Johnstown’s prospects for a new minor-league baseball team appear to be dwindling, with mixed signals coming from a North Carolina-based league that inquired about a franchise last month.
Just a few days ago, Atlantic Coast League Administrator Michael Harden declared on the league’s Web site that he “will no longer pursue” Johnstown as a site for a team.
However, after an inquiry Monday from The Tribune-Democrat, Harden said “nothing is completely set in stone.”
This much is clear: Harden has made his pronouncements without traveling to Johnstown or meeting with city officials. A meeting scheduled for Nov. 19 was canceled by Harden.
“We were willing to sit down with them and listen to what they had to say,” city Councilman Nunzio Johncola said.
The independent, minor-league organization has not yet played a game but projects an opening day in May 2009.
“I was scheduled to meet with the city, but I just feel that it would be a wasted trip, judging by the comments being made on how the council feels about the idea,” Harden wrote in a press release dated Nov. 30.
Local officials have approached Harden’s proposal with caution. They worry about reliving the financial problems and disputes that surrounded the 2002 exit of the Johnnies, the city’s last professional baseball team.
City administrators also express reservations about giving a baseball team too much authority over operations at Point Stadium, which just underwent an $11 million renovation.
“We can’t lose control of the stadium,” Johncola said. “The stadium is for everybody.”
That apparently is a sticking point for Harden, who on Monday said he “will not have a team in the league that a city wants complete control over.”
Local News
Signals mixed for city baseball deal
- Local News
-
-
Proposed bill would expand use of traffic-light cameras
Some call it the hand of “big brother,” others are convinced cameras at signal lights would be effective in curbing red-light runners and ultimately saving lives.
-
Minister's trial date set
An issue has been resolved over the report from an examination of a girl allegedly taken by her mother to a Bedford motel to have sex with a traveling minister, clearing the way for a trial.
-
AP: Almost half of new veterans seek disability
America’s newest veterans are filing for disability benefits at a historic rate, claiming to be the most medically and mentally troubled generation of former troops the nation has ever seen.
-
Geistown beginning crime watch program
Residents will patrol Geistown streets in the coming weeks as part of a community watch program.
-
Persons of the Week: Nanty Glo vets will remember fallen comrades
Michael Kurtz, Tom Kasecky and Steve Kasecky will be among members of the Loy A. Douglass Post 3489 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Nanty Glo who will be honoring fallen veterans today, Memorial Day.
-
AG candidates face potential conflicts of interest
Both candidates for Pennsylvania attorney general have family ties that could pose a conflict of interest for the one who is elected as the state’s next chief legal officer.
-
Lawmakers: Capitol rallies unpersuasive
Nancy Richey stepped to the podium with a microphone at the Capitol rotunda with the hope that the right people would hear her message.
-
Richland closer to new chief
The search for Richland’s next police chief is winding down.
-
In brief: Thunderstorm downs trees, knocks out power
A late Sunday afternoon thunderstorm brought high winds, hard rain and hail to the Cambria-Somerset region.
- District Deaths May 28, 2012
- More Local News Headlines
-


