Thursday, April 10, 2025
Agenda - Columbia Borough Parks & Recreation Advisory Board Meeting - April 10, 2025
Wednesday, April 9, 2025
Columbia Catholic Mental Health Ministry to offer suicide prevention training
LANCASTERONLINE | Staff
Young people can gain suicide prevention skills and mental health awareness at a free training event hosted by the Columbia Catholic Mental Health Ministry.
Set to take place May 10, the two-part event will provide education on common mental health conditions and will train attendees in suicide prevention, the ministry said. Children 12 and up, as well as adult counselors, can attend the training, which will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Holy Trinity Church Parish Center, 404 Cherry St., Columbia Borough. Those under 18 must get parental permission if they want to participate in the suicide prevention portion of the day.
“Our community has recently suffered the heartbreaking loss of two young lives to suicide, deeply affecting their families, friends and our local schools,” said the ministry’s Deacon Jim Doyle. “By learning to recognize and support someone who may be feeling lonely, despondent, or having suicidal thoughts, you could help save a life. This training provides the tools to offer that support when it’s needed most.”
The training will be conducted by Jayne Miller, WellSpan’s Lebanon County crisis intervention counselor. At the mental health awareness session, attendees will learn about conditions including depression, addiction and eating disorders, and will learn to recognize symptoms and offer help. The session also aims to promote emotional wellness and reduce stigma.
The suicide prevention session will teach participants to recognize and address suicide warning signs through an evidence-based certification program called Question, Persuade, Refer. Participants who complete this session will get a QPR booklet and a certification.
Pizza will be provided at the event, which is held in partnership with Columbia Catholic Youth Ministry.
Attendees must register by May 5. Donations to cover the cost of materials and food are welcome.
For more information, contact Doyle at ccmentalhealthministry@gmail.com or (717) 343-1102.
GET HELP
If you or someone you know is in crisis and needs immediate help, contact the following organizations:
988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, suicidepreventionlifeline.org, or call, text or chat 988. (The previous number 800-273-8255 still works.)
Those who are deaf or hard of hearing can contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline via TTY at 800-799-4889.
Lancaster County Crisis Intervention, 717-394-2631.
LGBTQ+-specific resources: thetrevorproject.org/get-help.
Veterans who are in crisis can call the toll-free Veterans Crisis Line by dialing 988 and then pressing 1, by texting to 838255, or chatting online (lanc.news/help4vets). This service is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. All calls are confidential.
Tuesday, April 8, 2025
Columbia Borough Public Works Department releases March 2025 report
Paving Projects Face Rising Costs
According to Jake Graham, manager of the Columbia Borough Public Works Department, 2025 paving projects are facing price increases.
Co-Stars pricing through Heidelberg Materials, formerly Highway Materials, has increased significantly. The 2025 pricing for 9.5mm is $78.95 per/ton, compared to $69.90 in 2024. Pricing for 25mm is $66.55 per/ton compared to $58.55 in 2024.
These streets are scheduled to be paved:
Walnut St (900 &1000 blocks CDBG)
*S 2nd St (Locust to Cherry)
*S 3rd St (Locust to Cherry)
*Maple St (500 block)
*Poplar St (600 block)
*13th St (Ironville Pike to Chestnut)
*Locust St (600 block)
*Tann Ave (Lancaster Ave to Elbow Ave) (*Indicates streets to be paved by Public Works staff.)
Street Maintenance Activities Underway
Crews have been actively performing crack sealing on borough streets to prevent water erosion and pavement failure.
Yard Waste Services Resume for Spring
Curbside yard waste collection resumed on March 31, 2025, with crews collecting 9.18 tons of yard waste on the first day alone. Collection will continue every Monday throughout the borough, with Tuesday pickups scheduled when Monday falls on a holiday (Memorial Day on May 26 and Labor Day on September 1). The final curbside collection for the season is set for November 10, 2025.
Starting in April, the yard waste recycling facility will open twice monthly—on the second and fourth Saturdays from 8 am to 12 pm—through October 25, 2025.
The report notes that four participating municipalities deposited 31.02 tons of yard waste at the borough yard waste recycling facility in March. Crews have completed processing materials from last season and are currently screening compost material.
The report also mentions that two public works employees recently completed a PennDOT flagger recertification course.
Trash, human feces lead to removal of Columbia bus shelter
JADE CAMPOS | LNP Staff Writer
A downtown Columbia bus shelter was removed in March after borough officials determined it had become a public safety issue.
Police Chief Jack Brommer said the borough received multiple reports of human feces at the Locust Street shelter in addition to a growing amount of litter. Brommer contacted the South Central Transit Authority, which operates the bus route, to assess the state of the bus shelter. Ultimately, he said, officials agreed the shelter was in poor condition.
An SCTA statement shared online by the borough resident who runs the Columbia Spy blog, noted Brommer requested SCTA remove the shelter because of “vagrancy, safety and hygiene issues.”
“I think the shelter itself was limited in size and didn’t really accommodate the number of people using the bus stop,” Brommer said. He added that he told SCTA that one solution could be to relocate the shelter.
The bus shelter was erected 20 years ago, Brommer said, and had not been properly maintained. Maintenance fell to SCTA, though Brommer said the authority contracted workers who did an “insufficient” job that left borough staff cleaning up afterwards.
Greg Downing, SCTA executive director, said the shelter was removed at the borough’s suggestion. He said a cleaning service stopped by the shelter once a week, but the conditions would become so bad in the interim that people wouldn’t wait inside of the shelter unless it was raining.
Brommer said the borough would be open to adding a new shelter at the stop in the future, though nothing is concrete. He noted that buses still stop at the location, which has two benches.
MORE: HERE
Columbia Borough to auction off dump truck
Resolution No. 2025-07, unanimously adopted during the April 8th council meeting, authorizes the sale of a 2001 Chevrolet 3500 dump truck that has been replaced through the borough's lease program with Enterprise Fleet Management.
The truck's estimated value is $2,000 or above. The resolution formalizes the council's decision to dispose of the equipment through public auction instead of direct sale or disposal.
The dump truck with snow plow was originally a wastewater treatment plant vehicle that was handed down to the public works department at 45,412 miles. The department recently received a 2024 Chevrolet 3500 dump truck with snow plow and salt spreader through Enterprise Fleet.