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May. 16th, 2023 @ 9:18 pm
RT @timelywriter: PHILADELPHIA (@AP) _ Cherelle Parker wins Democratic primary for Philadelphia mayor, likely positioning her as 1st woman…

May. 16th, 2023 @ 8:16 pm
RT @RyanDeto: NEW: The AP has called the Allegheny County Executive race for Sara Innamorato, a progressive lawmaker. She joins several oth…

May. 16th, 2023 @ 8:13 pm
RT @PeteHallPA: Democrat Heather Boyd has won the 163rd Legislative District special election in a 76-22% landslide preserving the Democra…

May. 4th, 2023 @ 9:06 am
RT @MacFarlaneNews: Zachary Rehl, Ethan Nordean, Enrique Tarrio and Joe Biggs are found GUILTY of seditious conspiracy.

Mar. 23rd, 2023 @ 10:46 am
RT @MacFarlaneNews: FLASH: Per my teammate @RobLegare Federal judge Amy Berman Jackson sentences Riley Williams to 36 months (3 years) i…

Mar. 23rd, 2023 @ 9:00 am
RT @MacFarlaneNews: Defense argues Trump and Rep Scott Perry (R-PA) and Nick Fuentes were influences on Riley Williams (Perry is the Cong…

Mar. 23rd, 2023 @ 8:50 am
RT @ryanjreilly: DOJ: Riley Williams is not some “impulsive Gen-Z gadfly,” she “participated in domestic terrorism, plain and simple.” Ril…

Jan. 31st, 2023 @ 12:42 pm
Pa State Sen. Mike Regan tosses protester blocking doorway at 1K$ fundraising lunch for Sen. Scott Martin https://t.co/KZqU3QfWiB

Jan. 17th, 2023 @ 6:19 pm
The end of an era - Tom and Frances Wolf exit the Pennsylvania State Capitol 1.17.23 https://t.co/l4eOdKBz6y

Jan. 12th, 2023 @ 3:26 pm
RT @ByCarterWalker: Lycoming County recount results are in. Story soon: https://t.co/Fj1SmIVmiN

Jan. 10th, 2023 @ 8:04 pm
Tuesday 4:53pm - Pa. Senate Rules committee passes SB1 11-6 https://t.co/3aMf75hCnX

Jan. 10th, 2023 @ 5:14 pm
Editing video of Pa. Senate Rules committee Tuesday 4:35pm. https://t.co/2VMENm4l6V

Jan. 9th, 2023 @ 6:46 pm
Pa Senate State Government committee Monday afternoon. Chair Cris Dush - nobody has been charged with insurrection. https://t.co/cOMm6oPSVU

Jan. 9th, 2023 @ 6:18 pm
Pa Speaker Mark Rozzi - Because they took all the money away. https://t.co/HVwgilc1sC

Jan. 4th, 2023 @ 7:42 am
Pa Speaker vote Rozzi 115 - Metzgar 85 https://t.co/7brf5ipXX8

Jan. 3rd, 2023 @ 9:01 pm
Pa. Speaker Rozzi 8:01pm https://t.co/9M5g1cFWds

Jan. 3rd, 2023 @ 6:42 am
Archive - Swearing-in day 1.2.7 https://t.co/ouzSdyAAYT

Jan. 3rd, 2023 @ 4:42 pm
Rep Cutler takes questions on election of House Speaker https://t.co/LdsbynObSK

Jan. 3rd, 2023 @ 4:36 pm
Pa House scheduled back in at 6:45pm https://t.co/J0bRjEO3f2

Jan. 2nd, 2023 @ 12:48 pm
https://t.co/0jv0ihYv2O

© Roxbury News, 2011

Christopher Craig to be sworn in after McCord resigns.

30 Jan
Friday @ 5:27 pm

AP is reporting that Christopher Craig, Chief counsel for the office of the treasurer will be sworn in after the formal resignation of Rob McCord.

Craig will serve on an interim basis until Governor Wolf appoints and the Pa House approves a replacement.

Archive video of Craig September 16, 2014.

Christopher Craig.

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Governor Wolf statement on Rob McCord admitting guilt.

30 Jan
Friday @ 4:40 pm

As released by the Office of the Governor.

Harrisburg, PA – Governor Tom Wolf today released the following statement on the immediate resignation of Rob McCord as Pennsylvania Treasurer:

“This is a sad day for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and for Rob McCord’s family. As elected leaders we should be stewards of democracy and we should act to protect hardworking taxpayers, not take advantage of them. This type of behavior leads to the erosion of the public’s trust – it is simply unacceptable. I stand firm in my commitment to restore the public’s trust in their government. Therefore, I will act as quickly as possible to present a nominee to the Senate of the highest caliber and capability.”

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Mayor Eric Papenfuse - The Verizon Tower Settlement.

30 Jan
Friday @ 1:20 pm

Harrisburg Mayor Papenfuse presser on the Verizon Tower Settlement.

I didn't sign it because it was a good deal, but I felt I had no choice, and it was better than the alternative.

We sold our soul by taking the 1998 bond proceeds.

The long history with the Commonwealth and Harristown Development Corporation.

A 16 million dollar plus no bid contract with Siemens.

Harristown awarded the no bid contract.

With this deal the city will max out it's debt limit until 2033.

I was under enormous pressure to sign off on this deal, threats were made and then retracted.

The people who approved the 1998 Bond issue.

This is part of the story of a whole series of financial transitions that forced Harrisburg to the brink of bankruptcy.

_______________________

Mayor Papenfuse statement on the Verizon Tower Settlement.

Shortly before noon today, I shall be signing the Verizon Tower Settlement Agreement. I do so, not because I think it is a good enough deal for the residents of Harrisburg, but because I feel the consequences of not signing it would be worse. Over the past 72-hours I have been under enormous pressure by members of your team and others to sign the documents associated with this settlement without doing my due diligence or even reading the associated contracts. I began by carefully scrutinizing the documents associated with the 1998 Bond transaction, materials it was suggested that I ought not read, and found them horribly negligent. Then, on Wednesday, I reviewed for the first time materials such as the DGS lease and the energy modernization agreement, which no other elected official associated with the City of Harrisburg had reviewed, and found them, in my judgment, not to have been negotiated with the City’s best interests sufficiently at heart. On Thursday, I questioned HDC about their operating expenses, which in my judgment are too high, and, among other threats from member s of your team, was told that if I didn’t sign anyway the City would lose its 5-million per year in state funding. To the Wolf Administration’s great credit they immediately squashed that unauthorized representation.

The fundamental problem with the settlement agreement is that not enough money from the nearly 4-million-dollar-per-year DGS lease is being used for debt service on the 1998 bonds. As a contribution toward the City’s 42-million-dollar-obligation, the DGS minimum allocation toward debt service is only 11 million, ranging from an anemic $500,000 to an equally disappointing $750,000 each year for the next 18 years. As a point of comparison, over $800,000 per year in operating expenses is going toward paying for 25% of the maintenance for the common areas in Strawberry Square, and if any savings are achieved there through belt-tightening, such savings, under the lease terms, will pass back to the Commonwealth and HDC and not be used by the City for debt service. The agreement’s minimum allocation for 1998 debt service, as you know, decreased over the course of your negotiations at the same time that evidence from the Parking Transaction began to mount that the City would receive significantly less from waterfall payments in future years than the Strong Plan had originally anticipated. A recalibration of the Verizon Tower settlement agreement’s objectives by your team should have occurred at that time. Instead of lobbying AGM to let the city have the option to borrow even more money (2.7 million) at over 6%-interest per year, the focus should have been on increasing the debt service allocation to make up for the parking shortfall. That would have meant renewed scrutiny of the DGS lease and modernization contracts, neither of which – it pains me greatly to admit – I am able to alter at this time.

As my conversations with yesterday revealed, DGS feels they have been overcharged for years by HDC and this is their opportunity, in some respects, to make up for those other transactions. HDC also indicated yesterday that they felt the taxes were too high on the tower and would look to appeal them. Neither calculation has the City’s long-term interests at heart, which is, in part, why there should have been greater public scrutiny of the settlement’s underlying assumptions. But, perhaps most importantly, at the heart of this deal there never should have been an expensive, multi-million-dollar energy modernization project that was NOT PUBLICLY BID. The settlement agreement became suspect, in my opinion, the minute the State told HDC that they must use one particular company, rather than bid the project. Having spoken with the new DCED Secretary this morning, I know that such a “gift” would never occur under Governor Wolf’s watch. A less-expensive, less-ambitious energy project may have meant more money for debt service payments.

This settlement agreement, which I am about to sign, fundamentally means that the City’s debt load is maxed out through 2033. That, ultimately, is the continuing legacy of Mayor Stephen Reed. The City is certainly better for the new state workers and parkers moving downtown, which is why I am signing this agreement today. And it should be noted that our Solicitor has also gone to great lengths to preserve the City’s right to contest the legitimacy of the original 1998 bond transaction. While I cannot yet prove fraud, I have enough concerns about the legitimacy of the self-liquidating debt report and associated legal opinions that I will be turning over everything to the Attorney General’s Office for consideration as a part of their ongoing criminal investigations.

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