At the Eliza Furnace Trailhead, a fleet of adaptive bikes line up beside a POGOH tent, ready for use by riders who prefer an alternative to a traditional bicycle.
-
The loans can be used for a variety of immigration-related purposes, including Green Card application, medical exams, travel to hearings and representation for asylum and deportation cases.
-
So far, the Army has refused to return to the Winnebago Tribe the remains of Samuel Gilbert and Edward Hensley, who died at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania.
-
The City of Pittsburgh kicked off Black History Month by announcing a new EMT training academy that honors the nation’s first emergency medical service.
-
Some in East Palestine say more needs to be done to address health risks. Other residents believe the derailment’s worst impacts were limited and have long since passed.
-
A new documentary produced by two Altoona natives takes viewers on a tour through a pivotal and hard-to-access World War II battleground. The documentary makers say it gives veterans’ families and those interested in history a chance to reflect on a place they likely couldn’t visit otherwise.
-
Researchers in the house at 257 Oakland Ave. aim to develop new technologies to help people stay in their homes as they age, as well as to test existing technologies already on the market.
-
People from around the world convened in Pittsburgh on Friday to remember the violent liberation of Cameroon in the 1950s.
-
Demolition got underway at the site of the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history, as part of the effort to reimagine the building to honor the 11 people who were killed there in 2018.
-
Despite data showing violence on the South Side decreased last summer, it became a major issue for residents, politicians and news outlets.
-
Attorneys with America First Legal claim that the policies violate parents’ ability to “make decisions concerning the care, custody, and control” of their children.