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Pittsburgh Courier NEW
www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 112 No. 24
Two Sections
JUNE 16-22, 2021
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New Duquesne Light CEO an inspiration for Black youth by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
Kevin Walker, as he tells it, didn’t see too much prosperity growing up in parts of Southeast Washington, D.C. and Maryland. He said that no one in his family had a college degree, or owned their own home, or had a big-time job to brag about that was bringing in the big bucks. Kevin Walker said he never knew his biological father; his mother had him KEVIN WALKER, formerly Duquesne Light’s Chief Operating Officer, was named when she was President and Chief Executive Officer on June 1. He’s the first African American to 16 years old. hold the title of DLC President and CEO.
Five years later, his mother got married to a man who, in effect, became his father. The two parents had a spiritual, Christian background, and they, along with Walker’s grandparents, always cheered for the young Walker to shoot for the moon. “‘We can’t help you, but we want you to do better, get out there, find people that are willing to invest in you,’” Walker recalled his parents telling him. “And I did that.” It’s safe to say that Walker overcame the odds. He said it himself. “If you think about the influences on my life at the time, it wasn’t necessarily a path out of the hood that I could see around me,” he told the New Pittsburgh Courier in an exclusive interview,
June 10. He did well in high school, Oxon Hill High School, in Prince George’s County, Md. Academically and in athletics. He was captain of both the football and wrestling teams. Like a sponge, he soaked up positive knowledge and advice from guidance counselors, teachers, even from the parents of his friends who were steadily giving advice. After high school, he entered the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, where Walker realized that “I was pretty much similar to all the other folks around there, they weren’t any better or worse than I was.” Today, he’s the first African American and first person of color to hold the
position of President and CEO of Duquesne Light Company. Chances are good that, if you’re reading this article in the Pittsburgh area, you’re one of Walker’s 600,000 customers. As you’re reading this article, chances are good that Walker is strategizing how to keep Duquesne Light at the forefront of energy innovation, which has an unspoken benefit to the Pittsburgh region. Or, Walker could be holding a meeting right now making sure that his company is leading the way in having a diverse workforce — who knows, you could be the next hire at Duquesne Light. Walker told the Courier SEE DUQUESENE LIGHT A2
Marlin Woods announces candidacy for mayor of Pittsburgh East Liberty resident will run as an Independent in November election by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
Marlin Woods is big on authenticity. He’s big on being exactly who he is. He’s an author, motivational speaker and is big on serving others. It just so happened that those he has served, those he has helped over the years with his words and actions have called on him to serve the entire City of Pittsburgh, as mayor. “Ultimately, I never had a choice. When you recog-
nize that you don’t have a choice, now that responsibility becomes your creed,” Woods said. The East Liberty resident, married with four children, officially announced his candidacy for mayor of Pittsburgh before friends, family and supporters at the Highland Park Reservoir, June 10. He is running as an Independent, as State Rep. Ed Gainey, another African American man, has wrapped up the SEE WOODS A4
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MARLIN WOODS, right, with his wife, Jessica Brooks-Woods, announcing his candidacy for mayor of the City of Pittsburgh at the Highland Park Reservoir, June 10. (Photo by Rob Taylor Jr.)