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Pittsburgh Courier NEW
VOL. 106, NO. 19
Three Sections
settles ACLU Protesters call for greater City lawsuit over biased police oversight in contract police hiring policy Published Weekly
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MAY 13-19, 2015
INSIDE
by Christian Morrow
Voters Guide 2015
by Christian Morrow
Courier Staff Writer
Courier Staff Writer
The City of Pittsburgh has agreed to pay $985,000 to roughly 360 African Americans who were eliminated from the pool of candidates for police jobs between 2008 and 2014 due to inherent bias in the hiring system. Mayor Bill Peduto, joined by state American Civil Liberties Union Legal Director Vitold Walczak, city Solicitor Lourdes Sanchez-Ridge and representatives of several community groups, announced the settlement of the 2012 lawsuit during a May 7 press conference, calling it an “historic day for the city.” “We need a police force that looks like Pittsburgh does, and today the city and the civil rights community are coming together to find the best and most equitable way to do that,” he said. That appears to be a total revamping of the hiring system that independent consul-
As the legal team for the City of Pittsburgh prepared to make its presentation to arbitrators in its contract dispute with the Fraternal Order of Police Fort Pitt Lodge #1, protestors representing several community groups rallied outside the City-County Building calling for more transparency and disciplinary oversight of police officers. “We’re here to demand accountability from the police union,” said rally organizer Celeste Scott of We Change Pittsburgh. “We want the Citizens Police Review Board to have subpoena power so it can have some teeth. Right now the police aren’t accountable because we still have bodies dropping in the street, people of color.” Chanting “From Baltimore to NYC, end police brutality” and “No justice. No peace. No racist police,” more than a dozen protesters prompted honks from passing motorists as they waved signs saying “End Blue Silence” and “Abolish the FOP.” Protester Ken Miller said police brutality is out of control and if the city cannot win concessions on greater police discipline through the ongoing contract arbitration process, Mayor Bill Peduto should seek federal oversight. “We expect Bill Peduto to tear down the ‘blue wall,’” he said. “He can ask the Department of Justice for help. He can say state law makes it impossible for him to
Special Section
Fund started for 2 killed in East Hills home by Ashley Johnson Courier Staff Writer
The family of a grandmother and granddaughter found brutality murdered last week in East Hills have recently started the Valorie Crumpton, Tionna & Vaughn Banks Memorial Fund through the site GoFundMe to raise funds for the funeral services and the support of a 2month-old baby who has been left without a mother just days before Mother’s Day. In the afternoon of May 7, according to a release issued by the PittsTIONNA BANKS burgh Department of Public Safety Information Officer Sonya Toler, Pittsburgh Police conducted a wellness check on Tionna Banks, 19, after a caseworker reported she had not shown up for a social service appointment days prior. Upon arriving to the home in the 500 block of Karl Street, and hearing music and smelling a strong odor, officers forced their way into the home and found the bludgeoned bodies of Banks and her grandmother, Valorie Crumpton, 72. They each died of blunt force trauma. Banks’ newborn son, Vaughn, was not home and was later found safe. No one has been charged and no suspects have
SEE PROTESTERS A4
SEE ACLU A4
Ginyard charges Burgess tried to steal lawn sign by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
END POLICE BRUTALITY—Student activist Teonna Ross listens to other protesters during a rally for greater police accountability at the City-County building May 8. (Photo by J.L. Martello)
Meetings held to determine future of Wilkinsburg School District by Paige K. Mitchell For New Pittsburgh Courier
Wilkinsburg Superintendent Dan Matsook, EdD, held a press conference and community meeting May 7 to address the immense issues currently affecting the school district. “We have a very positive outlook on the future of the
SEE FUND A5
Wilkinsburg School District,” Matsook said. Two separate meetings took place that day. A press briefing was held earlier in the day and a community meeting followed hours later. While the briefing was for press only, the community meeting, held in the Wilkinsburg High School Auditorium, was open to the public.
The long awaited neighborhood discussion came about after news reports that the surrounding neighborhoods, Penn Hills and Woodland Hills School Districts rejected overtures from the Wilkinsburg district to accept approximately 200 students in grades 7-12. The Penn Hills SEE MEETING A5
With a former felon running, and the incumbent refusing to join further debates after one featured an audience/candidate commotion, you might have been tempted to think the Pittsburgh District 9 city council race couldn’t get any stranger. And “tempted” may be the operative word, as challenger Judith K. Ginyard has filed a po-
GINYARD
BURGESS
SEE GINYARD A5
Hunt donates cord blood to save a life by Paige Mitchell For New Pittsburgh Courier
Carter, Moriarty, Rogers vie to replace Brentley by Christian Morrow Courier Staff writer
Having four of the nine seats on Pittsburgh Board of Education up for grabs is not unusual, the elections are staggered two years apart for that reason. But having three of those four seats open because the current directors are stepping down? That is different, and even more so because two of those three are the (current) longest serving members—District 4 Director Bill Isler and District 8 Director Mark Brentley. Also stepping down is Dis-
TAKING A STAND—Patricia Rogers works to convince voters she is the best choice to follow Mark Brentley in the District 8 director’s seat.
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trict 6 Director Sherry Hazuda. The District 2 seat, currently held by Director Regina Holley will remains so as she is unopposed. The eight candidates vying for the three open seats made their final pitches May 6 at the Hillman Auditorium in the Hill District. As there were no African American candidates running for either District 4 or District 6, and with District 8 including the Hill, those candidates: WALKING THE WALK—Rosemary Rosemary Moriarty, Kevin Moriarty makes a point during the Hill Carter and Patricia Rogers District Pittsburgh Public School Board candidate forum at the Hillman Auditorium. (Photos by J.L. Martello) SEE CARTER A5
A local mother has made a courageous decision, in order to save a life. “My decision was definitely made from a mother’s love. What I was asked to do for someone else’s child, I can only hope someone would do for mine. All parents want to live to see their children live happy, healthy, long lives. You can’t nurture someone in your womb and care for them after birth and not give all you can to ensure that,” donor Shawnika Hunt said. Hunt was pregnant with her first child when she and her husband first agreed that they were not going to move forth with donating their child’s cord blood. That was until a close friend was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoma. Hunt immediately wanted to know what she could do to help. It was when then that she learned about the need for African American cord blood donors. Hunt quickly learned that her SEE HUNT A4
George Curry asks
How can you tell when a politician is lying? Forum A7