out the idea of a connected greenway and to preserve and link strips of undeveloped land and the environment.

The planned corridor runs one to three miles on either side of the Susquehanna for the entire 500 miles of the western branch.

Based in Williamsport and Lewisburg, the partnership has concentrated its efforts on the central Susquehanna region, working to translate ideas into trails, parks and river access points.

SGP often uses Dauphin County as a model for greenway development and preservation.

Ellison pointed to the extensive county park system and the Capital Area Greenbelt, lovingly dubbed the “emerald necklace,” as proof of the capital city’s love affair with its greenways.

In and around Harrisburg, SGP often shares information at Greenbelt events and sponsors an annual photo contest.

The competition attracts photographers of all skill levels to the greenway. The images captured will be on display in the Capitol’s East Wing Rotunda through June 30. Picturesque landscapes, charming river towns, and panoramic sunsets are frequently captured on film, along with those iconic bridges of the Susquehanna.

“The greenway is so large and covers such a diverse geography that we are always surprised by the images that come in,” Ellison said.

 

A Resource

Ellison pointed out that many people who live along the river may know what’s in their own backyard, but not what’s upstream. And, of course, what begins upstream eventually flows down into the lower Susquehanna.

She acknowledged that the Susquehanna has a “storied past” that includes the good and bad—beauty and transportation, pollution and massive flooding.

In the recent past, swollen riverbanks and dirty waters caused people to move away from the river, both physically and mentally, Ellison said.

“They saw it as a risk instead of a resource,” she said. “It really is an opportunity, whether for recreation or economic development. We try to work with communities and groups to help see the river, not as a risk but as a resource.”

SGP offers a volunteer ambassador program for those who share the group’s passion. To grow the greenway, these ambassadors attend outreach events, talk to visitors, spread the vision and mission of greenways and identify access to trails.

Every year, the group also hosts a paddling event. This year, the Susquehanna Island Hopper event will allow paddlers to drift from outside Selinsgrove to the Mahantango Creek Fish and Boat Commission on Aug. 3. Early bird tickets are available.

Because last year’s pounding rains led to high river levels that forced the event’s cancellation, the partnership has formulated a backup plan. If the river is too high or too low, “hoppers” will go to a local lake and hike, but the trip is on—rain or shine.

The sojourn is suitable for all levels of paddlers, from beginners to experts and from teens to retirees. It is fully guided, complete with safety boats and naturalists who give “as-you-go” learning opportunities, pointing out wildlife and natural areas in a floating classroom.

Representatives of Selinsgrove will talk about its history as a river community.

SGP also offers day trips that can be found on its website.

Whether you paddle, picnic, picture-take or promote, you should know about this group and its resources. And its members invite you to visit their website, reach out and connect with them.

To learn more about the Susquehanna Greenway Partnership, visit www.susquehannagreenway.org.

Stories on environmental topics are proudly sponsored by LCSWMA.

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Set to Sail: Pride of the Susquehanna ready to launch for 31st year

The Pride of the Susquehanna riverboat at its City Island dock

An annual rite of spring in Harrisburg is slated to take place on Wednesday, as the Pride of the Susquehanna Riverboat launches for its 31st season.

The riverboat typically leaves dry dock in April, but the launch was delayed due to continuing high water on the Susquehanna River, said Jason Meckes, executive director of the Harrisburg Area Riverboat Society.

“We were a little bit extra cautious after last year,” Meckes said today. “But now we an see that the water levels have tapered off.”

According to the National Weather Service, the water level at Harrisburg should be about 6-feet in depth on Wednesday, far below the 8 to 9 feet that begins to cause problems for riverboat operations.

Last year, the Pride lost about one-third of its sailing days due to high water, which both flooded its docking area and made sailing conditions dangerous.

With so much lost revenue, Riverboat Society members questioned whether they could continue to operate. Therefore, they repeatedly appealed for financial support and, according to Meckes, the community responded, donating nearly $90,000 to ensure that the Pride would continue to sail.

“People stepped up to the plate and made a difference,” he said. “A lot of people love this riverboat and wanted it to return. It means a lot to a lot of people.”

That level of giving was far above average, as one-time donations ordinarily range from $16,000 to $20,000 a year, he said.

Meckes hopes for a more normal season this year, with a minimum of lost sailing days.

Dinner cruises and special events begin this weekend, with daily public sightseeing cruises starting over Memorial Day weekend. Right now, some 400 cruises are planned for the season, Meckes said, and advanced bookings already have exceeded last year’s level.

In addition, the Riverboat Society is working to expand its educational outreach, with hundreds of students from the Harrisburg school district signed up for free River School educational voyages, Meckes said.

“All indications are that it’ll be a heckuva year,” he said.

The Pride of the Susquehanna is located on City Island, Harrisburg. For more information, call 717-234-6500 or visit https://harrisburgriverboat.com.

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Harrisburg Needs: A lot has been accomplished over the past decade. Let’s build on that.

Illustration by Rich Hauck

Back on a chilly weeknight in mid-February, I sat among a few hundred others at the annual meeting of Harrisburg Young Professionals.

TheBurg was there in force because we had been nominated for one of HYP’s annual awards—namely, the “community engagement” award.

I bring this up neither to boast nor complain (we didn’t win) but because of what I saw around me.

Sitting in the auditorium of the State Museum, I felt delightfully ensconced in a type of ad hoc club—one that I definitely wanted to be a member of (sorry, Groucho).

I had tremendous respect for the people surrounding me because they’d accomplished so much.

Blake Lynch, who’s made it his mission to improve outreach between the community and the city’s police bureau, was in our category. So were the good people from Friends of Midtown, led by Annie and Andy Hughes, who spent two years organizing, raising funds for and building Harrisburg’s first public dog park.

Sitting right in front of me was Meghan Jones, co-founder of the HBG Flea, and, right in front of her, the young folks who organized HUE Fest, Harrisburg University’s block party and e-sports tourney. Off to the right sat Sara Bozich and her contingent from Harrisburg Beer Week, an event-rich celebration of local craft beer, and, in front of her, Andrea Grove and the people of Elementary Coffee Co.

All were nominees for various community and business awards.

Then, on the stage was keynote speaker Amma Johnson of the AMMA JO boutique and new HYP President Adam Porter, who has co-founded two city businesses, st@rtup Harrisburg and Provisions grocery store.

And sitting right next to me was TheBurg’s own Megan Caruso, a 2018 HYP award-winner for co-founding the Harrisburg Mural Festival.

Wow, what a group!

In recent years, these folks have helped transform Harrisburg with new events, new products, new businesses and a new energy. When TheBurg began, 10 years ago, none of this existed.

And 2019 promises more of the same. At least four Broad Street Market food vendors are expanding to storefronts on or near 3rd Street (Knead, Urban Churn, Elementary Coffee and Radish & Rye), and another HBG Mural Festival will paint the town for 10 days starting in late August.

But all this has at least one guy (me) wondering—what comes next? What other great ideas are out there? Harrisburg has come a long way in a short time, but there is still much to do to complete this city’s transformation from post-industrial poster child to shining city on a river (this time, apologies to Ronald Reagan).

When people talk to me about what Harrisburg most needs, the conversation often turns to better schools and more and better housing. I agree. However, those two issues seem so large, the problems so overwhelming, that they can be a formula for inaction. Since we, as individuals, can’t seem to do much about these, why not just crack open another beer and watch more “Judge Judy?”

No.

Individual action is exactly what’s needed. America’s cities have improved largely due to the cumulative effect of countless small actions by ordinary citizens, just like we’ve already seen here. And, just like in Harrisburg, many of these cities, unfortunately, still have huge housing problems and underperforming schools.

I’ll start the conversation.

Harrisburg needs retail. Duh, right? In Harrisburg’s hierarchy of needs, more and better retail often ranks right up there behind better schools and housing. Retail is a tough nut, but, heck, I’m a guy who started a print magazine—I never said it would be easy. Looking at other cities, specialty shops and boutiques seem to be the type of retail that can work in an urban environment, though stores typically need to be concentrated to create critical mass in an attractive, walk-able area.

Harrisburg needs community assets. The dog park is a perfect example of a community asset that people long said was needed—and then a few intrepid pooch-lovers made it happen. A farmers market on Allison Hill could be another great community project, and Riverside desperately needs a gathering place, such as a café. Speaking of gathering places, I would love for the city to do something useful with its warren of desolate alleys downtown. Many cities have created vibrant pedestrian zones, event spaces and shopping areas from underused, well-located alleys, just like those around 2nd Street.

Harrisburg needs attractions. The city can’t afford grand building projects, such as museums, nor would I ever suggest one. But smaller attractions (the HBG Flea, Beer Week, Mural Fest) have proven to be big winners. How about a multi-weekend Christmas market on City Island, more food-focused events or better, more frequent use of the plaza at the Broad Street Market? The state could even throw us a bone by opening up the old Archives building (once emptied) as an observation tower or encouraging better use of the vast, empty plaza behind the State Museum—talk about an underused asset.

Harrisburg needs people. Most of all, Harrisburg needs people. It needs more people to live here, visit here, shop here—bringing their checkbooks with them. This situation has improved immensely from 10 years back, when I often felt that I was the only person walking down 3rd street. Still, city businesses would benefit greatly from more foot traffic and more customers.

I would like to close out this column with a disclaimer. Naturally, these ideas are mine alone, a little spit-balling exercise to get the discussion started. What are yours? I would love to know. And, most importantly—like Amma and Annie and Meghan and Adam—are you ready to make them happen?

 

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Death Cab for Cutie to play in Harrisburg, marking return of major concerts to city waterfront

Death Cab for Cutie

The Harrisburg waterfront boasts great scenery, a few historic bridges and now—Death Cab for Cutie.

Come June, the eight-time Grammy Award-nominated band will grace a stage in Riverfront Park, making the band perhaps the biggest national act to play in the park in years.

Death Cab for Cutie will perform as part of Harrisburg University’s HU Concert Series, which this year is also featuring such popular acts as The Record Company in April at Club XL and Joan Osborne in May at Whitaker Center.

“This came about because we were looking for a major name,” said Frank Schofield, HU’s director of Music & Media Services. “The band became available, and we got it done.”

Death Cab for Cutie will set up on a stage in the southern part of the park, across from UPMC Pinnacle. The June 19 concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. with one or more opening artists, according to Schofield.

All tickets for the general admission, standing-only concert are priced at $40. Gates will open at 6 p.m.

In addition to the music, patrons will have access to a beer garden and food trucks, Schofield said. He also expects downtown venues to benefit from the influx of concert-goers.

“It will be a major economic boon for the city,” he said.

According to Schofield, there’s more to come. He said that “another major upcoming show,” targeted for August, will be announced soon that will bring music back to City Island, which once hosted major touring bands.

Special parking rates will apply for the Death Cab for Cutie concert. Parking will be available both at the Market Square Garage and on City Island for $10 starting at 6 p.m. the night of the concert.

Tickets for Death Cab for Cutie will go on sale at 10 a.m. on March 2 at www.ticketmaster.com. For more information about the HU Concert Series, visit www.HUconcertseries.com.

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A Very Good Year? Yes, assuming you like infrastructure and hate Act 47.

The days tick by and, before you know it, another year has passed us in the city of Harrisburg.

As I normally do for my January column, I’m reliving the recent past by reviewing the top news stories of the last 365 days.

I would say that it was an up-and-down year for Harrisburg, but I feel like I say that every year. In any case, buckle in for a trip down memory lane, assuming, that is, that your memories, like mine, mostly consist of taxes, housing and roadwork.

10. When the Rains Came
In journalism, the weather story may be the last refuge of the uninspired, and, accordingly, we don’t write a lot them. But even we take notice when the relentless rains start to affect people’s everyday lives. In 2018, the deluge began early, took a snow break for a late March blizzard, then continued for much of the year, obliterating outdoor events, delaying road projects and closing City Island briefly in July. In its history, Harrisburg has suffered much worse floods, but that was small comfort to the Pride of the Susquehanna riverboat, which lost weeks of sailing due to high water, leading to financial setbacks and appeals for donations.

9. New District, Same Result
The year started off on a hopeful note for area Democrats, as the state’s long-gerrymandered congressional districts were redrawn. The new 10th district, now centered around the Harrisburg area, still had Republicans in the majority, but their partisan advantage had narrowed. A snoozer of a Democratic primary led to the nomination of George Scott, a likeable, mild-mannered minister who, in the general election, raised a lot of money and fielded a large, enthusiastic team of volunteers. However, in the end, he could not dislodge the entrenched Republican incumbent, Scott Perry, who beat back the challenger by nearly three points.

8. Go Downtown
Harrisburg has suffered from decades of disinvestment. So, you might think that city officials would enthusiastically embrace multi-million-dollar redevelopment projects. Some, however, showed little love for a plan to convert two large, underused office buildings on Pine Street to apartments. City Council President Wanda Williams, claiming a lack of affordable units, objected to the projects. Harristown Development countered that some of the proposed units did meet the definition of “affordable” and, in any case, that the city as a whole, and downtown, in particular, would benefit greatly by an influx of new residents and their money. In the end, Williams’ objection could not derail the projects, which satisfied all other conditions set by a city that lacks a formal affordable housing policy.

7. Empty Spaces
During Harrisburg’s golden age, the Market/Cameron street corridor buzzed with activity from factory workers, auto salesmen, postal clerks and ink-stained wretches. But that was long ago. Today, it’s largely a no man’s land, stuck between hope and despair. On the despair side, it lost one of its few remaining structures—the century-old Schell seed building. But the circle of urban life continues, and, in March, the commonwealth released two promising reports. The first set forth renovation plans for the nearby, historic train station, and the second outlined a long-term vision to restore the Paxton Creek watershed, which would add acres of green space to the blighted area and reduce the risk of flooding. Mayor Eric Papenfuse has called the Paxton Creek project potentially transformational, but that transformation remains many years and many more millions of dollars away.

6. House of Controversy
Every year, a story pops up seemingly from nowhere and then surprises me in its public interest. For 2018, that story was the ongoing saga at the House of Music, Arts & Culture—otherwise known as HMAC. The summertime drama started after a patron said that she was assaulted after leaving the venue. The police soon cleared HMAC of culpability, but not before Facebook exploded in an onslaught of online invective. Soon after, TheBurg reported that HMAC had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and that its owners planned to sell the sprawling art space and restaurant. If HMAC does get new owners, 2019 could be a pivotal year for a place that has come a long way over a decade, when it was a blighted shell, but that, by its co-owner’s own admission, could use fresh leadership.

5. Park & Dine
Last January, I wrapped up my annual year-in-review column by stating that, for the first time in years, my top-10 list excluded the single-most persistent issue in Harrisburg—parking. Well, it’s back! In April, the city, Dauphin County, the Downtown Improvement District and Standard Parking inked a deal to provide free street parking after 5 p.m. throughout much of downtown. The early reviews were positive, with restaurant owners saying that business had picked up once patrons realized they could snag a drink or dinner without risking a $30 ticket. The one-year deal expires soon, so we’ll have to see what City Council and other stakeholders think of their “one-year experiment.”

4. Plan Jam
Second only to parking, the unfinished comprehensive plan is the city’s most evergreen story—with us year in, year out. It may now seem like a distant memory, but the city held a public meeting last January on the draft plan. That public hearing garnered many comments from residents, even as Mayor Papenfuse denounced the draft document as “unworkable” and “unsalvageable.” Papenfuse later threatened to replace the entire Planning Commission, even if it took years, to get a plan more to his liking. Nonetheless, the commission stuck with its draft and, in November, requested $50,000 to finish it up. So, could this be the year that Harrisburg finally gets a new comprehensive plan? Maybe, but I’m already reserving an entry for it on my 2019 list.

3. Drama Class
Generally speaking, Harrisburg is a much less dramatic place than it was a few years ago, during the height of the city’s financial crisis. I now will carve out a great, big exception for the school district, which has taken over as the center of city spectacle and dysfunction. Every month of 2018 seemed to feature some new problem—budget shortfalls, a tax hike, poor academic performance, a controversial grading policy, school board resignations, personnel issues, principal reshuffling and a battle over whether to re-appoint the superintendent, among other issues. I’ll go out on a limb and say that, with control of the school board at stake during upcoming municipal elections, city residents should expect more of the same this year.

2. All Roads Lead to (and from) Harrisburg
This past year, the long-awaited 3rd Street corridor project finally began digging, cutting and drilling. Then it stopped. Then it started again. City officials now say that the streetscape and paving project will conclude this year. But 3rd Street wasn’t the only stretch of road on the minds of city residents in 2018. The city kicked off its “Vision Zero” campaign with a public meeting in June, as it strives for zero pedestrian deaths, an ambitious goal considering the shockingly high rate of road fatalities. The year in infrastructure ended on a more hopeful note. In November, residents packed a public meeting on the city’s plan to convert much of N. 2nd Street to two-way traffic. Suburban commuters may have a different opinion, but the crowd that attended the meeting seemed to support the concept overwhelmingly.

1. The Long Good-Bye
In city life, an issue may arise under one set of assumptions, only to take numerous twists and turns before resolution. Such was the case with Harrisburg’s plan to leave Act 47, the state program for distressed municipalities. We began the year assuming the city would roll into a three-year wind-down of its involvement. That assumption was thrown into doubt after the state proposed doubling the city property tax as a condition for leaving. Appalled, Harrisburg officials asked the state legislature to allow the city to retain the extra taxing authority it has had under Act 47. That bill passed in October, though in a highly modified form that offers just five more years of enhanced taxing power. With that compromise, Harrisburg plans soon to exit Act 47 in 2019, allowing it, after many years, to shed the moniker, “distressed city.”

As I typically do, I will wrap up the January column with the disclaimer that, while these are my choices for the top Harrisburg news items of 2018, they may not be yours. You easily could make a case that I should have included the tragic deaths of a mother and son at the Dock Street Dam, the death of a U.S. marshal during a raid on a house in Allison Hill and the death of restaurateur Nick Laus, which was our single most-read online story of the year.

Here’s hoping that 2019 brings the people of Harrisburg nothing but good news, which I will happily recap a year from now. And more free parking.

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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