What Is It?

The Cumberland County Blighted Property Reinvestment Board (the ‘Board’) is here to serve municipalities in Cumberland County to help clean up vacant and blighted properties. It serves as a tool for municipalities to remove blight, complement the enforcement of existing codes, and increase property values.

Purpose

The Board has been in existence since 1999 and consists of seven (7) members appointed by the County Commissioners. The Cumberland County Redevelopment Authority provides administrative support for the Board.

Municipalities refer subject properties to the Board who works voluntarily with property owners to remove blighted conditions. If conditions are not removed, the Board can certify the property as blighted to the Cumberland County Redevelopment Authority. The Redevelopment Authority can acquire such properties through the power of eminent domain or court-appointed conservatorship and then hold, clear, manage, or dispose of such properties for reuse.

Completed property referrals may be submitted to:

Mikayla Kitchen

Assistant Director of the Redevelopment Authority

What Makes a Property ‘Blighted?’

1

Any premises which because of physical condition or use is regarded as a public nuisance at common law or has been declared a public nuisance in accordance with local housing, building, plumbing, fire and related codes.

2

Any premises which because of physical condition, use or occupancy is considered an attractive nuisance to children, including but not limited to, abandoned wells, shafts, basements, excavations, and unsafe fences or structures.

3

Any dwelling which because it is dilapidated, unsanitary, unsafe, vermin invested, or lacking in the facilities and equipment required by the Housing Code of any municipality, has been designated by the department responsible for enforcement of the Code as unfit for human habitation

4

Any structure which is a fire hazard or is otherwise dangerous to the safety of
persons or property.

5

Any structure, from which the utilities, plumbing, heating, sewage, or other facilities have been disconnected, destroyed, removed, or rendered ineffective so that the property is unfit for its intended use.

6

Any vacant or unimproved lot or parcel of ground in a predominately built-up neighborhood, which by reason of neglect or lack of maintenance has become a place for accumulation of trash and debris, or a haven for rodents or other vermin.

7

Any property which is vacant, which has not been rehabilitated within one year of the receipt of notice to rehabilitate from a municipal code enforcement agency.

8

Any abandoned property.

Current Blighted Properties

Please note that neither the Cumberland County Blighted Property Reinvestment Board nor the Cumberland County Redevelopment Authority facilitate sales, sales agreements, showings, or other activities related to the acquisition of blighted properties. Parties interested in the purchase of blighted properties will need to contact the owner directly or seek out the property at tax/public sale, if applicable. This list acts strictly as a method of public knowledge and awareness of properties currently involved in the Blight Process.

Silver Spring Township

102 Beard Road

New Cumberland Borough

222 Eutaw Avenue

Silver Spring Township

6583 Carlisle Pike

New Cumberland Borough

129 16th Street

Mechanicsburg Borough

421 W Simpson Street

Hampden Township

1500 Lambs Gap Road

New Cumberland Borough

519 7th Street

New Cumberland Borough

16th Street Parcel

Lemoyne Borough

240 Clark Street

Lemoyne Borough

513 Herman Avenue

Silver Spring Township

103 Locust Lane North

Key Resources