Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Reminds Eligible Pennsylvanians of October 20th, 2025 Voter Registration Deadline

(Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Department of State)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) According to a release from the Pennsylvania Department of State, Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt reminded Pennsylvanians today that the deadline to register to vote in the November 4th municipal election is four weeks away, which is on October 20th, 2025. This is to make sure that every voter that is eligible in Pennsylvania can make their voices heard and that elections can be conducted both fairly and freely, which the Shapiro Administration puts as top priorities for them. According to that same release from the Pennsylvania Department of State, here is some more information about both voter eligibility and how to get ready for the November 4th, 2025 municipal election in Pennsylvania.

To be eligible to register to vote in the Nov. 4 municipal election, a person must be:

  • A U.S. citizen for at least one month before the election,
  • A resident of the election district in which the person plans to register for at least 30 days before the election, and
  • At least 18 years old on or before Nov. 4.

 

Eligible Pennsylvanians can also get a voter registration application at the following locations:

  • their county voter registration office,
  • county assistance offices,
  • Women, Infants & Children (WIC) program offices,
  • Armed Forces recruitment centers,
  • county clerk of orphans’ courts or marriage license offices,
  • area agencies on aging,
  • county mental health and intellectual disabilities offices,
  • student disability services offices of the State System of Higher Education,
  • offices of special education in high schools, and
  • Americans with Disabilities Act-mandated complementary paratransit providers.

 

Four men charged and issued arrest warrants for allegedly killing mice after strapping them on fireworks with duct tape and lighting those fireworks in the Northview Heights neighborhood of Pittsburgh

(File Photo of a Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Arrest warrants have been issued for Nerson Amini, Abdi Mnongerwa, Zyquon Tot, and Gabriel Metusera, who are accused of allegedly killing mice by strapping them onto fireworks with duct tape before lighting these fireworks in the Northview Heights neighborhood of Pittsburgh in August of 2025. These four men also face filed charges of animal cruelty, numerous felony charges and other offenses. Pittsburgh Public Safety confirms that the Pittsburgh Police Violence Prevention Unit got notified on August 13th, 2025 about videos on social media of the alleged actions of these four men. The incident was thought to have happened on the 410 block of Pleasant Road and detectives went to Mount Pleasant Road and found a roll of tape, a plastic bin and remnants from fireworks. Investigators interviewed witnesses and reviewed surveillance video before they executed a search warrant, and their investigation confirms that the mice that these men allegedly killed were bought at the Petco store in the Waterworks Mall and the Petco store on McKnight Road in Ross Township.

Governor Josh Shapiro Delivers Opening Remarks at Historic 13-State Summit on the Future of PJM Interconnection

(Photo Courtesy of Commonwealth Media Services)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Philadelphia, PA) Governor Josh Shapiro had opening remarks yesterday in Philadelphia speaking at the Summit on the State of PJM Interconnection, which focused on bringing its representatives together for PJM to bothadaptand modernize so they can meet the demands of energy across the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest covering 65 million Americans. According to Shapiro in his remarks yesterday, those present were there to “reimagine the future of PJM, build a grid that works better for Pennsylvania and for each of our states. Let’s face it. Change is needed to keep energy costs low, renew energy generation onto the grid more quickly; meet the needs of the nearly seventy million Americans who rely on this grid for everything from running a business to keeping the lights on at home.” Those states that PJM covers are Pennsylvania, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia, along with parts or all of the District of Columbia.

Woman dies from a crash in the Spring Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh which involved a Pittsburgh Regional Transit bus

(File Photo: Caption for Photo: police car lights at night in city with selective focus and bokeh background blur, Credit for Photo: Courtesy of Getty Images/iStockphoto/z1b)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A woman died from a crash that occurred yesterday which involved a Pittsburgh regional transit bus. According to a Pittsburgh Regional Transit spokesperson, a 50-year-old woman was killed in this crash that happened around 12:15 p.m. yesterday near the intersection of Rhine and Buente streets in the Spring Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh. When paramedics arrived, this unidentified fifty-year-old woman was unresponsive. That spokesperson for Pittsburgh Regional Transit also confirmed that this fifty-year-old woman got taken to Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, which was where she was pronounced dead. The investigation into this crash is being handled by the Port Authority police of Pittsburgh. 

Recent Realtor.com analysis shows a listing price of $235,000 for the median home in Beaver County in August of 2025

(File Photo of a For Sale Sign)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver County, PA) According to a recent analysis from Realtor.com, the median home in Beaver County listed for $235,000 in August of 2025, which was same as July of 2025. These houses that were selected for this data were only Beaver County houses that were listed for sale. 1,486 square feet was the size of a Beaver County median home, with the price of each square foot being $157. The price of listing for a median home in Beaver County in August of 2025 increased 27% from August of 2024, which was $185,900.

One of Pennsylvania State Police’s Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitives who is wanted on murder charges gets taken into custody after being found in a residence in Pittsburgh

(Photo of Daryl Beckett Courtesy of WPXI/WPXI)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Philadelphia, PA) Thirty-six-year-old Daryl Beckett of Chester, Pennsylvania, wanted man who is facing murder charges from the Pennsylvania State Police, was taken into custody without incident yesterday by members of the U.S. Marshals Western Pennsylvania Fugitive Task Force after he was found in a residence located in the 1600 block of Brighton Place in Pittsburgh that night. Investigators from the U.S. Marshals Service learned Beckett was hiding in that residence in Pittsburgh. An arrest warrant was executed by members of both the Pennsylvania State Police Special Emergency Response Team (SERT) West and the Pittsburgh Police Department once Beckett was noticed by a task force surveillance team. Beckett is one of the Pennsylvania State Police’s Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitives. Beckett got charges of murder because he was connected to a fatal shooting that occurred on October 7th2023 in Delaware County. Beckett allegedly used a rifle to fire more than forty shots into a vehicle that was moving and traveling on I-95 in Upper Chichester, which killed the driver and hurt the passenger. The driver of the vehicle that passed away was forty-one-year-old Chris Gordy of Brookhaven, Pennsylvania. Beckett was added to the Pennsylvania State Police’s Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitives in December of 2024, which is when Pennsylvania State Police investigators from their Troop K Media barracks obtained a homicide warrant for Beckett.

A man from Monaca dies and a man from Sewickley gets injured after a single-vehicle crash occurs on Constitution Boulevard in Darlington Township

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Darlington Township, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that fifty-eight-year-old Anthony Pantaleo of Monaca died yesterday at the scene of a single-vehicle crash that occurred on Constitution Boulevard that nightPantaleo was driving south on State Route 51 near 3585 Constitution Boulevard in Darlington Township and did not have control of his vehicle and exited that road. Pantaleo hit an embankment, a fence, and a gas meter with his vehicle, which caused his vehicle to be overturned with its wheels facing up. Neither Pantaleo nor his passenger, sixty-three-year-old HarveMarenic of Sewickley, had their seatbelt on at the time this crash occurred. According to policeMarenic was transported by Medic Rescue for further medical attention because of a suspecteserious injury. 

AAA East Central’s Gas Price Report states that gas prices drop five cents in Western Pennsylvania this week as fall of 2025 is underway

(Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of AAA East Central)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Gas prices are five cents lower in Western Pennsylvania this week at about $3.42 per gallon, according to AAA East Central’s Gas Price Report. The national average for a regular gallon of gasoline is $3.18, a penny more than last week. The report states that at this time a year ago, the average price for a gallon of gas in Western Pennsylvania was around $3.50. The report also notes that the average price that you can expect for a gallon of unleaded gas here in Beaver County is $3.57. According to a release from AAA East Central and AAA East Central’s Gas Price Report, here are theaverage prices of unleaded self-serve gasoline this week in various Pennsylvania areas:

$3.378      Altoona
$3.570      Beaver
$3.587      Bradford
$3.066      Brookville
$3.500      Butler
$3.050      Clarion
$3.283      DuBois
$3.352      Erie
$3.332      Greensburg
$3.418      Indiana
$3.465      Jeannette
$3.486      Kittanning
$3.279      Latrobe
$3.363      Meadville
$3.524      Mercer
$3.441      New Castle
$3.473      New Kensington
$3.557      Oil City
$3.464      Pittsburgh
$3.393      Sharon
$3.538      Uniontown
$3.599      Warren
$3.497      Washington

Aliquippa man arrested for driving under the influence of drugs on the 1200 block of Saint Titus Alley in Aliquippa

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Aliquippa, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that twenty-three-year-old Romero Foster of Aliquippa was arrested on August 28th2025 for driving under the influence of drugs in Aliquippa that day. Foster was stopped by police for committing a vehicle code violation on the 1200 block of Saint Titus Alley. According to police, Foster was subsequently arrested for driving under the influence of a controlled substance and his charges are pending.

Shapiro Administration Continues Enhancing Safety and Traffic Flow with Roundabouts, Offers Public Educational Resources

(File Photo of the PennDOT logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) According to a release yesterday from PennDOT, PennDOT announced yesterday that roundabouts continue to provide safe, efficient travel across the Commonwealth. Findings in studies through 2024 with 20 years of crash data from roundabouts around Pennsylvania used confirmed that crashes decreased by 7 percent and crashes with injuries got reduced by 51 percent. 104 roundabouts across Pennsylvania have been built to improve the flow of traffic and/or decrease the severity of a crash and more than 30 additional roundabouts are in various stages of design and construction around Pennsylvania since 2005. According to that same release from PennDOT yesterday, here is some more information about roundabouts and some tips for safely driving on them:

  • Pennsylvania data reflects national studies that found changing two-way sign-controlled intersections to a single-lane roundabout reduced injury crashes by more than 80 percent. Likewise, changing a signalized intersection to single-lane or multilane roundabout reduced crashes with injuries by up to 78 percent.
  • The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) lists roundabouts as a “Proven Safety Countermeasure” that improves safety by reducing vehicle speeds by angling incoming traffic. The crashes that do occur tend to be sideswipe crashes with vehicles traveling at slower speeds rather than T-bone or head-on collisions. Additionally, eliminating left turns across opposing traffic results in dramatically fewer injuries.
  • In addition to safety improvement, roundabouts carry, on average, approximately 30 percent more vehicles during peak traffic than similar intersections. In off-peak hours, roundabouts cause almost no delay, compared to traffic signals.
  • As roundabouts are constructed around the state, it is important to know how to correctly navigate them.

Here are a few key things to remember when navigating a roundabout:

  • Slow down and be prepared to yield to pedestrians in the crosswalk.
  • Circulating traffic has the right of way. Look left and check for approaching traffic. If there are multiple circulating lanes, yield to both before entering. Do not assume the vehicle in the inside lane will stay there.
  • Do not stop while in the circulatory roadway, and always use your right turn signal to indicate your exit.

More on roundabouts in Pennsylvania, including videos on navigating the intersections, how to use a truck apron and notable projects in the state can be found on the PennDOT Roundabout web page.Information about state infrastructure in Pennsylvania, including completed work and significant projects, is available online. Find PennDOT’s planned and active construction projects at www.pa.gov/DOTprojects.

Subscribe to local PennDOT news or statewide PennDOT news on the department’s website.

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