From PublicSource <[email protected]>
Subject New guide dog gives Pittsburgh woman independence again 🦮
Date March 9, 2024 11:59 AM
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Also, in case you missed it, a look at the new environmental investigation PublicSource launched.
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In a first-person essay, Sally Hobart Alexander writes about how her sixth guide dog, Ozzy, has allowed her to regain a sense of independence after 13 months without a guide ([link removed]) .

Also, Aaron Fetty won an appeal this week, effectively ordering his reinstatement ([link removed]) as a Pittsburgh police officer after he was dismissed in 2022 following a civil case over sexual assault. Mayor Ed Gainey's administration said it would appeal the decision.

In case you missed it, this week PublicSource launched EQT's Gas Play ([link removed]) , an investigative environmental series that explores the politics, dollars and perspectives from communities in the Pittsburgh-based natural gas producer's fracking path.
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Hollowed out ([link removed]) , the inaugural story in the series, follows the complaint trail of four families in Knob Fork, West Virginia, where EQT has expanded its drilling operations. The families reported illness and VOC emissions to state and federal environmental regulators before they moved out of the village. Now, the EPA is investigating.

Check out the series and other stories we published this week below. ⬇️

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** After 410 days unable to run errands, a new guide dog brings ‘the elation of independence’ ([link removed])
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** Pittsburgh officer dismissed over sexual assault case wins court fight ([link removed])
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Pittsburgh Works Together is an alliance of business and organized labor that provides research and information on key issues for building an economy that works for all. Access these free resources at pghworks.com ([link removed]) .

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** Allegheny County updates healthy housing rules, but stalls on giving advocates a seat at the table ([link removed])
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** The SAT test is going digital. Here’s what you need to know. ([link removed])
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** Sponsored: Help make Pittsburgh a better place: Accept the YWCA Racial Justice Challenge! ([link removed])
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** Walnut Capital seeks one-block zoning change in Oakland ([link removed])
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** How Pittsburgh-based EQT’s expansion in West Virginia set four families reeling, while state regulators trusted the company to answer their complaints ([link removed])
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** Sponsored: Join journalist Soledad O'Brien for an evening on women's leadership ([link removed])
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** ICYMI FROM LAST WEEK
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* We launched the first two stories in a higher education investigation series, Opening the Books ([link removed]) , which looks at how Pittsburgh's wealthiest universities invest their billions. Read the first story on how the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University have boosted their endowments through private offshore investments that raise questions about transparency ([link removed]) .
* The second piece looks at the billions of research dollars funneled into CMU from the U.S Department of Defense ([link removed]) , and why some students are pushing back against the funding.

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Thank you to those who became supporters of PublicSource's journalism Feb. 27 - Mar. 4: Alan, Andrew, Barbara, Connie, Paolo, Richard and Steven. Join them by giving today! ([link removed])
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