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Pittsburgh Courier NEW
VOL. 107, NO. 6
Questions and outrage…
Published Weekly
Four Sections
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FEBRUARY 10-16, 2016
Is dog’s life more important than Black man’s life? Aren honored but Kelley Jr. not forgotten by Christian Morrow BRUCE KELLEY JR.
Courier Staff Writer
As a helicopter hovered above the police procession making its way through the five streets and one bridge closed for the occasion, the words penned days earlier by Tracy Jennings on Facebook proved prophetic: “It’s going to be a weeks long disturbing memorial for this dog…money raised and collected from all over the country, streets blocked off—the flags are already at half staff,” she wrote. “Then there is the Black Wilkinsburg family who more than likely struggle to bury their son.” The next day, during a Feb. 3 Alliance for Police Accountability meeting, Mae Chandler confirmed that funeral arrangements for her nephew Bruce Kelley Jr., shot to death by Port Authority of Allegheny County police officers after he fatally stabbed police dog Aren, remained unsettled because, the family didn’t have the money. “I think taking a life over a dog is the worst thing I can ever hear in my life. To kill my nephew be-
BRUCE KELLEY SR.
HOUNDED—Bruce Kelly Jr., captured here on a security camera, tries to wave police away with his knife just minutes before he stabbed an attacking police dog and was immediately shot 12 times. (Courtesy of YouTube/Black Lives Matter Pittsburgh) cause he killed a dog, it’s not right,” she said. “And they’re having a funeral for the dog, and my sister has to try and get enough donations to try to bury her son.” Jennings and Chandler weren’t the only ones upset by the notion that a dog’s life is more important than the life of a Black man.
Jivani Turner, 82, of Churchill, called the New Pittsburgh Courier to ‘vent,’ saying she had to turn (the local news coverage of the procession on) her television off. “It’s sick, the streets blocked, the helicopter. It’s absolutely sick. I hope someSEE QUESTIONS A4
by Ashley Johnson
Juvenile lifers now eligible for parole by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
In July of 2007, collegebound Jehru Donaldson was sitting in his father’s Oldsmobile in front of a North Side home waiting for his girlfriend’s nephews, whom he had promised to take to a Pirates baseball game. But he didn’t get to the game or to college, because as he waited, 17-year-old
Courier to celebrate city’s young movers and shakers
twin brothers Devon and Jovon Knox decided they wanted to steal his car. When he resisted and tried to drive off, they shot him. In 2009, 18-year-old mother-to-be Shavaughn Wallace was also sitting in her car on the North Side when 18-year-old Lamon Street opened fire on some rival gang members. He killed Wallace and her unborn child in the attempt. The Knox bothers and
Street received life sentences for their crimes. At the time, a life sentence in Pennsylvania meant exactly that—life, with no parole, even for juvenile offenders. But not anymore. Three years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that mandatory life sentences for juveniles were unconstitutional, except for those found to be “irreparably corrupt” or “permanently incorrigible.”
On Jan. 25, it made that ruling retroactive, meaning Street, the Knox twins and more than 400 other lifers sentenced as juveniles in Pennsylvania—the highest number in the country— may be eligible for parole. The majority of these inmates, more than 300, come from Philadelphia. Fifty, including the Knoxes and Street were sentenced in AlSEE LIFERS A4
Hill House Association revamping programming for job placement by Samson X. Horne For New Pittsburgh Courier
The nonprofit that funds social and community development programs in the Hill District has restructured its workforce development arm. After cutting programming that was underperforming and refocusing needs of individuals in the community, the Hill House Association says it has strengthened its positive impact for jobseekers in the Pittsburgh area. “Once we redefined our focus, we were able to develop strategic alliances with partners and restructure for longevity,” said Cheryl Hall-Russell, executive director of Hill House Association. Located at the Blakey Center on Wylie Avenue in the Hill District, the Hill House SEE HILL HOUSE A4
stream media. On Thursday, March 10, Courier Staff Writer at the Fairmont Hotel in Recognizing those downtown Pittsburgh, the uniquely talented African New Pittsburgh Courier American movers and will add 40 new names to shakers who are under the its elite list of recipients at the 2016 age of 40 FAB 40 and active Awards Reparticipants ception, in the upwhich will building of commence at their com6 p.m. munities, “This year whether it we have an be in the outstanding board room list of young or their people under neighborBRANDON HUDSON the age of 40 hoods, is the premise for which the FAB from a variety of different 40 award was established. professions,” said Rod Doss, It uplifts young Black pro- editor and publisher of the fessionals, while dispelling New Pittsburgh Courier. the negative image that is SEE COURIER A4 often depicted by main-
City Council hearing on Byrdsong’s CBA plan set by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
OPENING DOORS TO EMPLOYMENT—Hill House’s First Source Center Manager Donald McKeever and Director Sharnay Hearn helping residents to find jobs. (Photo by J.L. Martello)
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Community Empowerment Association President and CEO Rashad Byrdsong told the New Pittsburgh Courier he has received a letter confirming that Pittsburgh city council will hold a public meeting to be followed by a post agenda legislative meeting on his proposal to create a citywide Community Benefits Agreement. “This ordinance or law will
set in place contractual binding agreements that require community participation— at all tables—when it comes to planning for the use of development dollars,” he said. The public hearing is scheduled for March 8 at 1:30 p.m. to gauge public support for enacting a Community Benefits Ordinance for the City of Pittsburgh. The singular legislation Byrdsong envisions would cover the entire city, and en-
Ulish Carter asks
Is dog’s life more important than a man’s? Opinion A6
SEE CBA A4