Gas Prices in Beaver County Cool Off Some This Week, AAA Says

Gas prices in Beaver County have cooled off some this week. Beaver County Radio News intern Alex D’Itri has more. Click on ‘play’ to hear Alex’s report…

Feds’ Rules Threaten Pennsylvanians’ Food Stamps, State Says

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration is warning that hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvanians stand to lose food stamps or see reduced benefits under changes being advanced by the Trump administration. Wolf’s Human Services Secretary Teresa Miller said 90,000 Pennsylvanians could lose eligibility in April when a new rule limits states from exempting work-eligible adults from having to maintain steady employment. Miller said a rule proposed in October to set a national standard utility allowance could reduce benefits for 775,000 households. Miller also said another rule proposed in July to stop allowing states to exceed federal income eligibility thresholds could strip another 200,000 people of eligibility. Roughly 1.7 million Pennsylvanians receive food stamps.

Owner of Coraopolis Used Car Dealership Accused of Knowingly Selling Car with Fake Inspection Stickers

The owner of a used car dealership is accused of selling a car that wasn’t what it appeared to be. Peter Lyle Jr., who owns A&L Auto Sales in Coraopolis, is being charged with several crimes, including business fraud. In October, a 19-year-old Finleyville woman went to state police with suspicions that her newly purchased car had not been inspected – as Lyle had claimed. State police say Lyle sold her the car off Craig’s List and lied about its road worthiness. The state inspection sticker was a fake, and the car’s emission sticker was also phony. Lyle’s father said that state police got it wrong – his son runs a legal and law-abiding used car business. He also said that when the buyer complained about her car, Lyle refunded her money and cost of repairs in full. According to police documents, Lyle knowingly sold a car that had not been inspected and could have put the driver in danger. The investigation continues into if Lyle sold other vehicle that had faked safety inspections.

Fire Damages Carnegie Home Once Owned by Baseball Great Honus Wagner

CARNEGIE, Pa. (AP) — No one was injured when a fire broke out in the Pennsylvania home once owned by baseball Hall of Famer Honus Wagner. Officials believe Tuesday’s fire might have started in a clothes dryer in the basement of the home on Beechwood Avenue in Carnegie. The fire then spread through the walls and climbed up the dwelling. It took about five hours for firefighters to extinguish the flames. The house was built for the Pittsburgh shortstop in 1917. He lived there until he died in 1955.

No Tax Increase for Ambridge

Some good news this morning for taxpayers in Ambridge. Beaver County Radio News Correspondent Sandy Giordano reports. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report…

Florida GOP Rep. Yoho Announces Retirement from Congress

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Republican Rep. Ted Yoho of Florida has announced he won’t seek reelection, saying he never meant to spend more than eight years in Congress. Democrats are seizing on the news as a sign of weakening morale among the GOP.  Yoho is a Tea Partier who fiercely supports President Donald Trump. He defeated a longtime Republican incumbent in 2012 to represent Gainesville and a swath of northern Florida in Washington. He even tried for Speaker of the U.S. House at a time of disenchantment with former House Speaker John Boehner. Now he joins at least 27 House Republicans who have announced their departures.

Barr: FBI’s Russia Investigation Based on ‘Bogus Narrative’

WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General William Barr is leveling blistering criticism at how the Russia investigation was conducted. He says it was based on a “bogus narrative” that the Trump campaign might have conspired with Russia during the 2016  election. Barr spoke to NBC News after the release of a Justice Department inspector general report that found problems with the FBI’s investigation into ties between the Trump campaign and Russia, but also concluded there was a proper basis for opening the probe. Barr said he disagreed with the inspector general that the FBI had enough information to open the probe and particularly to use surveillance on a former Trump campaign aide.

House Votes, Senate Trial: What’s Next in Impeachment

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Judiciary Committee is expected to debate and vote on the two articles of impeachment later this week. The articles, one charging President Donald Trump with abuse of power and the other charging him with obstruction of Congress, would be considered separately. The committee’s vote would send the impeachment articles to the House floor for a vote by Christmas. Next would come a Senate trial, likely in 2020. Senators would act as jurors and select House members to act as prosecutors, or impeachment managers. If the Senate approves an article of impeachment with a two-thirds vote of “guilty,” the president is convicted and removed from office. If articles are rejected, the president is acquitted.