Alabama-based hospitality investment platform acquires Pittsburgh Marriott North in Cranberry Township

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Photo Courtesy of Pittsburgh Marriott North at Cranberry Woods, Posted on Facebook on April 18th, 2025)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Cranberry Township, PA) A hospitality investment platform based in Birmingham, Alabama is acquiring a hotel in Cranberry Township. Highline Hospitality Partners announced yesterday its acquisition of Pittsburgh Marriott North. Highline Hospitality Partners confirms that this transaction is its 17th hotel acquisition overall, but this is its first investment in Pennsylvania and officials from that company state that they plan to pursue renovations on guestrooms in the coming years although the hotel is “well maintained.” The Alabama company has also engaged Avion Hospitality to manage the hotel that has 298 rooms with around 12,000 square feet of flexible meeting space, to include a 7,500-square-foot ballroom and amenities like a full-service restaurant, grab-and-go market, indoor pool and fitness center.

Pittsburgh-based Alcoa pays Australian feds $36 million for “unlawful” forest clearing

(File Photo: Source for Photo: This photo provided by Pittsburgh’s Public Source shows an excavator working at an Alcoa mine site near Jarrahdale, Western Australia, March 28, 2025. (Quinn Glabicki/Pittsburgh’s Public Source via AP)

(AP) Pittsburgh-based Alcoa will pay the Australian government a settlement the company put at $36 million for “unlawfully” clearing tracts of endangered forest without approvals between 2019 and 2025.

The metals giant began mining bauxite — the raw ingredient for aluminum — from beneath Australia’s Northern Jarrah forest in the 1960s, but its footprint has swelled in recent years, drawing new scrutiny from regulators and the public.

Senator Murray Watt, Australia’s environment and water minister, said the payment — $55 million in Australian dollars — settles a longstanding question of whether Alcoa should enjoy exemptions from federal environmental processes.

“We are committed to responsible operations and welcome this important step in transitioning our approvals to a contemporary assessment process that provides increased certainty for our operations and our people into the future,” Alcoa President and CEO William F. Oplinger said in a statement. “We’re proud of our more than 60 years as a leading Australian aluminum producer and the role we are now playing in support of critical minerals production.”

“It’s well and truly the largest amount that’s been paid by way of an enforceable undertaking around the environment laws nationally,” Watt said in an interview with Australian broadcasters Feb. 18.

Alcoa maintains it has complied with federal law but agreed to the payments to “acknowledge historical clearing.”

The agreement includes an 18-month exemption for the company to operate while seeking those approvals.

Last year, Pittsburgh’s Public Source traveled to Australia to investigate Alcoa’s plans for the forest, environmental effects and community concerns.

Alcoa, a global metalmaker valued at $16 billion, mines about 34 million metric tons of bauxite annually to generate 9 million tons of alumina. Much of this is sourced from its vast mine sites in the Northern Jarrah Forest near Perth. The endangered forest is a recognized biodiversity hotspot and hosts threatened species including black cockatoos and a variety of marsupials.

The company runs a rehabilitation program to restore former mined sites, but a prominent botanist who once tried to aid those efforts now maintains it’s ineffective, and a growing chorus of Australian scientists join those criticisms.

Advertisements the company sponsored last summer promoting its rehabilitation program drew the attention of an ad standards watchdog, which issued a report stating “the advertisement was inaccurate and likely to mislead or deceive target consumers.”

Alcoa is still tussling with regulators in the state of Western Australia.

A proposal there to massively expand its operations drew some 60,000 public comments upon submission to the Environmental Authority last summer. Local governments encompassing the mining and refining sites and multiple First Nations representatives were among the critics. The decision is still pending, though Alcoa wrote in a statement to Public Source that the company responded to the “comments received from government entities” and remains “committed to working toward the decision by the end of 2026.”

Beaver Falls church hosting 41st Annual Tabernacle Baptist Church Black History Forum with speaker Cathryn Calhoun

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Photo Courtesy of the August Wilson African American Cultural Center)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver Falls, PA) Cathryn Calhoun will be the speaker at the 41st Annual Tabernacle Baptist Church Black History Forum on Sunday, February 22nd at 4 p.m. This will take place at the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Beaver Falls. Calhoun is the director of education and community engagement at the August Wilson African American Cultural Center, which is located in Pittsburgh. According to Calhoun, she’ll spotlight Wilson’s compelling background and reveal how he eventually earned the title as “theater’s poet of Black America.” Attendees will be offered light refreshments at the end of the event highlighting the history of the late Wilson at Tabernacle Baptist Church. 

Person arrested for DUI after single-vehicle crash in Pittsburgh close to Squirrel Hill Tunnel

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Pittsburgh reported via release today that a person was arrested for driving under the influence in Pittsburgh on Wednesday morning. At approximately 10 a.m., Pennsylvania State Police went to the eastbound Squirrel Hill Tunnel along 755 I-376 East after a single-vehicle crash occurred. Throughout the investigation of this crash, the operator of the vehicle displayed signs of impairment. 

New Castle woman charged after single-vehicle crash in Lawrence County

(File Photo of a Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Car)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Lawrence County, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in New Castle reported via release yesterday that twenty-two-year-old Kamara Douglas of New Castle was charged after a single-vehicle crash in Lawrence County on the evening of January 26th, 2026. At 7:48 p.m., a rollover crash occurred and it was determined that Douglas was driving on I-376 West, hit a patch of ice and began sliding towards a snowbank on the left side of the road. After the vehicle of Douglas hit a snowbank, it lost control and slid back onto the road, which is where it overturned. Both Douglas and the fifteen-year-old female passenger who was in the vehicle at the time of the crash were transported to UPMC Jameson Hospital in Pittsburgh with suspected minor injuries. 

Mike Wagner, four-time Super Bowl Champion wth the Steelers, dies at 76

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Fomrer Steelers player Mike Wagner talks about the Immaculate Reception (Robin Rombach/Post-Gazette)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Four-time Super Bowl champion defensive back Mike Wagner, who played on the championship teams of the Steelers in the 1970s, has died at the age of 76. Steelers President Art Rooney II announced the passing of Wagner last night. Wagner played all ten of his NFL seasons for the Steelers and played 119 games for them. He was an 11th-round draft pick in 1971 out of Western Illinois and went on to have 36 career interceptions, including an NFL-best of eight in 1973. Wagner is sixth in Steelers history in career interceptions. He earned two straight Pro Bowl nods in 1975 and 1976 and was also named to the All-Pro second team in 1976. He was a key member of the famous “Steel Curtain” defense who intercepted the Vikings’ Fran Tarkenton in Super Bowl IX and intercepted the Cowboys’ Roger Staubach in Super Bowl X. In 2020, he was inducted into the Steelers Hall of Honor. After he retired, he remained in Western Pennsylvania as a businessman.

Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board Reports Gaming Revenue Rise of 11.6% in January of 2026

(File Photo of the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board (PGCB) reported in Harrisburg yesterday that the combined total revenue generated from all forms of gaming along with fantasy contests during January of 2026 was $590,644,755 or 11.64% above the revenue that was generated in January of 2025. $249,969,629 was the resulting tax revenue during January of this year. The types of gaming that are regulated by the PGCB are fantasy contests, internet gaming, slot machines and table games in casinos, sports wagering and video gaming terminals (“VGTs”). 

Pennsylvania has the most fire-related deaths out of any U.S. state so far in 2026

(File Photo of a Fire Background)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) According to the United States Fire Administration, Pennsylvania has 26 deaths from home fires so far this year. This leads the United States of America in deaths related to fires in 2026. Pennsylvania had the most civilian home fire deaths out of any state with 131 in 2025. Firefighters have talked about electrical issues as being part of the problem with more fires showing up. 

State Representative Aaron Bernstine to Host Firearm Owners Against Crime Event in Mars

(File Photo of Representative Aaron Bernstine)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Mars, PA) Representative Aaron Bernstine (R-Butler/Lawrence) will host a Firearm Owners Against Crime event from 6:30-8 p.m., on Wednesday, February 25th at the Mars Road and Gun Club in Mars. This event will provide an opportunity for local residents to hear directly from advocates of the Second Amendment and for them to discuss current and proposed firearm legislation in the state of Pennsylvania. Those that attend the event will be able to ask questions, shartheir concerns and learn more about how policies in the state of Pennsylvania impact hunters, lawful gun owners and sportsmen. 

Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Directors taking another look at proposed plan that would close some local schools

(File Photo of the Top of a School Bus)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) The Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Directors is taking a fresh look at the proposed plan to close nine schools in the Pittsburgh area called the “Future-Ready Facilities Plan.” That board voted 6-3 on November 25th2025 against this plan and they decided to reintroduce it for consideration last month, and this led to a lengthy discussion meeting from them on Tuesday. According to Gene Walker, the president of the Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Directors, the discussions about this plan will continue in March and April and while an exact timeline to decide on it remains up in the air, Walker confirmed that his board hopes to decide on it before the end of the school year.