THE HOPEWELL AREA SCHOOL BOARD HAS ADOPTED ITS 2019-2020 BUDGET. BEAVER COUNTY RADIO NEWS CORRESPONDENT SANDY GIORDANO HAS DETAILS. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report…
Month: June 2019
Pittsburgh’s Just Ducky Tours Cancels its 2019 Season
The quack, quack, quack fun is over — Pittsburgh’s Just Ducky Tours, based in Station Square, has canceled its 2019 season. For 22 years, eight amphibious boats gave visitors a one-hour sightseeing tour of Pittsburgh. Michael Cohen – who started the business in 1997 with a friend – blames the loss on last summer’s accident involving a duck boat that occurred last year on Table Rock Lake in Missouri in which 17 people died. Despite warnings, the boat was caught in a thunderstorm that produced 60 mph hour winds and three-foot waves. The boat sank; the victims ranged in age from 1 to 70. The Table Rock Lake accident was the sixth involving a duck boat since 1999, including one in Philadelphia in 2010 in which two people died on the Delaware River. Cohen said he learned in January that their insurance company would not renew them, even thought they never had a fatality or a major accident. To stay in business, he said, Just Ducky Tours would have had to pay a 120 percent increase in its insurance premium. The company’s 50 employees were laid off in September. Cohen hopes to find someone local to buy the business.
State Senators Calling for General Assistance Program funding to be Restored
The initial 2019 Pennsylvania Budget approved by a House committee does not include funding for the General Assistance program. As Don Rooney reports, some state Senators are calling for that funding to be restored…
PA Lawmakers Vow to Authorize Second Year of School and Community Security Grants
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania lawmakers say they’ll authorize a second year of school and community security grants, a $60 million program spurred by last year’s Florida school shooting that killed 17 people. Republican lawmakers said Monday that a newly unveiled compromise budget package will keep the program intact for the coming school year. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf had proposed a second year at $45 million.
Beaver County Reassessment to be Completed By 2023
THE BEAVER COUNTY PROPERTY REASSESSMENT IS EXPECTED TO BE COMPLETED BY 2023. COUNTY SOLICITORS MET FRIDAY WITH BEAVER COUNTY JUDGE DALE FOUSE FOR A STATUS CONFERENCE ON A COURT-ORDERED TAX REASSESSMENT. FOUSE ORDERED THAT THE COUNTY ENTER INTO A CONTRACT FOR THE REASSESSMENT BY JANUARY 15TH, 2020.
Hopewell Commissioners Approve Location of the Amphitheater
(Photos of Hopewell Township Manager Jamie Yurcina taken by Sandy Giordano)
THE HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP COMMISSIONERS HAVE APPROVED THE LOCATION OF A NEW AMPHITHEATER. BEAVER COUNTY RADIO NEWS CORRESPONDENT SANDY GIORDANO WAS AT LAST NIGHT’S MEETING. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report…


Penguins Release 2019-20 Regular Season Schedule
The Pittsburgh Penguins have released their schedule for the 2019-20 regular season, their 53rd of operation in the National Hockey League.
The season begins at home, as the Pens host the Buffalo Sabres on Thursday, October 3. It’ll be the first of four for the opening homestand of the season, as the Penguins will also welcome in Columbus (5th), Winnipeg (8th) and Anaheim (10th) to the PPG Paints Arena before playing their first road game in Minnesota on October 12.
Pittsburgh will have their first crack at the Stanley Cup Champion St. Louis Blues on November 30 (at Enterprise Center), while the first shot at revenge against the Islanders takes place on November 7 in New York.
As always, you can hear live coverage of the Pittsburgh Penguins right here on 1230 WBVP & 1460 WMBA all season long with Mike Lange, Phil Bourque, and Josh Getzoff.
To see the full 2019-20 schedule, click here.
(Schedule courtesy of the Pittsburgh Penguins)
Former Penguin Orpik retires after 15 NHL seasons, 2 Stanley Cup titles
Orpik retires after 15 NHL seasons, 2 Stanley Cup titles
By STEPHEN WHYNO AP Hockey Writer
Brooks Orpik called it a career Tuesday after 15 bruising NHL seasons in which he established himself as a big-hitting, shutdown defenseman and won the Stanley Cup twice.
The 38-year-old played 1,171 regular-season and playoff games for the Pittsburgh Penguins and Washington Capitals. He won the Cup with Pittsburgh in 2009 and Washington in 2018.
“I’ve been extremely lucky to have the best job in the world for many years, but my body is telling me it is time to move on to something new,” Orpik said. “I’m excited for more family time and to experience a lot of the things that being a professional athlete forces you to miss out on.”
Orpik was more known for his physicality and defense than his offense. He put up 194 regular-season and 26 playoff points but also scored the Game 2-winning goal for Washington in the 2018 final on the way to the franchise’s first title.
“We wouldn’t have a Stanley Cup if it wasn’t for him,” Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby said at the end of this season. “The impact he’s had on our team is probably second to none, the way he’s changed the culture and pushed guys to make them better. One of the true leaders in our game.”
Orpik became a respected alternate captain and leader during his five seasons in Washington. Teammates nicknamed him “Batya” — Russian for “Dad.”
“Batya was a great leader in our locker room and was so important for us to win our first Stanley Cup,” captain Alex Ovechkin said in a statement Wednesday. “We will miss his presence in the room and on the ice. Not only was he a great leader and a player, but he was a better person. I’m so happy I had a chance to play with him and for our young guys to have had the chance to learn from him.”
Orpik implied throughout this season it could be his last in the NHL. He had surgery in November to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee.
“Trying to maintain that level, efficiency was tough,” Orpik said. “So I think there were times of the year, I was frustrated just that I couldn’t do what I wanted to do.”
Orpik was back to his vintage self in the playoffs, emptying the tank for 18 minutes a night during the Capitals’ seven-game series against Carolina. After the first-round exit in late April, the San Francisco native conceded he thought he may have played his final NHL game but didn’t want to make a rash decision.
“You got to be 100% committed to it,” Orpik said of potentially playing another season. “If you’re not, then it’s unfair to your teammates and other people that are trying to help you out. In terms of like wanting to play or being committed to play, I think that’s something that, I think when stuff doesn’t go your way after the season you got to take a lot of time off to let things settle down.”
Orpik came to that decision and will now turn his attention to finishing his communications degree at Boston College. He said he wished he had a better post-playing career plan in place but will see where the degree takes him.
He will be remembered for being the muscle behind two Cup champions — Sidney Crosby’s first and Ovechkin’s first. He often toed the line on hits and was suspended three games during the 2016 playoffs for a late, high hit that injured Pittsburgh’s Olli Maatta.
“He’s a little bit of a dinosaur because he hits and there’s not a lot of hitting in this game,” said Columbus coach John Tortorella, who knows Orpik well from U.S. teams in international play. “A lot of people think he might hit hard. I think he plays the game hard. I think he plays the game the right way.”
Orpik’s ability to play on the edge and defend other players made him beloved in Washington. The Capitals prepared for his departure by trading for big-hitting defenseman Radko Gudas, but teammates know there’s no replacing Orpik and what he meant on and off the ice.
“He’s been a force for all of us to gain knowledge from — how to better understand certain parts of the game, what it takes, the mental side of it,” Capitals defenseman John Carlson said. “He’s just a really aware person that can help anybody at any part of their career at any level of play. He’s just been so important to us.”
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Follow AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SWhyno
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More AP NHL: https://apnews.com/NHL and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
Severe Thunderstorms Cause Damage in Beaver County
The first storm of the summer brought rain, wind and lightning to the area. It caused some damage to Beaver County, where several houses are without power. Shannon Hefferan of the National Weather Service tells Beaver County Radio newsman Pat Septak that here in Beaver County, heavy rain and wind brought down trees and power lines…..
Hefferan says there are still homes and businesses without power this afternoon…
Hefferan was asked if there were any microbursts or tornadoes spotted in the area…
Hefferan says the next storm system is only 24-30 hours away with a few spotty showers and isolated thunderstorms in the area Wednesday.
Sunshine Today To Replace Yesterday’s Severe Thunderstorms
WEATHER FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, JUNE 25TH, 2019
TODAY – CHANCE OF A MORNING SHOWER. SUN AND
CLOUDS MIXED. HIGH – 82.
TONIGHT – CLEAR SKIES. LOW – 63.
WEDNESDAY – MOSTLY SUNNY IN THE MORNING. THEN
INCREASING CLOUDS WITH SOME
SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS LATER IN THE DAY. HIGH – 85.









