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School tech and suffering businesses and residents are in line for shares of Hburg’s CARES funds

The downtown Explore More Discovery Museum posts a closure notice. Many downtown businesses have closed due to health safety reasons during the COVID-19 pandemic in this photo taken on March 19, 2020.

By Randi B. Hagi, assistant editor

The plan for how the city might dole out federal COVID-19 relief funds continues to take shape, as Deputy City Manager Ande Banks told the Harrisonburg City Council in a meeting on Tuesday. 

Purchasing school technology for online learning, providing relief for local businesses and residents and covering some costs of delaying construction on the second high school are at the forefront. 

The council is expected to vote in an upcoming meeting on the spending plan for the $4.6 million the city is expecting to receive in CARES Act funds. 

The first draft of the spending plan includes:

The council plans to hold a work session to discuss in greater detail the spending plan before voting, but dates haven’t been set for that work session or the vote to approve the plan, although council members said they’d like to aim to finalize it in a month. The funds are intended to offset costs incurred directly due to the COVID-19 pandemic between March and December 2020.

New Sentara counseling center? 

Sentara RMH may have an outpost on Elizabeth Street — between Liberty and High streets — in downtown Harrisonburg in the coming years for counseling and behavioral health services, as the council discussed in Tuesday’s meeting. 

The council voted unanimously to approve a rezoning request and special use permit to allow an adjacent parcel on West Wolfe Street to offer parking for the planned medical offices. 

A representative of Matchbox Realty, representing the property owners, said they are “excited to have RMH as a tenant downtown and providing the services we need within the downtown community.”

N. Main sidewalk and S. Main trail extension

A number of improvements to city streets are also in the works, as the council voted unanimously to approve city staff to pursue grant funding from the Virginia Department of Transportation for seven different projects totalling about $20 million, including: 

Tom Hartman, director of public works, said a dirt path worn along that stretch of North Main Street “shows us where we need to build sidewalks.” 

Council member Chris Jones said the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Community Services Board’s facility — which provides mental health support — is undergoing an expansion.

“We need that place to be as accessible as possible,” Jones said, noting many clients walk to the facility. . 

Also in the meeting:


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