

The meeting packet is HERE.
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Neil Robert Bushong and Donna B. Bushong conveyed property on Malleable Road to Neil Robert Bushong and Donna B. Bushong for $1.
Mabel Hinson conveyed property on Locust Street to Kevin Farlow for $632,000.
Mabel Hinson and Luis E. Torres Santiago conveyed property on Locust Street to Mabel Hinson for $1.

On 2/25/24 at approximately 7:59 p.m. Columbia Borough Police were dispatch to the 500 block of Ave. H for a report of shots fired.
Responding officers arrived on scene at 8:01 p.m. to find the perpetrators had fled the area. Upon canvassing the scene, multiple cartridge casings were located. Officers also located private property damage due to bullet strikes.
There are no known injuries due to the incident. Photos are persons of interest involved in the incident.
Anyone with information on the shooting incident or if you have video of the area, contact the Columbia Police at 717-684-7735.
Incident #2402029104 Location 500 block of Ave. H Columbia, PA 17512 Date Issued Feb 25, 2024 @ 8:08 PM Incident Type Aggravated Assault Created Feb 25th, 2024 @ 11:29 PM




Sourced via CRIMEWATCH®: https://lancaster.crimewatchpa.com/columbiapd/10552/incidents/shots-fired-incident?fbclid=IwAR0C0oIs4vemzR0_M9wgl22B0JF0JWE0xGFsOOnufvaQudrRGZNErUfdJaA
(Click/tap on photos to see larger, sharper images.)

Rescue personnel pulled a man from the Susquehanna River this morning after he went for a swim in the cold water, as Columbia Spy reported HERE.




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Members of the Lancaster County Bird Club, who were at the Columbia Crossing building in Columbia River Park for an activity, first spotted the man in the water and called 911.



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The Veterans Memorial (Route 462) Bridge looks to be in bad shape. Will it make it to the rehabilitation project slated to start in 2027? Will the project even happen?


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These keys were hanging from a tree branch in Rotary Park and were subsequently turned in to Columbia Borough Police.

MARKET ST.

Jesse the Computer Guy at Columbia Computer & Gaming Company, 436 Locust Street, has a selection of games, DVDs, tapes, and other goodies.


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Hebe, the goddess of eternal youth, was hanging out on the 400 block of Locust Street this week.

This holiday is coming soon.
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When you need to take a load off.

These things have a tendency to migrate.

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You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.

A rock sculpture of sorts
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Reflections

Always wear a life jacket in this zone.

The fence at River Park was broken in two places.


The Columbia Public Works Department remedied the problem.

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Meanwhile, in Washington Boro

Spare gas tank in tow

Down at the tracks

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The moon taking a break on the bridge

Coming soon

Over on the other side

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Alley cats in the 200 block of Avenue H


Canine watching the felines

The nose knows.

The General Edward C. Shannon Armory

Friday’s sunset



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Curiosities at Columbia Curiosities . . .























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Columbia Borough Council meeting, Feb. 13.
The borough has moved one step closer to receiving almost a $1 million reimbursement for money used to renovate the Columbia Market House, Borough Manager Mark Stivers told council members.
Columbia has been waiting more than three years to collect, and council members want part of the reimbursement to start the second phase of the market, Stivers said during the meeting. The second phase will focus on parking.
Reimbursement stalled when borough employees could not find a copy of the deed to the land at 15 S. Third St. Instead, Columbia had to prove ownership through other documents, such as newspaper clippings and borough council minutes from more than 100 years ago.
MORE:
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Artie Poindexter scored 19 points and lifted No. 2 Columbia over third-seeded Delone Catholic 57-53 in the District Three Class 3A boys basketball semifinals at Kreiser Gym Friday.
Columbia (18-5) advanced to the district championship game for the third time in four seasons. The Crimson Tide will take on No. 1 Trinity in the final at Giant Center Wednesday at 8 p.m.
This was the last home game for the team’s eight seniors. It was the last time Poindexter will wear his No. 3 jersey and compete in the shadow of that Crimson Tide mural.
MORE:

A Columbia Borough-based pharmacist has been sentenced to three months of probation after submitting fraudulent pharmacy claims and giving customers extra pills.
Richard Boahene, 41, of East Hempfield Township, owner of the former Qwik-Med Pharmacy at 369 Locust St., Columbia, pleaded guilty Feb. 13 to charges of improper administration of a controlled substance, making a false statement and making a false medical claim.
Charges of drug possession with intent to deliver, dealing with proceeds of unlawful activities, criminal use of a communication facility and submitting a claim for services not rendered to a patient were dropped in the plea.
MORE:

Rescue personnel pulled a man from the Susquehanna River this morning after he ignored requests from police to get out of the water.
The man was initially seen at about 11 o’clock by members of the Lancaster County Bird Club, who were at the Columbia Crossing building in Columbia River Park for an activity. Members reported that the man, who was wearing a Superman t-shirt and shorts, entered and exited the water several times near the boat ramp.
After about 15 minutes, members became concerned and called 911. When police arrived, the man ignored their requests to leave the water.
Rescue crews arrived shortly after and located the man a few hundred yards downriver from the Columbia Water Company. Personnel pulled him from the water and placed him in their boat before transporting him back to the boat ramp, where crews were waiting.
The man appeared combative when he was removed from the boat. He was placed on a gurney before being taken by ambulance.



Stephen Atkins Swails
In addition to producing six generals and numerous other army officers, Columbia can boast another historical fact: It is the birthplace of the army’s first black officer in U.S. history. This fact has been confirmed by Hugh MacDougall, a historian from Cooperstown, N.Y.
Born in Columbia on February 23, 1832, Stephen Atkins Swails was the son of a black father and white mother. In 1863, while employed as a boatman in New York, Swails enlisted and joined the renowned 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, one of the first African-American regiments in the Civil War. He eventually rose to the rank of first lieutenant.
In 1863, Swails participated in the assault on Fort Wagner in Charleston, S.C., by the 54th Regiment in the summer of 1863. The 1989 filmGlory depicted the heroic charge.
After the war, he was made a major general in the South Carolina National Guard and was elected mayor of Kingstree, South Carolina. He also served as a state senator for ten years, including three terms as president pro tem.
Swails died in Kingstree in 1901 and is buried in the Friendly Society Cemetery, Charleston, South Carolina.
[Sources: LNP, Wikipedia]