-
Pittsburgh is now home to about 680 Afghans who were evacuated amid the U.S. troop withdrawal last summer. For one family now residing locally, their escape brings safety but also economic and emotional adversity.
-
The event at the Heinz History Center was a way to celebrate and recognize the naturalization of young immigrants.
-
Casa San Jose fears more undocumented Pittsburghers are losing their path to citizenship without a local immigration court.
-
Pennsylvania State Police have settled a federal lawsuit alleging that troopers routinely and improperly tried to enforce federal immigration law by pulling over Hispanic motorists on the basis of how they looked and detaining those suspected of being in the U.S. illegally.
-
The possibility of a Russian invasion of Ukraine worries Pittsburghers who have family in eastern Europe's second-largest country.
-
At a roundtable in Wexford, McCormick met with local law enforcement and rehabilitation specialists in southwestern Pennsylvania counties to talk about the impact of people crossing the southern U.S. border illegally and illegal trafficking of drugs.
-
Last year, governors in Texas, then Florida, directed their states’ child care regulators to stop issuing, or rescind licenses to facilities that house undocumented kids. Now, as high-profile races for U.S. Senate and governor heat up, the movement has spread to Pennsylvania.
-
Lou Barletta, a Republican candidate for governor of Pennsylvania, says he'll take a harder line against the federal government’s years-long practice of bringing unaccompanied minors found by the Border Patrol to various facilities in states.
-
A lawsuit against Clearfield County could at least pause the establishment of one of the largest and private detention centers in the northeast.
-
Despite ample supply of the COVID-19 vaccine, accessibility remains an issue, particularly for people with limited English skills.