Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Former funeral home gets a new roof


Renovations continued today at the former Long's Funeral Home at 855 Chestnut Street. Workers kept busy installing roofing underlayment and shingles.





Another one bites the dust


What was once a building is now a pile of rubble. This (former) brick building at 109 Perry is reputed to have been part of a livery stable years ago, and more recently a residence. It was demolished today to make way for a multi-unit self-storage facility to be developed by Associates Properties PA, LP.  The facility will also include properties at 243 S. Front Street and 319 S. Front. The facility will contain 10 x 20, 10 x 25, and 10 x 30 units, for a total of 40,000 square feet of storage space, according to Jeff Seibert of Associates Properties.  Construction is expected to begin in March and be completed by late July.





Below is a Google Maps photo showing how the building appeared in August 2011. The storage facility will cover the field shown in the photo.


Meetings for the Week of February 20, 2017

Borough
       Municipal Building, 308 Locust Street

Search the database of Pa. state government's top earners in 2016: $100,000 Club

Monday, February 20, 2017

Columbia takes action on blighted properties


At February's meeting, Columbia Borough Council took action on several issues, chief among them the large number of blighted properties in the borough.


BLIGHTED PROPERTIES

Mayor Leo Lutz said the Lancaster County Planning Commission approved six more vacant borough properties as blighted. They will now move through the blighted process. “By going through this process, they're not going to sit there much longer and deteriorate. Something's going to happen with them,” Lutz said.

Steve Kaufhold, manager of code enforcement, said there are currently 37 condemned properties in the borough, 14 of which have been placed into the blight process to be rehabilitated and put back onto the tax rolls. All of the blighted properties are vacant, according to Kaufhold. There are currently 26 total properties in the blighted program, with eight more in the process of being put into the program. Lutz said the blight program goes “hand-in-hand” with the Land Bank, another program that council recently initiated. He said the Land Bank is another entity that can buy blighted properties with an eye towards revitalization and future home ownership. Lutz also noted that Governor Tom Wolf just signed a new law that allows local municipalities to penalize owners of properties that are unattended for at least two years “up to and including jail time.” Lutz said he hopes to see improvements in the borough's housing stock within the next year or so.



LERTA (Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance)

According to Borough Consultant Rebecca Denlinger, Columbia has had the LERTA program in place for three years, and it is currently in its fourth year. Greg Sahd said that only one application was received recently. Denlinger said the program works in other communities but is not sure why it's not working in Columbia. Developers are interested in borough properties but hesitate due to financial issues, Denlinger said. The 5-year LERTA abates taxes on a property; i.e., only the taxes on improvements made on the property. Base taxes are still paid. On the first year after improvements are made, the abatement is 100%. (No taxes are paid on improvements.) Year two: 80%. Year three: 60%. Year four: 40%. Year five: 20%. After the fifth year, the property comes fully back onto the tax rolls.

Terms of the LERTA program as it currently stands are shown above. More information can be found HERE.

Denlinger proposed a 3-year abatement of 100%, with the abatement for years four and five at 50%. “Those three years of 100% abatement allow for new development whether it's commercial-only or mixed-use – residential and commercial mix – it allows for that property to become stabilized,” Denlinger said. She added that the next step would be to present the idea to the school district, after which it will go to the county level.

The meeting with the school board is scheduled for March 2.

Councillor John Novak said, “We're increasing the incentives to get people in our community involved in the revitalization of a great town.”


OTHER BUSINESS

Council confirmed the appointment of Mary Wickenheiser to borough council to replace Stephanie Weisser whose resignation the council accepted on January 9, 2017.

Council appointed Marlene Geltz as Columbia Borough/County/Municipal Tax Collector, term to expire December 31, 2017. She replaces Mary Wickenheiser, who was appointed to council. Finance Manager Georgiana Schreck was appointed deputy tax collector.

Council voted to advertise a rental ordinance amendment requiring owners and managers of rental units to notify the borough of vacancies and schedule an occupancy approval inspection with a code enforcement official prior to a change in occupancy. Currently, there are 53 unlicensed rental properties in the borough, according to Steve Kaufhold.

Demolition begins on Avenue G


Demolition has begun on a building in the 400 block of Avenue G. The brick structure, once a livery stable, was condemned in June 2015 and suffered a fire the following September. Owners Samuel and Cynthia Bigler previously submitted a request to demolish the fire-damaged building. The issue was heard at the Historical Architectural Review Board's August 17, 2016 meeting, in which the Biglers stated the case for demolition.

Happy Presidents Day!

Columbia Spy was lucky enough to get this photo of a flag at Locust Street Park today.

This photo could be titled "Reflecting on the Flag." 
(We noticed that flags in both photos were facing left.)