Candidates running for Lancaster’s nine-member home rule study commission must submit nomination papers – not candidate petitions – to appear on the May primary ballot.
The blighted Lancaster building that was once Walnut Street School – and later housed the photocopier business G.E. Richards before sitting empty for more than a decade – could soon
Lancaster residents will decide in May whether to authorize a home rule study commission after City Council agreed Monday to include a question on the primary election ballot.
Home rule may be a good idea for Lancaster, residents told Lancaster City Council on Wednesday, but some believe the process is moving too fast to be considered properly.