Here are a few nightlights that popped up on Chestnut Street recently...
Sunday, October 28, 2018
About Town - 10/28/18
Here are a few nightlights that popped up on Chestnut Street recently...
ASSAULT at Halloween parade - Man knocked down, baby knocked from stroller
On 10/25/18 at approximately 7:39pm the Columbia Borough Police Department was dispatched to the 400 Block of Locust Street for an assault. Upon arrival the Officer spoke with one of the victims who stated that he was struck and knocked down by two males that came running through the crown during the parade. Another victim stated that her baby was knocked from her stroller by one of the suspects. The suspects were described as black males in their 20's. One was wearing a cammo sweatshirt and dreads and the other was wearing a red baseball hat with a white sweatshirt. One of the suspects lost his green Nike sneaker at the scene. Anyone with information regarding this assault should contact the Columbia Borough Police Department at 717-684-7735 or text LANCS to 847411.
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Saturday, October 27, 2018
3-vehicle accident on S. 4th Street
Borough mulls funding $4 million parking garage related to hotel project
At the meeting, Cimarron CEO Don Murphy presented a tax map overlay and updated design for the project, showing how the garage would be built on a parcel behind the hotel. (The original plan was for hotel rooms to be built over a parking area.) The parcel, which is currently owned by Cimarron, would be conveyed to the borough.
Garage construction would be funded through a Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program 1:1 matching grant. According to pa.gov: "The Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP) is a Commonwealth grant program administered by the Office of the Budget for the acquisition and construction of regional economic, cultural, civic, recreational, and historical improvement projects." If a $4 million RACP grant is approved by the state, the borough will pay half the cost of the garage: $2 million. [Editor's note: The $4 million figure was quoted by borough manager Rebecca Denlinger at the meeting and differs from the $3.5 million presented in the summary. Denlinger told the committee that she uses a $25,000 to $30,000 per parking space to estimate the cost of a parking structure. Using those factors, however, the product does not equal $4 million.]
Murphy said the borough's funding of the garage would make the hotel project more feasible for Cimarron, because the company would not be required to abide by prevailing wage laws (and would obviously be spared from funding, maintaining, and managing the garage). If the RACP application is denied, a combined hotel and garage project could still be completed but on a smaller scale, with parking available for hotel patrons only, according to Murphy.
Denlinger noted two other mechanisms available to bring funding to the project: a Keystone Opportunity Zone (KOZ) designation and a Qualified Opportunity Zone designation. According to Denlinger, the KOZ issue is currently before the state legislature, and the borough should know by year’s end whether it will be approved. According to pa.gov: "Keystone Opportunity Zones eliminate specific state and local taxes within specific underdeveloped and underutilized areas." A Qualified Opportunity Zone designation has already been approved, however. Denlinger said that quite a large area of Columbia has already received this federal designation, including the block where the hotel site is located. irs.gov states: "An Opportunity Zone is an economically-distressed community where new investments, under certain conditions, may be eligible for preferential tax treatment."
The finance committee voted to move forward with the next step of the RACP process to fund not only the hotel project but also a semi-defined project for the market house. If this second step is approved, the state will invite Columbia Borough to make a final, more detailed, application, at which time, the borough will be required to commit taxpayer funds.