From PublicSource <[email protected]>
Subject County exec candidates promise more transparency at the helm
Date April 11, 2023 2:01 PM
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Inside: Education supports for housing-insecure students.
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In this newsletter: A PublicSource survey of Allegheny County executive candidates showed nearly unanimous agreement on reforms to boost transparency ([link removed]) in the county’s multibillion dollar administration.

A mother of two gave us an inside look at her daughter's tutoring sessions and other education supports ([link removed]) she received while their family was facing housing insecurity.


** Our top story
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** Allegheny exec candidates promise to shed more light on county government ([link removed])
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PublicSource surveyed the candidates for their stances on a set of policies — already in use in other local governments, such as the cities of Pittsburgh and Philadelphia — that would give the public a clearer view of how the county does its business.

From the way the county awards contracts to campaign finance regulations to the executive’s own activities, the seven candidates nearly universally signaled that greater transparency awaits when a new county administration enters in January 2024.

“There’s no question here, Allegheny County is standing out for these pretty substantial gaps in public integrity law,” said Pat Christmas, policy director at the Philadelphia-based good government group Committee of Seventy.
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** NOT TO MISS
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** How a Pittsburgh family made sure that being unhoused wouldn't mean losing out on school ([link removed])
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Pittsburgh Arts & Lectures welcomes award-winning poet, essayist and cultural critic Hanif Abdurraqib to the Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland on April 17. The 2022/23 Ten Evenings series concludes with novelist Hanya Yanagihara on May 8. Purchase your in-person or virtual tickets and subscriptions at pittsburghlectures.org ([link removed]) .


** WANT MORE? WE'RE ON IT..
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* Gender-neutral pronouns ([link removed]) are not a new phenomenon. Aim Comperatore writes in a first-person essay about the journey to finding the right pronouns with some history along the way.
* Thousands of eligible people in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County have applied for student loan debt relief ([link removed]) . Now, they’re in a holding pattern.


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** Pittsburgh-area youth with disabilities share perspectives on navigating school, friendships and the future ([link removed])
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Pittsburgh’s JFilm Festival screens exciting and thought-provoking, Jewish-themed independent films, April 20–30. Check out the lineup at FilmPittsburgh.org ([link removed] &utm_medium=email&utm_source=publicsourceroundup) .
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THANK YOU to the new members who stepped up to support this journalism in our mini-campaign! Your generosity will keep in-depth, paywall-free reporting available for your neighbors. With 26 new recurring members, we fell just short of our goal of 30. Your gift can still make a difference — click here to start a recurring gift of any amount. ([link removed])

With gratitude to those who became supporters of PublicSource's journalism April 4-10: Andy, Barbara, Jacqueline, Joni, Karen, Livia, Madeline, Mary, Michele, Paul, Tom, Traci and VJ. Join them by giving today! ([link removed])
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