Vote held by New Brighton and Rochester school boards on potential co-operative athletics agreement

(File Photo of New Brighton Area School District Logo and Rochester High School Athletics (Ram) Logo: Credit for Photo: Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of New Brighton Area School District and Rochester Area School District)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver County, PA) Both the Rochester and New Brighton school boards met yesterday to vote on a potential cooperative agreement between the athletic programs of the two districts for select sports beginning in the 2026-2027 school year. The board of Rochester voted 6-1 in favor of tabling to both receive input and to gather more information, while the New Brighton board voted unanimously in a 9-0 vote to move forward. According to New Brighton superintendent Dr. Joseph Guarinohe will be meeting with members of Rochester’s administration to discuss the next steps after Rochester chose not to officially vote on the matter. 

Pittsburgh man crashes vehicle into a deer in Findlay Township

(File Photo of a Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Car)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Findlay Township, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Pittsburgh reported via release today that fifty-four-year-old Andrew Jenkins of Pittsburgh crashed his vehicle into a deer in Findlee Township in the early morning of November 3rd, 2025. Upon further investigation, Jenkins was traveling in the right-hand lane of I-376 East at 12:28 a.m., west of the Moon Business Loop, and when a deer entered that lane, he could not stop in time to avoid hitting it with his vehicle. Jenkins was not injured during this crash. 

Driver charged for causing a three-vehicle crash in Moon Township

(File Photo of a Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Car)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Moon Township, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Pittsburgh reported via release today that an unidentified driver was charged after causing a three-vehicle crash in Moon Township on the morning of November 5th, 2025. This driver was traveling on I-376 West and crashed their vehicle with two other vehicles at 11:36 a.m. at mile marker 58. The driver that was charged was traveling in the center lane and was trying to merge into the left lane, but they did not see another driver’s vehicle traveling in the left lane and also hit a third driver’s vehicle traveling in the right lane when the first driver traveled across the center lane. There were no injuries after this crash occurred. 

Man from Niles, Ohio charged after causing a two-vehicle crash in Findlay Township

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Findlay Township, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Pittsburgh reported via release today that thirty-nine-year-old Jeremy Wood of Niles, Ohio was charged after causing a two-vehicle crash in Findlay Township on the morning of September 3rd, 2025. Wood was driving on the left lane of I-376 East at approximately mile marker 57 at 11:01 a.m. and merged into the right lane and hit a truck that had merged onto I-376 East from McClaren Road. There were no injuries after this crash occurred.

Seller of home in Beaver County with German hate symbols in property did not have to inform buyers of these symbols

(Photo Courtesy of KDKA-TV, CBS Pittsburgh, posted on Facebook post on August 25th, 2025)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver County, PA) A ruling came last Wednesday from the Pennsylvania Superior Court that the seller of a home that is now in Beaver County did not have to inform potential buyers of hate symbols embedded in his property. This comes after the Wentworth family filed a lawsuit when they found a swastika and what appeared to be a German war eagle which was tiled under rugs and a table on the floor of their basement. The court decided that symbols tiled into the basement home of homeowner Lynn Rae Wentworth were not “material defects” that the seller needed to disclose prior to the purchase of the home. Wentworth now has just under thirty days to appeal. 

Big fire occurs at BrickYard Auto Parts in Darlington Township

(Photo Courtesy of the Chippewa Township Volunteer Fire Department, Beaver Falls)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Darlington Township, PA) A big fire occurred yesterday afternoon at BrickYard Auto Parts, a scrap yard and auto parts store in Darlington Township. The Chippewa Township Volunteer Fire Department and dozens of other fire departments responded and started working on the blaze on Morris Street in Darlington, and officials confirm the blaze started at approximately 2 p.m. Hazmat was also called to help contain the fire after several hours, and the cause of it is unknown at this time. 

Suspect of a recent murder in the South Side Flats neighborhood of Pittsburgh arrested in Swissvale

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Swissvale, PA) WPXI sources confirm that twenty-six-year-old Moniem Strothers was arrested by U.S. Marshals and Pittsburgh SWAT in Swissvale yesterday. Strothers is the suspect of a shooting that occurred on October 12th2025 in the South Side Flats neighborhood of Pittsburgh in which thirty-three-year-old Steve Robertson of Squirrel Hill was shot and killed on East Carson Street. According to online court records, Strothers is charged with criminal homicide and firearms charges. Strothers is being held in the Allegheny County Jail and was denied bail.

Two children hospitalized, one woman injured after physical altercation in Allegheny County

(File Photo of Police Siren Lights)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Allegheny County, PA) According to police, two children were taken to the hospital in stable condition, and a woman suffered minor cuts on her hand following an altercation in Allegheny County. Officials told WTAE that Pittsburgh police were called to the 1100 block of Brownsville Road at 4 p.m. yesterday following reports of a physical altercation. One woman reported she was assaulted by two other women that she knew while she was outside with her children. One of the two women pulled out a knife towards the mother and swung it in the direction of her. The mother refused medical treatment after suffering minor cuts to her handCity officials later stated two of the children told authorities they had willingly entered the vehicle of one of the women involved in the altercation. The unidentified woman returned the children to officers a short time later. A spokesperson for police noted the children were returned to officers in the 1200 block of Banksville Road. Both children were evaluated on the scene by Pittsburgh EMS and later taken to a local hospital in stable condition. An investigation into this incident is ongoing. 

Lawsuit filed over 2 deaths in January air ambulance crash in Philadelphia

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Investigators work the scene after a small plane crashed in Philadelphia, Feb. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The families of two of the eight people killed earlier this year when an air ambulance crashed in Philadelphia filed a lawsuit on Monday, claiming the medical air transport company and others negligently caused their deaths.

The wrongful death case was filed by the estates of Dr. Raul Meza Arredondo, a pediatrician, and Lizeth Murillo Osuna, the mother of a girl who was flying home to Mexico after being treated at a Philadelphia hospital.

All six people on board the Learjet 55 were killed, along with two people on the ground. More than 20 people were hurt.

About a minute after takeoff from Northeast Philadelphia Airport on Jan. 31, the Tijuana, Mexico-bound plane crashed into a busy neighborhood, “erupting in a massive explosion that engulfed multiple vehicles and houses and sent fiery debris raining down on terrified and helpless bystanders,” the plaintiffs alleged in the lawsuit.

The crash occurred near Roosevelt Mall, an outdoor shopping center in the Rhawnhurst neighborhood.

The National Transportation Safety Board has said the voice recorder on the plane was not working and that the crew made no distress calls to air traffic control.

The defendants are the Guadalajara air ambulance company, Med Jets, S.A. de C.V., which does business as Jet Rescue, along with unspecified others who were responsible for the plane’s design, manufacture, maintenance and inspection.

Messages seeking comment were left Monday for a Jet Rescue spokesman, for lawyers listed as representing Med Jets in a related federal lawsuit, and for a Jet Rescue Air Ambulance facility in Florida.

Arredondo and Osuna were both described in the lawsuit as Mexican citizens. Arredondo lived in Atizapan de Zaragoza, Osuna in Ensenada.

James Franklin hired as Virginia Tech’s coach, just over a month after Penn State fired him

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Penn State head coach James Franklin watches the action against Northwestern during the second quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025, in State College, Pa. (AP Photo/Barry Reeger,File)

BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) — James Franklin was hired as Virginia Tech’s coach on Monday, a little more than a month after he was fired during his 12th season at Penn State.

The Hokies became the first Power 4 football program to fill a coaching vacancy this season. Franklin was set to be formally introduced at a news conference Wednesday morning.

He was fired by the Nittany Lions on Oct. 12, a day after they lost at home to Northwestern to fall to 3-3.

The 53-year-old Franklin went 104-45 at Penn State, winning a Big Ten championship (in the 2016 season), a Fiesta Bowl (2017) and a Rose Bowl (2022). Last season, he led the Nittany Lions to a first-round victory in the College Football Playoff.

“I’m honored and humbled to join the Hokie family,” Franklin said in a statement. “My vision is simple: to restore unmatched excellence, to build something that lasts, and to serve this university, the Commonwealth of Virginia and our amazing fan base with honor, integrity, and passion. I look forward to getting to work with our players, our staff, and the entire Virginia Tech community.”

Terms of Franklin’s contract were not released. Before he was hired by Virginia Tech, Penn State had been on the hook for a buyout worth nearly $50 million. But Franklin and the Nittany Lions negotiated a settlement under which he’ll be paid $9 million instead, according to multiple reports.

Franklin has a 128-60 overall record, including his three seasons at Vanderbilt. In Blacksburg, he takes over for his former Nittany Lions defensive coordinator, Brent Pry, who was fired on Sept. 14 after the Hokies lost their first three games by an average of 18.7 points. Virginia Tech started 0-3 for the first time since 1987.

Pry went 16-24, including 10-13 in Atlantic Coast Conference play, in his three-plus seasons. The Hokies (3-7, 2-4 ACC) have since been led by interim coach Philip Montgomery.

Franklin was maligned at Penn State for not winning big games — he went 4-21 against teams ranked in the top 10 of the AP poll — but he brings credibility to a Virginia Tech program that has struggled since Frank Beamer retired in 2015 after 29 years at the helm.

Athletic director Whit Babcock first hired Justin Fuente and then Pry in hopes of continuing the success enjoyed by Beamer, but both coaches floundered. That prompted Virginia Tech President Tim Sands to form a search committee to hire the next coach and limit the scope of Babcock’s role.

The Hokies have just four winning seasons since Beamer’s retirement and six since since Babcock became the AD in 2014.

The committee landed on Franklin, whose Penn State teams won at least 10 games six times during his tenure. Franklin also showed an ability to recruit in Virginia. In 2023, he signed six of the top 10 prospects in the state, according to various recruiting services, and one of his best players in the past five years was Tyler Warren, a tight end from the Richmond area who was a first-round NFL draft pick by the Indianapolis Colts this spring and is flourishing as a rookie.

“His experience, passion, and record of success embody our commitment to compete at the highest level,” Sands said of Franklin in a statement. “His selection is the result of unprecedented collaboration by our athletic administration with university leaders, esteemed alumni, including former NFL coaches and players, and our most dedicated supporters.

“James will provide the leadership and inspiration our student-athletes need, and the performance on the field that our university community, alumni, and fans expect and deserve.”

Virginia Tech has committed to providing Franklin with the resources he needs to be successful. The Board of Visitors approved a plan in late September to add $229 million to the athletic department’s budget over the next four years, primarily to bolster the football program. Half of that money, though, is coming from philanthropy and needs to be raised.