America’s best weekly Take charge of your health today. How worried should I be about my drinking water?
Generation NEXT: Jasmine Jones is passionate about helping others
‘Music of Prince’ celebrates artist’s musical accomplishments
Health A9
People A10
Entertainer A7
Pittsburgh Courier www.newpittsburghcourier.com
NEW
Vol. 108 No. 9
Two Sections
Published Weekly
MARCH 1-7, 2017
$1.00
Former OMI chief Walker collapses at event, dies by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
Calling her a warrior in social justice and a friend, Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto took to Twitter to note that Deborah Walker, who worked her way from University of Pittsburgh police officer to chair of the city’s Citizens Police Review Board to managing the city’s Office of Municipal
DEBORAH WALKER
Investigations, had died after collapsing at an event she was emceeing. “She walked a very delicate line between law enforcement official and social justice advocate,” he said of his friend. “And proved to everyone that they’re not mutually exclusive.” Walker collapsed with an apparent heart attack while presenting an award during Talk Magazine’s annual dinner, Feb. 24, and died later at UPMC. She was 62. Peduto had recently promoted Walker
to chief of human resources in the department of Personnel and Civil Service Commission with an eye toward using her expertise to help increase diversity within the city’s police department. She had recently completed a report and briefly discussed her recommendations for doing so with the mayor, just last week. Prior to taking the position as OMI director in 2014, Walker served as a police SEE WALKER A4
Compromise made in Penn Plaza fight Business leader named chair of the AWC board
by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
The city and the owners of the Penn Plaza Apartments have agreed to work toward a negotiated settlement of lawsuits and counter suits while also finding new homes for the building’s last remaining residents. At the direction of Common Pleas Judge John McVay, neither party will comment publically before they return to court March 3. This comes after a flurry of activity which included a rally by residents at the City-County Building on Grant Street, a new legal filing by the city against building owners Pennley Park South, and Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto writing a letter asking several developers and nonprofits to house the last of the complex’s residents, who have until March 31 to leave. At the rally, past and current residents told of hardships placed on them while trying to secure replacement affordable housing. Randall Taylor said affordable housing is a “human right,” and renewed his call for the city to seize the property via eminent domain. “We’ve got to begin putting in concrete policies. People can’t live in empty promises. So we have to challenge the city council SEE PENN A6
RALLYING GRANT STREET—Current and former Penn Plaza Apartments residents rally for affordable housing support at the City-County Building. The deadline for moving out of the complex is March 31. (Photo by J.L. Martello)
Hamlet hears from the community by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
Just because Pittsburgh Superintendent of Schools Anthony Hamlet has already held multiple meetings with parents, education advocates and stakeholders from across the city and incorporated the feedback into the district’s visioning, it doesn’t mean he’s
stopped listening. During a recent forum in Homewood, Hamlet said he will continue to gather community input for as long as he is superintendent. “I’ve said this before. I want this to be my first and last Superintendency,” he said. “I want to be here 10-15 years because you can’t create consistency if every two or three years there’s someone new in charge.”
The Feb. 17 forum, sponsored by the United Front for Education (UFE), was held at the Homewood branch of the Community College of Allegheny County. The UFE had asked to meet with Hamlet so it could present him an educational model it has been crafting, designed “to educate our SEE HAMLET A4
Courier highlighted at PBMF Point Park forum by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
LINEAGE—From left: Tene Croom, Damon Young, Jesse Washington and Rod Doss discuss the Pittsburgh Courier’s impact and the evolution of the Black Press at Point Park University. (Photo by J.L. Martello)
Pittsburgh Courier NEW
To subscribe, call 412-481-8302 ext. 134 or FAX 412-481-1360
Speaking of the history of Black Press, the Pittsburgh Courier and the New Pittsburgh Courier, internet maven and journalist Damon Young, founder of verysmartbrothas.com, said he would not be doing what he does if not for the Courier. “I was reading the Courier when I was 8 or 9. And it’s been inspirational to my work––maybe not directly, but in legacy. I’m standing on the shoulders of the reporters and editors who came before me,” he said during a Feb. 23 panel discussion at Point Park University. Courier Editor and Publisher Rod Doss, who also took part in the panel presentation sponsored by the Pittsburgh Black Media Federation, said that has always been part of the Courier’s mission––inspiration. “There was a woman who grew up in the rural SEE COURIER A4
Julianne Malveaux says
PITTSBURGH—The six-member board of the August Wilson Center has unanimously elected Pittsburgh developer and community leader Michael Polite as its new chair for this year. Polite, who joined the board in August 2015, is majority owner of Ralph A. Falbo Inc., a developer of unique and innovative urban residential properties. He succeeds Pittsburgh Foundation President and CEO Maxwell King, who MICHAEL POLITE will remain on the board, along with the heads of two other philanthropies—Grant Oliphant, president and CEO of The Heinz Endowment, and Scott Izzo, director of the Richard King Mellon Foundation. The three foundations were instrumental in funding the original construction of the Wilson Center, which opened in 2009. Five years later, after financial problems and unsuccessful management efforts forced it into SEE LEADER A6
Voices Unlocked
Stories of residents whose experiences have been shaped by the penal system by Brittany Hailer For New Pittsburgh Courier
(PublicSource)—Voices Unlocked is a project telling the stories of Pittsburgh-area residents whose life experiences have been shaped by the penal system. Meet Sarah Sarah Womack stands in the center of her daughter’s pink room and explains why she had to take the frame off the bed and leave the mattress on the floor. After the Office of Children, Youth and Families inspected her home, the agency claimed that a bed with a frame would make a room seem too much like SEE VOICES A6
Political involvement is necessary, not sufficient Forum B6