Congrats to This Year’s CCBC Players of the Game for Football

(Brighton Twp., Pa.) Now that the 2025 High School Football season is in the books for Beaver County Radio it is time to celebrate this year’s CCBC Players of the Game.

Please join CCBC and Beaver County Radio in Congratulating the following players:

08-22-25: Blackhawk: Brayden McCarthy    Beaver Falls: Xavier Clark

08-29-25: Western Beaver: Amari Marshall Southside: Andrew Corfield

09-05-25: Avonworth: Dimitri Velisaris  Aliquippa: Marques Councill

09-12-25: Western Beaver: Wyatt Sparbanie   Beaver Falls: Christian Dawkins

09-19-25: Central Valley: Braddock Ambrose  Beaver: Jonah Justice

09-26-25: Ellwood City: Dailonn Currie  New Brighton: Heath Lewis

09-27-25: Rochester: Jason Clinton  Summitt Academy: Demetris Crosby

10-03-25: Freedom: Kaden Bailey  Riverside: Tanner Richards

10-10-25: Beaver Falls: Xavier Clark  New Brighton: Jojo Montanez

10-17-25: Montour: Brandon Bennett  Aliquippa: Akiva Woods

10-24-25: Ellwood City: Tyler Smiley Beaver Falls: Kenny Jewell

10-31-25: Aliquippa: Marques Councill  Trinity: Jonah Williamson

11-15-25: Aliquippa: Marques Councill   McKeesport: Kemon Spell

11-22-25: Aliquippa: QaLil Goode    Oil City: Findlay Cole

 

Pennsylvania Attorney General Sunday, State Police Announce Charges Against New York Man who Used Stolen Credit Cards to Buy More than $65K in Liquor from Pennsylvania Stores

(File Photo of a Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) Attorney General Dave Sunday and the Pennsylvania State Police announced that a man from Brooklyn, New York is charged with orchestrating an identity theft scheme to place more than 200 orders for expensive liquors in numerous Pennsylvania counties. Twenty-six-year-old Eugene Antwi was arrested this week in New York and is charged with felony counts of identity theft, access device fraud, theft by deception, forgery, and related offenses. Antwi will be arraigned on the charges in Pennsylvania.

The joint investigation, that included a presentment from the 52nd Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, revealed that Antwi used falsified identities and stolen credit and debit cards to place more than 200 online orders, totaling more than $65,000. Antwi then picked up the orders at stores in 21 counties.

“This defendant went to great lengths to steal from unsuspecting Pennsylvanians and defraud the Liquor Control Board, which oversees legal purchases of alcohol in the Commonwealth,” Attorney General Sunday said. “Our Organized Retail Crime Section is committed to collaborating with partners like the Pennsylvania State Police to combat theft and fraud that raise the prices of goods for hardworking Pennsylvanians.”

Antwi perpetrated the scheme between August of 2023 and September of 2024. The Office of Attorney General filed charges and the New York City Police Department arrested Antwi on the outstanding warrant.

This case is being prosecuted by Senior Deputy Attorney General Philip McCarthy and Deputy Attorney General Kelsey Ashworth. Criminal charges, and any discussion thereof, are merely allegations and all defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

Man from Orlando, Florida charged after causing a single-vehicle crash in Big Beaver Borough

(File Photo of a Police Siren Light)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Big Beaver Borough, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Gibsonia reported via release yesterday that forty-one-year-old Junior Ariste of Orlando, Florida was charged after causing a single-vehicle crash in Big Beaver Borough on Tuesday morning. Ariste was driving on I-76 East west of Foxwood Road at 6:45 a.m. and hit a guard rail with his freightliner. The vehicle of Ariste was jack knifed, which caused the Power Unit to roll down a hillside partially while it was still attached to the semi-trailer. Ariste was wearing his seatbelt at the time of the crash and he was not injured. 

Over 1.5 million bags of shredded cheese sold in Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico and thirty U.S. states recalled for possible metal fragments

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Courtesy of Roberto Machado Noa/LightRocket / Getty Images, Caption for Photo: Over 1.5 million bags of shredded cheese have been recalled due to potential metal contamination.)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Hiram, OH) Cheese that was sold at stores like Target, Aldi and Walmart is now undergoing a recall because it could be contaminated with fragments of metal. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) confirmed that an upgrade to a Class II recall on the cheese happened on Monday. According to the FDA, a Class II recall is “a situation in which use of or exposure to a violative product may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences or where the probability of serious adverse health consequences is remote.” This is related to over 1.5 million bags of shredded cheese, which was sold in Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico and thirty other U.S. states. The full list of products recalled can be found below: 

Low-moisture part-skim mozzarella shredded cheese:

  • Always Save – Shredded, 5 lb., UPC 7003865782
  • Borden – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 5300007162; Thick Cut, 8 oz., UPC 5300007170
  • Brookshire’s – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 9282510119; Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 9282510120; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 9282510130; Thick Cut, 8 oz., UPC 9282592197
  • Cache Valley Creamery – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 7495802553
  • Chestnut Hill – Fancy Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 3225116742
  • Coburn Farms – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 5193331657; Shredded, 12 oz., UPC 5193321820; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 5193334257
  • Econo – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 893800294
  • Food Club – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 3680045573; Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 3680005117; Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 3680005144; Shredded, 32 oz., tube-style bag, UPC 3680012914; Shredded, 32 oz., square-style bag, UPC 3680038305
  • Food Lion – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 3582609008
  • Gold Rush Creamery – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 1401401014; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 1401401030
  • Good & Gather – Fine Cut, 8 oz., UPC 8523903860; Classic, 8 oz., UPC 8523903849; Classic, 32 oz., UPC 8523903852
  • Great Lakes Cheese – Shredded, 5 lb., UPC 3651415034
  • Great Value – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 7874237425; Finely Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 7874204492; Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 7874235317; Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 7874235321; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 7874237475; Shredded, 5 lb., UPC 7874204980
  • Happy Farms by Aldi – Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 4061463330864; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 4061463369413
  • H-E-B – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 4122022272; Thick, 8 oz., UPC 4122061295; Shredded/Fancy Finamente Rallado, 8 oz., UPC 4122006759 (distributed for sale in Mexico only)
  • Hill Country Fare – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 4122018977; Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 4122016234; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 4122042334; Shredded, 5 lb., UPC 4122082998; Shredded/Rallado, 8 oz., UPC 4122024512 (distributed for sale in Mexico only)
  • Know & Love – Fine Cut, 8 oz., UPC 788030650; Fine Cut, 16 oz., UPC 788030657; Classic Cut, 8 oz., UPC 788030659; Classic Cut, 32 oz., UPC 788030658; Thick Cut, 8 oz., UPC 788030678
  • Laura Lynn – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 8685401031; Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 8685400824; Shredded, 12 oz., UPC 8685400815; Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 8685406528; Thick Cut Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 8685407109
  • Lucerne Dairy Farms – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 2113004867; Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 2113004259; Shredded Family Size, 32 oz., UPC 2113004741; Rustic Cut, 8 oz., UPC 2113004944; Rustic Cut Family Size, 32 oz., UPC 2113004949
  • Nu Farm – Fancy Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 3104100151
  • Publix – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 4141511665; Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 4141523365
  • Schnuck’s – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 4131858010
  • Simply Go – Classic Cut Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 1015983021; Classic Cut Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 1015983020; Rustic Cut Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 1015983040
  • Sprouts Farmers Market – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 4667052284; Shredded Value Pack, 32 oz., UPC 4667052279
  • Stater Bros. Markets – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 7417546413; Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 7417546402; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 7417546435
  • Sunnyside Farms – Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 1754450204; Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 1754450057

Italian-style shredded cheese blend

  • Happy Farms by Aldi Italian Style shredded cheese blend, 12 oz., UPC 4061463330949
  • Brookshire’s Italian 6-Cheese – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 9282510174
  • Cache Valley Creamery Six Cheese Italian – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 7495800257
  • Coburn Farms Italian Style – Finely Shredded, 12 oz., UPC 5193365638
  • Great Value Italian Style – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 7874201566; Finely Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 7874203979
  • Know & Love Italian Style – Fine Cut, 8 oz., UPC 788030645
  • Laura Lynn Italian Blend – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 8685405157
  • Publix Italian Six Cheese Blend – Fancy Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 4141518065
  • Simply Go Italian Style Six Cheese Blend – Fine Cut Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 1015983015

Pizza-style shredded cheese blend

  • Food Club Finely Shredded Pizza Style Four Cheese Blend, 8 oz., UPC 3680017231
  • Econo Pizza – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 893800297
  • Food Club Pizza Style Two Cheese Blend – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 3680012422; Shredded, 32 oz., square-style bag, UPC 3680044487; Shredded, 32 oz., tube-style bag, UPC 3680048197
  • Gold Rush Creamery Pizza Blend – Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 1401401030
  • Great Value Pizza Blend – Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 538818789
  • Laura Lynn Pizza Blend – Finely Shredded, 8 oz., UPC 8685402132
  • Simply Go Pizza Blend Two Cheese Mix – Classic Cut Shredded, 32 oz., UPC 1015983022

Mozzarella and provolone shredded cheese blend

  • Freedom’s Choice Pizza Blend – Fine-Cut, 32 oz., UPC 4279810410
  • Good & Gather Mozzarella & Provolone – Classic, 8 oz., UPC 8523903871
  • Great Lakes Cheese Mozzarella & Provolone – Shredded, 5 lb., UPC 3651415115
  • Great Value Provolone & Mozzarella Blend – Shredded, 16 oz., UPC 7874226743

Mozzarella & Parmesan shredded cheese blend

  • Good & Gather Fine Cut, 8 oz., UPC 8523903856

Here are the thirty-one U.S. States and the country that this cheese was sold in:

  • Alabama
  • Arkansas
  • Arizona
  • California
  • Colorado
  • Florida
  • Georgia
  • Idaho
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Kansas
  • Kentucky
  • Louisiana
  • Minnesota
  • Mississippi
  • Missouri
  • North Carolina
  • Nebraska
  • Nevada
  • New Mexico
  • New York
  • Oklahoma
  • Oregon
  • Pennsylvania
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Utah
  • Virginia
  • Washington
  • Wisconsin
  • Puerto Rico

Nearly 40 babies sickened in infant botulism outbreak tied to contaminated formula

(File Photo: Source for Photo: A sign for ByHeart, a manufacturer of organic baby formula, is displayed outside a building that houses a plant for the company on Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2025, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)

(AP) Nearly 40 babies have been sickened in an infant botulism outbreak tied to contaminated formula, federal health officials say.

The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday reported 39 cases of confirmed or suspected illness in 18 states among babies who consumed ByHeart formula since August. The most recent illness occurred on Nov. 19.

No deaths have been reported in the outbreak, which was announced Nov. 8.

ByHeart, a New York-based manufacturer of organic infant formula, recalled all its products sold in the U.S. on Nov. 11. The company, which accounts for about 1% of the U.S. infant formula market, had been selling about 200,000 cans of the product each month.

Some ByHeart products are still on shelves at stores including Walmart, Target, Kroger, Acme and Shaw’s, despite the ongoing recall, the FDA reported.

It can take up to 30 days for symptoms of infant botulism to develop, medical experts said.

Here’s what to know about the outbreak and infant botulism.

The outbreak begins

The outbreak has sickened babies aged about 2 weeks to about 9 months, the FDA said. All the infants were hospitalized after consuming ByHeart powdered formula.

Earlier cases of infant botulism have been reported in babies who drank ByHeart formula and fell ill before Aug. 1. California health officials confirmed six such cases in that state between November 2024 and June 2025, although those are not considered part of the outbreak, health officials said.

California officials earlier confirmed that a sample from an open can of ByHeart baby formula fed to an infant who fell ill contained the type of bacteria that can lead to illness. And the company has said lab tests confirmed some samples were contaminated with that bacteria.

FDA inspectors have been to the company’s infant formula production plants in Allerton, Iowa, and Portland, Oregon.

The FDA is investigating a rise in cases of infant botulism reported since August. “ByHeart brand formula is disproportionately represented among sick infants in this outbreak,” the agency said.

Illnesses began between Aug. 9 and Nov. 19, federal officials said. Cases have been reported in Arizona, California, Idaho, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Jersey, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin.

Families of babies treated for botulism after drinking ByHeart formula have sued the company. Lawsuits filed in federal courts allege that the formula they fed their children was defective and ByHeart was negligent in selling it. They seek financial payment for medical bills, emotional distress and other harm.

Causes of infant botulism

Infant botulism typically affects fewer than 200 babies in the U.S. each year. As of Sept. 20, 133 cases had been reported in the U.S. according to the most recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention records. There were 145 cases reported all of last year.

The infection is caused by a type of bacteria that produces a toxin in the large intestine. The bacterium is spread through hardy spores present in the environment that can cause serious illness, including paralysis.

Infants are particularly vulnerable to infection because their gut microbiomes are not developed enough to prevent the spores from germinating and producing the toxin. They can be sickened after exposure to the spores in dust, dirt or water or by eating contaminated honey.

Symptoms can take weeks to develop and can include poor feeding, loss of head control, drooping eyelids and a flat facial expression. Babies may feel “floppy” and can have problems swallowing or breathing.

Baby formula has previously been linked to sporadic cases of illness, but no known outbreaks of infant botulism tied to powdered formula have previously been confirmed, according to research studies.

Infant botulism treatment

The only treatment is known as BabyBIG, an IV medication made from the pooled blood plasma of adults immunized against botulism. California’s infant botulism program developed the product and is the sole source worldwide.

BabyBIG works to shorten hospital stays and decrease the severity of illness in babies with botulism. Because the infection can affect the ability to breathe, infants often need to be placed on ventilators.

Potential impact on U.S. formula supplies

There is little danger of infant formula shortages because ByHeart represents a small share of the market. That’s far different from the crises in late 2021 and 2022, when four infants were sickened by a different germ after consuming formula made by Abbott Nutrition. Two of the babies died. No direct link was found between the Abbott products and the infections caused by a different germ, cronobacter sakazakii, but FDA officials closed the company’s Michigan plant after contamination and other problems were detected.

Abbott recalled top brands of infant formula, triggering a nationwide shortage that lasted months.

In 2022, ByHeart recalled five batches of infant formula after a sample at the company’s packaging plant tested positive for cronobacter sakazakii. In 2023, the FDA sent a warning letter to the company detailing “areas that still require corrective actions.” A ByHeart plant in Reading, Pennsylvania, was shut down in 2023 just before FDA inspectors found problems with mold, water leaks and insects, inspection documents show.

Reviewing infant formula ingredients

Federal health officials have vowed to overhaul the U.S. food supply and are taking a new look at infant formula.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has directed the FDA to review the nutrients and other ingredients in infant formula, which fills the bottles of millions of American babies.

The effort, dubbed “Operation Stork Speed,” is the first deep look at the ingredients since 1998.

FDA officials are reviewing comments from industry, health experts and public to decide next steps.

Luigi Mangione’s court hearing continues on anniversary of UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Luigi Mangione appears in Manhattan Criminal Court for an evidence hearing, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025, in New York. (Curtis Means/Pool Photo via AP)

NEW YORK (AP) — A high-stakes hearing in the New York murder case against Luigi Mangione continues Thursday, a year to the day after prosecutors say he gunned down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

Mangione, 27, has pleaded not guilty to both state and federal charges. Before any trials get scheduled, his lawyers are trying to preclude the eventual jurors from hearing about his alleged statements to law enforcement officers and items — including a gun and a notebook — allegedly seized from his backpack.

The evidence is key to prosecutors’ case. They have said that the 9 mm handgun matches the firearm used in the killing, that writings in the notebook laid out Mangione’s disdain for health insurers and ideas about killing a CEO at an investor conference, and that he gave Pennsylvania police the same fake name that the alleged gunman used at a New York hostel days before the shooting.

Thompson, 50, was shot from behind as he walked to an investor conference on Dec. 4, 2024. He became UnitedHealthcare’s CEO in 2021 and had worked within parent UnitedHealth Group Inc. for 20 years.

The hearing, which started Monday and could extend to next week, applies only to the state case. But it is giving the public an extensive preview of some testimony, video, 911 audio and other records relevant to both cases.

It’s not immediately clear what witnesses or evidence are expected Thursday.

Tuesday’s court session displayed police body-camera video of officers confronting Mangione at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania, and concluding — to their amazement — that he was the much-publicized suspect in Thompson’s killing five days earlier.

They interacted with Mangione for roughly 20 minutes before telling him he had the right to remain silent. The officers asked his name, whether he’d been in New York recently and other questions, including: “Why are you nervous?”

Officers tried to play it cool and buy time by intimating that they were simply responding to a loitering complaint and chatting about his steak sandwich. Still, they patted Mangione down and pushed his backpack away from him. About 15 minutes in, they warned him that he was being investigated and would be arrested if he repeated what they’d determined was a fake name.

After he gave his real one, he was read his rights, handcuffed, frisked again and ultimately arrested on a forgery charge related to his fake ID.

The video also provided glimpses of officers searching his backpack, a matter that will likely be explored further as the hearing goes on.

Mangione’s lawyers argue that his statements shouldn’t be allowed as trial evidence because officers started questioning him before reading his rights. The defense contends the backpack items should be excluded because police didn’t get a warrant before searching his bag.

Manhattan prosecutors haven’t yet detailed their arguments for allowing the disputed evidence. Federal prosecutors have maintained that police were justified in searching the backpack to ensure there was nothing dangerous inside and that Mangione’s statements to officers were voluntary and made before he was under arrest.

Many criminal cases see disputes over evidence and the complicated legal standards governing police searches and interactions with potential suspects.

Downtown Pittsburgh hosts celebration for the first title ever for the 2025 “champyinz” of the United Soccer League, the Pittsburgh Riverhounds Soccer Club

(Photo Courtesy of the Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC, Posted on Facebook on November 23rd, 2025)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A championship rally will be held today to celebrate the Pittsburgh Riverhounds Soccer Club’s first ever United Soccer League title that was won by them at ONEOK Field in Tulsa, Oklahoma on November 22nd, 2025 by defeating Tulsa FC 5-3 in a penalty shootout after a 0-0 tie occurred when the game ended. From around 10:30 a.m. until 2 p.m. this afternoon, Grant Street in Downtown Pittsburgh will be closed between Fourth Avenue and Forbes Avenue for the celebration.

Water main break occurs in the South Side of Pittsburgh

(File Photo of Water)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Crews were responding to a water main break on the South Side of Pittsburgh this morning. It was reported near the intersection of Sarah Street and East Carson Street in the South Side Flats neighborhood of Pittsburgh at around 3:45 a.m. 

Shapiro Administration Highlights Resources for Pennsylvania’s 2.3 Million Older Drivers During Older Driver Safety Awareness Week

(File Photo of the PennDOT Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(York, PA) Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT), Pennsylvania Department of Aging (PDA), Pennsylvania State Police (PSP), the Pennsylvanian Insurance Department (PID), and the American Automobile Association (AAA) shared safe driving advice and resources available for older Pennsylvanians with residents at the White Rose Senior Center in York yesterday during Older Driver Safety Awareness Week. Pennsylvania has a network of shared-ride service providers which are dedicated to keeping older adults engaged mobile and safe in their community. According to a release yesterday from every aforementioned organization except for AAA, here is some more information about these providers, links for more information about them and tips for drivers:

  • In 2024, there were 21,986 crashes involving at least one driver aged 65 or older that resulted in 308 total fatalities. This represents 19.8% of all crashes and 27.3% of all fatalities. Older drivers generally have fewer crashes per driver than the national average – but they have more crashes per mile of driving.

 

  •  The Senior Shared Ride Program allows seniors to ride at a reduced fare. More than 2.7 million senior shared ride trips were provided in FY 2024-25. Additionally, the Free Transit Program for Seniors allows citizens aged 65 or older to ride for free on a local, fixed-route service whenever local public transportation is operating. During FY 2024-25, there were more than 25 million senior Free Transit Trips.

 

  • While every person ages differently, aging typically brings certain — sometimes subtle — physical, visual, and cognitive changes that could impair an older person’s ability to drive safely. Older drivers and their families should work together to identify potential issues that may affect driving, outline courses of action to assist the older driver, and plan for when it’s time to hang up the keys.

 

  • To help older drivers who may have difficulties driving, PennDOT partnered with PA Department of Human Services and transit agencies to develop an online tool called Find My Ride that allows older drivers to access free ride services online. The app allows transit agencies to process applications more efficiently, so users can access benefits more quickly. The app can be found at: findmyride.penndot.pa.gov, or at www.pa.gov/penndot by clicking on Traveling in PA, then Public Transit Options.

A list of approved mature driver courses available can be found online on PennDOT’s Mature Driver Improvement Courses page by clicking here.

 

Signs that can indicate it may be time to limit or stop driving altogether include:

  • Feeling uncomfortable, fearful, or nervous when driving.
  • Unexplained dents/scrapes on the car, fences, mailboxes, or garage doors.
  • Frequently getting lost and frequent “close calls” (i.e. almost crashing).
  • Slower response times, particularly to unexpected situations.
  • Difficulty paying attention to signs or staying in the lane of traffic.
  • Trouble judging gaps at intersections or highway entrance/exit ramps.

 

  • PennDOT offers older drivers and their loved ones a resource to help assess older drivers’ abilities and offer guidance on next steps if their medical condition is reported to PennDOT. The Seniors Driving Safely publication series can be downloaded for free from the PennDOT Driver and Vehicle Services website by clicking here. The series also includes a publication designed to guide family and friends of older drivers in what can sometimes be difficult conversations about deciding to stop driving, as well as information for healthcare providers on PennDOT’s medical reporting program.

 

  • Additionally, CarFit is an educational program created by the American Society on Aging and developed with AAA, AARP, and the American Occupational Therapy Association. CarFit is designed to help older drivers find out how well they currently “fit” their personal vehicle, to learn how they can improve their fit, and to promote conversations about driver safety and community mobility.

 

The following safe-driving habits, which should be routine at any age, are especially useful to older drivers:

  • Plan ahead: lengthy car trips should be made during daylight hours. Morning may be best because most people aren’t as tired as they are in the afternoon.
  • Don’t drive in rush-hour traffic if you can avoid it. Plan trips after 9:00 AM or before 5:00 PM. Know what roads near home are most congested and avoid them.
  • When driving long distances, especially in winter, call ahead for weather and road condition updates.
  • Look ahead. Good drivers get a jump on trouble by looking far down the road and making adjustments before encountering problems that may involve other vehicles, pedestrians, bicyclists or animals.
  • Maintain a safe speed. This depends on what the road is like, how well the driver can see, how much traffic there is and how fast traffic is moving.
  • Keep a safe distance from the vehicle ahead of you. The PA Driver’s Manual advises that you should always keep a 4-second gap between you and the vehicle in front of you.

 

LIHEAP Applications Now Open: Get Up to $1,000 to Pay Your Peoples Natural Gas Bill

(Photo Provided with Release Courtesy of People’s Natural Gas)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Peoples Natural Gas is encouraging their customers in Pennsylvania to apply now for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). LIHEAP is a federally funded program that provides cash grants ranging from $200 – $1,000 that are one-time to help eligible low-income households pay their heating bills. These Grants can be directly applied to a Peoples account of a customer. According to a release in Pittsburgh today from People’s Natural Gas, here is some more information about applying for the LIHEAP program, the website to apply as well as some crisis eligibility guidelines they provide:

  • To qualify for a LIHEAP grant, total gross household income must be at or below 150 percent of the federal poverty level. Customers do not have to be on public assistance or have an unpaid heating bill. LIHEAP is open to both renters and homeowners, and Pennsylvania households experiencing a heating crisis may be eligible for additional benefits.
2025 LIHEAP/Crisis Eligibility Guidelines
Family Size Month Year
1 $1,956 $23,475
2 $2,644 $31,725
3 $3,331 $39,975
4 $4,019 $48,225
5 $4,706 $56,475
6 $5,394 $64,725
7 $6,081 $72,975
8 $6,769 $81,225
For each person, add: $688 $8,250

 

  • LIHEAP is one of several programs Peoples offers customers to help pay bills or make energy-saving home improvements. If you or someone you know needs assistance, call 1-800-400-WARM (9276) or visit peoples-gas.com/help.