Tag Archives: harrisburg

A Ritch Life: Poet Jeremy Ritch has a voice—and he’s not afraid to use it.

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Jeremy Ritch, photo by Dani Fresh, www.danifresh.com

Being with artist, musician, poet/writer, blogger and former pastor Jeremy Ritch is easy.

Ask a question, sit back and listen; take it all in. No pressure. Ritch has a lot to say, and he doesn’t hold back.

He’s complex, has lived many lifetimes in quite a few places—Philadelphia, Atlanta and now Harrisburg. And while his beginnings date back 30-plus years to Cleveland, where he was “a white kid in a black neighborhood,” Ritch wouldn’t have it any other way. Those surroundings molded his passions, his concern and his yearning to speak out against injustice.

“My mom was open to people,” Ritch recalls. “She fed the kids in the neighborhood. I was very accepted, and it’s something that stays with you.”

Ritch’s mother was an artist, his father a bass player. Music was a mainstay in the home where Marvin Gaye, Aretha Franklin and Motown were played. Later, it was Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash. Ritch started to write songs and recognized the “poetry” of country music.

“I wrote a lot of music,” Ritch says. “As a kid, my identity was through music. Music was my biggest influence and became everything. It was a way to escape. In Cleveland, I listened to black music and started to learn about punk rock.”

Musically, Ritch is currently writing with local singer/songwriter Nina Scarcia.

His old neighborhood is gone now but not Ritch’s rebellious spirit—a spirit, he says, that has been redirected and re-harnessed into the written word. Case in point: his poem, “Philadelphia (Take Me Back),” begins with “Mad love to Philadelphia/Mean street Killadelphia/Straight Illadelphia…”—and ends with “That’s Philadelphia/Just Relax and Chilladelphia.”

“While I was in college, I was obsessed with Philadelphia,” he says. “There’s so much diversity there.”

Ritch’s love of cities is evident in his latest book of poems, “Sidewalk Stories and Other Poems,” recently published by Atlanta-based Autumn+Colour.

Growing up that white kid in a black neighborhood resulted in his respect for groundbreakers like Martin Luther King, Jr., and baseball player Jackie Robinson as evidenced in Ritch’s “#42 (A Poem For Jackie).”

“Show those ignorant folks that it is time for a new day/Where we judge by character not by skin/Jackie helped break that down and he also did win/He was at the top of the game as an elite player/Robinson helped to quiet the racist naysayer.”

“Jackie Robinson sacrificed a lot,” Ritch muses. “Many people don’t have a voice. I’m not the most appropriate voice, but I do have one.”

That voice echoes in his blog, which is a mix of his poetry and the columns he writes for today’s the day Harrisburg, where he points out the injustices faced by the less fortunate, particularly those living in urban areas like Harrisburg. One that he is particularly passionate about is ending the “war on drugs,” which, he says, has devastated poor communities for decades, especially the African American community. Another is prison reform and making sure sentencing is fair for minor crimes.

“There are generations of black men who have been destroyed by an unbalanced justice system and by the ‘three strikes’ rule that many states have,” Ritch says. “The poor of our country are devastated by unfair drug laws. It is fine to find the source of these drugs and go after that, but punishing users and small-time dealers with outrageous jail terms is a great injustice.”

While there are two sides to every story, Ritch only knows to relay any one story with honesty—an attribute he values greatly. For instance, he’ll tell you without hesitation what needs to be fixed in Harrisburg: The arts district is too spread out, Allison Hill needs attention, downtown needs more retail, and something should be done about all the abandoned buildings.

While the themes of Ritch’s work are hope and justice, he does like to sprinkle in a bit of comedy because he loves making people laugh.

Yes, musician, writer, blogger and a former “man of the cloth.” This rebel, this Harrisburg citizen who wants his city to be the best it can be, has planted his roots in our fair city and is sticking around a while. It’s never been easy, but that’s okay.

“Growing up, our family had a hard life,” he says. “My mother knew I was a strong kid. I’d call myself a survivor.”

Find out more about Jeremy Ritch’s life and work by visiting his blog: jeremymarkritch.wordpress.com. His work also can be read at www.todaysthedayhbg.com.

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Community Comment: Draft Zoning Code Sparks Concern

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The old Keystone Post Office (pictured 2011) is now privately owned, incubating and housing several businesses. The property owner is concerned that a proposed new zoning code for Harrisburg could detrimentally affect his business going forward.

 

Editor’s Note:
Harrisburg will hold public sessions on its proposed new zoning code on Wednesday and Thursday. The letter below was sent to City Council and the mayor yesterday, written by the president of the company that, several years ago, bought the former post office building at 815 Market St. The author allowed us to reprint his letter here. For more background on the zoning changes, please see our story from last week.

I am writing in regard to the Proposed Zoning Code and Map that shall be considered by the Harrisburg City Council in public hearings on June 25 and June 26, 2014 and a potential Council vote on July 8, 2014.

An affiliated investment company of our firm is the owner of the former Keystone Branch Post Office Building at 815 Market St., encompassing a 200,000-plus-square-foot building and 11 acres of land adjacent to the Harrisburg Transportation Center.  The proposed changes to the Zoning Code and Map were first raised nearly a decade ago at the end of the Reed administration and are now proposed for expedited approval.

We are supportive of the concept of a new ordinance for the city. However, the proposed Zoning Code and Map absolutely fail to acknowledge the hard work by our firm that has occurred since the time that this plan was first brought forth. NONE of the various uses that we have put into place at 815 Market St. over the past several years are listed as Permitted Uses under the proposed changes and, furthermore, the clear industrial bones of our property were not taken into account in pushing this new ordinance ahead.

Our progress and efforts were not, unfortunately, considered in the recent decision to advance this revised Zoning Code and Map. Our efforts over the past several years have been quiet, but successful! We have been working very hard to turn around 815 Market St. and make it a productive asset for the City of Harrisburg. In doing so, 815 Market St. has not become another addition to the sea of vacant and dilapidated buildings in our immediate neighborhood. We have expanded and incubated various growing businesses at the property that have decided to remain in Industrially Zoned property within the City of Harrisburg.

New tenants that have moved into our renovated 815 Market St. include Exhibit Studios, Restaurant Auction Company, Appalachian Brewery and Tri-County OIC and account for over 70,000 square feet of new occupied space for the City of Harrisburg. Other viable concerns are still considering our project at present. We recently donated space to the city (and several non-profits) for the storage of 80 classic murals saved from the Mulberry Street Bridge project that now are within our building. Recently, we were able to accommodate Volunteers of America (whose building was burned in a horrible fire on Cameron Street).

Our property is also the location of a thriving, 700-space parking business (https://transitpark.com) that is largely populated by (1) City, State and Federal workers and other downtown employees looking for affordable monthly parking and (2) customers of the Harrisburg Transportation Center. We have developed a very close relationship with Amtrak in this venture. Our lot improvements, new state-of-the-art parking equipment, video cameras, new signage, validation kiosks within the Amtrak station, local advertising and Internet search engine optimization have helped us excel.

As indicated above, the proposed City Zoning and Map changes that are, by the city’s own admission, a “stepping stone” to future Comprehensive Planning studies, do not list any of our actual current property uses. Various industrial and parking uses are not part of the “Downtown Center” zone proposed for our property. Our entire project could become some odd “pre-existing non-conforming use”… despite our new industrial tenants, 40 dock doors, excellent ceiling heights, high-capacity freight elevators, large truck court, etc. This is trouble we do not need or deserve and will make it more difficult for us to continue our good work. We obviously are serving numerous businesses that want to remain and conduct commerce in the city. Our progress cited above is proof positive.

We respectfully ask for your consideration of these points and hope that the proposed Zoning Ordinance and Map changes will be modified to allow all of our current permitted uses to continue as permitted in the future. We made a significant investment in the city at a time when others were fleeing from it during the height of the “Great Recession” and while the city was in a dire financial crisis. It is hard enough for us to attract new companies and retain businesses to the city without additional roadblocks.

Sincerely,

Adam P. Meinstein
President
Equilibrium Equities, Inc. (www.equilibriumequities.com)

 

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Mayor’s Tax Abatement Presentation for “Informational Purposes,” Say Administration and School Board

A collapsing building on a blighted block of N. 6th St., formerly the site of the Riviera Hotel.

A collapsing building on a blighted block of N. 6th St., formerly the site of the Riviera Bar and Hotel.

A presentation by the mayor’s office on tax abatement this month was not, in fact, a proposal, but rather was given to the city’s school board for “informational purposes,” school board and administration officials said Friday.

The presentation, which was first reported by the Patriot-News, bears the title “Full Tax Abatement To Grow the City’s Housing, Residents and School District Revenues,” and contains 11 pages of slides and figures about the potential financial impact of a tax abatement program on the city.

It was given to school board members at their former Front Street office on June 3.

Jackie Parker, the city’s director of community and economic development, said Friday that she prepared the presentation in collaboration with Brian Hudson, the executive director of the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency.

Mayor Eric Papenfuse, who expressed support for tax abatement programs during his campaign last year, also attended the June 3 meeting.

Tax abatement programs, also known as LERTAs, for Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance, were authorized by the Pennsylvania legislature in 1977. They aim to spur development in struggling areas by providing tax breaks on certain forms of development, under terms to be specified by the local governments that adopt them.

Lancaster, for instance, has a tax-abatement program that it has consistently renewed since 1978, providing for exemptions on either new housing in under-developed areas or improvements on existing deteriorated properties.

The Lancaster program follows a “phase-in” model, whereby the new development is fully exempt in the first year, and then pays an increasing share of taxes each year until arriving at the full assessment in year 11.

Lancaster’s program also includes incentives for “green” construction, under which environmentally-friendly construction can receive full abatement for as many as five years.

Harrisburg previously had a phase-in abatement program, but it expired in 2010 and was not renewed.

The June 3 presentation includes numerous unsourced charts and graphs, which assume new development under full tax abatement—meaning 100-percent real-estate tax exemption for new developments or improvements—at a rate of 200 houses per year. If those numbers were realized, according to the presentation, the school district could see nearly $8 million in income and real-estate tax revenues over the next 11 years.

But, Hudson said Friday, these figures were purely hypothetical, and had been provided to give a sense of the potential financial impact of an abatement program.

“This was in no way, shape or form a proposal,” Hudson said. “It was just an example of what could happen.”

Asked about one of the graphs in his presentation, which identified Harrisburg’s former phase-in program as “ineffective policy,” Hudson said he wasn’t certain where the slide had come from. But, he said, he supported full abatement as a better method of jump-starting the city’s growth.

“Full abatement sends a message,” he said. “Yes, we want you to live here, we want you to build here.”

On Friday, Hudson, Parker and school board officials all emphasized that the abatement presentation was meant to be a means for starting discussion. “You look around the city, and you see how many properties are vacant, and how many could be new homes,” Parker said. The purpose of the school board meeting was to discuss one of many “tools in the tool box” for spurring economic growth, she said.

Jennifer Smallwood, the school board president, said the meeting had been called to answer members’ questions about whether a LERTA program “could be a good tool” for Harrisburg. Following the presentation, the school board scheduled a public meeting for Aug. 11, to discuss possible tax-abatement programs.

Smallwood is also a program manager at PHFA, where she has worked since 1990, according to her LinkedIn profile. The agency was created by the state legislature in 1972 and provides affordable housing options for low-income families, seniors and people with special needs across the commonwealth.

Hudson, who has worked at PHFA for the past 39 years, became its executive director in 2003.

James Thompson, a school board member, said Friday that he met with Parker individually before the June 3 meeting.

“The mayor hasn’t been shy about his support of a tax abatement program,” he said.

Thompson previously researched and recommended tax abatement for Harrisburg as a member of a business advisory committee under former Mayor Linda Thompson. In 2010, when the city’s existing abatement program was expiring, he advised Mayor Thompson to renew it.

But, he said, both the mayor and City Council seemed to view abatement with suspicion. “They felt that, if people were loyal to this city, they would develop here without it,” he said.

Mayor Thompson’s position may have evolved somewhat in the years that followed. In the summer of 2012, according to a report in the Patriot-News, she publicly supported abatement, submitting a proposal for a five-year program to council. Council President Wanda Williams, however, opposed the plan, and it never went forward.

On Friday, following the initial story on PennLive, J. Alex Hartzler, a local developer and the publisher of TheBurg, took to Twitter to critique the report on the presentation as “inaccurate and irresponsible.”

Abatement “is not a ‘tax break,'” he wrote to Matt Zencey, the paper’s deputy opinions editor. “LERTA holds assessment value constant and no increased taxes for rehab and new. I know you know this.” 

Several commenters on PennLive Friday suggested that Hartzler’s campaign contributions had influenced the mayor’s support of an abatement program. Harrisburg Capital City PAC, a political action committee headed by Hartzler, paid for television ads and mailers for the campaign of the school board’s Jim Thompson, and also made contributions totaling $60,000 to Papenfuse’s mayoral campaign.

Hartzler’s company, WCI Partners, is a “real estate development company focused on urban revitalization,” according to its website. A photo of an Uptown block of Green Street, where WCI has invested heavily in recent years, appears on the front page of the abatement presentation.

Hudson said Friday that he picked the photo himself, because it represented an area where PHFA had made significant investments.

“It’s a perfect shot of what could happen with investment,” he said.

This story has been updated with information about Smallwood’s and Hudson’s employment at PHFA.

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Harrisburg Renews Push to Pass Zoning Code

EmptyLotWeb

Undeveloped sites, such as this Front Street lot in a newly created “Riverfront District,” would be impacted by Harrisburg’s proposed new zoning code.

Harrisburg has revived a long-dormant effort to re-haul its aged zoning code, with a final City Council vote slated for next month.

The flurry of action represents an abrupt change for the city. Four years ago, the city’s Planning Bureau submitted the new code to council, which then bottled it up in committee and never voted on it. After making several small changes, the Papenfuse administration recently re-introduced the draft code for consideration.

“The existing zoning code is too outdated and must immediately be updated,” said Joyce Davis, communications director for Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “[The mayor] believes at least a transitional zoning code is needed as the city goes through the comprehensive planning process.”

Council held a committee hearing on the proposed code on June 5. At that meeting, some businesses and residents expressed concern over how the new code treats matters like private parking businesses and transitional housing.

The city now will conduct two public input sessions. The first is slated for June 25 at 5:30 p.m. at the Camp Curtin YMCA, 2135 N. 6th St. The second will take place June 26 at the Boys & Girls Club at 1227 Berryhill St.

A final council vote is slated for the July 8 legislative session.

The effort to revamp the city’s zoning code began about five years ago in an effort to streamline and simplify a code that had become overly complex and even obsolete, according to the city. Over the years, the code, originally passed in 1950, had grown to include 27 base zoning districts and six overlay districts. The new code includes just nine base districts and four overlay districts.

There has been some opposition to the new code, which makes considerable changes to how Harrisburg zones the city for housing and business. Several critics have said the city has the process backwards, that it should pass a new comprehensive plan before a new zoning code.

Davis, though, said that amendments can be added later “if deficiencies surface after the comprehensive planning process is complete.”

In one significant change, a new Riverfront District would be created along much of Front Street and along State Street to the Capitol. The district is more restrictive than existing zoning in terms of use, signage and parking in an effort to minimize impacts and preserve the character of the area. It also would cap new building height at 45 feet and, in many cases, increase setbacks.

Click here to read the draft zoning code and see maps of Harrisburg’s existing and proposed zones.

 

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Theater in Bloom: Once, June was a sleepy month on the local stage. No more.

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Do know the song “June Is Bustin’ Out All Over?”

It could refer to theater in central Pennsylvania, where seasons are longer and busier than ever.

This month proves the rule. Among the highlights: a historical drama (with romance), a romantic comedy, and an original production paying homage to the capital region—on stage at Reservoir Park (Gamut Theatre Group’s Harrisburg Shakespeare Festival), Theatre Harrisburg and Open Stage of Harrisburg, respectively.

Love and Duty

Ancient Rome and Egypt form the backdrop for the annual Shakespeare in the Park production, which this year is “Antony and Cleopatra.” The play, directed by Karen Ruch, continues through June 14.

It’s debatable whether Cleopatra—who had been romantically involved with her mentor, Julius Caesar, and might still be grieving for him—was in love with Mark Antony or merely “playing” him. Ruch essentially leaves that for the actors to decipher.

“Clearly, Cleopatra knew how to navigate the powers of Rome,” she said. “After Antony’s death, she tries to make a play for the next emperor, Octavius, but doesn’t succeed.”

Shakespeare’s play touches more generally on what makes a relationship work—or not. The lovers die by their own hands in the end—two mature adults, not the young, impulsive Romeo and Juliet.

Ultimately, for the director, “Antony and Cleopatra” concerns the conflict between love and duty and contrasting Roman and Egyptian values.

“Their relationship was not legitimate according to Roman law,” Ruch explained. “The Romans were notorious for promiscuity, but then moved on. Antony disappeared into the relationship and, thus, became less Roman.”

Philip Weaver and Francesca Amendolia portray the star-crossed lovers. Jeff Luttermoser is Octavius, and Thomas Weaver is Enobarbus.

Red Hot

Theatre Harrisburg’s final production of the season is “The Last of the Red Hot Lovers,” running from June 13 to 22 and staged by Robert Campbell in his directorial debut with the community theater.

“One thing I like about the play is that it’s a Neil Simon brand of comedy, uniquely funny but grounded in real people behaving like real people,” he said. “There are surprises, because the people don’t fit any formula.”

Campbell also admires “Red Hot Lovers” as one of those works in which the director can “get out of the way.” “In a Simon play, it’s all there,” he said. “No need to conceptualize.”

“Red Hot Lovers” is like a collection of one acts, unified by the attempt of the nice-but-nerdy Barney (played by Richard Johnson) “to do a not-nice thing”—commit adultery, said Campbell. “He wants to do something sexy, hot and exciting. Looking for excitement is something most people can identify with.”

Each of the three acts focuses on a different (and distinctive) woman Barney considers—portrayed by Lydia Graeff, Chelsea Day and Lisa Weitzman. “Deep down, he thinks he should, but really doesn’t want to,” Campbell said. “So, there’s self-sabotaging”—especially if you consider where he takes the women.

Set in the late-‘60s, “Red Hot Lovers” ends on a “sweet note,” as Barney reaches to call—well, we won’t give that away either.

Home Story

Though the “official” season of Open Stage of Harrisburg ends in May, June has, for several years, been devoted to a standalone original production. For the third year in a row, the theater is presenting “Stories from Home,” a tribute to the region.

Running from June 19 to 29, this year’s edition focuses on the 8th Ward of Harrisburg, as well as Steelton and Paxtang—the latter celebrating its 250th anniversary.

“The 8th Ward was like the Lower East Side of Harrisburg,” said Anne Alsedek, who directs “Stories from Home” and writes the scripts with an assist from her casts. “It drew a mixed population of African Americans, Jews and Irish, who then moved on. Beth El AME and other churches and synagogues were born there. The tenements were torn down to make way for an expanding Capitol complex.”

There’s other rich history. People may not know that, when Lincoln was making his whistle stop in Harrisburg, the Pinkerton Agency received a tip that there would be an assassination attempt on his life.  “Thanks to the coachman of Simon Cameron, an African-American former slave who was a member of Bethel AME, the president was spirited out of the city by night, in disguise,” said Alsedek, Open Stage’s education director.

“Stories from Home” recalls less palatable aspects of history as well, including the tale of the Paxton Boys, frontiersmen along the Susquehanna who formed a vigilante group. They retaliated in 1763 against local Native Americans in the aftermath of the French and Indian War and are known for murdering 20 Susquehannock Indians in events collectively called the Conestoga Massacre. “This is alluded to in the novel ‘A Light in the Forest’ and the film version,” Alsedek noted.

The ensemble cast includes John Bailey, Nina Beesley and Ferris Evans in their Open Stage debuts, as well as Aaron Bomar, Jeremy Patterson, J. C. Payne and Cassandra Potter. Yoleidy Rosario is the stage manager.

“’Stories from Home’ is fortunate to have developed a partnership this year with the three Dauphin County commissioners—Jeff Haste, George Hartwick III and Mike Pries—who are lending financial support and co-presenting,” Alsedek added. “We had always hoped the productions would move beyond Harrisburg.”

More Great Theater

There are many other productions this month—too many to detail here. But the highlights include:

  • Allenberry Playhouse, “Ladies Night in a Turkish Bath,” a farce, through June 15, followed by the musical “42nd Street,” June 18 to July 20.
  • Dreamwrights Youth and Family Theatre, “My Favorite Year,” a comedy based on the movie, June 26 to 29.
  • Ephrata Performing Arts Center, “Agnes of God,” psychological thriller, June 12 to 28.
  • The Fulton Theatre’s evergreen musical “Les Miserables,” June 3 to 29.
  • Gretna Theatre’s “Tribute to the Four Seasons,” June 12 to 15, followed by Lerner and Loewe’s “Camelot,” June 19 to 29.
  • Little Theatre of Mechanicsburg, “Reefer Madness,” a musical, June 6 to 21.
  • Oyster Mill Playhouse, “Jeeves in Bloom,” a comedy, June 6 to 22.
  • York Little Theatre, mega-hit musical “Gypsy,” June 20 to 29.

Peeking into next month, be sure to check out the Carlisle Theatre Company’s take on the musical comedy, “Once Upon a Mattress,” July 3 to 6.

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Wishing on Star City: Amid his dreams, rapper Capeesh strives to create a career, a life.

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The recording studio of the rapper Gabe Killian, who also goes by the stage name Capeesh, is located in a peeling gray apartment block on N. 6th Street, just past the defunct Camp Curtin BBQ. You go up some dirty stairs past a stained-glass window—“Stained glass, stained streets, stained everything,” Killian says—and arrive at a surprisingly ample apartment, where the studio sits off a brown-carpeted corridor. There’s a crib in one corner for Killian’s 10-month-old son Ryden, named for the Japanese god of lightning, and some posters on the wall, including one for the Beatles, Killian’s favorite band. A black skull on a table commemorates the studio’s nickname, the Headquarters. (It evolved from another nickname, “Head Hunta,” that Killian used for a former roommate who is one of his producers.)

On a drizzly Tuesday in late April, one of his days off from selling cell phones at a Camp Hill store, Killian was in front of a computer monitor in the Headquarters, cycling through songs. Killian, 26, is skinny, with a buzz cut and deep-set, shadowed eyes; he wore a black hoodie and jeans and sat in a wicker chair. He put on a track he recorded for a mixtape in 2011. Hip-hop mixtapes, typically used for promotional rather than commercial purposes, often contain a medley of originals and remixes of popular songs. On the track in question, Killian raps over the B.o.B. song “Airplanes,” which begins with a chorus by the rock singer Hayley Williams. Then Capeesh comes in:

Where to start, how ‘bout where I left off,

Made a bet on life, and I guessed wrong,

I guess y’all just wouldn’t understand,

How come nothing ever went according to the plan?

As the song played, Ryden, standing up in his crib, started bouncing on his knees. “This one’s probably my favorite song off the mixtape because it’s the only one that I actually put my personal feelings into,” Killian said. He reflected on how his style of rapping had changed in the years since. He used to put more animation into his voice, thinking that would make it “sound more ‘hype,’ more energetic.” Now his rapping voice was closer to his speaking voice—deeper, more relaxed and sounding more like him.

But it had also been a while since he’d released any new material. The “Airplanes” remix was part of a three-mixtape series, “The Conference Room,” “The Press Conference” and “The Confiscation,” which Killian had completed in 2012. The titles represented a three-stage plan of attack—a conference room is for drafting a business plan, a press conference is for taking it public, and the “confiscation” was the stage of taking over, he told me. Rappers don’t usually do three mixtapes in a year, but it was a time of intense productivity for Killian, who had just gotten out of prison. “I was just like, ‘You know what? I just wasted a bunch of time doing nothing, and I’m ready to roll,’” he said.

Since the mixtapes, though, he’d gotten more precious about his releases. His next step was an album, which, unlike the mixtapes, would be composed entirely of original tracks. You only get one shot at a debut album, he thought, and he wanted it to be as close to perfect as possible. The demands of fatherhood were also slowing him down. Some days, even when he didn’t have Ryden (he and his ex-girlfriend share custody), he would come home from work planning to record and find he didn’t have the energy. Nonetheless, he believed in his heart that he was meant to be a rapper and, seasoned by past experience with the industry, he’d sketched out a rough marketing plan for when the songs were ready. “The passion’s definitely there, but, not being able to pull it out of me whenever I want to, I just feel drained a lot of the times,” he said. “And that’s hard. But a little bit of success can change all that. You know what I mean?”

Killian grew up in Edgemont, a neighborhood north of the East Harrisburg Cemetery, along Route 22. His family was musical; his mother is a music teacher, his brother plays in a band in Boston, his cousin is an opera singer in New York. His parents were also religious and ran a strict household, but the neighborhood was urban. As Killian puts it, “Everything my parents tried to protect me from was at my neighbor’s house.” As rap music was increasingly coming into style, he became attracted to it, in part because he wasn’t allowed to listen to it.

Killian’s earliest influences were gangsta rap—“dark, angry, violent music.” Perhaps predictably for a white rapper of his generation, he was most strongly influenced by Eminem, although he wasn’t impressed the first time he heard him. “He sounded like an annoying white dude,” he told me. Over time, however, he became enamored with Eminem’s wordplay. You can feel the influence in songs like “Star City,” whose lines are packed with internal rhymes and double-entendres. (The title comes from a nickname for Harrisburg.) The chorus, in a quick 10 words, glances past the title, the city’s area code and Killian’s record label—“EnV,” short for Envisioned Entertainment—finally landing on a pun: “Star City, seven-seventeen, me and my team gettin’ EnV green.” Then comes the first verse:

Star City, letterman, varsity

Liquor store on every corner, Bar City

Rappers everywhere you look, Barz City

You know I make ‘em get the point, archery

Like a lot of rap music, Killian’s songs often have a combative undercurrent, with lyrics directed at enemies, real or imagined. “Every time I hear ya shit I click the next song,” he raps in “Star City.” To Killian, these lyrics represent a competitive spirit that defines the genre. The thing that first inspired him to write rap was a friend telling him he shouldn’t bother, because Killian would never be as good as he was. “I wrote some stuff, and the next day I rapped at him, and all his friends were like, ‘Ohh! You got beat by a white boy!’” He likes to compare rapping to entering the ring for a fight. “I’m not an arrogant person, but when it comes to music and rhyming, I do feel like a boxer would never go into a boxing ring expecting to lose,” he said. “Why would a rapper go out there expecting to be second best?”

When Killian was 21, he got pulled over for a traffic stop and was told he had an outstanding warrant for transporting cocaine. The incident had taken place a couple of years prior, when he was 18; in his telling, he was set up to carry the drugs by a friend who was working with an undercover police officer. Prosecutors offered to reduce the charges in exchange for his cooperation setting up other friends, but Killian refused. He wound up doing six months, initially at the Dauphin County prison and later on work release. “It sucked,” he said. “It sucked.” After graduating high school, he had studied at HACC to become an elementary school teacher, a career path he subsequently had to abandon. But, he said, he still hopes his work will impact young people someday. “I love kids,” he told me. “I figure kids learn more from music than they do from their teachers.”

In part, his continuing interest in education stems from his concerns about society. Alongside his songs’ preoccupations with nightlife, women and sparring with other rappers, Killian also has an abiding interest in politics and the news, which he often expresses on his Facebook page. A frequent theme is the idea that the mainstream media conceal the truth about the world. “You could call me a conspiracy theorist,” he told me. “I don’t like to call it ‘conspiracy,’ because the only conspiracy is the cover-up that there is one. But I do a lot of research.”

This interest, in my view anyway, is behind some of his most provocative lyrics. In one 2012 track, “Accepted Ignorance,” he raps about subliminal messaging in pop culture: “Don’t you know that a subliminal’s intended for you / You be pretending that the message didn’t get you to do / What it was sent there to do.” The YouTube video for the song consists of a single still image, a photo of George Orwell’s “1984,” opened to the page with the three Party slogans from the walls of the Ministry of Truth:

WAR IS PEACE

FREEDOM IS SLAVERY

IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH

On a recent, mild Monday night, around 10 p.m., a patchy early crowd milled around the bar at Midtown’s Stage on Herr. A life-sized crucifix, covered in a skin of coins, hung on stage right, while a projector flashed karaoke lyrics on a nearby wall. Killian strolled in and took a seat at the corner of the bar. “Man, this shit is dead in here,” he said, surveying the crowd. On stage, a youngish man began an enthusiastic, if not always pitch-perfect, rendition of Donna Summer’s “Oh Billy Please.”

“This guy is terrible,” Killian said, smiling. “But the thing is, he doesn’t care, and I respect that.” When the song finished, he laughed, said “Good job,” and gave the singer a high-five as he bounded off the stage.

Killian is a regular at Stage on Herr. Sometimes, he goes to rap, through a kind of karaoke loophole—he picks out a favorite artist’s track, then raps his own lyrics over it. “That way the audience is watching you, and not the words,” he said. On other occasions he goes to, as he puts it, “prospect.” “There’s some real talent that comes through here,” he told me. One of his recent tracks, “Are You Gonna Love Me,” features a refrain by Veela, a local EDM singer whom he first heard at a karaoke night. (The song includes one of the better demonstrations of Killian’s internal rhymes: “I’ve considered getting the scissors, and cutting her off, I’m distant and bitter, / ‘Cause I envisioned a winner, not blizzards in winter, with splintering timbers, and miserable dinners.”)

After a few songs, Killian stepped outside for a cigarette. He sat on the steps in front of the bar, reflecting on Harrisburg’s music scene. In his view, despite plenty of “raw, undiscovered talent” in the city, the absence of any blockbuster successes has left local artists without much to aspire to. “It’s a genuine lack of belief in people, because it’s never been done before,” he said. He’d been rapping for 13 years, and he was frustrated at times by the feeling of diminishing returns: showing up at the same stages, circulating songs through the same social media networks for likes and shares. In 2011, he invested in a radio campaign for his song “Can’t Do It”—$1,600 for 8 weeks on 2,000 stations. The experience disillusioned him somewhat. “That made me realize that everything in the industry, no matter what industry you’re in, is all about money,” he said. (He simultaneously made a music video for the song and posted it on YouTube, where it garnered more than 30,000 views.)

Not long ago, he wrote a song he can really only use for promotional purposes, because the beat isn’t his. Called “Mona Lisa,” it features his lyrics over an instrumental track by Ryan Lewis, the musical partner of the rapper Macklemore, from their 2012 album “The Heist.” The piece is a five-minute tour of Killian’s range, crossing from languid stanzas close to plain speech to rapid successions of rhymes to repetitive, crowd-revving choruses. He rapped it for me the day he showed me his studio. By then he’d recorded it 15 or so times, always in one take, the way he records every song. But he had yet to produce a version he was happy with.

The piece is a kind of artist’s statement, building to a pledge to recommit his life to music: “I married the game, and here I am renewing the vows,” he raps. He named it “Mona Lisa,” he said, because he thought it was his masterpiece, and because he felt the song, like the painting, gave the feeling of a blank stare. Towards the end, he brushes off people who would drag him down—“enemies tryna befriend me,” “emcees tryin’ to offend me.” Then he makes a breathless promise:

I’ma spit it out til I’m empty

Yeah, spit it out til I’m empty

I’ma spit it out til I’m empty

Yeah, spit it out til I’m empty

A couple of weeks later, he finished the recording. “I’m ready to give y’all what I consider a masterpiece,” he wrote on Facebook. “But only if y’all want to hear it.” He asked people to “Like” his status to indicate their support. More than 60 people obliged, and he released the track the next day.

Capeesh will be performing in Reservoir Park on Aug. 23, as part of the 3rd Annual Harrisburg Music Festival. For more information, or to hear his music, visit Capeesh’s YouTube channel.

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Lessons in Money, Life: With the Nubians, you’ll learn a lot more than how to pick a decent stock.

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Allow me to introduce you to a group of dynamic, well-seasoned ladies—oh, and one gentleman—who have quietly and successfully been running an investment club in Harrisburg for more than 10 years.

Until the addition of the lone gentleman in the club, the group was affectionately known as “The Nubian Ladies.” They are now known as The Nubians—natives or inhabitants of Nubia (an ancient region of northeastern Africa).

Now, let me give you a bit of a historical perspective.

For the majority of our history in America as black women, talk of investing, purchasing stock, reading the stock pages was largely unheard of. Black women were busy being “the help,” with little time to care for their own families and households. Yes, money was made, but very little, and every cent of it was used to exist, not prosper.

Well, that certainly has changed, granted from the countless sacrifices and unyielding determination to improve our socioeconomic status. However, let’s be clear: the ebb and flow of contemporary life has stagnated conversations on the importance of financial literacy for many in our urban communities.

Recently, I had the immense pleasure to speak with a founding member of the Nubian Ladies, Mrs. Phyllis Britton.

Mrs. Britton was born in Uptown Harrisburg in 1936 and attended Edison and John Harris, graduating in 1954. After high school, she graduated from Cheyney University and earned her master’s degree in Special Education and Supervision from Bloomsburg University. She then taught in the Harrisburg public school system for 42 years.

None of the investment club members had formal training in investing or financial services. They did, though, attend college, many obtaining their master’s degrees, and two became members of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority. In other words, they are all self-taught in the area of investing.

Mrs. Britton said she was inspired to start the club by the wise words instilled by her grandmother, who always said that you should own something.  She also recalls a workbook The Patriot-News ran in the 1960s, when she was teaching at John Harris. It gave children lessons by using imaginary money to invest.

Years later, when a fellow church member mentioned she was interested in starting an investment club, it was a no-brainer for Mrs. Britton.

The 15 original members drew up the bylaws and began to read Carolyn Brown’s book, “The Millionaires Club.”

“This was a good jumping off point for us,” said Mrs. Britton. “When we began, our members ranged in age from 40 to 68. We didn’t make much money at first, but now it’s paying dividends.”

The club has a president, vice president, recording secretary, corresponding secretary, financial secretary and treasurer. Members had their first meeting at a local library and still meet there. Meetings last about an hour.

“Everyone is given a specific stock to report on,” said Mrs. Britton. “We follow that stock and bring our information to the meeting. Our reports are due quarterly. We research the stocks we have, as well as new ones to consider.”

The group’s portfolio consists of 13 stocks, including retailer Dollar Tree, which was an early investment for the club and has, over time, proven to be one of the more successful buys.

“We are now in search of the next Dollar Tree!” said Mrs. Britton.

The year is capped off by a June dinner for all members before they take a much-needed summer break in July and August.

The social aspect of the club, in fact, is a big part of it.

“We call it an investment club, but it may be a social club as well,” she said. “We love our meetings and always look forward to them. We enjoy our meetings because we have common interests of family, education, self-reliance and pride.”

The group tries to keep membership to around 15 people, which is large enough to ensure a well-functioning club, but still is manageable. Prospective members must have some computer knowledge, a strong willingness to read, the ability to get along with members and the means to pay the monthly $25 contribution.

What advice does this veteran investor have for younger people?

“Start saving early!” she said without hesitation. “There is something more important than material things. Young people spend too much money on material things that lose value. Those of us who are older must pass these values down to our children and grandchildren. We hold on to our stocks—you just can’t sell at the first dip. Have patience.”

Interested in your own investment club? Mrs. Britton suggests checking out www.betterinvesting.org as a starting point, as well as seeking the advice of a certified professional.

My visit with Mrs. Britton took me back to those years as a child sitting around my older “kinfolk” listening to their stories with big eyes, just soaking everything in. I treasure those times and now have another story to add to my “treasure chest” of memories and life lessons.

Thank you Mrs. Britton and all the members, past and present, of The Nubians.  Oh, did I mention that my mom is a founding member too? Thanks Mom… I’m so proud of you!

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Purl Hunting: Since opening, Little Owls has become a sanctuary for knitters.

Screenshot 2014-05-29 16.27.51Sadie deWall called central Pennsylvania her home for many years, graduating from CD East in the ‘90s before embarking on a career as a classical viola player. After moving to Manhattan, she spent a large amount of time on the road as a freelance musician.

“I traveled the world for 17 years, and I just got tired,” she said.

Three years ago, when her daughter was born, the urge to settle into a calmer lifestyle grew stronger, she recounts.

“I took her on the road with me, and she was fine, but I was looking ahead to schooling and realized I needed to work regular hours.”

Although still involved in music (she plays in the Harrisburg Symphony as a substitute), deWall is opting for a more serene scene these days. To that end, she recently opened a quiet, cozy boutique business she named Little Owls Knit Shop.

Located on Market Street in Camp Hill near the Cornerstone Coffeehouse, the shop is a respite from the hustle and bustle of everyday life, a place where crafters can sink into a cozy couch and knit away the day if they choose.

When the forecast called for snow on the planned Jan. 7 grand opening, deWall was a bit apprehensive, concerned that potential customers might hunker down inside their houses. Instead, she was pleasantly surprised. “We were slammed that day,” she said.

Curious crocheters, knitters and would-be crafters packed the shop, marveling at the array of needles, yarn, patterns and books, suitable for a host of projects.

For those who need a little help envisioning a final product, a variety of finished items like mittens, blankets, shawls and scarves are displayed throughout the shop.

Employees, skilled and enthusiastic, are at the ready, willing and able to answer customers’ questions or to help them get past that bump in the road they may encounter while working on a piece. Employee Beth Kurtz from Susquehanna Township is excited to share her expertise.

“I retired from teaching and enjoy using my creativity to help others with projects and challenges,” she said.

During a recent visit, Keri Feldman relaxed on a comfy couch in a bright corner of a room next to a floor-to-ceiling chalkboard, on which was drawn three colorful owls perched on a branch, busying themselves with knitting needles. As she rolled yarn for a project, the Camp Hill resident shared her reason for patronizing the business, saying she enjoys the quiet respite from her busy life and finds knitting calming and therapeutic.

Zella Anderson sat nearby, listening carefully to instructor Kurtz sharing tips on the hobby.

“I learned to knit as a child and never really did anything with it. When the shop opened, I thought it was a great opportunity to learn more,” she said, as Kurtz demonstrated a variety of different stitches to help her complete her “sampler scarf.”

Employee Nicole Kostelec, a Harrisburg resident with a degree in fine arts, said she enjoys the job because it enables her to keep up with her knitting skills since she’s expanding into design work.

Customer Mia Bachman, a Mechanicsburg resident, has been knitting “on and off” for three years.

“I taught myself by reading a book and googling YouTube videos,” she said. “When I moved here and was visiting the coffee shop nearby, I saw the business and have been visiting weekly since it opened.”

She added that she’s received help on many projects since then.

“I knitted one scarf that was very complicated,” she said. “Sadie explained it over the phone and was amazingly helpful. I am now full-blown, madly in love with knitting and her shop. Sadie and her staff love knitting and helping customers.”

She credits the shop for allowing her to tackle a Paloma scarf, which she describes as quite a challenge. “I gave it to my best friend as a birthday present, and she was thrilled.”

For those interested in enrolling in formal classes, times and costs are listed on the store’s website. Classes are tailored to most ages and abilities.

Children who are interested in learning to knit with a group of their peers can enroll in a kids’ knitting club held every Wednesday from 4 to 5 p.m.

“I teach kids how to knit, or if they already know how, we work on a project together. I really want to empower children. We make little arm warmers and leg warmers, and I can see in their faces how proud they are when they finish a project,” said deWall.

For those who are free on Sundays, 12 to 2 p.m., and want to contribute their efforts to a good cause, deWall holds a “knit for charity” social, where members of the community can gather to knit blankets, scarves and hats for the homeless and chemo caps for cancer patients. Free yarn and patterns are provided.

As for the future, deWall has even more plans for area residents to get together to learn from each other and socialize.

“I would like to plan even more community events and want this to be a gathering place for knitters to inspire each other,” she said. “There was a need here in the community, and I hope to continue to fulfill that need.”

Little Owls Knit Shop is located at 2138 Market St., Camp Hill. Call 717-737-6700 or visit www.littleowlsknitshop.com.

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Pride of the County: In Dauphin County, Harrisburg went from being embraced to shunned. Is the pendulum swinging back?

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The relationship between Dauphin County and the City of Harrisburg is an interesting one to ponder.

Historically, the two entities go hand in hand. John Harris, Jr. famously lobbied for the establishment of Dauphin County, as well as for the location of the county seat. The to-be-named Harrisburg became the hub, winning out over Middletown.

Harris was even wise to seal the deal by giving the county several plots of land on Market and Walnut Streets. Together the city and the county evolved to be prominent and significant, most especially when designated the state’s capital.

Currently, there are 40 municipalities in Dauphin County. It’s typical, though, to think of the county as being made up of “the city” and “the 39 municipalities.”

Technically inextricable from one another, in most people’s minds—including many county and city elected officials’—the city is separate and apart from the rest of the county.

Over time, it has increasingly stood alone and not necessarily in high esteem.

When the financial crisis bubbled to the surface, mass disregard for the city became more apparent. Few people in Dauphin County believed the city was worth saving, especially if they were expected to help or care. If that were the case, they were prepared to let it die.

More and more, the city was alienated and scoffed at. Ridiculed and scorned.

Of course, it wasn’t always like that. There was a time when the city was the center of the entire region, the place to be. It was where people came for commerce, business, shopping, education, art, culture, food, music, socializing and work.

However, it wasn’t just Harrisburg’s recent fiscal woes that altered its reputation and attraction. The decline started a long time ago. As post-World War II suburbia began its sprawl and superhighways enabled people to move faster and more freely to places like shopping malls, places of employment and homes with big yards, the city lost its appeal.

People stopped coming here and industry and businesses left.

As that happened over decades, the other Dauphin County municipalities grew more robust and stable. The city—once the nexus—was practically useless to them. If it weren’t for the fact that Harrisburg is the capital and county seat, it might have perished a long time ago.

This situation wasn’t unique to Harrisburg. It was a statewide and national trend. Cities emptied out as their usefulness was replaced. This is why Pennsylvania has so many cities in the state’s Act 47 fiscal distress program—and why more continue to enter.

Harrisburg had the added condition of Hurricane Agnes in 1972. That did nothing but add incredible injury to an already insulted place. The flood waters soaked and rotted whole sections of the city, leaving not much more than prime pickings for those looking for places on the cheap, slumlords included.

By the 1980s, the city had become “that place.” Dirty, blighted, crime-ridden, and, yes, poor.

Most of Dauphin County pretended it didn’t exist. Necessary trips to the city were lamented, done during the day, and executed with an in-and-out intent.

Then that began to change little by little. When Harrisburg’s renaissance got started in the last years of the millennium, downtown transformed from a virtual wasteland to an improving urban center, with Strawberry Square, the Hilton, Restaurant Row and the Whitaker Center.

People started to visit again for more than just errands. Commuters stayed longer and lingered and even returned on the weekends. Visitors had a place to stay overnight and enjoy the scene.

While this provided a useful, interesting, entertaining and enjoyable urban space for some people’s use, it did not succeed in re-earning much of the county’s acceptance. It didn’t succeed in redeeming the city’s position as an integral place.

There are still far too many county neighbors who don’t venture to the city. Too many of those who do visit and work here fail to go beyond the lines of downtown to experience more of the city’s revitalization. Destinations like the Broad Street Market, Harrisburg Cemetery, Italian Lake, Allison Hill murals and the statues of Reservoir Park are missed. Delicious eateries throughout the city go unnoticed. Boutiques and special events are overlooked.

At the annual State of the County dinner in April, each one of the commissioners remarked on the city’s value. They applauded its recovery and potential. They talked of collaboration and cooperation. They commended the city’s elected leadership and its residents. For the first time in a long time, they spoke highly of the city.

Hopefully, their speeches signify a change in attitude and symbolize a sincere reconciliation between the city and the county. Optimistically, their new attitudes will influence many others. It’s a message we should all be touting and spreading around the region—Harrisburg is a virtue of Dauphin County rather than its bane.

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

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Eyesore No More: On Hummel Street, once-dilapidated townhouses soon will find new life housing the homeless.

 

Screenshot 2014-05-29 16.26.05On the 200-block of Hummel Street sat a collection of eyesores—a situation too common in urban communities like Harrisburg.

The houses were dilapidated, a detriment to the neighborhood’s appearance, and they occupied precious space that could accommodate a portion of the city’s homeless population.

Two Harrisburg organizations stepped up to breathe new life into this neglected part of the city. In Extreme Home Makeover-style, PinnacleHealth and Brethren Housing Association (BHA) are rehabbing homes that fell into disrepair and are building modern, clean amenities for families in need that will call the townhouses home.

Back in January, PinnacleHealth, BHA and city officials broke ground on Hummel Street, where they will transform six blighted buildings into five modern houses for homeless single mothers and their children. This cooperative effort is hugely significant for Harrisburg’s homeless and BHA’s work.

“We have just dealt with an overwhelming amount of people calling and asking for help, but we are at maximum capacity,” says BHA Executive Director Steve Schwartz, explaining that, because the organization only has 16 apartments, it has been forced to turn away between 100 and 150 families. “To be able to help five more families, we will increase our traditional housing capacity by 25 percent.”

The project began after major players of both organizations began discussing how they could work together for a good cause. “Wouldn’t it be nice to develop something really meaningful that impacts our community directly?’” says Phil Guarnescelli, COO of PinnacleHealth, reflecting on how their partnership began.

At the time, Guarnescelli was successfully managing $308 million in construction and renovation projects, so BHA staff members felt that his experience and connections could be helpful with their rehab projects.

When Guarnescelli visited BHA, he became inspired to do the project, in which the organizations would gather contractors to donate labor and materials to the cause and unveil a completely rehabbed, attractive final product.

“As we walked out of the front door of our office, [Guarnescelli] looked at the dilapidated building across the street and said ‘like that building there; we would love to take that and turn it into housing for homeless families.’ Phil’s enthusiasm continued, and he got the leadership of PinnacleHealth on board,” says Schwartz. “By the summer of 2013, we were in the midst of a design process with Murray Associates, who agreed to donate their services as architect to the project.”

Then this last fall, the organization worked on acquiring the properties, which was tedious at times, as some of the owners live out of town and were difficult to track down. After PinnacleHealth purchased the homes, Guarnescelli got in contact with Michael Young, president and CEO of PinnacleHealth, who linked him with contractors that work closely with the non-profit. In March, demolition got underway.

Reynolds Construction, Pyramid Construction, McClure Company, GR Sponaugle & Sons, Edwin L. Heim Co., Murray Associates, Macri Concrete, Pennsy Supply, H. Edward Black & Associates and Carter Lumber have all signed on to donate time, labor, services and materials to the project. In addition, Benedict Dubbs, principal at Murray Associates, has worked on the demolition and architecture plans pro bono.

“Everybody stepped up to the plate and helped out,” says Guarnescelli.

Construction of the $925,000 project began this spring, and, within six months, BHA and PinnacleHealth expect to have the five townhouses finished. Once the homes are up, BHA will continue to provide rehabilitated housing in Allison Hill to help women and children transition out of homelessness.

BHA places families in their homes through referrals from local shelters, which can accommodate people for only about 30 days. Others either call the organization or walk into their offices seeking help. For families with long-term problems, BHA assists them for a year or two, working on the issues that made them homeless.

“This project is so cool. What really turned me on to it was the ‘teach a man to fish’ [philosophy],” says Guarnescelli.

This is the sentiment that BHA brings to the project. BHA works with its clients to develop career plans, gain job skills, obtain an education and increase skills in parenting and budgeting.

“The more young moms with their kids in a stable upbringing, [the healthier they will be],” says Schwartz.

This partnership is a natural fit for both organizations, as they independently support the health and wellness of the people in their community. Guarnescelli says that PinnacleHealth has a major interest in supporting families in need. “These are the kids we will be taking care of, and our goal is to keep people out of the hospital,” he says.

These organizations highlight what people can do when they’re invested in elevating the community that they love.

“There are a lot of committed people in this neighborhood who are concerned about the decline in Allison Hill,” says Schwartz. “This is a really transformative project. This is going to be a neighborhood centerpiece when it is done.”

Lend a Hand

Interested in pitching in to make this a successful project?

For cash contributions, please make out checks to Brethren Housing Association and mail to Hummel Street Townhouses, 219 Hummel St., Harrisburg, Pa., 17104.

Contractors interested in donating skills, time or materials should contact Dana Klinepeter at 717-782-3168.

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