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Costa, Gainey, Wheatley get funds for Wilkinsburg-Westinghouse student move VOL. 107, NO. 2
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JANUARY 13-19, 2016
by Christian Morrow
“In addition to thanking Gov. Wolf for releasing the Courier Staff Writer money, I would like to thank Sen. Jay Costa and Rep. Thanks to concerted efforts of local state COSTA Jake Wheatley for their dilirepresentatives, when Gov. Tom Wolf regence in making this funding possible.” leased emergency education funds with his Wilkinsburg, plagued by declining enrollsignature on a $24 billion partial budget, ment and increasing budget shortfalls, $3 million of that was earmarked to assist began searching for neighboring district with the transition of Wilkinsburg High assistance or a possible merger several School students to Westinghouse in the years ago. Both the Penn Hills and WoodPittsburgh Public School District. State Rep. Ed Gainey, D-East Liberty, REP. JAKE WHEATLEY land Hills school districts turned them down. thanked Wolf, and called it a tremendous In October, however, the Pittsburgh feat to secure the funding. “We let them (the governor and the De- low-income communities just don’t get Board of Education agreed to a plan that will send just over 200 Wilkinsburg stupartment of Education) know that a lot of their due,” he said.
“The fight is not over. I strongly encourage the Wilkinsburg parents to stay at the table and make sure resources aren’t just going into a black hole.”
GAINEY
WHEATLEY
dents in grades 7-12 to Pittsburgh Westinghouse 6-12 beginning in the 2016-2017 school year. “This type of change is never easy,” said Gainey. “The decision to transition the Wilkinsburg students was not taken lightly and I commend the Wilkinsburg School Board and other officials for their commitment to ensuring that the students are the SEE REPS. A4
Commonwealth Court rules for city on police residency
Supporters petition state for Sander’s pardon
by Christian Morrow
by Christian Morrow
Courier Staff Writer
Courier Staff Writer
Not satisfied to let things take their course after McKeesport councilman-elect Corry Sanders was told a 23-year-old felony conviction made him ineligible to hold office, supporters are petitioning state officials for relief. State Rep. Ed Gainey, D-East Liberty, is among them. “This guy has been clean for 23 years. How can this follow him for that long,” Gainey said. “State Rep. Jordan Harris (DPhiladelphia) has legislation pending to address expungement for non-violent offenses. This situation is a perfect example of why I’m a co-sponsor. For now, we’re writing the governor, the lieutenant governor and the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons.
TYIAN BATTLE Executive Director of ACH Clear Pathways
Children’s non-profit set to launch $2M capital campaign by Samson X. Horne
nity Recreation Center, a City Parks Recreation Center on Bedford Avenue, served as the home for after school programming that includes: dance, digital media, drama, martial arts, music and visual arts. “We were blessed to have that space for four years, we want to better the space to meet the needs of our youth and families,” Executive Director Tyian Battle said. The facility, which provides hot meals and academic tutor-
For New Pittsburgh Courier
A local non-profit plans to reveal Thursday, Jan. 14, its launch of a $2 million capital campaign to build a state-ofthe-art center in the Hill District. ACH Clear Pathways, founded in 2010, is an organization that focuses on encouraging young boys and girls in the Hill District with an avenue to explore and express their artistic skills. Since 2012, Ammon Commu-
SEE SUPPORTERS A5
County, city’s first homicides of the year
KIMBERLY SLATER-WOODS
SEE CHILDREN’S A4
After losing in arbitration, and again in Common Pleas Court, Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto was elated upon hearing the Commonwealth Court’s ruling that Pittsburgh police can be required to live in the city. “The City respects the collective bargaining process. But residency and other workplace issues should be subject to good-faith negotiations and not made through backdoor deals in Harrisburg,” he said in a Jan.7 press release. “The people of Pittsburgh must have a seat at that table.” The court action stems from a 2012 modification to state law wherein the General Assembly approved a law saying the City of Pittsburgh “may” require police to be City residents, changing previous language that officers “shall” be residents. Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 1 moved to reopen its contract to allow officers to move out of the City, and in March 2014 an arbitration panel ruled officers only had to live within 25 miles of the City-County Building Downtown. The Peduto Administration took the panel’s decision to Common Pleas Court, which ruled with the FOP that the residency requirement was subject to review by the arbitration panel. City voters then SEE COMMONWEALTH A4
Cannabis decriminalized, APA holds forum
Allegheny County and City of Pittsburgh Police have investigated their first homicides of the year. Both victims were Black males from the North Side and under the age of 40. The first victim, according to the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office, was 39-yearold Damion Graham, of the North Side. On Jan. 10, Graham, the first homicide of the year and the first homicide outside of the city of Pittsburgh, was fatally shot during an altercation in a residence on Forest Avenue in Bellevue. According to other reports, Graham was shot during an argument that had taken place. No one has been charged as of this publication’s deadline. Several calls were made to Allegheny County Police for an update on the case, but were not returned. Later that day, 25-year-old
by Michael B. Rose For New Pittsburgh Courier.
Just 15 months after Philadelphia decriminalized marijuana, Pittsburgh is doing so as well. The effects of decriminalization on incarceration and public order was an 80 percent decline in marijuana arrests from 4,000 to just under 1,000. In order for Pittsburghers to truly understand what that will mean for those who choose to take advantage of the slackening of enforcement, the Alliance for Police Accountability (APA) held a forum on Jan. 6 at the Kingsley Center in which Attorney Patrick Nightingale, City Councilman R. Daniel Lavelle and Zone 5 Commander Jason Lando educated those in attendance on what rights a citizen with marijuana on their person will have and what rights law enforcement will retain and have the right to enforce. Ayodeji Young, outreach specialist at the YMCA of Greater Pittsburgh, began by explaining why this was so important to himself and the APA. “The marijuana thing is an easy way to get pulled over and if kids knew they didn’t have to take off running because they had a bag of weed in their pocket, it would stop a lot of the extra things that
SEE COUNTY A4
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WHAT SHOULD WE DO?—From left: Commander Jason Lando, City Councilman R. Daniel Lavelle and Criminal Defense Attorney Patrick Nightingale at a Jan. 6 community meeting on marijuana possession. (Photo by J.L. Martello) happen on the back end of that.” He said, alluding to the high frequency of unarmed Black males who get shot or
charged with a felony for gross disparity in enforcetrying to elude capture. ment and the data shows Brandi Fisher, head of the that. Black men are number APA, said it is because SEE CANNABIS A4 “Number one there is a
Ulish Carter asks
Where are all the guns coming from? Opinion A6