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ChiefMcLay drawslarge crowdatPitt VOL. 106, NO. 39
SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 6, 2015
Courier Staff Writer
Courier Staff Writer
SEE CHIEF A5
WOMEN UNITED—Women of all ages, faiths, and from all over the region held hands and prayed before the walk began. (Photo by J.L. Martello)
Women’s Walk for Peace seeks to end violence by Samson X Horne For New Pittsburgh Courier
The Northside Coalition for Fair Housing conducted its annual Women’s Walk for Peace on Sept. 26. This is the eighth year of the walk, which has traditionally been geared to community awareness in parenting, domestic violence and violence within the community. NCFH Executive Director
Courier Staff Writer
One day after Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto announced that his administration had brokered a deal between the owners and residents of the Penn Plaza apartments in East Liberty, city councilman Rev. Ricky Burgess
In 1979, when Brenda Tate applied to the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, her cadet class consisted of 10 White males, 10 White females, 10 Black males and 10 Black females. But with such quotas being ruled illegal, in the intervening 30-plus years, few classes have had more than three Black males or females—until now. During a recent press announcement at police headquarters, 23 members of the current recruit class waited in the back— having been temporarily displaced from a lecture for the press conference. Of those 23, seven were Black males. “I’m surprised and hopeful that they can build on that. It shouldn’t have taken a lawsuit to find qualified Black men,” said Tate, who retired last year. “I’ve had friends who were so discouraged because their kids applied and ended up going to other cities to get hired. There’s no telling how many qualified candidates were eliminated over the years.” But Witold “Vic” Walczak, who as Pennsylvania legal director for the ACLU won a $985,000 settlement for 360 Blacks SEE CADETS A5
Work Pittsburgh building futures for ex-offenders
Ronell Guy said that this is an event that everyone can relate to. “I don’t think there’s a woman alive that hasn’t been affected in some form of domestic abuse whether it’s physical or emotional. And if they haven’t, they know someone that has. There are no perfect people,” she said. The walk has also transformed into a #BlackLivesMatter movement in which the opportunity Black women in the communities of Pittsburgh to speak up for
themselves through the demonstration. “We have to take responsibility of our actions, and to have respect for the life and love of one another,” said Guy. The walk kicked off with a rally in the lot across the street from the Pittsburgh Project on North Charles Street. Reverend Dorothy Stubbs of Lost But Not Forgotten Outreach de-
introduced legislation designed to maintain affordability and livability for the city’s low- and moderate-income residents. The Penn Plaza agreement, reached 10 weeks after the residents were initially given 90-day eviction notices, calls for the residents of the complex’s two buildings to be moved out in two
phases, with funding support from the owner, Pennley Park South, which plans to redevelop the property into a mixed-use retail and housing site. In addition to Burgess, Peduto, the residents and owners, state Rep. Ed Gainey, D-East Liberty,
At the end of the day when Kris Davis leaves his job at Work Pittsburgh on the South Side, he can look across the rivers at the Allegheny County Jail windows he would stare out of. “I would look at the cars on Parkway East and wish I was stuck in rush hour traffic,” he said. Now, when other drivers are fuming about traffic as he drives home to McKeesport, he smiles. And he gives a lot of credit for that smile to the people he is working with, who have honed his modest skills with shop tools into the rough and finished carpentry needed to build a house—which he is doing in a South 6th Street warehouse. Along with 10 other ex-offenders and one
SEE BURGESS A5
SEE BUILDING A4
Burgess introduces ‘Agenda for All’ following Penn Plaza deal by Christian Morrow
COUNCILMAN RICKY BURGESS
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by Christian Morrow
by Christian Morrow
Usually a small audience attends the Center for Race and Social Problems lectures at the University of Pittsburgh. But Pittsburgh Police Chief Cameron McLay is anything but usual. That meant room 2017 at the Cathedral of Learning was standing room only for his Sept. 14 presentation. McLay began by saying that racism is not driving the animosity between Pittsburgh’s Black communities and the police. “It’s about poverty, access to opportunity, unconscious bias and lack of communication. It’s not as easy as “racism” he said. “Is it a factor? Absolutely, but it’s not the prime driver.” McLay cannot do anything about the first two factors, but since he arrived one year ago, he has been working to improve officercommunity communication, and has recently begun implementing training to eliminate unconscious bias throughout the police bureau. “Unconscious bias training scared me because I had been a ‘use of force’ trainer
Current police class: Most Black cadets in decades Published Weekly
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by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
SisterFriend gives ‘forgotten about supplies’ to women by Ashley Johnson Courier Staff Writer
When people donate to individuals in need or to organizations that provide aide, it’s usually the same items—toiletries such as soap, lotion, deodorant, etc.—but what about the other items? Those products that few like to talk about, but women need on a monthly basis. SisterFriend Inc., a new community organization that provides feminine hygiene products and more to social service organizations, is not only meeting those needs, but also breaking the stigma that comes along with it. “This is one of the major needs for shelters because, of course, menstruation is
WOMEN'S NEEDS—The SisterFriend Inc. team, from left: Shauna Brown, Julie Strickland-Gillard, founder Tamara Whiting and Darlene Powell, with its SisterFriend kits and other feminine hygiene products collected at its Community Outreach Day. (Photo by Rossano P. Stewart)
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not something that’s talked about; it’s unfortunately taboo and there is a lot of shame around that. Women are groomed from day one to hide the fact that they have periods, so if that’s the case, it doesn’t really get funded, organizations don’t really have the supplies and it’s something people don’t think to donate,” said Tamara Whiting, founder of SisterFriend Inc. “(Shelters) get the hats, the gloves, the deodorant the soaps, which they continuously need all the time, but they don’t get the tampons, the pads, the bras, the underwear, even the adult diapers, so that’s where SisterFriend comes SEE SISTERFRIEND A5
Ulish Carter says
Leon Ford continues his fight for justice Opinion A6