The community’s biggest employer, Fourth Street Foods, relies on immigrant labor and it's leaders are making preparations for how to respond if Donald Trump is elected and implements an immigration policy that would make it difficult for its current workforce to stay.
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Pickles are invading downtown Pittsburgh — in the streets, the food, the drinks, even the air — during the city’s ninth annual Picklesburgh festival.
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Visitors with disabilities are left to navigate a building largely frozen in 1906, despite the passage in 1990 of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
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The units being purchased were originally part of a larger set of around 141 units, called the Bethesda Homewood Properties. Federal housing regulators declared them uninhabitable in 2017.
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In Reading, about two-thirds of the city’s 95,000 residents are Latino — and voters there could play a pivotal role in deciding which way the state goes this November.
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Nonprofit groups Steel Smiling and Artist Talk Mental Health promote mental health in Pittsburgh's Black community with Black Therapy 101.
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It was a record-breaking year for the convention, which has been held annually since 1997 and is now considered one of the largest furry conventions in the world.
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The bill would codify same-sex marriage into state law, making gay marriages valid regardless of federal law.
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All signs point to big celebrations for Americans this Fourth of July even as sizzling temperatures are triggering heat warnings for millions. Travel records are projected to fall as people gather for cookouts, parades and fireworks.
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Ed Simon's new essay collection, "The Soul of Pittsburgh," probes everything from the city's food culture and film output to the local accent, Steelers fandom and more.
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Some of 2nd Lt. Nathan Baskind's remains were recovered and then buried exactly 80 years after he died in combat during World War II.