Tag Archives: Mayor Papenfuse

City Activist Faces Loss of CRW Seat

Cluck, left, whose term on the board of Capital Region Water expired in 2015. City Council will consider whether to replace him with a mayoral nominee later this month.

Cluck, left, whose term on the board of Capital Region Water expired in 2015. City Council will consider whether to replace him with a mayoral nominee later this month.

Capital Region Water is poised to mark the end of an era this month, as the Papenfuse administration seeks to replace board member Bill Cluck, an environmental lawyer and city activist who oversaw a turbulent time in the authority’s history.

At a hearing next week, City Council will consider two nominees, Garvey Presley, Jr., and Charla J. Plaines, to the water and sewer authority’s five-member board.

Presley would fill a spot left vacant by Westburn Majors, who surrendered his seat after being elected to Harrisburg City Council last fall. Plaines would replace Cluck, whose five-year term expired in January 2015.

Council will not cast a final vote on the nominations until April 27, the first legislative session after next week’s hearing. But Cluck did not waste time in objecting to his replacement, urging council at a meeting Tuesday night to meet with him and review his record before agreeing to oust him.

Council members “have absolutely no idea” of Capital Region Water’s achievements during his tenure, he said, nor did they fully appreciate how the authority had fought to maintain public ownership in a period of financial crisis.

“We saved this city from privatizing the water and sewer systems,” he said.

He also said he was disappointed by the way he learned of his replacement from Mayor Eric Papenfuse. “There was no communication other than an email,” Cluck said. “I feel disrespected.”

Papenfuse, for his part, said the decision was not personal and that he was grateful for Cluck’s years of service on the board. “I’m a huge fan of Bill’s,” he said. “I consider him an inspirational model to me personally. I think he’s played just an incredibly important role in bringing accountability to Harrisburg and in the city’s recovery.”

He said the nomination was motivated by his goal to bring greater diversity to the city’s governmental agencies and by a desire “not to burn people out” with too many years of service in any one role.

Even if Cluck’s plea finds favor with some council members, it is unlikely he will be able to hold his seat indefinitely. Papenfuse is empowered by law to nominate members to the boards of city authorities with the advice and consent of council.

“This is my decision for sure,” Papenfuse said.

As a board member, Cluck helped the authority weather a period of crisis and profound transformation. He helped usher it through the transition from the Harrisburg Authority, an all-purpose financing vehicle best known for the spectacular incinerator-related debts that pushed the city nearly to bankruptcy, to a service-focused water and sewer authority with stable finances and a new name.

Since the transition, Capital Region Water has earned a series of affirmations, including a top-five ranking for best drinking water in the country from the American Water Works Association and the 2015 Catalyst Award from the Harrisburg Regional Chamber. Most recently, in March, it secured an investment-grade rating on its municipal bonds from Standard & Poor’s.

In 2011, Cluck also helped initiate a forensic investigation into the Harrisburg Authority’s disastrous borrowings to retrofit the city incinerator. At the time, he was one of only three board members, along with Majors and Marc Kurowski, a civil engineer who is currently the board’s chair.

The findings of that investigation have resonated through Harrisburg politics ever since, drawing citations from the city’s first state-appointed receiver, playing a key role in state hearings on the city’s debt crisis and making a cameo in the 2015 grand jury report approving corruption charges against former Mayor Steve Reed.

“We collectively fly under the radar,” Kurowski said Tuesday night, in reference to the board’s accomplishments during his and Cluck’s tenure. “There was a lot of stuff happening in the last four or five years. It was very intense, and for a long time there it was just Bill, Wes and myself.”

Kurowski said he didn’t know either of the mayor’s nominees and was reluctant to inject himself into the city’s politics. But he said that, if Cluck were replaced, he would miss his skills as an attorney and his dedication.

“Bill’s pretty committed,” he said. “He does his homework. I mean, he reads every single word of every single document. We’d miss that. It’d be a shame to not have that aspect on the board.”

Kurowski also said that he thought Presley, an equipment operator at the Derry Township Municipal Authority wastewater treatment plant, might be able to bring “boots-on-the-ground operational experience” to the position.

Papenfuse said that, in addition to seeking fresh energy on the board, he hopes his nominees will further his goal of bringing diverse voices to city entities.

He hoped that Plaines, a reentry coordinator at the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency, would be instrumental in Capital Region Water’s community outreach during a series of important projects in the coming months.

“I think she can be an excellent community advocate and can perhaps assist in the outreach which CRW is inevitably going to need to do as it upgrades its systems,” he said. “I think we need to have people who connect the community in different ways.”

As for Cluck, Papenfuse added that he hoped he would contribute to other city efforts in the future. “I wouldn’t hesitate to appoint him for something else,” he said.

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TheBurg Podcast, Feb. 12, 2016

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

To listen to this week’s episode, click here.

Feb. 12, 2016: This week, Larry and Paul talk about a bill before City Council to reduce the penalty for possession of small amounts of marijuana, plus the passage of more or less the same 2016 budget that was adopted in December. They also talk about problems of editorial control and sensitivity to city issues with an NRA-sponsored exhibit at the Civil War museum. And, as always, they nominate their candidates for the Most Harrisburg Thing This Week.

TheBurg Podcast is proudly sponsored by Ad Lib Craft Kitchen & Bar at the Hilton Harrisburg.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music. Check out his podcast, the PRC Show, on SoundCloud or in the iTunes storeYou can also subscribe to TheBurg podcast in iTunes.

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Clean Slate: After being endorsed by the mayor, three newly elected council members are determined to go their own way.

 

The public comment portion of City Council meetings has always intrigued me. We live in a representative democracy, not a direct one, and so the challenge for the electorate, in the years between elections, is how to keep the ears of the elected. You can petition, you can email. You can comment on Facebook or Twitter or anonymously on PennLive. But there’s really no substitute for showing up warm-blooded in the place where council does its business. You state your name and address, the mayor seated to your right, the councilors fanned out on the dais before you. For a few minutes, you stand in the spotlight of democracy. It’s a beautiful thing.

And a tedious thing, and a beguiling one. The meetings are broadcast on the city’s television station, WHBG-TV 20, and people milk the free airtime. They pontificate. They self-promote. Occasionally, they heckle. Last month, at council’s first legislative session of 2016, a man identifying himself as Keith Lawson, a resident of S. 17th Street, took to the microphone. He was a big guy with a blue-collar aspect: wool hat, wearing a short-sleeved T-shirt over a long-sleeved one.

“I’m glad we got new council members, because I got a complaint about council,” he began. He said he was speaking on behalf of young people, particularly in poor neighborhoods, claiming they never saw council members “except when it’s time to get voted.” Council President Wanda Williams engaged him, and the exchange quickly got testy. Lawson accused her of ignoring residents’ questions. “Excuse me,” Williams interrupted. “I’m not going to be in a debate with you, nor am I going to allow you to stand up here and say that these council members do not respond to you.” Lawson persisted. He wanted council to address the issue he felt was at the root of violence in the city—idle youth, many of whom couldn’t find employment because of drug problems and criminal records. Eventually, Williams concluded by gently inviting the young people he’d been talking with to come address council any time. “OK,” Lawson said. He sat down and folded his arms.

After the meeting, I caught up with Cornelius Johnson, one of four councilors elected last year. We chatted at the sports bar Rookie’s on Derry Street, over wings and beer. “I think a lot of times, especially when people come to the mike, people make blanket statements,” he said. He didn’t take Lawson’s comments personally—he volunteers at the southside Boys and Girls Club, and he has family all over the city, so he didn’t accept the suggestion that councilors were out of touch. “But I think what he’s basically trying to say is, there is a segment of our community that are affected by criminal charges, who need opportunities,” he said. He also understood why Williams “may take it personal”—you can do a lot of work that goes unacknowledged, and still get publicly blasted for not doing enough. “It’s a lot of work to be on City Council,” he said. He was playing it down the middle, respecting the constituent while being sympathetic to his senior colleague.

Johnson grew up on Holly Street, in South Allison Hill. His mother is from Sierra Leone, his father from Jamaica. Perhaps due in part to his background, he has little patience for the “natives-versus-outsiders” dynamic that inflects city politics from time to time. “I’ll take someone who just moved here six months ago and is about moving the city forward over someone who lived here their entire life and doesn’t want to do anything and is completely negative about the city,” he said. He was a member of the first class to complete four years at SciTech High, a specialized public high school for gifted students in the city. He joined the Sigma Beta Club and served on the student council, though he had no thought of entering politics until years later, when he started working for the city.

Among his colleagues on council, Johnson is perhaps the best positioned to understand the day-to-day operations of municipal government. A year after graduating Penn State, with degrees in general science and toxicology, he took a job as Harrisburg’s health officer, inspecting the city’s 400 or so restaurants. One of the things he said he noticed was a “disconnect between citizens and their government.” People were unaware of the programs available to them, like one that would help pay for lead removal. He left, after a little more than a year, to take a position as the health officer at Susquehanna Township. The job came with a raise, but he also saw it as a chance for professional growth. With fewer restaurants and a more stable budget, the township gave him the opportunity to study other parts of government.

Johnson was one of three candidates endorsed by Mayor Eric Papenfuse last April, about a month before the Democratic primary. Explaining his picks, the mayor said council needed “fresh, independent, new voices”; he also specifically asked voters to oust the incumbent, Brad Koplinski. Among other things, he said Koplinski was propping up the council presidency of Williams, whose leadership Papenfuse thought was “problematic” and the “source of the dysfunction on council.” “If you don’t re-elect Brad Koplinski, we get a new council president,” he said. In the primary, voters obliged, by a narrow margin—in the race for three four-year seats, Koplinski came in fourth by only 16 votes. Addressing the results, Papenfuse said he was “elated” that Harrisburg would be getting “new leadership to move the city forward.”

But when it came time to elect a president, it seemed council was content to preserve a piece of the status quo. At a reorganization meeting in January, members nominated Williams, the incumbent president, to keep her post. When it came time to nominate any challengers, no one made a sound. “I don’t put as much emphasis as the rest of the world does on those positions,” Johnson responded, when I asked him about it. Even if the president is the “face of council,” he said, “it’s only a council of seven. Everyone gets one vote.” He would have been open to supporting other nominees, but he was also confident in Williams’ leadership—she “has shown herself to be fair,” he said. In other words, he played that one down the middle, too.

In the general election of November 1968, Harrisburg voters appointed a charter commission to reevaluate the form of their government. For half a century, the city had operated under a “commission” structure run by five co-equal council members. Each member was both a legislator, proposing and passing ordinances as council members do today, and an administrator, directing a particular department in city hall. The arrangement could be cumbersome, especially as government functions became more complex and social problems more pernicious. Councilors’ department assignments were arbitrary; as the commission’s report put it, the electoral process “seldom attracts trained and experienced departmental administrators.”

The commission recommended the city switch to a mayor-council government, popularly known as a “strong mayor” form. Under that structure, council would handle legislation, while the mayor, as an independently elected executive, would manage the city’s day-to-day affairs. Existing council members fretted about the loss of checks and balances, but the commission dismissed such fears. The “risk of continuing to operate with divided, indecisive leadership,” its report said, “far outweighs the risk of an overconcentration of executive power.” Furthermore, the structure preserved an essential role for council—the commission envisioned a “vital, deliberative body, broadly representative of all segments of the population of the city,” which would “keep a close watch” on the executive.

Battles between council and the mayor in the decades since have tested the boundaries of their respective powers. In the 1990s, a group of citizens sued Mayor Stephen Reed over his use of $7 million in proceeds from the sale of the city’s water system. The power to appropriate the money, they said, belonged to City Council. A decade later, council openly challenged Reed by giving themselves the power to appoint directors to the Harrisburg Authority, the financing arm that had borrowed steeply to retrofit the incinerator. Reed sued, saying he had to “protect his essential executive powers” from a “misguided, power-hungry City Council.” The case went all the way to the state Supreme Court, which sided with Reed, though, by that time, he’d been replaced by the former council president, Linda Thompson. Thompson, too, had notable skirmishes with council, including in 2011, when members tried to outmaneuver her with a 4-3 vote to declare bankruptcy.

In short, some amount of friction between council and the mayor is customary. Sometimes, the disputes are about policy. Other times, they can seem like sport. Jeff Baltimore, another of the council members elected last fall, told me he’d been embarrassed at times to see a public meeting erupt into what seemed like a needless, personal dispute. “I’m not comfortable with other adults seemingly talking disrespectfully to other adults,” he said. “If you’re not gonna respect the person, at least respect the office.”

Baltimore first arrived on council by appointment, after the sudden death of Councilwoman Eugenia Smith in the spring of 2014. Sixteen people applied for her seat; Baltimore ultimately secured it with a tie-breaking vote from Papenfuse. He ran a lackluster campaign last spring, but won handily, perhaps through some combination of an incumbent’s advantage, his eloquence and civility, and his deep roots in the city. His endorsement by Papenfuse likely didn’t hurt, either. While he appreciated the mayor’s support, he told me, he hadn’t sought it, and he wanted to make clear he and the administration weren’t “aligned.”

Baltimore lives on 17th Street, just north of Herr, in the home he grew up in. We spoke there one afternoon last month, in a room adorned with black-and-white photos of family members and famous African-Americans: jazz greats, Frederick Douglass, Jackie Robinson. He described his neighborhood as stable, mostly middle-class, though the population was aging. He recalled how, as a kid, he had roamed freely throughout the city, then reflected, ruefully, that things were “different now”—more territorial, with fistfights replaced by gun battles. This led him to what he saw as his own generation’s failure to pass on the legacy of the Civil Rights era to their children. Young people “don’t feel like they’re a part of any continuum,” he said. “And they are.” He told me he was slow to embrace the Black Lives Matter movement, in part, because he didn’t want to be “policed better.” “I want better housing. I want better education. I want better health care,” he said.

Baltimore is a former city employee, having worked in economic development under Mayor Reed. He seems to support most of Papenfuse’s legislative agenda, particularly with respect to his development goals.He was also broadly supportive of the mayor, who he said he hoped would “be a two-termer.” He favored the tax abatement legislation council passed last year, describing it as a tool to attract developers he thinks will inevitably seek the best deal available. He also supports the local services tax hike, an integral part of the 2016 budget, which the new council has reopened. The $2-per-week increase will affect substantially more commuters than residents, which appeals to what, for Baltimore and many other city residents, is an article of faith about non-resident workers. “A lot of people who live outside the city bad-mouth and bash it,” he said. “So hey, you know, if you’re gonna talk trash about us and use our stuff, you should pay for it. You should have skin in the game, too.”

Baltimore had been interested in challenging Williams for the council presidency, but he hadn’t wanted to nominate himself. When I asked him about it, he said he agreed with a reporter who described him as a “reluctant politician.” He isn’t on social media. He doesn’t hold court at the Broad Street Market, and he doesn’t go to church. He didn’t want to discuss the details of his bid for the presidency on the record, but what he did say gave the impression that Williams out-campaigned him and that he wasn’t sure how to lock down fellow members’ votes. The day after the reorganization meeting, he was out with his sister distributing for Meals on Wheels. “I just don’t feel like a politician,” he told her. “She said, ‘Jeff, shut up, you’re a politician,’” he said. “‘You’re just really not all that good at it.’”

At a briefing in early January, Papenfuse outlined his vision for 2016 in three adjectives: he wanted Harrisburg to be “safer, more self-determined and growing.” The middle term was the most subtle. “Self-determined” was a reference to two forms of long-range planning the city will formally revisit this year—the comprehensive plan, which will guide development and capital projects, and the financial recovery plan, which was passed in late 2013 and is now scheduled to be amended. Papenfuse spoke of the city “seizing its destiny” and exiting Act 47, the state oversight program, but he also acknowledged the process would take years.

Whatever the timeline, the mayor’s relationship with council will be critical to his achieving this goal. Last year, council members largely concurred with Papenfuse’s assessment that the state receiver’s plan for the city was based on inaccurate financial projections. “Right away, in year one, we felt that the revenue projections that the receiver’s team had come up with were off,” said Ben Allatt, council’s budget and finance committee chair. In December, after rejecting cuts proposed by Koplinski, council passed a budget that will require nearly $3 million in new revenue from the local services tax hike. But it will fall to the new council to officially adopt the hike, as well as to vet the adjustments to the recovery plan.

State oversight of the city is largely a bureaucratic function. But it also involves state legislators, to the extent that they set the rules on local taxing authority and appropriate $4.5 million each year to pay for city fire services. For what it’s worth, council has two members with some insight on the Capitol. One is Allatt, whose partner works for the House Republican caucus, in the office of former Majority Whip Stan Saylor. Allatt said he is friendly with Saylor, with whom he will occasionally go back and forth on issues relevant to the city. “It’s an uphill battle, because you have to communicate the needs of an urban community to a legislature that the majority of them are not from an urban community,” he told me. Allatt was elected in 2013, having gotten interested in city politics after being, as he put it, “really unimpressed” with Mayor Thompson. (When it comes to Papenfuse, he said, “I think I’ve been critical where it’s been called for to be critical, and I’ve been supportive where it’s been the right thing to be supportive.”)

The other is Westburn Majors, the third new council member, along with Johnson and Baltimore, whom Papenfuse endorsed last spring. When he ran for office, Majors worked for Gmerek Government Relations, a downtown lobbying firm. (He is now the director of legislative affairs at the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency.) Like Johnson and Baltimore, he took an arm’s-length view of the endorsement. He was appreciative, but he certainly didn’t feel he was part of a mayoral “slate,” a term he felt was too reminiscent of the “Reed team” that Papenfuse’s predecessor would traditionally endorse for council. “I don’t think folks are real supportive of slates and teams anymore,” he said. “But I think now we actually have a council that is independent of the mayor. And that doesn’t mean that you’re against the mayor. It means, look, we’re gonna vet our own issues. If things that the mayor brings down to council are right, people will support it.”

Majors grew up on Market Street, across from the former site of Bishop McDevitt, the Catholic high school he would later attend. As a kid, he said, he was a “political junkie.” He went to Lincoln University in Chester County, majoring in sociology and political science, and later to Penn State for a master’s in public administration. Before he got the job at Gmerek, he had a notion that lobbying would be something like what was portrayed in the film “Thank You For Smoking.” In fact, he said, it wound up much less glamorous. “There’s a lot of research and attending committee meetings,” he said. “And you’ve got to have a decent pair of shoes up there, because of the cobblestone. The little flashy shoes—like, no. Get something with a decent sole.”

With the hearings on the reopened city budget approaching, Majors didn’t quite want to tip his hand. He was supportive of the local services tax hike in principle, though he said he wanted assurances it would really be used for services, and not simply to cover salaries and pensions. Like Johnson and Baltimore, he seemed to be waiting to form his opinions at the hearings in the weeks to come. None of the three had run on specific legislative promises—a fact reflected in the mayor’s endorsements, which focused largely on the candidates’ experience and personal biographies.

If, as Papenfuse has suggested, this is going to be a year of self-determination, how far does that concept extend? City council, as the charter commission recognized 50 years ago, was the venue best equipped to open government to the citizenry. But even if the members are “broadly representative” of residents, residents must still make their concerns known. Majors addressed this topic at one point, as we discussed disparities in wealth and investment across different neighborhoods.

“The developers and the folks that are trying to get plans through planning or zoning, they’re coming and they’re going to speak their case,” he said. “So we need residents that don’t feel like they’re getting enough services to come out and speak. Write a letter. Reach out to council members. And, you know, let your voice be heard.”

 

 

 

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TheBurg Podcast, Jan. 8, 2016

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

To listen to this week’s episode, click here.

Jan. 8, 2016: This week, Larry and Paul talk about the swearing-in of new City Council members, a pair of hearings in the corruption case against former Mayor Stephen Reed, the court pressing the reset button on a bar the city has targeted for closure, and their picks for the first Most Harrisburg Things of the year.

TheBurg Podcast is proudly sponsored by Ad Lib Craft Kitchen & Bar at the Hilton Harrisburg.

Special thanks to Paul Cooley, who wrote our theme music. Check out his podcast, the PRC Show, on SoundCloud or in the iTunes store.

You can now subscribe to TheBurg podcast in iTunes!

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TheBurg Podcast, Sept. 12, 2014

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

Week 1, Sept. 8 – 12, 2014: Burg editor-in-chief Larry Binda and senior writer Paul Barker discuss personnel changes in city hall, the ongoing controversy over the Civil War Museum funding, and the 14th St. sinkhole.

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Some Very Good Numbers

The National Civil War Museum in Reservoir Park.

The National Civil War Museum in Reservoir Park.

In a report before the Dauphin County commissioners Wednesday morning, representatives of Harrisburg’s National Civil War Museum made a detailed case for the museum’s continued receipt of a county subsidy that has funded between one-quarter and one-third of its budget for the past six years.

CEO Wayne Motts, reciting what he referred to at one point as “some very good numbers,” told the commissioners that museum visitors spent an estimated $5.7 million in the region last year, representing a nearly 2,000-percent return on the museum’s $296,000 share of county tax dollars.

Where did these numbers come from? It’s a well-worn truth that numbers, manipulated in just the right way, can tell whatever story you want them to. As the British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli is supposed to have said (he was quoted, quite possibly apocryphally, by Mark Twain), “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.”

The statistics in the museum’s report this week are not lies, but they aren’t the whole truth, either. They were obtained by a series of simple calculations, performed on a relatively small set of figures from three main sources.

The first two sources come from the museum itself. One is the museum’s annual visitor tally, which clocked in at 38,688 in 2013-14. (The museum reports figures corresponding with its fiscal year, which runs from July 1 to June 30.) Of these, 4,664 were school-age visitors who came in groups, and another 472 were people who self-reported as having come from Harrisburg zip codes.

The second source is survey data collected and tabulated by the museum from a subset of visitors. Last year, according to Motts, 601 visitors responded to the museum survey; over the past four years, there have been a total of 2,099 respondents. Of last year’s 601 respondents, 39 percent said they had stayed in a hotel, which matches pretty closely the figure for respondents who stayed in hotels over the past four years (36 percent).

In its report, the museum filters these visitation numbers through a third source, provided by an outside party—the most recent “Economic Impact of Travel and Tourism in Pennsylvania” study, performed by the consulting company Tourism Economics. The study, which is commissioned each year by the Pennsylvania Tourism Office, aims to give a detailed picture of how tourism impacts the state economy. Last year’s study, released in December, analyzes data from 2012.

Using these sources, the museum calculates what is meant to be its “direct economic impact” on the region. Here’s how it works. The museum subtracts school-age visitors and Harrisburg residents from the raw visitor total, arriving at an estimated number of tourist visitors of 33,552. Then, using the percentages from its in-house surveys, the museum sorts these visitors into “day-trip leisure” visitors (20,326) and “overnight leisure” visitors who stayed in a hotel (13,226). Finally, the report multiplies each of these subgroups by average spending data from the Tourism Economics study, which is conveniently already sorted along the same lines ($111 per day-tripper, and $265 per overnight visitor per trip).

Based on these calculations, the report arrives at a “direct economic impact” for the museum of $5,761,076: the sum of the $3,504,890 and $2,256,186 spent by overnight visitors and day-trippers, respectively, in 2013-14. The visitors spend their money, the Tourism Economics study tells us, on lodging, food and beverages, retail, entertainment and transportation.

How reliable are these figures? Christopher Pike, the director of impact studies at Tourism Economics, told me that, for the most part, the museum’s calculations were reasonable. He noted that the museum used average spending figures from 2012, which, preliminary research shows, were likely 1 to 3 percent lower than the corresponding figures for 2013. Combined with the decision to exclude school-age visitors, this meant the museum’s estimates “maintained some conservative-ness,” Pike said.

On the other hand, the museum’s calculations assume that the museum—and not other regional attractions—is the primary draw for tourists who walk through its doors. “If you wanted to be an academic stickler, you’d want to break out visitors they attracted to Harrisburg,” as opposed to people for whom the museum was merely a side attraction, Pike said.

Nonetheless, it was Pike’s conclusion that the museum’s report presented, on balance, a respectable analysis. “It’s much more detailed than what I’ve seen from a lot of other places,” he said. Given that museum staff did the calculations themselves, “they’ve not done a bad job.”

There is one notable exception, however. That is the museum’s purported rate of “return on investment,” which the report tabulates at an eye-catching 1,942 percent. The museum arrived at this figure by dividing the $5.7 million it says it generated last year by the $296,646 in hotel taxes it received. (These taxes come out of the $500,000-or-so portion of hotel taxes designated for marketing the city—which, speaking of numbers, is not “one-quarter of one percent” of hotel tax revenues, as is often cited elsewhere, but one-quarter of about one-fifth of them, or about 5 percent.)

Returns on investment, or ROIs, “can be calculated in many, many ways,” Pike said. He declined to give an opinion on the “right” method, though he did laugh when the museum’s reported figure was quoted. Another way to come up with the museum’s ROI would be to compare the hotel taxes it receives with the hotel taxes it generates—which, if you follow the assumptions of its other calculations, comes out to around $36,801. That leads to the rather dismal return of 12 cents for every tax dollar received, meaning the museum cost the county nearly $260,000 last year.

On Thursday, Motts responded to the suggestion of this less flattering figure by saying the museum had followed the ROI-calculation method of the Hershey Harrisburg Regional Visitors Bureau, the county tourism promotion agency which serves as a pass-through for the museum’s tax funding and to which the museum reports on its marketing activities each year. The museum should be “held to the same standard” as other regional tourist draws, which calculate their impact the same way, he said. (Motts also reiterated Pike’s points about the comparatively high level of detail in the museum’s visitor data and the conservative nature of its estimates.)

But there are yet other ways to measure return on investment—ways that have less to do with tourism money today, and more to do with history. The museum began receiving its dedicated share of hotel taxes from the county in 2008, when its annual visitor base was nearly 44,000. The money was to be spent on marketing and promotions, which the museum says it is, although Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse, who catapulted the museum’s tax funding into headlines by asking the county to freeze it, has challenged this. In any case, despite the boost to marketing, the museum’s visitor total this year represents a decline of 5,000 people—and that’s in a year that included the sesquicentennial of the battle of Gettysburg.

Or what about another measure of return on investment, which would compare the city’s share of the costs of the museum’s creation with the city’s share of its rewards? The building itself, as museum leadership likes to point out, was paid for with $16.2 million in state money. But the state money required a city match, which was supplied by at least as many millions in Civil War artifacts acquired on the city’s dime. The museum now leases those artifacts—and the building, whose fair market rental value is estimated at $633,000 per year—at an annual rate of $1.

There are other numbers to consider, too. Seven, for instance, which is the number of City Council members (that is to say, all of them) who voted last month to back Papenfuse’s request to cut the museum’s funding. Or 25, which is the number of years on the museum’s lease, extended by former Mayor Stephen Reed in the last two months of his 28-year reign. Or how about 1.2 million—the number of dollars the city has paid the museum directly since 2000, for employee benefits and construction costs and any number of other things.

These numbers, not surprisingly, were not part of the museum’s presentation to the county commissioners this week. Yet they tell an important part of the story, too. It’s for the commissioners—and for city residents, in assessing whose interests the commissioners represent—to decide how many of the numbers to listen to. Will it be some of them, or all of them, or none?

An earlier version of this article referred incorrectly to the museum’s proportion of hotel taxes. The figure “about 5 percent” refers to the portion of county hotel tax revenue designated for marketing the city, not only the portion spent on the museum.

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Mayor Again Presses County to Cut Civil War Museum Funding

Harrisburg's National Civil War Museum in Reservoir Park.

Harrisburg’s National Civil War Museum in Reservoir Park.

Harrisburg Mayor Eric Papenfuse took another shot at the National Civil War Museum’s tax subsidy late Friday afternoon, suggesting that the Dauphin County commissioners were taking an excessively long time to conduct a legal review of his request that they freeze the museum’s funding.

In a press release, Papenfuse is quoted as saying that the commissioners have clear authority under a county tax ordinance to withdraw their approval of the museum’s estimated $300,000 subsidy per year.

“This is not a complicated legal question that requires weeks of review,” the mayor is quoted as saying. “It is fully within the commissioners’ authority to stop the National Civil War Museum’s misuse of hotel tax dollars on salaries and general expenses.”

Dauphin County Chief Clerk Chad Saylor, however, said by phone Friday that lawyers for the county “basically don’t share that view.”

“He raises an important issue, and we’re taking it seriously,” Saylor said of the mayor’s request. “But we’re going through our process.”

Saylor added that the current funding arrangement, which involves a combination of state hotel tax law, county ordinance, and separate contractual agreements between various parties involved, is more complicated than the mayor suggests.

Saylor also said that the mayor should not expect a decision from the county until the commissioners have heard from museum representatives at one of their public hearings. Such a presentation by the museum is not yet scheduled, he said.

Friday’s press release is just the latest in the mayor’s sustained efforts to reclaim the museum’s portion of county tourism dollars for city use. He first raised the issue at a county commissioners’ hearing July 30, at which time he also critiqued the museum’s $1 annual rent for the use of millions of dollars worth of city artifacts and a facility whose fair market value is estimated at $633,000 per year.

The press release, with its reference to spending on “salaries and general expenses,” follows a line of argument that the mayor’s office advanced on Wednesday, when it released a report from the National Civil War Museum regarding the museum’s use of hotel tax funds.

According to that report, which only covered the museum’s 2010-11 fiscal year, the museum spent 66 percent of its $270,696 in county tourism dollars on salaries and another 18 percent on utilities.

Only 15 percent was spent on marketing, although the report also identifies the salaries as being for “3 full-time sales and marketing staff.”

The mayor’s office did not provide any reports on the museum’s marketing expenditures in more recent years.

Friday’s press release also draws a distinction between the museum’s share of hotel taxes and the city’s, noting that the county ordinance permits a broader variety of uses for the portion the city receives directly each year.

Among those permitted uses for the city is payment of debt service on bonds issued for the construction of tourism-related facilities, which the mayor’s office says more than consumes the city’s portion—around $750,000—of hotel taxes each year.

“The money the city receives directly from commissioners for tourism is less than the annual debt payments on bonds that helped originally construct the National Civil War Museum and other tourism related facilities,” the mayor is quoted as saying. “I don’t think the public is aware that the city is still paying off debt for this venture.”

In a phone call placed shortly after the press release was issued, the mayor’s spokeswoman, Joyce Davis, was unable to clarify which bond issues the release referred to. But Neil Grover, the city solicitor, said in a subsequent phone interview that they comprised general obligation bonds that were partly used to fund tourism projects, which the city is still paying off.

These bonds include a 1997 series that indirectly financed the Civil War Museum through projects related to Camp Curtin and improvements in Reservoir Park, Grover said. An additional portion of general obligation debt went to finance the construction of the stadium on City Island, which Grover said fits the description of a tourism-related facility.

Saylor, the Dauphin County chief clerk, said Friday that the county would also like to review these expenditures by the city out of its share of hotel tax funds. “Did the mayor mention the 2.5 million?” Saylor said, referring to an estimated $2.5 million the city has received in direct revenue from the tax since 2011. He said the county would like to get information from Harrisburg on how that money was spent, though he acknowledged the county had not yet made any formal request for that information.

Friday’s press release was the mayor’s third substantive action against the museum this week, his first back from a two-week vacation. In addition to the report on marketing expenditures, Papenfuse brought a resolution to City Council Tuesday night asking for its support of his request to county commissioners, which council passed unanimously.

A phone call to Wayne Motts, the National Civil War Museum’s CEO, was not immediately returned Friday afternoon.

This story has been updated to include comments from the Dauphin County chief clerk.

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Harrisburg Soon to Have 311 Number for City Services

Jeffrey Edwards, Harrisburg's director of IT, left, and Phred Barber, network administrator for the city, at a press conference Thursday in the mayor's city hall office.

Jeffrey Edwards, Harrisburg’s director of IT, left, and Fred Barber, network administrator for the city, at a press conference Thursday in the mayor’s conference room in city hall.

Harrisburg is on track to have a new 311 information system for non-emergency government services, Mayor Eric Papenfuse said Thursday, thanks to the state Public Utility Commission’s approval of a city petition to administer the three-digit dialing code.

The 311 code, whose use will be restricted to Harrisburg residents, will connect callers to a centralized, automated directory of city services. Under the existing system, residents either would need to look up the numbers of individual city departments or, as often happened, would simply dial 911 with non-emergency calls, tying up the county’s dispatchers.

Papenfuse recommended the adoption of a 311 system during his campaign for office last year. In March, the city submitted a petition to the PUC, who announced its approval Thursday following a 5-0 vote by its commissioners.

At a press conference Thursday afternoon, Papenfuse suggested the PUC’s approval had come more swiftly than expected, although Robin Tilley, an information specialist with the commission, later said that the city didn’t actually require PUC approval to use the 311 code.

Papenfuse also added Thursday that certain infrastructure upgrades necessary for running the system were well underway. In the next two to three months, the city expects to replace its phone system with one that will be able to accommodate 311 calls. The city also recently replaced its previous Internet provider, Windstream Communications, with Comcast. According to Fred Barber, a network administrator in the city’s IT department, the change will both improve city hall’s download speeds by a factor of 75 and save around $3,000 per year.

The 311 dialing code, assigned for use nationwide by the FCC in 1997, has been implemented in cities such as Baltimore, Chicago, Philadelphia and New York. Tilley, from the PUC, explained that the code would work for landlines located in Harrisburg, as well as some, but not all, cell phones, depending on the caller’s provider and the location of its towers. Cities can also provide a direct 10-digit number to cell phone users in case the 311 code doesn’t work, Tilley said.

On Thursday, Papenfuse held up the plans for the 311 system as an example of how his administration has prioritized communication with city residents. He also used the press conference to celebrate an “exciting rebranding” of Harrisburg, in the form of a five-minute music video, “Harrisburg Be Happy,” that was released earlier this week.

Produced by volunteers, including Ryan Grigsby, who designed the city’s new website, Cory Cross, who provided camera equipment free of charge, and Michelle Green, a local director, it features clips of city residents and officials, including Papenfuse, the police chief and the City Council president, dancing to the song “Happy” by Pharrell Williams. On Wednesday, the video was posted to YouTube, where as of this writing it had registered more than 2,500 views.

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Heart and Soul

Rick Kearns, Harrisburg's poet laureate, speaks with an audience member Friday in city hall.

Rick Kearns, Harrisburg’s poet laureate, left, speaks with Nancy Mendes of the Historical Society of Dauphin County’s Board of Trustees after Friday’s poetry reading in city hall.

On Friday, at 20 or so minutes to noon, Rick Kearns, Harrisburg’s new poet laureate, sat in the city hall atrium and talked about jazz.

Since 2010, Kearns has performed with a Lancaster-based jazz ensemble, the Con Alma Quartet, whose renditions of established jazz tunes—Ron Carter’s “Little Waltz,” Miles Davis’s “Blue in Green”—he threads with readings of his poems. The poem-song matchup is determined in advance, but the pacing is improvisational, with the result that Kearns’ voice fits in like just another instrument, seamless and responsive.

“It’s stimulating, scary, maddening, and a lot of fun,” Kearns said. “It keeps me on my toes. And we have a CD!”

Kearns wore a black corduroy sports jacket, black corduroy slacks, and a blue button-down shirt, open at the collar. He has exactly the sort of voice (smoky, slow-going) you would want telling you, over, say, a seventh chord on electric guitar, that the “moon wants a good red wine and a woman who can dance.”

Friday’s event was the second of Mayor Papenfuse’s “brown bag cultural programs,” which city hall will host on the first and third Friday of each month “to help promote the arts in Harrisburg and help connect citizens with the government center.” Within a few minutes, the atrium would fill up with 20 or so observers. For the moment, though, Kearns sat in a sea of empty chairs and reflected on “Aurelio’s Vengeance, Puerto Rico, 1901,” one of the poems cited in the mayor’s press release earlier that week.

“That one was about Puerto Rico right after the Spanish-American War, after America had sort of taken Puerto Rico,” he said. “It was very much based on the historical record.” Years ago, Kearns, who is of Puerto Rican and European descent, spent several days in Hunter College’s Center for Puerto Rican Studies, in New York, going through Puerto Rican newspapers from around the turn of the century. There he encountered stories about a “rash of suspicious fires” in the estates that had been abandoned by the Spanish-Creole gentry after the war.

“The rumor was that the guys working there had torched them, taking vengeance,” he said. The poem imagines one such arsonist, “early in the morning in the wet bushes,” waiting to “torch the grand old house”:

These are
the flames of hell
you bastard you won’t
be back to enslave my family any
more nunca
jamás
nunca
jamás

“Hey hey hey, brother!” Kearns said suddenly. J. Clark Nicholson, the artistic director of the Gamut Theatre Group, had arrived. Lenwood Sloan, the newly appointed director of arts, culture and tourism, followed close behind, greeting the pair warmly. They chatted for a moment, and then Sloan took center stage.

“Greetings to you all. We are gonna get started,” he said. The mayor arrived, slipping into an open seat in the front row, and Sloan, spotting him, welcomed him as “a literary man in his own right.” There were no brown bags in evidence yet, excepting one sandwich in butcher paper. Sloan took a moment to point out the various art exhibits close at hand: a display of “150 years of recreation,” including an old Atari console; a four-part mural, conceived by students at John Harris High, depicting Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King, Jr., Rosa Parks, and Nelson Mandela.

He also indicated a folding table, piled with wooden contraptions and labeled “FREE BIRDHOUSES.” “We’ve been graced by these bird cages,” Sloan said, “and I’d ask you each to take one as an omen that spring is coming.” Then, with a nod to the Con Alma Quartet—“If we were in another place, there would be a saxophone behind him”—he introduced Kearns.

Kearns began with a series of poems about Harrisburg. They visited North 6th Street (“hip hop swagger” on a “cool summer night”), a mambo dance on Allison Hill, and—in the obligatory light-hearted antipathy towards commuters—crows in Midtown defecating on state workers’ cars. In one poem, a long and compassionate tribute to an elderly couple Uptown, he reflected on “old-time Harrisburg”: the wife’s “crime watch through cigarette haze” on her porch, her husband “inconsolable” after her death, and his own death leaving behind $35,000 in credit card debt.

He continued with more tributes, to his Puerto Rican grandfather, to his mother, and to Martin Luther King. Papenfuse and his wife, who had slipped in, too, with the mayor’s lunch in tow, sat side by side in identical poses: legs crossed at the ankles, cupping take-out coffee.

“I don’t have a concept of time, so—how’m I doing?” Kearns said.

“Please keep reading,” Sloan said from the back of the house.

At the end of the reading, Kearns took a few questions. Nicholson, from Gamut, asked if he could talk about “the rich ground that Harrisburg is for so many poets.”

Kearns, nodding, credited Harrisburg’s “rich history.” “There was always music. That much I know. And my understanding is there were poets showing up off and on through our history.” By the time he became aware of it, Kearns said, he was running into poets “all over the place.” “There’s always been something about this town. There is an energy, there’s an artistic energy here.”

Joyce Davis, the mayor’s director of communications, asked if Kearns could discuss his vision for the role of poet laureate, especially in connecting with young people.

“There’s a couple things I’d like to do,” Kearns said. “And one is to help develop writing and poetry workshops in the city, one based in the Latino community, one based in the African-American community, open to everybody. And I think one of the great joys for me as a writer, as a person, as a community member, is being able to give young people that opportunity, to develop an artistic skill.”

“We have time for one more question,” Sloan said. “Yes ma’am.”

“I’m afraid I don’t have a question,” said a woman towards the back. “But I do have to thank you. Here I am on a Friday, in the middle of meetings, and phone calls, and text messages, and I didn’t expect for something to touch my heart. And I think I need to go home and write something for my mother.”

“Good! Great! I’m very glad to hear that,” Kearns said, as the room burst into applause.

“Can I borrow your words,” Sloan said. “Here, in the middle of the afternoon, with phone calls, and messages, and work, we can stop in the atrium of the city, in the center of government, for something to touch our hearts.”

He then asked Kearns to read a final poem. Kearns thought for a moment, then read “The Body of My Isla,” about protests he’d participated in against a military testing site on Vieques, an island off Puerto Rico:

5 million translucent tree frogs
singing as they must
aiming their love at the
murderous F-18s dropping
bombs and dripping poison
on Vieques, residential bombing site.

When he finished, there was another round of applause, and then members of the audience stepped forward to greet the poet, or to walk off with what Sloan, reminding them, called a “piece of spring”—a wooden birdhouse in a plastic bag.

To read “Verse Across Cultures,” TheBurg’s Q & A with Kearns, featured in this month’s issue, click here. You can listen to Kearns and the Con Alma Quartet at their SoundCloud page.

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Harrisburg 2014: A Balanced Budget?

Mayor Eric Papenfuse’s amended 2014 budget, which Harrisburg’s City Council is expected to vote on Tuesday night, has been touted as the city’s first balanced budget in years—a sign of the capital city’s successful sacrifices in the form of increased taxes and labor concessions, and a testament to its return to health after unending fiscal crisis.

But a close look reveals that the picture of a balanced budget is somewhat misleading, as the budget actually includes a $4 million shortfall, disguised in the form of a “negative expenditure” representing assumed concessions and other savings which were not realized at the time of its initial passage in December.

Deep within the 176-page budget document, under the “General Expenses” section, is a line item labeled “Concessions and Vacancies,” in the amount of $3,959,157. The item is carry-over from Mayor Linda Thompson’s final budget, adopted at the end of last year, and was retained in the amended budget Papenfuse submitted to City Council in January. The item is listed as a negative expenditure—an amount reducing, rather than adding to, the total expenditures for the year. It represents a variety of savings that the city hopes to realize before the end of 2014.

Some of these, such as the projected $1.6 million in savings achieved under the firefighters’ new labor agreement, approved by a majority union vote last Friday, have already been secured. Others, such as potential reductions in health care costs across a smaller city workforce and reductions in overtime, are hoped for but not guaranteed. The just-under $4 million figure also includes certain city positions that are budgeted for but have not yet been filled. If the city doesn’t realize all the savings that it hopes for, it could close the gap by leaving some of these vacant.

Steven Goldfield, a financial advisor to the receiver, said that the negative expenditure, while “unconventional,” should not be taken to imply a funding deficit. “We’re not going to let them adopt a budget that’s not balanced,” he said. He attributed the line item to the city’s former finance director, Robert Kroboth, and said he was uncertain why Kroboth had balanced the budget that way. The receiver and his team, Goldfield said, had emphasized to Mayor Papenfuse and the new finance director, Bruce Weber, that the new administration would have to “own this budget,” including the decision to maintain the $4 million negative expenditure line.

Weber could not be reached for comment, but Joyce Davis, the mayor’s communications director, said that Weber, the mayor and council were all aware of the negative expenditure. “It’s part of the budgeting process going forward,” she said.

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