FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT'S SOUTHWESTERN PENNSYLVANIA
BY COLIN WILLIAMS
Kosoko
BY REGE BEHE
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COVER PHOTO: COURTESY OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA CONSERVANCY.
PROJECT FOR CIVIC CENTER AT POINT PARK FOR THE ALLEGHENY CONFERENCE, PART OF FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT’S SOUTHWESTERN PENNSYLVANIA
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OCT. 11–17, 2023 // VOL. 32 ISSUE 41
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14 POLITICS
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“transformational” plans. Will
Jackson centers Black, queer characters in a haunting new tale
EVENTS Pittsburgh’s top events this week BY CP STAFF
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CHECK THESE STORIES OUT ONLINE: SLIDESHOW Cinderlands’ Cinderfest 2023 BY STACY ROUNDS SOCIAL JUSTICE Art by and for everybody: meet the Disabled Artists Creative Cohort
PHOTO: STEPHANIE STRASBURG/PUBLICSOURCE
CP PHOTO: MARS JOHNSON
04 VISUAL ART
PHOTO: COURTESY OF THE FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT FOUNDATION ARCHIVES (THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART|AVERY ARCHITECTURAL & FINE ARTS LIBRARY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, NEW YORK)
Frank Lloyd Wright’s plans for Pittsburgh included a massive, car-centric civic center
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FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT'S
AUFO-SHAPED CIVIC CENTER LOOMING OVER THE POINT. A TOWERING APARTMENT BUILDING ATOP A WOODED RIDGE. A FULLY-AUTOMATED PARKING GARAGE HULKING NEXT TO KAUFMANN’S. THESE ARE JUST SOME OF THE VISIONS FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT HAD FOR SOUTHWESTERN PENNSYLVANIA IN THE LATER YEARS OF HIS CAREER, AND A NEW EXHIBITION BRINGS THESE VISIONS TO LIFE WITH A COMBINATION OF ANIMATION, ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS, AND 3-D MODELING.
Co-organized with Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania explores never-built projects that would have irrevocably altered the local landscape — for good or for ill.
“This exhibition celebrates the genius of Frank Lloyd Wright’s design in a new and approachable way, but it also asks visitors to question how these projects might have changed the Pittsburgh region as we know
it, for better or for worse,” Justin Gunther, Fallingwater Director and Western Pennsylvania Conservancy Vice President, said in a press release.
The exhibition was four years in planning and gives visitors a deep look at the full breadth of Wright’s genius and ambition.
Much of Wright’s work is characterized by harmony with nature. Both Fallingwater, built in 1935, and nearby Kentuck Knob, built between
1953 and 1956, seem almost to emerge from wooded hillsides with their rough-hewn stonework and low-slung shapes. The 1957 Duncan House, another Wright design that was built in Chicago and reassembled in Polymath Park, also fits these criteria.
But Wright wasn’t afraid to dream big. In one example, he planned a mile-high skyscraper for what’s now Chicago’s Millennium Park. His utopian — or dystopian
— vision for the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela shares this idealist approach.
Just as the Civic Arena required the destruction of a vibrant neighborhood, Wright’s Point Park Civic Center would have remade the Point into a blocks-wide, car-centric hub that feels out of proportion with its surroundings. His Kaufmann’s garage would have similarly required the leveling of a large
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VISUAL ART
swath of Pittsburgh’s Firstside (and thus Pittsburgh City Paper newsroom). Given the fate of the Arena and other projects such as Penn Circle and Allegheny Center, it’s hard to imagine these grand visions aging well.
Not all of Wright’s dreams for the region were so sweeping. His neverrealized Rhododendron Chapel, presented at Fallingwater’s visitor center, would have been a jeweltoned tribute to Pennsylvania veg etation. But the Kaufmann family, for whom Wright designed the chapel, had the idealism and deep pockets necessary to fuel Wright’s more aspi rational side. The exhibition explores Wright’s relationship with patrons such as the Kaufmanns and organizations such as the Allegheny Conference.
It also places Wright’s legacy in contemporary context. An adjacent exhibition in the Westmoreland’s Paneled Rooms, Toshiko Mori & Frank Lloyd Wright: Dialogue in Details half-scale models to showcase the dialogue between Wright’s Martin House and Mori’s Greatbatch Pavilion in Buffalo, N.Y.
“Dialogue in Details is an exhibi tion that asks: what about the past should we be carrying forward, and what about that past should we leave behind? In the times in which we find ourselves, Toshiko Mori’s project feels more relevant than ever,” Jeremiah William McCarthy, the Westmoreland’s chief curator, said in a statement.
Like other artists, Wright has come under scrutiny in recent years for his chauvinism. Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania: The Fallingwater Projects. Sun., Oct. 15 through Dec. 31. Fallingwater-Speryer Gallery. 1491 Mill Run Road, Mill Run. fallingwater.org/exhibitions
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania. Continues through Jan. 14, 2024.
“THIS EXHIBITION CELEBRATES THE GENIUS OF FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT’S DESIGN IN A NEW AND APPROACHABLE WAY, BUT IT ALSO ASKS VISITORS TO QUESTION HOW THESE PROJECTS MIGHT HAVE CHANGED THE PITTSBURGH REGION AS WE KNOW IT, FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE.”
PHOTO: THE FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT FOUNDATION ARCHIVES (THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART|AVERY ARCHITECTURAL & FINE ARTS LIBRARY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, NEW YORK)
Point View Residences designed for the Edgar J. Kaufmann Charitable Trust, part of Frank Lloyd Wright's Southwestern Pennsylvania
The Westmoreland Museum of American Art. 221 N. Main St., Greensburg, thewestmoreland.org
WHO'S AFRAID OF CHRIS BRUSSALIS?
Chris Brussalis rose up the ranks quickly at Point Park University. In spite of questions around his appointment and his politics, he’s pursuing big changes at the cash-strapped university.
BY COLIN WILLIAMS
6 WWW.PGHCITYPAPER.COM NEWS
LIKE MANY REGIONAL COLLEGES, POINT PARK UNIVERSITY IS FACING SEVERAL CONCURRENT CHALLENGES.
COVID dampened enrollment and created hurdles for the university. Meanwhile, some alumni and current employees say money is tight at the school known for its performing arts conservatory, especially after Point Park spent $60 million building the Pittsburgh Playhouse and paid out $1.25 million to settle claims it provided an inadequate education during lockdown.
an environment where we’re stimulating creativity and innovation really grounded in experiential learning.”
He characterizes Point Park as “one of the most dynamic urban universities in the country” and says a combination of access to workforce internships and co-ops, improved student life, national recruitment, fundraising, and improvements to facilities will help the university not just survive, but thrive. Brussalis’ administration sees these plans going hand-in-hand with the betterment of the Golden Triangle.
“As the downtown university, we
And then there’s the president situation — namely, Point Park has had three university presidents since 2021. That includes current officeholder Chris Brussalis, whose swift, unanimous promotion from board member to interim leader to permanent president has raised some eyebrows on campus. Meanwhile, the Hill Group, the consulting company Brussalis chaired until “semi-retiring” more than two years ago, seems to be planning a sweeping overhaul of Point Park’s admissions, programs, and possibly faculty.
Concurrently, the vibe on campus seems to be shifting. Students with marginalized identities say that since Brussalis took over, they’re noticing more hostility from incoming freshmen. Some of them worry changes to the student body’s makeup could have implications for their safety.
Still, Brussalis says he’s the man for the job.
“This is a very challenging time in higher ed. An extremely challenging time. Our strategic plan has to be transformational,” Brussalis tells Pittsburgh City Paper. “We’re all about trying to create an atmosphere and
can be the driver of Renaissance III,” he says. “There’s no better entity to drive that transformation.”
Brussalis is hardly alone in the region in the recency of his appointment. Six of 11 higher ed institutions in Greater Pittsburgh have had an administrative changing of the guard in the years since COVID. However, some prominent alumni and current students say the speed of his appointment was alarming. Combined with Brussalis’s conservative personal politics, they worry his appointment portends unilateral changes to a university home to many queer students.
A bold vision
Recent alumna and former Student Government Association (SGA) president Kendra Summers says Brussalis’ rapid ascent occurred “without consultation” of on-campus groups, including the SGA (Brussalis says 50 stakeholders, including SGA members, had input on his performance as interim president).
“It’s concerning,” Summers tells City Paper . “Point Park has a very diverse student body — there should be more involvement from people
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WHO'S AFRAID OF CHRIS BRUSSALIS?, CONTINUES ON PG. 8
CP PHOTO: MARS JOHNSON
"THIS IS A VERY CHALLENGING TIME IN HIGHER ED. OUR STRATEGIC PLAN HAS TO BE TRANSFORMATIONAL."
you’re aiming to protect.” She says former university president Don Green’s brief tenure and sudden departure were jarring.
“I had no idea which signature was going to be on my degree,” she says.
Former SGA president Dennis McDermott (who preceded Summers in office) says they perceive a “disconnect” between the businessfriendly trustees and the student body in aggregate. They say the board seemed to favor Brussalis early in the search process in spite of student misgivings. “They don’t talk to students at all,” they say of the trustees. McDermott worries many board members see their office as a “prestige position.”
“It would probably come as a surprise if they actually walked through campus to see how proud students are of their identities,” McDermott says.
Calling it a “competitive advantage,” Brussalis says Point Park’s diversity “makes us special.” That diversity, he says, is central to the successful implementation of a new
strategic plan that runs through 2030.
City Paper was able to view an undated draft copy of the strategic plan in September. Left intact, it would substantially change facets
Some initiatives pertain to faculty. Under the new plan, the university would review and “teach out programs that are no longer relevant.”
Brussalis denies that this means
the addition of “mixed-generational housing” within existing campus facilities. This plan would see “graduate artists, Pittsburgh Scholar House single mothers and children, and retirement residences” added to residence halls.
There’s also the now-public study of the feasibility of sharing services with other local colleges and universities such as Robert Morris and Carlow. The Hill Group undertook the study with former Point Park president Paul Hennigan, who’s now a senior consultant at Hill.
of daily life at Point Park, ranging from student housing to academic programs.
Some of the initiatives pertain to enrollment — under Brussalis, the university is aiming for a massive bump in admissions. His administration is hoping to increase enrollment in the Conservatory of the Performing Arts by 30% even as colleges’ student bodies shrink across the nation. Also envisioned is a rise in transfers, additional varsity athletic teams, and more international students.
imminent layoffs — “we’re hiring,” he says, though he describes examining a variety of strategies for greater solvency as his “fiduciary responsibility.”
The university also proposes evaluating processes for faculty review and studying faculty pay “to better align compensation with peers.” For those following the WVU saga farther south, where the state school’s leadership is purging hundreds of faculty, these words are likely to raise questions.
Other foreseen changes include
Brussalis says sharing services could save area institutions millions on procurement. “I think we spend probably $34, $40 million on stuff,” Brussalis says. Combining different schools’ operations would mean, instead of $40 million, “you now have an organization that spends threequarters of $1 billion per year, you have some incredible buying power.”
It’s nothing if not an ambitious plan. However, items such as the addition of lacrosse programs seem out of character for an arts-forward, largely
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"IF THEY THINK ATHLETICS ARE THE SOLUTION, THEY'RE GOING TO LOSE STUDENTS."
WHO'S AFRAID OF CHRIS BRUSSALIS?, CONTINUED FROM PG. 7
CP PHOTO: MARS JOHNSON
queer university, McDermott says.
“If they think athletics are the solution, they’re going to lose students,” they say. They add that many students choose the university specifically “because it doesn’t have frats and that atmosphere of frats.”
Brussalis has continued to do charitable work in support of his former college fraternity, Phi Delta Theta. Ted Black, Point Park’s senior vice president of institutional giving and a former NHL executive, was also a Phi Delta Theta brother. He and Brussalis both graduated from Allegheny College in 1987.
But fraternity membership isn’t the only way Brussalis differs from some Point Park students.
The specter of Florida
Point Park’s trustees are disproportionately white and male. Among them are several financial executives and investment managers, as well as PA Rep. Rob Mercuri, whose
anti-LGBTQ positions place him outside the Point Park mainstream. Mercuri represents the growing suburban area encompassing Brussalis’s home in Richland Twp., where (as this author covered in a previous role) Brussalis’s wife Christina has been a sharp-elbowed conservative school board member. Christina Brussalis — whom one current Point Park employee alleged President Brussalis called “the First Lady of Point Park” during the early days of his tenure — has been an outspoken advocate for school choice and against the perceived encroachment of critical race theory in K-12 education. She was a panelist at the conservative PA Leadership Conference in March 2023, which featured Rep. Scott Perry, who played a major role in the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection, and arch-conservative Fla. Gov. Ron DeSantis. Florida has its own recent history of higher-education tumult. Among other things, Christina
WHO'S AFRAID OF CHRIS BRUSSALIS?, CONTINUES ON PG. 10
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WHO'S AFRAID OF CHRIS BRUSSALIS?, CONTINUED FROM PG. 8
Brussalis advocated for “plant[ing] parents’ groups that are conservative and fighting for conservative values in every school across the state.”
President Brussalis’s own political donations skew conservative. Though he did donate $2,500 to Democratic congressional candidate Larry Maggi in June and September of 2012, the vast majority of his donations have been to conservative Republicans. In the summer of 2021, Brussalis donated almost $6,000 to conservative congressional candidate Sean Parnell. In spring and summer of 2022, he donated $2,250 to GOP candidate Jeremy Shaffer.
While some Point Park trustees have also donated to Republicans, Brussalis’s contributions to the party’s candidates and PACs have been larger and more frequent; they total $21,959.31 since 2001. Christina Brussalis also donated thousands to Shaffer and the WinRed PAC. (For comparison, former Point Park president Hennigan appears to have donated a total of $250 each to Democratic legislators Mike Doyle and Bob Casey in 2006 and 2012, respectively.)
The current employee, who spoke to CP on background for fear of jeopardizing their career, says the couple’s leanings, and particularly Christina Brussalis’ rejection of an equity policy in Pine-Richland School District, are alarming. Some students agree.
Current student Henry*, who asked to remain anonymous but has worked with Brussalis as a member of a student organization, says he fears the reversal of recent gains made in pursuit of more robust diversity, equity, and inclusion practices. He worries Pres. Brussalis isn’t ready for hard conversations around such issues, especially after the university restructured its Office of Equity and Inclusion last year. “That’s very heavily impacting us in a negative way,” he says, although SGA recently added a DEI-focused officer role.
Henry says Brussalis has seemed unprepared to tackle issues such as those facing trans students.
“Everything felt very business-oriented,” he tells CP . “Every time we brought up a genuine, serious issue affecting the LGBTQ community, he skirted around it hardcore.”
can I help transform this university?”
Henry worries bigoted behavior at Point Park is already on the rise — he says he’s observed “an influx of freshmen with less tolerant beliefs” accompanied by microaggressions, including deliberate misgendering of trans students and vandalism of the Gender & Sexuality Spectrum Alliance’s flyers.
“There’s kind of the vibe that freshmen are less tolerant or were not expecting [Point Park] to be as liberal and queer as it is,” he says. Henry says one friend overheard someone saying they were “fine with gay people, but not expecting it to be this much.”
Brussalis says he’s made every effort to support all students and has worked closely with both SGA and student organizations, including the Gender and Sexuality Spectrum Alliance (GSSA). “I’ve met with GSSA probably more than any group on campus,” he says. He’s worked closely with the org since taking office, including on a 10-point plan
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“How
CONSERVATIVE
"THE PRESIDENT APPEARS WILLING TO ASSIST US IN ACHIEVING OUR OBJECTIVES BUT REMAINS UNDOUBTEDLY PRACTICAL AND
IN HIS APPROACH."
WHO'S AFRAID OF CHRIS BRUSSALIS?, CONTINUED FROM PG. 9 DJ FEMI FRIDAY, OCT. 13 SING! SING! SING! Featuring Various Artists + Karaoke - Open to Public 7-8PM SATURDAY, OCT. 14 3PM-8PM PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER STAGE DOWNTOWNPITTSBURGH.COM
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WED.OCT. 11 + FRI. OCT. 13 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM + LIVE MUSIC! JOIN US FOR HAPPY HOUR! HAPPY HOURS IN THE PARK! ELYSE AND RYAN OCT. 12 5 - 7 PM
CP PHOTO: MARS JOHNSON
King’s Ransom
MARKET SQUARE
MELLON SQUARE
can be more proactive about seeking student input, especially when hiring administrators who make universitywide policy decisions.
“It sets a very dangerous and interesting precedent to make those decisions without consulting the president of the SGA,” she says. She hopes the current administration can cement a policy in writing that guarantees SGA a seat at the table for big hires.
Current SGA president Marc Palombo characterized the current situation at the university as “hang[ing] in uncertainty.” In an emailed statement, he told CP in part, “the President appears willing to assist us in achieving our objectives but remains undoubtedly practical and conservative in his approach to running the university.
“Nevertheless, as we’re still in the early stages of the academic year, I prefer to reserve judgment and
forward.”
Time will tell if Point Park can avoid culture-war pitfalls and realize the ambitious goals laid out in the draft strategic plan. Part of that will depend on Brussalis’ rapport with the student body. Current student Henry reports that Brussalis has been congenial and visible on campus. Brussalis says he’s made every effort to serve as a resource for students, faculty, and staff.
“I’m out and about all the time. My family’s on campus. My wife’s engaged,” Brussalis says.
Brussalis says he’s in the “fourth quarter” of a fulfilling life — he views his legacy now through the lens of impacting students and leaving the university better than he found it. His main concern at this critical early stage: “How can I help transform this university, lead the way, and help transform one of the most beautiful cities in the world?” •
CP PHOTOS: MARS JOHNSON
OUT OF THE FOREST
REGE BEHE // CPCONTRIBUTORS@PGHCITYPAPER.COM
PITTSBURGH ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS KOSOKO JACKSON.
6 P.M. THU., OCT. 12.
CARNEGIE LIBRARY LECTURE HALL. 4400 FORBES AVE., OAKLAND. FREE. REGISTRATION REQUIRED. PITTSBURGHLECTURES.ORG
One of Kosoko Jackson’s main sources of inspiration is filmmaker Jordan Peele which would be understandable if Jackson was a filmmaker.
But like Peele, Jackson, who crafts young adult books featuring nonstereotypical Black, queer characters, does dip into horror. His latest novel, The Forest Demands Its Due (HarperCollins), is akin to Rushmore by way of American Horror Story. The protagonist, Douglas Jones, attends an elite prep school where he doesn’t fit in. Things take a sinister turn when a fellow student ends up murdered and, not long after, everyone, except for Douglas and the groundskeeper’s son, acts as though the victim never existed.
The book released on Oct. 3 to positive reception, with Kirkus Reviews calling it a “satisfying and suspenseful genre-bender” that “delivers an uplifting gay romance.”
Jackson, who currently serves as a visiting professor at Seton Hill University in Greensburg, Pa., will discuss the book on Thu., Oct. 12 as part of a Pittsburgh Arts & Lectures Made Local event.
One of the things Jackson admires about Peele is the award-winning
filmmaker’s determination not to have Black people die in his movies.
“That’s not the same thing that I prescribe myself to, but I do think that nuanced characters with a wide range of experiences that are, frankly, like straight white experiences, are incredibly important for gay Blacks,” Jackson tells Pittsburgh City Paper.
Jackson admits he is more of a movie buff than an avid reader and that most of his stories start with a vivid image or scene.
“When I come up with a book, it usually appears as a cinematic piece before I start plotting,” he says, adding, “There’s like one quintessential scene of a book that I think of first and I use that to set the tone for the whole book. For me, if I get to the point of a book where this is a story I’m going to write, that scene has to resonate with me emotionally. And then it’s how do I carry that emotion through the whole story.”
There’s another cinematic aspect to Jackson’s work; he’s a self-described “intense” outliner, explaining that he will start with a 20-25 page quasi-screenplay and turn it into a 354-page book.
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LITERATURE
PHOTO: COURTESY OF KOSOKO JACKSON Kosoko Jackson
Jackson’s first attempt at writing started when he was 6 years old, scribbling very short stories as his parents watched Wheel of Fortune , then reading them aloud during commercial breaks. His writing, of course, matured over the years in his books, including the culinaryinspired romance A Dash of Salt and Pepper , the thriller Survive the Dome , and the time travel narrative Yesterday is History
None of Jackson’s books are culled directly from his experiences, but the sub-themes of racism, sexism, and homophobia that appear through his work were present throughout his life, he says.
Jackson, who also works as a digital media specialist, says one of his goals is to write the kinds of novels he wanted to read during his teen years.
“I grew up as a gay Black teen and, back in the day, there were not many inspiring stories,” he says. “We kind of had very typical gay male tropes. You could be a hooker, you could be in the closet, you could be a drug addict. And so, especially for teens, I wanted to write stories where they could be a wide range of things. They can be heroes, they can be villains, and that’s always what I’ve dedicated myself to.” •
13 PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER OCTOBER 11-18, 2023
PHOTO: COURTESY OF HARPERCOLLINS The Forest Demands Its Due
“WHEN I COME UP WITH A BOOK, IT USUALLY APPEARS AS A CINEMATIC PIECE BEFORE I START PLOTTING.”
NATIONAL HEAT
A progressive megadonor backs Democrat Matt Dugan in his quest to topple 25-year incumbent Stephen Zappala as Allegheny County’s top prosecutor. Zappala asks voters to look to other cities and has an endorsement from a national political group.
BY CHARLIE WOLFSON // INFO@PGHCITYPAPER.COM
14 WWW.PGHCITYPAPER.COM POLITICS
THE RACE TO BE ALLEGHENY County’s top prosecutor — between incumbent Stephen Zappala and challenger and Democratic nominee Matt Dugan — has drawn unusual national attention for a local election.
A local contest that’s usually sleepy and uncompetitive has become a flashpoint in the long-running debate over criminal justice reform, attracting outside attention and money and causing a longtime incumbent to switch parties.
Dugan defeated Zappala, who has served as district attorney since 1998, in the Democratic primary in May. But Zappala accrued enough write-in votes in the Republican primary to earn that party’s nomination, setting up a rematch before the broader electorate.
public safety in the process.
Pennsylvania Justice & Public Safety PAC, a political action committee funded by billionaire progressive donor George Soros, gave more than $700,000 in in-kind donations — mostly in the form of TV ads — to Dugan’s primary campaign. That represented about 90% of the campaign’s total contributions through early June.
Zappala’s campaign received mostly local money ahead of the primary, including some five-figure checks from labor unions.
Filings showing fundraising since June are due to be disclosed in October.
Zappala supporters, meanwhile, are using media interviews and television ads to invoke other cities — some with prosecutors backed by Soros — by stoking fears
Dugan’s campaign has attracted big money from a progressive mega-donor, reflecting a new strategy by the donor class to bypass federal and state politics and try to bring change at the local level. Zappala’s side has invoked scenes of chaos in cities from coast to coast to make their pitch, and he received an endorsement from the Forward Party, a centrist group with presence nationwide.
Dugan, who served as the county’s chief public defender, said in a press conference Friday that he has a plan to improve public safety conditions in Downtown Pittsburgh. Zappala countered that Dugan would go too far in catering to defendants, jeopardizing
that crime-ridden streets and lawlessness could come to Allegheny County if Dugan prevails, framing this race as a referendum on progressive approaches to criminal justice nationwide.
The Forward Party announced its support for Zappala by sending former New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman — who positioned herself as a crime-fighter — to Pittsburgh. The group has a presence in dozens of states and is fronted by former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang. It later endorsed Republican county executive candidate Joe Rockey.
The crush of money flowing in and the heightened, nationalized rhetoric
15 PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER OCTOBER 11-18, 2023
“THEY KNOW THAT THEY CAN QUIETLY PUT MONEY INTO THESE RACES AND AFFECT CHANGE WITH THE DISCRETION THAT EXISTS AT THE LOCAL LEVEL, OUT OF THE SCRUTINY OF THE NATIONAL MEDIA, OUT OF THE SCRUTINY OF HIGH-PROFILE STATE RACES, AND START CREATING CHANGE FROM THE BOTTOM UP.”
PHOTO: STEPHANIE STRASBURG/PUBLICSOURCE
make this race different from what county voters are accustomed to when it comes to local elections.
Outside support coming in
Dugan’s campaign finance disclosure ahead of the May primary showed a modest amount of money given directly to the campaign — just over $70,000. The bulk of his support instead came as in-kind contributions, almost all attributed to the Pennsylvania Justice & Public Safety PAC, consisting largely of research, polling, television ads, and mail. The PAC’s mailing address is in
Washington, D.C. and its disclosure filed with the county shows that all of its money came from Soros.
Why would anyone outside Allegheny County, let alone a billionaire, care about a county-level race here?
Jennie Sweet-Cushman, a Chatham University political science professor, said donors are growing frustrated with inaction at the federal level and increasingly see local seats as an avenue to bring about change.
“They know that they can quietly put money into these races and affect change with the discretion that exists at the local level, out of the scrutiny
of the national media, out of the scrutiny of high-profile state races, and start creating change from the bottom up,” Sweet-Cushman says.
An array of Soros-funded PACs has backed reform-minded prosecutor candidates in many counties in recent years, including Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner and the former San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin, who was recalled by voters last year.
Chris Bonneau, a political science professor at the University of Pittsburgh, says such out-of-town spending in local prosecutor races used to be nearly unheard of, but has
gained steam in the last few years.
“It’s much more about criminal justice reform,” than local politics, Bonneau says. “If they have an agenda of criminal justice reform and they want to see changes, then they target not only Allegheny County but other counties where there are key races or key openings on the ballot. And much like a Supreme Court case is kind of about the litigants but not really — it’s about the broader policy issue — I think it’s a similar thing at work here.”
Competition in DA races across the country used to be uncommon, Bonneau says. Zappala won a contested election in 1999, then didn’t
16 WWW.PGHCITYPAPER.COM
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PHOTO: STEPHANIE STRASBURG/PUBLICSOURCE
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face a spirited challenge until 2019, before Dugan swiped the Democratic nomination from him.
“Prior to [the past 10 years], most prosecutors rarely got opposition, and when they did, the incumbents won with overwhelming percentages of the vote,” Bonneau says. “Now, prosecutor elections have really become the flashpoint in criminal justice reform, particularly in urban areas.”
Local policy in a national debate
A new television ad from Zappala’s campaign features footage not just of Allegheny County, but of Philadelphia and San Francisco. Scenes showing robberies and shootings, purportedly in other cities where progressive prosecutors have prevailed in recent years, are meant as a warning of what could happen here if Zappala loses.
“The same extremists who created this now want Pittsburgh to be their next social justice experiment,” a narrator says in the ad as carnage fills the screen.
Dugan dismissed the ad in an interview as “a standard red meat ad for Republicans” and criticized Zappala for shifting “blame or responsibility to other entities.”
Asked for a response, Zappala campaign spokesperson Ben Wren says, “It’s clear Matt Dugan doesn’t want to answer for what the policies he proposes have already done to other cities.”
Dugan took to Market Square last week to roll out his plan to curb Downtown crime, saying the DA’s office should take a leading role in the process alongside Pittsburgh’s mayor, police, and county leaders.
He suggested creating a dedicated magistrate to handle and become familiar with Downtown cases, and said he would establish more channels for Downtown residents and business owners to communicate their concerns to the DA’s office.
Zappala issued a press release hours later, accusing Dugan of not understanding the DA’s duties. Zappala blamed current Downtown conditions on Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey, spurring another pair of dueling press releases between the mayor and DA, pointing the finger at one another.
A top point of contention in the race is Dugan’s opposition to the use of cash bail. Zappala and other critics say the position shows Dugan would turn dangerous criminals loose, endangering the public. Dugan counters by saying he would still seek pretrial detention for defendants with violent histories or other risks using risk assessment reports that are already produced for each bail hearing.
Dugan’s website also suggests he would look at cutting down on probation periods for nonviolent offenders, saying “unnecessarily long” probation periods are leading to an increased jail population. He would seek periods of supervision “that balances public safety and the rehabilitative needs of the defendant.”
Zappala’s campaign website does not have an issues page; the 25-year incumbent is not campaigning on changing policy. He is positioning himself instead as a firewall against progressive policies.
“I will never permit your safety to become an experiment,” Zappala says in the TV ad. •
This story was fact-checked by Jack Troy.
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This article was originally published by PublicSource a nonprofit newsroom serving the Pittsburgh region. Read PublicSource’s coverage of this race here.
Charlie Wolfson is PublicSource’s local government reporter and a Report for America corps member. He can be reached at charlie@publicsource.org or on Twitter @chwolfson.
KIDS’ FALL FESTIVAL
Friday, Oct. 20, 4-8 p.m.
Fall Activities * Pumpkin Patch * Refreshments
FREE for kids under 12
ADULT FALL FESTIVAL
Saturday, Oct. 21, 6-10 p.m.
Bill Henry Band * DJ NATE DA BARBER * Silent Auction
$50 per person - includes 2 drink tix
Guests must be 21 years of age or older
sarahheinzhouse.org
19 PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER OCTOBER 11-18, 2023 Call now! 1-855-385-3879 Dental50Plus.com/Citypaper See any dentist — save more if you stay in network Preventive care starts right away No deductible, no annual maximum Product not available in all states. Contact us to see the coverage and offer available in your state. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation including costs and limitations. This specific offer is not available in CO. Call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for a similar offer. In WV: To find a provider in the network visit us at https://www. physiciansmutual.com/web/dental/find-dentist. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E); Insurance Policy P150; Rider Kinds B438/ B439. In CA, CO, ID, KY, ME, MD, MA, MI, MO, NV, NJ, NC, ND, VA: Includes Participating Providers and Preventive Benefits Rider. Certificate C254/B465 (PA: C254PA); Insurance Policy P154/B469 (GA: P154GA; OK: P154OK; TN: P154TN). It doesn’t matter what dentist you see, we can help pay the bill. Get dental insurance from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. 6323 Get your FREE Information Kit
SEVEN DAYS IN PITTSBURGH
BY CP STAFF
THU., OCT. 12
ART • WEST END
Fugue State: Paintings by Catharine Fichtner 5-8 p.m. Continues through Dec. 8. James Gallery. 413 South Main St., West End. Free. jamesgallery.net
LIT • OAKLAND
Pittsburgh Arts & Lectures presents Kosoko Jackson 6 p.m. Carnegie Library Lecture Hall. 4440 Forbes Ave., Oakland. Free. Registration required. pittsburghlectures. culturaldistrict.org
MUSIC
• BLOOMFIELD
El Perro with Outside Inside. 8 p.m. Brillobox. 4104 Penn Ave., Bloomfield. $12. brilloboxpgh. com
FRI., OCT. 13
CONVENTION • DOWNTOWN
RV Fall Super Sale 3-9 p.m. Continues through Sun., Oct. 15. David L. Lawrence Convention Center. 1000 Fort Duquesne Blvd., Downtown. $5, free for kids 6 and under. pittrvshow.com
MUSIC • GARFIELD
Thrash to two days of music when The Mr. Roboto Project hosts Jean Scene Fest. Co-presented by the Don’t Let the Scene Go Down on Me! Collective, the event features over 20 bands from Pittsburgh and beyond, with genres ranging from screamo to hardcore. Enjoy the mime-themed antics of Mime Etiquette, the dark noise of Doom Beach, the emo sounds of Times Tables, and more. 4 p.m. Continues through Sat., Oct. 14. 5106 Penn Ave., Garfield. $30-50. therobotoproject.com
FILM • DOWNTOWN
The Allegheny Sport and Outdoor Film Festival 5:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. Continues through Sat., Oct. 14. Harris Theater. 809 Liberty Ave., Downtown. $8-15. trustarts.org
COMEDY • MCKEES ROCKS
Russell Howard 6:30 p.m. Roxian Theatre. 425 Chartiers Ave., McKees Rocks. Tickets start at $25. roxianlive.com
THEATER • MIDLAND
Catch Me If You Can The Musical. 7:30 p.m. Continues through Sun., Oct. 15. Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center. One Lincoln Park, Midland. $20.50-27.50. lincolnparkarts.org
SAT., OCT. 14
OUTDOORS • MILLVALE
EveryBody Outdoors: Millvale Art Walk & Brewery Adventure 1-3 p.m. Corner of Grant St. and E. Sherman St., Millvale. $10. ventureoutdoors.org
OCT.MON., 16
ART • GARFIELD
When speaking of his work, artist Glendon Hyde says, “As a gay man of 56, having been removed from my home by my family before graduating high school, I use my work to give voice to the broken and discarded.” The Irma Freeman Center for Imagination presents Tenderness, a solo show featuring fiber art and other pieces by Hyde. The Center describes the show as being meant to “to give worth to another’s trash.” 2-5 p.m. Contuinues through Nov. 3. 5006 Penn Ave., Garfield. Free. irmafreeman.org
FUNDRAISER • SEWICKLEY
Goatoberfest Cash Bash and Fundraiser for Kindred Spirits Rescue Ranch 4-8 p.m. Zassick Park. 50 Zassick Road, Sewickley. $50. druskyentertainment.com
THEATER • SOUTH SIDE
Momentum Reading Series: South Side Stories Revisited. 6:30 p.m. City Theatre. 1300 Bingham St., South Side. Free. RSVP required. citytheatre.culturaldistrict.org
MUSIC • LAWRENCEVILLE
Riot Grrrl Halloween Tribute Show with Zinnia’s Garden, Murder For Girls,
20 WWW.PGHCITYPAPER.COM
PHOTO: COURTESY OF SONY PICTURES ENTERTAINMENT Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story at Bottlerocket Social Hall
PHOTO: GLENDON HYDE/COURTESY OF THE IRMA FREEMAN CENTER FOR IMAGINATION Tenderness at The Irma Freeman Center for Imagination
Dumplings, and The Marigolds. 8 p.m. Doors at 7 p.m. Thunderbird Music Hall. 4053 Butler St., Lawrenceville. $13. thunderbirdmusichall.com
SUN., OCT. 15
LIT
• EAST
LIBERTY
Take in a showcase of self-published works when the Pittsburgh Zine Fair takes over The Kingsley Association. Over 90 local and national zine makers converge for what’s described in a press release as an “exceptionally diverse collection of artists, writers, comics creators, and publishing collectives.” Interact with exhibitors while exploring a large selection of zines and prints covering political, educational, poetic, and literary topics. 12-5 p.m. 6435 Frankstown Ave., East Liberty. Free. All ages. pghzinefair.com
FILM
• OAKMONT
48 Hour Film Project Horror/Sci-Fi Premiere Screenings. 2-9 p.m. Continues through Mon., Oct. 16. The Oaks Theater. 310 Allegheny River Blvd., Oakmont. $12 per screening block. 48hourfilm.com
DRAG
•
GARFIELD
House of Burton presents Shriek! A Halloween Drag Series 9 p.m. Mixtape. 4907 Penn Ave., Garfield. $7 in advance, $10 at the door. mixtapepgh.com
MON., OCT. 16
FILM • ALLENTOWN
A cult comedy receives a musical tribute
LYNN CULLEN LIVE
10 A.M. MONDAY THRU THURSDAY AT PGHCITYPAPER.COM
when Bottlerocket Social Hall presents a special screening of Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story. The 2007 parody stars John C. Reilly as a Johnny Cash-type country music star who rises from humble beginnings, climbs the charts, and then struggles to stay relevant as the decades pass. The event will feature an appearance from Mike Viola, who co-wrote some of the film’s inspired songs. After the screening, stay for a live performance by Viola and his band and a Q&A moderated by WYEP's Joey Spehar.
7:30 p.m. 1226 Arlington Ave., Allentown. $10. bottlerocketpgh.com
TUE., OCT. 17
VOLUNTEER • BALDWIN
Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy
Stewardship Days-Hays Woods Park. 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Hays Woods-Agnew Road Trailhead. 1017 Agnew Road, Baldwin. Free. Registration required. pittsburghparks.org
WED.,
OCT. 18
LIT • BLOOMFIELD
University of Pittsburgh Speakeasy
Reading. 7-8 p.m. White Whale Bookstore. 4754 Liberty Ave., Bloomfield. Free. RSVP required. speakeasy2023.splashthat.com
MAGIC • DOWNTOWN
Shoot Ogawa in Holy Shoot. 7:30 p.m. Continues through Sun., Oct. 22. Liberty Magic. 811 Liberty Ave., Downtown. $40-75. trustarts.org
21 PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER OCTOBER 11-18, 2023
18
OCT.WED.,
CP PHOTO: AMANDA WALTZ
LIVE PODCAST
University of Pittsburgh Speakeasy Reading at White Whale Bookstore
FINANCIAL
MARKET PLACE
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given that Articles of Incorporation were filed with the Department of State of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on the 27th day of April, 2023 with respect to a proposed nonprofit corporation, Catelynn’s Kindness. which has been incorporated under the Nonprofit Corporation Law 1988. A brief Summary of the purpose or purposes for which said corporation is organized is: To encourage kind gestures to remind people to laugh, have a treat, and share light with others.
NOTICE
FREE Golden Retriever Puppies to Forever Homes!
1 Male,1 Female. Excellent temperament! House trained with very good trainable natures & perfect for families with children and other pets! Please email me first at: stephaniechristensen59@ gmail.com and Text (312) 270-0850
NAME CHANGE
IN The Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: No. GD-23-10299
In re petition of Cody William Repko for change of name to Cody Bell.
To all persons interested: Notice is hereby given that an order of said Court authorized the filing of said petition and fixed the 1st day of November, 2023, at 9:30 a.m., as the time and the Motions Room, City-County Building, Pittsburgh, PA, as the place for a hearing, when and where all persons may show cause, if any they have, why said name should not be changed as prayed for.
NAME CHANGE
IN The Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: No. GD-23-010298
In re petition of Ajay William Repko for change of name to Ajay Bell.
To all persons interested: Notice is hereby given that an order of said Court authorized the filing of said petition and fixed the 1st day of November, 2023, at 9:30 a.m., as the time and the Motions Room, City-County Building, Pittsburgh, PA, as the place for a hearing, when and where all persons may show cause, if any they have, why said name should not be changed as prayed for.
NAME CHANGE
IN The Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: No. GD-23-008476
In re petition of Lionel Claude Niyibigira Joseph for change of name to Tembe Niyibigira Kasovya.
To all persons interested:
Notice is hereby given that an order of said Court authorized the filing of said petition and fixed the 1st day of November, 2023, at 9:30 a.m., as the time and the Motions Room, City-County Building, Pittsburgh, PA, as the place for a hearing, when and where all persons may show cause, if any they have, why said name should not be changed as prayed for.
LEGAL NOTICE
Onondaga County Supreme Court of the State of New York – Index # 000742/2023
In a Divorce matter.
Maria Killingsworth (Plaintiff) v. (Keith Thompson Defendant). A Motion for Alternate Service has been granted by the Honorable Kevin P. Kuehner for service via publication for three consecutive days upon Defendant Keith Thompson.
To the above-named Defendant, Keith Thompson, you are hereby SUMMONED to file an Answer to the Summons and Verified Complaint in Onondaga County Supreme Court. You can contact Judge Kuehner’s clerk by calling 315-728-7231. In case of your failure to appear, judgment will be taken against you by default.
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ESTATE NOTICE ESTATE OF CHERICO, DIANA, DECEASED OF PITTSBURGH, PA Diana Cherico, deceased, of Pittsburgh, PA. No. 01048 of 2023. Nick Cherico, Extr., 161 Pearl Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15224. ESTATE NOTICE ESTATE OF HOUSTON, HYDIE RIAL, DECEASED OF VERONA, PA Hydie Rial Houston, deceased, of Verona,
PA. No. 06472 of 2023. William A Houston Jr, Extr., 6362 Whispering Lakes Ln. West Palm Beach, FL 33418.
Opioid Treatment Program Specializing in Methadone and Suboxone New and Faster Intake Process! Mon-Fri at 6AM Accepted Insurances: • Aetna Better Health of PA • Highmark Blue Shield • United Behavioral Health • UPMC Health Plan • Medicare/Medicaid “Meeting Needs. Renewing Life.” Since 1968 Priority Admissions for: • Pregnant women who inject drugs • Pregnant women who use substances • Persons who inject drugs • Overdose survivors • Veterans 1425 Beaver Avenue • Pittsburgh, PA 15233 Phone: 412-322-8415 • Fax: 412-322-9224
SELLING POINT
BY BRENDAN EMMETT QUIGLEY // BRENDANEMMETTQUIGLEY.COM
OFFICIAL ADVERTISEMENT
THE BOARD OF PUBLIC EDUCATION of the SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PITTSBURGH ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed proposals shall be deposited at the Administration Building, Bellefield Entrance Lobby, 341 South Bellefield Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15213, on October 24, 2023, until 2:00 P.M., local prevailing time for:
VARIOUS SCHOOLS, FACILITIES, AND PROPERTIES
• Environmental Abatement Contract: Asbestos, Lead-based paint, Mold & Animal Excrement Remediation, Mitigation & Abatement
• Environmental Abatement Primes
Project Manual and Drawings will be available for purchase on October 02, 2023, at Modern Reproductions (412-488-7700), 127 McKean Street, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15219 between 9:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M. The cost of the Project Manual Documents is non-refundable. Project details and dates are described in each project manual.
ACROSS
13. Heaped, like dirty laundry
14. Shoulder adornment indicating rank
15. Cranky speeches
16. Classic science fair experiment
17. Enter the Void director Gaspar
18. Commented on the fireworks
20. “___ sure”
21. “Consequently ...”
24. Title earned after kneeling
25. Longest river in Germany
27. Strong liking, in baby talk
29. Bonanza setting
31. Using existing staffers
34. Fellow fraternity brothers, e.g.
38. Monopolize ... or an alternate name for this puzzle
40. Italian chemist
Amedeo with an eponymous constant
41. “I come to bury
Caesar” speaker
42. 2010 movie with the tagline
“There is No Plan B,” with “The”
43. Agcy. supposedly tackling the common cold
44. Hurdles for future D.A.’s
47. Au Bonheur ___ Dames (1883 Émile Zola novel)
49. Fancy tie
52. Skedaddle
53. Skin: Pref.
55. Classic game show prize
56. Bestowed
59. Like some professors
62. Tower with balconies
63. Approached bedtime
DOWN
1. Civil War side
2. Dog-___ (like old book pages)
3. Spot for reflexology
4. Screened
5. Stick in the fridge
6. Cash for a cerveza
7. Potable
8. Old music box?
9. Hoyden at a hoedown
10. NFC South athlete
11. 10th-century Norwegian king
12. First noble gas to be synthesized
19. Go yard, say
22. Go for, as a piñata
23. Beats in a pie contest?
25. Neighbor of Hungary
26. Floors near the fireplace
28. Africa’s Cape ___
30. Stud
31. Andean tuber
32. Peanut Butter Lover’s mo.
33. Sign that’s wicked good for Wicked
35. UFC result
36. Shakespeare’s night
37. What a dump
39. Suddenly became a Saint, with “was”
45. 2005 horror sequel
46. Laundry 1-2-3 manufacturer
48. “He who ___ it, dealt it.”
50. Adding as a recipient to the e-mail
51. Grainy?
53. Really intense
54. Latin 101 word
57. Did a 10K
58. The Karate Kid kid
60. WWII arena
61. One with a lot of talent
LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS
We are an equal rights and opportunity school district.
PUBLIC AUCTION
Public notice is hereby given that property placed in storage by the following persons at the following locations will be sold via public sale to satisfy Guardian Storage liens for unpaid rent and other charges. Bidding for property of persons renting space at the following locations will be held online at www.Storageauctions.com ending on October 24, 2023 at 10:00 am, and day to day thereafter until sold at which time a high bidder will be determined. 4711 William Penn Highway, Monroeville, PA 15146: Unit #11607 Aubrey Thornton, Unit #12008 Jeff Legato, Unit #12115 Will Wall, Unit #12211 Renee Ragin-Moton, Unit #12707 Sally Frick, Unit #12911 Rebecca Tolliver, Unit #13603 Krystle Knox
1028 Ridge Road, Tarentum, Pa 15084: Unit #31119 Suzanne Vogel, #31203 Suzanne Vogel, Unit #31205 Suzanne Vogel, Unit #31606 Suzanne Vogel, Unit #32304 Corey Snodgrass, Unit #41319 Skylar Drane, Unit #41533 Nicole Hoak
901 Brinton Road, Pittsburgh, Pa 15221: Unit #2115 Chimere Moore, Unit #2207 Loraine Darden, Unit #2320 Jared Moore, Unit #3126 Andy Forston lll, Unit #8311 Phoenix Braidinhawk, Unit #8412 Garnett Long-Parham, Unit #9408 Donte Dixon, Unit #11115 Allayah Seibert, Unit #11116 Jewel Ponder, Unit #11208 Londone Banks
5873 Centre Ave Pittsburgh, PA 15206: Unit #7406 Melissa Halliday, Unit #7412 Rosalyn Criswell
2839 Liberty Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15222: Unit #5203 Larry Bittner, Unit #5914 Denise Shaw, Unit #6805 Javier Rodriguez
750 South Millvale Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15213: Unit #6409 Brian Vaske
1002 East Waterfront Drive, Munhall, PA 15120: Unit #1213 Roxanne Squair, Unit #3525 Betty Thompson, Unit #3623 Lawrence Dolby, Unit #4302 Chona Seaton
1300 Lebanon Church Road, West Mifflin, PA 15236: Unit #13412 Victoria Uhme, Unit #32312 Shonte Allen, Unit #41208 Justin Penn
1599 Washington Pike, Bridgeville, PA 15017: Unit #2503 Susan Hustler, Unit #2606 Julie Welter, Unit #2610 Hanna Waddell, Unit #3109 Susan Hustler, Unit #3415 Susan Hustler, Unit #53711 Louis Easton
1067 Milford Drive, Bethel Park, PA 15102: Unit #21103 Jeffrey Bullock, Unit #23111 Dennis Tharp, Unit #23929 Rommie Brown, Unit #23939 Ryan Ballas 7452 McKnight Rd, Pittsburgh, PA 15237: Unit #2309 Marsha Peterson, Unit #816 Kathleen Flack, Unit #817 Robert Russell
401 Coraopolis Rd, Coraopolis, PA 15108: Unit #13007 Sequoia Davis, Unit #13202 Justin Williams, Unit #21007 Kal-ell Spencer, Unit #22414 Malik King
Purchases must be made with cash and paid at the location at the above referenced facility to complete the transaction. Guardian Storage has the right to refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.
23 PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER OCTOBER 11-18, 2023