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READ ABOUT THE IMPACT OUR MEMBERS MADE POSSIBLE. Then, help our team create more of it. We’re proud to share our 2022-23 Impact Report, full of changes that happened as a result of our newsroom’s reporting. Help us create more impact in the coming year by supporting our work with a doubled one-time gift, or a new monthly gift that will be matched x12.

In Pittsburgh’s Bhutanese community, ‘first aid’ for the struggle with mental health stigma

Charles E. Davis built homes for Pittsburgh’s Black middle class that still endure

Brewing belonging: Code of conduct lays out steps for a better beer scene

Winter shelter beds open, but severe weather plan details still scant

Gainey’s budget shows lean years ahead, with cuts to paving and shrinking reserves

Sponsored: A confluence of heritage and growth


How Rivers of Steel brought partners together around heritage tourism and transformed a region.

Here’s what tech stakeholders hope to see from the incoming Allegheny County executive

Updated: Innamorato hears ‘alarm bells’ in lawsuits against Adelphoi, picked to run Shuman

With the value of a degree in doubt, high schoolers are exploring other routes

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Join us on Nov. 28 as University of Pittsburgh Chancellor Emeritus Mark Nordenberg welcomes Professor Lisa Nelson in a conversation about Political Violence and Polarization. Register now using this link: pitt.wufoo.com

Learn more about this program at: www.thornburghforum.pitt.edu

ICYMI FROM LAST WEEK

  • A Downtown church that routinely sheltered more than 100 people last winter will no longer be used as an emergency shelter. Allegheny County announced that it has partnered with the City of Pittsburgh on a severe weather action plan for winter’s “harshest nights,” which the county later described as “extreme temperatures or dangerous precipitation.”
  • Allegheny County Controller Corey O’Connor announced that his office will begin an audit of the county’s Clean Air Fund.
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