https://columbianewsandviews.com/2020/01/30/coming-an-event-barn-in-columbia/
Columbia names Distinguished Alumni: Hilary Hershey and Glenn Vogel
Scam Alert: Caller Claiming to be a Deputy Sheriff, Demanding Payment of Fine | Lancaster County District Attorney's Office
Residents are warned to beware of an active scam involving a caller identifying himself as a member of the Lancaster County Sheriff’s Office while demanding payment for fines. Multiple incidents were reported to the Sheriff’s Office on Tuesday.
Sourced via CRIMEWATCH®: https://lancaster.crimewatchpa.com/da/11617/post/scam-alert-caller-claiming-be-deputy-sheriff-demanding-payment-fine
January 2020 Lancaster County Delinquent Tax Report
Nifty Needles Knitting Club – Thursday at the Columbia Public Library
Columbia Creative Factory wants to buy old Heineman’s Department store, keep operating there
A nonprofit is working to purchase a building in Columbia as part of efforts to bring art to underserved communities and rejuvenate the area.
Columbia Creative Factory, an offshoot of the successful Lancaster Creative Factory, has been operating in the old Heineman’s Department store building since 2016, with volunteers leading free and low-cost classes for children, veterans and others.
Columbia is #15 out of 20 of Pennsylvania's least educated towns
15. Columbia, Lancaster County
13.3% bachelor’s degree or higher
3.7% graduate or professional degree
Paul Morgan, professor of education and demography at Penn State, says it’s all about location.
“The towns where the education level is higher tend to be closer to major, urban areas,” Morgan said.
People with higher levels of education sort into communities with those of similar educational backgrounds because of the access to services, networking opportunities and jobs that require their degrees.
On the flip side, the least educated communities tend to be isolated and rural where the educational opportunities are not as abundant.
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Tuesday and Wednesday at the Library
About Town 1/26/20
Urgent messages on borough finances, missing records, $100K a year for Market House
In a recent series of Facebook posts, Columbia Borough Councilman Howard Stevens laid out “urgent action” items that were sent to him from the borough’s finance manager. Among the items: an immediate need to create a “Debt Service Fund” to handle our $12.9 million bond debt. Finance Manager Kyle Watts said that currently we have no formal plan in place, according to Stevens.
Facts and figures
Stevens also relayed that the urgent message noted that the general fund balance Reserve Resurrection Planning needs to be addressed. He said that since his leadership role is finance for the borough that he takes this message very seriously. Stevens proposes taking $800,000 from the budget and putting it into the Debt Service fund, noting that this amount is not the whole $1.8 million in cuts he proposed recently. Those numbers are shown here:
30-434-001 462 lighting $500,000.00
30-438-014 Rotary Park $124,000.00
30-438-016 Parking Improvement Program $700,000.00
Parking study???????
30-447-002 Streetscape Master Plan $100,000.00
$1,424,000.00
Capital Fund 18
18-410-740 Police cars $ 80,275.00
18-410-741 Tire Machine $6,800.00
18-41-742 Zero Turn Mower $8,826.00
18-410-734 Hook lift Truck acc $142,095.00
18-410-744 F-550 $63,648.00
$ 301,644.00
Stevens said he posted this information to get feedback before a vote that could come at this week’s borough council meeting.
No records exist on bids for lights
[Note on the Route 462 lighting project: Information obtained through a right-to-know request reveals that no record exists about bids for the lights, which were purchased in 2018 at a cost of $347,000. Columbia Spy reported on the lighting project HERE.
The cost of installation could be an additional $500,000. Stevens has proposed canceling the project and selling the lights. For about the past two years, the lights have been stored outside at the “borough sheds” along Front Street.]
Market House could cost the borough $100,000 a year in school taxes
According to Stevens, the former Columbia Borough Fire Department building on Front Street is assessed at over $900,000. He said that the borough is paying the school district about $24,000 in taxpayer school taxes and warns that when the Market House project is completed, the building might also be taxed by the school district for an estimated $100,000 a year – for which taxpayers will be on the hook – unless the district exonerates the property. The district has not exonerated taxes on the firehouse. [Note: A few years ago, Columbia Borough paid off a debt of about a million dollars to acquire the property. The fire department could not legally sell the property because the building sits on borough-owned property.]

























































