AAA: New Vehicle Costs Drop to $11,577, according to AAA’s Your Driving Costs analysis for 2025

(Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of AAA East Central)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) According to a release from AAA yesterday, this year’s AAA’s Your Driving Costs analysis shows that the total cost of owning and operating a new vehicle is $11,577, or $964.78 per month, a $719 decline from 2024. AAA recommends that buyers should consider the costs of this price decline, which include finance charges that are lower, a shift towards vehicle options that are more affordable, fuel prices that are reduced, and depreciation to choose the best model of vehicle and type of vehicle for their budget. According to that same release from AAA yesterday, here are categories driving the lower costs for 2025 and some car buying advice that AAA recommends:

Categories driving lower costs this year include:

  • Finance Charges – Estimated finance costs have decreased to $1,131 in 2025, down 15 percent compared to $1,332 in 2024.
  • Fuel Prices – The average fuel cost dropped to 13.00 cents per mile, a 12.8% decrease from last year, while regular grade gasoline for YDC vehicles averaged $3.151 per gallon, down from $3.539. Meanwhile, electricity prices for charging electric vehicles rose slightly to 16.7 cents per kilowatt hour, up from 15.9 cents in 2024.

Car Buying Advice

  • Create a monthly or annual budget and factor in ownership and operating costs before making a purchase.
  • Keep each transaction and negotiation separate from the other – the cost of the car, the finance rate, and the trade-in value.
  • Obtain pre-approval from a financial institution (e.g., Bank, Credit Union, AAA, etc.) before discussing finance rates with the car dealer to ensure the best lending rate is available.
  • There are quite a few options (online and in-store) available to consumers when considering where to buy a used vehicle besides a dealership. Visit a AAA branch, which may offer discounts for members.

McKees Rocks Resident Sentenced to 46 Months in Prison and 15 Years of Supervised Release for Possession of Child Sexual Abuse Material

(File Photo of Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Acting United States Attorney Troy Revetti announced yesterday that a resident of McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania was sentenced in federal court to 46 months of imprisonment, followed by 15 years of supervised release, on his conviction of possession of material depicting the sexual exploitation of a minor. Thirty-eight-year-old Brandon Jennings got sentenced yesterday. According to the information presented to the Court, in and around March of 2021 and July of 2021, Jennings possessed 926 images and 803 videos depicting the sexual exploitation of minors, some of whom were infants, toddlers and prepubescent. Jennings also possessed child sexual abuse material with portrayal of sadomasochistic conduct or other depictions of violence. The investigation that led to the successful prosecution of Jennings was conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Allegheny County Police Department.

Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant and Bar in the South Side of Pittsburgh permanently closes

(Photo of Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant and Bar Logo Courtesy of Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant and Bar, Logo Posted on letter on Facebook post from Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant and Bar on April 30th, 2025)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant & Bar in the South Side of Pittsburgh is now closed permanently. According to a Facebook post yesterday from Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant and Bar, they have “weighed difficult decisions over the past year about how to serve you best in an increasingly challenging business climate.” The Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant and Bar locations in Cranberry, Bethel Park and Gibsonia are still open, even though the South Side location of that restaurant located on East Carson Street closing has nothing to do with sixteen people getting detained and getting taken into ICE custody on August 7th2025 at the Cranberry and Gibsonia locations for Emiliano’s Mexican Restaurant and Bar. 

Alcoa and Eurasia Group Release White Paper on Economic Competitiveness and the Green Transition

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – The Alcoa and Arconic headquarters, left, sit on the Northside of Pittsburgh along the Allegheny River, on Oct. 17, 2022. Aluminum maker Arconic is being taken private by Apollo Global Management in a deal worth approximately $5.2 billion, according to a statement from Apollo on Thursday, May 4, 2023. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

PITTSBURGH–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Sep 18, 2025– Alcoa Corporation (NYSE: AA; ASX: AAI), together with Eurasia Group announced yesterday the publication of a new white paper, “Competitiveness & Green Transition in the Aluminum Industry: Finding Synergies or Facing Trade-Offs,” which examines the intersection of economic competitiveness and the global green transition in the aluminum industry.

The white paper highlights how aluminum demand is rising across technologies such as solar panels, wind turbines, electric vehicles and the transmission projects that support them. At the same time, the industry is working to reduce its own carbon footprint, as a critical player in the global energy transition.

“Aluminum is essential to the world’s low-carbon energy transition, and at the same time has opportunities to improve our own carbon footprint,” said Nicol Gagstetter, Alcoa’s Executive Vice President and Chief External Affairs Officer. “This white paper offers a perspective on how the aluminum industry can improve its competitiveness relative to other industries while also addressing the requirements of decarbonization. Alcoa is pleased to play a part in furthering the industry’s conversation regarding competitiveness and the green transition while also providing the products and technologies necessary to achieve these aspirations.”

ATF agent shoots an eighteen-year-old Aliquippa High School student in Aliquippa; student dies in a hospital early next morning

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Aliquippa, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that yesterday evening, agents from both the ATF and the FBI working in a joint investigation were involved in a fatal shooting incident. According to officials, the shooting happened on Waugaman Street at the Linmar Terrace housing complex in Aliquippa around 6:20 p.m. yesterday. Aliquippa Mayor Dwan Walker confirmed that an ATF agent shot a boy that went to Aliquippa High School. Sources told KDKA the boy was shot in the head. According to the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office, eighteen-year-old Kendric Curtis was flown to Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh and died there shortly after 3 a.m. this morning. Aliquippa School District Superintendent Dr. Phillip Woods said that a Trauma Support Team will be on-site at the Aliquippa Junior/Senior High School today when students arrive. Aliquippa Junior/Senior High School students can also go to the library there to find support resources throughout today as they need it.

Ryan Named to the 2025 Best Places to Work in Western Pennsylvania List

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – This April 2, 2021, file photo shows bridges spanning the Allegheny River in downtown Pittsburgh. Republicans in Congress are making the politically brazen bet that it’s more advantageous to oppose President Joe Biden’s ambitious rebuild America agenda than to lend support for the costly $2.3 trillion undertaking for roads, bridges and other infrastructure investments. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

PITTSBURGH–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Sep 18, 2025– Ryan, a leading global tax services and software provider, is pleased to announce the Firm has been named to the Pittsburgh Business Times 2025 Best Places to Work in Western Pennsylvania list. This is the 11 th consecutive year that Ryan has been recognized for this award.

“Our local team members are integral to fostering a strong workplace culture while delivering exceptional client results,” said Ginny B. Kissling, President Americas and Chief Operating Officer. “Their perseverance, willingness to go the extra mile, and collaborative spirit are the driving force behind our success. Thank you for 11 years as a best place to work—we look forward to many more.”

More than 250 companies in the Western Pennsylvania area applied to participate in the online survey of employee engagement administered by Quantum Market Research. Online employee satisfaction surveys formed the basis of the final scores used in this program. The number of surveys required from each company was based on a sliding scale applied to the total number of employees the company has in the region—the higher the number of employees, the lower the percentage of employee surveys required to qualify.

To view the full 2025 Best Places to Work in Western Pennsylvania list, see here.

The Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency Encourages Students and Families to Save for College During National College Savings Month

(Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) The Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) is hosting the webinar, “Financial Aid 101,” on Monday, September 22nd at 1 P.M.-2 P.M., and the Pennsylvania Treasury Department (Treasury) is hosting the webinar, “Overview of the PA 529 College & Career Savings Program,” on Tuesday, September 23rd at 11 A.M.-12 noon. Both of these webinars are free. According to an advisory on Wednesday from the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, September is National College Savings Month, and both the PHEAA and the Treasury is encouraging families to take advantage of these free webinars to educate themselves on the financial aid process and how to start saving early with the PA 529 College and Career Savings Program and Keystone Scholars. The links to register for these webinars can be found below:

Click here to register: PA529 Webinars | College and Career Savings Program

Prosecutor says stalking suspect ambushed Pennsylvania police officers, killing 3

(File Photo: Source for Photo: This combo of images provided by the York County, Pa., District Attorney’s office on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, shows, from left, Det. Mark Baker, Det. Sgt. Cody Becker and Det. Isaiah Emenheiser, all of the Northern York County Regional Police Department. (Northern York County Regional Police Department/York County District Attorney’s Office via AP)

NORTH CODORUS, Pa. (AP) — A suspected stalker armed with a rifle hid inside his ex-girlfriend’s home in the rolling farmland of southern Pennsylvania and ambushed police officers who came to arrest him, killing three of them in a shootout, a prosecutor said Thursday.

Two other officers were seriously wounded before police shot the suspect to death in a hail of gunfire that capped a 15-hour ordeal after a trail camera captured an image of the suspect, armed with an AR-style rifle, peering through a scope into the house Tuesday night.

How the shooting unfolded

The ex-girlfriend and her mother called the police and then fled the house for their safety after officers dispatched Tuesday night were unable to find him there. Police didn’t find him at his own home so arrived back at the house Wednesday afternoon.

Using a drone, six officers scoured the property, including farm buildings, before they noticed the door to the home was unlocked — even though the ex-girlfriend and her mother had locked it before fleeing.

Four plainclothes detectives from the Northern York County Regional Police Department wearing bulletproof vests opened the door and were immediately fired on by the suspect, 24-year-old Matthew James Ruth, who was carrying an AR-style rifle with a suppressor, York County District Attorney Tim Barker said.

Barker said he believed that Ruth had planned to ambush his ex-girlfriend before the detectives walked in.

Ruth fired numerous rounds, killing three of the officers at the door and seriously wounding the fourth, Barker said. A gunfight then ensued between Ruth and two officers outside. Ruth wounded a York County sheriff’s deputy before he and another Northern York County Regional officer shot the gunman to death by the road, Barker said.

Detective Sgt. Cody Becker, Detective Mark Baker and Detective Isaiah Emenheiser were killed, he said.

“Each of these men represented the best of policing. They served with professionalism, dedication and courage. They were leaders within our agency, committed to protecting this community and standing beside their follow officers,” Chief Dave Lash said.

All three slain officers were long-time veterans of the nearly 70-officer force, with almost six decades of combined service. Baker, 53, had served 21 years after spending time as a police officer in Philadelphia; Becker, 39, had served 16 years; and Emenheiser, 43, had served 20 years.

The wounded detective and sheriff’s officer remained hospitalized, one of whom is in critical but stable condition Thursday.

What happened before the shootout

When the ex-girlfriend’s pickup truck mysteriously caught fire one night in August, she suspected Ruth was behind it, but she asked police not to investigate, Barker said.

Instead, she and her mother put up the trail camera and, nearly a month later, called police when they discovered an image of him wearing camouflage and peering into the house through what Barker called a scope-like device.

With misdemeanor warrants for his arrest, police went looking for Ruth.

Investigators went to Ruth’s home in Hanover, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) from where the officers were killed, and talked to relatives earlier Wednesday, Barker said. He wasn’t there, so they left to try the ex-girlfriend’s home again.

Barker said he couldn’t immediately say how Ruth got into the ex-girlfriend’s house, but he said Ruth had “carefully surveilled the entire residence and the outbuilding areas” and even shot and killed the family dog, a black Labrador, after he entered the home.

Detectives returned to Hanover after the shooting and left with several bags of potential evidence, neighbor Rose Miller said. She didn’t know Ruth well, but remembered him working on Boy Scout fundraisers.

A community mourns

On Thursday night, a couple hundred people gathered for a vigil honoring the officers at a church in Spring Grove, Pennsylvania, some wiping away tears as pastors led prayers and hymns and a woman sang “Amazing Grace.” Community members wrote messages on stones and arranged them under a table displaying five lit candles.

“We need to do better as a society,” Gov. Josh Shapiro said Wednesday evening. “We need to help the people who think that picking up a gun, picking up a weapon is the answer to resolving disputes.”

It was one of the state’s deadliest days for law enforcement this century, matching the toll from a shooting in 2009 when three officers were ambushed by a domestic violence suspect sporting a bulletproof vest.

Community members held American flags and saluted as police and emergency vehicles formed a procession to the coroner’s office, and people left flowers outside the slain officers’ headquarters.

The confrontation unfolded on a rural road in North Codorus, about 46 miles (75 km) north of Baltimore. Neighbor Dirk Anderson heard “quite a few” shots from his home across the street and wondered what was happening. Then he saw a helicopter and police arrive.

In all, some 30 police vehicles arrived, blocking off roads bordered by a barn, a goat farm and soybean and corn fields.

“It’s strange walking down this road now and seeing all these cars and knowing what happened here,” said Bryan Rice, who lives nearby and regularly walks the road with his wife.

Barker declined to ponder the gunman’s “full profile,” but said one thing was apparent.

“There is one motive though that is clear for everything. And that is the hateful scourge of domestic violence,” he said. “That is what brought us here. That is what brought law enforcement here.”

Film crews heading to New Brighton, sources say

Story by Curtis Walsh – Beaver County Radio. Published September 18, 2025 5:50 P.M. Updated 6:36 P.M.

(New Brighton, Pa) Sources say that film crews will be working in New Brighton on Friday, September 19th.

Information we have gathered alleges that Apple TV will be filming in the area of 5th Avenue and 13th Street, possibly at the local Marathon gas station, formerly Valero.

The store currently has signage displayed stating they will be closing early on Friday.

No Parking signs from the New Brighton Police Department have been placed in the area along 5th Avenue.

Representatives of the store declined to comment on the matter.

In a press release issued by Apple TV in May, it was announced that the company would be filming in the Pittsburgh region for a 10 episode drama based on Lars Kepler novels.

A working title used for the project casting calls was “Parallax”, but it has since been reported that the series has not yet been officially named.

 

Slide repair and pipe replacement work on Willoughby Run Road (Route 1023) in New Sewickley Township will begin, weather permitting

(File Photo: Caption for Photo: PennDOT, PSP, PTC, Construction Industry Highlight National Work Zone Awareness Week)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver County, PA) PennDOT District 11 announced that on Monday, September 22nd, weather permitting, slide repair and pipe replacement work on Willoughby Run Road (Route 1023) in New Sewickley Township will begin. According to a release from PennDOT District 11, beginning at approximately 7 A.M. Monday, a portion of Willoughby Run Road will close to traffic around-the-clock through late November between Glen Eden Road and Zeigler Road and work will occur in two separate locations on the roadway, but the work will not occur simultaneously. Glen Eden Road and Zeigler Road is where traffic will be detoured during this work. Slide repair and pipe replacement work will be conducted by crews from PennDOT’s Beaver County maintenance forces in the first location and slide repair work will be conducted by crews from PennDOT’s Beaver County maintenance forces in the second location.