Tag Archives: harrisburg

August News Digest

 

Harrisburg Crime Rate Falls

Serious crime in Harrisburg plummeted by almost 21 percent for the first six months of the year, according to statistics reported last month to the FBI.

Compared to the same period of last year, nearly all “Part 1” crimes were down by double-digits, including rape, vehicle theft, robbery, assault and burglary. Homicides were unchanged at seven.

Arson was the only crime that showed an increase, with 11 cases from January through June, as opposed to eight cases in 2014.

The statistics that the Harrisburg Police Bureau reported to the FBI include (Jan.-June 2015 vs. Jan.-June 2014):
Homicide: 7 vs. 7
Rape: 15 vs. 28
Robbery: 115 vs. 155
Assault: 593 vs. 680
Burglary: 238 vs. 263
Theft: 409 vs. 591
Auto Theft: 63 vs. 96
Arson: 11 vs. 8

In 2014, Part 1 crimes were down by 8 percent for the entire year.

Reed Defense Fund Goes Live
 
A website launched last month to accept contributions to the legal defense of former Harrisburg Mayor Steve Reed.

The website, justiceforsteve.com, seeks to raise money to help Reed battle 499 criminal counts filed against him in July by the state attorney general’s office. The charges cover a wide range of alleged corruption, centering on Reed’s use of public borrowings to direct money to pet projects and favored professionals.

The website also refutes the state’s allegations against Reed.

“Steve Reed was one of the most honest, dedicated and brilliant public servants to ever serve our city and accusations now being levied against him are a travesty,” states the website, which adds that “it’s time to stand up for Steve Reed!”

Reed has engaged the Philadelphia-based law firm of Ballard Spahr to assist him with his defense.

More Downtown Apartments

New apartments continue to spring up in downtown Harrisburg, as Harristown Enterprises plans to add 23 more units near Strawberry Square.

Harristown expects to start this fall on the renovation of a six-story office building at 18-22 S. 3rd St., which also houses El Sol Mexican restaurant, which will continue to operate. The building will feature 15 high-end, one-bedroom apartments, each measuring about 800 square feet.

Directly across the street, Harristown will renovate historic townhouses at 19, 21, 23 and 27 S. 3rd St. Those three-story townhouses will contain eight one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments, as well as commercial space on the ground floors.

This is the second time recently that Harristown announced it would convert downtown commercial space to apartments. It recently received City Council approval to renovate 21,000 square feet of office space and another 6,000 square feet of loft space to 22 apartments above a stretch of shops along N. 3rd and Market streets in Strawberry Square.

“We believe the market for high-end and unique apartments in the downtown is very strong, and we look forward to continuing to grow the downtown residential population,” said Brad Jones, president and CEO of Harristown.

All of these projects are slated for completion in spring 2016.

Over the past two years, downtown housing has experienced a rapid revival, with numerous office-to-residential conversions. Most recently, WCI Partners completed its Walnut Court Apartments, a 21-unit project at Walnut and Court streets that opened in July and is already mostly leased, according to WCI President David Butcher.

Harristown will partner with Select Capital Commercial Properties for a portion of its most recent project.

New SAM Director
 
The Susquehanna Art Museum has named Alice Anne Schwab as its new executive director.
Schwab last served as director of education for the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra and currently serves on the boards of several local non-profit organizations.

Schwab replaced Laurene Buckley, who served a little over two years in the post. Under her tenure, the museum constructed its new facility, which opened in January at N. 3rd and Calder streets in Midtown Harrisburg.

In this position, Schwab will oversee the day-to-day operations of the museum, supervising both the administrative and creative teams to create a “premier regional art museum,” according to the museum’s announcement.

To learn more about the Susquehanna Art Museum, visit www.sqart.org.
 
 

Little Amps to Open 3rd Location
 
Attention state workers—your high-quality caffeine fix is closer than ever as Little Amps Coffee Roasters soon will open in Strawberry Square.

The third location of the Harrisburg-based coffee shop is slated to debut in October in vacant space adjacent to the Chockablock Clock on the first floor, said Brad Jones, president and CEO of Harristown Enterprises, which owns and manages Strawberry Square.

Little Amps owner Aaron Carlson said he was attracted to Strawberry Square so he can serve office workers who may not venture to his other shops.

“Our other stores tend to attract people who live in the city,” he said. “There are some 9-to-5 coffee-lovers that we think we can attract.”

The new location will be small, a kiosk-style space with a few cafe tables, Carlson said.

Little Amps was founded in October 2011 with a single location at the corner of Green and Muench streets in Olde Uptown in Harrisburg. It later opened a downtown location at the corner of N. 2nd and State streets.

 
Changing Hands
 
Boas St., 110: M. Lehocky to A. Seig, $130,000
Boas St., 1855: Pennymac Corp to M. Myers, $38,000
Boas St., 402: I. Lewis to E. Musselman, $89,900
Briggs St., 1608: C. Johnson to M. Bullock, $105,000
Crescent St., 326: S. & S. Rodriguez to O. & Z. Gonzalez, $51,000
Cumberland St., 270: W. Fritz & PA Deals LLC to D. Reinhart, $125,000
Derry St., 1201½ & 1224: S. & S. Rodriguez to O. & Z. Gonzalez, $51,000
Fillmore St., 614: C. Badillo to G. Boyd, $69,900
Fulton St., 1419: G. & D. Hanslovan to A. Skerpon, $88,500
Fulton St., 1420: PA Deals LLC to V. & D. Poplaski, $95,000
Green St., 1100: N. & A. Hoffner to B. Smith, $140,000
Green St., 1115: W. Hoover & D. Scoyoc to R. Slater & K. Hribar, $175,000
Green St., 1515: F. Bierach & R. Stanley to J. Barton, $109,900
Green St., 710: M. Coble to N. Pinkston & C. Maximowicz, $163,000
Hamilton St., 213: M. Montaine to R. & F. Armetta, $155,000
Harris St., 330: K. Barrow to A. Roth, $102,000
Kelker St., 201: Rockville Enterprises LLC to R. Stelzer, $82,500
Logan St., 1733: PA Deals LLC to D. Dougherty & K. Lyons, $96,900
Manada St., 2016: PA Deals LLC to D. Reinhart, $94,800
Mulberry St., 1158: S. Elazouni to S. Patel, $65,000
Nagle St., 119 & 709 Showers St.: T. Sangrey to J. Baer & A. Jury, $251,000
N. 2nd St., 1827: K. Dougherty to J. Reneker & A. Woodrow, $110,000
N. 2nd St., 2135: Fannie Mae to PA Deals LLC, $45,000
N. 2nd St., 2727: M. & J. Hobson to W. Stabler, $246,900
N. 3rd St., 712: Grandkott Corp. & M. Granderson to MLP LLC, $126,000
N. 3rd St., 1229: S. Johnsen to J. Geronimo, $126,000
N. 4th St., 1905: K. Clifford to A. Adesubokan, $75,000
N. 5th St., 3108: Secretary of Veterans Affairs to J. Charlton, $33,478
N. 6th St., 3212: PA Deals LLC to V. & D. Poplaski, $100,000
N. 19th St., 28: D. County Property Investors LLC to N. Grimes, $50,000
Paxton St., 1908: S. Benjamin to Niel Real Estate Investments LLC, $250,000
Penn St., 1910: WCI Partners LP to A. LaFountain, $154,900
S. 20th St., 19: M. Wolde & H. Andemapiam to W. Kharalah, $32,000
S. 25th Street, 432: P. Bauer to D. Price, $106,000
S. 29th St., 520 & 576: Goodrich Associates to Amerco Real Estate Company, $1,800,000
S. River St., 317: J. Dominick & R. Swartzentruber to W. Danowski & A. Mead, $82,000
Seneca St., 313: R. Sheetz to M. & V. Keyes, $35,000
Verbeke St., 222: A. DiSilvestro to E. Dean, $140,000
Vineyard Rd., 214: V. Grodner to L. Csovelak & A. Trone, $184,000
Walnut St., 211: M. Ntonados to R. Rammouni, $150,000
Zarker St., 2007: M. Wolde & H. Andemapiam to W. Kharalah, $32,000

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

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More Apartments: Harristown to Add to Downtown Housing Revival

Harristown3rdSt

Harristown plans to renovate this row of buildings (except Walker’s) into high-end apartments and retail.

New apartments continue to spring up in downtown Harrisburg, as Harristown Enterprises plans to add 23 more units near Strawberry Square.

Harristown expects to start this fall on the renovation of a six-story office building at 18-22 S. 3rd St., which also houses El Sol Mexican restaurant, which will continue to operate. The building will feature 15 high-end, one-bedroom apartments, each measuring about 800 square feet.

Directly across the street, Harristown will renovate historic townhouses at 19, 21, 23 and 27 S. 3rd St. Those three-story townhouses will contain eight, one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments, as well as commercial space on the ground floors.

The building at 21 S. 3rd “may be dedicated” to a new downtown co-working space of about 5,700 square feet, according to Brad Jones, president and CEO of Harristown.

This is the second time recently that Harristown announced it would convert downtown commercial space to apartments. Last month, it received City Council approval to renovate 21,000 square feet of office space and another 6,000 square feet of loft space to 22 apartments above a stretch of shops along N. 3rd and Market streets in Strawberry Square.

“We believe the market for high-end and unique apartments in the downtown is very strong, and we look forward to continuing to grow the downtown residential population,” said Jones.

All of these projects are slated for completion in spring 2016.

Over the past two years, downtown housing has experienced a rapid revival, with numerous office-to-residential conversions. Most recently, WCI Partners completed its Walnut Court Apartments, a 21-unit project at Walnut and Court streets that opened in July and is already mostly leased, according to WCI President David Butcher.

Harristown will partner with Select Capital Commercial Properties for a portion of its most recent project.

HarristownElSol3

This historic office building is slated to be renovated as an apartment building.

 

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Burg Blog: Gun Shy

Harrisburg police Cpl. Ty Meik (right) speaks with organizer Jay Bowser during a recent meeting at Zeroday Brewing Co.

Harrisburg police Cpl. Ty Meik (right) speaks with organizer Jay Bowser during a meeting at Zeroday Brewing Co.

On Wednesday night, a group of concerned Midtown residents gathered at Zeroday Brewing Co. to discuss what recently has become the talk of the neighborhood—the shooting of two dogs, in just two months, by a fellow neighbor who is a Dauphin County parole officer.

The meeting featured a guest speaker, Cpl. Ty Meik, a Harrisburg canine officer, who, the organizers hoped, would shed some light on the matter, even if he could not discuss specifics (Meik repeatedly said he had no information on an investigation into the parole officer’s actions—or even if one was occurring).

It was interesting to hear Cpl. Meik speak. He clearly was concerned about the incident, as well as the community around him, and urged residents to be both cautious and vigilant.

However, I left the meeting with greater unease than when I arrived. Near the end of the hour-long discussion, the topic evolved from the specific to the general—from the actual case at hand to a broader debate about using deadly force when “feeling” under threat—including when your dog might be under threat.

Among this group of 20 or so, a division emerged between those who felt that firing a gun when sensing a threat was appropriate versus those who did not think so.

I was solidly in the latter category.

At 52 years old, I’m not a young man. I grew up just over the Hudson River from Manhattan when the Bronx was burning and “Escape from New York” seemed less a movie than a prediction. I lived in Washington, D.C., during the crack war and “Murder Capital” years, walking everywhere, even when the city logged more than 500 homicides in just one year.

Yet not once, in all those years, did I feel the need to pull out a gun and start shooting.

Did I feel uncomfortable at times? Absolutely—and not infrequently.

I’ve had groups of young men stare me down menacingly. I’ve had people shove me onto the sidewalk for no reason. I’ve had countless panhandlers aggressively beg for money, even threaten me. I’ve had random people mutter, swear at and even spit at me. I’ve lived on streets where people openly dealt drugs. I’ve had many dogs run at me (most harmlessly).

In other words, I’m no stranger to uncomfortable, even threatening situations, which, unfortunately, are nearly always a part of life in an American city. Yet, somehow, I’ve managed to survive, even prosper, without firing a shot.

Which is why I felt such discomfort when Meik—a solidly built, well-armed man wrapped in a bundle of protection—said that one’s sense of threat was relative, and, if that sense was strong enough, shooting a gun might be justified.

So, I thought to myself, should I have shot a gun when, as a freshman in college, a clearly unstable man punched me in the head as I was walking to the National Mall? Should I have shot a gun when a man followed me down the street and wouldn’t stop harassing me? Should I have shot a gun the one time I was mugged at gunpoint (the robber, clearly a junkie looking for a fix, stole $35 and ran away). Should I have shot a gun when my cousin’s dog bit me so hard in the stomach—and wouldn’t let go—that I needed stitches?

What is the threshold of threat that justifies using deadly force? And could those situations be resolved more peacefully?

I believe that, in each of the many threatening situations I’ve encountered, shooting a gun would have vastly escalated the situation. Someone, today, would be dead. It well might be me.

I have respect for Cpl. Meik and the difficult job he has to do. Having met him, I don’t feel disconcerted that he carries a gun everywhere, including, as he bluntly stated, into his church and his kid’s school. He seems responsible, caring and well trained.

But some people—many people—are not like Cpl. Meik. They are easily threatened and sense great danger when other people see an easily resolvable situation.

This is why I left the meeting so distraught. I have difficulty understanding how one person can feel so threatened by dogs that he pulls out a gun and shoots them twice in two months.

To me, there’s nothing relative about using deadly force. Shooting a gun is the most serious action a person can take, so he’d better be sure there are no alternatives. He should be carrying a gun only if he has the maturity and intelligence—even in the heat of the moment—to distinguish between a solvable problem and a genuine threat to life.

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Our Collective Legacy: We all share some responsibility for Harrisburg’s past; we all should embrace responsibility for a better future.

Harrisburg is back in the national news again.

The 499 criminal counts against former Mayor Stephen Reed earned mention on the pages of the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post and even national TV. This is just a short while after our city’s brush with bankruptcy from the incinerator debacle that brought infamy and ridicule. Depending on your perspective, the criminal charges against Reed are unnecessary grave-digging into a sordid political past or (for a seemingly growing number of people) a sense of justice finally delivered. Nearly all agree that the news represents something less than our community’s finest hour.

Similar news will likely continue for quite some time. The attorney general promised additional indictments stemming from a Reed-led “criminal enterprise” that spent millions of dollars of fees derived from municipal bond financings to purchase artifacts for museums. While some of those city-owned artifacts have already been sold off at steep losses, many more are either on public display (in the National Civil War Museum, for one) or in various storage spots around the city, including, allegedly and until recently, Reed’s personal home. Regardless of the ultimate resolution and disposition of these artifacts and the wisdom or utility of a Civil War museum, it is quite clear that city residents remain responsible for paying back the bonds that made their purchase possible.

The former “mayor for life,” who served from January 1982 until January 2010, maintains his innocence and vows to fight to clear his name. The eventual trial, perhaps together with a number of others involving those who helped to facilitate the bond fee boondoggle, promises to divert our attention from things that need to be done today to things that were done years in the past. Questions about who received what money for what work on what financings will no doubt be asked and (hopefully) answered. But the questions about what needs to be done to move our city forward unfortunately will not.

Current Mayor Eric Papenfuse rightly points out that many of the things some complain about today, including high parking and trash collection rates, as well as neglected infrastructure, are due in part to the millions in bond fees that went to build museums and buy artifacts rather than to the basic building blocks for our city. Papenfuse, in turn, deserves credit for his focus on the decidedly non-sexy items of potholes, vacant buildings, trash pick-up and safe streets, all the while under-spending on shrunken city budgets. His “more with less” approach is certainly a welcome contrast to actions detailed in the attorney general’s criminal presentment.

Papenfuse also called upon the board of the Civil War Museum to close and return the artifacts on display, saying the museum serves as a “monument to corruption.” All indications are that the board has no such intention, setting up additional acrimony and potential litigation from both sides. Regardless of your view on the merits of a Civil War museum, everyone should encourage the mayor and board to not waste yet more civic energy and resources. There should be a realization that, while none of the current parties created the situation, it is their responsibility to try to resolve it, amicably, for the benefit of the city residents who made the museum possible. The mayor and board, at minimum, should pledge to resolve the issue via negotiation and cooperation, not the court system.

For his part, Reed continues to deny any ownership of the city financial problems, claiming that a contractor’s failure to perform needed upgrades to the city-owned incinerator is to blame. The heart of the legal presentment against him, however, is whether or not Reed had the right to use fees from those financings for purposes other than those stated in the bonds. Vampire-hunting kits and buffalo heads make for easy ridicule. However, the real question is, would it make any difference if the mayor had used the funds to purchase items of a less ridiculous nature?

No doubt, the law needs to answer how it is that municipal bonds are allowed to include fees that can be used for such things. Presumably, bond buyers would be less interested in buying municipal bonds if they knew that part of the proceeds would help to build a Civil War or a Wild West museum in a small Pennsylvania city that had relatively little to do with either.

But, even if that’s true, I would caution the wider community to not use this as an opportunity for easy finger pointing, since collectively we do not escape the blame unscathed. All of us need to face difficult questions of exactly how this happened on our watch and, in some sense, take ownership, even if the main protagonists will not.

What responsibility do we all bear for this civic debacle? We, the citizens of Harrisburg, with tacit endorsement from the media and the communities around us, elected Mayor Reed a remarkable seven times over 24 years. To say that he did nothing right and that we are all merely innocent bystanders is to hide from the truth. We liked him for the good feelings he gave us and the seemingly good deeds he did.

At his best, Reed gave us a collective belief and confidence, however chimerical in retrospect it may have been, that the city was heading in the right direction. Somewhere along the line, though, things began to turn, and that collective belief and confidence began to erode. Whether it was due to his overconfidence from past successes or something more pathological in nature, Reed increasingly focused on amassing artifacts for ill-conceived museum projects that would ultimately overshadow the positives. As his longtime advisor Randy King told him, according to the grand jury report, “You’ve got to stop this, you’ve got to cut it out, it’s just going to kill your career.” Indeed it did—and nearly the city, too. But few of us noticed at the time, let alone helped King make his point.

The truth is, there was no one around to make him stop. Those close to him enabled him or benefited financially from him or both. To a person, this inner circle still doesn’t own the problem. Not their fault, they say. They were just doing what they were told.

For the most part, most of us, like them, were content to see the mayor take care of Harrisburg, so that we could go on with our lives, devoid of the responsibilities of ownership of our capital city.  While in office, Reed may have sucked all the oxygen out of the room, so to speak, but that easy vacuum allowed many of us to avoid the hard work of real civic engagement and sustainable growth and development.

More than the artifacts, the misguided museums or the alleged criminal misconduct, that might be the saddest legacy of the Reed era—that many in the region weren’t left with any real connection or feelings of responsibility toward Harrisburg. While things were going well, he was the hero; when they went wrong, the pariah. “Let the city fail,” they say. “They elected him, and we are safe out here in the suburbs.” “The city is someone else’s problem, not ours.” If this ordeal accomplishes anything, it’s hopefully showing how wrong that kind of thinking is and that it must begin to change.

For the city to truly move forward from this, we all have to acknowledge and take responsibility for what happened to make certain that it doesn’t happen again. And by that, I don’t simply mean the alleged criminal misconduct, as important as that is. More broadly, I mean we can never allow a single person or organization or entity to hold the reins of the city while ignoring our civic duties to question, engage and, most importantly, do the hard work it takes for a community to be strong—whether that means picking up trash or fixing up a building or getting involved in city life and doing more than the bare minimum that is required. Maybe it just means acknowledging that the health of Harrisburg matters to the health of our region. Maybe it just means giving a damn.

The first step is admitting. The next step is doing. This is our collective penance, and, despite whatever Reed did, it’s the legacy that we can still leave behind.

J. Alex Hartzler is publisher of TheBurg.

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Don’t Hate on Harrisburg: All cities have problems, and this one is coming back.

Screenshot 2015-07-31 09.50.26It never ceases to shock me how unabashedly people bash the city of Harrisburg.

Yes, shock. I’m shocked at what people say.

People say this place is a pathetic slum that is ruined beyond repair. People say the residents of this city are degenerates. People call for boycott and rally vehemently for others to despise this capital city. The fever pitch too often sounds like a lynch mob ready to set fire to the pyre they’ve built at the base of this place.

The hate comes in many forms. Sometimes, it’s nasty comments left anonymously under bleeding headlines. Sometimes, it’s proudly owned and freely distributed on social media. Other times, it’s proclaimed face to face.

In those instances when someone unabashedly bashes Harrisburg to my face, it’s as if I deserve to hear it because I choose to live in the city.

It’s extremely unsettling.

When did this happen? When did the people of this region determine it was okay to spurn and spit on the capital city and kick it while it’s down?

Yeah, it’s down. No one’s denying that. But down doesn’t mean worthless.

There’s a lot of value here, not just in the history and establishment of this place but in its people.

Harrisburg is rich with potential. It’s a small city with big-city virtues like diversity, culture and options. These are all lying right beside its issues, problems and challenges.

The fact of the matter is the difficulties that Harrisburg faces are the same for American cities across the nation.

That’s what’s especially shocking to me when I hear the vitriol. It’s as if the people of this region have never read about municipal financial struggles or heard of urban revitalization.

It’s as if people around here haven’t read any of the numerous articles or seen the countless documentaries on the struggles of cities across the nation. Everywhere, cities are recalibrating and rebuilding.

If more people were aware how ordinary Harrisburg is in this regard, perhaps they would see the narrowness of their contempt.

Perhaps if more people realized how common it is for cities to make comebacks, more people would be supportive and engaged in Harrisburg’s renewal.

Harrisburg did it before. It was dismissed as hopeless. Then with persistent ambition and collaboration, it became something else. It became beautiful and special.

A hundred years ago, so much effort was directed at making Harrisburg better that so much about it became new and innovative—the roads, the parks, the streetlights, the transit, the architecture, the engineering. When it was shiny new, the public loved it and applauded Harrisburg as a 20th-century model city.

Then, like many places, the shine dulled and the innovation became outdated. Like cities across the nation, people turned their backs on this urban core and saluted the suburbs as the next best thing.

However, that attitude is changing once again.

Just like before, more and more people want to live, work and play in cities. They want the urban vibe and the convenience. They want the concentrated options and the unique experiences that only a city can give.

Despite the hyperbolic, fallacious claims of the ignorant haters, Harrisburg’s got all that.

The sport of hating Harrisburg irresponsibly overlooks the incredible opportunity this entire region has to reconstruct a really cool city.

I think we have to ask ourselves: Why so much hate towards Harrisburg?

This entire region would do well to examine the source of this hate. When people who aren’t from around here visit or move in, they, too, are wholly shocked at the bashing of Harrisburg.

Therefore, it seems as if it’s something entrenched in this region. So, what is it?

It’s time to recognize some very real prejudices directed at this place and its people.  When people point to Harrisburg and declare it ugly, despicable and vile, what’s the true source of their distaste?

Because, quite frankly, it just doesn’t make sense to hate one place and its people so much, especially a capital city along a river.

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

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Most Kipona Activities Return to Riverfront Park

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

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Dugan Resigns as Broad Street Market Manager

BSMExterior

The courtyard and stone building of Harrisburg’s Broad Street Market.

 

Ashlee O. Dugan soon will leave her position as manager of Harrisburg’s historic Broad Street Market, which continues to struggle with manager retention.

In her resignation letter, Dugan told the board of the Broad Street Market Corp. that she would leave effective July 29 to take a job as the PA Preferred Coordinator for the state Department of Agriculture.

“This experience has been a unique one full of challenges and successes,” she wrote to the board. “I am grateful for the opportunity to have served this beloved place. I am confident that the market is facing in the right direction, and I see amazing things on the horizon.”

Dugan has served in the post since June 2014. The market has had six interim and permanent managers since 2010.

Joshua Kesler, who recently was named board president, said he is sorry to see Dugan go, but hopes that she might be able to assist the market in her new position. He added that the board now would initiate a nationwide search for a new manager.

“We’re going to take our time and find the best possible candidate, “ he said. “I think we’ll be able to find that person.”

In the meantime, Barbara Skelley, who served as market manager from 1995 to 2003, has agreed to take over in a part-time, interim capacity.

In a phone interview, Dugan said she regards recruiting new vendors to the market and starting Farmers at Broad, a monthly outdoor producer’s market, as two of her greatest successes. In recent months, about 10 new vendors have come into the market.

Despite these strides, Dugan said that the market continues to struggle with such challenges as market infrastructure, which was long neglected, and a negative public perception of the market due to past problems.

In addition, she said that she strongly agrees with the recommendation that the market move to a non-profit structure. The Broad Street Market Task Force made that suggestion in a recently released report.

Kesler praised Dugan for achievements during her tenure, saying the market is now “on the right track.”

“A lot of work has already been done to make it stable for the next person,” he said.

In one of her last official acts, Dugan announced that the market will extend its opening time by one hour, to 6 p.m., on Thursdays and Friday. The extension, she said, will help people who wish to shop or get a bite to eat after work.

This story was updated to reflect the interim market manager and extended hour announcements.

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Kane’s Office Releases Criminal Complaint, Presentment

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane today released both the criminal complaint against former Harrisburg Mayor Steve Reed and the grand jury presentment.

The criminal complaint lists the charges against Reed, while the presentment provides tremendous detail on the allegations against him, including many issues never before discussed publicly. Click here to read the complaint and presentment: 2015_07_14_Reed_Presentment

Reed was arraigned today on 17 criminal charges, with a total of 499 counts filed against him.

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Kane Releases Statement, Details Charges Against Reed

 

Reed1

Former Harrisburg Mayor Steve Reed (right) as he stepped up to the mic following his arraignment today.

The following is a statement by Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane on the charges filed today against former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed:

HARRISBURG — Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane today announced the arrest of Stephen R. Reed, the former Harrisburg mayor now charged with various crimes, including using public money while in office to illicitly obtain artifacts and other memorabilia.

“This is one of the most disturbing cases of public corruption this office has investigated,” Attorney General Kane said. “Mayor Reed used taxpayer money to further his own interests. His conduct is at the root of the fiscal issues that continue to plague the City of Harrisburg today.”

The Criminal Prosecutions Section of the Office of Attorney General presented evidence to a statewide investigating grand jury, which recommended the charges filed against Reed, 65. He was elected Harrisburg mayor in 1981 and held office until early 2010.

The grand jury found several instances in which Reed used money available in the municipal debt market to create opportunities to raise money and divert funds.

The grand jury alleges this practice of using the expenditure proceeds from public debt touched several entities, including the Harrisburg Authority, the Harrisburg School District, the Harrisburg Civic Baseball Club and the Harrisburg University of Science and Technology, among others.

Over time, Reed, who had a hand in all of these entities while mayor, allegedly used this public money at his discretion partly to obtain thousands of artifacts, which was a violation of Pennsylvania’s Criminal Code. The artifacts — which include such items as a life-sized sarcophagus, a full suit of armor and a “vampire hunting kit” — were bought as Reed made several trips throughout the country allegedly at taxpayers’ expense.

The artifacts and other memorabilia purportedly were destined for several museums Reed planned for the city. Investigators with the Office of Attorney General recovered many of these city-owned items as they executed search warrants at Reed’s office and home, the grand jury presentment states. Many of the artifacts were reported to be in poor condition because they were improperly stored.

Evidence presented to the grand jury also showed Reed made attempts to sell at least 20 city-owned firearms on consignment. Reed allegedly made trips to Gettysburg for this purpose after investigators conducted the search of his office. The weapons have since been recovered.

Furthermore, evidence presented to the grand jury showed Reed allegedly offered to bribe at least one city official, a former City Council President, by offering him a yet-to-be-created position with the Harrisburg Senators. Testimony before the grand jury alleged the exchange was a “quid pro quo” designed to control City Council votes.

Reed also collected money from the Harrisburg University of Science and Technology through a contract he signed to serve as a guest lecturer and fill other functions, but testimony indicated he performed very few of the services for which he was being paid, the grand jury alleges.

Attorney General Kane stressed the investigation of Harrisburg’s finances is ongoing.

“In order for the City of Harrisburg to continue its financial recovery, it is imperative that its citizens have a clear picture of the past,” Kane said.

Reed, 212 Cumberland St., Harrisburg, is charged with the following crimes:

2 counts of corrupt organizations (F-1).

2 counts of dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities (F-1).

2 counts of theft by deception (F-1).

20 counts of theft by receiving stolen property (F-2).

20 counts of theft by unlawful taking or disposition (F-2).

1 count of theft by deception (F-2).

7 counts of bribery in official and political matters (F-3).

29 counts of theft by receiving stolen property (F-3).

29 counts of theft by unlawful taking or disposition (F-3).

3 counts of theft of services (F-3).

1 count of theft by deception (F-3).

110 counts of theft by receiving stolen property (M-1).

110 counts of theft by unlawful taking or disposition (M-1).

158 counts of misapplication of entrusted property and property of government or financial institutions (M-2).

1 count of deceptive business practices (M-2).

3 counts of criminal solicitation (M-2).

1 count of tampering with or fabricating physical evidence (M-2).

Reed was expected to appear this morning for his preliminary arraignment in district court.

The Office of Attorney General started its investigation of Reed after receiving a conflict referral from the Dauphin County district attorney’s office.

Attorney General Kane thanked the attorneys prosecuting the case and agents with the Office of Attorney General’s Bureau of Criminal Investigations, who spent weeks collecting and cataloging the artifacts and other memorabilia seized as part of the investigation.

The case is being prosecuted by Deputy Attorneys General Clarke Madden and Rebecca Franz of the Criminal Prosecutions Section.

 

 

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A Clickbait History of Harrisburg

Screenshot 2015-06-30 07.39.37Recently, the website ask reddit asked the following question: What clickbait titles would you give to major historical events? That question inspired us to give Harrisburg its own clickbait chronology.

10 Facts You Never Knew About Glaciation

Harris’ Ferry: Smooth Sailing Or DEATH TRAP??

15 Ways to Get Rid of Your Indians

This Whiskey Rebel’s Story Will Shock And Move You

Trending: John Harris Jr.’s TOP-SECRET Plan (Hint: It’s A Capital Idea!)

Take Our Survey For A Chance To Win Hair From Charles Dickens’ Hotel Bed Sheets

Which Whig Candidate Are You Most Like? Take Our Quiz!

Bigger Mutton Chops In Just 2 Minutes!

Patriot-News Founded

Your Top 5 Stocks For The Coming Confederate Invasion

This Woman Showed Her Ankle On State Street. Outrage?

10 Nutritious Meals From Slag Waste

The Newest Front Street Mansion. We Have The Tintypes!

You Won’t BELIEVE What We Saw In Harrisburg After The Wind Briefly Cleared Away The Factory Smoke

Adorable Pics From Cameron School’s 6th Grade Graduation/First Day Of Work

10 Lessons In Life From Harrisburg’s Plutocrats

State Capitol Burns: Wrath Of An Angry Christian God, Says Our Reader Poll

Which Black Neighborhood Should The State Government Demolish Next? You Decide!

Is That Vomit Cholera Or Tuberculosis? We Let You Know!

SHOCKER: One Of The People Behind City Beautiful Is A WOMAN!!

Only 8 Bodies Dumped Outside City Speakeasies Last Night. Progress?

Trending: Top 10 Reasons Why Trolleys Stink

War Is Over: 5 Harrisburg Steel and Rail Companies To Invest In NOW

Can You Believe It? This Man Just Named A Bridge For HIMSELF!

You’ll Never Guess Which City Streets Will Become Speedways

Our Favorite Looted Items? We Asked The Rioters.

Why This Tropical Storm Is Blowing Up

Slideshow: 10 Suburbs To Flee To Now

Our Shopping Picks: Harrisburg’s Top 5 Closed Department Stores

Don’t Watch This Footage If You Love Nuclear Power!

Reader Poll: You Voted “The Spot” The Only Restaurant In Harrisburg

What Used To Be In That Empty Lot? Take Our Quiz.

5 SHOCKING Schemes to Fix The City Incinerator

Playtime: Match The Artifact To The Museum

Steve Reed’s 7 Terms—Ranked!

PennLive Founded

She Called Them Scumbags. They Made Her a Pizza. What Happened Next
May Surprise You.

Can You Spot The Differences Between The 2 City Receivers? Neither Could We!

5 Ways To Make Your Comb-over Say, “I Can Lead”

Paul Barker contributed to this silly exercise.

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