Joseph Dell (June 2, 1988 – June 9, 2024)

Joseph Dell, 36, of Pittsburgh, beloved husband, father and son passed away unexpectedly on June 9, 2024.
He was born June 2, 1988, and is the son of Peggy Dell and the late Brian Dell. In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by his mother-in-law, Kim.
Joseph lived his life to the fullest. He enjoyed hiking and being outside mowing the lawn, washing cars and attending car cruises. Joseph was a computer wiz and whenever there was a problem with a computer everyone turned to the “IT guy of the family”.
Above all Joseph was truly a family person. He loved being with his family and cherished the time they spent together.
He is survived by his loving wife of 12 years, Casey Dell, a cherished son Andrew Dell. In addition to his wife and son, Joseph is also survived by his mother Peggy, a sister Jenna (Matt) Czaplicki and his in-laws: Anthony Dorazio, Scott (Barb) Jennings, Mela (Alicia) Jennings, Alyssa (Kyle) Bass and nieces: Madison and Kylie, nephews: Mark, Noah, Nicholas, and Kolby, his many friends and his dog Lady.
A memorial visitation will be held on Friday from 4:30 pm until time of service at 5:30 pm in the Anthony Mastrofrancesco Funeral Home Inc. 2026 McMinn Street, Aliquippa, PA 15001

 

Harry W. Kirchner (Died June 9, 2024)

Harry W. Kirchner, 78 passed away peacefully on June 9, 2024, at his residence in Monaca surrounded by the love and care of his family.

Born in Rochester, Harry was predeceased by his parents, Harry and Sarah Kirchner, his cherished spouse, Lee Kirchner, brother Thomas McPadden, Sr., and his caring sister, Margaret Evans. Harry’s legacy continues through his beloved children, Terra Albala and her husband Jason of Hilton Head, S.C., Sara Stone and her husband D.J. of Monaca, Cory Dugan and his wife Jacqui of New Brighton, and Shane Dugan and his wife Ashley of Aliquippa. His sisters Kathy Householder and her husband Dave of Columbus, Ohio, and Elaine Milligan and her husband Dave of Rochester also hold his memory dear. Harry’s grandchildren, Evan, Avery and Jayce Stone, and Miles Albala, will miss their grandfather’s boundless love and the stories he shared.

Harry’s educational journey culminated in earning an Associate’s Degree. Employed as a tool and die maker for Precision Kidd Corp., Harry’s commitment to his craft was paralleled only by his love for the great outdoors. An avid fisherman, hunter, and trapper, he found solace and joy in nature’s embrace.

Gardening was another of Harry’s passions, along with his talent for making wine, which he lovingly shared with friends and family. A gifted cook, Harry was famous for his Sunday family dinners, where his children and grandchildren gathered around the table to enjoy his delicious creations and the warmth of his company.

Harry’s life was marked by his service to his country as a member of the U.S. Army Signal Corps. Harry served as a sergeant from 1963 until 1966 during the Vietnam War. His service was a point of pride and contributed to his character as a man of honor and courage.

As a lifelong member of the Monaca Saxon Club, Harry found camaraderie and community.

Friends will be received on Wednesday, June 12th from 3 pm – 7 pm at SIMPSON FUNERAL & CREMATION SERVICES, 1119 Washington Avenue, Monaca where services will be held on Thursday June 13th at 10 am. with Reverend Angela Smith officiating. Interment will follow in Sylvania Hills Memorial Park with military honors provided by the U S Army.

Rather than flowers, the family has suggested memorial contributions be made in Harry’ memory to the Beaver County Sportsman Conversation League, Youth Foundation P O Box 376, Monaca, PA 15061

To share online condolences, view Harry’s video tribute, add photos, get directions, please visit www. simpsonfuneralhome.com

To send flowers to the family or plant a tree in memory of Harry, please visit our floral store.

MARGARET LORRAINE (REDPATH) KEITH (3/23/1928 — 6/10/2024)

Margaret Lorraine (Redpath) Keith, 96, of Moon Twp., died on June 10, 2024 in Good Samaritan Hospice House, Wexford.  She was born in Milton, Massachusetts on March 23, 1928 the daughter of the late Chesleigh & Annie (Gray) Redpath.

Lorraine received her BA from Simmons College in Boston. She retired from Moon Area School District as a secretary in 1993.

Having an extremely generous nature, she volunteered her time helping friends in addition to donating time with various organizations including Moon Library, West Hills Food Pantry, and at Apple Blossom Memory Care.

Lorraine was a long-term member of Sharon Presbyterian Church, MASCA, Moon Area AARP, RUAEA (Retired United Airlines Employee Association).

Lorraine enjoyed her crossword puzzles, bowling, reading, gardening, hockey, socializing with friends, spending time with her family and loved to swim.

In addition to her parents, Lorraine was preceded in death by her husband Walter Keith in 1988. A granddaughter, Jennifer Smith; a sister, Audrey Redpath and nephew Rick Redpath.

She is survived by her four children:  Deb Bennett (Jeff), NE; Dave Keith (Kim), WA; Brian Keith WA; Shelley Smith (Jeff), Hopewell Twp.  Eight grandchildren, Justin Bennett (Amy), KS; Christina Bennett, CA; Megan Nunns (Rob), NE; Brandon (RuthAnn), WA; Andy Keith (Chelsea), CA; Clara Brown (Jake), VA, William Smith (Brittany), Fl and Steven Smith, Hopewell, 12 great grandchildren and another on the way.

A memorial service will be held at the Sharon Community Presbyterian Church, Moon Twp. on Saturday June 15th at 11 AM.   Private interment will take place at Sewickley Cemetery, Sewickley, PA.

In Lieu of flowers, memorial donations can be made to:  Sharon Community Presbyterian Church (www.sharoncpc.com) and or the West Hills Food Pantry (www.westhillsfoodpantry.org)

The Huntsman Funeral Home & Cremation Services of Moon Twp. is in charge of arrangements.

Ronald L. Hummel Jr (May 13, 1966 ~ June 8, 2024)

Ronald L. Hummel, Jr., 58, of New Brighton, passed away Saturday, June 8, 2024 at UPMC Presbyterian, Pittsburgh.

Born May 13, 1966, in Beaver Falls, he is the son of the late Ronald Sr. and Phyllis (Lowe) Hummel, Sr.  He worked for A.R. Oliastro, Inc. as a truck driver.  Ronald loved hunting and riding motorcycles.  There was nothing that brought more joy toRonald than his family, grandchildren, and his dog, Bo.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Ronald L. Hummel III.

Ronald is survived by his wife, Kimberly S. (Klingensmith) Hummel; a daughter, Jessica Hummel (Ed Steiner), Beaver Falls; two grandchildren, Sophia and Micah; brother, Charles (Kathy) Hummel, Chippewa; sisters, Vicky Holland (Barry Wright), Beaver Falls; Lisa Miller (Sam Rossi), New Brighton; Amy (James) Nicgorski, New Brighton, Lori Kindleberger, Butler; several nieces, nephews and their families.

A Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, June 15, 2024 from 2 pm until time of service at 4 pm.
The family appreciates and would be very grateful that in lieu of flowers, donations may be made to J&J Spratt to help pay for funeral costs.Thank you all who have been there for us this far in our heartbreak and thank you also to those who have sent loving thoughts and prayers. They will never be forgotten. God bless you all.

To send flowers to the family or plant a tree in memory of Ronald L. Hummel Jr, please visit our floral store.

Regional Baton competition Saturday at Aliquippa High School

Story by Sandy Giordano – Beaver County Radio. Published June 11, 2024 1:53 P.M.

(Aliquippa, Pa) The Aliquippa High School Marching Band is presenting the Twirling Unlimited Competition Saturday, June 15, 2024 at the high school. Doors open at 8:30 a.m. in the high school gym. Featured at the competition will be high ceiling, novice level, and instate and visitor solo, beginning and advanced show routine.  An interview clinic will be available.

Donations of small bags of chips, pretzels, and cookies, juice boxes and tortilla chips are needed for the concession stand.,
All proceeds from the event will benefit the  QUIP band.

Pennsylvania Senate passes a bill to outlaw the distribution of deepfake material

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania’s state Senate on Monday approved legislation that would outlaw the distribution of salacious or pornographic deepfakes, with sponsors saying it will eliminate a loophole in the law that had frustrated prosecutors.

The bill was approved unanimously and was sent to the House.

It comes as states are increasingly working to update their laws to respond to such instances that have included the victimization of celebrities including Taylor Swift through the creation and distribution of computer-generated images using artificial intelligence to seem real.

Under the bill, one provision would make it a crime to try to harass someone by distributing a deepfake image of them without their consent while in a state of nudity or engaged in a sexual act. The offense would be more serious if the victim is a minor.

Another provision would outlaw such deepfakes created and distributed as child sexual abuse images.

President Joe Biden’s administration, meanwhile, is pushing the tech industry and financial institutions to shut down a growing market of abusive sexual images made with artificial intelligence technology.

Sponsors pointed to a case in New Jersey as an inspiration for the bill.

The problem with deepfakes isn’t new, but experts say it’s getting worse as the technology to produce it becomes more available and easier to use.

Researchers have been sounding the alarm on the explosion of AI-generated child sexual abuse material using depictions of real victims or virtual characters. Last year, the FBI warned it was continuing to receive reports from victims, both minors and adults, whose photos or videos were used to create explicit content that was shared online.

Several states have passed their own laws to try to combat the problem, such as criminalizing nonconsensual deepfake porn or giving victims the ability to sue perpetrators for damages in civil court.

Pennsylvania schools would get billions more under Democratic plan passed by the state House

FILE – Shown is the Pennsylvania House of Representatives on Jan. 5, 2021, at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. Six weeks after Pennsylvania state representatives elected a Democratic speaker and have not returned to session, the Republican leader on Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2023 warned of chaos when they reconvene next week. (AP Photo/Laurence Kesterson, File)

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A Democratic-sponsored proposal to boost public school funding by billions in the coming years and impose stricter rules on cyber-charter schools passed the Pennsylvania House on Monday in a test of political will as lawmakers haggle over the state budget.

The bill responds to a report issued in January that said Pennsylvania underfunds public school districts by more than $5 billion annually and recommended phasing in increases over several years. The proposed legislation would set up a new formula to distribute state education aid but does not include an appropriation of the money to fund it.

Five Republican lawmakers voted with all Democrats to approve the measure, which passed 107-94 and was sent to the state Senate.

Majority Leader Matt Bradford, D-Montgomery, said the state’s current system of doling out support has failed, calling it unconstitutional. Phased in over seven years, the measure would eventually increase state support by about $7 billion annually.

“What we’re doing is what the court has told us to do, to give every child in this commonwealth an equitable and fair public education,” Bradford said during floor debate. “This isn’t politics, this is a constitutional requirement, one that this body has failed for too long.”

The measure also would impose a range of new regulations on cyber-charter schools, including public disclosure requirements for budgets, taxes and reports to the state Education Department. Public schools’ payments per student to cyber-charter schools would be capped at $8,000 a year for those not in special education, a change projected to save public school districts hundreds of millions of dollars a year. Cyber-charter schools are independent public schools that offer classes through electronic means, typically over the internet.

Rep. Bryan Cutler, the Republican floor leader from Lancaster County, called the bill a massive shift in educational priorities that would hurt school choice options.

“Until we fix some of the systemic problems, more money alone will do little for students stuck in schools in crisis,” Cutler said.

It’s unclear whether these policies, drawn from the Basic Education Funding Commission’s report, will survive budget negotiations with the Republican-controlled state Senate. The commission report in January was approved 8-7, with all Republicans and one Democrat opposed.

Republican legislative leaders have called for districts to instead focus on making instructional changes that could boost student achievement.

“More money and a lot of it over the last decade or more has not enhanced student outcomes,” said Rep. Joe D’Orsie, R-York.

Supporters of a major boost in K-12 spending are hoping the time is right, thanks to a projected $14 billion state surplus available and the recent memory of a major court decision last year that found Pennsylvania’s system of funding public schools violates the constitutional rights of students in poorer districts. The state budget is due in three weeks.

School districts considered to be underfunded in Pennsylvania are often faster growing, disproportionately poor or with a student body that has a significant number of minority students. The result can be larger class sizes, underqualified teachers and outdated buildings, textbooks, technology and curriculum.

Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro in the annual budget address in February backed a $1.1 billion increase in public school operations and instruction, a 14% increase, with much of it concentrated among the largest and poorer districts — including many with significant numbers of minority students.

The state’s school funding system currently places much of the funding burden on local taxpayers in the form of property taxes.

“When we do not fully fund schools here, your local government is forced to raise taxes,” said Appropriations Chairman Jordan Harris, D-Philadelphia.

A state judge early last year ruled that Pennsylvania’s system of funding public schools is inadequate and violates students’ constitutional rights. Commonwealth Court Judge Renee Cohn Jubelirer’s 800-page ruling found the state has been violating students’ rights of a “comprehensive, effective, and contemporary” education.

Steelers sign head coach Mike Tomlin to 3-year deal that will carry through at least the 2027 season

FILE – Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin listens during a press conference in Pittsburgh, Friday, March 15, 2024. Tomlin signed an extension with the Steelers on Monday, June 10, that will keep the NFL’s longest-tenured coach in Pittsburgh through at least 2027. (AP Photo/Rebecca Droke, File)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — The NFL’s longest-tenured head coach isn’t leaving Pittsburgh anytime soon.

The Steelers signed Mike Tomlin to a three-year extension on Monday that will carry through at least the 2027 season. Tomlin was about to enter the final year of the deal he agreed to in April 2021.

The 52-year-old Tomlin is 173-100-2 since taking over for Hall of Famer Bill Cowher in 2007. Tomlin has yet to endure a losing season and despite speculation late last season that he was considering taking some time off, he remains intent on trying to help the Steelers stay in the mix in a highly competitive AFC.

“I am appreciative for this contract extension and thankful for Art Rooney II for his support during my first 17 years in Pittsburgh,” Tomlin said in a statement. “We are continuing to work diligently to get back to where we belong — sustained playoff success with the ultimate goal of winning the franchise’s seventh Lombardi Trophy.”

Pittsburgh is coming off an eventful 10-7 season that ended with a first-round playoff loss to Buffalo. Tomlin was asked in the immediate aftermath about his future status and rather than answer he abruptly stormed off the podium.

A few days later the relentlessly energetic Tomlin hardly sounded like someone on the verge of burnout, stressing he was “on go” as he looked to 2024 and beyond.

“I coach football, that’s what I do,” Tomlin said in January. “I’m respectful of the position that I hold. I have no sense of entitlement in terms of what I do. I just got a high level of respect for what we all do in this space, and I try to earn it daily.”

While Pittsburgh has been consistently competitive under Tomlin, the franchise also hasn’t won a postseason game since the divisional round of the 2016 playoffs, an eight-year drought that marks the club’s longest since the “Immaculate Reception” in 1972.

Tomlin’s decision to stick around extends an unmatched level of continuity atop an organization that’s had just three head coaches since 1969. Yet the Steelers have also made a series of moves of late that suggest the team is no longer content on merely being in the mix in mid-January.

In the past year alone Tomlin fired offensive coordinator Matt Canada in midseason, the team’s first in-season dismissal of a high-level coach since World War II.

Pittsburgh spent the offseason completely overhauling its quarterback room, signing Russell Wilson in free agency, trading away Kenny Pickett and acquiring Justin Fields from Chicago.

Tomlin has used the word “excited” in recent months to talk about Pittsburgh’s immediate future. The new contract indicates owner Art Rooney II’s commitment to letting Tomlin try and find a difference-maker at quarterback, something that’s been an issue since Ben Roethlisberger’s retirement following the 2021 season.

“Mike Tomlin’s leadership and commitment to the Steelers have been pivotal to our success during his first 17 years as head coach,” Rooney said in a statement. “Extending his contract for three more years reflects our confidence in his ability to guide the team back to winning playoff games and championships, while continuing our tradition of success.”

The Steelers have mandatory minicamp this week then take a break before reporting for training camp at Saint Vincent College on July 24.

Sen. John Fetterman was treated for a bruised shoulder after a weekend car accident

Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., is seen at the Senate Subway on Capitol Hill Wednesday, May 15, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman was treated at a hospital for a bruised shoulder after a car accident Sunday morning, according to a statement from his Senate office. He was released from the hospital Sunday afternoon.

Fetterman, a Democrat, and his wife Gisele were “involved in a car accident with another driver,” the statement said, and were both evaluated at a local hospital and discharged within hours. The senator returned to his home in Braddock, Pennsylvania, and is expected to be back in the Senate for votes this week.

A spokeswoman for Fetterman, Carrie Adams, said that the senator was driving the car and the accident was on Interstate 70 in Maryland. The condition of the other driver is unclear.

Fetterman, 54, suffered a stroke in May 2022 as he was campaigning for his seat. As a result, he still has some trouble speaking fluidly and quickly processing spoken conversation, and he often uses devices in congressional hearings and routine conversations to transcribe spoken words in real time.

Breaking News!!! President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, Convicted of all 3 Felony Counts

FILE – President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden leaves after a court appearance, July 26, 2023, in Wilmington, Del. House Republicans plan to hold their first hearing next week in their impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden over his family’s business dealings. The Sept. 28 hearing is expected to focus on “constitutional and legal questions” that surround allegations of Biden’s involvement in his son Hunter’s overseas businesses. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) — Hunter Biden has been convicted of all three felony charges related to the purchase of a revolver in 2018 when, prosecutors argued, he lied on a mandatory gun-purchase form by saying he was not illegally using or addicted to drugs. Jurors found Hunter Biden guilty of lying to a federally licensed gun dealer, making a false claim on the application by saying he was not a drug user and illegally having the gun for 11 days. First lady Jill Biden arrived to the courthouse minutes after the jury delivered its verdict and was not in the courtroom when it was read. The judge did not set a sentencing date.