About Town 8/25/19

This week’s photos of Columbia

Morning reverie
First day of school
This sign could bear some looking into.

 They turn this color at dawn, for a few minutes.

 He must be a patriotic canine.

Sidewalk median

 Newly painted lines, just in time for the first day of school

 Double barrel

Sidewalk seats

 Peace, love, hope, unity, faith, joy, kindness

 Sidewalk abuse

He finds it fascinating, so who are we to judge?

 You don’t see this end too often.

Binary system, with a crow in between

On the grounds of the former firehouse on Front Street

 Recycling

 Balancing act

 Bottoms up!

 He may have made it to the top . . .

 . . . but the smorgasbord is down here.

Global vision

Old look at 203 Walnut

Unique pillar at 203 Walnut

 Already in season
At the Nick Mills memorial at 3rd & Walnut

Just a reminder – Put your used flags here (at the Elks on the 400 block of Chestnut).

This was once known as the Cookman Church.
(6th & Chestnut)

 Evil little Volkswagen

 “Board” meeting filled with bird-brains. Most board meetings are.

Even a work glove deserves a break.

Soon-to-be saw cuts at 4th & Locust 

The lot at 4th & Locust is now a staging area for construction equipment.

 Alice went through there.

Almost hidden away

Sign near 3rd & Cherry

 Generation gap

Shifter

Left behind

 Under the bridge

 126 Walnut

Here a weed, there a weed, everywhere a weed-weed

 Man emerging from a horse’s neck

 They must be supervisors. They’re standing around doing nothing.

Here are the workers. They’re working.

 Cleaning up at Mount Bethel

 Meanwhile, over at Garfield Road

A lot of this lately –
This time at 7th & Maple.

Right vs . . .

Left

Shiny plane flying low

 Pumped up

 Portable shower

 Beauty strip

 This used to say FIRE ESCAPE (at Hotel Locust).

 Right on through at Living Stones on Front Street

 There’s a Jeff Foxworthy joke that goes: “If you mow your lawn and find a car, you might be a redneck.”

Discount rail travel

Corrugated sign

 When you want to keep your safety barrels safe

Welcome to the jungle.

 Wanted: technician to work on bods

 Biplane over River Park
Waiting outside Stover’s

 Anatomically correct – in the window of Burning Bridge Antiques

 “Take Away Refuge” = a portable shelter?
(So that’s what those hoppers are for.)

 Reminder
 Flying into frame

 Sumac shadows – 
Back in the day, this might have been called “op-art.”

 Long Level as seen from Laurel Hill

 Egret fishing for breakfast

This Rube Goldberg-like contraption…

…actually worked.

There really is a Transylvania County. It’s in North Carolina.

He refused to look at the camera.

Something extra, just in case

The project is almost finished but violates an ordinance – Should it be allowed to move forward?

Painting at Bootleg Antiques, as of June 23, 2019. The project has since progressed and is now almost complete. 

To paint or not to paint, that is the question. Or perhaps the question really is, Should a painting project be permitted to be finished if it’s in violation of an ordinance? (An ordinance passed unanimously last year by Borough Council and crafted with good intentions, which has run up against the Law of Unintended Consequences.) That is the question before Columbia Borough Council, which will likely be addressed at its next meeting.

That same question was discussed at Wednesday night’s meeting of the Historic Architectural Review Board (HARB). At issue is a painting project currently underway at Bootleg Antiques on Bridge Street, which has been going on for well over a month and is almost finished. The project appears to be in violation of Ordinance 905 (passed October 8, 2018) which revised the definition of the term ALTERATION:

“Any act or process requiring a building permit and any other act or process not requiring a building permit but specifically listed in this chapter as an act or process reviewable by the Borough’s Historical Architectural Review Board, including, without limitation, the repair, application of paint to any previously unpainted building material or surface, replacement, reconstruction, demolition or relocation of any structure or object, or any part of any structure or object that is visible from a property’s tax parcel street address, but excluding rear elevations and rear accessory buildings visible only from secondary public streets or public alleys, or the installation of a satellite dish, antenna and other required equipment on the front of buildings, along their facades, or on the roofs or sides of such buildings if visible from a public right-of-way.”

Specifically, the project appears to violate the ordinance because the business owner painted a previously unpainted surface, namely, the building’s brick exterior. The ordinance, which governs properties in the Historic District, states that no such surface may be painted (at least not without approval from HARB or Council).

Bill Pflumm the building’s owner, and Tom Anderson, the owner of Bootleg Antiques (a building tenant) attended the meeting but were unsure which body – HARB or Council- is responsible for the ordinance and its enforcement. The two also questioned the reasoning behind the recent posting of a “stop-work” at Bootleg. Board members explained that HARB does not post such orders, or pass or enforce ordinances. Zoning & Planning Officer Jeff Helm, who posted the order and is responsible for enforcement, was conspicuously absent from the meeting. (The following report may explain why.)

Further complicating matters is the fact that borough officials have stated they only became aware of the project at the July 23, 2019 Columbia Borough Council meeting, at which time the project was already well underway. On top of that, Helm did not immediately act once he learned of the project but instead waited about another week. In addition, Helm’s assertion that no borough employee noticed the project and reported it strains credibility.

The timeline:

At the July 23, 2019 Borough Council meeting, council candidate Sharon Lintner asked why the painting project was being allowed to continue when a similar project at the Haitian Maranatha Church on the 200 block of Locust Street was shut down almost immediately last year when it was discovered. Lintner cited the fact that the latest project violates the borough’s ordinance.

At the August 8, 2019 Borough Council Work Session, Helm said he had been unaware of the project, because no one had filed a complaint. However, even after Helm was apprised, he still did not address the issue until the beginning of August when he reportedly sent a letter to the building owner informing him of the ordinance violation. That information apparently did not reach the owner of Bootleg Antiques until a week later, when Helm talked to him in person. The painting had “apparently” continued in the interim, according to Helm.

Helm also said that although a “stop-work” order is typically posted in such a circumstance, it was not done in this case. When questioned further, he explained the order was not posted because the painting was about three-quarters finished. In addition, Helm attempted to plead ignorance about the project: “To the best of my knowledge, this painting was going on for weeks and it never came to the knowledge of anybody in the borough that I know of that it was actually happening,” Helm said. He also implied that the community was at fault for not filing a complaint. “If we’re expecting minimal staff to do that [inspect properties daily], I think that’s an unrealistic expectation,” Helm explained. “There should have been no reason why this went on for two weeks, three weeks or whatever the time period was without some complaint being filed with the borough.”

Helm told Council that he first heard about project two weeks previous when he was told there had been “multiple weeks of painting going on.” He said it was unfortunate that a complaint was made only at the “last minute.” Helm also noted several ghost signs had been painted earlier. [NOTE: The ghost signs were previously painted decades ago and the new painting therefore do not violate the ordinance.]

Councilman John Novak told Helm that a stop-work order should have been posted immediately when the owner was apprised of the violation instead of a week later. Novak added that imposing some sort of fines and penalties should now be considered, because painting allegedly continued between the time the owner was notified and the stop-work order was posted.

Mayor Leo Lutz said a stop-work order indicates a citable offense, and the fact that a notice was ignored takes it “into another category.” Lutz told Council that the stop-work order should stay in place until councillors make a decision: “That stop-work order should stay in place until you seven say, yes you can continue on with it, or no you must remove it, or take it back and do it right.”

Novak further explained that it is the property owner’s responsibility to first approach HARB so that members can weigh in and send their “advise” so that Council may act on it. Novak also recommended imposing fines and penalties and not moving forward until that is done.

Musser’s Markets selling family-owned stores to Giant | ABC27

EAST DRUMORE TOWNSHIP, Pa. (WHTM) – Musser’s Markets announced it has made the decision to exit the grocery industry and sell their remaining grocery stores to Giant.

Musser’s Markets have been in Lancaster and Lebanon counties for the past 94 years.

MORE:

https://www.abc27.com/news/local/giant-to-acquire-one-of-the-oldest-local-markets/

About Town 8/18/19

This week’s photos of Columbia

And that’s how to use your head.
 What the heck is it?
Nosferatu?

 A mutated Albatwitch?

Nope, just the shadows of a guy carrying a 4′ x 9′ piece of particle board up an extension ladder.
Wait . . . what?!
 The Poplar Street School, still for sale

 Many windows, multi-colored and otherwise

 Man at work

 Field of Screams has a boat (?)
Maybe they’ll round up some river monsters.

 Boot Hill Saloon, across from the cemetery – says so on the shirt

 Hetter
Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy!

The fence lost.

Officer on duty

Elephantine 

17-19 South 3rd
See the note below.

Nice note

Attempted break-in at Hotel Locust?

Heron reflecting 

More men at work
(North 3rd & Avenue H)

New facility at the Shops at Prospect 

Sometimes a slab is an abstract. 

Hung up

But all this web got was a few raindrops. 

Earlier this week, a man was supposedly about to jump from the Veterans Memorial Bridge (near the Wrightsville end) but was talked down by a pedestrian. Several departments responded. 

And this is why you shouldn’t leave those hubcaps standing around.  They tend to sprout. 

Stop in and fill up.

Rumors of his existence might be greatly exaggerated. 
And yet, here’s a “Special Parking Permit” outside his office.

 Historic window at the Haitian church

 You see? Unicorns DO exist!

 Cut-rate windshield, in case you don’t need to go anywhere. 

No comment 

Bricks and moss

 Columbia artist Joanna Spicer just painted this mural inside the soon-to-be “Coffee & Cream” building at Front & Walnut. Two years ago, she painted a mural and the emblems of the United States armed forces at the Locust Street Park storage building. Columbia Spy reported on that project HERE.

 Workin’ on the railroad

 Painting crossing lines at 4th & Locust

The cement’s here (400 block of Locust).

Here’s where it goes. 

 Tiger swallowtail with tattered wings

 Still here pointing there

Looks like something out of Tolkien.

 But on top: an airplane weather vane

 You might have to be from the planet Gallifrey to understand some of these symbols at NAWCC. 

The proverbial cross of gold

 The Weeping Angel – praying for its nose to return?

 Looks like we got us a convoy.

 Here yesterday, gone today

 The building is for sale or rent (4th & Chestnut).

 Watching over

 Ready to pave, patch, or in-between.

 Eight A’s ready for the 6th Street road closure during Monday’s dismissal at Park Elementary

 Sunflower – The bees like it.

 Building an armada

 Way up high

 Baby sparrow at River Park
(But wipe that fountain before you use it.)

 More progress at “Coffee and Cream” – Front & Walnut

 Tree vs pitchfork, but who won?

 Don’t stand underneath.

 That lazy mattress in Avenue H (200 block)

 Add this to the parking study: plenty of space at the Avenue H municipal lot.

 Delivery service, right to your door

Take your pick peaches on South 9th, right around the corner from Locust
[Submitted photo]

Free community breakfast coming up