Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute to relocate to Penn State Health Holy Spirit Medical Center in fall 2026
Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute
Decision comes after unsuccessful attempts to renew current lease, which expires September 2026
As part of its steadfast commitment to delivering behavioral health services that are greatly needed in central Pennsylvania, Penn State Health will relocate Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute’s (PPI) inpatient services to Holy Spirit Medical Center in Camp Hill at the end of its lease in September 2026.
November 7, 2024
Penn State Health had intended for PPI to remain at its current location at 2501 North Third Street in Harrisburg, and made efforts to secure a new lease with UPMC, which holds the master lease for the site. However, UPMC has not been responsive to Penn State Health’s requests, resulting in the decision to relocate in order to maintain ongoing access to these essential services.
“Given the circumstances, we must act now to ensure a successful relocation of PPI by September 2026,” said Kim Feeman, president of PPI. “We are committed to making the transition as seamless as possible and to minimize disruption of care and services for patients and their families, clinicians, staff, educators, students and researchers.”
Late last year, Penn State Health assumed 100% governance control of PPI after the departure of UPMC as a 50% joint venture partner.
PPI inpatient services will continue unchanged through the end of the lease. PPI outpatient psychiatry and therapy services and the Advances in Recovery clinic, which offers comprehensive services for people with opioid use disorder, will also continue to operate at their current locations in Harrisburg until September 2026. Penn State Health is working to identify a new location for these services near the present site.
Later this month, architects and contractors will begin work to renovate the third and fourth floors at Holy Spirit Medical Center. Leaders are working on a plan to retain all employees and transition some of the hospital’s medical and surgical services to nearby Hampden Medical Center.
“We will continue providing all of the important behavioral health services and resources we currently deliver in Cumberland County,” said Kyle Snyder, president, Hampden and Holy Spirit medical centers. Holy Spirit Medical Center provides an acute inpatient and partial hospitalization program, and intensive outpatient and dual-diagnosis programs. “Combining these existing services with PPI will create even greater impact for our communities, as we leverage the benefits of our integrated academic health system to offer the best possible behavioral health care across central Pennsylvania.”
The PPI team will work side by side with the Holy Spirit Behavioral Health team and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health throughout the transition process.
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Pennsylvania
1 killed in crash involving horse and buggy in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania State Police say
One person was killed in a two-vehicle crash involving a horse and buggy in Lancaster County on Wednesday afternoon, according to Pennsylvania State Police.
The crash happened around 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the 4000 block of Strasburg Road in Salisbury Township, state police said.
One person was pronounced dead at the scene, according to state police.
Strasburg Road, or Rt. 741, near Hoover Road, is closed in both directions, PennDOT says.
PSP said the Lancaster Patrol Unit, Troop J Forensic Services Unit and Troop J Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Specialists Unit are on scene investigating the crash.
Pennsylvania
Police hunt for masked suspects who looted a Pennsylvania Lululemon overnight
Pennsylvania police are searching for at least two masked suspects believed to have looted a Lululemon store overnight.
At least two masked men broke into a Lululemon in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, around 2 a.m. Tuesday, police told NBC 10 Philadelphia. Ardmore, a suburb of Philadelphia, is home to about 14,000 people.
The suspected thieves used a sledgehammer to break the glass on the store’s front door, according to police.
Once they gained access, the masked individuals grabbed handfuls of merchandise, security footage shows. The men went in and out of the store several times, grabbing handfuls of items that included coats, vests and shirts from the men’s section, police told local outlet WPVI.
“This is taking it to another level,” Lower Merion Police Superintendent Andy Block told WPVI.
The suspects then loaded the merchandise into a U-Haul truck. Their truck was last seen at the intersection of Bryn Mawr Avenue and Woodbine Avenue, just a few miles from the store, police said.
The entire incident lasted about five minutes, which Block said is longer than usual for this type of burglary.
“Usually, it is because in a smash-and-grab situation they want to get in and get out before they’re identified or anybody’s notified on it,” Block told CBS Philadelphia.
Block told WPVI the store is a popular target for robbers, given that many of its items cost more than $100. Now, he expects the alleged thieves have sold or exchanged the items.
“They’re using it on the market, maybe they’re exchanging it for drugs, or they’re selling it on the black market. It’s a highly sought-after item,” he told WPVI.
Even though police say Lululemon is a popular target, Lt. Michael Keenan of the Lower Merion Police Department still called the incident “out of character.”
“This is an out of character, out of type incident where we don’t normally see people smashing windows in the middle of the night. But, certainly this is something that is distinct,” Keenan told NBC 10 Philadelphia.
The store still opened Tuesday, with a banner covering the smashed glass on the door, according to Fox 29. Gina Picciano, a general manager at a restaurant across the street, said it was a frightening incident.
“I walked out here with my bartender and we looked, and it’s scary that it’s happening right across the way from us,” Picciano told Fox 29.
The same store was previously robbed in May 2024. Thieves stole more than $10,000 worth of merchandise during that incident, NBC 10 Philadelphia reports.
The Independent has contacted the Lower Merion Police Department and Lululemon for comment.
Pennsylvania
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