About Town 12/20/2020

This week’s photos of Columbia 


Santa came to visit.
Many mini-Santas came to visit, also.

Skyline as seen from Mount Bethel Cemetery
Lighting up the night
[Submitted photo]
Taxpayers spent thousands of dollars, and all we got were these lousy tree lights.

[Submitted photo]
Sections of lights routinely go dark.
Sometimes they come right back on. 
Sometimes not.

Here are some bluer-than-blue lights at Kindred Collections on the 400 block of Locust.

An environmentally friendly Harley

A former vehicle being hauled away

And more junk on its way to somewhere.

This crossing sign near Front and Bridge seems to be a favorite target for vehicles.

Descending clouds

Turkey vulture looking for dead stuff

Waterlogged tree

Temporary window repair?

Free stuff

Looking up Avenue G

Bumper to bumper

Camouflaged!

Big tank coming through

Hand sanitizer at the Chestnut Street Turkey Hill Store

Ongoing problems on the 200 block of Walnut

Watch your step at Columbia Crossing.

After 41 years, a final run for first woman to drive bus for Red Rose Transit

At the wheel of the Route 18 bus, Denise Smith, 64, departed Lancaster’s Queen Street Station with two riders at 12:10 p.m. Friday on a run to Elizabethtown that would prove routine in every way but one: it was her last after 41 years.

A pleasant, reserved woman, wearing a scarf, gray fleece and black facemask, Smith kept to a tight schedule on a winding, two-hour, 45-mile roundtrip through snow-blanketed Landisville and Mount Joy to Elizabethtown’s Amtrak station. Then she headed back the same way to Lancaster. All told, she transported 10 riders.

“Be safe out there,” said one as he got off in Mount Joy with a companion who used a walker.

MORE:

https://lancasteronline.com/news/local/after-41-years-a-final-run-for-first-woman-to-drive-bus-for-red-rose/article_c85f25c2-4180-11eb-b713-c38da2b7615e.html 

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church faces expensive fixes

Time has taken its toll on St. Paul’s Episcopal Church.

Built in 1885, the historical church building at 340 Locust St., Columbia, has weathered rain, snow and wind for over a century. Faced with a growing list of repairs and a lack of funds, the church is struggling to keep its doors open.

“The most urgent structural repair needing to be done is the roof,” says the Rev. Patrick Peters, priest at St. Paul’s.

If something isn’t done soon, he says, the building will need to be vacated due to safety concerns. He knows the roof protects the structure of the building and church artifacts as well as those who gather for worship. St. Paul’s leaking roof affects the interior as well as exterior of the building.

Peters says he’s seen a lot of upgrades to the church buildings in his almost 18 years as church rector.

The necessary roof repairs are estimated at $300,000, Peters says. This involves replacing ridge caps, flashings, valleys and gutters on the 135-year-old gabled slate roof. The main problem appears to be the masonry wall under the capstones on the roof peaks which will need to be rebuilt.

MORE:

https://lancasteronline.com/features/st-paul-s-episcopal-church-faces-expensive-fixes/article_16adf8e2-415f-11eb-9e84-f77636cf7b86.html

About Town 12/13/2020

This week’s photos of Columbia 

Some signs of Christmas about town:

“Joy to the World” on the 400 block of Chestnut 
on Sunday afternoon, December 13, 2020

The singers were the LanCarolers from Lancaster’s Prima Theatre.
They travel in a trolley courtesy of Expressions Limousine of Lancaster

Elsewhere in Columbia . . .

Testing at 7th & Maple a few days ago:

1898 Firehouse coming up for review:

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Columbia Crossing contains canoes and kayaks.

Clouds in the river

A Columbia tradition:
Parking your car in the street even though parking spaces are available

Parking for cookers only

Your speed is . . . LOW BATTERY!
Photos in the fog:

New ride:

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For all your liquidation needs

Welcome

Meanwhile, down at Floyd’s

That’s one way to keep your beer cold.

Sun, setting

Weather vane, with sky aglow

Colorful clouds
COLVMBIA TELEPHONE CO

Building blocks on Purples Lane

Tent at Coffee & Cream

No more indoor dining, casinos and theaters will close and new limits on retailers: Pa. Gov. Tom Wolf – pennlive.com

Gov. Tom Wolf announced new steps Thursday to combat the surge in coronavirus cases, including temporary measures to prohibit indoor dining in restaurants, the closure of casinos and theaters and a halt to scholastic sports.

In a news conference, Wolf said he is imposing other limits on all businesses serving the public, capping retailers, barber shops and salons and other businesses to 50% of indoor occupancy limits. Gyms and fitness centers can offer outdoor classes but cannot offer indoor operations.

MORE:

https://www.pennlive.com/news/2020/12/no-more-indoor-dining-casinos-and-theaters-will-close-and-new-limits-on-retailers-pa-gov-tom-wolf.html

Columbia council OKs rezoning land for Luthercare expansion

Columbia Borough Council meeting, Dec. 8:
Council unanimously voted to authorize advertising an ordinance to rezone a parcel of land at 75 S. 12th St. from rural residential to institutional residential.
The parcel is included in the land development plans for a Luthercare development project. A rezoning ordinance initiated by the borough in 2019 overlooked the parcel, since it is next to another Luthercare property at 1200 Locust St.
Luthercare needs the parcel to be rezoned to expand onto the property.
The rezoning request will be sent to the county for formal review. If it’s approved, the borough then will advertise the ordinance.
Help for residents in need: Mayor Leo S. Lutz made a statement directed to borough residents struggling financially because of COVID-19, urging them to contact Columbia Life Network, a nonprofit that connects residents in need with food, clothing, shelter and other basic necessities. Lutz also urged local residents to continue taking precautions against COVID-19.

https://lancasteronline.com/news/regional/columbia-council-oks-rezoning-land-for-luthercare-expansion/article_545a10a4-3af7-11eb-8221-3342d665b350.html?utm_medium=social&utm_source=email&utm_campaign=user-share 

WRIGHTSVILLE COUNCIL PRESIDENT RECOVERS FROM COVID-19, DISPUTES ALLEGED ACCUSATION FROM WIFE OF COUNCILMAN

The president of Wrightsville Borough Council announced at the regular Dec. 7 council meeting that he had been hospitalized with COVID-19 in November, less than a week after attending a planning meeting.
Council President Eric J. White also accused the wife of a fellow council member of lying about when White had been diagnosed. In the Wrightsville Rants and Raves Facebook group, Mel McDonald, wife of council member Rick McDonald, said White attended the Nov. 16 planning meeting knowing he was positive for coronavirus.
On Dec. 7, White forcefully disputed a “public misconception,” saying he tested positive for COVID on Wednesday, Nov. 18, and was hospitalized on Friday, Nov. 20. He has since fully recovered.
“According to the doctors at Lancaster General, I am now the safest person in this room,” he said, explaining they said he can no longer contract COVID or give it to others.
MORE:

https://lancasteronline.com/news/regional/wrightsville-council-president-recovers-from-covid-19-council-holds-line-on-taxes-for-2021/article_bb12d072-3ae5-11eb-ac13-e7b91c9526a3.html