Starview Brews, 224 Locust St., Columbia, Sept. 25. Pass. Facility offering for sale two bags of Woodland All American Beef Jerky, which is not approved for wholesale. Product was removed from sale.
Columbia Market House, 15 S. Third St., Columbia, complaint, Sept. 23. Pass. No violations.
The former McGinness property at 1020 Manor Street [File photo]
JOE LINTNER | COLUMBIA SPY
Columbia Borough Council voted unanimously to take out a $5 million mortgage on the former McGinness property at 1020 Manor Street at its September 23 meeting.
The details Council voted to approve two key ordinances at the meeting to finalize a loan package worth over $5 million from the Commonwealth Financing Authority.
Council passed Ordinance No. 963 of 2025, granting the Commonwealth Financing Authority a mortgage on the former McGinness property at 1020 Manor Street as collateral for a $5,028,030 loan through the state’s Business in Our Sites (BIOS) Program. The mortgage will serve as security for the funding.
Council also approved Ordinance No. 964 of 2025, which amends Ordinance No. 962 from July 15, 2025 that had authorized the issuance of a general obligation note for the same $5,028,030 amount. The amendment removes language that referenced the anticipated sale of $1 million worth of the subject property by December 31, 2025.
The loan carries a 3% annual interest rate, with a penalty rate of 12.5% per annum on overdue amounts. The borough retains the right to make early payments on the loan without penalty.
Council hopes to pay back the loan by selling the property, although no potential buyers have been announced.
It’s unclear whether council plans to sell the property as one tract or as individual lots when a $2.2 million soil stabilization project is completed in November.
State and local officials attended a groundbreaking ceremony for Makle Park Tuesday afternoon. [Photo: Submitted]
State and local officials attended a groundbreaking ceremony for Makle Park Tuesday afternoon. [Photo: Submitted]
JOE LINTNER | COLUMBIA SPY
State and local officials helped kick off a major improvement project for Makle Park at a groundbreaking ceremony Tuesday afternoon.
The project is Phase 1 of improvements that include resurfacing the park’s basketball courts, resurfacing the parking lot with new pavement and striping, constructing a picnic pavilion, and installing a prefabricated restroom. Also included are new benches, trash receptacles, picnic tables, and bike racks.
The improvements are primarily funded through a state Community Conservation Partnerships Program grant, with a matching contribution from the borough.
Brad Chambers hosted the presentation, “Underground Abolition” at Columbia’s National Watch & Clock Museum on Sunday evening.
JOE LINTNER | COLUMBIA SPY
Columbia’s National Watch & Clock Museum was the backdrop Sunday evening for “Underground Abolition,” a symposium focused on Columbia’s role in the Underground Railroad.
The event was organized and sponsored by Columbian Brad Chambers, a 2026 candidate for Pennsylvania State House. About 100 people assembled to learn about the history of the Underground Railroad and its connection to Columbia.
Columbia Borough Councilwoman Barbara Fisher read a proclamation designating September 2025 as Underground Railroad Month in Columbia.
Columbia Borough Councilwoman Barbara Fisher kicked off the proceedings by reading a proclamation declaring September 2025 as “National Underground Railroad Month in the Borough Columbia.” The proclamation noted that the Underground Railroad “played a significant role in the eradication of slavery in the United States and became a cornerstone for a more comprehensive civil rights movement that followed.”
Local historian Cindy Beaston explained why September was chosen as “International Underground Railroad Month.”
Local historian Cindy Beaston explained that September is “International Underground Railroad Month” because it’s the month that Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglas found freedom in the North. Beaston noted that Columbia’s network of tunnels aided escaped slaves in their journey to freedom.
The Mt. Zion AME Church choir provided musical interludes.
Throughout the event, the Mt. Zion AME Church choir provided musical interludes with songs of faith and freedom.
Professor emeritus Leroy Hopkins spoke about the Black community’s role in the Underground Railroad.
Professor emeritus Leroy Hopkins spoke about the Black community’s role in the Underground Railroad. “The Underground Railroad’s not possible without the Black community,” he said. He noted that African-American entrepreneurs Stephen Smith (who owned a successful business in Columbia) and William Whipper played pivotal roles.
Reverend Dr. Patricia McAllister: “As we look to the future together, we must dismantle the evil systems of this world.” [Columbia Spy file photo]
Reverend Dr. Patrcia McAllister senior pastor at the Mt. Zion AME Church, spoke about social justice. “We can’t change what happened in the past, but we can change what we do moving forward,” she said. “As we look to the future together, we must dismantle the evil systems of this world.”
The program concluded with the audience holding hands and joining the choir in song.
A new banner at 3rd & Locust celebrates Columbia’s upcoming 300th anniversary in 2026.
Columbia was originally a settlement founded by John Wright and other Quakers in 1726. The settlement came to be known as Wright’s Ferry and was formally laid out and named Columbia in 1788 by Samuel Wright.
Signage at Columbia River Park states that only vehicles with trailers may park in the main lot between Memorial Day and Labor Day, but the ordinance makes no mention of those dates.
JOE LINTNER | COLUMBIA SPY
Columbia resident Mary Wickenheiser told officials at Tuesday’s borough council meeting that a discrepancy exists between parking signage at Columbia River Park and the municipal ordinance that governs parking there.
Wickenheiser noted that Columbia River Parking Ordinance 719, adopted May 12, 2003, states that designated spaces at River Park should be reserved exclusively for vehicles with trailers (with no restrictions for time of year). In other words, the ordinance indicates that area is reserved year-round.
However, signage at the park indicates that the trailer-only parking restriction applies only from Memorial Day through Labor Day, after which the spaces become available for general parking. (The designated spaces are in the parking lot between the Columbia Crossing building and the bridge.)
“There is nothing in this ordinance specifying Memorial Day to Labor Day,” Wickenheiser told council.
Ordinance 719 authorizes the Borough’s Public Safety Committee to “establish, designate and mark by proper signs parking zones or parking places for the exclusive use by vehicles with trailers only” at River Park parking areas. The ordinance specifies that “no vehicle, other than a vehicle with trailer, shall at any time be parked at such spaces so designated.”
“I spent two hours going through River Park advisory notes thinking that maybe this was something that happened after the building [Columbia Crossing] opened, but it was not,” Wickenheiser said.
Mayor Leo Lutz suggested that updated language may not have gone through general codes and been published.
Columbia River Park property is governed by an agreement between the Borough of Columbia and the Pennsylvania Fish Commission dated September 9, 1968, according to the ordinance text.
The issue was left unresolved at the end of the meeting.