Steelers QB Aaron Rodgers misses practice but is hopeful to renew acquaintances with the Bears

(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)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Aaron Rodgers is optimistic but hardly certain his broken left wrist will be good enough for him to play on Sunday when Pittsburgh visits Chicago.

There’s no question how the rest of him feels about the potential to get a chance to face the Bears one last time.

The 41-year-old four-time MVP clashed memorably for so long with Chicago during his long run in Green Bay earlier in his career.

“There’s incentive for every opponent, but I have enjoyed many a Sunday and Monday and many Thursdays in that city,” Rodgers said. “It’s a great sports town, phenomenal sports fans, and a great place to play.”

Particularly if you win there as much as Rodgers has through the years.

Rodgers is 11-1 at Soldier Field, and permanently etched his name into the lore of the oldest rivalry in the NFL when he memorably told the home crowd during a trip to Chicago in 2021 that he “owned” one of the league’s marquee franchises.

“I feel like we can let bygones be bygones, maybe,” Rodgers said with a smile, then later added, “I hope those fans can put that behind them. I’m sure they can’t. Don’t expect them to.”

There’s a chance Rodgers returns to practice on Thursday wearing a protective brace on the wrist he broke late in the first half of last Sunday’s 32-14 win over Cincinnati. Rodgers was rolling to his left and jumped to heave a pass to the back of the end zone, then landed awkwardly on the wrist of his non-throwing hand.

Mason Rudolph, who was excellent in the second half against the Bengals, will get the nod if Rodgers is unavailable, though it seems the Steelers will exhaust every avenue to make sure that Rodgers can go.

Rodgers said the primary issue will be safety. If he can protect himself and handle the ball normally, he’ll likely be given the OK. He could return to practice as early as Thursday, though Steelers coach Mike Tomlin pointed to Friday as a pivotal day in deciding who will be under center when the Steelers (6-4) try to win in Chicago for just the second time in franchise history.

Rudolph is preparing to be ready if called on, but knows anything can happen. He has been spectacular in his four extended appearances for Pittsburgh, posting a quarterback rating of around 120 during a run that started with engineering three straight victories to get the Steelers into the 2023 playoffs, then a steady two quarters against the Bengals.

“I think I got a lot of different experiences to draw from,” Rudolph said. “Whether you find out the day before the game, or you’re thrown into the game first quarter or in the second half or you get the whole week of reps. So you definitely draw from those experiences.”

The environment in the quarterback room is a bit more relaxed than it was during Rudolph’s first stint with the team from 2018-23. Rodgers and Rudolph both good-naturedly referred to each other as “trolls” on Wednesday.

Rodgers tweaked Rudolph for the lengthy list of “dad jokes” he tries to reel off during a meeting. Rudolph called it one of the “most fun” groups of quarterbacks he’s been around, even if it’s still a little surreal that he’s sharing it with a future Hall of Famer.

When Rudolph and the victorious Steelers made their way to the locker room on Sunday, Rodgers was waiting outside to congratulate him.

“I think if the 14-year-old me knew that I was getting a nice dab from A-Rod after a game, that would be pretty darn exciting,” Rudolph said.

Still, Rudolph knows that Sunday holds special significance for Rodgers beyond the opportunity for Pittsburgh to hold onto its slim lead over Baltimore in the AFC North.

“I think he made the comment early on that there’s certain games that mean a lot and just games you circle, and this was one of them,” Rudolph said. “So I understand his motivation to come back and take the field against an old rival.”

Woman in custody after being accused of intentionally setting fire to a Pittsburgh home that she was being evicted from

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Forty-eight-year-old Keila Fiqueroa is now in custody and is facing charges because she was accused of setting a Pittsburgh home on fire yesterday, which was also where she was being evicted from on that same day. According to Pittsburgh Public Safety officials, police officers were called to the 5300 block of Mossfield Street in Garfield for a reported break-in at 11:40 a.m. yesterday. Fiqueroa was in the process of being evicted at that time. Firefighters were called back to the same house at 12:40 p.m. after somebody called 911 and reported seeing smoke, which was coming from a second-story window. Investigators confirm that Fiqueroa was the one who intentionally set the fire even though she fled the scene when crews were battling the fire and were able to put it out. There were no reported injuries. Fiqueroa was taken into custody after she was found at the intersection of East Liberty Boulevard and North Highland Avenue and she faces charges of felony counts of aggravated arson, causing or risking catastrophe, arson endangering property, arson-reckless burning or exploding, criminal mischief and a summary offense for dangerous burning.

L.C. Greenwood, the late Steelers defensive lineman, voted into semi-finals for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026, seniors category

(Photo Courtesy of Getty Images and Focus on Sport, JANUARY 20: American professional football player L.C. Greenwood #68 of the Pittsburgh Steelers during Super Bowl XIV against the Los Angeles Rams at the Rose Bowl on January 20, 1980 in Pasadena, California. The Steelers defeated the Rams 31-19. (Photo by Focus On Sport/Getty Images)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) The late Pittsburgh Steelers defensive lineman L.C. Greenwood has now made it to the semi-finals for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026 in the seniors category after a recent round of voting from people from the museum located in Canton, Ohio. Greenwood and eight others have reached the semi-finals for this honor as the next vote will pick three finalists for next year’s class. Greenwood was a four-time Super Bowl Champion who played all thirteen of his NFL seasons with the Steelers.     

As infant botulism cases climb to 31, recalled ByHeart baby formula is still on some store shelves

(File Photo: Source for Photo: ByHeart infant formula has been removed from shelves of a Walmart store in Temecula, Calif., on Nov. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/JoNel Aleccia)

(AP) As cases of potentially deadly botulism in babies who drank ByHeart infant formula continue to grow, state officials say they are still finding the recalled product on some store shelves.

Meanwhile the company reported late Wednesday that laboratory tests confirmed that some samples of formula were contaminated with the type of bacteria that has sickened more than 30 babies in the outbreak.

Tests by an independent food safety laboratory found Clostridium botulinum, a bacterium that produces toxins that can lead to potentially life threatening illness in babies younger than 1, the company said on its website. ByHeart officials said they notified the U.S. Food and Drug Administration of the findings but did not specify how many samples were tested or how many were positive.

“We are working to investigate the facts, conduct ongoing testing to identify the source, and ensure this does not happen to families again,” ByHeart said on its website.

The FDA did not immediately respond to questions about the findings.

The lab results come as investigators in at least three states found ByHeart formula still for sale even after the New York-based company recalled all products nationwide, officials told The Associated Press.

At least 31 babies in 15 states who drank ByHeart formula have been hospitalized and treated for infantile botulism since August, federal health officials said Wednesday. They range in age from about 2 weeks to about 6 months, with the most recent case reported on Nov. 13.

No deaths have been reported.

In Oregon, nine of more than 150 stores checked still had the formula on shelves this week, a state agriculture official said. In Minnesota, investigators conducted 119 checks between Nov. 13 and Nov. 17 and removed recalled products from sale at four sites, an agriculture department official said. An Arizona health official also said they found the product available.

Businesses and consumers should remain alert, Minnesota officials said in a statement. “No affected product should be sold or consumed,” they wrote.

Investigators with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration conducted inspections at ByHeart manufacturing plants in Allerton, Iowa, and Portland, Oregon. No results from the inspections have been reported.

California officials previously confirmed the germ that can lead to illness in an open can of ByHeart formula fed to a baby who fell ill.

Infant botulism, which can cause paralysis and death, is caused by a type of bacteria that forms spores that germinate in a baby’s gut and produce a toxin.

Symptoms can take up to 30 days to develop and include constipation, poor feeding, a weak cry, drooping eyelids or a flat facial expression. Babies can develop weakness in their limbs and head and may feel “floppy.” They can have trouble swallowing or breathing.

ByHeart had been manufacturing about 200,000 cans of formula per month. It was sold online or at retail stores such as Target and Walmart. A Walmart spokesperson said the company swiftly issued a restriction that prevented sale of the formula, removed the product from stores and notified consumers who had bought it. Customers can visit any store for a refund of the formula, which sold for about $42 per can.

Federal and state health officials are concerned that some parents and caregivers may still have ByHeart products in their homes. They are advising consumers to stop using the product — including formula in cans and any single-serve sticks. They also suggest marking it “DO NOT USE” and keeping it for at least a month in case a baby develops symptoms. In that case, the formula would need to be tested.

The California health department operates the Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program, which tracks cases and distributes treatment for the disease. Officials there have launched a public hotline at 833-398-2022, which is staffed with health officials from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Pacific Standard Time.

The new hotline was created after calls from hundreds of parents and caregivers flooded a different, longstanding hotline for doctors to discuss suspected infant botulism cases, officials said.

President Donald Trump signs bill to release Jeffrey Epstein case files after fighting it for months

(File Photo: Source for Photo: (File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Audrey Strauss, acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, points to a photo of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, during a news conference in New York on July 2, 2020. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump has signed a bill to compel the Justice Department to make public its case files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a potentially far-reaching development in a yearslong push by survivors of Epstein’s abuse for a public reckoning.

Both the House and Senate passed the bill this week with overwhelming margins after Trump reversed course on his monthslong opposition to the bill and indicated he would sign it. Now that the bill has been signed by the president, there’s a 30-day countdown for the Justice Department to produce what’s commonly known as the Epstein files.

“This bill is a command for the president to be fully transparent, to come fully clean, and to provide full honesty to the American people,” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York said Wednesday.

Schumer added that Democrats were ready to push back if they perceive that the president is doing anything but adhering to “full transparency.”

In a social media post Wednesday as he announced he had signed the bill, Trump wrote, “Democrats have used the ‘Epstein’ issue, which affects them far more than the Republican Party, in order to try and distract from our AMAZING Victories.”

The swift, bipartisan work in Congress this week was a response to the growing public demand that the Epstein files be released, especially as attention focuses on his connections to global leaders including Trump, former President Bill Clinton, Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, who has already been stripped of his royal title as Prince Andrew over the matter, and many others.

There is plenty of public anticipation about what more the files could reveal. Yet the bill will most likely trigger a rarely seen baring of a sprawling federal investigation, also creating the potential for unintended consequences.

What does the bill do?

The bill compels Attorney General Pam Bondi to release essentially everything the Justice Department has collected over multiple federal investigations into Epstein, as well as his longtime confidante and girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for luring teenage girls for the disgraced financier. Those records total around 100,000 pages, according to a federal judge who has reviewed the case.

It will also compel the Justice Department to produce all its internal communications on Epstein and his associates and his 2019 death in a Manhattan jail cell as he awaited charges for sexually abusing and trafficking dozens of teenage girls.

The legislation, however, exempts some parts of the case files. The bill’s authors made sure to include that the Justice Department could withhold personally identifiable information of victims, child sexual abuse materials and information deemed by the administration to be classified for national defense or foreign policy.

“We will continue to follow the law with maximum transparency while protecting victims,” Bondi told a news conference Wednesday when asked about releasing the files.

The bill also allows the Justice Department to withhold information that would jeopardize active investigations or prosecutions. That’s created some worry among the bill’s proponents that the department would open active investigations into people named in the Epstein files in order to shield that material from public view.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a longtime Trump loyalist who has had a prominent split with Trump over the bill, said Tuesday that she saw the administration’s compliance with the bill as its “real test.”

“Will the Department of Justice release the files, or will it all remain tied up in investigations?” she asked.

In July, the FBI said in a memo regarding the Epstein investigation that, “we did not uncover evidence that could predicate an investigation against uncharged third parties.” But Bondi last week complied with Trump’s demands and ordered a federal prosecutor to investigate Epstein’s ties to the president’s political foes, including Clinton.

Still, Rep. Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican who sponsored the bill, said “there’s no way they can have enough investigations to cover” all of the people he believes are implicated in Epstein’s abuse.

“And if they do, then good,” he added.

The bill also requires the Justice Department to produce reports on what materials it withheld, as well as redactions made, within 15 days of the release of the files. It stipulates that officials can’t withhold or redact anything “on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity, including to any government official, public figure, or foreign dignitary.”

Who could be named?

There’s a widely held expectation that many people could be named in case files for investigations that spanned over a decade — and some concern that just because someone is named, that person would be assumed guilty or complicit.

Epstein was a luminary who kept company with heads of state, influential political figures, academics and billionaires. The release of his emails and messages by a House Oversight Committee investigation last week has already shown his connections with — and private conversations about — Trump and many other high-powered figures.

Yet federal prosecutors follow carefully constructed guidelines about what information they produce publicly and at trial, both to protect victims and to uphold the fairness of the legal system. House Speaker Mike Johnson raised objections to the bill on those grounds this week, arguing that it could reveal unwanted information on victims as well as others who were in contact with investigators.

Still, Johnson did not actually try to make changes to the bill and voted for it on the House floor.

For the bill’s proponents, a public reckoning over the investigation is precisely the point. Some of the survivors of trafficking from Epstein and Maxwell have sought ways to name people they accuse of being complicit or involved, but fear they will face lawsuits from the men they accuse.

Massie said that he wants the FBI to release the reports from its interviews with the victims.

Those reports typically contain unvetted information, but Massie said he is determined to name those who are accused. He and Greene have offered to read the names of those accused on the House floor, which would shield their speech from legal consequences.

“We need names,” Massie said.

Crash occurs in Cranberry Township involving a Seneca Valley School District bus and another vehicle

(File Photo of the Top of a School Bus)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Cranberry Township, PA) A Seneca Valley School District bus was involved in a crash in Butler County yesterday afternoon. Butler County dispatchers first confirmed to WTAE that crews were called to the scene along Plains Church Road in Cranberry Township at 3:15 p.m. The bus and another vehicle were pulled off onto the side of the road. Over a dozen children who were reported to be OK were picked up by their parents. The front bumper on the driver’s side of the bus was seen being repaired to make the bus drivable and four pine trees also sustained damage as a result of the crash. The vehicle involved in the crash was also seen being towed away from the scene. The cause of this crash is unclear at this time.

Route 4042 Wexford Bayne Road, Route 4049 Nicholson Road Intersection Restrictions Extended in Allegheny County

(File Photo of a Road Work Ahead Sign)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Allegheny County, PA) PennDOT District 11 announced that restrictions have been extended at the intersection of Wexford Bayne Road (Route 4042) and Nicholson Road (Route 4049) in Franklin Park Borough of Allegheny County. On weekdays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. through Tuesday, November 25th, there will continue to be single-lane restrictions and flagging operations at the intersection of Wexford Bayne Road and Nicholson Road as crews to continue temporary signal installation and roadway widening work at that intersection. No restrictions will be in place from Wednesday through Friday, November 26th-28th because of the Thanksgiving holiday. 

Kennywood, Sandcastle and Idlewild and SoakZone 2026 opening dates announced

(File Photo of the Kennywood Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(West Mifflin, PA) Kennywood announced yesterday that April 18th2026 will be its opening date for next year for its amusement park rides and events to start again. The sister parks of Kennywood,Sandcastle and Idlewild & Soak Zone will both open on May 23rd2026 to start their seasons next year for their amusement park activities to begin again.

David Dousey introduced as the 14th president of Duquesne University

(Photo Courtesy of Duquesne University)

Noah Haswell, Beaver COunty Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) David Dausey was introduced yesterday as the 14th president in the history of Duquesne University at that university in Pittsburgh, which was where he was officially named to that position on Tuesday. Ken Gormley is the current president and he will step down from his role before Dausey will take over on July 1st, 2026. Dausey is a native of Jefferson Hills who presently serves as the provost and executive vice president of Duquesne University.  

Fourteen-year-old boy dies following a collapse during basketball practice at Imani Christian Academy in Pittsburgh

(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 fourteen-year-old freshman who went to Imani Christian Academy died on the way to a hospital after he collapsed during a basketball practice there at the school in the East Hills of Pittsburgh. According to the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office, the boy was taken to a Pittsburgh hospital, which is where he was pronounced dead. The cause of his death is unknown at this time.