Tag Archives: Stephen Reed

Fire in the Belly: Dave Houseal’s passion for Harrisburg firefighting history cannot be extinguished.

Dave Houseal as a Harrisburg firefighter, 1985.

David Houseal’s first memories of firefighting go back to when he was 5 or 6 years old in the mid-1950s, when his family lived in a house across the street from the old Progress firehouse in Susquehanna Township.

Whenever the wail of the station’s roof siren would pierce the air, young Houseal never failed to scramble up to his home’s top-floor attic for a bird’s eye view of the action.

As it turned out, that same little boy who hurried to watch the fire engines would grow up to become a Harrisburg firefighter and a noted curator of the city’s firefighting history.

“Firefighting is a very noble profession,” he said succinctly.

After a long career with the Harrisburg Fire Bureau, Houseal, now 69, retired as a chief in 2003.

Retirement, however, didn’t put a stop to Houseal. He’s since developed a second career as a book author and serves as historian of the Harrisburg bureau, a post he’s held since his appointment by former Mayor Stephen Reed.

Housel has authored several books about the Harrisburg area’s firefighting history and his own experience during his years of service. His first book, “We Can See It from the Bridge,” was published in 2010, titled after a phrase common to Harrisburg firefighters.

“I’ve always been a voracious reader, but there never really was anything to read about firefighting,” Houseal said. “A lot of people were craving books for firefighters written by firefighters. I draw a lot on my own stuff that I have and voluminous correspondence from others.”

 

Just Awesome

Today, Houseal is pounding the keyboard to finish a fifth book in his converted writer’s cottage outside his South Hanover Township home. At first, his work was published in conjunction with “Engine 82” author Dennis Smith, “a really good friend,” he said. After Smith died five years ago, Houseal began self-publishing his books in conjunction with David A. Smith Printing of Harrisburg.

Years ago, Houseal also was appointed as chairman of the steering committee that established the Pennsylvania National Fire Museum.

“Dave has been involved with the Pennsylvania National Fire Museum since its inception and continues to be a driving force in the museum,” said Jason Lloyd, Harrisburg Bureau of Fire battalion chief and owner of the Allison Hook & Ladder Co. #2 firehouse. “While he’s contributed in so many ways to the fire companies he’s been involved with, I believe his involvement with the history of the service is his greatest accomplishment.”

Since 2003, the museum has been based in an 1899-era firehouse that once was home to the Reily Hose Co. No. 10 of Harrisburg. From the beginning, Houseal has tackled the role of historian with profound enthusiasm.

“Dave literally digs through endless archives at the museum, online resources and his family’s personal records to post events daily,” Lloyd said.

Among his many source materials: newspaper articles, historical photos and turn-of-the-century Sanborn city directory maps, meticulously research and cross-referenced. Much of his research eventually appears on the very active PA Fire Museum Facebook page.

“It’s just awesome what he does,” Lloyd said.

 

Dynasty

Considering Houseal’s lineage, it’s little wonder that he sprouted an avid interest in firefighting.

His father, Robert M. Houseal Jr., grandfather, Robert Houseal Sr., and two great-uncles all served as firefighters in the Harrisburg area, with Robert Sr. and Robert Jr. each attaining the posts of fire chief.

Houseal began volunteering as a local firefighter as soon as he was old enough to do so.

After serving four years in the U.S. Navy, he returned to Harrisburg to become the first graduate of HACC’s fire science program in 1974. A year later, he joined the ranks of the Harrisburg bureau, where he remained for nearly 30 years.

Nonetheless, Houseal said that he “never felt pressured” to continue the family’s firefighting dynasty. Instead, it was a passion he developed all on his own.

“I liked the people I worked with,” he said. “Being there was like a family.”

Firefighting research also is family tradition started by Houseal’s father.

“Grandpa always thought he was right about everything,” Houseal said. “So, that started dad to dig in and look for facts.”

Eventually, Houseal’s father compiled enough material during his long hours at the Pennsylvania State Library to fill four filing cabinets. After his father’s death in 1976, Dave became the obvious heir of these voluminous files, all of which provided a running start for his own recordkeeping.

“This is the kind of thing that makes Dave truly special,” Lloyd said. “He truly has a passion for both the fire service and the history.”

The Pennsylvania National Fire Museum is located at 1820 N. 4th St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.pnfm.org or call 717-232-8915.

Continue Reading

Ante Up? Harrisburg debates chipping in for new revolving loan fund.

Harrisburg City Council at tonight’s work session meeting.

The Harrisburg Business Opportunity Fund hasn’t doled out its first loans yet, but its leaders already have their eyes on growth.

Last week, Impact Harrisburg, the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Authority and the Community First Fund announced the launch of a new $1 million loan fund for small businesses in the city of Harrisburg. The Harrisburg Business Opportunity Fund will grant loans ranging from $1,000 to $100,000 to working and aspiring entrepreneurs who might be overlooked by traditional lending institutions.

HBOF partners hope that Harrisburg will eventually contribute money to the initiative, but local leaders say they’re hesitant to get back into the loan business.

Harrisburg launched its own revolving loan fund in 1984 under former Mayor Steve Reed, which disbursed millions of dollars of high-risk loans to local businesses over the course of two decades. Many recipients went delinquent on payments. Current Mayor Eric Papenfuse said tonight that more than $1.5 million in city money was lost through the venture, though the city is still receiving payments from some loan recipients.

Today, $1 million from the moribund revolving loan fund sits untouched in a city account. Impact Harrisburg Executive Director Sheila Dow Ford suggested at a City Council work session tonight that some of that money could go into the Harrisburg Business Opportunity Fund.

Unlike the city’s revolving loan fund, the Harrisburg Business Opportunity Fund will be administered by an experienced loan panel and underwritten by the Community First Fund, which Dow Ford said will mitigate risk and bolster return on investment.

Papenfuse, however, said he’s wary of lending out public dollars.

“The city has a very poor history with these types of loan funds,” he said. “They’re prone to corruption and have cost us millions of dollars. I don’t know if the city’s role is taking risk with taxpayer dollars.”

What’s more, it’s not clear if the money in the revolving loan fund could be designated for any other use. Papenfuse said that there are few records from the loan fund’s inception, and some of the money may be legally bound to its original purpose with the city.

Papenfuse and Jackie Parker, the city’s director of community and economic development who also sits on the board of Impact Harrisburg, agreed that the city should wait to invest in the fund until it sees how its early loans are disbursed and if they are reaching a target population of entrepreneurs. Parker stressed that the purpose of the fund is to empower people who want to start businesses, not just entrepreneurs looking to scale up an existing venture.

“The right approach here is making sure the fund is successful in getting money in the hands of folks who really need it,” Parker said. “We would consider a potential future transfer of money, but I think it’s premature.”

Council President Wanda Williams, on the other hand, called on the city to chip in to the new fund. She argued that if Harrisburg allows developers to build high-rent apartments and office space in the city’s downtown business district, it should find a way to empower small business owners.

“We have developers coming in and renovating buildings into high-rent places people cannot afford – why not look at small businesses?” Williams said. “We need to release some of that money.”

Papenfuse said that Impact Harrisburg has not formally invited the city to contribute to the fund, but he would consider a partnership after seeing how the first round of loans are distributed.

But he’s also in favor of pursuing other options, such as neighborhood-based business incubators, as a way to help entrepreneurs.

“There are potentially lots of ways to invest in small businesses,” Papenfuse said. “This [loan fund] is just one option on the table.”

Continue Reading

Question of Ownership: Reed requests return of artifacts, memorabilia after pleading guilty.

two white men loading a truck with what appear to be old chairs. They stand outside a red brick home

Two years ago, the state seized many artifacts from Stephen Reed’s Cumberland Street house. The ownership of those are now an issue.

What should be the fate of 1,790 items seized from former Mayor Steve Reed?

A judge began grappling with that question today, as the commonwealth and Reed’s attorneys argued over matters of rightful ownership and proper return.

In February, Reed pleaded guilty to 20 counts of theft-related charges. Now that that case is settled, he’s asking the state to return artifacts, memorabilia and city documents seized during the criminal investigation.

Reed’s lawyer Allen Welch insisted that these items should be returned to Reed, while state Deputy Attorney General Danielle Graham said that the former mayor needs to prove ownership.

In a Thursday review hearing, Judge Kevin Hess began to deal with the legal arguments for returning the items to the rightful party.

“The issue is who has the burden of proving what, when items are seized in relation to an investigation but aren’t connected to illegal activity,” Hess said.

Hess moved to schedule a civil trial this summer to determine the ownership of the artifacts.

The state possesses 150 items subjected to criminal prosecution and about 1,600 items seized under a grand jury indictment that were not subjected to criminal prosecution, Graham said. The state cannot return the 1,600 items that were not subject to criminal investigation because “when [they were] seized, it was in connection of an investigation,” she said.

Saying “they’re mine” should be enough to return the items to Reed, Welch said.

“They should be returned immediately,” he said. “The commonwealth has no basis to [keep them].”

However, Graham said the state seeks “the production of credible evidence” that proves Reed owned the items.

Hess compared this situation to police officers seizing a television in addition to illegal drugs and guns in someone’s living room. The television set was seized as part of a criminal investigation, but the suspect didn’t prove ownership to have the television returned, he said.

To that, Graham said, “It’s nuanced.”

“The distinguishing factor is that this is significant memorabilia with a specific, unique purpose and high value,” she said.

The state has some receipts and “hand-written, somewhat illegible” documentation, Graham said. However, she questioned their authenticity and said her office had difficulty connecting the documents with the corresponding items. She requested the original documents to inspect their authenticity, she said.

Welch said Reed can prove he owns the items in question.

“We are prepared to present evidence to show when they were purchased by Stephen Reed, not the City of Harrisburg,” he said.

Hess suggested the process could be streamlined.

“If they establish ownership of 150, [it could] dispense the necessity of showing evidence of the rest of the 1,600,” he said.

The state possesses city documents such as mayoral notes and minutes from cabinet meetings, Deputy Attorney General Rebecca Franz said after the hearing. The state cannot return the documents to the city right now because Reed asserts that they are his items, she said.

Author: Danielle Roth

Continue Reading

Final Mayoral Debate: Candidates throw last punches, address campaign issues

Harrisburg’s five mayoral candidates made a final push for votes last night in a concluding mayoral debate that turned heated at times.

Moderators Blake Lynch and Mark Hall, an ABC27 reporter, kept the debate civil, though the town hall-style event at Harrisburg Midtown Arts Center kicked off to a feisty start.

Moderators Blake Lynch, left, and ABC27 Reporter Mark Hall, right, stand in front of mayoral candidates, from left to right, Lewis Butts, Gloria Martin-Roberts, Mayor Eric Papenfuse, Anthony Harrell and Jennie Jenkins.

Challenger Gloria Martin-Roberts started her opening remarks by separating herself from two former mayors, who both have indicated support for her, as well as her campaign treasurer, James Ellison.

“My name is not Linda Thompson, it’s not James Ellison and it’s not Stephen Reed,” Martin-Roberts said. “Some of you may be confused by the negative mailers that you have received over the past couple of weeks…They’ve had their time.”

She then criticized a PennLive article about a letter that Reed sent to encourage a friend to donate to the Martin-Roberts campaign. She said she did not ask Reed to write the letter to request the donation.

Likewise, incumbent Mayor Eric Papenfuse responded to campaign rhetoric from the Martin-Roberts camp. He referenced a Facebook post from Ellison that claimed Papenfuse purchased properties while mayor.

“I have not purchased any investment properties since taking office,” he said, adding that his wife also has not purchased any properties since he was elected mayor in 2013. “This is a ridiculous falsehood of my character.”

He asked Martin-Roberts to admit to the falsehood and have Ellison take down his Facebook post.

Martin-Roberts said she would not have Ellison take down the post. She pulled out several mailers sent by Papenfuse’s campaign that link her to Harrisburg’s old guard, while saying, “This is lack of character.”

Later in the debate, Martin-Roberts did say sorry.

“I apologize for losing my temper,” she said.

Challengers Jennie Jenkins, Anthony Harrell and Lewis Butts also addressed issues that have arisen over the course of their campaigns, as moderators fired questions from the community during the second half of the 90-minute event.

Jenkins addressed her termination from her position as police officer with the city. Last year, Jenkins entered a county program meant for first-time offenders charged with nonviolent crimes. This came after the city suspended her in 2013 after accusing her of taking $7,000 from the Police Athletic League.

Moderators asked why she entered this program if she maintained her innocence in the theft case.

“It was a way I could move on with my life,” she said, adding that she spent two-and-a-half years without income while tied up in the lawsuit.

Moderators bluntly asked Harrell, “Who are you, and where have you been?” They followed up and asked specifically about his community or church involvement aside from his two well-known biographical details: that he served in the armed forces and now studies full-time at Central Penn College.

“I lived in the community, purchased from stores, and I send my children to schools,” he said.

Butts touted his Harrisburg First plan, which includes a citywide Wi-Fi network, a shopping mall at PennDOT and, most notably, a hydroelectric dam in the Susquehanna River.

He called himself the “revenue candidate.”

“The hydro-power dam [would bring in] a lot of extra money for roads, scholarships and anything that we need,” he said.

With the final mayoral debate complete, voters get the last word on Tuesday, May 16, with the primary election.

Author: Danielle Roth

Continue Reading

Steve and the City: A final assessment of Harrisburg’s “Mayor for Life.”

Illustration by Rich Hauck.

It’s complicated. Very complicated.

That may best describe Harrisburg’s relationship status with its former mayor for life and now-convicted felon, Stephen R. Reed.

Following Reed’s recent plea deal on 20 counts of theft-related charges, the conversation began once again about the legacy of the man who served for nearly three decades as the city’s chief executive.

Reed’s judge, the Hon. Kevin Hess, didn’t hesitate to share his personal opinion with the courtroom.

“He revitalized the city of Harrisburg in ways clearly visible to anyone who bothered to look out the windows of this courthouse,” said Hess, paying tribute to an admitted felon who he was about to sentence for his crimes.

So, was Reed a mayor of great vision who singlehandedly revived Pennsylvania’s dying capital city? Or was he a financially reckless dictator who drove Harrisburg headlong into a ditch?

Personally, I tend toward the second explanation because, as I stated once in another column, leaving a city you ran for 28 years in grave financial distress, essentially bankrupt, forced into receivership, is pretty much the definition of failure. To me, that ends the argument.

However, even I can’t ignore the physical legacy that Reed left behind: Harrisburg University, Whitaker Center, the Civil War Museum, the Hilton, restaurant row. These happened on his watch—several were basically his ideas—and there’s no denying that.

That said—what marks a successful project? Is it the initial idea? The launch? Or is it the ability for that project to carry on year after year, to grow, to become institutionalized in a community?

For an example, let me discuss a project that’s especially close to my heart—TheBurg.

About a decade ago, two guys had an idea, and, well, everyone has some crazy idea for a business, right? Maybe it’s a community magazine, but maybe it’s a restaurant or a shop or a new school. I can tell you that the idea is the easy part, the most fun part.

Next come the plan and the financing. That’s harder, but, if you’re determined, you can probably jump those hurdles, too. We used our own cash—and seriously underestimated how much capital we needed to make TheBurg sustainable. Reed used everyone else’s—and, likewise, severely underestimated how much capital he needed.

So, in January 2009, after much planning and our own money at stake, we launched TheBurg with three strikes already against us. We began a print publication as print was declining (strike one); as the Great Recession reached its frightening depth (strike two); and in a city itself in financial free fall (you’re out!). At that time, “shorting” TheBurg (betting against us) would have been the smart move.

However, we’ve succeeded far beyond my expectations. Sure, there were major hiccups along the way, but we were able to make our project work with continual hard work, a talented staff, solid leadership, community involvement, a bit more capital and maybe some good luck.

To me, this is what gets lost when someone credits Steve Reed for what downtown Harrisburg has become. He may have set the wheels in motion in some cases, but the truly hard, day-to-day work fell to people like Eric Darr, Michael Hanes, Brad Jones, Tom Scott, Steve Weinstock, Juan Garcia, Nick Laus, Qui Qui Musarra, Staci Basore and many others. They’re the ones who deserve the real credit for making downtown successful.

Along the journey, they’ve had their own version of TheBurg’s “three strikes,” including the city’s financial crisis, skyrocketing parking rates and years of skewed, harmful press coverage. In several cases, Reed’s crazy financial schemes proved themselves to be major burdens. Imagine starting a project under such a load of debt that it’s hard to understand your obligations, much less pay them—yet still succeeding. Now, that’s leadership!

So, looking at Reed’s legacy, I don’t want to dismiss his contributions out of hand. He had some successes. Of course, to make an honest assessment, you also have to examine the opportunity costs involved (how many roads could have been paved and pipes laid for some $18 million spent on artifacts?), as well as his many failures (everything from three abandoned museum projects to the never-built city gateways to the Verizon Tower bond insanity). And then, my God, there’s the broken-down, leveraged-up city incinerator. Talk about an unmitigated disaster.

In the end, I simply can’t get beyond Reed’s financial destruction of the city and the school district, which both needed state intervention to survive. Is that success? In defending my position to Reed supporters, I’ve often asked them what they could have done with the essentially blank check that Reed had, with the $1 billion or so in debt that he and his cohorts piled on the city and the school district. For that money, shouldn’t tiny Harrisburg be in far better shape than it is, with solid roads, sewer, safety and schools?

There’s an old saying—I’m sure you know it—that a hungry person may order too much because his eyes are too big for his stomach. That’s rather how I feel about Steve Reed. He had a raging desire to impose his solutions on Harrisburg, remaking the city in his image and indulging his own appetites in the process. However, he had very limited financial ability to make it happen. Unfortunately, that didn’t stop him.

Lawrance Binda is editor-in-chief of TheBurg.

Continue Reading

Reed Gets Probation: Case had “whole lot more smoke with very little fire,” says judge.

Former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed received a probation sentence today.

Former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed received a probation sentence today.

What began as a man’s ambitious vision to develop a network of museums in a city of 50,000 people ended today with two years of probation for former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed.

This afternoon, Judge Kevin Hess sentenced the former “mayor for life” to probation for 20 counts of receiving stolen property. Reed must also pay a $2,000 fee plus the cost of the prosecution.

Hess gave Reed’s stage-four cancer, guilty plea and clean criminal record as reasons for the probation sentencing, as opposed to jail time. He also cited improvements made to the city during Reed’s tenure as mayor, which are “visible to anyone who bothered to look out the windows of this courthouse,” he said.

In addition, Hess called the nearly 500 counts of corruption charges that the state initially brought against the seven-term mayor a “whole lot more smoke with very little fire.”

Hess received numerous letters about the case, including a 161-page victim’s impact statement filed by the city.  In it, the city requested a two-to-five-year jail sentence

“We felt that would have been an appropriate sentence given the magnitude of the crime and a continued pattern by the mayor for not accepting the responsibility of his actions,” said current Mayor Eric Papenfuse, clearly disappointed by the judge’s decision.

Deputy Attorney General Rebecca Franz, the lead prosecutor, said that her office achieved justice today and accepts the sentencing.

“We have brought closure for the citizens of Harrisburg and the Commonwealth,” she said.

Papenfuse said this sentencing did not send “a strong message about public corruption.”

He did see some positives. Reed’s guilty plea for these 20 counts leaves the door open for civil suits and possible charges against other individuals from the Reed administration.

“The city currently is a party to what could become millions and millions of dollars in a civil suit,” he said.

The city seeks the return of the artifacts and “tractor-trailer loads” of public documents from Reed’s 28 years as mayor, he said.

“He packed up every public record associated with his time in office,” Papenfuse said. “We want them all back.”

Reed also alluded to an unfinished ending to his tenure as mayor.

“One day, there may be additional details about the case that come to light, and so forth, which I think you’ll find very interesting at that time,” Reed said, adding, “but please don’t sit on my doorstep to try to find out.”

He will now focus on his stage-four prostate cancer, which will eventually spread and become bone cancer, he said.

“It is a relief for the whole thing to be over,” Reed said.

Author: Danielle Roth

Continue Reading

Reed Guilty: Longtime Mayor Pleads to 20 Theft-related Counts

reedplead

Former Mayor Stephen Reed gives his statement with his lawyer, Henry E. Hockeimer.

Former Harrisburg Mayor Stephen Reed today pleaded guilty to 20 counts of receiving stolen property, ending a decades-long saga that began with one man’s ambitious vision for a series of museums throughout the city.

To a surprised courtroom, Reed’s lawyers announced that he had accepted a plea bargain with the state that dropped most of 112 criminal counts in exchange for pleading guilty to two felony and 18 misdemeanor counts. The proceedings lasted less than an hour.

“He’s charged with misappropriating public tax dollars and using them for his own personal gain,” said Deputy Attorney General Rebecca Franz, the lead prosecutor. “This sends a strong message about public corruption.”

This story began back in the 1990s, when Reed and several associates began buying and shipping back to Harrisburg thousands of artifacts for a series of museums he wanted to build in the city. After Reed left office, the city auctioned off most of the items. However, in June 2015, state investigators found some of the artifacts in Reed’s Cumberland Street home and in a nearby storage facility.

A month later, the state charged the seven-term mayor with almost 500 criminal counts, including charges of theft, bribery and evidence tampering. However, the court threw out most of those, determining they violated the statute of limitations because they had occurred too long ago.

Reed called the proceedings “gut wrenchingly humiliating.” He stuck to a script with defense lawyer Henry E. Hockeimer of Philadelphia-based Ballard Spahr by his side. Reed said he personally purchased similar items when the city purchased artifacts. These items got mixed up while moving out of the mayor’s office, he said.

“How they got into some box when moving out seven years ago? I still do not know,” he said. “My guess is that they were thrown in with a bunch of similar things in the haste of getting everything packed.”

He said he takes responsibility for these 20 counts.

The artifacts, valued at more than $18,000 total, included documents, letters and other Wild West relics connected to Native American groups and famous figures such as Buffalo Bill.

A $3,500-value brochure about Geronimo, a late-1880s Apache leader, landed Reed one of two felony counts. A $2,500-value letter from a Missouri convict earned him another felony.

Items worthy of misdemeanors included a check that Oklahoma outlaw AJ Jennings signed and a photograph of an infantry group from Montana. None of the 20 items appear to originate from Pennsylvania.

Reed’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for Friday afternoon. He could face up to 101 years in prison per standard issuing. However, his actual sentence will range from probation to nine months in a county jail, Franz said. Reed, 67, has stage 4 cancer, but appeared healthy at the trial.

City Solicitor Neil Grover said Harrisburg will submit a formal written statement to the prosecution outlining their request for the sentencing length.

“The city is a victim of the crime,” he said.

Reed’s attorney said they still seek the return of the artifacts that Reed did not plead to. Franz said the Office of Attorney General will not return the artifacts.

Franz said the plea deal came together over the last couple of days.

“The fact that the defendant came into court today and entered a plea of guilty achieves justice,” Franz said.

Author: Danielle Roth

Continue Reading

She’s In: Former City Council President Gloria Martin-Roberts announces bid for Harrisburg Mayor

 

Former Harrisburg City Council President Gloria Martin-Roberts announced her bid for Harrisburg mayor today, saying that she seeks a unified, prosperous city.

Speaking to an enthusiastic crowd of about 100 at the National Civil War Museum, Martin-Roberts said she would seek to build better community relations with the police, support small businesses and encourage home ownership. Her platform, with the slogan of “A City of Unity,” aims to include parts of the city that she said have been left out of Harrisburg’s economic growth.

Gloria Martin Roberts 11.14.16 mayor bid

Former Harrisburg City Council President Gloria Martin-Roberts announced her bid for Harrisburg mayor today.

The Harrisburg native, self-described as “homegrown,” grew up in the Allison Hill and Uptown neighborhoods and graduated from John Harris High School. She said she seeks to serve all of the Harrisburg community.

“I do not have a favorite neighborhood,” she said.

Martin-Roberts retired after two terms on city council in 2011, including one term as council president. In 2012, she ran for 103th seat in the state’s House of Representatives and lost to now-state Rep. Patty Kim. She also served on the city’s school board.

Martin-Roberts took the audience on a trip down memory lane as she recounted local businesses, restaurants and medical offices that have since vanished from Harrisburg with suburbanization. The audience cheered and shouted as Martin-Roberts brought up cherished childhood spots like Martha’s Turntable, the Shake Shop and F&W Fish House.

She called this period “economic development at its best” then added that she doesn’t want to return to the past, but rather return the spirit of the city.

“The common denominator was a city of unity,” she said.

Crowd Gloria Martin Roberts 11.14.16

A crowd of about 100 supporters cheered as she announced her platform.

She praised former Mayor Stephen Reed, with whom she served while on council, for his efforts in rebuilding downtown Harrisburg.

“It was this young man’s vision to rebuild this city,” she said. “Let’s give kudos where kudos is due.”

However, she does not plan to get involved with the school district like Reed did. “I have no desire to take over the Harrisburg School District,” she said to big cheers.

She had some subtle digs at Mayor Eric Papenfuse, repeating that she would engage civilly in disputes. The location itself at the National Civil War Museum held significance, as Papenfuse has repeatedly called for a shutdown of the museum.

She also criticized the fact that the city has hired consultants to create a plan for Reservoir Park and took aim at the bike lane on Front Street, saying it’s “an accident waiting to happen.”

In another rebuke to Papenfuse, she said she would be a “consensus builder,” working closely with such entities as the Dauphin County commissioners, the Harrisburg Chamber & CREDC, the school district and City Council.

“As your mayor, I will be an authentic mayor, a leader who I would want to follow,” she said.

Author: Danielle Roth

Continue Reading

Reed Lawyers Demand Fees from City in Records Case

Attorney Henry E. Hockeimer, Jr., left, and former Mayor Stephen Reed after Reed's arraignment July 14 on corruption charges.

Attorney Henry E. Hockeimer, Jr., left, and former Mayor Stephen Reed after Reed’s arraignment July 14 on corruption charges.

The defense team for Stephen Reed has asked a judge to order Harrisburg to pay some of Reed’s legal fees, as part of an ongoing and increasingly bitter fight over access to city records from the former mayor’s tenure.

In his Jan. 29 filing, Henry Hockeimer, of the Philadelphia firm Ballard Spahr, disputed the city’s reasons for withholding documents he is seeking under the state open records law, claiming they are “entirely personal” and without legal merit.

Hockeimer argued the city’s responses have shown “bad faith” and asked the court to require Harrisburg to pay the costs of what he described as the “frivolous litigation” forced by the administration’s withholding of records.

Hockeimer first requested the documents in July, after a state grand jury approved a sweeping array of charges against Reed in an ongoing corruption probe. The city so far has declined to provide them, claiming among other reasons that doing so would force it to violate a judicial gag order and break grand jury secrecy rules.

Hockeimer sharply critiqued those claims in his filing, arguing the city has released similar records to news outlets without complaint. He cited four news stories, including one published by TheBurg, that he said proved the city denied him access “solely because he represents Stephen Reed.”

Two of those stories, one appearing in the Patriot-News and one on abc27, refer to right-to-know requests partially granted by the city this year, although for much narrower sets of records than those requested by Hockeimer in July.

TheBurg article, published in the spring of 2015, detailed receipts of Reed’s purchases that were provided to the magazine by a different entity altogether. Hockeimer’s filing claimed the city provided the receipts, though they were, in fact, provided by Capital Region Water, the successor agency to the Harrisburg Authority.

Reed submitted the receipts to the Harrisburg Authority to support his request for a $33,000 reimbursement in 2003. The article identified Capital Region Water as the source of the documents, but that information was omitted in the legal filing.

The filing similarly mischaracterized a 2012 Patriot-News article, which referred to Harrisburg Authority documents provided in response to a right-to-know request. Nick Malawskey, the article’s author, confirmed Thursday the records were provided by the authority, not the city.

Hockeimer also said the city discriminated against Reed because of his “alleged criminal conduct.” He cited a prior filing in the case, in which the city said it was “fundamentally unfair and unjust” to force the costs of a vast records request by an alleged criminal upon a purported victim of the crime.

City solicitor Neil Grover stood by that argument Wednesday night, saying that the rights of victims of alleged crimes were also relevant in the case, and not only questions about open records laws.

Grover also denied the city had acted in bad faith and said Harrisburg would “fight a question about the awarding of fees as far as the courts will allow us to go.”

“We have acted in good faith,” he said. “If there’s anyone who’s acted in bad faith, it’s the requestor.”

A representative of Ballard Spahr said on Thursday that Hockeimer is out of the country until next week. Terence Grugan, another attorney at the firm identified as also representing Reed on the Jan. 29 filing, said he had no comment.

Findings of bad faith by an agency in records requests do occur, but are exceedingly rare, according to Erik Arneson, director of the state Office of Open Records. Of the 13,000 or so requests that have been appealed to his agency, fewer than 10 have later resulted in a judge making a bad faith finding, Arneson said.

Arneson said he was “extremely confident” in his agency’s prior analysis, which held that at least some of the records, which would have been deemed public prior to any criminal investigation, did not suddenly become privileged because of their more recent connection to a grand jury probe.

At the same time, he said the intersection of open records law and laws regarding grand jury secrecy was “not a settled area,” and that he understood why the city appealed his agency’s finding.

“I don’t fault the city for making the arguments they’re making,” Arneson said. “They’re being cautious. I get where they’re coming from.”

Judge Kevin Hess heard arguments last month on the records case, after the city appealed the Office of Open Record’s prior finding.

Hess is a former Cumberland County president judge who was appointed to oversee Reed’s criminal case after Dauphin County recused itself. He asked the city to submit a legal brief on the records issue, which he is also overseeing, by this Friday.

Continue Reading

Collateral Damage: Harrisburg’s revolving loan fund was supposed to spark business development. Decades later, the fund is dormant, and the city is still trying to figure out who owes what.

Screenshot 2015-10-30 12.29.18It was, as others observed at the time, a kind of public shaming. The administration of Mayor Linda Thompson, at a time when Harrisburg was on the brink of financial collapse, released a list of businesses that owed the city money.

A bakery that borrowed $175,000 in 2009 and soon closed without making a single payment. A bar that got a $160,000 loan in 2005, shut down after running afoul of the law, and never paid back a $150,000 balance—even after its owner won $1 million in the lottery. A downtown restaurant and jazz club that got almost a quarter-million in 1990 and has been in and out of default ever since, having paid back less than a sixth of what it borrowed more than two decades earlier.

They had all received money under a city loan program started under former Mayor Stephen Reed and strongly critiqued by the Thompson administration. “There was not a proactive approach to collecting delinquent loans,” Jack Robinson, then head of the Department of Building and Housing Development, said in 2012. Thompson’s successor, Mayor Eric Papenfuse, questioned the program, too—a year before running for office, he suggested its origins fit into a pattern of “secretive, unsupervised spending” under Reed.

And yet, after more than five years of successive initiatives to improve collections and enable a new round of loans, the city has made little progress. Program records remain incomplete or missing. The city’s security filings with the state, which ensure a creditor’s priority in the event a business declares bankruptcy, have been allowed to expire. With rare exception, businesses that collectively owed $850,000 in past-due payments in July of 2011 have not made a payment since. As of this past July, the total overdue amount owed to the city was $1.1 million—money that could have been used to help fund new enterprises or perhaps even, because of its source, been spent on a variety of non-business projects citywide.

When a government makes economic development loans, past program officials say, they should be expected to default at a higher rate than what might be found in the private sector. “Remember, you’re taking the next-tier loans,” said Jeffrey Schaffer, who headed Harrisburg’s economic development office in the 1990s. “You want to take the ones that don’t quite make it.” The program targeted speculative or risky projects that traditional investors were reluctant to fund. “They’re coming to the city because the city is the last possible resort,” said Kathy Possinger, whose department briefly oversaw the program during the first months of the Thompson administration. “The potential for default is pretty high.”

In many cases, however, the city appears to have increased the risk of loss with its own policies. For several years, the program operated without the involvement of an independent review committee, which had previously vetted prospective borrowers. Many of the now-delinquent loans were made in years where there was no committee oversight. Jeff Baltimore, a City Council member who was a deputy director in the city’s economic development office in the late 1990s, said the loan policies could be “very uncomfortable.” He told the story of one large loan that Reed described at a meeting as “self-amortizing.” The term normally refers to a loan, like a mortgage, where the principal is gradually paid off over the life of the loan. But the mayor was describing something more like a grant—a loan that would be forgiven if the business stayed in town five years.

The Papenfuse administration has said it is pursuing delinquent accounts and reviewing its legal options. Jackie Parker, director of the Department of Community and Economic Development, which now oversees the loan portfolio, said the city sends notices each month to businesses with past-due loan payments. “The approach is review, find out what our standing is, and then go after them legally,” Parker said. “I don’t know about the shaming method.” But Papenfuse, when I asked him about the delinquent accounts, said the city had limited expectations. “In order to collect on some of these loans, it would take a legal strategy and a deployment of legal resources which the city can neither afford nor has the capacity to do at the present moment,” he said. Given the costs of trying to collect the money, and the odds that, in many cases, there is nothing to collect, he said he is not sure the investment would yield a worthwhile return.

The longer-term goal, Parker said, is to start lending again, with a particular emphasis on moderate-sized loans—less than $50,000—to smaller businesses. If the city is going to go back into the banking business, it’s worth asking what can be learned from the first time around.

 …

The city’s original revolving loan program was created in 1984. It was termed “revolving” because it was meant to be self-perpetuating: payments from early borrowers would provide the funding for future loans. A five-person loan review committee, with two members from financial institutions and three from the business community, would approve or reject loan applicants at public meetings. At least a fifth of the loans, by dollar amount, were to go to minority-owned businesses and at least 5 percent to businesses owned by women.

The program’s initial seed money came from federal block grants, according to a budget approved by City Council. But in March 1990, Reed issued an executive order creating a second “special projects” loan program. According to the order, federal grant guidelines were too limiting; the program rules were “appropriate and applicable to some types of economic development projects but not all opportunities related to City economic development.” Among other things, Reed wanted to increase the maximum loan amount from $100,000 to $250,000 and relax a job creation requirement. The order said the mayor’s office would create its own rules for this second program, although the same staff and review committee approved the loans. “The mayor was very hands-off,” Jeffrey Schaffer said.

The source of funding for the “special projects” loans would later become a point of controversy. In the spring of 1990, the city sold its water system to a related government entity, the Harrisburg Authority. In a series of executive orders, Reed dictated how the city would spend around $7 million in proceeds from the sale. He hoped to set aside $4 million for the special projects loan program. In February 1992, a group of residents sued Reed, claiming that City Council alone had the power to spend the money. In an opinion more than four years later, Dauphin County Judge Joseph Kleinfelter agreed. By then, the question of who should spend the money was moot—it had all either already been spent or moved back under council’s control. But Kleinfelter sided with the residents on the question of law, writing that Reed should have known better from a prior decision. Though Reed may have “had the best interests of the City in mind,” Kleinfelter wrote, “it is always a serious matter when a city official disregards a judicial ruling and yields to Machiavellian precepts in assuming authority which is not vested in him.”

For all that, the first round of big-ticket loans seemed to fit within the description of economic development. In 1991, in one of his executive orders, Reed had referred to a “high need” for the loans “during a time of national economic recession hallmarked by tightened commercial bank and other lender credit.” A development company owned by a man named Douglas Russell got a $250,000 loan to renovate a Herr Street building into offices and apartments. A married couple, Sandra Buckley-Rusnov and her husband Cornelius, got a $350,000 loan to build houses along Rudy Road. Richard Engle, who owned a company called Central Business Systems, received $250,000 to relocate to S. 13th Street. “We were competing for businesses,” Schaffer said. “A business might be looking at locating in either Harrisburg or Lemoyne. Well, did Lemoyne have a revolving loan program?”

Minutes from the first two years of loan committee meetings reveal little about how applicants were vetted. Occasionally members tabled a vote, asking for further documentation from an applicant. Here and there, a note might reflect a requirement to create a certain number of jobs or record that the loan was contingent on additional financing from other sources. But for the most part, city staff simply recommended a loan be made, and the committee unanimously approved. Schaffer recalled a time when some reporters showed up to watch a meeting, and afterwards asked him, “Is that it?” “I don’t know what they were expecting, but it wasn’t very exciting,” he said. The companies’ financial records, which were deemed proprietary, were not made public. But aside from that, Schaffer said, the committee “was very transparent.”

Nonetheless, some wondered whether the loans might reflect political influence or favoritism. In September 1991, the Patriot-News wrote about the number of Reed campaign donors who received either loans or grants out of the proceeds of the water system sale. Russell, the Herr Street developer, had given $100 to the Reed campaign; Engle, of Central Business Systems, had given $350. Those amounts might seem small; in fact, one impression you get from the article is that, for a certain period in Harrisburg, the unusual thing was not to donate to Reed’s campaign. (According to the report, Schaffer himself had given $700.) Reed, for his part, told the paper there had been “no undue influence and no action taken by these boards based on political mayoral intervention.”

Still, it’s hard not to wonder about the provenance of some of the program’s early loans. In 1995, the city loaned $250,000 to James Pianka, at the time a city magistrate, to construct batting cages on City Island. The loan came with a 25-year term and a 2-percent interest rate, at a time when the national prime rate was between 8 and 9 percent. Schaffer said he had initially come up with the batting cage idea himself, but that after speaking with the mayor, he had concluded it would be improper for a city employee to have a concession in a city park. He said Reed later asked if Pianka could develop the project instead. (Pianka, after saying he didn’t know who Schaffer was, declined to answer questions for this story.)

Pianka “was always appreciative,” Schaffer said, though he added that the business “could easily have failed.” He suggested that those who saw overly generous terms didn’t understand the business risks. “People said, ‘He got it because he was a magistrate.’ No, he got it because he had the idea and put up the collateral.” Pianka, who still owns the batting cages, continues to make a $1,200 payment each month. He is one of only a handful of recipients current on their loans.

 …

Another of the up-to-date borrowers is Char Magaro. In 2007, Magaro took out a $135,000 city loan to buy a liquor license for Bella Mundo, a fine-dining restaurant in Shipoke. (The restaurant has since relocated to Front Street, as Char’s Tracy Mansion.) She found the application process and the terms—10 years at 4-percent interest—to be “very reasonable.” “They didn’t put me through too many hoops,” she said. The loan was a safe bet, in part, because the liquor license was pledged as collateral. “Liquor licenses are self-collateralizing,” Magaro said. “They have value.”

The city has nearly twice as many delinquent loans as current—25 to 13. In a way, though, it’s remarkable the city has any current accounts at all. In 2010, a consulting firm called Management Partners published an audit of Harrisburg government, as part of an early intervention during a period of mounting financial distress. Included in their report was a survey of the loan program, whose portfolio at the time encompassed more than 60 small-business loans totaling almost $7 million. Or so they believed. According to the report, the city “was unable to provide the exact amount of outstanding loans,” and other information about the program could not be verified. “The fact that they’re making loans to people and don’t have records of it is a problem,” Jerry Newfarmer, one of the consultants who worked on the report, told me recently. “That makes no sense to me.”

The recordkeeping problem seems to date to late 2009 and early 2010, during the transition from the Reed to the Thompson administration. The Mayor’s Office of Economic Development, which had previously overseen the loan program, was dissolved, and the loan portfolio was merged into the Department of Building and Housing Development. The staff did not follow. Linda Walker, a deputy director in MOED who closely oversaw the loan program for many years, told me that was politics—when you took a supervisory position under one mayor, you could expect to leave when the seat changed hands. “Linda Thompson wanted everyone gone, and that was the end of the program,” she said. (Ed Nielsen, MOED’s director at the time, described the transition somewhat differently. He suggested the decision to dissolve MOED started with Reed, who “didn’t see any need for a cabinet-level department like that”; he believed the rationale had been, “Thompson was gonna kill the program anyways, we might as well close it down.”)

Walker starting working for the city in 1985. To this day, she stands by the loan program’s accomplishments. “We were proud of the fact that we could create so many businesses,” she said. She described the loan criteria, and particularly the rules for securing collateral, as strong. “You have to dig deep sometimes to find collateral,” she said, but the city always got a lien on something—buildings, equipment, accounts receivable, liquor licenses. Walker felt the program opened the door to entrepreneurs, especially women and people of color. “Back in the day, minority- and female-owned businesses couldn’t get a loan from the downtown banks,” she said. When she would talk to people in the community, she kept hearing the same complaint: “lack of capital, lack of capital.”

Walker said the loan files were kept in accordion folders, and were voluminous, with some businesses having two or three folders of material. They were stored in a set of lateral cabinets on the fourth floor, which people often mistook for a dividing wall between MOED and the neighboring offices of the Redevelopment Authority. A couple of months after she resigned, she said, she went to city hall to meet some former colleagues for lunch and saw the cabinets were empty. According to Walker, Thompson accused Walker and her colleagues of taking them. She said she got calls from the district attorney asking if she knew where they were. She denied having anything to do with it. “What the hell would I do with loan files?” she asked me. “We left everything there.” Indeed, Kathy Possinger, who stayed on as acting director of the housing department for several months in 2010, said the former MOED staff had been diligent in closing down and transferring their programs. “Everything we needed to know about—hot files, hot topics—we knew about,” Possinger said. She said that the Thompson administration rearranged many things in city hall upon arriving, and that they may have relocated the loan files.

Neil Grover, the city solicitor, told me recently that he suspects there are more files at city hall than people think. The rumor that files were deliberately removed or destroyed “is, frankly, scurrilous,” he said. “That’s accusing someone of a fairly significant crime.” But there are undeniably problems with the records the city does possess. “We have what we have,” Jackie Parker, the economic development director, told me. “But the files are not uniform. Not everybody has collateral. Not everybody had a recorded mortgage. Not everybody had signed papers. And obviously, if they hadn’t signed it before, they aren’t signing it now.”

The program has suffered from other lapses. The committee that used to review the loans has been defunct since 2005. Nielsen, the former MOED director, said that the committee’s dissolution, for him, marked “a real seminal moment figuring out how things work in la-la land.” According to his account, Reed, having concluded he wouldn’t be able to push any nominees through City Council, simply told the office to keep making loans without a committee. Nielsen asked Linda Thompson, then council president, about it. “That was the oddest part—Reed saying council won’t approve anything, and then the conversation with Linda Thompson right after, verifying it,” he said. As mayor, Thompson tried to restart the committee, successfully appointing three members. One of them, a banker named Brittany Brock, told me they met several times to review things like underwriting and eligibility guidelines. But the effort went nowhere, in part because of a lack of direction from the administration. “It just didn’t go,” she said.

With few exceptions, loan clients currently on the books as delinquent stopped paying sometime after Reed left office. This doesn’t account for loans supposedly written off, which reportedly totaled $1 million or more, though confirmation is hard to come by. Grover, the city solicitor, said he had yet to verify that any loans were officially forgiven. “I’m not sure who would have that authority,” he said.

In the case of non-real estate collateral, the city, as a creditor, is also required to renew certain filings with the state every five years, under what’s known as the uniform commercial code. These UCC filings preserve the priority of the city’s claim in the event a business liquidates or goes bankrupt. According to state records, all of the city’s filings on its loan portfolio have expired, some as recently as this year. Juliet Moringiello, a professor of bankruptcy law at Widener Commonwealth Law School, told me that, when a UCC filing lapses, it’s not that a creditor loses all rights to its collateral. It’s more that it loses its place in line with other creditors. “There’s a big burden of monitoring on the lender in the code,” she said. When I told her the city’s claims had all expired, she was astonished. “That is insane,” she said.

 …

Jeffrey Schaffer, who now works on economic development in the Pittsburgh office of U.S. Rep. Mike Doyle, urged me not to think of a loan program’s default rate as the only measure of its success. “There’s a return that isn’t in the books,” he said. A business that fails may nonetheless have brought benefits while it lasted—as a provider of jobs, as encouragement for other investment, even as just a presence on a struggling block. “It helped a lot of people,” he said of the city’s program.

One of the delinquent accounts is held by Steve Pearlman, who sells vintage clothes and 1950s- and ‘60s-era antiques and furniture out of a store on Market Street called Atomic Warehouse. In the early 2000s, the city gave him $60,000 in loans to help finance the renovation of his building, which had previously been vacant and in deep disrepair. “It was horrendous,” he told me. The store now has a bright, teal-colored façade and a retro-looking logo splashed over the door.

As a delinquent borrower, Atomic Warehouse makes an interesting case. Pearlman’s last payment was in 2011, and he is $35,000 in arrears. Even if he pays it all back, as he says he plans to do—he wouldn’t go into details, although there’s a for-sale sign in front of the store—he won’t have been the perfect client. Yet he has stayed open for 13 years on a block that has since seen incremental development.

From another perspective, though, a promise is a promise. Another of the city’s loan clients I spoke with was Matt Tunnell, who, along with his business partner John Tierney, bought the Midtown Cinema on Reily Street in 2008. As part of the purchase, they took over what was then a delinquent $350,000 city loan.

The loan, which is now in good standing, makes an interesting case of its own. “I feel stupid,” Tunnell joked, when I asked him about it. “We’re paying our loan, and no one else is!” But, he added seriously, the cinema was actually happy to pay it off. “That was always part of the revitalization, to pay our obligations and then maybe see it circle back to other businesses,” he said. He gave credit to the original owners, who “poured hours and hours” into the venture at a time when investing in the area was much less certain. “They were trying to jump start Reily Street,” he told me. “They were really the pioneers.”

Continue Reading