Allegheny County’s Board of Health held a preliminary vote Wednesday to create a Housing Advisory Committee.
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The large arc of flat land curving through Pittsburgh's East End seems out of place, but it's actually an ancient riverbed marking where the Allegheny and Monongahela once flowed.
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A new report from Brookings finds Black and Latino business ownership is behind a surge of new business growth in the U.S., but Pittsburgh is lagging the national trend.
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The district replaced all unfiltered water fountains by installing close to 1,300 lead-filtering ones.
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It’s the latest attempt by Republican state lawmakers to speed up permitting by allowing outside parties to review applications, rather than state agencies, such as the Department of Environmental Protection.
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The bill defines the kind of on-campus speech and behavior that would be defined as discriminatory under federal law.
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The Family Care Act has bipartisan support in the Pennsylvania House and Senate.
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Pennsylvania is just one of more than a dozen states that have recently banned — or want to ban — the ornamental tree.
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The chaos at the Jesus’ Dwelling Place Church in North Braddock took place Sunday while the service was being livestreamed, state police said in a news release.
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By 2045, the buses of Pittsburgh will produce net zero carbon emissions, according to the first-ever climate plan released by Pittsburgh Regional Transit.
Pennsylvania is just one of more than a dozen states that have recently banned — or want to ban — the ornamental tree.
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A new national report says Pittsburgh's arts audiences are still down from the pandemic, but patrons who remain are spending more than ever.
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The Wilkinsburg-Penn Joint Water Authority, which serves 40,000 customers in Pittsburgh’s eastern suburbs, will resume shut-offs for nonpayment next month.
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The non-profit American Rivers will use the federal funds to take down small, obsolete dams in the Ohio and Susquehanna rivers watersheds.
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The ongoing consolidation between DuBois and Sandy Township is only the second one in Pennsylvania after lawmakers standardized the process. It has shown the limits of state law.
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A federal court decision that protects the constitutional rights of homeless Pottstown residents could be overruled by the high court this summer.