(Aliquippa, PA) The Pennsylvania Broadband Development Authority (PBDA) announced that the B.F. Jones Memorial Library has received $250,975 in grant funding to increase internet access as well as other services in Aliquippa. The money will also assist in the overall structure of the building, which includes better security, window resealing, and projects to fix the roofs. According to legislators, these renovations to the building will ensure visitors’ safety and access to library services.
Author: Beaver County Radio
Women’s Center of Beaver County receives grant to help underserved populations in Beaver County as well as victims of domestic violence
(Beaver, PA) The Women’s Center of Beaver County has been awarded a grant of $594,500 in its mission to protect victims affected by domestic violence. Safe transitional housing and relocation services will be provided in coalition with the grant. According to program officials, the Women’s Center will use these federal funds to provide scattered, private landlord housing to 35 survivors of domestic abuse and their families. The Beaver County Rehabilitation Center will also team up with the Women’s Center of Beaver County to provide holistic, victim- centered therapy, with services for at least six months and up to two years. Underserved populations of people in Beaver County, which includes communities of color, people with disabilities, older adults, those with limited proficiency in English, those that are hearing impaired, and the LGBTQ community receiving these services.
Investigation regarding selling and purchasing of the former Beaver County Times buildign continues
(Beaver, PA) The investigation continues regarding the purchase and selling of the former Beaver County Times building. Former county solicitor Joe Askar bought the building last year for less than $700,000 and is looking to sell it for four times that price. Beaver County controller Maria Longo is questioning whether the asking price of the building is worth less than the building itself. The Chairman of the Beaver County Commissioners Dan Camp stresses that Beaver County needs this building to house election equipment and keep records as well as possibly housing the Beaver County SWAT team.
Ronald F. Rokicki, Sr. (1965-2024)
Ronald F. Rokicki Sr., 59, of Moon Township, passed away on October 13, 2024. He was born in Sewickley on April 30, 1965, the son of the late Walter & Marie (Martin) Rokicki. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister, Cathy. Ron is survived by his wife of 39 years, Colleen Sue (McCormick) Rokicki, five children: Ronald Rokicki Jr. of Moon Township, Moriah Bialowas (Brian), of Robinson Township, Steven W. Rokicki (Rachael) of Neville Island, Patti Katora (Neil) of Downingtown, David Rokicki of Moon Township, four grandchildren: Julia, Erin, Jacob & Corrina. Brothers, William (Patty), Walt (Bobbi), Bob (Maria); and brother-in-law, Magno.
Ron enjoyed time on his boat, quality pizza, and watching the Steelers on Sundays. Most of all, he treasured time with those he loved, sparking contagious joy with his boisterous laughter that could likely be heard from across the street. He was passionate about music, and could find the perfect song for any moment, influencing his five childrens’ love of music and living on in the songs he shared.
Ron was a certified master technician known for his ability to fix anything. He spent many years running his own business, Rokicki’s Auto Service. In recent years, he was employed at FedEx as a technician specialist. Ron was a dedicated, lifetime firefighter for the Neville Island Volunteer Fire Department. Ron’s friendly nature made a lasting impression on everyone he met, always making time for a chat. Those who knew him knew a hardworking man with a big heart and a desire to be helpful. He was loved deeply by all who knew him, and fully embraced as a member of the McCormick family.
Friends will be received on Thursday October 17th from 2-4 P.M. & 6-8 P.M. in The Huntsman Funeral Home & Cremation Services of Moon Township, 1522 Coraopolis Heights Road.
A memorial service will be held on Saturday October 19th at 1PM in St. Philip’s Church of Moon Township, 1629 Beaver Grade Road.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to The Neville Island Fire Department.
John A. “Moose” Uccellini (1929-2024)
John A. “Moose” Uccellini, 95, of Midland, passed away on October 13, 2024 at Villa St. Joseph.
He was born on September 7, 1929 in Midland, the son of the late Carlo and Emma (Rocca) Uccellini. He is survived by his son Dr. John (Hollie) Uccellini, his daughter Anita (Glenn) Buse, his daughter-in-law Tina Uccellini, five grandchildren, Dr. Beth (Jon) Carpenter, Anthony (Megan) Uccellini, John Michael Uccellini, Dr. Nicole (Andrew) Clevenger, Ashley (Matthew) Work, five great grandchildren, Joseph and Anna Carpenter, Lucy Clevenger, and Emma and Sadie Work, his brother Rocco (Dorothy) Uccellini, brother-in-law James Kossler, numerous nieces and nephews and lifelong friends Lucy and Hezzie Presutti and Patricia Bernardi. He was preceded in death by his wife Anna Marie (DeProspero) Uccellini, his son Michael Uccellini, his sisters Chris and (Ralph) Musi, Rose and (John) Cindrich and Anna Kossler, his brothers and sisters-in-law Mary and (George) Seifert, Louie and (Mary) DeProspero, Patty and (Danny) Santia.
John retired from Crucible Steel and extended his career as Manager of Midland Water Authority until he retired in 1993. He served as a member of the Midland School Board, recording secretary of the USW local 1212 and local 122, and a lifelong member and former President of the St. Anthony Italian Club in Midland. He was a lifelong member of St. Blaise Church of Midland, part of Saint Augustine Parish where he was very active as an usher and active member of their fall festival committee. He will long be remembered for his sense of humor, storytelling ability and serving as a master of ceremony for many events. For example, he often would talk about his time in school where he would sit next to the smartest girl in class. In one class, Sister Bernise passed out a 10-point quiz, where he got 9 out 10 right and got an ‘F,’ and the girl next to him got 9 out of 10 right and got an ‘A’. He asked Sister Bernise why, and she told him the girl next to him wrote “I don’t know the answer” to the one she got wrong, and he wrote on his test “I don’t know it either!”
Friends will be received on Friday October 18, in the Schwerha-Noll Funeral Home Inc., 629 Midland Avenue, Midland, from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will be conducted on Saturday, October 19 at 10:30 a.m. at St. Blaise Roman Catholic Church, 772 Ohio Avenue, Midland. Online condolences may be shared at www.nollfuneral.com.
Interment will follow at Beaver Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to St. Blaise Roman Catholic Church, 772 Ohio Avenue, Midland, PA 15059, or the St. Anthony Club in Midland, 561 Beaver Avenue, Midland, PA 15059.
Mary Ann Glatzel (1944-2024)
Mary Ann Glatzel, 80, of Fair Oaks, passed away on October 13, 2024. She was born on July 25, 1944, in Pittsburgh, the daughter of the late Richard and Julia (Woods) Baldwin Sr. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her brothers, Richard Baldwin and William Baldwin.
Mary Ann is survived by her loving husband, Fred Glatzel, daughter, Kimberly (Nathan) Janney, grandchildren, Caleb, Joshua, and Sarah Janney, sisters-in-law, Judy Baldwin and Michelle Baldwin, and nieces and nephews.
Mary Ann worked as a cleaner for the Quaker Valley School District. In her spare time, she enjoyed playing computer games, especially Candy Crush, was a veteran of Black Friday shopping, and above all, loved going to the zoo and spending time with her grandchildren.
Family and friends will be received on Thursday, October 17, from 4-8 P.M., in the John Syka Funeral Home, 833 Kennedy Drive, Ambridge, where a funeral service will be held on Friday, October 18, at 11:00 AM. Interment will follow in the Resurrection Catholic Cemetery Mausoleum, 100 Resurrection Road, Coraopolis.
John Jack Leibig McCormick (1948-2024)
John Jack Liebig McCormick, 76, of Beaver, passed away at home on October 12, 2024.
He was born on July 17, 1948, in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, the son of the late Mary Louise Liebig and Jon McCormick. In addition to his parents, he is preceded in death by his adoptive father, George Liebig.
He is survived by his wife, Dianne; his son John (Elizabeth) Liebig, of Raleigh, North Carolina, his daughter, Gretchen (Michael) Kelley, of Beaver, and his grandchildren, Quinn Kelley, of Bellevue, Pennsylvania, Zane Kelley, of Beaver, Jason Liebig, of Raleigh, North Carolina and Megan Liebig of Raleigh, North Carolina. John had worked as a Quality Assurance Specialist at Nova Chemical.
According to John’s wishes, there were no services.
Professional Arrangements have been entrusted to the Noll Funeral Home Inc., 333 Third Street, Beaver. Online condolences may be shared at www.nollfuneral.com.
Russell Wilson ‘in consideration’ to start against the Jets in return from calf injury
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Russell Wilson (3) walks on the sideline during the second half of an NFL football game against the Las Vegas Raiders in Las Vegas, Sunday, Oct. 13, 2024. (AP Photo/John Locher)
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Russell Wilson’s time may be fast approaching in Pittsburgh.
Coach Mike Tomlin said Tuesday that Wilson is “in consideration” to be the starting quarterback when the Steelers (4-2) host the New York Jets (2-4) on Sunday night. The 35-year-old nine-time Pro Bowler has spent the past six weeks recovering from a calf injury he aggravated a couple of days before the season opener.
While Tomlin stressed that Justin Fields “has been really good” while filling in for Wilson and the team has “been really good at times,” the NFL’s longest-tenured coach added that good was “not to be confused with great.”
Enter Wilson, who won the starting job at the end of training camp before tweaking the calf less than 72 hours before a Week 1 visit to Atlanta. Tomlin saw enough of Wilson in practice last week to have him serve as the backup behind Fields during a 32-13 win in Las Vegas, and there’s a very real chance they could swap roles against the Jets.
“This is a competitive league, man,” Tomlin said. “We’re trying to position ourselves to be that team. And we got a player with talent who hadn’t had an opportunity to play. So we’re going to potentially explore those things.”
Fields has been efficient and occasionally spectacular during his six-week audition. He’s also largely avoided the kinds of mistakes that were a common thread during his three years in Chicago, throwing just one interception in 160 attempts. His accuracy, however, had dipped of late. Fields has completed just 57% (29 of 51) of his passes over his past eight quarters, down from 69% (77 of 111) across the opening month of the season.
The Steelers are also 28th in passing and 20th in scoring, riding a soft(ish) early season schedule and a disruptive defense led by All-Pro linebacker T.J. Watt to a tie atop the AFC North with rival Baltimore. After a pair of home primetime games against the New York City area teams — the Jets on Sunday, the Giants on Oct. 28 — the sledding figures to get far heavier once the calendar flips to November and Wilson’s resume may be too tantalizing for Tomlin to pass up.
Tomlin cautioned that the decision to give Wilson reps with the first team in practice this week has more to do with Wilson’s experience and his resume than Fields’ performance.
“Justin has been an asset to us,” Tomlin said.
Just not enough of one for Tomlin to definitively hand the starting job to Fields outright. Tomlin declined to get into specifics on how he will divide the practice snaps with the first team and doesn’t expect to make a decision on who will start against the Jets until later in the week.
“We’re just going to roll the ball out, let both guys work and make decisions from there,” Tomlin said.
Fields’ play has allowed the Steelers to bring Wilson — who turns 36 next month — along slowly. Wilson initially injured the calf when the team reported to training camp in July and there was a concern when he aggravated it that it could lead to something more serious.
Wilson has steadily improved and showed Tomlin last week that he could protect himself in practice. The next step will be knocking off whatever rust might remain from a month-plus of relative inactivity, though Tomlin doesn’t sound overly concerned.
Whoever the quarterback is will likely be playing behind a seventh different offensive line combination in as many weeks with rookie center Zach Frazier out with an ankle injury sustained against the Raiders. Fields’ mobility — he’s already run for five touchdowns — has helped offset the constant churn in front of him. That’s not a tool that Wilson has had since the height of his “Let Russ Cook” days with Seattle several years ago.
Asked how the offense might change with Wilson behind center, Tomlin smiled and said “it remains to be seen. And I think that’s one of the cute things about this discussion.”
NOTES: LB Nick Herbig (hamstring) will miss his second straight game. … There’s a chance OLB Alex Highsmith (groin), out since a win over the Los Angeles Chargers on Sept. 22, could return. … RB Cordarrelle Patterson (ankle) may also be available after missing two games.
AAA: Gas Prices Continue to Climb in PA
Gas prices are six cents higher in Western Pennsylvania this week at $3.549 per gallon, according to AAA East Central’s Gas Price Report.
This week’s average prices: Western Pennsylvania Average $3.549
Average price during the week of Oct. 7, 2024 $3.489
Average price during the week of Oct. 16, 2023 $3.845
The average price of unleaded self-serve gasoline in various areas:
$3.550 Altoona
$3.564 Beaver
$3.772 Bradford
$3.501 Brookville
$3.546 Butler
$3.393 Clarion
$3.575 DuBois
$3.562 Erie
$3.571 Greensburg
$3.561 Indiana
$3.594 Jeannette
$3.512 Kittanning
$3.566 Latrobe
$3.587 Meadville
$3.495 Mercer
$3.446 New Castle
$3.463 New Kensington
$3.587 Oil City
$3.543 Pittsburgh
$3.406 Sharon
$3.538 Uniontown
$3.759 Warren
$3.525 Washington
Trend Analysis:
The national average for a gallon of gas has jumped three cents since last week to $3.20 as parts of the country deal with back-to-back storm damage. Like Hurricane Helene, Milton has not severely impact national gasoline supplies but will affect demand in areas with destroyed infrastructure, flooded roads, and power outages. Today’s national average is a penny less than a month ago and 40 cents less than a year ago.
According to new data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA), gas demand surged from 8.52 million barrels per day last week to 9.65. Meanwhile, total domestic gasoline stocks plunged from 221.2 million barrels to 214.9, while gasoline production increased last week, averaging 10.2 million barrels daily.
At the close of Wednesday’s formal trading session, West Texas Intermediate fell by 33 cents to settle at $73.24 a barrel. The EIA reports that crude oil inventories increased by 5.8 million barrels from the previous week. At 422.7 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are about 4% below the five-year average for this time of year.
PennDOT Accepting Unsolicited Public-Private Partnership Proposals Until Oct. 31
Harrisburg, PA – The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) Office of Public-Private Partnerships (P3) announced today that it is accepting unsolicited proposals for transportation projects from the private sector through Oct. 31.
The submission period applies to PennDOT-owned projects and infrastructure. During this period, the private sector can submit proposals offering innovative ways to deliver transportation projects across a variety of modes including roads, bridges, rail, aviation, and ports. Proposals can also include more efficient models to manage existing transportation-related services and programs.
The private sector may also submit applications for non-PennDOT-owned assets directly to the P3 board during this time. Transportation entities outside of the governor’s jurisdiction, such as transit authorities, may establish their own timelines or accept proposals year-round. Unsolicited proposals are being accepted through 11:59 PM on Oct. 31. Instructions on how to submit a project and information on the unsolicited proposal review process can be found on the state’s P3 website.
The state’s P3 law allows PennDOT and other transportation authorities and commissions to partner with private companies to participate in delivering, maintaining, and financing transportation-related projects.
As part of the P3 law, the seven-member Public Private Transportation Partnership Board was appointed to examine and approve potential public-private transportation projects. If the board determines a state operation would be more cost-effectively administered by a private company, the company will be authorized to submit a proposal and enter into a contract to either completely or partially take over that operation for a defined period of time.