Aliquippa man arrested after driving under the influence in Monaca

(File Photo of Police Lights)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Monaca, PA) A man from Aliquippa was arrested after driving under the influence in Monaca Borough on Sunday. Thirty-seven-year-old Andrew Hrynewich was stopped by police on 600 Pennsylvania Avenue in a parking lot. Hrynewich had the license plate hidden on his car because the trunk of his car was open and he did not use a right turn signal when turning to 6th Street from Pennsylvania Avenue. Hrynewich was released because of a rule after his DUI arrest. 

Enon Valley woman charged after driving impaired in Darlington Township

(File Photo of a Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Badge)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Darlington Township, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that a woman from Enon Valley was charged for driving under the influence after causing a single-vehicle crash in Darlington Township. On May 10th, 2025, seventy-five-year-old Diane Sobona was driving her truck on 267 Taggert Road and hit a concrete barrier. Sobona was discovered as an impaired driver, and she was taken to Heritage Valley Beaver even though she was not injured. Her truck had damage that was minor. 

Man from Beaver apprehended after assualting his wife in Bridgewater Borough

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Bridgewater Borough, PA) A man from Beaver was apprehended by troopers from the Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver after he assaulted his wife in Bridgewater Borough on Friday. Thirty-four-year-old Derek Hays committed an act of domestic violence against his wife, twenty-six-year-old Lilia Hays at a residence on 1311 Market Street. Lilia went towards a window and jumped out of it after the incident occurred. Public drunkenness was the reason that Derek is now in the Beaver County Jail. According to police, a felony warrant that was temporary was entered for Derek and charges were filed against him.

Beaver Falls woman charged for causing a single-vehicle crash on I-376 East

(File Photo of Police Lights)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Brighton Township, PA) Pennsylvania State Police in Beaver report that a woman from Beaver Falls was charged after causing a single-vehicle crash on I-376 East on Saturday. Thirty-one-year-old Sarah Fabiani was at the Brighton Exit, and she looked at her phone, which caused her to not have control of her car. Fabiani hit a guide rail, but she was not injured. According to police, Fabiani broke a vehicle code and was cited for the violation.

McKeesport man charged for allegedly giving alcohol to the man that fell onto PNC Park from the stands on April 30th, 2025

(File Photo: Source for Photo: A fan is carted off the field at PNC Park after falling out of the stands during the seventh inning of a baseball game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago Cubs in Pittsburgh, Wednesday, April 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A twenty-one-year-old man from McKeesport got charges after allegedly giving alcohol to the twenty-year-old man who fell onto PNC Park from the stands on April 30th, 2025. According to the Pennsylvania State Police Liquor Control Enforcement, Ethan Kirkwood got two counts for furnishing alcohol to a minor. Court documents confirm that Kirkwood was arrested on Tuesday with these charges and on June 23rd, he will undergo a preliminary hearing. 

Oscar Mayer’s Fleet of Wienermobiles Go Head-to-Head in Inaugural “Wienie 500”

(Photo Provided by AP with Release. Oscar Mayer unveils the “Wienie 500,” a first-ever Wienermobile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, streaming live May 23 ahead of the Indy 500.)

 

CHICAGO & PITTSBURGH–(BUSINESS WIRE)–May 20, 2025–

 

Oscar Mayer announces the “Wienie 500” – a first-of-its-kind spectacle where the fleet of Wienermobiles will haul buns to the legendary Indianapolis Motor Speedway for a race unlike any other. Ahead of this year’s Indianapolis 500, which draws more than 330,000 fans who consume nearly 30,000 hot dogs, Oscar Mayer’s beloved Hotdoggers will make their racing debut on the very same track as the pros. The race will be streamed live on Friday, May 23 at 2pm ET on the FOX Sports app and across @INDYCARonFOX social accounts, and fans can catch highlights from the race during Sunday’s Indy 500 pre-race show on FOX.

The Wienie 500 will also mark the first ‘meat-up’ of all six Wienermobiles in over a decade and the first competitive race for the fleet, each sporting an all-new look. Each Wienermobile will represent a different regional dog, including the Chi Dog (Midwest), New York Dog (East), Slaw Dog (Southeast), Sonoran Dog (Southwest) Chili Dog (South) and Seattle Dog (Northwest). From custom Hotdogger racing suits, to a trophy presentation in the ‘Wiener’s Circle’, complete with a condiment spray and hot dog for the wiener’s enjoyment, every moment of the race is designed to spark smiles, serving up a delightful racing event only Oscar Mayer can.

“The Indy 500 marks the unofficial kickoff of summer and the start of hot dog season,” said Kelsey Rice, Brand Communications Director at Oscar Mayer. “As a brand known for sparking smiles in disarmingly delightful ways, it’s only fitting that we bring a race of epic proportions to the Speedway and celebrate a timeless tradition: delicious meats and a little friendly competition to kick off a summer of wieners.”

As part of the fun, Oscar Mayer is inviting fans across the nation to get in on the action. In collaboration with DraftKings, fans can predict the outcome of the unforgettable race by answering a series of race-related questions. Beginning today, fans can head to Draftkings.com/wienie500 to enter the free-to-play pool, and those who rack up the most points will win a share of the total cash prize of $10,000.

The inaugural Wienie 500 marks the beginning of a summer of celebrating the American staple, proving that even the most unexpected places – like a professional racetrack – is the perfect setting for an Oscar Mayer wiener. The Wienie 500 is part of a partnership between Oscar Mayer and IMS that names Oscar Mayer the ‘Official Hot Dog’ of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Indianapolis 500. The first-of-its-kind race is also supported by an advertising campaign rolling out across the country, along with more surprises to come this summer.

To learn more about the Oscar Mayer Wienie 500 and see the ultimate wiener crowned, visit OscarMayer.com and follow @OscarMayer on Instagram and TikTok.

Results for the 2025 primary elections in Beaver County and the contested primary races in Pennsylvania

(File Photo of Pins that say “Vote”)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver County, PA) The unofficial results for the 2025 Beaver County primary elections have been released. According to the Beaver County Elections office, just over 18% of Beaver County voters went to the polls. Tom Hamilton defeated Lincoln Kretchmar in the Beaver Borough Mayor primary election. Bob Knox defeated Walter Pat Duffy in the East Rochester mayor primary election. According to the Beaver County elections office, here are the other results:

Pennsylvania’s contested primary races

  • Judge of the Superior Court (10 Years) – Republican
    • Maria Battista (Clarion County) – 6,034
    • Ann Marie Wheatcraft (Chester County) – 2,235
  • Judge of the Commonwealth Court (10 Years) – Republican
    • Matt Wolford (Erie County) – 6,071
    • Josh Prince (Berks County) – 2,185

Beaver County’s contested primary races

  • Magisterial District Judge 36-2-01 (Conway, Economy, Freedom, New Sewickley, Rochester, East Rochester) – Cross-filed (Pick one)
    • John Farmer – 576
    • Ronald Leindecker – 828
    • Adam Johnston – 407

Local offices’ contested primary races

  • Ambridge Borough Council (Four Years) – Democratic (Pick four)
    • Scott Prentice – 316
    • Russell G Basalyga – 260
    • Mary Jane Jones Gilliam – 289
    • Nadine Marie Palichat – 217
    • Tony Cafarelli – 272
  • Beaver Borough Mayor (Four Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Thomas Todd Hamilton – 393
    • Lincoln Kretchmar – 247
  • Beaver Borough Council (First Ward – Four Years) – Republican (Pick two)
    • Justin Ankrom – 91
    • Margaret Mckean – 51
    • Jarrod Thomas – 96
    • Ron Stidmon – 45
  • Beaver Borough Council (Second Ward – Four Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Ellen Kretchmar – 88
    • Phil Oshaughnessy – 132
  • Beaver Borough Council (Third Ward – Four Years) – Republican (Pick two)
    • Bill Egley – 103
    • Roberta Good – 152
    • Rebecca Beem – 95
    • Whitney A Learn Conjeski – 128
  • Bridgewater Borough Council (Four Years) – Republican (Pick two)
    • Anthony Ellis – 48
    • Gage Gimbus – 26
    • Charles Bates – 39
  • Darlington Borough Council (Two Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Zander Mckeel – 8
    • Glenda L Tetemanza – 9
  • East Rochester Mayor (Four Years) – Democratic (Pick one)
    • Bob Knox – 37
    • Walter Pat Duffy – 24
  • Economy Borough Tax Collector (Four Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Amy L Miller – 511
    • Nicole Thompson – 170
  • Franklin Township Supervisor (Six Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Steve Bailey – 146
    • Rod Richard – 293
  • Midland Borough Council (Four Years) – Democratic (Pick four)
    • Patsy Esposito – 166
    • Joseph Donald Checca – 110
    • Connie Ditri Drozdjibob – 157
    • Gregory Gutierrez – 144
    • Ivee Jo Roach – 124
  • Monaca Borough Tax Collector (Four Years) – Democratic (Pick one)
    • Angel Zampogna – 169
    • Barbara J Brummitt – 259
  • New Sewickley Township Supervisor (Six Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Artie Evans III – 179
    • Jonathan Stragand – 177
    • Daniel R Plunkett – 322
    • Barbara Blake – 92
  • Shippingport Borough Tax Collector (Four Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Kayla Carpenter – 11
    • John G. Depaolis – 4
  • South Beaver Township Supervisor (Six Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Jake Rosenberger – 101
    • Caine A Laderer – 90

Local school boards’ contested primary races

Note: Many candidates for school boards are cross-filed in primary races.

  • Aliquippa School District – Democratic (Pick Four)
    • Sandra Gill – 467
    • Tina Price Genes – 434
    • Brian M Sims Sr. – 427
    • Nakita L Strickland – 258
    • Yvonne Jackson – 322
    • Ezra G Lowe Jr. – 277
    • Torri Durham Flannigan – 297
  • Ambridge Area School District – Democratic (Pick Four)
    • Kelly Romasco – 1,097
    • Joshua Gill – 866
    • Kaylin Majeran – 533
    • Amy Fitsko – 1,065
    • Michael Jackson – 494
    • Thomas Samarco – 348
    • Mark D Reichard – 335
    • Kathleen A Curtis – 724
    • Jesse Hernandez – 726
    • Thomas G Short III – 379
  • Ambridge Area School District – Republican (Pick Four)
    • Mark D Reichard – 346
    • Joshua Gill – 489
    • Amy Fitsko – 479
    • Jesse Hernandez – 382
    • Kathleen A Curtis – 393
    • Thomas G Short III – 341
    • Thomas Samarco – 336
    • Kelly Romasco – 493
    • Michael Jackson – 175
    • Kaylin Majeran – 213
  • Beaver Area School District – Democratic (Pick Four)
    • Michael Litchfield – 451
    • Donald E Phillips – 368
    • Peter Grundberg – 285
    • Aaron Bovalino – 757
    • Celina Petronzi Hendershot – 596
    • Andrea Walker – 731
    • Steven Neeley Jr – 684
    • Karin M Pilarski – 914
  • Beaver Area School District – Republican (Pick Four)
    • Donald E Phillips – 422
    • Andrea Walker – 504
    • Aaron Bovalino – 797
    • Michael Litchfield – 769
    • Peter Grundberg – 650
    • Steven Neeley Jr – 990
    • Karin M Pilarski – 611
    • Celina Petronzi Hendershot – 473
  • Blackhawk School District (Region Two – Four Years) – Democratic (Pick Two)
    • Frank Makoczy – 116
    • Thomas A Wire – 188
    • Chad McMillen – 271
  • Blackhawk School District (Region Two – Four Years) – Republican (Pick Two)
    • Frank Makoczy – 106
    • Thomas A Wire – 181
    • Chad McMillen – 250
  • Ellwood City Area School District (Four Years) – Democratic (Pick Four)
    • Kathy C Tillia – 22
    • Robyn Nicklas – 16
    • Nick J Mancini – 28
    • Norm Boots – 14
    • Victoria Kincaid – 13
    • Brady Guy – 8
    • Claire Fauzey – 26
  • Ellwood City Area School District (Four Years) – Republican (Pick Four)
    • Kathy C Tillia – 10
    • Robyn Nicklas – 5
    • Nick J Mancini – 23
    • Norm Boots – 12
    • Victoria Kincaid – 12
    • Brady Guy – 12
    • Claire Fauzey – 10
  • Ellwood City Area School District (Two Years) – Democratic (Pick one)
    • Robyn Nicklas – 5
    • Brady Guy – 2
    • Victoria Kincaid – 6
    • Kathy Galbreath – 7
    • Norm Boots – 13
    • Kathy C Tillia – 10
  • Ellwood City Area School District (Two Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Robyn Nicklas – 4
    • Brady Guy – 4
    • Victoria Kincaid – 5
    • Kathy Galbreath – 4
    • Norm Boots – 8
    • Kathy C Tillia – 3
  • Freedom Area School District – Democratic (Pick Four)
    • Christian A Brenckle – 572
    • Michelle Micija -548
    • Wes Sterrett – 455
    • Laura B Stofan – 469
    • Monica Grunnagle – 564
  • Freedom Area School District – Republican (Pick Four)
    • Christian A Brenckle – 707
    • Michelle Micija – 486
    • Wes Sterrett – 599
    • Laura B Stofan – 481
    • Monica Grunnagle – 587
  • Hopewell Area School District (Region Three – Four Years) – Democratic (Pick one)
    • Tory Aquino Sims – 142
    • David Piroli – 263
  • New Brighton Area School District (Four Years) – Democratic (Pick Four)
    • Bernadette Saiko Mattica – 346
    • Christeen Deane Ceratti – 390
    • TJ Lofaso – 171
    • Steven Powell – 311
    • Matthew Ledonne – 374
    • Katherine Crisci – 337
  • New Brighton Area School District (Four Years) – Republican (Pick Four)
    • Bernadette Saiko Mattica – 200
    • Christeen Deane Ceratti – 235
    • TJ Lofaso – 140
    • Steven Powell – 229
    • Matthew Ledonne – 227
    • Katherine Crisci – 221
  • New Brighton Area School District (Two Years) – Democratic (Pick one)
    • Matthew Ledonne – 137
    • Katherine Crisci – 64
    • Steven Powell – 90
    • Bernadette Saiko Mattica – 111
    • Christeen Deane Ceratti – 119
  • New Brighton Area School District (Two Years) – Republican (Pick one)
    • Matthew Ledonne – 93
    • Katherine Crisci – 35
    • Steven Powell – 82
    • Bernadette Saiko Mattica – 61
    • Christeen Deane Ceratti – 53
  • South Side Area School District – Republican (Pick Four)
    • Craig Stewart – 316
    • Jonathan Glenn – 261
    • Michael W Rounds – 233
    • Cynthia Cusato – 337
    • Jesse Streeter – 264
  • Western Beaver County School District – Democratic (Pick Four)
    • Shawn Roman – 107
    • Daniel Trent – 149
    • Samantha Trimble – 203
    • Ronald J Bender – 117
    • Michael Smith – 81
    • Erin Majors – 160
    • Peter Kadilak – 163
  • Western Beaver County School District – Republican (Pick Four)
    • Shawn Roman – 133
    • Daniel Trent – 238
    • Samantha Trimble – 247
    • Ronald J Bender – 205
    • Michael Smith – 91
    • Erin Majors – 192
    • Peter Kadilak – 165

Central Valley School District teachers and administrators giving back to the Beaver County community this week

(File Photo of the Central Valley School District logo)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Center Township, PA) On Wednesday, May 21st and Thursday, May 22nd, the teachers and administrators of Central Valley School District are helping their community here in Beaver County. Some of the activities they are doing are picking up trash around their school, putting flags on a local cemetery and volunteering at Family Matters Food Pantry in Monaca for both collecting and distributing food. Nicolina’s Wishes and Club Hope will receive encouragement messages and cards from them those days and community children at Communicycle will receive built bikes from them on those days. They will also be assisting at a local YMCA with their activities, going to Brady’s Run to plant saplings and performing yard work outdoors at the Women’s Center of Beaver County and at the Monaca Library.

At least eighteen killed as severe weather lashes Kentucky, and nine more die elsewhere

(File Photo of Police Lights)

LONDON, Ky. (AP) — Storms that swept across part of the Midwest and South killed least 27 people including 18 in Kentucky, where another 10 were hospitalized in critical condition, authorities said.

A devastating tornado in Kentucky damaged homes, tossed vehicles and left many people homeless. Seventeen of the deaths were in Laurel County, located in the state’s southeast, and one was in Pulaski County: Fire Department Maj. Roger Leslie Leatherman, a 39-year veteran who was fatally injured while responding to the deadly weather.

Parts of two dozen state roads were closed, and some could take days to reopen, according to Gov. Andy Beshear, who announced the toll of dead and critically injured on Saturday. He also said the death toll could still rise.

“We need the whole world right now to be really good neighbors to this region,” the governor said.

State Emergency Management Director Eric Gibson said hundreds of homes were damaged,

Kayla Patterson, her husband and their five children huddled in a tub in their basement in London, the county seat, as the tornado raged around them.

“You could literally hear just things ripping in the distance, glass shattering everywhere, just roaring like a freight train,” she recalled Saturday. “It was terrible.”

The family eventually emerged to the sounds of sirens and panicked neighbors. While the family’s own home was spared, others right behind it were demolished, Patterson said.

Rescuers searched for survivors all night and into the morning, the sheriff’s office said. An emergency shelter was set up at a high school and donations of food and other necessities were arriving.

Resident Chris Cromer said he got the first of two alerts on his phone around 11:30 p.m., about a half-hour before the tornado struck. He and his wife grabbed their dog, jumped in their car and sought shelter in the crawlspace at a relative’s nearby home because their own crawlspace is small.

“We could hear and feel the vibration of the tornado coming through,” said Cromer, 46. A piece of his roof was ripped off, and windows were broken, but homes around his were destroyed.

“It’s one of those things that you see on the news in other areas, and you feel bad for people — then, when it happens, it’s just surreal,” he said. “It makes you be thankful to be alive, really.”

The storm was the latest severe weather to cause deaths and widespread damage in Kentucky. Two months ago at least 24 people died in a round of storms that swelled creeks and submerged roads.

Missouri pounded by storms, with deaths confirmed in St. Louis

About 1,200 tornadoes strike the U.S. annually, and they have been reported in all 50 states over the years. Researchers found in 2018 that deadly tornadoes were happening less frequently in the traditional “Tornado Alley” of Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas and more frequently in parts of the more densely populated and tree-filled mid-South area.

The latest Kentucky storms were part of a weather system Friday that killed seven in Missouri and two in northern Virginia, authorities said. The system also spawned tornadoes in Wisconsin, brought punishing heat to Texas and temporarily enveloped parts of Illinois — including Chicago — in a pall of dust on an otherwise sunny day.

In St. Louis, Mayor Cara Spencer said five people died, 38 were injured and more than 5,000 homes were affected.

“The devastation is truly heartbreaking,” she said at a news conference Saturday. An overnight curfew was to continue in the most damaged neighborhoods.

Weather service radar indicated a likely tornado touched down between 2:30 p.m. and 2:50 p.m. in Clayton, Missouri, in the area of Forest Park, which is home to the St. Louis Zoo and formerly hosted both the 1904 World’s Fair and the Olympic Games in 1904.

Three people needed aid after part of the Centennial Christian Church crumbled, according to St. Louis Fire Battalion Chief William Pollihan.

Stacy Clark said his mother-in-law, Patricia Penelton, died in the church. He described her as a very active church volunteer who had many roles, including being part of the choir.

At the zoo, falling trees severely damaged the roof of a butterfly facility. Staffers quickly corralled most of the butterflies, the zoo said on social media, and a conservatory in suburban Chesterfield was caring for the displaced creatures.

A tornado struck in Scott County, about 130 miles (209 kilometers) south of St. Louis, killing two people, injuring several others and destroying multiple homes, Sheriff Derick Wheetley wrote on social media.

Forecasters say severe weather could batter parts of the Plains

The weather service said that supercells are likely to develop across parts of Texas and Oklahoma Saturday afternoon before becoming a line of storms in southwest Oklahoma and parts of Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas on Saturday night.

The biggest risks include large to very large hail that could be up to 3.5 inches (8.9 centimeters) in size, damaging wind gusts and a few tornadoes.

These conditions were expected to continue on Sunday across parts of the central and southern Plains as well as parts of the central High Plains.

National Weather Service offices lost staff

The storms hit after the Trump administration massively cut staffing of National Weather Service offices, with outside experts worrying about how it would affect warnings in disasters such as tornadoes.

The office in Jackson, Kentucky, which was responsible for the area around London, Kentucky, had a March 2025 vacancy rate of 25%; the Louisville, Kentucky, weather service staff was down 29%; and the St. Louis office was down 16%, according to calculations by weather service employees obtained by The Associated Press. The Louisville office was also without a permanent boss, the meteorologist in charge, as of March, according to the staffing data.

Experts said any vacancy rate above 20% is a critical problem.

After a political career shaped by cancer, Former Preisdent Joe Biden faces his own grim diagnosis

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – President Joe Biden speaks from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Sept. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — In Joe Biden’s family, there’s a saying that the three worst words anyone can hear are “you have cancer.”

One decade ago, his son Beau died from a brain tumor. Several years later, his wife Jill had two cancerous lesions removed in her own brush with the disease.

Now it is the former president’s turn. Biden’s office disclosed his prostate cancer diagnosis over the weekend, saying it has already spread to his bones.

Although the cancer can possibly be controlled with treatment, it is no longer curable. The announcement is a bitter revelation that a disease that has brought so much tragedy to Biden’s life could be what ends it.

“Cancer touches us all,” Biden wrote on social media. “Like so many of you, Jill and I have learned that we are strongest in the broken places.”

Even before the diagnosis, Biden’s post-presidency was shadowed by questions about his health and whether he should have run for reelection. As questions about his fitness for office mounted, he abandoned the campaign and Donald Trump retook the presidency by defeating Kamala Harris. As the 82-year-old Biden works to safeguard his damaged political legacy, he’ll also be fighting a disease that shaped the final chapters of his decades-long career.

Biden was serving as Barack Obama’s vice president when Beau died in 2015. He decided not to seek the Democratic nomination the following year, which helped clear a path for Hillary Clinton, who lost to Trump in 2016.

Valerie Jarrett, a longtime Obama adviser, said Biden wanted to “channel his grief into action and figure out how we can do better” on treating cancer to “make sure that other people didn’t have to go through what he went through.”

The effort was formalized as a White House task force, with Biden in charge. After a few years out of office, Biden re-entered politics to campaign against Trump in 2020. The heartache from Beau’s death was never far from the surface though. His eldest son had been Delaware’s attorney general and often viewed as Biden’s political successor.

“Beau should be the one running for president, not me,” Biden said, a thought he echoed on many occasions.

He made fighting cancer a focus for his presidency, resurrecting a “moonshot” initiative to increase funding for research and improve treatment. He unveiled the initiative at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in 2022, echoing the Democratic icon’s famous speech declaring that “we will go to the moon” six decades earlier.

“Beating cancer is something we can do together,” Biden said.

By this point, he had already signed legislation known as the PACT Act to expand healthcare benefits for veterans. The law guarantees treatment for chronic illnesses blamed on burn pits, which were used to dispose of chemicals, tires, plastics, medical equipment and human waste on military bases.

Biden left no doubt that he believed Beau’s death resulted from his service with the National Guard in Iraq.

“When they came home, many of the fittest and best warriors that we sent to war were not the same — headaches, numbness, dizziness, cancer,” he said. “My son Beau was one of them.”

Denis McDonough, who led the Veterans Affairs Department under Biden, said the president didn’t talk about Beau’s death during policy discussions. But he said it was clear that Biden “knew the experience that other families were having, and he was going to be damn sure that we weren’t going to miss an opportunity to address that.”

McDonough recalled that Biden wanted the new law to take effect as quickly as possible.

“He had an option to stretch it out,” he said. “He said no way.”

The following year, first lady Jill Biden had two cancerous lesions removed, one above her right eye and the other on her chest. They were both basal cell carcinoma.

Learning of the diagnosis “was a little harder than I thought,” she told The Associated Press during a trip to Africa.

“I’m lucky,” she said. “Believe me, I am so lucky that they caught it, they removed it, and I’m healthy.”

Biden’s cancer diagnosis is not the first time that he’s faced his own mortality.

Months after ending his first presidential campaign in 1988, he collapsed in a New York hotel room. In his memoir “Promises to Keep,” he described “lightning flashing inside my head, a powerful electrical surge — and then a rip of pain like I’d never felt before.”

He had suffered a brain aneurysm that required surgery. Biden wrote that “I had no real fear of dying. I’d long since accepted the fact that life’s guarantees don’t include a fair shake.”

McDonough imagined that Biden would feel similarly about his current situation.

“He’s always on to the next fight,” he said.