6.29.22 NPC

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America’s best weekly Dorin Dickerson named morning show co-host on ‘The Fan’ Page A6

Pittsburgh Courier NEW

www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 113 No. 26 Two Sections

JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022

thenewpittsburghcourier Published Weekly $1.00

What does Black Pittsburgh think about the Roe v. Wade reversal? Mayes: Decision hit me ‘like a ton of bricks’ by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer

Black women accounted for 44 percent of the abortions performed in Pennsylvania in 2020. The exact number, according to Pennsylvania’s Annual Abortion Report released by the Pa. Department of Health, was 14,177 Black women. Enough to fill the University of Pittsburgh’s Petersen Events Center to capacity, and then some. The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on June 24, reversing the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision from 1973, which made it a constitutional right for a woman to have an abortion, has some Black women in the Pittsburgh area and beyond perturbed. Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 2019 revealed that nationwide, Black women are almost four times as likely to have abortions as White women. But in many religious circles, which includes

some Black church denominations, abortion is not viewed in a favorable light, and the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade reversal was applauded. With the Court’s Roe v. Wade reversal, the legality of abortion will be left to the states. Almost immediately, Alabama, Kentucky, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, South Dakota and Wisconsin banned abortion within its borders. Judges on Monday, June 27, temporarily blocked “trigger effect” abortion ban laws in Louisiana and Utah, and allowed abortions to resume. But other states are expected to ban abortion in the coming days and weeks, including West Virginia, Texas, Tennessee, Mississippi, North Dakota, Idaho and Wyoming. But what about Pennsylvania? Outgoing Pa. Governor Tom Wolf, a Democrat, already denounced the banning of abortion and, SEE ROE V. WADE A3

LA’TASHA D. MAYES, Democratic nominee for state House District 24 in the November election, denounces the June 24 Supreme Court decision to reverse Roe v. Wade.

‘A Force for Change: Esther Bush and the Urban League’ to air on WQED-TV by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer

On Thursday evening, June 30, at 8 p.m., WQEDTV will premiere a halfhour program on who many in the Pittsburgh region and nationally call a tireless advocate for civil rights. Even better, she’s a Pittsburgher. A proud graduate of Westinghouse High School, who spent the final 27 years of her professional career making the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh into one of the top chapters in America. “A Force for Change: Esther Bush and the Urban League” will take viewers back to Bush’s early days as a youth in Pittsburgh, after her family moved to the Steel City from Alabama. It chronicles Bush’s

fight to better her African American community, from high school teacher to college administrator, to the Urban League in New York City, Hartford, and finally, Pittsburgh. “When Esther Bush was a little girl, she saw the world as a place filled with possibilities. The way she saw it, we should all have the same rights and opportunities to be whom and what she wanted to be. It was that belief that inspired Esther to join the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh and become a force for change,” said WQED-TV marketing communications manager Delaney Healey, in a release announcing the Bush documentary. Minette Seate, lead producer of the Bush docSEE BUSH A6

Pittsburgh Courier NEW

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ESTHER BUSH LED THE URBAN LEAGUE OF GREATER PITTSBURGH FOR 27 YEARS.


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