Matzie: $6.2 million secured for Beaver County construction and revitalization projects

AMBRIDGE, Nov. 1 – New funding of $6.2 million from the Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program will support major Beaver County building construction and revitalization projects, state Rep. Rob Matzie announced today.

“I’m beyond proud to have brought these dollars home,” Matzie said. “When experience and perseverance meet, this is the result. It’s not only about supporting our communities, but also knowing how to go about doing it. Anyone can talk the talk, but not everyone can walk the walk. I’ll always put Beaver County and the communities I represent first, and I will never quit fighting to get our fair share and more.”

Matzie said the funding includes:

  • $1.5 million to Monaca Borough for Phase III construction of the Monaca Civic Center. The project includes site preparation; required infrastructure including parking; and construction of a two-story 27,000-square-foot building for administrative, police and fire needs, plus housing of police and fire vehicles.
  • $1.25 million to Ambridge Borough for Phase 2 (interior) construction of the new Ambridge Senior Center, including framing, plumbing, electrical, mechanical, drywall, carpentry, and other work.
  • $1 million to Aliquippa School District for expansion of the high school’s Aschman Stadium complex, including completion of a state-of-the-art fieldhouse and academic resource center that will serve as an assembly/education space and indoor athletic/activity space.
  • $750,000 to Community College of Beaver County to transform the Beaver County Airport facility into a shared hub for aviation students and professionals by adding classrooms, study spaces, faculty offices, pilot briefing rooms and flight simulation and air traffic control simulation labs.
  • $750,000 to Heritage Valley Health System, Inc. for construction and renovation of patient rooms at HVHS Beaver Hospital to create a modern recovery space.
  • $500,000 to International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local Union #712 for construction of a new building with offices spaces, a union hall/training/conference center and related spaces.
  • $450,000 to CCBC for critical infrastructure renovations to the Golden Dome arena, including substantial roof repairs and waterproofing, mitigation of water damage, interior lighting upgrades to replace the failing metal halide system, restoration of deteriorating flooring and replacement of manually operated bleachers with automatic ones.

Sidney Crosby Scores Twice as Penguins edge Ducks 2-1 in overtime to end 6-game losing streak

 

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Sidney Crosby scored his second goal of the game 2:35 into overtime as the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Anaheim Ducks 2-1 on Thursday night to end a six-game losing streak.
Crosby found himself in alone on Lukas Dostal and hit the brakes before roofing the puck over the Ducks’ goaltender for the 93rd game-winning goal of his career.
Alex Nedeljkovic made 22 saves for Pittsburgh, which outshot Anaheim 46-23. Dostal stopped 44 shots to keep the Ducks in it, but it still wasn’t enough.
Alex Killorn picked up his second goal of the season for the Ducks, who ended a four-game East Coast trip with a 1-2-1 mark.
Anaheim led going into the third period before Crosby tied it with a redirect off a point shot from Matt Grzelcyk 1:47 into the final frame.
Takeaways
Ducks: The 24-year-old Dostal has built off his strong finish to last season. He remained steady while facing near-relentless pressure from the Penguins while finishing with 40+ saves for the third time in six starts.
Penguins: Pittsburgh needed something positive to happen at the end of a miserable October and responded with a win in front of one of the smallest crowds in the history of PPG Paints Arena.
Key moment
Nedeljkovic made three big saves down the stretch. He turned aside Trevor Zegras with the help of defenseman Marcus Pettersson with 4:25 to go, stoned Cutter Gauthier on a breakaway moments later and stopped a redirect by Pavel Mintyukov in the final seconds to force overtime.
Key stat
85-12-5 — Pittsburgh’s record during Crosby’s career when their longtime captain scores at least twice.
Up next
The Ducks begin a six-game homestand on Sunday against the Blackhawks, while the Penguins host the Canadiens on Saturday.
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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Mike Tomlin Isn’t Settling for Merely Being Good During the Steelers’ 6-2 Start. Neither is His Team

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Russell Wilson (3) throws a pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the New York Giants, Monday, Oct. 28, 2024, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Matt Freed)
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Mike Tomlin could have played it safe. Could have stuck with Justin Fields. Could have settled for the weekly rock fights that have been the Pittsburgh Steelers ‘ trademark for a half-decade and counting.
The NFL’s longest-tenured coach, however, knew he hadn’t seen enough. Not from Fields or the rest of the offense, either.
So Tomlin pulled Fields aside a few days after a relatively easy 19-point win over Las Vegas on Oct. 13 that boosted Pittsburgh’s record to 4-2 and told Fields it was time to see if Russell Wilson, now fully recovered from a calf injury, could still cook.
Asked if it was a tough discussion considering Fields had accounted for 10 touchdowns against one turnover, Tomlin shrugged.
“I don’t worry about the difficulty of conversations,” he said at the time. “It’s about whether or not they’re necessary. We’re pursuing big business here. Comfort is not a component of what we’re chasing.”
Neither, it seems, is complacency.
The NFL’s most stable franchise is evolving, working with a type of urgency it has perhaps lacked at times during a playoff victory drought that’s at seven years and counting.
It’s why the Steelers blew up the quarterback room during the offseason and why Tomlin turned to Wilson in mid-October and essentially said, “Let’s see what you got.”
Turns out, more gas in the tank than Wilson’s abrupt exit in Denver would have people believe.
The 35-year-old has thrown for 542 yards with three touchdowns and no interceptions in wins over the New York Jets and New York Giants. The offense topped 400 yards in both games, something the Steelers hadn’t done in consecutive weeks since 2018.
It’s a promising start, though Wilson acknowledged it’s just that — a start.
“We have great confidence (but) we haven’t done everything yet,” Wilson said. “We’re obviously sitting here at 6-2, which is a great thing, but it doesn’t mean anything.”
Reaching the playoffs hasn’t been the issue for Pittsburgh, which has made it to the postseason in three of the last four years. The problem has been that the Steelers often look overmatched once they get there, lacking the firepower to keep up with teams like the Bills and Chiefs.
That may be changing in 2024. Pittsburgh has reached 20 points in five of its last six games, something it hasn’t done since its 11-0 start in 2020, taking some of the pressure off a defense that has spent the last three years well aware that it could ill afford to get into a shootout.
While cornerback Joey Porter Jr. downplayed the idea that the defense has more wiggle room than usual — trotting out a variation of Tomlin’s “the standard is the standard” motto — Pittsburgh’s ability to score more often has allowed defensive coordinator Teryl Austin to be even more aggressive.
The Steelers are tied for second in the NFL with 15 takeaways, many of them momentum-changers like T.J. Watt’s strip-sack of Daniel Jones and Beanie Bishop’s clinching interception in the fourth quarter against the Giants, part of what outside linebackers coach Denzel Martin describes as a turnover “culture.”
There’s even T-shirts to match. Coaches will hand them out after Saturday walkthroughs. They come with their own color code. Get one, it’s a white shirt. Get two, it’s a gray shirt. Get three, it’s a black shirt. Watt and Bishop are racking them up with increasing frequency.
Yet all is not perfect. The Giants gashed the Steelers for 157 yards rushing, not the best indicator for a team whose second-half schedule includes four games combined with Baltimore, Washington and Philadelphia, three of the most productive running teams in the league.
New York’s productivity on the ground was a sobering and in some ways welcome reminder of the considerable work that lies ahead.
“I think that’s good to be able to win ‘in spite of’ sometimes,” Austin said. “And so I’m real confident in our group coming back and working our tail off to be better when we line up and play next.”
It’s a methodology that trickles from the top down.
Tomlin’s message when he switched quarterbacks was simple: Good is no longer good enough. While Watt and defensive end Cam Heyward — now the longest-tenured defensive player in team history — are building resumes worthy of Hall of Fame consideration, neither has reached a Super Bowl. Watt, in fact, is still waiting for his first playoff victory.
“We can’t get comfortable because we know that we just got to, we got a lot of tough, tough games, a lot of tough ball ahead of us,” outside linebacker Alex Highsmith said. “And so we know our ultimate goal. And so we know we just got to always want to get better and have that championship detail.”
Something Wilson knows a little bit about. He arrived in Pittsburgh in March eager to resurrect his career after two underwhelming seasons with the Broncos. It’s early — very early — but his play so far has validated Tomlin’s decision to shake up the status quo and maybe set Pittsburgh on a path that’s been a slippery slope since reaching the AFC championship in 2016.
“You want to be on the rise as you go,” Wilson said. “I think we’re on that journey right now. We’re on that train of just continuing to grow. I think that’s an exciting thing for this football team, what we’re doing, how we’re doing it.”
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AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Matzie: $6.2 million secured for Beaver County construction and revitalization projects

(File Photo)

AMBRIDGE, Nov. 1 – New funding of $6.2 million from the Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program will support major Beaver County building construction and revitalization projects, state Rep. Rob Matzie announced today.

“I’m beyond proud to have brought these dollars home,” Matzie said. “When experience and perseverance meet, this is the result. It’s not only about supporting our communities, but also knowing how to go about doing it. Anyone can talk the talk, but not everyone can walk the walk. I’ll always put Beaver County and the communities I represent first, and I will never quit fighting to get our fair share and more.”

Matzie said the funding includes:

  • $1.5 million to Monaca Borough for Phase III construction of the Monaca Civic Center. The project includes site preparation; required infrastructure including parking; and construction of a two-story 27,000-square-foot building for administrative, police and fire needs, plus housing of police and fire vehicles.
  • $1.25 million to Ambridge Borough for Phase 2 (interior) construction of the new Ambridge Senior Center, including framing, plumbing, electrical, mechanical, drywall, carpentry, and other work.
  • $1 million to Aliquippa School District for expansion of the high school’s Aschman Stadium complex, including completion of a state-of-the-art fieldhouse and academic resource center that will serve as an assembly/education space and indoor athletic/activity space.
  • $750,000 to Community College of Beaver County to transform the Beaver County Airport facility into a shared hub for aviation students and professionals by adding classrooms, study spaces, faculty offices, pilot briefing rooms and flight simulation and air traffic control simulation labs.
  • $750,000 to Heritage Valley Health System, Inc. for construction and renovation of patient rooms at HVHS Beaver Hospital to create a modern recovery space.
  • $500,000 to International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local Union #712 for construction of a new building with offices spaces, a union hall/training/conference center and related spaces.
  • $450,000 to CCBC for critical infrastructure renovations to the Golden Dome arena, including substantial roof repairs and waterproofing, mitigation of water damage, interior lighting upgrades to replace the failing metal halide system, restoration of deteriorating flooring and replacement of manually operated bleachers with automatic ones.

RACP funds design, acquisition, and construction of regional economic, cultural, civic, recreational and historical improvement projects that have a regional impact and generate substantial increases or maintain current levels of employment, tax revenues, or other measures of economic activity.

Overnight I-376 Fort Pitt Tunnel Inspections Begins Sunday Night in Pittsbur

file photo

​Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing overnight inspection work on I-376 (Fort Pitt Tunnel) in the City of Pittsburgh, Allegheny County will begin Sunday night, November 3 weather permitting.

Overnight tunnel inspection activities requiring a full closure of the Fort Pitt Tunnel will occur from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. according to the following schedule:

  • Sunday night, November 3 – Eastbound (inbound) tunnel
  • Monday night, November 4 – Westbound (outbound) tunnel
  • Tuesday night, November 5 – Westbound (outbound) tunnel
  • Wednesday night, November 6 – Westbound (outbound) tunnel
  • Thursday night, November 7 – Eastbound (inbound) tunnel
  • Tuesday night, November 12 – Westbound (outbound) tunnel
  • Wednesday night, November 13 – Eastbound (inbound) tunnel
  • Thursday night, November 14 – Eastbound (inbound) tunnel

    As work occurs, traffic will be detoured via Route 837 (East Carson Street), the West End Circle, and Route 51 (Saw Mill Run Boulevard).

    Crews from Gannett Fleming will conduct the routine bridge inspection activities.

    Motorists can check conditions on more than 40,000 roadway miles by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras.

    511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following regional Twitter alerts accessible on the 511PA website.

I-376 Beaver Valley Expressway Lane Closures Next Week in Vanport

Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing lane closures on I-376 (Beaver Valley Expressway) in Vanport Township, Beaver County, will occur Monday through Wednesday, November 4-6 weather permitting.

A single-lane closure on the I-376 Vanport Bridge in each direction will occur Monday through Wednesday from 9 a.m. 3 p.m. as PennDOT crews conduct bridge washing operations.

Motorists should be prepared for changing traffic patterns. Please use caution when driving through the area. Work zone safety is everyone’s responsibility.

Motorists can check conditions on more than 40,000 roadway miles by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras.

511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following regional X alerts accessible on the 511PA website.

Contact: Yasmeen Manyisha, ymanyisha@pa.gov ​

Northbound Interstate 79 Neville Island Bridge Deck Repair Work this Weekend Allegheny County

Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing deck repair work on the northbound Interstate 79 Neville Island Bridge in Robinson and Neville townships, and Glenfield Borough, Allegheny County will occur Friday through Monday, November 1-4 weather permitting.

A single-lane restriction will occur in the northbound I-79 lanes on the Neville Island Bridge between the Route 51/Neville Island (Exit 65) and the Route 65/Emsworth/Sewickley (Exit 66) interchanges from 7 p.m. Friday night continuously through 6 a.m. Monday morning to allow crews to conduct deck repair work.

Please use caution when traveling through the project corridor.  Work zone safety is everyone’s responsibility.

This work is part of the $43.9 million I-79 “S-Bend” Project that included full-depth pavement reconstruction, bridge preservation work on five mainline structures (I-79 northbound and southbound over Clever Road, I-79 northbound and southbound over Route 51, and the Neville Island Bridge). Additionally, milling and paving of three ramps at the Route 51 (Coraopolis/McKees Rocks) interchange. The project also includes guiderail replacement, highway lighting and signing upgrades, new pavement markings and delineation, and other miscellaneous construction work.

Motorists can check conditions on major roadways by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras. 511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following regional X alerts.

Follow PennDOT on X and like the department on Facebook and Instagram.

Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade will feature Ariana Madix, T-Pain, ‘Gabby’s Dollhouse’ and pasta

FILE – Performers lead the Tom Turkey float down Central Park West at the start of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade, Thursday, Nov. 23, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Jeenah Moon, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — A eclectic group of stars — including reality TV’s Ariana Madix, Broadway belter Idina Menzel, hip-hop’s T-Pain, members of the WNBA champions New York Liberty and country duo Dan + Shay — will feature in this year’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Music performers The War and Treaty, Lea Salonga, Kylie Cantrall, The Temptations, Chlöe, Charli D’Amelio, Jimmy Fallon & The Roots, Coco Jones, Walker Hayes, Rachel Platten, Bishop Briggs, Joey McIntyre, Natti Natasha and ballet dancers Tiler Peck and Roman Mejia, are also slated to perform. The Associated Press got the list early.

The holiday tradition will begin at 8:30 a.m. on Nov. 28 in all time zones and will be kicked off by actor Alison Brie, the “Glow” star currently starring in Peacock’s “Apples Never Fall.”

This year’s parade will feature 17 giant character balloons, 22 floats, 15 novelty and heritage inflatables, 11 marching bands, 700 clowns and 10 performance groups.

“The work that we do, the opportunity to impact millions of people and bring a bit of joy for a couple of hours on Thanksgiving morning, is what motivates us every day,” Will Coss, Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade executive producer, said in an interview.

The parade airs on NBC and streams on Peacock. Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb and Al Roker from “Today” will host and a Spanish language simulcast on Telemundo will be hosted by Carlos Adyan and Andrea Meza.

There will be six new featured character balloons, including Minnie Mouse, Extraordinary Noorah” with The Elf on the Shelf, “Gabby’s Dollhouse,” “Goku” and “Spider-Man.”

The “Gabby’s Dollhouse” float will include a 55-foot-tall (17-meter-tall) balloon featuring Gabby and Pandy Paws that will have 10 different shades of pink.

“As a little girl growing up in New Jersey, the Thanksgiving Day parade was what you always tuned into and the balloons were, of course, the best part,” says Traci Paige Johnson, the co-creator of “Gabby’s Dollhouse” with Jennifer Twomey.

“That little 7-year-old girl in me is just like, ‘Oh my God!’ — something from your brain that you created that all the world watches floating down New York City is just absolutely incredible.”

She and Twomey, who also produced “Blue’s Clues,” are the rare creators who get to celebrate having a second balloon in the parade. Johnson advises watchers this time to look for all the hidden cats in Gabby’s sneakers and costume.

The Macy’s parade has been a traditional holiday season kickoff and spectators line-up a half-dozen deep along the route to cheer the floats, entertainers and marching bands. The parade has lately asked icons to be the last guest before Santa, with last year Cher fitting the bill. This year’s headliner will be revealed later.

Broadway will be represented by performances from “Death Becomes Her,” “Hell’s Kitchen” and “The Outsiders,” as well as the iconic Radio City Rockettes and “Riverdance” dancers.

New floats include ones from brands like Disney Cruise Line, Haribo, “Wednesday” from Netflix,” Universal Orlando Resorts and “The Grannies Car” from BBC Studios’ “Bluey.” Nickelodeon and Paramount’s “Dora the Explorer” will have both a float and a balloon.

One new float will spotlight the Rao’s food brand, featuring a knight and a dragon in battle made with actual pasta elements.

“It’s one of those opportunities to really combine the whimsy and the artistry of our great artists and artisans at our studio and deliver on that iconic spectacle that’s known and loved of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade,” said Coss.

The marching bands will hail from Massachusetts, Indiana, Tennessee, Texas, Arkansas, South Dakota, Georgia, South Carolina, West Virginia and New York.

Members of the New York Liberty, who earlier this month won their first-ever WNBA Championship, will march alongside their popular mascot, Ellie the Elephant.

The Macy’s parade team, if you can believe it, are already working on sketches and ideas for the next parade, since each cycle takes 18 months. Coss calls it “the largest variety show on television.”

US employers added just 12,000 jobs last month as hurricanes and strikes sharply reduce payrolls

FILE – Kegan Ward, assistant manager of Swami Spirits, walks through debris of the damaged store in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, in Cedar Key, Fla., on Sept. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — America’s employers added just 12,000 jobs in October, a total that economists say was held down by the effects of strikes and hurricanes that left many workers temporarily off payrolls. The report provided a somewhat blurry view of the job market at the end of a presidential race that has pivoted heavily on voters’ feelings about the economy.

Last month’s hiring gain was down significantly from the 223,000 jobs that were added in September. But economists have estimated that Hurricanes Helene and Milton, combined with strikes at Boeing and elsewhere, had the effect of pushing down net job growth by tens of thousands of jobs in October.

Friday’s report from the Labor Department also showed that the unemployment rate remained at 4.1% last month. The low jobless rate suggests that the labor market is still fundamentally healthy, if not as robust as it was early this year. Combined with an inflation rate that has tumbled from its 2022 peak to near pre-pandemic levels, the overall economy appears to be on solid footing on the eve of Election Day.

The government did not estimate how many jobs were likely removed temporarily from payrolls last month. But economists have said they think the storms and strikes caused up to 100,000 jobs to be dropped. Reflecting the impact of the strikes, factories shed 46,000 positions in October.

In a cautionary sign for future hiring, though, temporary job placement firms 49,000 jobs last month. Companies often take on temporary workers before committing to full-time employees. On the other hand, healthcare companies added 52,000 jobs in October, and state and local governments tacked on 39,000.

The employment report for October also revised down the government’s estimate of the job gains in August and September by a combined 112,000, indicating that the labor market wasn’t quite as robust then as initially thought.

“The big one-off shocks that struck the economy in October make it impossible to know whether the job market was changing direction in the month,’’ Bill Adams, chief economist at Comerica Bank, wrote in a commentary. “But the downward revisions to job growth through September show it was cooling before these shocks struck.’’

Still, economists have noted that the United States has the strongest of the world’s most advanced economies, one that has proved surprisingly durable despite the pressure of high interest rates. This week, for example, the government estimated that the economy expanded at a healthy 2.8% annual rate last quarter, with consumer spending — the heart of the economy — helping drive growth.

Yet as voters choose between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, large numbers of Americans have said they are unhappy with the state of the economy. Despite the plummeting of inflation, many people are exasperated by high prices, which surged during the recovery from the pandemic recession and remain about 20% higher on average than they were before inflation began accelerating in early 2021.

With inflation having significantly cooled, the Fed is set to cut its benchmark interest rate next week for a second time and likely again in December. The Fed’s 11 rate hikes in 2022 and 2023 managed to help slow inflation without tipping the economy into a recession. A series of Fed rate cuts should lead, over time, to lower borrowing rates for consumers and businesses.

In the meantime, there have been signs of a slowdown in the job market. This week, the Labor Department reported that employers posted 7.4 million job openings in September. Though that is still more than employers posted on the eve of the 2020 pandemic, it amounted to the fewest openings since January 2021.

And 3.1 million Americans quit their jobs in September, the fewest in more than four years. A drop in quits tends to indicate that more workers are losing confidence in their ability to land a better job elsewhere.

Male dies following a medical episode while driving in Aliquippa

Story by Sandy Giordano – Beaver County Radio. Published November 1, 2024 12:07 P.M.

(Aliquippa, Pa) Aliquippa responded to a one vehicle accident behind the Aliquippa  Shopping Center on Calvert Street. According to the police report the driver struck a barn in the rear of a nearby home.  Police found the male driver inside was unresponsive and the vehicle running and smoking. They broke the passenger window to gain access to the unidentified patient. Police said first responders determined the male had a medical episode and had recently had open heart surgery. Police and Medic-Rescue removed the male from the vehicle. Paramedics and the Aliquippa Fire Department executed life saving measures, and he was transported to the Medical Center in Brighton Township where he was pronounced dead at 4:15pm.