Monday, January 31, 2022
DEEDS RECORDED - COLUMBIA BOROUGH - JAN. 31, 2022
Ryan Joseph Mercado conveyed 125 N. Sixth St. to Elizabeth Hernandez for $205,000.
Gregory M. Reisinger, Kathleen A. Reisinger and Gregory Reisinger conveyed property on a public road to Carlee D. Reed and Chase M. Overmiller for $169,900.
Michael R. Young conveyed 301 Chestnut St. to Riehl Investments LLC for $180,000.
Sunday, January 30, 2022
About Town - January 30, 2022
Recent photos of Columbia
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DEAL TO LEASE/PURCHASE COLUMBIA'S FORMER SEWER PLANT RUNS INTO PROBLEMS
• What happened: A deal with JG Environmental of Lancaster to lease and then purchase Columbia’s unused wastewater treatment plant seems to have run into a problem after Lancaster Area Sewer Authority (LASA) raised a one-time tapping fee from $10 per gallon to $16.50 per gallon that applies to new customers.
• The motion: Council voted to table a motion to return to JG about $94,000 of that increase that the borough would collect. The borough, which sold its sewer pipes to LASA in 2015, receives a percentage of all tapping fees until 2025. The extra $94,000 from this deal was not included in the borough’s budget but would count as revenue.
• The issue: The added expense may force JG to abandon its deal with Columbia. JG President James Guerin then said he won’t speculate on the company’s decision.
• Quotable: “Right now, we’re still in the middle of it,” Guerin said during a phone call several days after the meeting. “We are working through it. I don’t want to show my hand.”
• Coming up: Council members say they want a chance to study the matter and will address it at a later meeting. “It’s unfair for the board to swallow all of that,” council member Todd Burgard said during the meeting, adding that he would consider negotiating with PGE and LASA. Sharon Lintner, also a council member, said members may have been surprised by the motion. “We need more time to study this and digest this,” she said during a phone call after the meeting.
— Gayle Johnson, For LNP | LancasterOnline
In a March preview, Columbia boys take first loss vs. Executive Education
Friday, January 28, 2022
Lancaster County restaurant inspections Jan. 28
A complete guide and amendment tracker for proposed changes to Pennsylvania’s Constitution
A complete guide and amendment tracker for proposed changes to Pennsylvania's Constitution
Since January 2021, Pennsylvania legislators have proposed more than 70 changes to the constitution, some of which could radically reshape how parts of state government work.
https://www.spotlightpa.org/news/2022/01/pennsylvania-constitution-amendments-tracker-complete-guide/
COLUMBIA WATER CO. JOINS OTHERS TO HELP LOW-INCOME FAMILIES PAY OVERDUE WATER BILLS
Thursday, January 27, 2022
Railroad display to be held at National Watch & Clock Museum
The Lower Susquehanna Valley Railroad will be at the National Watch & Clock Museum February 5 through March 5. Viewing the train in the lobby is free.
Museum hours: Wednesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
Agenda - Columbia Borough Council Meeting - January 25, 2022
Monday, January 24, 2022
DEEDS RECORDED - COLUMBIA BOROUGH - JANUARY 24, 2022
Michael R. Whalen, Stacy A. Whalen and Stacy Whalen conveyed property on a public road to Premier Home Solutions LLC for $200,000.
Daniel Colon Osorio, Daniel Colon Osorio and Christine Suitor conveyed property on Walnut Street to Jayson Watson for $194,000.
The estate of Mary Lou Reitzel conveyed property on Maple Street to John D. Reitzel and Wendy Reitzel for $160,000.
The estate of Kay Gordon, the estate of Kay Lynn Gordon, Zachary Gordon and Emily Gordon conveyed 408 Poplar St. to First Choice Home Buyers LLC for $140,000.
Sunday, January 23, 2022
Joining a rare club: Columbia's Emily Gambler poised to earn 6 varsity letters this school year
It certainly isn't uncommon for a prep student-athlete to earn three varsity letters in a single school year.
Four isn't unheard of, with some athletes crossing over, like in soccer and football, for instance. Five? That's pulling some serious double-duty. Six? Now that's some uncharted territory, and it takes a special kind of student-athlete to pull that one off.
Say hello to Columbia junior Emily Gambler. She's on pace to earn — wait for it — six varsity letters this school year, as the Crimson Tide's busy body crosses over in two events in the fall, winter and spring.
Columbia girls keep pedal to the metal, knock off river-rival Eastern York to remain undefeated
It was billed as the Battle of the Bridge.
Saturday night, Columbia won the battle and defended its home turf.
Brie Droege scored a game-high 25 points, twin sister Brooke Droege added 15 points, including a pair of back-breaking fourth-quarter buckets, Morgan Bigler and Emily Gambler combined to own the glass, and the host Crimson Tide played a spirited second half for an electric 47-39 river-rivalry nonleague showdown victory against Eastern York.
About Town - January 23, 2022
Recent photos of Columbia
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