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  #981  
Old Posted Oct 25, 2005, 9:57 AM
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New city restaurant will offer ataste of '50s
Dining car with films planned for eatery row
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
BY JOHN LUCIEW
Of The Patriot-News

Harrisburg's trendy Restaurant Row is about to get a touch of retro.

In a throwback to the 1950s, a developer is planning to relocate a vintage diner car on the 200 block of North Second Street.

The service would be reminiscent of the old-style car hops -- minus the cars. An outdoor "pedestrian hop" area would feature a canopied bar and table seating.

There would also be an outdoor stage and movie screen. And each table would be outfitted with a drive-in-movie-type speaker.

The complex is scheduled to open next spring on the 11,000-square-foot vacant lot at 210 N. Second St. in front of the River Street parking garage.

The project must be approved by City Council, which held its first hearing on the plans last night.

The project is the brainchild of Rick Galiardo, who operates the downtown clubs Mars and Noma, both on Second Street, and is opening Max's restaurant in the new Market Square Plaza high-rise.

But where Galiardo's past ventures have been geared toward late-night crowds in their 20s and 30s, the new project is being billed as family friendly.

"There will be things to do for the kids," Galiardo said. "I think it will be fun."

Galiardo bought a diner in Allentown that had closed and was being moved to make way for a highway project. The modular diner car will be reassembled on the North Second Street lot, forming the anchor for the entertainment complex.

The diner would provide about 100 indoor seats and offer what Galiardo called "trendy diner fare," along with alcohol. Plans call for the diner to be open 24 hours seven days a week.

The rest of the complex's 200 seats would be outdoors. About 50 would be clustered around the "pedestrian hop" and bar. Another 150 seats would be toward the rear of the lot, where the stage and movie screen would be set against the parking garage.

Council member Gloria Martin-Roberts praised Galiardo last night for creating a beachhead for families along Second Street, which is better known for trendy clubs, rowdy bars and high-end restaurants.

"We have bars, we have this, we have that. But I love the diner idea," Martin-Roberts said. "It brings something to downtown that has a family focus. I think it will be very appealing."

The project is the latest in Harrisburg's restaurant and bar boom. The Quarter, a New Orleans-style club and eatery, and an authentic-style Irish bar, both on the 300 block of North Second, are under construction.

Galiardo said the new blood is necessary if Restaurant Row is to retain its momentum and remain an attractive destination for patrons.

"The downtown needs niche players," he said. "This is something different."

However, Galiardo and his partner on the project, Realtor Greg Rothman, said they have not abandoned long-range plans to build a larger building, perhaps an office high-rise, on the parking garage lot. They said the diner could easily be disassembled and moved if such a project materialized.

JOHN LUCIEW: 255-8171 or jluciew@patriot-news.com
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  #982  
Old Posted Oct 25, 2005, 10:05 AM
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NEW ADDITION
PinnacleHealth uses robotics equipment to handle lab tests
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
BY DAVID WENNER
Of The Patriot-News

PinnacleHealth System today will begin using a $3 million robotics system capable of dramatically reducing the number of people needed to analyze laboratory samples.

The system is in a new building adjacent to Harrisburg Hospital. It is expected to perform 1.2 million tests annually and can handle test procedures involving blood and urine samples previously done by hand.

But even with that capability, Pinnacle, which employs about 230 people involved with processing such samples, has no plans to cut any of those jobs, said Judy Darr, director of the laboratory.

Darr said one of the main reasons Pinnacle switched to the automated system is because of an aging work force of lab employees and a shortage of people entering the field. Pinnacle said nearly half of its lab workers are at least age 50, and many training programs for such workers have closed.

"I'm trying to prepare for the time when they retire," Darr said.

Only four fully automated labs are now operating in Pennsylvania -- one in Wilkes-Barre and two in Philadelphia, according to Darr.

Pinnacle expects the automated system to yield a 7 percent cost reduction for each test, reduce the error rate by 75 percent, allow the tests to be done nearly twice as fast, and greatly reduce the risk of exposure to biohazards for lab workers.

The robotics system is in the new medical sciences building at Chestnut and Second streets. The total cost is $14.5 million.

The lab has a direct connection to nearby operating rooms, giving doctors quick access to results of some tests, Darr said.

The medical sciences building also will house a blood-donation center and private physicians' offices.

Pinnacle plans tours of the new facility today. It will take several months to test the robotics system and have it running at full capacity.

The system will process urine and blood samples, but not tissue samples, Darr said.

The 1.2 million tests the new system will handle are about 60 percent of all lab tests performed by Pinnacle.

The medical sciences building also has features designed to reduce physical stress and strain on lab workers, including flooring material made of recycled tires, workbenches with adjustable heights and natural lighting.

DAVID WENNER: 255-8172 or dwenner@patriot-news.com
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  #983  
Old Posted Oct 25, 2005, 10:11 AM
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some letters to the editor posted in this mornings Patriot...right on target!

Rail's real benefits
Tuesday, October 25, 2005
Cheers to Herb Field! His column (Oct. 12) was an on-target support for Corridor One.

It's a shame that some people in power in Cumberland County have such a limited view of the value of commuter rail to their community and to the region as a whole. Riders will never be able to pay for the operating costs of passenger rail systems now or ever -- here or anywhere! High fares only serve to discourage ridership. Government subsidies will always be needed and everyone benefits.

The real financial returns to everyone lie in the reduction of air pollution, limiting traffic congestion, better land use, successful economic development and a general improvement of life. These are important to all who live, work and play in the Harrisburg area. A provincial approach to these important values is a disservice to us all.

Studies have shown conclusively that commuters from outside Cumberland County travel on county roads every day to work and shop in the county and beyond. Failure to control this traffic will only cause Cumberland residents and people doing business there to suffer from more daily delays.

-- M. DUDLEY SMITH JR., Harrisburg

Rail roadblock

Thanks to Herb Field for decrying the lack of vision (or more accurately, lack of sense) on the part of Cumberland County commissioners and municipal officials who seem determined to sabotage the Corridor One regional rail project.

As a new resident, I'm perplexed. Do any of the commissioners ever try to drive from the West Shore to the East Shore during the morning rush? Do any of them ever have to pay $14 a day at the Chestnut Street Garage in Harrisburg? Do any of them ever try to navigate afternoon traffic on Trindle Road or Simpson Ferry Road?

Clearly, the commissioners are all safely ensconced in their West Shore offices and homes.

When I moved here and learned about regional rail plans, I thought, wow, I'm in an area that gets it! That understands the idea is to build mass transit sooner rather than later as a way to limit sprawl and spur focused development in the rail corridor.

We're not at the crisis stage yet in traffic, but do officials imagine we'll get some perverse thrill by ignoring present and future transit needs, that life will be more interesting and "big city" if we wait for gridlock?

-- JOHN BARNETT, Mechanicsburg
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  #984  
Old Posted Oct 25, 2005, 6:11 PM
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Those editorials are right on track (yes, pun intended ).

I think the diner is a GREAT idea and something needs to feel that empty parcel in such a prime location.

Re: PinnacleHealth, kudos to them for using high tech equipment yet no lay offs. I can only pray it will remain this way...

And yet another example of how high tech this area is getting.
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  #985  
Old Posted Oct 27, 2005, 2:51 PM
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Decline in passenger traffic hurts revenue at HIA
Thursday, October 27, 2005
BY ELLEN LYON
Of The Patriot-News
Passenger traffic at Harrisburg International Airport continues to decline, pushing airport revenue below projections for the year.

Last month, 103,378 travelers flew into or out of HIA, a 5.58 percent decrease from September 2004.

Cliff Jones, a member of the Susquehanna Area Regional Airport Authority that owns and operates HIA, said bankrupt airlines are offering fewer flights on smaller planes with fewer seats.

Three of the top four carriers that serve HIA -- Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines and United -- are operating under bankruptcy protection.

The airport's No. 1 carrier, US Airways, recently emerged from bankruptcy and is billing itself as the largest low-cost carrier, HIA Aviation Director Fred Testa said.

"It may be low-cost, but it's high fares," he added.

Testa predicted that the downward trend in passenger traffic at HIA will continue for the rest of the year because of the sudden shutdown of the bankrupt TransMeridian Airlines on Oct. 1. TransMeridian had been offering two nonstop flights a week from HIA to Orlando-Sanford International Airport in Florida.

So far this year, HIA's passenger traffic is down 3.43 percent when compared to the first nine months of 2004. At the same time, the number of seats available on departing flights out of the airport has declined nearly 8 percent.

Jones said Testa and his staff are making "every effort ... to secure another airline for this airport. If that happens, we'll see an increase in seats."

Testa said "talks have been very productive, and hopefully they will bear fruit some time in the near future."

"It just seems odd all our seats are full but we can't get larger planes," authority member John Ward observed.

Testa said it costs airlines more money to put larger planes in the air. "The airlines are in crisis right now because of fuel prices," he noted.

Testa said HIA and other airports have lost passengers to Philadelphia International Airport, where US Airways and Southwest Airlines are engaged in an aggressive fare war.

Corresponding to the decline in traffic has been a drop in airport revenue.

In September, revenue was 9.3 percent less than had been budgeted.

And revenue so far this year is 2.5 percent less than expected.

However, total revenue so far this year still is 35 percent more than in the first nine months of 2004 because of higher revenue from the car-rental operations, parking and concessions in the new terminal, Testa said.

In other business yesterday the authority, which also owns and operates Capital City Airport, unanimously approved a $62,000 settlement with former employee Garin Moore.

Moore had claimed in a federal lawsuit that Testa and Capital City Airport eliminated his maintenance job because of his union-organizing activities.

A federal court jury in Harrisburg found last year that the authority had violated Moore's rights and awarded him $42,000 for lost wages and $20,000 in punitive damages.

Under the settlement, both sides give up the right to appeal, which saves the airport the cost of additional legal fees, Testa said.

Efforts to contact Moore were unsuccessful.

ELLEN LYON: 255-8153 or elyon@patriot-news.com
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  #986  
Old Posted Oct 27, 2005, 7:08 PM
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:tdown:

They really need to A) get more airlines to HIA. I know it will be a tough sell w/ Philly and BWI so close, but still B) LOWER the fares they already have!!! I flew out of BWI for about $150 less. Why wouldn't I do that instead?!? HIA's facility is brand new and beautiful, and I feel we can do better.
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  #987  
Old Posted Oct 27, 2005, 7:17 PM
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Okay, I just couldn't resist!!!

http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...threadid=90199


Sprawl, sprawl, away!!! And take a look at what land goes for here now...

MIDDLE PAXTON TWP.

Vartan Group seeks mountain-land bids

Thursday, October 27, 2005
BY JACK SHERZER
Of The Patriot-News

There are no development plans -- yet -- for the densely forested ridge known as Second Mountain.

But would-be builders are already vying for the opportunity.

As word got out that the Vartan Group was looking to develop the 504-acre mountain that hugs the Susquehanna River, the company started getting calls.

And after seeing how successful an auction of a Lower Paxton Twp. farm was this month, the company decided the prudent move was to allow interested parties to submit proposals for the land, said Robert J. DeSousa, CEO of the Vartan Group.

"There has been such a tremendous interest in our area in raw ground, we thought it was advisable [to look at offers]," DeSousa said. Because of the interest, he said the company has decided to accept proposals until early next month before making a decision on whether to sell.

"We are not 100 percent sure that we would sell the property at this juncture rather than develop it ourselves," DeSousa said. "We are sure development will go there because it is such a beautiful location, and at this point, we are continuing to go along with the plan of developing it ourselves."

Proposals from would-be buyers are being collected by CBRE/Harrisburg, the real estate group selected by the Vartan Group to handle the development, being called River Ridge.

DeSousa readily acknowledged that seeing the 291-acre Stray Winds Farm in Lower Paxton bring $13.6 million helped convince the Vartan Group to test the waters with River Ridge. CBRE/Harrisburg has a packet of information about the site, he said.

In case the company decided to hold on to the property, DeSousa said the company is in the process of getting proposals from engineering firms to help design the project.

In keeping with the property's existing zoning, the sketch plan envisions 200 single-family houses and about 400 "high-density" units, such as town houses, which would be along the Fishing Creek Valley Road part of the tract, DeSousa said.

If the Vartan Group develops the site, formal plans will likely be filed with the township early next year, he said. And even if the group retains the property, it likely would work with another developer.

Especially near the top of the mountain, where the views are spectacular, DeSousa said the Vartan Group envisions luxury houses with perhaps four or five houses worth $1 million or more on the mountain's top.

Even after development plans are approved, the Vartan Group could sell. That happened with a condominium development in Susquehanna Twp. off Thea Drive, which was recently sold to a Lancaster builder.

"We wanted to see if parties would pay a price [that would make us willing] to sell," DeSousa said.
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  #988  
Old Posted Oct 28, 2005, 6:17 AM
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^ is this development in Lower Paxton or Middle Paxton? i thought Fishing Creek was in Middle Paxton Twp?
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  #989  
Old Posted Oct 28, 2005, 8:37 AM
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i posted a thread in City Discussions about how well Harrisburg faired in a salary/employment index published by Salary.com. it may be another one of those worthless lists, but Harrisburg was ranked 4th in the nation. check it out:
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...16#post1665416
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  #990  
Old Posted Oct 28, 2005, 12:21 PM
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Racetrack owner pushes back opening of casino
Friday, October 28, 2005
BY TOM DOCHAT
Of The Patriot-News

The owner of Penn National Race Course in Grantville has pushed back its projected opening of a slot-machine casino at the track from the spring of 2007 to the third quarter of that year.

The delay is the result of an ongoing political dispute within the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board over distribution of gaming machines in the state. The dispute centers on whether machine distributorships should be established on a regional or statewide basis. The PGCB has not resolved the issue, failing again last week to reach a consensus.

"We'll just sort of wait it out," Penn National CEO Peter Carlino said yesterday during a conference call to discuss the company's third-quarter financial results. "It will get settled, but in some indeterminate time."

The company had expected to open the casino by the spring of 2007. It once had thought an opening in the second half of 2006 was possible after the gaming legislation was approved last year.

Penn National plans to build a casino with 2,000 slot machines at the Grantville racetrack. It said construction will take 12 to 14 months, so it needs to begin work next spring to reach its projected opening in the third quarter of 2007.

The company has vowed not to start construction until it receives a license. At this point, the PGCB won't be in a position to evaluate and grant licenses until late next April, after it resolves the distributorship issue.

Carlino said a temporary 25,000-square-foot facility should be completed by December at the Grantville track to handle horse-racing and simulcasting activities. Penn National can then demolish the existing grandstand to make way for the casino.

Penn National now expects to spend $262 million on the casino, up from an earlier forecast of $240 million. The estimated cost includes the $50 million gambling license.

"We're ready to roll," Carlino said. "We're just going to have to let this unfold."

Earnings reported:
Penn National reported net income of $55.4 million, or 64 cents a share, for the third quarter. Income included a nearly $38 million gain from the sale of its Shreveport, La., casino.

The quarterly results also include the financial impact from destruction of Penn National's two casinos along the Gulf Coast by Hurricane Katrina. The company posted a pre-tax expense of $19.1 million for deductibles on insurance, as well as $4.1 million to continue providing pay and benefits for nearly 2,000 employees affected by the two closings.

Bill Clifford, chief financial officer, said the company's insurance "will be more than adequate" to pay for reopening the casinos at Biloxi and Bay St. Louis, Miss.

Third-quarter earnings, without the Katrina expense and the Shreveport sale, amounted to 37 cents a share. Penn National stock gained 4.4 percent yesterday to close at $27.45 a share.

In other developments, Carlino said a temporary gaming facility in Bangor, Maine, will open Nov. 4.

The facility will have 475 slot machines.

Carlino said the company hopes to start construction of a permanent facility in the second quarter next year.

Kevin DeSanctis, president and chief operating officer, said Penn National's casino in Baton Rouge, La., has been doing a robust business in the aftermath of Katrina.

"We think things are going very well right now," he said, but he cautioned that "we don't know how long this will last."

TOM DOCHAT: 255-8216 or tdochat@patriot-news.com
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  #991  
Old Posted Oct 28, 2005, 12:26 PM
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Swiss company offers medical data on cards, establishes HQ in Harrisburg
Friday, October 28, 2005
BY DAVID WENNER
Of The Patriot-News

A Swiss company that sells portable medical records has opened a North American headquarters in Harrisburg and says it might build a local production facility if the product catches on.

World Medical Center says its portable medical record, which resembles a credit card, is carried by about 200,000 people in Europe. But it's used by fewer than 100 people in the United States, said Christian von Hirsch, CEO of the company's North American operations.

The company decided to open its headquarters in Harrisburg because of a relationship with PinnacleHealth System, von Hirsch said. Pinnacle has installed the equipment needed to scan, create and upgrade the cards.

The portable medical record, called a World Medical Card, carries encrypted information that can be read by an electronic scanner. It contains basic information such as medications the person is taking, allergies and major medical issues that doctors should know about.

If someone carrying the card is unconscious and in need of emergency medical care, doctors can use information from the card to avoid problems such as allergic reactions or dangerous drug interactions. It takes a special scanner to read the card.

Von Hirsch said he doesn't expect the scanners to become common in the United States. But that won't detract from the value of the card, he said.

The real value, he said, is that the card can be cut open to reveal the data written in a universal medical language developed by the World Health Organization. Using a translation aid, the data can be read by health-care providers anywhere in the world, von Hirsch said.

World Medical Center is marketing the card to individuals and to businesses and organizations, including insurers, travel associations and businesses whose employees travel a lot.

Dr. Donald Wilson, a physician involved with an effort to create an electronic system for sharing medical data in Pennsylvania, said several companies offer cards or small storage devices to hold medical data. One of the obstacles to widespread use is lack of a common format, he said.

Wilson, the medical director for Quality Insights, said there's a push to create a national network for sharing medical data by 2014. Such a network would make the portable devices obsolete.

Still, a national system faces many obstacles and could be a long way off.

Wilson said the portable devices are "an interesting idea, and in the short term it may be better than nothing."

World Medical Center gave Pinnacle the equipment needed to scan and update the cards. Chris Markley, a senior vice president at Pinnacle, said the hospital system became involved because it supports efforts to improve patient safety.

The World Medical Center headquarters at 227 State St. in Harrisburg employs two people, including von Hirsch.

Von Hirsch said the company is working with city, county and state economic development officials and is interested in tapping government funds to help it open a local facility to produce the cards.
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  #992  
Old Posted Oct 29, 2005, 1:06 PM
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Whitaker Center halfway to fundraising goal
Foundation makes $5 million donation
Saturday, October 29, 2005
BY DAVID N. DUNKLE
Of The Patriot-News

The Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts is halfway home on a two-year, $10 million fundraising campaign announced Friday.

The effort got a kick-start from the Whitaker Foundation of Arlington, Va., which contributed $5 million toward the center's endowment fund.

"This is a great start," said Hal McInness, former chairman of Whitaker's board of directors and one of three honorary co-chairpersons for the new campaign. "There are very, very few days when you can participate in the announcement of a gift of this magnitude."

The campaign has multiple goals, said Byron Quann, president and CEO of the Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts, at 222 Market St.

In addition to building the endowment, the goals include improvements to the Harsco Science Center, building upgrades and underwriting the costs of educational programs for midstate students, resident companies, traveling exhibits and the IMAX Theater.

"This campaign will help us continue serving as the region's premier venue," Quann said during a news conference yesterday.

Longer term, the campaign, officially titled "Excellence and Innovation: The Next 10 Years at Whitaker Center," aims to build the endowment fund to $25 million. That amount, Quann said, will provide a reliable source of operating revenues for the center.

The $52.7 million Whitaker Center, which opened in 1999, combines science and performing arts under one roof. The center has received more than 2.2 million visitors since opening, officials said.

Quann said a committee made up of Whitaker employees, board representatives and members of the public will "crawl all over the building" in the coming months to establish priorities.

To date, center officials have focused on achieving short-range objectives and proving the center's value to the community, board chairman Mark G. Caldwell said.

"Now that start-up issues are mostly behind us, the time has come to build the endowment fund and ensure the center's future," he said.

The foundation and the center are separate entities linked by a benefactor.

The late Uncas A. Whitaker, founder of AMP Inc., created the foundation through a bequest following his death in 1975. The foundation's primary mission is the support of bio-medical engineering research, but it has also been a supporter of Whitaker Center.

The foundation provided a $5 million naming grant and $2 million toward the center's endowment in 1999.

"Without the Whitaker Foundation, there would be no Whitaker Center," Quann said.

Support for the center is based on its mission and Uncas Whitaker's strong links to Harrisburg, according to the foundation's president, Dr. Peter G. Katona.

"We wouldn't be around without the generosity of Mr. Whitaker," he said. "And we really like the mission of Whitaker Center, providing science education to young people."

But the center will not be able to look to the foundation for support in the future. Katona said the foundation, which has given away nearly $800 million since its founding, is closing in 2006.

"We are not closing because we have to," he said. "It's been in the works for 15 years. Even Mr. Whitaker suggested that the foundation not go on forever. He wanted it to be about research and education, not bureaucracy."

DAVID N. DUNKLE: 255-8266 or daviddunkle@patriot-news.com
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  #993  
Old Posted Oct 30, 2005, 9:44 PM
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Originally Posted by wrightchr
^ is this development in Lower Paxton or Middle Paxton? i thought Fishing Creek was in Middle Paxton Twp?
It's in Middle Paxton Twp. The LP part was referencing land that was just sold, and what sparked the interest of selling/buying land elsewhere in the metro.
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  #994  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2005, 2:32 PM
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^ thanks Dave
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  #995  
Old Posted Nov 1, 2005, 7:50 PM
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No prob, Chris.

I said it before and I will say it again: why two Target's so close?!? And why does J.C. Penny think this store will be better than the one that was a block down at the HBG Mall?!?!? WHY?!? This area is :nuts: with retail development...


Construction begins at shopping center

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

CBL & Associates Inc. said yesterday it has started construction of High Pointe Commons, a shopping center in Swatara Twp. that will be anchored by Target and J.C. Penney stores.

The Chattanooga, Tenn.-based real estate investment trust is partnering with High Real Estate Group of Lancaster to develop the shopping center, which is to be completed next October.

The 311,0000-square-foot center is located at Lindle Road and Route 283, behind the Wyndham Harrisburg-Hershey hotel.

Target Corp. plans a 127,000-square-foot store at High Point. The retailer has had a store for five years at Paxton Towne Centre along Route 22 in Lower Paxton Twp.

J.C. Penney Co. Inc. plans to open a 99,000-square-foot store. Penney's had closed a 153,000-square-foot store at nearby Harrisburg Mall in April 2001.

High Pointe also will have 69,400 square feet of space for smaller retailers.

Greenfield Architects Ltd. of Lancaster designed High Pointe. High Construction Co., also of Lancaster, is the general contractor. Both are affiliated with High Real Estate Group.

CBL is one of the nation's largest owners and managers of malls and shopping centers. Its holdings include York Galleria in York County.

In another joint venture with High Real Estate, it is building the 300,000-square- foot York Town Center, which is scheduled to open next year at the intersection of Routes 24 and 30 in York County.
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Old Posted Nov 1, 2005, 7:52 PM
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GREAT news for the area!!!


HARRISBURG

Science center to be based at university

Program will teach through focus on societal issues such as HIV, environment

Tuesday, November 01, 2005
BY DIANA FISHLOCK
Of The Patriot-News

The Harrisburg University of Science and Technology hasn't even been open for a full semester, but officials can already boast that it is the home of the National Center for Science and Civic Engagement.

The center will be a major plus for Harrisburg and the university, which opened in August, Mayor Stephen R. Reed said at a news conference yesterday.

The center will teach basic science and math through a focus on issues facing society, such as HIV, transportation, energy, voting and the environment.

Nearly 200 colleges and universities in more than 40 states and 10 nations will work on projects with the center, Reed said.

Reed and university officials say it will bring new businesses and jobs, have the potential to solve regional problems and the center also can help with the university's recruitment.

"In many respects, the establishment of the center at Harrisburg University immediately raises the entire school's national standing," said Mel Schiavelli, the university's president and CEO.

David Burns, a professor of general studies at Harrisburg University, and Karen Kashmanian Oates, Harrisburg University's vice president for academic and student affairs, started the center while they were affiliated with the Association of American Colleges and Universities in Washington, D.C., and brought it with them to Harrisburg.

The center is financed with a grant from the National Science Foundation, a federal agency supporting research and education.

The center will operate a program called Science Education for New Civic Engagements and Responsibilities.

University faculty will teach courses to enhance students' learning in science, engineering and math by looking at real-life problems, Reed said.

Students and faculty won't be hampered by "silos" of learning where disciplines are separated, Reed said.

Rather, they'll develop ways to solve problems and establish new businesses.

Instead of a standard biology class, students might learn their biology lessons through studying a disease such as HIV or avian flu, Burns said.

"Professors will have to be pretty nimble, and students have to participate pretty sizably," Burns said.

The center will help the city and university strengthen links between education and economic development, Reed said.

"This has economic development implications here and in this country," he said.

The center's work will dovetail with the plan to establish a business incubator where the university's students, faculty and outsiders can start new advanced technology businesses, Reed said.

The center also will publish a new online publication, "Science Education and Civic Engagement: An International Journal."

People around the country and in other nations will pay attention to what's happening in Harrisburg, Burns said.

************

Area unemployment rate stabilizes

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

The unemployment rate in the Harrisburg area was 3.9 percent in September, unchanged from August and down from 4.4 percent a year ago.

The Harrisburg area -- Cumberland, Dauphin and Perry counties -- continued to have one of the lowest unemployment rates in the state.

The Lebanon area had the lowest jobless rate in September, at 3.5 percent, followed by the Lancaster and State College areas, each at 3.6 percent. The unemployment rate in the York/Hanover area dropped to 4 percent in September.

The statewide unemployment rate in September was 4.8 percent, and the national rate was 5.1 percent.

The total number of jobs in the Harrisburg area in September dropped by 100 from August, a reflection of fewer jobs in the leisure and hospitality industries with the end of the summer hiring season. That decline was offset by an increase in the number of jobs related to the reopening of public and private schools and colleges.

The area had 327,600 jobs in September, up by 2,100 from September 2004.

The number of manufacturing jobs dropped by 200 from August and is down by 900 from September 2004. The average manufacturing wage in the Harrisburg area in September was $16 an hour, up from $15.19 a year earlier. The average statewide wage was $15.33. The average manufacturing work week in the Harrisburg area was 38.7 hours, compared with 40.5 hours statewide.
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  #997  
Old Posted Nov 1, 2005, 7:56 PM
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EastSideHBG EastSideHBG is offline
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Old Posted Nov 2, 2005, 8:49 AM
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^ that's great news for the local economy...another large corporate HQ here in the midstate is a good thing. now if Bon-Ton would put a store in DT Harrisburg i would happier than a pig in sh@#!
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Old Posted Nov 2, 2005, 4:09 PM
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AS WE SEE IT EVELYN A.K. THOMCHICK and JOHN C. SPYCHALSKI
Outside analysis backs regional rail concept
Tuesday, November 01, 2005
We recently had the opportunity to review Modern Transit Partner ship's Corridor One regional rail project, the initial leg of a proposed regional rail system in southcentral Pennsylvania. On this leg, electric-powered trains would run between Carlisle and Lancaster via Harrisburg.

We were part of an interdisciplinary research team from the Pennsylvania Transportation Institute at Penn State University that conducted a third-party analysis of the Corridor One project on behalf of MTP and the Community Action Commission.

The PTI team found the Corridor One planning process to be systematic and based on sound methodology. The team's assessment confirmed that the studies conducted by and for MTP used methods appropriate for Corridor One and compliant with federal and state requirements.

Stepping beyond the scope of the PTI team assessment, we wish to offer several observations that we view as important in evaluating a project such as Corridor One. The supply of transportation has entered a new era. Fuel prices have escalated significantly. Political instability in several key oil-producing nations has raised uncertainty about future supply conditions. Road congestion continues to rise. Alleviation of this congestion through major additions to existing capacity has become increasingly difficult. Highway construction costs per se are not the only challenge. Land is becoming less readily available for highway use, and the environmental impacts of automobile and truck traffic are drawing increasing concern.

These and other factors have caused a shift toward more comprehensive regional transportation planning encompassing the development of multimodal transportation links.

As a result of this shift, rail transit has been introduced in a variety of urban and suburban communities since the 1980s. Rail initiatives such as Corridor One offer several key advantages, including support of more efficient land-use patterns, slowing of the rate of increase in highway congestion, improved passenger safety, energy efficiency, air quality, reduced reliance on petroleum fuel, and encouragement of economic development through improved overall mobility.

Because Corridor One would use upgraded existing rail infrastructure and rights of way, its capital costs could be lower than alternatives requiring completely new rights of way and infrastructure. Use of existing infrastructure can also save time. Modification of existing rail facilities to accommodate passenger service operation can usually be accomplished more quickly than a "build new" option. These advantages have been demonstrated in a number of localities where regional rail service has been introduced since the 1980s. THE CORRIDOR ONE rail system would provide additional supplementary long-term transportation capacity in a sector that has or otherwise will reach low service levels if the highway mode remains the only option. That is, Corridor One is intended to augment and complement the highway transportation system. Continuation of present growth trends in travel demand means that the region will need both modes to accommodate travel needs adequately over the long run.

Building Corridor One now rather than later, while the opportunity to access existing infrastructure is available, would ensure that this need can be met. It is time to seize that opportunity.

EVELYN A.K. THOMCHICK, Ph.D., is an associate professor of supply chain management, and JOHN C. SPYCHALSKI, Ph.D., is a professor of supply chain management at Penn State University.
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Old Posted Nov 4, 2005, 9:04 AM
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HIA controllers raise staffing concerns
Thursday, November 03, 2005
BY ELLEN LYON
Of The Patriot-News

Air-traffic controllers say the tower at Harrisburg International Airport is understaffed, and they worry that it will be closed during the overnight shift despite its proximity to two nuclear power plants.

"We're routinely short-handed," said Joseph Carbone, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association at HIA. "We've ended up combining positions because of this."

The airport has 17 controllers and seven controllers in training, but it is supposed to have a total of 30, Carbone said.

He estimates that HIA has lost about a dozen senior controllers over the last few years to retirement.

Federal Aviation Administration officials dispute that there's a staffing shortage at HIA.

"We're short a couple of controllers, but principally because we haven't gotten everybody through the training program," said John Gilmore, the FAA manager at HIA.

The seven controllers in training can't work all the positions yet, he noted.

Gilmore said HIA is supposed to have 26 controllers, but is one short because of a recent resignation. That position is about to be advertised, he added.

FAA spokesman Greg Martin said the union is "posturing" during contract negotiations, with "no indication that Harrisburg is understaffed."

The FAA expects a wave of retirements in the coming years -- 7,500 between 2007 and 2015 -- so the agency plans to hire 12,500 new controllers over the next decade, he said.

Doug Church, spokesman for the union's national office in Washington, D.C., accused the FAA of being "late to the party.

"It's one thing to hire them, but it's going to take a few years before they'r e ready to swim alone ," he said. "Right now, they'r e not hiring them fast enou gh" to keep up with retirements.

It can take up to five years of on-the-job training for new hires to become certified professional controllers, Church noted.

Another issue for the controllers is a directive the FAA recently issued to smaller airports, including HIA, where only one controller is on duty overnight.

The directive told them to schedule two controllers on the midnight shift, but did not set a deadline for them to do that, FAA spokeswoman Arlene Murray said.

But Carbone said he understood there was a target date of Oct. 17 to implement the directive, and it hasn't happened yet at HIA.

"That's a definite safety issue," Carbone said. "God forbid somebody would get sick ... and not be able to respond to the airplanes."

Carbone and Church suspect the directive hasn't been implemented at HIA because of plans to close the tower overnight.

The union considers it "a very ominous thing that they haven't complied with the FAA's own mandate," Church said.

Last winter, the FAA compiled a list of 42 low-traffic airports, including HIA, where it is considering closing the control towers between midnight and 5 a.m. to save money.

During that shift, an average of 10 flights an hour are in the HIA tower's radar coverage area, according to Murray.

That coverage area includes Reading to just east of Johnstown and from Selinsgrove south to York. During the day, Reading Airport has its own radar approach control.

No decision about tower closures has been made, Martin said yesterday.

But Gilmore said, "If they want us to close [for that shift] there's no point in staffing two [controllers]. We haven't been taken off the list. We'd like to know for sure if we're going to close on the midnight shift."

However, he added, "we're not going to wait indefinitely. We're probably going to give it another few weeks" before making the scheduling change.

If the HIA tower is shut down at night, a New York facility would take over radar approach control in this area, but that facility's radar can't see below 4,000 feet, Carbone said.

"With Three Mile Island and Peach Bottom [nuclear power plants] here, they wouldn't see any suspect aircraft approaching these facilities," he said.

The tower at HIA has a direct phone line to TMI's security office. "If we notice any suspect aircraft we are to call them to advise them. So we do act as a first line of defense to them," Carbone said.

TMI in Londonderry Twp. is a few miles from HIA, and the Peach Bottom plant is in southern York County.

Carbone also noted that Life Lion helicopters based at Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and York Airport "rely on us [for] those instrument approaches below the 4,000-foot mark."

Fred Testa, aviation director at HIA, agreed with the controllers about the midnight shift. "I'm 100 percent for keeping that tower open with staffing. It's absolutely needed for the region," he said.

ELLEN LYON: 255-8153 or elyon@patriot-news.com
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