The 2025 Hookstown Fair is ready to begin in Hookstown

(File Photo of the Visit Beaver County Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Hookstown, PA) Today is the last day to buy admission tickets that are discounted for the 2025 Hookstown Fair, which will occur tomorrow through Saturday, August 23rd in Hookstown. Events include its yearly pulls of tractors and trucks and demolition derbies in the main arena that the fair is held in. Local performers will provide the entertainment and attractions this year include fishing tanks, petting zoos, laser tag, square dancing and strongman competitions. There will also be a fair princess and a fair queen crowned on the main stage of the Hookstown Fair tomorrow as well as fireworks occurring tomorrow at 9:40 p.m. Ticket prices and more information about the Hookstown Fair can be found at the link below:

Click here for the link: Tickets | HookstownFair

Governor Josh Shapiro Visits Penn State’s Annual Ag Progress Days, Highlighting His Administration’s Historic Investments in Ag Innovation to Support Pennsylvania’s Farmers, Growers, and Producers

(Photo Courtesy of Commonwealth Media Services)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(State College, PA) Governor Josh Shapiro spoke at the Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences’ annual Ag Progress Days luncheon in State College on Wednesday. Shapiro talked about the commitment of his administration that is ongoing to support farmers, growers, and producers in Pennsylvania and to talk about the continued investments by his administration in the agricultural industry of Pennsylvania. The sector of agriculture in Pennsylvania is a major driver of economics for the state, annually contributing $132 billion to the economy and assisting close to 600,000 jobs. Historic support for Pennsylvania agriculture was delivered through the first two budgets from Shapiro. The proposed budget from Shapiro for 2025-2026 is building on that progress regarding investments to spur the innovation of them, get more strength for the food supply chain in Pennsylvania and protect against animal disease. According to Shapiro in his speech at the Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences’ annual Ag Progress Days luncheon in State College on Wednesday, “Pennsylvania went from the bottom of the pack in the nation when it came to permiting times, and now we are leaders in the nation.” This is addressing permiting for farmers. Shapiro also noted that the government of Pennsylvania will both continue to back the famers in Pennsylvania and to back agriculture as central to both the strategy of growth and economy in Pennsylvania.

Last Hurrah of Summer: Top Labor Day Travel Trends

(File Photo of the AAA East Central Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) If you would like to travel for Labor Day of 2025, according to AAA booking data, Seattle, Orlando, and New York are the three most popular cities over Labor Day weekend*. Car rentals, flights and hotels are less expensive for the 2025 Labor Day Weekend compared to the 2024 Labor Day Weekend. In 2025, domestic roundtrip flights are cheaper by 6% compared to 2024, with a ticket price average of $720. AAA booking data also confirms that rates for hotels are lower by 11% and car rental costs are cheaper by 3% compared to last Labor Day. According to AAA car rental partner Hertz, the top destinations based on advanced bookings are Orlando, Denver, Boston, Los Angeles, and Atlanta, with the busiest day to pick up rental cars expected to be Friday, August 29th. Summer gas prices have matched the averages in 2021 as they have remained low. On Labor Day of 2024, the national average for a gallon of regular gas was $3.33. Hotel are cheaper by 2% and airfare is more expensive by 8% for the cost to travel internationally for the Labor Day weekend of 2025. The number one spot on the top international destinations from AAA is Vancouver, with most of the cities on that list being European cities.

*According to that same release from AAA East Central, AAA looked at booking data for Thursday, August 28th through Monday, September 1st, and compared those numbers with booking data for that same five-day period in 2024.

According to a release from AAA East Central, here are the top Labor Day Weekend destinations domesticcaly and internationally:

AAA’s Top Labor Day Weekend Destinations

DOMESTIC

INTERNATIONAL

SEATTLE, WA

VANCOUVER, CANADA

ORLANDO, FL

ROME, ITALY

NEW YORK, NY

DUBLIN, IRELAND

BOSTON, MA

LONDON, ENGLAND

ANCHORAGE, AK

PARIS, FRANCE

CHICAGO, IL

AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS

ATLANTA, GA

BARCELONA, SPAIN

DENVER, CO

ATHENS, GREECE

MIAMI, FL

EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND

LAS VEGAS, NV

LISBON, PORTUGAL

Best and Worst Times to Travel by Car over Labor Day Weekend

According to INRIX, a provider of transportation data and insights, the best times to drive over Labor Day weekend are before lunchtime, and for those hitting the road on Saturday, a better time is earlier. As the day progresses, traffic congestion worsens. Early evening and in the afternoon typically the worst times to drive over the holiday weekend. An extra busy time is expected to be Saturday because of a good amount of drivers going out of town or taking trips during the day.

Best and Worst Times to Travel by Car

Date

Best Travel Time

Worst Travel Time

Thursday, Aug 28

Before 1:00 PM

1:00 PM – 8:00 PM

Friday, Aug 29

Before 12:00 PM

12:00 PM – 8:00 PM

Saturday, Aug 30

6:00 AM – 10:00 AM

10:00 AM – 6:00 PM

Sunday, Aug 31

Before 11:00 AM

12:00 PM – 5:00 PM

Monday, Sep 1

Before 12:00 PM

1:00 PM – 4:00 PM

Allegheny Health Network Wexford Hospital Earns 2nd Consecutive 5-Star Rating for Quality, Safety and Patient Experience from the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

(File Photo of the Allegheny Health Network Logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Wexford, PA) According to a release from Allegheny Health Network today, Allegheny Health Network’s Wexford Hospital has once again earned a 5-star rating from the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or CMS, for short. The only hospital in Western Pennsylvania to get a 5-star rating from CMS is AHN Wexford Hospital. The 5-star rating from CMS to AHN Wexford Hospital gives recognition to the commitment of AHN Wexford Hospital to its dedication and excellence to provide patient-centered, effective and safe care at the level that is the highest for care that it can be. 291 hospitals around the United States earned this 5-star distinction from CMS, which is about a 1 in 10 rate. CMS issued their star rankings on July 31st, 2025 and they are revised every year. 91 less hospitals in the United States earned this 5-star ranking in 2025 then the ones that did so in 2024.

Tom Young Talks About the Efficiency of Money Tuesday Moring On Beaver County Radio

(Brighton Twp., Pa.) On Tuesday, August 19, 2025, Tom Young from 1st Consultants, Inc. in Beaver will join Scott Tady on “The Beaver County Radio Morning Show” at 9:05 AM.

This month Tom will discuss “The Efficiency of Money  and the lies the financial world is telling you”.

Change your mindset and you change the future.

Tune in on Tuesday, August 19, 2025. The special multi media presentation begins at 9:10 A.M. on Beaver County Radio.

You can participate in the show by calling 724-843-1888 or 724-774-1888. You can also ask your questions on Facebook Live.

Click the picture below on Tuesday’s showtime of 9:10 A.M. to be directed to the WBVP and WMBA Facebook page where the special multi media simulcast will be streamed on Facebook Live.

Lane restrictions on Penn Avenue in the city of Pittsburgh will occur, weather permitting

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

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) PennDOT District 11 announced that beginning tomorrow, weather permitting, lane restrictions on Penn Avenue (Route 380/400) in the City of Pittsburgh will occur. From 7 A.M. to 3 P.M. tomorrow to allow for crane and material delivery, lane restrictions will occur on Penn Avenue in both directions between Fifth Avenue and Bakery Square Boulevard.

Bridge inspection activities on I-376 Parkway West in Carnegie and Rosslyn Farms Boroughs, weather permitting

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

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Allegheny County, PA) PennDOT District 11 announced that Saturday and Sunday morning, August 16th and August 17th, weather permitting, bridge inspection activities on I-376 (Parkway West) in Carnegie and Rosslyn Farms boroughs, Allegheny County, will occur. From 6 A.M. to 12 noon on Saturday on Eastbound I-376 and from 6 A.M. to 12 noon on Sunday on Westbound I-376, inspection activities, requiring a single-lane restriction on I-376 between the Carnegie (Exit 65) and Rosslyn Farms (Exit 64B) interchanges will occur. Inspection work will be conducted by crews from Mackin Engineering.

Air quality concerns linger in the wake of steel plant explosion in Pennsylvania

(File Photo: Source for Photo: The Clairton Coke Works, a U.S. Steel coking plant, is seen Monday, Aug 11, 2025, in Clairton, Penn. (AP Photo/Gene Puskar)

(AP) The Pennsylvania county where an explosion at a U.S. Steel plant south of Pittsburgh killed two people and injured more than 10 others announced Thursday that it is stepping up air quality monitoring in the area of the sprawling facility that has a troubled environmental record.

The Allegheny County Health Department announced that mobile air units provided by the state and Carnegie Mellon University will be stationed in the Mon Valley where the plant is Thursday and Friday. The county said these measures are part of its ongoing investigation into Monday’s explosion at Clairton Coke Works.

The county said the measures go “well beyond the normal and rigorous regulatory air quality monitoring” and will assess parts of the valley for different types of pollutants such as volatile organic compounds, PM2.5 pollutants and sulfur dioxide.

After Monday’s blast, the county health department initially told residents within 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) of the plant to remain indoors and close all windows and doors. The department lifted the advisory after its monitors didn’t detect levels of soot or sulfur dioxide above federal standards.

Dr. Deborah Gentile, the medical director of Community Partners in Asthma Care, called the mobile units an “excellent move for the county” because the general public “has no idea what is going on at the facility.”

“The current regulatory monitors are in fixed locations, and many residents live in closer proximity to the plant than these stationary monitors,” she said. “Having monitors in additional locations will help identify if there are any exceedances of the criteria pollutants. So this is good news.”

The Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office also confirmed Thursday that the second person who died in the blast was Steven Menefee, 52, of Clairton. Earlier, the county medical examiner’s office identified one of the dead as Timothy Quinn, 39.

U.S. Steel CEO David Burritt said Tuesday the company is working closely with local, state and federal authorities. He would not speculate about the cause of the explosion.

The massive plant along the Monongahela River in Clairton converts coal to coke, a key component in the steelmaking process. The facility is considered the largest coking operation in North America and is one of four major U.S. Steel plants in Pennsylvania.

To make coke, coal is baked in special ovens for hours at high temperatures to remove impurities that could otherwise weaken steel. The process creates what is known as coke gas — a lethal mix of methane, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide.

The plant has a long history of environmental problems, especially fouling the air in communities nearby the sprawling plant.

In 2018, a Christmas Eve fire damaged pollution-control equipment and led to repeated releases of sulfur dioxide, according to a subsequent lawsuit. The fire prompted Allegheny County to warn residents to limit outdoor activities. Residents said it was hard to breathe for weeks afterward and that the air felt acidic and smelled like rotten eggs. U.S. Steel settled a lawsuit last year with an agreement to spend $19.5 million in equipment upgrades and $5 million on local clean air efforts and programs.

In 2019, U.S. Steel agreed to settle a lawsuit regarding air pollution from Clairton for $8.5 million.

The concerns about air quality also come as the federal Environmental Protection Agency moves to postpone new hazardous air pollution standards for coke plants, like Clairton.

Matthew Mehalik, executive director of the Breathe Project, a public health advocacy group in Pittsburgh, said the regulations were deemed to be almost insignificant to operational costs and would have helped protect the public with air quality monitoring.

The regulation would have required — like is already required at refineries all over the United States — fence-line monitoring for hazardous air pollutants at the Clairton plant, Mehalik said.

That information would have been “incredibly useful” when the explosion happened on Monday, Mehalik said.

Gentile, who studied asthma levels after the 2018 fire and found twice as many patients sought medical treatment, said the fenceline data, a measure of air pollution at the property line of a manufacturing site, would have helped with the latest blast.

“If fenceline monitoring were in place at the time of the event and now in the aftermath, it would be providing us with valuable information on emissions during these times, which in turn would help us advise the community on their risk of adverse health effects,” she said.

The Latest: Trump en route to high-stakes meeting with Putin in Alaska

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G-20 Summit on July 7, 2017, in Hamburg, Germany. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

(AP) President Donald Trump ‘s face-to-face high-stakes summit with President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday could determine the fate of European security as well as the trajectory of the war in Ukraine. The exclusion of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy already deals a heavy blow to the West’s policy of “nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine.”

Washington, D.C.’s police department now potentially in open conflict with federal forces over the terms of Trump’s takeover of security in the nation’s capital, with the DEA administrator now named “emergency police chief,” a declaration that city leaders say has no basis in law. The attorney general’s declaration came after a dispute over how much help police would provide in arresting immigrants.

The Latest:

DC takeover centers on how much help DC police should give feds in arresting immigrants

Attorney General Pam Bondi’s directive putting the DEA administrator in charge of D.C. police came after Police Chief Pam Smith updated guidance on arresting immigrants.

Smith had told Metropolitan Police Department officers to share information with immigration agencies regarding people not in custody, such as someone involved in a traffic stop or checkpoint. But she said other MPD policies remain in effect, limiting inquiries into immigration status and preventing arrests based solely on federal immigration warrants.

The Justice Department said Bondi disagreed with the police chief’s directive because it allowed for continued enforcement of “sanctuary policies.” Trump is testing the limits of his legal authorities, relying on obscure statutes and a supposed state of emergency to speed the mass deportation of people in the U.S. illegally.

▶ Read more on developments related to the federal takeover of the capital’s police force

New lawsuit challenges Trump’s federal takeover of DC police as crackdown intensifies

The nation’s capital challenged Trump’s takeover of its police department in court on Friday after his administration named the DEA administrator as the new “emergency police chief.”

District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb accused Trump of going far beyond his legal authority and asked a judge to keep control of the police department in district hands.

“The administration’s unlawful actions are an affront to the dignity and autonomy of the 700,000 Americans who call D.C. home. This is the gravest threat to Home Rule that the District has ever faced, and we are fighting to stop it,” Schwalb said.

‘Possibility’ of US security guarantees for Ukraine, ‘but not in the form of NATO’

Trump says there’s “a possibility” of the United States offering Ukraine security guarantees alongside European powers, “but not in the form of NATO.”

Trump spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One on his way to the summit with Putin in Alaska.

He said it will be up to the Ukrainians to decide whether to concede land to Putin as part of a peace deal, but added: “I think they’ll make the proper decision.”

“I’m not here to negotiate for Ukraine,” Trump said. “I’m here to get them at a table.”

Macron and Zelenskyy huddled ahead of the Alaska summit

The office of President Emmanuel Macron says the French leader and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke Thursday and again Friday before the Trump-Putin summit. The two have agreed to meet each other after the U.S.-Russia summit, when “it will be most useful and effective.”

The brief readout of the exchanges didn’t detail any specifics of what Macron and Zelenskyy discussed.

Several Cabinet members will accompany Trump on Air Force One

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are among the Trump administration officials joining the president for his flight to Alaska.

Trump will also be accompanied on Air Force One by CIA Director John Ratcliffe and top White House aides, including Chief of Staff Susie Wiles.

Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Monica Crowley, a former Fox News commentator serving as Trump’s chief of protocol, also are making the trip.

The Washington police department seeks to assure its citizens

With the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police Department potentially in open conflict with the federal government over the terms of Trump’s departmental takeover, the police department is looking to address public concerns.

“What’s most important for our community to know is that MPD remains committed to delivering high-quality police service and ensuring the safety of everyone in our city,” a Friday morning statement from an MPD spokesperson.

The city appears poised to fight back against the federal takeover, particularly Thursday’s attempt by Attorney General Pam Bondi to install DEA chief Terry Cole as “emergency police commissioner.”

D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb issued a declaration that Bondi’s order was “unlawful” and the MPD was under no obligation to comply.

Trump: ‘HIGH STAKES!!!’

Trump made his first public comments on the day as he prepares to meet with Putin.

“HIGH STAKES!!!” he posted on Truth Social as his motorcade idled outside the White House shortly after sunrise in Washington.

He left the White House for Joint Base Andrews, the home base for Air Force One, at 7:32 a.m. ET.

It’s a cool and rainy day in Anchorage

An early morning rain storm hit Anchorage, Alaska, just before 3 a.m. on Friday, and the streets leading to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson were sopping wet. The temperature was hovering right about 53° F early Friday morning.

Media from all over the world have descended on Anchorage for the top-level summit.

There was not much activity outside the base’s main gate early Friday morning except for media setting up for the day or sending live images back to the networks.

Eyeing Texas, California will hold vote on partisan redistricting

Gov. Gavin Newsom called for a Nov. 4 special election as the state moves toward redrawing congressional maps in an attempt to pick up five more Democratic seats in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2026.

The move is in direct response to a Republican-led effort in Texas pushed by Trump, as his party seeks to maintain its slim House majority after the midterm elections.

Judge rules against Trump’s efforts to end DEI programs

U.S. District Judge Stephanie Gallagher in Maryland ruled that the Education Department violated the law when it threatened to cut federal funding from educational institutions that continued with diversity initiatives.

The case centers on two Education Department memos ordering schools and universities to end all “race-based decision-making” or face penalties up to a total loss of federal funding.

Joint Agriculture Committee Hearing Sheds Light on State of Pennsylvania Livestock Industry, Says Vogel, Pashinski

(File Photo of Senator Elder Vogel, Jr.)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Harrisburg, PA) Senator Elder Vogel, Jr. (R-47) and Representative Eddie Day Pashisnki (D-121) held a joint hearing on Wednesday to talk about the state of livestock in Pennsylvania at the Red Barn Annex in Pennsylvania Furnace. U.S. Representative Glenn Thompson and leaders representing famers of beef, dairy, poultry, sheep and swine in Pennsylvania were there to speak about this topic. According to a release from Vogel’s office, the representatives spoke of the continued growth and success they have been seeing within their individual industries across the board.