Monday, April 12, 2021

The McGinness project - What's going on? (Part 1)

Two borough trucks were parked at the 12th Street entrance to the McGinness property late this morning.
 

At last week's Columbia Borough Council work session, borough manager Mark Stivers said environmental studies of the McGinness property at 1020 Manor Street would begin today (Monday, April 12, 2021), but as of late morning no engineering vehicles or equipment were to be seen. There were, however, two borough trucks at the 12th Street entrance to the property. The borough hired two firms to conduct the studies during this "due diligence" period, which is projected to last through May. Stivers wants the borough to purchase the property in early July of this year, if all goes well. The property was recently listed at $1,495,000. 

At last Tuesday's meeting, Stivers presented this timeline (excerpt):

  • May 2021 – Complete Due Diligence process
  • June 2021 – Final Determination to purchase property
  • July 2021 – If approved, purchase land and begin development process

Columbia Borough considered purchasing the property once before, in 2017. As part of the process, a study of the property was done, the results of which are not publicly available. Only one small excerpt was revealed at the July 24, 2017 council meeting and is the first of three contradictory explanations presented by borough officials on why that purchase was canceled. According to the minutes of the meeting, council nixed the purchase because "environmental and/or subsurface conditions of the property are unacceptable to the borough."


Excerpt from the minutes of the July 24, 2017 Columbia Borough Council meeting


Councilman Todd Burgard contradicted that statement, though, at the October 13, 2020 meeting, stating that the deal was canceled because of price, not contamination. Interestingly, at last week's meeting, Stivers contradicted both explanations by saying the sale was canceled because "We decided at that point that we didn't have a solid plan." 

[MORE TO COME . . .]


The McGinness property, as seen from South 9th Street this morning



Hit and run to occupied building | Columbia Borough Police Department

At 11:10 p.m. on 04-11-2021, a car struck an occupied building at 458 Cherry St. in Columbia Borough. The impact caused significant damage to the building making it unsafe for habitation. A wall partially collapsed onto a couch in the living room of the first floor apartment. The striking vehicle left the scene. A man and young child were asleep on the second floor of the building and were not injured. The striking vehicle was probably a Lexus and has damage to the front end. 

Anyone with information regarding the crash is asked to contact the Columbia Borough Police at 717-684-7735.   

Date:  Monday, April 12, 2021 - 4:15am

Sourced via CRIMEWATCH®https://lancaster.crimewatchpa.com/columbiapd/10552/cases/hit-and-run-occupied-building

 

Sunday, April 11, 2021

About Town - April 11, 2021

This week's photos of Columbia

(Click on photos to see larger, sharper images.) 

[NOTE: This is the last weekly installment of "About Town." In the interest of timeliness, photos will now be posted on a day-by-day basis, as issues and items crop up.]



Coexist Gallery on Locust just got these two new signs (above).

Hate has no home here, but it does reside in a few other places in Columbia.

Community dinner on Wednesday evenings

Columbia skyline

A sliver of the river . . .

. . . and a smidge of the bridge

The DAC

A solar-powered van?

Well, why not?

Not a swimming pool, just the water company's reservoir

Trailer on Bridge Street

Apparently, it sometimes holds alpacas.


At the town square:








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Shadows on 462

Coming up . . .

Watching the train go by

Looks like a shipment of aluminum

A comment on Columbia corruption?

Bursting forth

The last day will be June 2.

Remnant of Columbia's legendary past

Slab and debris

Not a box turtle, but an old-fashioned vent pipe cover

To be discussed at this month's zoning meeting?

Someone got the boot.

Have a seat, any seat.


One could surmise that Columbia lies along a flight path:









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Working hard

Fixing the golden arches

Nest-building time - 
It's a good thing the toilet paper shortage is over.

Movin' in at 237 Locust

Healthy Columbia meals

Don't look now, but there's a giant rooster behind that door.

Shawnee Run is bounded on both sides by private property, but FERC boundaries, the Public Trust Doctrine, and Riparian rights suggest it can be accessed by the public.

Wounded signpost at 4th & Manor


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