Marge J. Salamone, 86, of Conway, passed away peacefully at home on Wednesday, May 29, 2024. She was the daughter of the late David and Rose Miles. In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Frank “Buff” Salamone and her sister Mary Ann Niklewicz. She is survived by her children, Frank Salamone Jr., Ray Salamone, Lisa (Ron) Mazzetti, sister, Betty (Thomas) Murray, grandchildren, Steve (Heather) Painter, Tyler Hallaman, Amanda Salamone, three great grandchildren, and nephew, Jeremy Valent. Marge was a graduate of Ambridge Area Highschool. Her first job was a key punch operator at American Bridge Company. She sold real estate for over 40 years, and helped her son at Conway Pizza. She was a Christian Mother at the former Saint Veronica Church in Ambridge. Marge will be dearly missed by all her family and friends. Friends will be received on Monday, June 3, 2024, from 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM in the Alvarez-Hahn Funeral Services and Cremation, LLC, 547 8th Street, Ambridge, 724-266-2549. A blessing service will be held at 11:00 AM Tuesday, June 4, 2024, at the funeral home. Burial will be private at Calvary Cemetery. The family would like to extend there sincere gratitude to Donna, Melissa, Mary Ann, as well as Three Oaks Hospice for their excellent care of Marge.
Author: Beaver County Radio
Raymond Thomas “Tom” Carter (1944-2024)
Raymond Thomas “Tom” Carter, born on September 14, 1944, passed away peacefully with his family by his side on May 30, 2024. Tom was a graduate of Beaver Falls High School, Class of 1962.
Tom served our country with distinction, spending four years on active duty in the United States Air Force. He was stationed for one year at Tan Son Nhut Air Base in South Vietnam, serving as a Air Police during the Vietnam War. After his active duty, he continued his service with the 911th Air Force Reserve for another four years. Tom was a respected member of the Beaver Falls American Legion.
His professional career was spent at Westinghouse-Cuttler Hammer, where he worked diligently as a Machine Repairman until his retirement. Not one to remain idle, Tom continued to work post-retirement at Rolling Acres Golf Course and as a security officer at Geneva College.
Tom is survived by his beloved wife of 57 years, Caren Carter; his daughter Cammie (Jeffrey) Schoeneweis; his son TR (Darcie) Carter; and his cherished grandchildren, Courtney Small, Lacey (Edward) Kallen, Cody (Dallis) Schoeneweis, Creighton Carter and Brynn Carter. He also leaves behind his adored great-grandchildren Enzo, Isla, Addelyn, and Cody Jr.
Tom was preceded in death by his father, Alfred Benjamin Carter, Sr.; his mother, Dorothy Manion; brother Alfred (Ben) Carter Jr., sister Dolly Dedonker, nephew Alfred (Benny) Carter III, and niece Kelly Blythe.
Known for his infectious sense of humor and dedication to his family, Tom lived to make everyone around him laugh. He was truly the life of the party, always wearing a smile on his face and bringing joy to those around him. His kind soul and generous spirit touched everyone he met. Tom’s memory will be forever treasured by those who knew and loved him.
A celebration of Tom’s life will be held on Monday, June 3rd from 2 – 4PM and 6-8 PM and Tuesday June 4th, 12pm until the time of service at 1PM in the GABAUER-LUTTON FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION SERVICES, INC., 117 Blackhawk Rd., Chippewa Twp., where family and friends can gather to honor his legacy and share in the joy he brought to all our lives.
Members of the Beaver County Special Unit will provide full military honors at 12:55am at the funeral home on Tuesday.
The family would like to extend a heartfelt thank you to Advanced Hospice and their team for their exceptional care and compassion during Tom’s final days.
Janet A. Young (1952-2024)
Janet A. (Gahles) Young, 71, of Industry, died Tuesday May 28, 2024, in her residence.
She was born October 8, 1952, in Rochester, she was the daughter of the late Robert and Mary (Jolley) Gahles. Janet was a graduate of Penn State University. She worked at Valley Tribune as an editor and Gateway Rehabilitation Center as a social worker. She loved the outdoors, hunting, fishing and was an avid reader.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Donald Lee Young, on May 15, 2022.
She is survived by a brother, Robert Gahles; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, Art and Brenda Siebenaler, Sean and Beth White and Lanny Young ; father-in-law and mother-in-law, James and Ilene White. Several nieces and nephews and her beloved dog Bella.
A celebration of life will be held on Saturday, June 8, 2024 at 4PM at the Lillyville Church of God 408 Hickernell Rd. Ellwood City, PA 16117
Inurnment will take place in Slippery Rock Cemetery.
The Gabauer-Lutton Funeral Home & Cremation Services, Inc., Chippewa, 117 Blackhawk Road, Beaver Falls, was honored to provide care and guidance to Janet’s family during this time. www.gabauerfamilyfuneralhomes.com
Norma E. Durham (1932-2024)
Norma E Durham, of Chippewa, a beloved Mother, Grandmother, Sister, Aunt and Friend, passed away peacefully on May 28, 2024, at the age of 92.
Born April 30,1932 to the late Virginia and Robert Johnson or North Sewickley. She graduated from Beaver Falls High School in 1949.
Norma’s life was a beautiful testament to love, faith, and family. She will be deeply missed and forever remembered as the “Sweetest Human Being on Earth”.
Norma found great joy in spending winters in Florida with her loving husband Dan of more than 60 years. Together, they enjoyed the warm weather, made many friends, and created countless memories in the Sunshine State.
Her family and friends will always remember her as a dove of peace, a pillar of strength and a source of endless love and support. Her legacy of kindness and devotion will live on in the hearts of those who were fortunate enough to know her.
Norma is preceded in death by her husband Daniel, son Daniel “Butch”, daughter Patricia “Trish” and sister Clara Frazier.
She is survived by her children, Rebecca “Becky” (William) Becze, Michael (Dr Jennifer) Durham, brother Robert Johnson and her cherished grandchildren, Benjamin Becze (Lisa), Rachel Becze (David Peters), Jack, Annie and Holly Durham, and her many nieces and nephews. She was a loving and supportive Grandmother and Aunt, always ready with a kind word, a warm hug, and cookies from the cookie jar.
Friends will be received on Monday June 3rd from 3-7PM in the Gabauer-Lutton Funeral Home in Chippewa Twp.,117 Blackhawk Rd in Beaver Falls. A celebration of Norma’s life will be held on Tuesday morning from 10-11AM in the funeral home chapel led by Dr Robert Frazier. Private interment in the Beaver Falls Cemetery.
Maryann (O’Neill) Lindner (1937-2024)
Maryann (O’Neill) Lindner, 87 of Darlington, passed away Tuesday May 28, 2024 in Canterbury Place, Pittsburgh.
Born February 19, 1937 in Aliquippa was the daughter of the late Charles & Margaret O’Neill.
Maryann graduated from Darlington High School in 1955. She was a member of St. Augustine’s Parish ( St. Monica’s).
Surviving are a sister Madelaine ( Frank) Jenkins, a brother Patrick O’ Neill and her three children John Charles Lindner, Kathleen Ann Lindner and Jerry Matthew ( Crystal) Lindner.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her husband John E. Lindner, her sister Margaret O’Neill and sister-in-law Toni O’Neill.
A private Blessing service was held for the family with Father Bill Schwartz.
Interment followed in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Chippewa Township.
New court challenge filed in Pennsylvania to prevent some mail-in ballots from getting thrown out
FILE – Allegheny County Election Division Deputy Manager Chet Harhut explains the process of sorting mail-in and absentee ballots in preparations for Pennsylvania’s primary election on April 23, at the Elections warehouse in Pittsburgh, April 18, 2024. Pennsylvania election officials said Wednesday, May 8, 2024 that the number of mail-in ballots rejected for technicalities, like a missing date, saw a significant drop in last month’s primary election after state officials tried anew to help voters avoid mistakes that might get their ballot thrown out. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, file)
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A new lawsuit filed Tuesday by a constellation of left-leaning groups in Pennsylvania is trying to prevent thousands of mail-in ballots from being thrown out in November’s election in a battleground state that is expected to play a critical role in selecting a new president.
The lawsuit, filed in a state court, is the latest of perhaps a half-dozen cases to challenge a provision in Pennsylvania law that voters must write the date when they sign their mail-in ballot envelope.
Voters not understanding that provision has meant that tens of thousands of ballots lacked an accurate date since Pennsylvania dramatically expanded mail-in voting in a 2019 law.
The latest lawsuit says multiple courts have found that a voter-written date is meaningless in determining whether the ballot arrived on time or whether the voter is eligible. As a result, rejecting someone’s ballot either because it lacks a date or a correct date should violate the Pennsylvania Constitution’s free and equal elections clause, the lawsuit said.
“This lawsuit is the only one that is squarely addressing the constitutionality of disenfranchising voters under Pennsylvania’s Constitution,” said Marian Schneider, a lawyer in the case and senior policy counsel for voting rights for the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania.
In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs’ lawyers — including the ACLU, the Public Interest Law Center and the Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer law firm — referenced a 2023 opinion in which state Supreme Court justices seemed to invite such a challenge. In it, they suggested that the free and equal elections clause would indeed prevent ballots from being thrown out for failing to comply with the date requirement.
Enforcement of the dating provision resulted in at least 10,000 ballots getting thrown out in the 2022 mid-term election alone, the lawsuit said. Lawyers in the case said research shows that a disproportionate share of rejected ballots come from older voters, poorer districts and Black and Latino communities.
The lawsuit names Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro’s top election official, as well as the election boards in Philadelphia and Allegheny County, both heavily Democratic jurisdictions.
However, Democrats have fought repeatedly to undo the dating requirement, while Republicans in the past have fought in court to ensure that counties can and do throw out mail-in ballots that lack a complete or correct date.
Roughly three-fourths of mail-in ballots tend to be cast by Democrats in Pennsylvania, possibly the result of former President Donald Trumpbaselessly claiming that mail-in voting is rife with fraud.
Shapiro’s Department of State did not comment on the lawsuit. But it said in a statement that it is “irrefutably clear that the handwritten date serves no function in the administration of Pennsylvania’s election” and that it has consistently argued in court that voters shouldn’t have ballots rejected for incorrectly writing it.
A November ballot in Pennsylvania that likely will feature President Joe Biden and Trump at the top of the ticket also will feature a high-profile Senate contest between Democratic Sen. Bob Casey and Republican challenger David McCormick.
Republicans are urging their voters to cast ballots by mail. Still, national Republican groups signaled that they will oppose the lawsuit.
The National Republican Senatorial Committee accused Democrats of attempting to “change the rules at the last minute in a desperate bid to hold onto power.” The Republican National Committee claimed the date requirement is an ”important election integrity safeguard” and that lawsuits like the one filed Tuesday “are designed to undermine voter confidence and make mail voting less secure.”
The plaintiffs in the lawsuit include the Black Political Empowerment Project, POWER Interfaith, Make the Road Pennsylvania, OnePA Activists United, New PA Project Education Fund, Casa San José, Pittsburgh United, League of Women Voters of Pennsylvania and Common Cause Pennsylvania.
Currently, a separate challenge to the date requirement is pending in federal court over whether it violates the 1964 Civil Rights Act or the Constitution’s equal protection clause. In March, a divided 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the date requirement does not violate the civil rights law.
AAA: Event Travel on the Rise with Younger Generations
A new study from AAA and Bread Financial finds younger generations are driving a surge in live event travel. Approximately three in five Gen Z (65%) and Millennial (58%) respondents confirmed they have traveled in the past 12 months and/or plan to travel in the next 12 months for in-person events like concerts, sporting events, comedy shows, and book readings that are more than 50 miles from home. This compares to 43% of Gen X and just 27% of Baby Boomers.
Going the Extra Mile and Spending the Extra Dollar
More than half (53%) of Gen Z travelers have or plan to head to live events by plane, the most of any generation, and are willing to go the extra mile, literally! Twice as many (18%) Gen Z travelers say they have or would be willing to go more than 1,500 miles – the distance of half of the continental United States – compared to only 9% of Baby Boomer travelers.
“Traveling to live events has become a preferred pastime for the younger generations,” according to Bevi Powell, senior vice president, AAA East Central. “Many Gen Z and Millennials consider the journey to be as enjoyable as the destination and are willing to spend more to attend their favorite sporting events, cheer for their favorite sports teams and enjoy their favorite artists in person. They simply don’t want to miss out on the experience of a lifetime.,” she added.
Younger generations spend the most for a good time, as nearly two in five Gen Z (37%) and Millennial (39%) travelers have spent between $500 and $5,000+ on tickets alone for destination live events. To afford this, approximately two in five Millennial (42%) and Gen Z (37%) travelers are willing to dip into their savings to pay for travel costs for a live event. About a third of those travelers would consider taking up a side hustle to pay for their event travel. The younger generations are also getting creative to cut costs with nearly half of Millennial and Gen Z travelers saying they already have or would travel internationally to score cheaper tickets.
Sports and Music Important to Gen Z Travelers
The youngest generation is driving concert travel with more than half (52%) of Gen Z travelers planning to attend a music event in the next 12 months. Artists themselves can influence Gen Z’s travel habits as one in five travelers (20%) have traveled or plan to travel to a Taylor Swift concert.
Gen Z is also most likely to travel to some of the bigger sports events. Nearly two in five (38%) Gen Z travelers have traveled or are planning to travel for the 2025 Super Bowl, 32% have traveled or are planning to travel to the 2024 NBA finals, and 19% have traveled or are planning to travel for the upcoming Summer Olympics in Paris, France.
Must Go Due to FOMO
FOMO (fear of missing out) also plays a substantial role in influencing live event ticket purchases with more than one-third (34%) of all travelers admitting it played a role in their decision. While Gen Z travelers (54%) most often feel compelled to make event travel purchases based on FOMO, 83% of Baby Boomers say they resist such pressures. Additionally, younger generations (Gen Z – 44%, Millennials – 43%) emerge as the demographics most pressured into spending money on events they didn’t want to attend.
Top Destinations for Event Travel
More than three in four (79%) travelers are eager to head to their dream event location, with New York, Florida, and California being the most popular states and Las Vegas and Chicago the top cities. Travelers are also shaping their plans around famous event venues like Madison Square Garden (38%), Las Vegas Sphere (38%), and Radio City Music Hall (31%).
While at their destination, travelers want to take time to sightsee and explore before and/or after a live event with 62% noting they have included or are planning to bake in additional vacation time. Gen Z (72%) and Millennials (68%) lead the charge on extra time spent at a destination compared to Gen X (56%) and Baby Boomers (51%).
Often, travel expenses come with a hefty price tag because of skyrocketing event ticket prices. Top reasons for staying home differed between generations with Millennials most likely to skip an event due to an inability to take time off from work (37%), while Gen Z was most concerned about budget or debt worries (38%).
“While younger generations are driving the trend, this survey highlights the ways different generations are thinking about traveling to events and how they save for and spend around experiential moments in time,” said Nick Antonelli, chief marketing officer at Bread Financial. “These results show that while plenty of consumers are hitting the road for fun events, many are cognizant of their budgets, and being purposeful around achieving a healthy balance between managing their finances and desire to travel and attend live events.”
Survey Methodology
This was an online survey of 1,654 U.S. respondents 18+ who have traveled or are planning to travel for live event(s) in the past/next 12 months. The survey was conducted from March 5 to 8, 2024.
Route 60 Steubenville Pike Restrictions Begin Monday in Allegheny County
Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing lane restrictions on Steubenville Pike (Route 60) in Robinson Township, Allegheny County will begin Monday, June 3 weather permitting.
Single-lane and shoulder restrictions will occur on northbound Steubenville Pike between the I-79 north and south interchange ramps around-the-clock beginning at 9 a.m. Monday, June 3 through 3 p.m. Monday, June 24 to allow crews to conduct overhead bridge substructure repair work.
Work on this $14.97 million highway restoration project in Robinson and Kennedy townships began in early April. The project begins at the I-376 Airport/Pittsburgh (Exit 59 A/B) interchange and continues approximately one-half mile north of the Route 60 Moon Run/Crafton (Exit 60 A/B) interchange. Work includes concrete pavement patching, guide rail and cable barrier replacement, highway lighting and signing updates, drainage work, pavement markings and other miscellaneous construction activities on mainline I-79 and ten ramps (four at the I-376 interchange and six ramps at the Route 60 interchange). There will be bridge preservation work on six structures (northbound and southbound I-79 bridges over I-376, Route 60, and Campbells Run Road), including concrete deck overlays, replacement of seals at expansion dams and deck joints, substructure concrete repairs, cleaning of bridge bearings and spot painting of the northbound and southbound I-79 steel I-beam bridges over I-376. The majority of the roadway work along mainline I-79 will be performed under short-term, single-lane closures during nighttime restrictions. There will be long-term lane restrictions in place for the bridge work, including six weekend-long lane restrictions. Additionally, there will be milling and paving operations on Route 60 between Lorish Road and Old Steubenville Pike, preservation work of six existing sign structures (one on northbound I-79 and five on southbound I-79) as well as concrete repairs and scour protection of two arch culverts underneath mainline I-79 and several ramps. The project is anticipated to conclude in the late spring of 2025.
The prime contractor is Golden Triangle Construction Company, Inc. Work on this project will be coordinated with other projects in the area.
Update on Ambridge Drug Raid
Story by Sandy Giordano – Beaver County Radio. Published May 31, 2024 1:42 P.M.
(Ambridge, Pa) Michael, Motton, 34, is lodged in the Beaver County Jail on $900,000 bail. He is charged with 4 felony counts of manufacturing, delivering or possession with intent and 4 misdemeanors. The warrant was served Wednesday by police and the PA Attorney’s Drug Task Force.
Donald Trump Guilty On All 34 Charges
Donald Trump became the first former American president to be convicted of felony crimes Thursday as a New York jury found him guilty of all 34 charges in a scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election through a hush money payment to a porn actor who said the two had sex.










