Cranberry Township confirms Kenneth Ruckel will be their new chief of police

(File Photo of a Cranberry Township Police Car)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Cranberry Township, PA) Yesterday evening, the Cranberry Township Board of Supervisors officially ratified the selection of Kenneth Ruckel to serve as Cranberry Township’s new chief of police. Ruckel will start his new position on December 1st, 2025 and will replace the retiring Kevin Meyer, who had been the Cranberry Township chief of police since 2015. Ruckel has most recently served as a division commander at the Allegheny County Police Department headquarters. Ruckel started his career in law enforcement as a patrol officer in Hanover Township and then went on to serve with the Allegheny County Police Department. Ruckel also spent time as a detective in the general investigation and homicide units and then became a sergeant and took on roles as a shift and unit supervisor.

Samuel J. Lofaso, Sr. (1942-2025)

Samuel J. LoFaso, Sr., 83, of Economy Borough, passed away on November 20th, 2025, at UPMC Mercy Hospital in Pittsburgh. He was born in New Brighton on September 30th, 1942, in New Brighton, the son of the late Samuel and Lina Bonanno LoFaso. In addition to his parents, she was preceded in death by one sister, Janet Primo. He is survived by his wife of forty-two years, Linda K. (Nicolo) LoFaso, as well as two daughters, Shelby L. Espenschied, of Kent, Ohio, and Kaylee L. LoFaso, of Baden, one son, Samuel J. Jr. and Joelle LoFaso, of Brunswick, Ohio, five grandchildren, Megan James and her husband Hunter, Samuel J. LoFaso III and his fiance, Audrey Guggenbiller, John J. LoFaso, Michael and Maci Espenschied, a great-grandson, Finley James, one brother and sister-in-law, Thomas and Anna LoFaso, of Monaca, three nieces, Natalie Anderson and her husband Kevin, Michelle Cronin and her husband Dan, and Angela Benson, two nephews, T.J. LoFaso and his wife, Carrie, Anthony Primo and his wife, Christine, several great-nieces and great-nephews. Samuel was a retired school teacher with the Wichita Kansas, Monaca, and Quaker Valley School Districts, where he taught Health and Physical Education, as well as coached football at all of these schools. He was the girls softball coach at OLSH and Chatham College. He was a 1960 graduate of Monaca highschool, where he was Class President and a 1964 graduate of Wichita State College, where he played quarterback on a full scholarship. He was also a member of the Divine Grace Parish and Holy Redeemer Roman Catholic Church in Ellwood City. He was also a charter member of the Quaker Valley Sports Hall of Fame, where he had been inducted. He was also inducted into the Beaver County Coaching Hall of Fame.  The family will receive friends on Tuesday, November 25th, from 3-7 p.m., at the William Murphy Funeral Home, Inc., 349 Adams Street, Rochester, who was in charge of his arrangements. Friends are requested to meet at St. James Roman Catholic Church, 200 Walnut Street, Sewickley, on Wednesday, November 26th for a Mass of Christian Burial at 10:30 a.m. The celebrant of the Mass will be Father Rich Johns.

A beloved Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Mounted Patrol male horse retires

(Photo Courtesy of KDKA-TV, CBS Pittsburgh, Posted on Facebook on November 20th, 2025)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A male horse named Cannonball retired yesterday after he worked with the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Mounted Patrol. Cannonball served in that position for eight years and is leaving the city stables on the North Side of Pittsburgh and he was taken to Bella Terra Stables in Murrysville yesterday. Cannonball will be celebrated in a special event on December 13th2025 at Bella Terra Stables when its horses will join Santa Claus. Cannonball will become a therapy horse to help young people, which includes those with both disabilities and post-traumatic stress disorder. According to Officer Jamie Bush, “He’s a great horse, gentle, kind, patient, and pretty much bulletproof when it comes to sensory stuff Downtown and crowd control.”

ALDI’s grocery store opens on Banksville Road in Pittsburgh

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Customers walk into an Aldi supermarket in Bensalem, Pa., March 14, 2022. Discount grocer Aldi plans to add 800 stores across the U.S. in a five-year expansion plan as it looks to capitalize on cost-conscious Americans feeling the pinch at grocery stores. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A new ALDI’s grocery store opened on Banksville Road in Pittsburgh yesterday to sell their grocery items. This is the 51st Aldi’s in the greater Pittsburgh area. According to Aldi’s, shoppers can save up to 36% on average household shopping.

Pittsburgh police officer receiving second charge for DUI in less than five years

(File Photo of Police Siren Lights)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A Pittsburgh police officer has now been placed on paid administrative leave after recently being charged with DUI for the second time in less than five years. On November 10th, 2025, forty-four-year-old Sergeant Tariq Jamal-Francis of Pittsburgh, was found parked in Plum Borough with his car angled into the road, but police confirmed that he was asleep behind the wheel. According to a criminal complaint, Jamal-Francis allegedly told officers he was “Pittsburgh police” and had been drinking at a nearby bar. According to police, Jamal-Francis was taken to the police station for a field sobriety test, but failed to pass and later agreed to a blood sample and the blood test later showed Jamal-Francis had a blood alcohol content of nearly four times the legal limit. Jamal-Francis had been involved in a crash in Plum Borough previously in 2021 that led to him facing a prior charge of driving under the influence. 

New welcome center opens in the Heinz History Center building in Pittsburgh

(File Photo of an Open for Business Sign)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Yesterday was when a new welcome center was opened on the first floor of the Heinz History Center building in the Strip District of PittsburghThis was accomplished to celebrate The Heinz History Center’s new partnership with VisitPittsburgh. There are graphics, flyers and other informational media in the new center which are all about Pittsburgh so visitors to the city can view them. The ribbon cutting also took place yesterday for the new welcome center and Pittsburgh-mayor elect Corey O’Connor was one of the local leaders that was on hand for it. 

 

New Castle man not charged after hitting a deer in Mahoning Township

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(New Castle, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in New Castle reported via release today that fifty-five-year-old Donald Nogay of New Castle was not charged by police after causing a single-vehicle crash in Mahoning Township in Lawrence County yesterday morning. A determination was made that at 7:15 a.m. yesterday, Nogay hit a deer in the area of 4626 West State Street in the westbound lane. Nogay was wearing his seatbelt when the crash occurred and no injuries were observed or reported. 

Steelers visit Bears with Aaron Rodgers’ status uncertain because of wrist injury

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) holds his arm after a hit by the Cincinnati Bengals during the first half of an NFL football game Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Matt Freed)

CHICAGO (AP) — Aaron Rodgers once famously turned to the crowd at Soldier Field and screamed that he still owns the Bears. No one would have argued back then.

Rodgers would love a chance to show it’s still true, though it’s not clear if he’ll get the opportunity when the Pittsburgh Steelers visit Chicago on Sunday.

The four-time MVP broke his left wrist in last week’s 32-14 win over Cincinnati, throwing his status for what could be his final game against the franchise he has tortured into question.

Rodgers was optimistic but far from certain that he would be able to play through the injury to his nonthrowing hand. It depends on if he feels he can protect himself and handle the ball the way he normally does.

Either way, Rodgers said this week he hopes Bears fans can let “bygones be bygones.” And, with a laugh, he added: “Maybe, I can, I guess.”

Rodgers, as he has done in the past, praised Chicago. He mentioned growing up a fan of Michael Jordan and the Bulls and watching Cubs games on WGN.

“They got great sports, man,” he said.

Rodgers is 25-5 against Chicago, counting the playoffs. If he is unavailable, the AFC North-leading Steelers (6-4) will go with Mason Rudolph. The veteran returned to Pittsburgh for a second stint when he signed a two-year deal in March and came through after Rodgers exited last week. He completed 12 of 16 passes for 127 yards and a touchdown, helping the Steelers win for the second time in three games and keep a tenuous grip on first place ahead of Baltimore.

Narrow escapes

The NFC North-leading Bears (7-3) have won seven of eight and lead Green Bay (6-3-1) by the slimmest of margins. They have five wins this season after trailing in the final two minutes of the fourth quarter, including the past three games.

They squeezed out a 19-17 victory at Minnesota last week when Devin Duvernay returned a kickoff 56 yards to set up a 48-yard field goal by Cairo Santos as time expired. The Vikings had scored a touchdown with 50 seconds remaining.

“I think we feel good with where we’re at,” quarterback Caleb Williams said. “But you also do understand that things can turn. We have a whole season left basically with seven games left. And so, things can still turn fast in those ways.”

Monitoring a ‘Magician’

The Steelers are well-versed in the problems created by a team whose quarterback likes to move around. They can thank years and years of chasing Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson.

Williams, however, presents a different challenge. Where Jackson typically takes off the second he tucks the ball under his arm, the slippery Williams is more likely to scramble around in the backfield while hoping something develops downfield.

“He’s kind of like a little magician back there, being able to get out of tough jams and (he’s) got a hell of an arm,” Steelers inside linebacker Patrick Queen said. “So you definitely got to respect the guy. Even with him being young, he’s been playing at a high level.”

The Steelers can try to take solace in this: they’re 5-4 against Jackson, one of the few teams the two-time MVP has a losing record against.

Pick it

A two-time All-Pro, Bears safety Kevin Byard was no stranger to picking off passes. He just hadn’t done it as much as he would have liked the past few seasons.

Byard is making up for it with a league-leading five interceptions after combining for two the previous two years with Tennessee, Philadelphia and Chicago. He had one last year in his first season with the Bears.

“I just think it’s the (opportunities),” said Byard, who has 34 interceptions in 10 seasons. “Honestly, even last year. I feel like I dropped two. I felt like I should have had multi-interceptions last year as well.”

With Nahshon Wright and Tremaine Edmunds tied for second with Jacksonville’s Devin Lloyd with four, the Bears have three of the NFL’s top four leaders in interceptions.

‘Kenny G’ hits the right notes

The Steelers signed running back Jaylen Warren to a modest extension before the season began, and while the former undrafted rookie free agent has been effective with the ball in his hands, he’s also been knocked around a bit.

Enter Kenneth Gainwell. The former Philadelphia Eagle began the season as a complementary piece but has shown a couple of things that Warren has not. He’s been durable, and he’s figured out a way to get to the end zone.

Gainwell had 105 total yards last week against the Bengals and caught two touchdown passes. The Steelers opted to roll with him late even though doctors had cleared Warren to return after tweaking his right knee in the third quarter.

One-sided

Though Rodgers has dominated Chicago, the Bears have done the same against the Steelers.

They lead the series 22-8-1 and are 14-1 at home, including a pair of wins over the combined 1943 Philadelphia-Pittsburgh and 1944 Chicago Cardinals-Pittsburgh teams. The Steelers’ lone victory in Chicago was in 1995. Pittsburgh’s record against the Bears is the franchise’s worst against any NFL team still in existence.

Rico Elmore will formally announce his candidacy for Beaver County Commissioner in New Brighton

(Photo Courtesy of Rico Elmore)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(New Brighton, PA) Technical Sergeant Rico Elmore will formally announce his candidacy for Beaver County Commissioner tonight at 1001 10th Avenue in New Brighton beginning at 6 p.m. with speeches starting promptly at 7:30 p.m. Elmore is an Air-Force Veteran and a lifelong resident of Beaver County who will share his vision for a revitalization of Beaver County and talk about both strengthening public safety and restoring both transparency and accountability in local government. Elmore is also one of the people that tried to save the late Corey Comperatorewho was the man who died on July 13th2024 when the attempted assassination of President Donald Trump occurred at the Butler Farm Show Grounds in Butler. 

Source: Pirates sign outfielder Jack Suwinski and right-handed reliever pitcher Yohan Ramírez to one-year deals to keep both of them on their roster

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Pittsburgh Pirates’ Jack Suwinski (65) celebrates with teammates after hitting a home run against the San Francisco Giants during the seventh inning of a baseball game in San Francisco, Monday, May 29, 2023. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) According to a source, the Pittsburgh Pirates and outfielder Jack Suwinski have recently agreed to a contract of one year which is worth $1.25 million and the Buccos and right-handed reliever pitcher Yohan Ramírez have recently agreed to a contract of one year worth $825,000. These contracts will make both Suwinski and Ramírez avoid arbitration to stay on the Pirates roster.