About Town
This week’s photos from around Columbia…
Former Colonial Metals VP jumps to new firm
http://www.recyclingtodayglobal.com/article/greenland-america-scrap-recycling-trading-greenberg/
MMA fighter high on cocaine gets in fight with two garbage cans – MMA News
ROUTE 30 IS OPEN BOTH DIRECTIONS
Man cited for setting off fireworks near homes
Wednesday, August 29, 2018
35508-8-29-18
Charges:
Source:
Job opening for full-time Property Inspector in Columbia Borough
Go HERE for details.
Construction at Starview Brews to begin mid-September
Construction at Starview Brews, 224 Locust Street, is expected to begin in mid-September. The brew pub hopes to open in December or January.
MORE: LINK
Columbia man charged after allegedly fighting with trash cans
A 36-year-old Columbia man was charged with public drunkenness and disorderly conduct after getting into a fight with two trash cans, police say.
https://fox43.com/2018/08/29/columbia-man-charged-after-fighting-with-trash-cans/
Curiouser and curiouser: Columbia's parking lot regulations
Questions about regulations for the borough’s public parking lots were raised but not fully answered at the August Public Property & Public Works Committee meeting.
“No vehicle, including boat trailers, camp trailers and any like devices, shall be allowed to remain parked on any Borough highway or street for a period longer than 48 consecutive hours. Moreover, when such a vehicle is moved, it shall be moved no less a distance than twice its own length.”
Committee members and officials could not definitively state that the ordinance covers parking lots, and Mayor Leo Lutz said a sign needs to be posted at the Locust Street lot. Borough Manager Rebecca Denlinger said the ordinance and signage need to be looked at, also.
When questioned about parking at Columbia River Park, Lutz said the 48-hour rule does not apply there for vehicles with boat trailers, because those vehicles are used in conjunction with the boat ramp and the park is regulated by and was paid for (in part) by the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission. “They can come from West Podunk and park there every week and no problem,” he said. Boaters who camp on the river islands leave vehicles with trailers in an assigned, or “restricted,” area for days and even weeks at a time without being ticketed. However, vehicles without trailers that are parked in the restricted area are routinely ticketed by borough officers. It is unclear why officers are authorized to ticket, if Fish and Boat Commission regulations apply there, as Lutz has suggested. There is, however, a borough ordinance that may grant the borough that authority. It states, in part:
“…parking zones or parking places for the exclusive use by vehicles with trailers only at the parking areas designated for the River Park in the Borough of Columbia as said property is described in an agreement by and between the Borough of Columbia and the Pennsylvania Fish Commission dated September 9, 1968, and no vehicle, other than a vehicle with a trailer, shall at any time be parked at such space so designated. “
After Labor Day, any vehicle may park in the restricted area, not just vehicles with trailers. It is unclear if those vehicles will be governed by the 48-hour rule and be ticketed. At any rate, the borough contradicts its ordinance by relaxing the parking restrictions, since the ordinance states: “no vehicle, other than a vehicle with a trailer, shall at any time be parked at such space so designated.”

























































































