Harrisburg Again Rejects Recovery Plan

NEW YORK - While a state takeover looms for Harrisburg after the City Council on Tuesday night again rejected a financial recovery plan, Pennsylvania’s capital will be able to meet its bond obligations and make payroll for the rest of the year.

The city council for the third time in three months rejected the plan under the state’s Act 47 program for distressed communities, again by a 4 to 3 vote. But the council, voting separately, approved a $7.4 million, 10-year lease extension with the Harrisburg Parking Authority regarding three garages. The upfront payment will enable the city to make general obligation bond payments and pay workers through December. A $3.3 million GO payment was due Wednesday.

Harrisburg, with a 48,000 population, is staring at $300 million in debt related to cost overruns in an incinerator retrofit project. Lawsuits may re-emerge over missed bond payments. The Harrisburg Authority, which operates the incinerator, Dauphin County and bond insurer Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. have litigation that was on hold pending acceptance of a recovery plan.

“Even if the state does take over the city, the mayor at least wants that GO bond covered to be assured that her people – the fire and police – are paid through the end of the year,” said authority vice president Corky Goldstein, a local attorney who has favored the Act 47 plan.

Mayor Linda Thompson lashed out at the same four council members who voted against the Act 47 plan – Brad Koplinski, Susan Brown-Wilson, Eugenia Smith and Wanda Williams. Thompson had attended the meeting, but stormed out of the council chambers following the vote at City Hall.

“The actions of council members Koplinski, Brown-Wilson, Smith and Williams, since we have begun the Act 47 process and to this very day, have demonstrated their incompetence to hold public office and desire to render the City of Harrisburg ungovernable,” Thompson said at a press conference. She said the four harbor “short-sighted and irresponsible delusions of power.”

Rejection of Act 47 means the state could deny Harrisburg grants, loans and other funding means, according to the Department of Community and Economic Development. Gov. Tom Corbett’s administration could also appoint a three-person panel, tantamount to receivership, to run Harrisburg.

Council President Gloria Martin-Roberts, Patty Kim, and Kelly Summerford voted yes again. Martin-Roberts called for a revote after the council rejected the plan on Aug. 31, citing community feedback.

“It would have been nice to control our own destiny,” she said.

The council also voted against it July 19, after its recommendation by state-appointed Novak Consulting Group of Cincinnati. After that, Thompson became the Act 47 coordinator by law.

“It seems more likely that you will see a three-person receivership panel,” said Brian Fraser, a partner at Richards Kibbe & Orbe LLP. He added that Harrisburg’s status as a state capital “is an issue for the markets in general.”

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