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Columbia officials review draft of nuisance ordinance, call for revisions

E.Anderson27 min ago

: Columbia Borough Council meeting, Oct. 1.

What happened: Council members unveiled the first draft of Columbia's long-awaited nuisance ordinance, but the new borough manager and several council members expressed concerns that the 14-page document lacks specific information they wanted included.

: Borough solicitor Evan Gabel, whose law firm created the ordinance, was unable to answer questions about the law because he did not attend the meeting.

Why it matters: The borough has been working on creating a nuisance ordinance for about three years, Paula Diffenderfer, code compliance manager, told council members. This law usually defines dangerous or damaging actions and lays out penalties, according to the Network for Public Health Law. Most violations concern property maintenance, such as high grass, rodent infestation or abandoned trash.

: In Columbia, those and other items, such as loud music and illegal fireworks, are spread throughout borough code. A nuisance document would gather these violations into one place. Also, council members previously have discussed increasing fines to hold property owners more accountable for violations and shortening the amount of time they have for appeal.

: "I'm quite disappointed in this whole thing," Eric Kauffman, vice president, said, explaining that he was hoping to find specific ways to penalize landlords who fail to maintain their properties. Heather Zink, president, said, "I was hoping we would have something in here saying that if a landlord has X number of violations within a certain amount of time they would lose their rental license for all of their properties," she said.

: The borough's new manager, Steven Kaufhold, suggested asking staff members to rework the nuisance ordinance. "A lot of money has been put into it, and I don't feel we need to put any more into it," he said.

: Diffenderfer mentioned combining the new document with the borough's existing "quick ticket" program that cites and fines code violators. Zink said she is unsure about next steps toward a adopting a nuisance ordinance or updating the quick ticket process.

: "Everything we've done needs reworking," she said in an Oct. 3 phone call.

Firearms workshop: The borough will deliver on its promise to host a gun safety workshop from 9-11 a.m. Oct. 12 at the Columbia Market House. Mayor Leo Lutz and police Chief Jack Brommer previously said they had been planning such a seminar before recent shooting took place in Columbia. No weapons will be fired, but the borough will give gun locks to anyone who needs one.

Bridge dedication: The bridge carrying Pennsylvania Route 441 over U.S. Route 30 in Columbia will become the Major General Edward C. Shannon Memorial Bridge with a naming ceremony at 10 a.m. Oct. 16, Zink announced.

: The ceremony will take place in a nearby Burger King parking lot at 531 N. 3rd St. in Columbia. Shannon (1870-1946) earned several military awards and served as the state's lieutenant governor from 1930-35. Born in Chester County, Shannon moved to Columbia as an adult.

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