Tag Archives: Harrisburg Authority

Community Comment: Capital Region Water marks 10 years of infrastructure, community improvements

Charlotte Katzenmoyer

When Capital Region Water formed in 2013, it inherited a water and wastewater system that was reeling from years of neglect and suffering under a massive backlog of deferred maintenance needs. Now, with the municipal authority marking its 10th anniversary this month, the city’s infrastructure is on the mend. 

Over the last decade, Capital Region Water has invested more than $200 million in capital projects to restore failing infrastructure, improve the health of local waterways, and beautify neighborhoods through community greening.

And that is only the beginning. Over the next 10 years, more than $350 million will be invested to address localized flooding and fix aged and undersized infrastructure that long ago exceeded its useful life. 

No one denies the challenges of maintaining and upgrading a water and wastewater system that is more than a century old in some places. Nearly 40 percent of Harrisburg’s sewer and stormwater (rainwater) infrastructure needs to be repaired or replaced. 

But these improvements are essential to our quality of life and economic growth. They also go a long way in ensuring we meet our environmental obligations.

A CRW crew performs inlet maintenance.

Recently, after months of negotiation and public comment, the U.S. Department of Justice approved a modification to the 2015 Partial Consent Decree among Capital Region Water, the city of Harrisburg, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. This historic agreement defines the work we must do to continue improvements and ensure regulatory compliance. 

More certainly needs to be done. But that doesn’t mean we should ignore some of the good work and significant investments that have been made over the years. 

In 2016, Capital Region Water completed a $50 million biological nutrient removal (BNR) upgrade to our Advanced Wastewater Treatment Facility. We demonstrated that the facility, which employs the most cutting-edge treatment processes in the region, can reduce total nitrogen in the outflowing water to better protect the Susquehanna River and downstream in the Chesapeake Bay. 

We continue to further improve the facility as evidenced by an additional $15 million investment in screening and anaerobic digester rehabilitation projects undertaken since the BNR upgrade. Additional improvements to the energy recovery systems are planned over the next few years that will significantly increase the revenue generated from this facility. 

Since 2014, Capital Region Water has repaired more than 100 sinkholes created by sewer pipe failures. Fixing old, cracked pipes reduces leakage that leaches into waterways.  Our team also has cleaned and inspected all 4,000-plus storm inlets to collect runoff and prevent localized flooding. Many inlets had dirt that allowed weeds and even small trees to take root preventing proper rainwater drainage. 

Capital Region Water works on the Front Street Interceptor project earlier this year.

Anyone who drives along Front Street has witnessed firsthand the investments being made in the city. Capital Region Water upgraded the Front Street Pump Station and work is wrapping up on the multi-phased Front Street Interceptor Rehabilitation Project.

In just the last few years, Capital Region Water has secured more than $141 million in low-interest PENNVEST loans from the state to complete many of the aforementioned projects, easing the burden on ratepayers. 

Being able to obtain state and federal grants, low-rate loans, revolving loan funds at sub-market rates, and favored bond issues has been a hallmark of Capital Region Water’s independent five-member board, which despite being all volunteer has the relevant professional expertise to manage complex decisions and provide leadership to the 140-strong professional staff that manages daily operations. 

That much can be seen in the financial turnaround of the system. When CRW assumed functions from The Harrisburg Authority, the water and sewer system essentially had junk bond status. Today, S&P Global has affirmed Capital Region Water’s A+ water and sewer bond ratings. Financial markets like predictability and stability. 

CRW rebuilds a manhole.

Harrisburg’s water routinely ranks among the best-tasting water in the state, thanks to protections in place at the source at DeHart Dam, and we want to keep it that way. Safety improvements to the DeHart Dam are planned for 2024 and continued investments and improvements are being made to the water systems that supply that pristine water to our customers. 

Managing stormwater runoff remains a priority. Capital Region Water’s stormwater fee generates about $5 million annually in dedicated funds to transform vacant lots into green spaces, improve parks, install raingardens and other stormwater infiltrating features, and manage stormwater with street-level planters that also calm traffic.

Looking back, residents should be proud of the work that has been accomplished over the last 10 years. It’s an impressive track record that should make us all realize that over the next 10 years, there isn’t much we can’t do when we do it together.

Charlotte Katzenmoyer is CEO of Capital Region Water. For more information on Capital Region Water, visit their website.

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Harrisburg considers selling water, sewer system; asks interested parties to respond

A file photo of Capital Region Water replacing a sewer pipe on Green Street in Harrisburg.

Harrisburg is considering privatizing its water and sewer system, asking qualified companies to submit letters of interest to the city.

The “request for information” is designed to gauge market interest and ascertain preliminary qualifications, a first step in potentially selling the system, said Mayor Eric Papenfuse.

“I’m not saying we’re going to do it,” Papenfuse said. “But if it seems beneficial, then we’ll take it to the next step.”

Letters of interest are due to the city by the end-of-day, Sept. 16, potentially followed by interviews and a formal bidding process.

Capital Region Water (CRW) currently operates the city’s water/sewer system, overseen by a five-member volunteer board appointed by the city. The municipal utility was established in 2013 following the dissolution of the former operator, the Harrisburg Authority. If the city sells the system, CRW would be dissolved.

Papenfuse said that the decision to explore privatization was prompted by the city’s dissatisfaction with CRW. He strongly objects to CRW’s proposal to implement a stormwater fee, which would initiate a new fee for most customers starting on Jan. 1. Under the proposal, customers would pay a fee of $72 a year or $6.15 per month, money designed to fund improvements to the city’s aging stormwater system and reduce the flow of toxins into streams and the Susquehanna River.

Papenfuse said that he also considers the Front Street interceptor project, which was delayed several times last year, to be a “complete boondoggle,” and charged that CRW lacks a firm plan to bring the city into compliance with a federal partial consent decree to reduce pollution into area waterways.

“I have concerns about Capital Region Water’s ability to manage the projects they do have planned,” Papenfuse said. “I want to explore if a private company can do a better job.”

Marc Kurowski, chairman of the CRW board, said that he was surprised by the city’s exploration of a sale, which he learned about on Thursday afternoon, just hours before Harrisburg publicly posted the request for information notice on its website. CRW officials and the board now need to discuss the matter and decide what to do next, he said.

“We were not part of the conversation or discussion that prompted this to happen,” he said. “We need to do some homework and figure out what it means and figure out what the next course of action is.”

If the system is sold, the buyer would get access to about 20,300 water customers, primarily in the city limits, and a 17,000-connection wastewater system that serves Harrisburg and several surrounding municipalities.

A buyer also would receive all assets currently owned and operated by CRW, including the stormwater infrastructure, a wastewater treatment facility, five pumping stations and the 6-billion-gallon capacity DeHart Reservoir.

“This is not a bid situation yet,” Papenfuse said. “We are only asking companies if they have an interest and the expertise.”

Click here to read the city’s “Request for Letter of Interest.”

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“Worst Municipal Finance Disaster”: Commonwealth files lawsuit against actors in HBG incinerator debacle.

Inside the Harrisburg incinerator, just before its sale in 2013.

The commonwealth of Pennsylvania filed a civil lawsuit on Monday against numerous companies involved in Harrisburg’s disastrous incinerator retrofit, seeking compensation for some of the $360 million in debt that the project piled up.

The lawsuit, filed in Commonwealth Court, names many of the law firms, finance companies and consultants familiar to those who have followed the 25-year saga of the incinerator, which nearly bankrupted Harrisburg and led the commonwealth to impose a receiver to help set the city’s finances straight.

“It is time to hold those responsible for the failed incinerator debt scheme accountable and recoup the taxpayer dollars wasted by their negligence and deception,” said Gov. Tom Wolf, in a statement. “This project, started in 2003, represents the worst of how lobbyists and special interests bilk taxpayers for their own gain. My administration is standing up to these interests on behalf of the taxpayers, and we will continue to fight to stop anyone that uses deception or fraud to take advantage of taxpayers.”

The incinerator dates from the late 1960s. However, much of the facility’s crippling debt began to accumulate with its 1993 “sale” from the city to the city’s own utility authority, the Harrisburg Authority. The state’s lawsuit mostly concerns itself with the period starting in 2003, when under the administration of former Mayor Steve Reed, the authority made the disastrous decision to “retrofit,” or upgrade, the facility using largely untested technology from Minnesota-based Barlow Projects. (Click here for a detailed history of the Harrisburg incinerator.)

In its lawsuit, the commonwealth calls the Harrisburg incinerator debacle, “. . . the worst municipal finance disaster in the history of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”

The respondents named in the suit include RBC Capital Markets Corp.; Obermayer, Rebmann, Maxwell & Hippel LLP; Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC; Eckert, Seamans, Cherin & Mellot LLC; Public Financial Management, Inc.; Buchart Horn Inc.; and Foreman and Caraciolo PC.

The lawsuit charges that members of these firms formed a “working group” that allegedly did not act in the best interests of the city. Among the allegations, the lawsuit states that:

  • “The Working Group’s dual representation of the [Harrisburg] Authority and the city created destructive conflicts of interest.”
  • “In their efforts to close the debt transaction and collect their compensation, the Working Group’s members provided the city with false and misleading information, concealed material facts and aided others in breaching their duties to taxpaying citizens. Consequently, the city signed onto imprudent and illegal debt guarantees that rendered it insolvent.”

Because of this insolvency, former Gov. Tom Corbett declared a fiscal state of emergency and placed the city into receivership.

The lawsuit also alleges that:

  • The working group convinced Harrisburg City Council to guarantee $130 million in debt that the city could not afford.
  • The working group’s disclosures understated the financial burden of the reconstruction project and its financing.
  • The working group did not disclose to council or to residents the “unreasonable assumptions” supporting its financial analysis.
  • The engineering consultant failed to identify “key defects” in the original incinerator retrofit design by Barlow Projects.
  • The working group “falsely” advised the city that the incinerator debt complied with laws meant to prevent excessive municipal debt.
  • The working group told the city to classify debt as self-liquidating (able to pay for itself out of revenue), “even as the incinerator is about to shut down.”
  • The working group advised the city to classify new incinerator debt as self-liquidating “based on unreasonable assumptions and despite contrary evidence.”
  • The working group submitted “incomplete and inaccurate information” to obtain state approval of city debt guarantees.
  • The working group “violated” laws requiring contractors to post financial security.

In the end, the lawsuit charges that the working group was responsible for adding some $60 million to the incinerator’s debt.

“The professionals involved in these transactions reaped rewards at the taxpayers’ expense,” the lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit further makes charges against some of the respondents, including allegations of fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, legal malpractice, aiding and abetting fraud, professional malpractice and unjust enrichment.

In its suit, the state is requesting both actual and punitive damages, as well as a jury trial.

“The action taken today by Governor Wolf is welcome news for the city of Harrisburg,” said Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse in a statement. “I’m thrilled the governor is taking the necessary step to hold accountable those responsible for the failed incinerator debt scheme. Our residents also are pleased the commonwealth is continuing to fight to secure revenues for the city.”

In 2013, the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority agreed to purchase the Harrisburg incinerator, relieving about half of the outstanding debt on the facility. Tax increases and the long-term lease of the city parking system covered much of the rest of the debt.

The state exited its receivership in early 2014, though the city remains in the state’s Act 47 program for financially distressed municipalities.

In 2015, the commonwealth filed almost 500 criminal counts against Reed, many in relation to incinerator financings. However, many of the counts were eventually dismissed because a judge ruled that the statute of limitations had expired. Last year, Reed pleaded guilty to 20 theft-related counts arising from city-owned museum artifacts that were found in his possession, and he was given probation.

“I thank Gov. Wolf for his willingness to take tackle the tough issues and take on special interests to do what’s right for Harrisburg residents and Pennsylvania taxpayers,” Papenfuse said.

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Not Our Fault? In Harrisburg, there’s plenty of blame to go around.

Screenshot 2015-06-01 08.14.19I don’t often get into screaming matches, much less in public places.

But, a pint or two in at my favorite new Harrisburg brewery, a friend and I began raising our voices over something we actually agree about—that we’re both angry, really angry, at John Campbell.

For sure, we’re not alone. The disgraced former Harrisburg treasurer upset plenty of people who had trusted him with their confidence and their money.

Heck, two months before Campbell’s arrest on theft charges, TheBurg helped host a party in his honor as he departed Historic Harrisburg Association, where he had been executive director. And my friend and I both were members of organizations where Campbell has been accused of taking money.

So, I guess we needed to vent, which we did, loudly, in contrast to the sounds of folks happily enjoying their La Dolce Vita drafts and their mutual company and the din of the jukebox at Zeroday Brewing.

We vocally debated Harrisburg’s version of “he who must not be named,” but, in the process, disagreed about something fundamental.

I hold many of us at least partially responsible for the phenomenon that was John Campbell; my friend doesn’t.

“He was a con man,” my friend said. “How could anyone have known that?”

Con man, no doubt. But I insisted that Campbell never should have had such positions of authority in the first place.

“He was a 21-year-old kid still in college when he was hired,” I countered, insisting (without success) that Campbell should have been flagged as too young and too inexperienced to serve as director or treasurer of anything important.

A person, I believe, is responsible for his own actions. However, that also pertains to the supporting actors, those who played lesser parts in a situation that goes spectacularly wrong.

I feel largely the same way about the city’s financial collapse.

Former Mayor Steve Reed, without question, tops the list of people responsible for Harrisburg’s fiscal chaos. However, in a flow chart of blame, you could list, in descending order, Reed’s direct underlings; the professionals who advised him; the Harrisburg Authority; members of City Council; the Dauphin County commissioners; numerous state officials; the supine media; and the voters.

Not that anybody has accepted this blame. A few years back, during a state Senate committee hearing on the city’s massive incinerator debt, every witness called upon, including Reed himself, denied responsibility. Evidently, Harrisburg’s near-bankruptcy happened without anyone causing it.

In fact, during the Reed administration, signals abounded that his consolidation of power was troubling and that the city’s finances were increasingly out-of-whack. Some residents tried to sound the alarm, but they invariably were shouted down, mocked or ignored.

You could make a long list of the ill-advised projects that the Reed administration championed, often financing them through strange, convoluted deals. For the sake of this column, I’ll limit my focus to what might be the most surreal—Reed’s attempt to build not one, but “five nationally scaled museums” (his words) in a poor, tiny city in central Pennsylvania.

New museums typically are born in one of two ways. In the first, a group (usually a non-profit board) tries to raise money for a building and/or its contents. In the second, a wealthy patron donates items—and sometimes foots the bill for the building, as well.

Harrisburg didn’t follow either path. The museum idea originated in the mind of a single man, Steve Reed, without any of the detailed preparation and painstaking planning needed to embark on a massive venture like starting a world-class museum (much less five of them).

In a nutshell, Reed got hold of public money and began buying stuff because he wanted to—and because he could.

Over a decade, he packed an enormous warehouse (and several other buildings) full of thousands of items from his sprees, spending untold millions on things that ranged from the genuine and valuable to junk and fakes. Lacking expertise, he vacuumed up lot after lot, often overpaying for the good and the bad.

The majority of objects were for an Old West museum he wanted to build, but some were for an African-American heritage museum he proposed and others for a Sports Hall of Fame he hoped to construct on City Island. There also were artifacts that didn’t seem to fit into any category—wood from a Colonial-era ship, transcripts from the Nuremberg trials.

Eventually, he got one “nationally scaled” museum built, the National Civil War Museum, but only because he learned that former Gov. Tom Ridge was a Civil War buff. So, according to project architect Vern McKissick, Reed quickly carved out a Civil War collection from his vast Old West stash and, though luck and salesmanship, got the state to foot the bill for the building.

This is local government gone completely off the rails. I half-laugh, half-cringe when I imagine Reed and his surrogates darting around the country attending auctions, sweeping up inventory, packing it all up, shipping it to Harrisburg, unpacking it and storing it in whatever dusty corner they could find for future museums that had no realistic path to ever existing.

But that’s what happened, and a lot of people knew about it—officials and politicians, consultants, city workers, the media, some in the general public. Yet year after year after year, it went on.

Typically, I’m not big on assigning blame, as I find resolving a problem more important than determining who’s at fault. However, in the case of Campbell and Reed, I believe it’s important to examine if we, as individuals, are in some way responsible. By understanding our own roles, we lessen the chance of a future rogue mayor, thieving treasurer or whoever might try to scam us next.

We all know the cliché that it takes a village to accomplish something good. Well, sometimes, it also takes a village to screw up royally.

 

 

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

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Mayor’s Receipts For Artifact Purchases May Factor in Grand Jury Probe

These receipts, with Mayor Stephen Reed's handwritten notes in the margins, are among the decade's worth of purchase records for which Reed sought a $33,000 reimbursement.

These receipts, with Mayor Stephen Reed’s handwritten notes in the margins, are among the decade’s worth of purchase records for which Reed sought a $33,000 reimbursement.

The receipts were from antique malls, book stores and outfits with names out of a Zane Grey novel—Bischoff’s Shades of the West in Scottsdale, Ariz., Arrowsmith’s in Santa Fe, N.M., and Garden of the Gods Trading Post in Manitou Springs, Colo.

They tracked purchases from the summer of 1991 through mid-2001, for items as varied as an 1896 Swedish bayonet, a Jesse James “fake rifle,” a Southwestern medicine pot and a Civil War daguerreotype.

And in 2003, more than a decade after the earliest purchases, they were collected to justify a $32,928 reimbursement to the man whose name is on virtually all of them: former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed.

The receipts, along with other records of the reimbursement, are a token of city government under Reed, a mayor who has been both hailed for his work ethic and vision and criticized for reckless spending and an autocratic governing style.

They may also feature in an ongoing probe into the city’s recent debt fiasco. A witness who testified before a state grand jury, and who asked not to be named, said they were among the files presented during testimony.

The probe is reportedly looking into risky borrowings related to a retrofit of the city incinerator in the mid-2000s. The reimbursement records, though apparently not related to those borrowings, give a brief glimpse into Reed’s spending habits and his control of theoretically independent city entities.

If they are indeed among the documents being aired before the grand jury, they suggest the probe has expanded into other areas of city government during his tenure.

Reed asked for the reimbursement in a memo dated May 20, 2003, explaining he’d bought the items for the city and its museum projects using his own money.

He addressed the memo to the Harrisburg Authority, the former all-purpose municipal authority that served as a financing vehicle throughout the 1990s and early 2000s.

The memo, receipts and other reimbursement records were provided to TheBurg by Capital Region Water, the successor agency to the Harrisburg Authority, in response to a right-to-know request.

Reed had come across the receipts, he wrote, while “pulling files that have been set aside in storage, for the purpose of making room for future files.”

Though he was aware of “past personal expenditures” he’d made on behalf of the city, he said, he “was astounded to find the extent” of the purchases recorded.

Former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed, left, and former Harrisburg Authority board member Fred Clark at a Senate hearing on the incinerator financings in 2012.

Former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed, left, and former Harrisburg Authority board member Fred Clark at a Senate hearing on the incinerator financings in 2012.

The items, bought from collectors across the country, were all part of the city archives, he said. They were distributed across sites including city hall, the National Civil War Museum and “the suite of the Office of the Mayor.”

In the memo, Reed noted that federal tax rules precluded him from claiming a deduction on the items, but that it was “fiscally unfeasible to simply donate them absent deductibility,” which is why he was seeking reimbursement.

Nearly all of the purchases were physical artifacts, though the reimbursement also covered $350 in expenses from a trip to Gettysburg in the summer of 2001, including $283 for three rooms at a Holiday Inn Express and a $66 tab for a five-person dinner at General Pickett’s Buffet.

The receipts also reflect a certain degree of meticulousness, as Reed’s handwriting appears on many of them, identifying which items are to be reimbursed and which are to be excluded.

On one 1991 receipt, from a vendor called Covered Wagon in Albuquerque, N.M., Reed circled $2,180 worth of items for reimbursement, but left out an item identified only as “2 Snake Dancers,” listed at $995.

On another, he calculated the exchange rate from peso to U.S. dollar, noting the receipt was from a “trade mission to sister city, Pachuca, Mexico” in 1996.

It’s not clear whether the reimbursement would constitute an ethics violation under state law. Rob Caruso, executive director of the State Ethics Commission, said that his agency’s policies precluded him from commenting on specific cases.

But he said that, in general, the ethics act covers cases involving a conflict of interest, which he defined as a public official using his or her office for personal enrichment.

Reimbursement of goods bought on a municipality’s behalf, Caruso said, would seem not to be a case of enrichment, though there are also considerations about whether those expenses were approved in advance by the municipality.

“If the public official bought those goods on his own, without the authorization of the municipality, that puts it in a different category,” he said.

In Reed’s case, reimbursement was to be paid out of a special Harrisburg Authority fund filled with fee proceeds from various bond financings throughout the 1990s. Reed claimed sole authority to requisition payments for city projects out of the fund, pursuant to a resolution the authority board adopted in 1991.

In his memo, Reed seemed to suggest the special fund was not the typical source for the request he was making, noting that “normally” he would have submitted it for payment from the city’s general fund.

But, he wrote, the “2003 fiscal constraints on the City preclude this now.”

At least two officials signed off on the reimbursement payment, which was made by check dated May 20, 2003. The check, from an account labeled “City Special Projects Reserve Fund” at M&T Bank, bears the signatures of Leonard House, then an authority board member, and Thomas Mealy, then the authority’s executive director.

Mealy, reached by phone, declined to comment, saying he had been advised not to answer questions about his time at the authority.

Though the grand jury proceedings are secret, there have been a few hints about the duration and scope of the probe. Current Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse and Steve Goldfield, a financial expert who worked on a 2012 forensic audit of incinerator financings, previously acknowledged testifying before the grand jury in early 2014.

Last month, Attorney General Kathleen Kane, whose office is overseeing the investigation, said during a Senate hearing that she hoped it would draw to a close “in the very near future.”

More recently, the Patriot-News identified a series of potential witnesses arriving this week in Pittsburgh, where the grand jury is seated, including former Mayor Linda Thompson, Dauphin County Commissioner Jeff Haste and Robert Kroboth, a finance director under Reed. On Wednesday, the paper photographed Reed himself outside the attorney general’s office there, accompanied by midstate lawyer Allen C. Welch, Jr.

Welch, reached Thursday, confirmed he is representing Reed but said neither he nor his client could comment on the reimbursement records. He could not even confirm whether he knew of their existence, he said, citing a judicial gag order.

 

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

Water_Rescue_3 Water_Rescue_2

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 …

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 …

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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March News Digest

 

New Parking Rates Go into Effect

The first of Harrisburg’s new parking meters went live last month, doubling street parking rates through much of downtown.

Street parking in the heart of downtown Harrisburg now costs $3 an hour, or 75 cents for every 15 minutes. In addition, enforcement hours have been extended to Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.

The 40 new meters accept credit cards, meaning parkers, for the first time, do not have to manually feed the meters with change.

The new parking rates were agreed to as part of the long-term lease of the city’s parking system to Standard Parking. Outsourcing the parking system was a key part of the city’s financial recovery plan, which helped rid Harrisburg of its overwhelming debt load and, if revenue projections are met, should provide additional annual funds to the city.

Standard Parking still must install new meters in several locations, including in Midtown Harrisburg, where metered parking also will be extended up N. 3rd Street to around Reily Street.

 

Water Rate Hike Effective

The Harrisburg Authority last month began implementing its new rate structure that includes a 27 percent hike in combined water and sewer rates.

As a result, authority customers experienced an increase in their utility bills last month. Most customers saw their bills go up by under $15 per month, said the authority.

The rate hike will help ensure the long-term health of Harrisburg’s drinking water, wastewater and storm water systems, said Executive Director Shannon Williams, who added that, even with the increase, water rates are among the lowest in the region.

 

Brewery Headed to Midtown

A brewery is headed to the heart of Midtown Harrisburg, as Alter Ego Brewing Co. last month received the OK to open a brewhouse at the rear of Midtown Cinema.

The city’s Zoning Hearing Board unanimously approved a special exception to permit the brewery and brew pub to operate in a residential zone.

Several dozen supporters—and some opponents—gathered in City Council chambers to voice their opinions. Supporters testified that the brewhouse would play an important role in continuing the revitalization of the area, while opponents cited possible traffic, noise, odor and parking issues.

Owners Theo and Brandalynn Armstrong expect to begin to build out the space at 250 Reily St. in May. If the renovation goes as planned—and assuming Alter Ego is granted its liquor license—the brewery should begin to serve customers around October.

When completed, the beer-making operation will take up about half of the 3,500-square-foot space, which is owned by Lift Development LLC. The other half will include a bar, tables and a small stage, which will be confined to acoustic acts and small bands.

In addition to serving their own beer in mugs and growlers (no bottles), Alter Ego will offer local Pennsylvania wines and a limited menu focused on small plates and finger foods. No spirits will be served.

Hours are expected to be Wednesday to Friday, 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

 

Stadium to Undergo Upgrade

Harrisburg plans to undertake a major upgrade to the Skyline Sports Complex to significantly improve the soccer facility used by the Harrisburg City Islanders and youth soccer groups.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse last month said the project will double the seating capacity at the city-owned facility to 4,500. It also will create a new entrance plaza, install a new scoreboard and build new restrooms, locker rooms and a concession area.

No city funds will be used for the $14 million project on City Island, said Papenfuse. Instead, private funds will be pursued, in addition to a possible state matching grant, said Islanders President Eric Pettis, who expects work to be finished in 2016.

The upgrades will allow greater use of the venue, including for concerts, youth sports and other events, said Papenfuse.

 

More Downtown Housing Planned

Another downtown office building is going residential, as the 19-century Walnut Court building is slated to become a 21-unit apartment building.

The Harrisburg Zoning Hearing Board last month agreed to waive the parking requirements for the conversion by 210 Walnut LLC, which is made up of the partners of WCI Partners LP. City Council still must OK the land use plan for the project.

The developers plan to convert the four-story, 21,600-square-foot building into 15 one-bedroom units, three two-bedroom units and three lofts. Rents will range from $900 to $1,350 per month.

The building has housed many businesses throughout the years, including, most recently, the law firm of Keefer, Wood, Allen & Rahal, which relocated up the block. The women’s clothing store, The Plum, also long-occupied the large retail space at Walnut and N. Court streets. It has moved next door to Locust and N. Court streets.

The building will retain two commercial spaces. The first is the snug storefront at 206 Walnut St. that long has housed Alden, a men’s haberdashery. The second, at the corner, will probably house a restaurant, said Butcher.

 

Flood Insurance Hikes Rolled Back

Congress last month passed legislation watering down key elements of the Biggert-Waters Act, which had threatened to dramatically raise the cost of flood insurance.

The U.S. Senate and House both passed bills that will roll back hikes that, in many cases, would have increased federal flood insurance premiums by more than three-fold. In addition, many property owners now will be allowed to pass on below-market rates to people who buy their homes.

As of press time, the legislation was waiting action by President Barack Obama. The White House has indicated he will sign it.

 

Warfel Snags National Award

Warfel Construction last month received national recognition with a first-place award for its work on the new office building at N. 2nd and State streets in Harrisburg.

Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC), a leading construction trades organization, honored East Petersburg, Pa.-based Warfel with the first place Eagle Award in the category of commercial property, $5 to $10 million.

“The Excellence in Construction awards program is the industry’s leading competition, developed to honor innovative, high-quality merit shop construction projects,” according to ABC.

The project was selected from entries submitted from across the nation and judged first in terms of complexity, attractiveness, workmanship, innovation, safety, cost and completion time.

WCI Partners developed and owns the building. Major tenants include the Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney law firm and First National Bank of Pennsylvania.

 

New Bishop Installed

Most Rev. Ronald W. Gainer was installed last month as the 11th Catholic bishop of Harrisburg at a Mass at St. Patrick Cathedral.

A native of Pottsville, Pa., Gainer was ordained in 1973 and previously served as bishop of Lexington, Ky.

He succeeds Bishop Joseph P. McFadden, who died last May.

 

Changing Hands: February Property Sales

Brookwood St., 2451: Fannie Mae to C. Wise & L. Stone, $41,000
Chestnut St., 2044: W. Bohn Jr. to M. Catania, $81,900
Chestnut St., 2304: M. & T. Bosak to M. & K. Johnson, $189,500
Duke St., 2622: J. Pierce to PI Capitol LLC, $51,031
Hale Ave., 377: H. & K. Le to I. Yolov, $49,000
Hale Ave., 412: Fannie Mae to T. Tran, $36,000
Herr St., 226: M. Kurowski to V. Wills & R. Moore, $160,000
Meadowlark Pl., 3028: C. Capitani to K. Clark, $73,000
North St., 244: S. Touloumes & J. Nye to E&S Properties LLC, $37,000
N. 2nd St., 511: C. Longyear to L. Eyler, $240,000
N. 2nd St., 1605: Freddie Mac to NR Group LLC, $42,000
N. 3rd St., 906 & 912: 3rd Street LLC to Nish Properties LLC, $285,000
N. 3rd St., 925: AIM Holdings LLC, CL Holdings LLC & Lam & Cheng Properties to 921 Home LLC, $715,000
N. 3rd St., 1724: G. DiCioccio to Y. Farzana, $91,500
N. 3rd St., 2103: WEC 97A 11 Investment Trust to Rite Partners LLC, $985,366
N. 3rd St., 3017: Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. Trustee to J. Crossett & M. Hochstetler, $80,000
N. 3rd St., 3221: Freddie Mac to PA Deals LLC, $39,250
N. 4th St., 1723: P. Laudermilch to R. Brock, $130,000
N. 14th St., 210: R. Rammouni & W. Othman to FBTB Group LLC, $48,900
N. 15th St., 1340: PA Deals LLC to MidAtlantic IRA LLC & James Yeager IRA, $56,500
N. Front St., 1525, Unit 409: P. Krantz to M. Anderson, $189,150
Penn St., 1338, 1340 & 1342: P. Sowers-Alton to T. Hanley & J. O’Neill, $36,000
Pennwood Rd., 3141: J. & P. Sandrock to C. Giba, $75,000
Rose St., 933: Rose Street Associates to F.A. Clark, $150,000
Rudy Rd., 2323: Fannie Mae to O. Saleh, $61,000
Rudy Rd., 2400: A. & J. Erby to Secretary of Housing & Urban Development, $156,008
Seneca St., 540: K. McCauley to E. Jefferies, $59,000
S. 13th St., 127 & 1304 Derry St.: S. Pak to Mount Pleasant Laundromat LLC, $1.2 million
S. 13th St., 301: 301 South 13th Street LLC to Skynet 301 LP, $360,000
State St., 1522: E. Stoute to C. Evans, $75,000
Susquehanna St., 1909: WCI Partners LP to L. Marven III, $149,900
Sycamore St., 1525: J. Moyer to P. Pham & T. Nguyen, $63,000
Valley Rd., 2300: E. & J. Schweikert to M. & R. Lewis, $208,000
Woodbine St., 245: J. & J. Nagy to J. & M. Harris, $52,800

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

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Get Smart: It’s a perfect time to make Harrisburg an example of smart planning and growth.

Screenshot 2013-12-29 19.50.17

It’s a city broken.

That’s what we keep hearing—the infrastructure is antiquated and decrepit. Services are deficient. Quality of life is low. Even the mighty Susquehanna River that flows by has a reputation for being sick and dirty.

While that can be disheartening to read, it can be looked at another way—it all means opportunities for rebuilding and innovative improvement.

Harrisburg is in a fortuitous position as this year begins. Not only is there newly elected leadership that has stimulated an atmosphere of optimism and ambition, but there are some important projects already in the works and on the horizon.

These projects include The Harrisburg Authority’s GIS project, Harrisburg Area Transportation Study’s development of the 2040 Regional Transportation Plan, Tri-County Regional Planning Commission’s Cross-River Connections Project and Capital Area Greenbelt Association’s upgrades. Both Dauphin County and the city have started a comprehensive planning process, and several “greening” projects have been launched, such as a tree inventory and planting, stormwater management initiatives and urban garden projects.

These are only a few things that are happening. There are even more as nonprofits, community groups and organizations strategize and implement ways to make the city a better place to live, work and visit.

It all fits well into the concept of “smart growth.”

A buzz term among urban and regional planners, smart growth can be generally defined as an approach to establishing communities where housing, jobs, shopping, schools and recreation are located in close proximity to one another. Before the invention of cars, this is precisely how municipalities were built.

This current approach integrates green practices into the planning process. As Andrew Bliss, grassroots coordinator at Chesapeake Bay Foundation stated, “The great thing about green infrastructure is the numerous social, economic and environmental benefits it provides in addition to reducing water pollution.”

Taking this precise idea as its foundation, smart growth means creating cities that have more permeable surfaces—trees and green spaces not just to make things pretty, but to deal with stormwater runoff, along with water and sewer management.

Every municipality must deal with such public issues. When it rains and pours, too much stormwater runoff causes floods, sweeps garbage into the sewers, strains underground pipes and sends pollution into waterways.

Recently, government agencies like the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) have been hitting places with “fix it or be fined” mandates.

This has municipalities searching for how best to fix it.

The fact of the matter is green infrastructure can cost less.

To see evidence of this, we only need to look at Lancaster and its Green Infrastructure Plan. When the city faced EPA fines of $37,500 a day, analysis showed that the least expensive options were green ones. The state’s infrastructure loan program, PENNVEST, agrees that going green is a viable alternative to traditional solutions, such as underground storage bins for stormwater runoff. In the past few years, PENNVEST has added a variety of green infrastructure options to the list of projects available for funding. 

So, not only does a focus on green practices save money, but it creates employment in the green sector. This is especially significant for disadvantaged communities.

Smart growth goes beyond “greening” things, though. It is about economic development because it makes places more compact, more economically self-sufficient—bringing jobs, businesses and shopping into an urban core.

Smart growth focuses on the pedestrian rather than the vehicle. The idea is, if a city has everything it needs, people will walk and bike to where they need to go. Cars won’t be necessary, especially if there is sufficient public transportation made available, which is a smart growth consideration, too.

Of course, another positive part of smart growth is that things look pretty.

When places are pretty, people feel better about where they live. Greener spaces mean healthier living because there are more places for people to exercise and enjoy. It also helps to attract visitors to the urban core, which adds value to the local economy.

Although this term wasn’t coined until the new millennium, “smart growth” was the concept that initially revamped Harrisburg more than 100 years ago during the City Beautiful movement. And, with City Beautiful 2.0 just getting started, it’s prime time to re-create Harrisburg as a model of smart urban planning and implementation.

To accomplish this, it will take a concerted, collaborative effort of governments, organizations and citizens. With so many projects occurring at once, it will be necessary to locate the overlaps of resources and efforts to make initiatives most successful. 

Harrisburg is a region capable of principles of smart growth. Not only is its urban core a capital city that should be modeling innovative policies and practices, but it’s a river city with a responsibility as steward of an important body of water.

There’s no better approach when so much of the city is in need of repair.

Tara Leo Auchey is creator and editor of today’s the day Harrisburg. www.todaysthedayhbg.com

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December News Digest

 

2014 Budget Passed

Harrisburg residents will see no tax hike in 2014 as part of a $77.8 million budget that unanimously passed City Council last month.

The 2014 budget process was remarkably smooth following several years of annual conflict between the council and administration over spending priorities, allocations and tax increases.

Council held just a single, 90-minute budget hearing then approved the spending plan with little additional comment.

A direct comparison to last year’s budget is difficult due to the provisions of the Harrisburg Strong plan, which included the sale of the incinerator, the lease of the parking system and the transfer of the water/sewer system.

That said: expenditures from the city’s general fund, which covers most day-to-day operations, will increase about 1.7 percent, from $56.2 million in 2013 to $57.2 million this year.

City Council expects to reopen the budget this month to better reflect the priorities of newly elected Mayor Eric Papenfuse. However, major changes are not expected, as the anticipated amount of revenue will not change, and the current budget already has the blessing of the receiver’s office.

 

Water/Sewer Rates Going Up

Harrisburg water and sewer customers will see a 27 percent rate hike this year for their service under a budget passed by The Harrisburg Authority.

The rate increase was necessary to pay for long-delayed system improvements, said Executive Director Shannon Williams.

“For too long, necessary investments in Harrisburg’s water infrastructure have been deferred to future generations,” she said. “That ends with the adoption of this budget. It will allow us to deliver service and reliability that our customers deserve and that will sustain the city into the future.”

An average customer who uses 5,000 gallons of water per month will pay about $825 per year, an increase of about $175.

Initially, the Authority had projected a 47 percent rise in rates for 2014. However, that amount was reduced after the board of directors and staff developed strategies to control costs, said Chairman Bill Cluck.

 

Sanitation Outsourcing on Hold

City Council last month put the brakes on privatizing trash pickup, as it refused to approve an administration-brokered deal with Republic Services.

Councilwoman Sandra Reid said the city would issue a new request for proposals early this year, which would delay the plan to hire an outside waste hauler well into 2014.

Council balked at the Thompson administration’s selection of Republic Services, the nation’s second-largest trash hauler. Council members claimed they were shut out of the selection process and objected to certain requirements of the proposed agreement, including that sanitation workers would have to pick up their equipment each day in York.

Receiver William Lynch has recommended privatizing sanitation services to save the city money. The contract with Republic would have saved Harrisburg about $1.1 million per year, according to a memo to City Council from Chief Operating Officer Robert Philbin.

Separately, the Department of Public Works is relocating its headquarters and operations to the 1600-block of N. Cameron Street, said Director Kevin Hagerich. The move is due to be completed by March 1.

For many years, the department occupied space on the property of the Harrisburg Authority. That land, though, is no longer available due to the sale last month of the incinerator to the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority.

 

Projects Get Go-Ahead

Harrisburg City Council gave the green light to numerous development plans last month, allowing construction to begin for several critical projects.

Council unanimously approved land use plans for the following:

  • The conversion of the Stokes Millworks building, 340 Verbeke St. in Midtown, to a farm-to-table restaurant and art studio/gallery by Historic Holdings LLC.
  • The conversion of the First Church of God, 15 N. 4th St. downtown, into a new theater and home for Gamut Theatre Group.
  • The construction of four new apartment buildings with 171 units at Brookwood and Melrose streets on South Allison Hill by Brookwood Commons LP.
  • The demolition of small, vacant apartment buildings and their replacement with five townhouses at 222-224 Hummel St. on South Allison Hill by Brethren Housing Association.
  • A 33,000-square-foot expansion of an industrial warehouse at 4000 Industrial Rd., including two parking lots and on-site stormwater infrastructure improvements, by the Sygma Network.

These projects come on the heels of several other recent development initiatives, including the planned completion of the abandoned, half-finished Capitol View Commerce Center on N. Cameron Street by Moran Industries.

 

No Tax Increase from County

For the ninth straight year, Dauphin County will not raise its property tax, as county commissioners last month passed the 2014 budget.

The county tax will remain at 6.87 mils, in addition to a .35-mil library tax.

For 2014, overall spending is actually expected to fall, as the $230.6 million budget clocks in at about 5.5 percent less than the 2013 budget. The decrease is largely due to the Harrisburg Strong recovery plan, which freed the county from most of its obligation from incinerator bond guarantees.

 

Swearing In Slated

Harrisburg will ring in new leadership on Jan. 6 with the swearing in of several key municipal officials.

New Mayor Eric Papenfuse will be sworn into office in a ceremony that will begin at 10 a.m. in the lobby of City Hall. In addition, City Controller Charles DeBrunner will take the oath of office, as will newly elected council members Shamaine Daniels and Ben Allatt and incumbent council members Wanda Williams and Eugenia Smith.

After the swearing in, the new administration will begin to move into its offices. City Council will hold its reorganization meeting in council chambers at 3 p.m.

 

Changing Hands

Barkley Ln., 2509: T. Huynh & L. Lee to C. & S. Moore, $74,900

Boas St., 406: C. DeLorenzo to A. Heisey, $90,000

Brookwood St., 2610: D. Krekstein to Scottsdale Commercial Partners LP, $170,000

Croyden Rd., 2986: PA Deals LLC to N. Peterson, $79,000

Green St., 1608: PA Deals LLC to G. & J. Modi, $137,000

Green St., 1816: J. Tran to G. Brown, $92,945

Green St., 1911: T. & S. Cohen to G.E. Morris III, $159,000

Kensington St., 2252: S. Myers to C. Dell, $52,900

Locust St., 130: D. Bohn et al to WCI Partners LP, $300,000

Market St., 1501 & 1507: Martin Luther King Baptist Church to Eastern PA District Christian & Missionary Alliance, $130,242

N. 2nd St., 1303: U.S. Marshall Service to PA Deals LLC, $30,000

N. 2nd St., 2447: E. & S. Lupyak to M. DePhillip, $57,500

N. 3rd St., 1421: Third Street Development LP & Powers & Assoc. LLC to E. & C. Papenfuse, $60,000.

N. 3rd St., 1912: PA Deals LLC to N. Peterson, $76,000

N. 16th St., 1106: Community First Fund to R.J. Murphy III, $31,500

N. Front St., 111: Front & Locust LLC to J.A. Hartzler, $200,000

N. Front St., 1525, Unit 312: P. Lafferty to R. & C. Chaudhuri, $160,000

N. Front St., 2509: A.L. Schein MD to Pennsylvania Builders Assoc., $575,000

Reily St., 219: J. Williams to PA Deals LLC, $44,450

Rumson Dr., 369: PA Deals LLC to J. Gaidos, $80,700

S. 14th St., 404: D. Boyle to J. Lopez, $30,000

November 2013 property sales for Harrisburg, greater than $30,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

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Smell Ya Later! We bid adieu to the Harrisburg incinerator–40 years, many breakdowns, a botched upgrade, dubious financings and a near-city bankruptcy later.

Screenshot 2013-11-29 10.14.23

Later this month, about a week before Christmas, Harrisburg should complete its sale of the facility that the journalist Paul Beers once called the “infernal furnace.”

The Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority (LCSWMA) will pony up somewhere between $126 and $132 million for it, helping the facility shed the $350 million or so in debt it accumulated over the years. The purchase will also, it’s hoped, help ditch the adjectives—“troubled,” “ill-fated,” “botched,” not to mention “infernal”—that have historically preceded its name.

In the meantime, though, those adjectives will continue to amuse employees like Guy Lefever, who started working at the incinerator in 2009 and has always known it as a functional facility.

“People come up here, and they’re blown away,” he told me one morning in late September. “They’re thinking it’s just gonna be a run-down building, and trash laying all over the place. And it’s not.”

We were standing a few dozen yards from an ash heap, where the scorched remains of solid waste from households in Pennsylvania and New Jersey arrive fresh from the burners all day. A couple of ravens scavenged for surviving morsels. The land around the incinerator is close to capacity, so a pair of trucks spends most days at this heap, loading ash onto haulers that will take it elsewhere.

Lefever, a solidly built man in a clean, blue dress shirt, with a doughy lower jaw like Bill Murray’s, starts many sentences with, “So basically,” in the manner of someone whose job often involves translating technical terms. “So basically,” he said, as we watched the vehicles work amid a thin cloud of ash, “the truck comes up, dumps it out, they spread it out, stockpile it, and then load these trucks to go out to the different landfills.”

According to Lefever, “troubled” is not the only misnomer attached to his place of work. The incinerator is also not technically an incinerator. Covanta Energy, its operator, prefers the term “EfW,” for “Energy-from-Waste,” although the amount of stock you put into this distinction probably says something about your industry. The Harrisburg incinerator achieves the “E” in “EfW” by using the heat from its burners to produce steam, which, in turn, powers a turbine, producing electricity. Nonetheless, some environmentalists have condemned incineration as a wasteful and hazardous method of dealing with trash.

Reconciling the claims of energy companies and their watchdogs can be an exercise in futility. Covanta’s website refers to EfW electricity as “clean, renewable energy,” relying on a definition of “renewable” as “derived from natural processes that are replenished constantly.” But a fact sheet from GAIA, the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, contests this pretty much absolutely. “Municipal waste,” GAIA says, “is non-renewable, consisting of discarded materials such as paper, plastic and glass that are derived from finite natural resources such as forests that are being depleted at unsustainable rates.”

Tours of the incinerator start in a squat, brick outbuilding, where a colorful graphic mounted on the wall of a conference room provides an overview of the facility’s moving parts. We stood in front of the graphic for about 40 minutes while I tried to picture the combustion process Lefever was describing within the abstract boundaries of a line drawing. Then we put on hard hats and safety vests and headed for the entrance.

People like Lefever often refer to “feeding” the incinerator, and the first stage in the long meal occurs on what’s known as the tipping floor, where garbage trucks pull up one at a time and “tip” their cargo out onto a cement bay. As we approached, a short line of trucks curled back from the entrance, waiting their turn. Inside, the floor was loud with the grumble of diesel engines and the warning peals of heavy machinery going in reverse. It smelled like wet garbage, but not in an oppressive way. “It gets better over the winter,” Lefever said. We watched as a large hauler backed up and tipped its load. As it drove forward, a block of dripping waste slid out, in the exact shape of its container. Then it settled, its edges melting away, until it was just another pile of trash.

The price the haulers pay to deposit their waste is known as a tipping fee, and it’s the primary source of income for the facility. It’s also the subject of a fair amount of controversy. Different municipalities are charged different rates, for reasons having to do both with volumes of trash and other, more political considerations. Historically, Dauphin County’s fees have been drastically lower than the city’s; last summer, the city’s fee was $200 per ton, while the county’s was $77. Under the terms of the sale to LCSWMA, the fees will gradually become more equitable over the next couple of decades, until both the city and county are paying $115. But, in the short term, the city’s fee will remain much higher.

Preserving the disparity is one of the less savory requirements of the state-appointed receiver’s recovery plan for the city. Higher fees mean more revenue for LCSWMA, which, in turn, translates to a higher sale price for the facility. The receiver’s team viewed the higher sale price as critical, because the proceeds will help pay down the incinerator debt, but many residents are still unhappy about it.

In addition to paying more to dump, the city will also be contractually obliged to deliver 35,000 tons of waste to the incinerator each year. Many residents aren’t particularly happy about this, either. But if trash is the facility’s food, then the burners, like teenagers, need to be constantly eating. If there isn’t sufficient trash to keep the fires burning, they must be restarted with gas, at cost to the owners. The demand for trash is so great, in fact, that Lefever must occasionally bid for waste from outside municipalities. (In the olden days, he said, some incinerators may have even accepted trash for free, because “they were making a god-awful amount on their electric side.”)

From the tipping floor, we headed to the control room, where a shift supervisor named Troy was watching a set of big-screen monitors. “So if this was MTV Cribs, you remember that show?” Lefever said. “Well, this is where the magic happens.”

From this station, Troy could keep an eye on temperature levels, burn rate, flame height, steam output and just about everything that happens to the trash once it enters the burners. Some screens showed color-coded blueprints of the equipment, spotted with lines of data, and some provided live camera feeds from inside the facility. On one feed, lead-colored ash trundled along on a conveyor belt. On others, unbelievably, you could watch the garbage actually burning. Tiny fisheye lenses, cooled by constant air streams, provided the images: ghostly orange-and-black blurs, smoldering at temperatures as high as 2,000 degrees.

Troy, like Lefever, spoke in industrial shorthand. (“So here’s your pit, crane operator feeds grapples in here, trash goes down the chute, and here you got feed rams that are pushing your fuel off, you know…”) They talked about “wet stuff,” meaning moist, slow-burning trash, which produces dark spots in the flames on the video feed. Whoever is manning the control room must monitor the amount of wet stuff in each burner, in order to ensure a well-paced, thorough burn. “If your fuel would be a consistently steady fuel,” Troy said, “you wouldn’t have to do much. But trash is trash. One load comes in, it’s all paper, and the next load comes in, and it’s restaurant waste. You got a constant different waste stream.”

From the control room, we headed out to observe the crane operator, who spends the day plucking up trash from the tipping floor and feeding it to the burner.

He was sitting inside a glass box, manipulating an enormous grappling claw. Essentially, his job is to manipulate a smelly, 70-foot tall teddy picker. He dropped the claw, closed it around a massive clump of trash, and then hoisted it to one of the chutes and let it spill. Occasionally, rather than empty his claw into a chute, he’ll unload it on one of his stockpiles along the edges of the floor. The stockpiles keep the tipping floor clear for incoming trucks, but they also allow for the mixing of wet and dry waste to achieve a more consistent burn.

We passed back along a catwalk between the boilers and stepped outside. Lefever pointed out the baghouses: big, funnel-shaped filters that strip particulates from emissions en route to the smokestack. The effectiveness of these filters is something environmentalists also question, although the state Department of Environmental Protection, which monitors the facility’s emissions, has issued few violations, and the ones it has have been minor. “Really, you don’t see anything coming out of the stack,” he said. “It’s all being captured.”

I looked up. The stack seemed to be emitting nothing more than little white wisps of cloud.

The things that have troubled the incinerator in recent years have afflicted it almost from the beginning. In September 1966, City Council approved a project that, at the time, was projected to cost $4.5 million. By the time the facility came online, five years later, that cost had nearly tripled. After repeated breakdowns, it nearly tripled again.

Then, as now, the incinerator became a measure of the office of the mayor: both the scale of its ambitions and its command of city finances. Paul Beers, surveying the facility’s early history in several columns for the Patriot, recalled that Mayor Al Straub called it “the Rolls-Royce of incinerators” in 1969. But his successor, Harold Swenson, condemned it as “a facility that far exceeds our needs and our ability to pay.”

And then, as now, the trouble came mostly from two quarters: the difficulty of securing a sufficient waste stream and the need for its technology, never quite ready for prime time, to comply with environmental regulations. Beers reported that, in order to pay for itself, the incinerator needed to run at 85 percent of its capacity. It routinely ran at 60 percent. Neighboring municipalities, Beers wrote, could not be cajoled into committing to the city’s project.

In addition, the incinerator was continually plagued with mechanical problems. In 1978, it caught fire. In 1979, there was a cave-in, the aftermath of which, Beers wrote, “epitomized all the comedy and tragedy” of the facility. Its manager, Jack Karper, “hurriedly rescued the garbage reserve so there would be trash to feed the flames and make steam…Explained a jubilant Karper, ‘Thank God we saved the garbage. It represents dollars.’”

In 1984, after years of regulatory violations—mostly over where the city was storing waste after burning it—Mayor Stephen Reed corralled the operation under a newly minted “Department of Incineration and Steam Generation.” Some improvements were made, including the addition of a new steam line, but the compliance issues persisted. In 1985, an inspection revealed the city was burning a greater-than-allowable quantity of sewer sludge. In 1988, a succession of tests on the smokestack discovered emissions violations, and ash repeatedly escaped the site and landed on private property. Eventually, the city reached a consent agreement with the state Department of Environmental Resources and completed major capital repairs in 1990 and 1991.

In 1993, Reed engineered a sale of the facility to the Harrisburg Authority. The deal ushered in what you might charitably call an era of creative financing. The “sale,” to an authority of the city’s own making, drew revenues to the city of around $27 million, and, at the same time, saddled the incinerator with an additional $34 million in debt—the acquisition price, plus $7 million in bonds for capital improvements. In other words, the incinerator acquired substantial debt that had nothing to do with expanding its operations, ensuring its regulatory compliance or improving its equipment. The pattern would be repeated throughout the 1990s, until the debt load had climbed to nearly $100 million.

2003 was something of a watershed year. Dauphin County had pledged its waste stream to the incinerator, promising revenues that might have been sufficient to pay its bills, except that the federal Clean Air Act threatened to sharply limit the facility’s capacity. The city faced a choice. It either could shut down the operation, assuming its debt, or it could borrow once more to retrofit the incinerator and increase its capacity, with the hopes of generating enough revenue to cover the cost. The city opted for the retrofit.

City officials, for several years prior, had been eyeing a potential contractor that could upgrade the facility at the lowest possible price. The contractor, Barlow Projects, had installed a burner in Perham, Minn., using “churn-and-burn” technology that used forced air to circulate the waste, rather than moving grates, which were constantly breaking down in the Harrisburg facility. The Perham installation’s capacity was 50 to 100 tons per day—far short of the 800 tons the city required. Nonetheless, Barlow concluded it could complete the retrofit. The upgraded incinerator, in Barlow’s projection, would produce a cash surplus of $57 million by 2028.

Barlow, though, did not complete the project on time or on budget, and ultimately the firm was fired. The company’s projections of a cash surplus relied on dubious assumptions about electricity prices and interest rates, not to mention its own construction costs. A forensic audit, commissioned by the Harrisburg Authority and completed in 2012, pointedly questioned why Barlow was even allowed to submit a financial analysis of its own project—which, furthermore, was not subject to a public bid. The decision “to allow Barlow to certify the feasibility of its technical approach, to estimate the project’s cost and purported financial benefit, and then to obtain the contracts to actually conduct the work, appears questionable at best,” the audit says. “There are no indications that the City, the Authority or their advisors identified the conflict or potential problems.”

But the city, the authority and its advisors, following the pattern set by the 1993 sale, were far past the point of measuring debt against any future capacity to pay. Like the incinerator, which fed new trash to old trash to produce electricity, they were issuing new debt to pay for old debt. By the time Covanta was hired to finish the project, the facility’s debt totaled $280 million. The authority could no longer service it, and the city, which had promised to pay in its place, was on the hook.

The trick of municipal finance—in a sense, the trick of finance generally—is how to make something out of nothing. A city wants to build an incinerator, but it has no money. What should it do?

If the city were like me, and followed the advice of my old boss (“stay out of debt, kid”), it would sock away a little bit of each year’s revenues until it had enough for an incinerator. The problem with this method is that it would lead to the building of exactly zero incinerators.

An alternative is to borrow now and pay the bill later. The favored tool of municipal borrowing is the bond issue. A bond is a promise to pay, and in the case of a capital project like an incinerator, it comes with a certain built-in elegance: the promise sows the seeds of its own fulfillment. The debt builds the thing that earns the revenue to pay the debt. Between the tipping fees and the electricity sales, the incinerator should be able to pay all of its workers and still have enough left over to pay back what’s been borrowed. The city comes away owing nothing, and, in the meantime, careers have been made, families supported, kids sent to college, and everyone has avoided being drowned in garbage.

The term for debt that can be paid back with user rates is “self-liquidating.” When a local government classifies debt as self-liquidating, it’s essentially reassuring taxpayers that their taxes will never be raised to cover the debt, because the project will pay for itself. It’s important for governments to make this classification, because state law imposes strict limits on how much a municipality can borrow, based on its revenues. Self-liquidating debt doesn’t count against the limit, which frees up the municipality to borrow for other projects.

In Pennsylvania, the entity charged with watching the taxpayers’ back in the municipal borrowing process is the Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED). When a local government wants to issue new debt, it must submit a five-page statement to DCED tallying its various outstanding obligations. The third page of this statement, known as an 8110(b) certificate, requires the government unit to sign off on a one-sentence pledge that says, in essence, that any debt that was classified as self-liquidating in the past is still self-liquidating. A government that gives this assurance is said to have filed a “clean” 8110(b).

On Oct. 4, 2012, the Pennsylvania Senate held the first of two hearings to try to determine what, exactly, had gone wrong in Harrisburg. In a period lasting just under 20 years, the debt load on an incinerator that the city had bought for $27 million had ballooned to nearly $350 million. Huge portions of the borrowings were used to refinance prior debt and generate “working capital,” to cover the costs of operation. A remarkably small portion of the debt went towards actual improvements on the facility, which should have been an indication the project had ceased to pay for itself. Yet each time it borrowed, the city filed a clean 8110(b).

One question for the legislators was how the city was permitted to keep classifying the incinerator debt as self-liquidating. Steve Goldfield, a financial advisor to the state-appointed receiver who contributed to the forensic audit, raised this question during the hearing. In addition, he asked, if the debt didn’t go towards improvements, what was it spent on?

Goldfield’s testimony lasted two hours. After Goldfield, the senators listened to representatives from DCED, to former board members of the Harrisburg Authority, to former Mayor Reed, and to a handful of lawyers and financial advisors, among others. Most of those involved at the time of the borrowings came supplied with reasons why they weren’t to blame. DCED was desperately short-staffed and could rarely give more than a cursory review to the assurances made by local officials. Local officials relied on the advice of professionals, not being qualified themselves to assess technical projects. The professionals, for the most part, fobbed off culpability onto other professionals.

Goldfield, in his testimony, was careful to point out the many factors outside the city’s control. Revenues for an incinerator project were particularly volatile: there was the unpredictability of electricity prices, the unreliable flow of trash, the need to comply with environmental regulations. But Goldfield also described the disturbing pattern that emerged with each new bond issue. Harrisburg wasn’t just borrowing to fix the incinerator; it was using the construction project as a back door to extra debt above its limit.

Each time the Harrisburg Authority issued new debt, it sought guarantees from Harrisburg and from Dauphin County, and in most instances, the guarantees were provided. There’s nothing irregular about guarantees in and of themselves. Municipal bonds, like any other form of debt, have interest rates tied to the amount of risk the bondholder assumes in purchasing them. To reduce the amount of risk, and therefore the interest rate, the borrowing entity can seek a guarantee from a municipality, which pledges to pay bondholders in the event of default.

But the city and the county also charged the authority fees for those guarantees, in the several millions of dollars. In his testimony, Goldfield was quick to note the suspect nature of these charges, especially as applied by the city. In 23 years of working in municipal finance, he said, he had only seen one other instance of a municipality charging its own authority a fee for a bond guarantee.

In addition, there was something peculiar about the way the fee amount was calculated. “The guarantee fee, through serendipity or something else, matched the structural deficit in the city’s budget,” Goldfield said. In short, each time the authority issued new debt, the city sliced off a piece exactly large enough to fill a hole in the general fund.

It has occasionally been said that, under receiver William Lynch’s plan, various creditors and professionals will receive what they’re owed, while the city’s taxpayers receive nothing. Particularly in regards to the incinerator, this interpretation has some intuitive appeal. The facility, the thinking goes, was built with Harrisburg-taxpayer-backed borrowing, but now it will be sold to enrich the coffers of some other municipality.

The problem with this argument is that it skips over everything that taxpayers received under Reed. Tax revenues were insufficient to cover the budget, yet, for years, tax rates stayed low. This was true, in fact, for rates across the board, including water and sewer rates and fees for using public parks. Part of the reason there’s been so much grumbling lately is that prices that ought to have gone up gradually each year are now playing dramatic catch-up.

It’s one thing to be cheated and lied to, of course. The state attorney general has announced an investigation of whether any of Harrisburg’s officials or their advisors cheated or lied, and the receiver’s plan includes a hope for some civil claims from the professionals who escorted the city down a financial hole. But the borrowed money didn’t all just go to a few suits in city hall. Might some part of the deal reflect Harrisburg’s payment for two decades of willful ignorance?

A very small portion of the incinerator’s revenues has nothing to do with burners or electricity. It comes, instead, from scrap metal recovered from the waste. The ash, leaving the boilers on a conveyor belt, passes beneath a big, spinning magnet that sucks metal up from the stream and whisks it onto a mound of salvaged scrap.

Towards the end of my tour, Lefever led me up a ramp, to a point from which I could peer into a large cement box. The magnet, like a giant spool, revolved at the leisurely pace of a paddlewheel. Bed springs, chicken wire, coffee cans and oil pans piled up below, effaced to an identical smoky blue-gray.

We climbed some stairs to the room where the turbine, a dull nest of pipes and dials, sits underneath a high ceiling. It was about as large as a mid-sized Winnebago. I was struck, again, with a sense of disbelief: how could such an extraordinary amount of debt be saddling a facility that was, in physical scope, so comprehensible?

Outside, we pulled out our earplugs and shed our safety jackets and hats. On the perimeter of the facility are a couple of capped landfills. They used to be more of an eyesore (“I think people were calling it ‘Mount Ashmore,’” Lefever said), so they seeded them with temporary grass covers. Now they look like ancient burial mounds—hills too square-shaped to be naturally occurring.

We walked to the active part of the landfill. Between the boilers and the ash heap is a span of city garages and, beside them, a lot that amounts to a graveyard for retired city vehicles. We passed some garbage trucks, still in use, and an outmoded fire truck, long abandoned. At the end of a gravel road, a truck was depositing a load of new ash, water-soaked for cooling purposes, and spreading it out to dry. It will remain there a while, picked at by scavengers. Then haulers will come and take it away, and it will cease to be Harrisburg’s concern.

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