Indiana Gazette: Area counties asked to participate in broadband service challenge

Public and private organizations in area counties are requesting that residents who rely on DSL (digital subscriber line) or wireless home internet services participate in the Pennsylvania Broadband Development Authority’s broadband service challenge process, which is ongoing through Wednesday at 11 p.m.



In a news release, the Indiana County Board of Commissioners said residents can go to SPCBEADchallenge.com and follow the instructions to identify their location on the Federal Communication Commission’s map and take the speed test.

Because the test must be taken three times, users must begin their first test no later than Monday. However, each test only will take a few minutes.

Indiana County officials said they have identified 1,150 homes equipped with DSL or wireless home internet services incorrectly labeled on the FCC map as having access to high-speed internet.

They said efforts are underway to rectify that discrepancy. They said residents may access instructions via the challenge website.

Residents whose addresses are identified as being unserved or underserved on the FCC’s map do not need to complete this challenge process. Those locations are already deemed eligible for Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program infrastructure funding.

Local officials said this challenge is different from the FCC’s Challenge process previously administered in January 2023.

Still, they said, residents that submitted a challenge last year should consider taking part in this new challenge process.

In response to last year’s federal announcement allocating $1.16 billion to Pennsylvania through the BEAD Program, efforts are underway to bolster the infrastructure required for robust internet connectivity in areas currently lacking or experiencing insufficient service.

One prerequisite for accessing these funds involves implementing a challenge process to validate the accuracy of BEAD-eligible locations. This collaborative endeavor empowers local governments, nonprofits, and internet service providers to collaborate with the PBDA in refining the FCC’s map, which delineates regions as either served by strong, reliable internet, underserved or completely unserved.

Similar instructions were sent out for Westmoreland County, as well as through other member counties in the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission, which also includes Armstrong, Allegheny, Beaver, Butler, Fayette, Greene, Lawrence and Washington counties, and has a Connected initiative regional consortium with Carnegie Mellon University, Allies for Children, and a diverse group of regional partners.

View the full article at indianagazette.com.




Observer-Reporter: SPC seeking feedback on future transportation, infrastructure projects

People in Southwestern Pennsylvania will have multiple opportunities later this month to learn more about the region’s future transportation and infrastructure plans, while offering their own suggestions on what improvements they would like to see happen.

The Southwest Pennsylvania Commission is holding separate town hall meetings in Washington and Fayette counties next week, and another one in Greene County at the end of the month.



On the agenda is the 2025-28 Transportation Infrastructure Program, or TIP, that will discuss the roughly $4.5 billion in state, federal and local funds that will be invested in the region’s infrastructure and transportation system over the next few years.

The meetings are being held this spring across the SPC’s 10-county region, and the discussions will focus solely on each individual county, while seeking input from local residents. Plans typically center around transportation improvements, such as construction of new roads, highways and bridges, or other infrastructure plans, such as expanding high-speed broadband internet.

SPC officials, county leaders and state Department of Transportation representatives will be in attendance to listen to input and gather information from the public. The discussion of the region’s 25-year plan will also include a question-and-answer session with the public.

The meetings will be held on the following dates:

  • Fayette County – Tuesday, May 21, 2 to 4 p.m. – Former Gallatin Bank Building at 2 W. Main St. in Uniontown.
  • Washington County – Wednesday, May 22, 3 to 5 p.m. – Courthouse Square at 100 W. Beau St. in Washington.
  • Greene County – Wednesday, May 29, 5 to 7 p.m. – PennDOT District 12 Maintenance Facility at 129 Jefferson Road near Waynesburg.

People who cannot attend one of the meetings, but would still like to offer their opinions, can submit public comments through email, mail or online by June 7. Comments can be emailed to comments@spcregion.org; mailed to Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission’s address at 42 21st Street, Suite 101, Pittsburgh, PA 15222; or sent through an online form at www.spcregion.org/get-involved.

More information on the meetings and the TIP can be found at www.spcregion.org.

View the full article at observer-reporter.com.




Herald-Standard: SPC seeking feedback on future transportation, infrastructure projects

People in Southwestern Pennsylvania will have multiple opportunities later this month to learn more about the region’s future transportation and infrastructure plans, while offering their own suggestions on what improvements they would like to see happen.

The Southwest Pennsylvania Commission is holding separate town hall meetings in Washington and Fayette counties next week, and another one in Greene County at the end of the month.



On the agenda is the 2025-28 Transportation Infrastructure Program, or TIP, that will discuss the roughly $4.5 billion in state, federal and local funds that will be invested in the region’s infrastructure and transportation system over the next few years.

The meetings are being held this spring across the SPC’s 10-county region, and the discussions will focus solely on each individual county, while seeking input from local residents. Plans typically center around transportation improvements, such as construction of new roads, highways and bridges, or other infrastructure plans, such as expanding high-speed broadband internet.

SPC officials, county leaders and state Department of Transportation representatives will be in attendance to listen to input and gather information from the public. The discussion of the region’s 25-year plan will also include a question-and-answer session with the public.

The meetings will be held on the following dates:

  • Fayette County – Tuesday, May 21, 2 to 4 p.m. – Former Gallatin Bank Building at 2 W. Main St. in Uniontown.
  • Washington County – Wednesday, May 22, 3 to 5 p.m. – Courthouse Square at 100 W. Beau St. in Washington.
  • Greene County – Wednesday, May 29, 5 to 7 p.m. – PennDOT District 12 Maintenance Facility at 129 Jefferson Road near Waynesburg.

People who cannot attend one of the meetings, but would still like to offer their opinions, can submit public comments through email, mail or online by June 7. Comments can be emailed to comments@spcregion.org; mailed to Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission’s address at 42 21st Street, Suite 101, Pittsburgh, PA 15222; or sent through an online form at www.spcregion.org/get-involved.

More information on the meetings and the TIP can be found at www.spcregion.org.

View the full article at heraldstandard.com.




WPXI-TV: What would hosting an NFL Draft in Pittsburgh look like?

In just a matter of days, the City of Pittsburgh could find out if they’ll be hosting the 2026 or 2027 NFL Draft. Channel 11′s Jenna Harner has been talking with city officials over the last month to find out what a draft here in Pittsburgh would look like, from where the stage goes to where the events are, and the preparations the city is making already, even before it’s official.



“The visibility of downtown has to be very quite apparent,” said Jerad Bacher, the CEO of VisitPittsburgh.

“So the front of the stage where the viewers would be looking into at the front of the stage would be facing downtown. You could see the stage being located just on this side of Acrisure Stadium facing the downtown area.”

But it’s more than just the massive stage the prospects, potentially including the next future Steeler will walk out on. Downtown, Point State Park, the Central Business District, and the Strip District will all host extra events over the course of the weekend. The inclines, Station Square, and the rivers will also be used.

“The opportunities for us to invest in the existing infrastructure is strong, but we don’t need a large infrastructure investment beyond what’s already here,” said Bacher.

In order for a city to host a draft, the NFL has two primary requirements. Logistics, does the city and its surrounding areas have the space, the hotels, the capabilities to host the event? And community collaboration.

“When they’re looking at Pittsburgh, they’re talking about things on such a level of detail that we wouldn’t typically expect at this stage of the bid,” said Bacher. “

A lot of the detail that they’re asking about is usually further on after the bid is awarded.”

Part of what makes Pittsburgh so appealing to host the draft? Its location.

“We’re within a half-a-day drive of 11 NFL markets, as well as over 30 NCAA division one schools that also have football programs,” said Bacher.

And you’ve seen all the construction. The upgrades at the airport are also critical– to prove the city can host an event of this magnitude. Add to that – Western Pennsylvania’s football history and storied tradition.

“Going back to, you know, the Unitas’ and Marino, Montana, said Rich Fitzgerald. “You know, some of the greats who have come through Western Pennsylvania and are now in the Hall of Fame and the Steelers themselves.”

Based on the economic analysis from some of the most recent drafts – officials expect hundreds of millions of dollars in direct spending during the weekend.

“We’re estimating there’ll be over 300 to 350,000 visitors that would come to Pittsburgh, putting an economic impact anywhere from 100 million to $150 million,” said Fitzgerald. “And that’s I think being actually somewhat conservative.”

With another 50 million viewers expected to watch – it’ll also attract tourism, and boost the Burgh’s brand.

“I’ve been twisting the arm of Commissioner Goodell of the NFL,” said Governor Josh Shapiro.

“I won’t get into our private conversations but suffice to say I’ve been pretty aggressive in making the case for Pittsburgh.”

A case the committee feels they’ll win

“We believe we deserve it,” said State Senator and Chair of the Sports and Exhibition Authority Wayne Fontana.

“And we believe we’re going to get it.”

View the full story at wpxi.com.




Leader Times: SPC hosts public meeting to gather feedback on the Transportation Improvement Program

The road to completing transportation improvement-related projects is most crucially paved with governmental funding dollars.

Appreciation for efforts to acquire such funding from the state and federal levels, particularly as it pertains the three ongoing initiatives in Armstrong County, represented a fair portion of the detail and dialogue voiced during Tuesday’s public meeting of Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission (SPC) leaders to gather feedback from county residents, which was held at Kittanning Township Volunteer Fire Dept.



“Armstrong County, per capita, had some of the worst secondary roads in the commonwealth, and over the last two years we’ve seen $5 million last year and $5 (million) coming this year … to get some funding back here,” said county Commissioner Pat Fabian, SPC chairman, in reference to the continuation of a two-year, $10 million investment in the county’s secondary road infrastructure advocated by State Sen. Joe Pittman (R-41).

The state routes targeted include 37.7 miles of passages in Burrell, Kittanning, Manor, Plumcreek, South Bend and Bethel townships.

Such action is largely dependent on needs expressed to decision-makers by members of the public, Fabian stressed.

“This feedback that we get today … this review of this TIP (2025-28 Transportation Improvement Program) is important … for us, as county commissioners, and the (state’s) southwest region, to go after state and federal dollars to improve our transportation system out there,” he added.

Active projects on the SPC’s current TIP (2023-25) in county that were initially highlighted during the event, by Ryan Gordon, SPC manager of transportation planning, included:

• Margaret Road Intersection — Reconstruction of a portion of US 422 near the intersection of SR2005 (Margaret Road/Cherry Run Road) to include the construction of a new two-span continuous steel multi-girder bridge to carry US 422 over SR2005 and a new precast concrete box culvert, with an estimated completion date of May 25, 2025, and a construction cost of $28.6 million.

“Big project, as everybody knows … we never had enough money to put a four-lane in from Kittanning to Indiana. We’re going to do safety enhancements along the Route 422 corridor,” said Harold Swan, PennDOT District 10 planning and project manager. “This happens to be an improvement to the past improvement we made, and (we’re) trying to eliminate more traffic backups. We appreciate our local representatives and senators … Sen. Pittman helped us in getting (this funding). These were not funds out of our TIP. Much appreciated, because (that would have been) a big chunk for us out of our TIP funds. That $28 million, that’s a third of our TIP funds for the year.”

  • Goheenville Dip — Safety improvements including roadway realignment, bridge replacements, continuation of a truck-climbing lane, and turning lanes at intersections along PA 66 in Boggs and Wayne townships, with an estimated completion date of Nov. 22 of this year;
  • “I think this is the beginning of good things to come,” said Swan, with regard to the enhanced potential for safety designed to ensure via the project.
  • Poverty Hill Bridge — Replacement of existing structure carrying State Route 28 over a branch of Cowanshannock Creek in Rayburn Township, as construction is in the process of being completed at a cost of $3.8 million.

Gordon added: “We are actively managing (the SPC’s current TIP) almost daily, working with our PennDOT districts and our project sponsors. We meet monthly as a transportation technical committee, which Armstrong County attends and has a vote there. We’re constantly managing this for the most efficient use of our public funds for transportation. We’re constantly adjusting things as we need.”

Funding is required to fuel all phases of each project, from study phases and preliminary engineering and all the way through construction.

PennDOT District 10 officials, along with State Rep. Abby Major (R-60) and State Rep. Donna Oberlander (R-63) and representatives of the offices of U.S. Rep. Glenn “GT” Thompson (R-15) and Pittman.

During the meeting’s public comment segment, Bradys Bend Township Supervisor Frank Bratkovich asked how realistic it is for a smaller municipality, such as the one he is elected to represent, to be eligible for funding to complete its own projects of a TIP nature.

“I’m assuming this is going to take place where the bridges are bigger — where there is more traffic,” Bratkovich added.

Gordon responded by saying the SPC tries to include, where possible, projects to improve bridges, for instance, if the need is severe.

“We work closely with PennDOT District 10’s bridge unit. They kind of have a handle on the bridges that are in the worst condition, and we try to kind of target it that way,” he said.

In terms of roadway improvements in smaller municipalities?

“Roadways? No. For roadways, our items that are on this TIP only go to the federal aid network, which is not the local system. The local system is funded through a different manner, through liquid fuels funding, to a municipality,” Gordon said.

Fitzgerald encouraged Bratkovich and other leaders in smaller municipalities “not to be dissuaded from applying.”

“Just because it might not be this program, there are multiple programs for funding roads and bridges that could be used, so we would encourage you to contact your commissioners, your state legislators, you state senators, as an elected official, to let them know of your needs, and that you want to put in for a grant, and there are ways to get there. This isn’t the only option that’s there,” Fitzgerald added.

County citizen Rick Drumm questioned where the funding was coming from, and whether the SPC officials are making it adequately known if the money is largely the result of federal infrastructure bills being pushed through by the Biden administration.

“There are a lot of pots of money that it comes from, primarily from obviously the state and federal government … our friends from PennDOT … that the legislature and the governor appropriate, and obviously out of Washington that the Congress and the President appropriate,” Fitzgerald said.

He added that a lot of the appropriated dollars, unfortunately, has been eaten up, of late, but inflation-related increases in costs to materials and other resources.

SPC’s 2025-28 TIP is detailed

The meeting was also used as a forum to provide details of a working draft of the SPC’s 2025-2028 TIP.

During the TIP period (2025-28), approximately $4.5 billion in state, federal, and local funds will be invested throughout the next four years to improve infrastructure/transportation system throughout the next several years in Armstrong County and 10 other counties in the SPC-represented region.

The event served as part of a public comment period to gather feedback from the public.

The public meetings that SPC officials host are part of a 30-day public comment period.

As the region’s metropolitan planning organization (MPO), SPC officials are responsible for drafting the region’s long-term and short-term transportation plans, in conjunction with leaders of member counties and the state’s department of transportation (PennDOT).

As part of the SPC’s work, its officials develop a Long-Range Transportation Plan (LRTP) that provides Southwestern Pennsylvania with specific infrastructure and transportation initiatives that need addressed throughout the next 25 years.

The LRTP is implemented with a series of shorter-term investment plans, or TIPs.

During the TIP period (2025-28), over $4.5 billion in state, federal, and local funds will be invested to improve our region’s transportation system over the next four years.

Editor’s note — If a member of the public was not able to attend the meeting, but would still like to provide their opinion, they are invited to submit their comments during SPC’s public comment period (which runs until June 7). The public can submit comments by email at: comments@spcregion.org — or mail hard copy comments to Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission’s address at 42 21st St., Suite 101, Pittsburgh, PA 15222, or they can compete an online comment form available at: spcregion.org/get-involved.

View the full story at leadertimes.com.




Mon Valley Independent: West Newton Bridge rehab among projects eyed with $300M in funding

The West Newton Bridge is among a list of projects that could be brought to life with $300 million in road, transit and bridge improvement funds that Westmoreland County is slated to receive as part of regional infrastructure work.

The metal truss bridge, built in 1909, carries about 6,500 vehicles each day on Route 136 over the Youghiogheny River, connecting two parts of the borough.



Angela Baker, transportation planning manager for PennDOT’s District 12, estimated the project at $17 million. The bridge is used by pedestrians and bicyclists on the nearby Great Allegheny Passage.

“It is a very historic structure,” she said.

It was listed in poor condition in 2022 with a deteriorating superstructure. Officials plan to build a temporary bridge next to it during the work, as a detour would be significant. The bridge most recently underwent a preservation effort in 2010, following previous rehabilitation work in 1957 and 1984. Bids for the work could be sought next year.

The project appeared among several on the horizon around Westmoreland County in a proposed 2025-2028 Transportation Improvement Program being planned by the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission.

The agency anticipates spending $3.8 billion on highway, bridge and transit projects in 10 counties in 2025-2028.

They’re projects that are important, especially in areas that have seen growth and need additional infrastructure investment to keep up, said Jason Rigone, county director of planning and development.

“This TIP focuses on major priorities in the county,” he said.

The regional commission connects agencies, such as PennDOT, with county and municipal leaders to examine what projects are important and how to best use funding. During a public meeting Monday at the county courthouse in Greensburg on the proposal, Dom D’Andrea, commission director of transportation planning, said the program looks out four years and gets updated every two years.

As projects in the plan are completed or costs change, officials have to decide how to adjust it or what improvements should come next based on the amount of federal funding the commission believes it will receive. If approved, it will go into effect Oct. 1.

It will likely be years before any of the projects mentioned Monday come to fruition. They include:

  • Construction of a roundabout at the sometimes-clogged intersection of Donohoe and Georges Station roads in Hempfield. Baker estimated that project at $8 to $10 million.
  • Improvements on Route 201 in the area of Interstate 70 in Rostraver Township. A study will help identify potential work there, but it would span between C. Vance DeiCas Memorial Highway to Finley Road.

“It is very congested,” Baker said.

That has been a priority of Rostraver leaders for a long time, Rigone said, adding he’s happy to see it on the list so officials can find a solution.

The commission is holding public meetings regarding the draft program in each of the 10 counties it serves. It will meet Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Kittanning Township Volunteer Fire Department in Armstrong County and Thursday at 6 p.m. in a virtual event for Allegheny County.

The 2025-2028 draft plan is available at spcregion.org under programs, transportation and TIP or here.

Comments on it are being accepted until June 7. They can be submitted via email at comments@spcregion.org or by mail to the attention of Ronda Craig, Southwestern PA Commission, 42 21st St., Suite 101, Pittsburgh, PA 15222.

View the full article at monvalleyindependent.com.




Pittsburgh Business Times: Newly Minted: 24 new Pittsburgh-area top executives you should know

This spring, the Pittsburgh Business Times is launching a new project called Newly Minted.

This special publication, running in June, will highlight 24 top executives who have assumed their new roles since fall 2023. These include CEOs, presidents, executive directors and equivalent roles.



They represent a variety of industries, from banking to manufacturing to real estate and beyond. Each has been hand-picked by their organization to drive business forward and meet goals and objectives.

The Business Times’ editorial team regularly tracks people in top positions at companies as part of our ongoing news coverage. We selected these 24 based off of this coverage, looking to ensure there was a diversity of people and industries on this list.

To see who the 24 are, scroll through the gallery below or check out the list below, in alphabetical order.

24 new Pittsburgh-area top executives you should know

  • Chris Ayers, CEO, Arconic Corp.
  • Frederique van Baarle, president and CEO, Lanxess Corp.
  • Dr. Richard Beigi, president, UPMC Mercy and UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital
  • Barata Bey, president, African American Chamber of Commerce of Western Pennsylvania
  • Steve Blanco, CEO, MSA Safety
  • Diana Charletta, president and CEO, Equitrans Midstream
  • Sanjay Chowbey, incoming president and CEO, Kennametal Inc.
  • Michael Connor, market leader, Hanna Commercial Real Estate
  • Nicholas Dragga, executive director, Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre
  • Rich Fitzgerald, executive director, Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission
  • Jeffrey Ford, managing partner, Grossman Yanak & Ford LLP
  • Tom Frank, executive director, NAIOP Pittsburgh
  • Ricky Frazier Jr., SVP, Keystone Region, Comcast
  • Ken Gabriel, CEO, Pitt BioForge
  • Christopher Lee, managing director and COO, Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote
  • Michael Lyons, president, PNC Financial Services Group Inc.
  • David McCall, international president, United Steelworkers
  • James Newell, chairman and CEO, Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney
  • William Oplinger, president and CEO, Alcoa Corp.
  • Luke Ratke, Pittsburgh managing partner, Grant Thornton
  • Thomas Ryan, Pittsburgh office managing partner, K&L Gates
  • James Sullivan, president and COO, Koppers
  • Christie Tillapaugh, president and CEO, Dentons Cohen & Grigsby
  • Penny Zacharias, managing partner, McGuireWoods Pittsburgh

Profiles of each of these leaders will run in the June 14 weekly edition of the Pittsburgh Business Times and online.

View the full article at bizjournals.com.




Tribune-Review: West Newton Bridge rehab among projects eyed with $300M in funding

The West Newton Bridge is among a list of projects that could be brought to life with $300 million in road, transit and bridge improvement funds that Westmoreland County is slated to receive as part of regional infrastructure work.

The metal truss bridge, built in 1909, carries about 6,500 vehicles each day on Route 136 over the Youghiogheny River, connecting two parts of the borough.



Angela Baker, transportation planning manager for PennDOT’s District 12, estimated the project at $17 million. The bridge is used by pedestrians and bicyclists on the nearby Great Allegheny Passage.

“It is a very historic structure,” she said.

It was listed in poor condition in 2022 with a deteriorating superstructure. Officials plan to build a temporary bridge next to it during the work, as a detour would be significant. The bridge most recently underwent a preservation effort in 2010, following previous rehabilitation work in 1957 and 1984. Bids for the work could be sought next year.

The project appeared among several on the horizon around Westmoreland County in a proposed 2025-28 Transportation Improvement Program being planned by the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission. The agency anticipates spending $3.8 billion on highway, bridge and transit projects in 10 counties in 2025-28.

They’re projects that are important, especially in areas that have seen growth and need additional infrastructure investment to keep up, said Jason Rigone, county director of planning and development.

“This TIP focuses on major priorities in the county,” he said.

The regional commission connects agencies, such as PennDOT, with county and municipal leaders to examine what projects are important and how to best use funding. During a public meeting Monday at the county courthouse in Greensburg on the proposal, Dom D’Andrea, commission director of transportation planning, said the program looks out four years and gets updated every two years.

As projects in the plan are completed or costs change, officials have to decide how to adjust it or what improvements should come next based on the amount of federal funding the commission believes it will receive. If approved, it will go into effect Oct. 1.

It will likely be years before any of the projects mentioned Monday come to fruition. They include:

  • Construction of a roundabout at the sometimes-clogged intersection of Donohoe and Georges Station roads in Hempfield. Baker estimated that project at $8 million to $10 million.
  • Improvements on Route 201 in the area of Interstate 70 in Rostraver. A study will help identify potential work there, but it would span between C. Vance DeiCas Memorial Highway and Finley Road.

“It is very congested,” Baker said.

That has been a priority of Rostraver leaders for a long time, Rigone said, adding he’s happy to see it on the list so officials can find a solution.

The commission is holding public meetings regarding the draft program in each of the 10 counties it serves. It will meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Kittanning Township Volunteer Fire Department in Armstrong County and 6 p.m. Thursday in a virtual event for Allegheny County.

The 2025-28 draft plan is available at spcregion.org under programs, transportation and TIP or here.

Comments on it are being accepted until June 7. They can be submitted via email at comments@spcregion.org or by mail to the attention of Ronda Craig, Southwestern PA Commission, 42 21st St., Suite 101, Pittsburgh, PA 15222.

View the full article at triblive.com.




Pittsburgh Union Progress: Pittsburgh’s long-awaited high-tech traffic management center should open in the next two years with regional planning support

Over the next two years, Pittsburgh is ready to move ahead with a $32 million traffic management system to improve traffic flow on six busy corridors.

That system, which will allow signals to be changed as needed based on traffic flow and provide a quicker response to traffic accidents, highlights a series of city projects included in the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission’s Transportation Improvement Program. SPC had a public hearing Friday on projects in Pittsburgh, one of 11 hearings it will have before approving the regional transportation plan June 24.



Jeff Skalican, deputy director of the city’s Department of Mobility and Infrastructure, said during the hearing the city has advertised for someone to manage its proposed traffic management center. The center and series of corridors known as “spines” are scheduled to get $29.3 million over the next two years.

After the meeting, Skalican said he is “really excited” that the city will hire the traffic center manager in the next couple of months. The manager will help to oversee development of the center itself in the 412 Building on the Boulevard of the Allies, Downtown, where employees will monitor a series of cameras focused on more than 200 intersections across the city.

The project is an outgrowth of the city’s bid in 2016 to win a one-time Smart Cities Challenge by the U.S. Department of Transportation to use technology to address a transportation issue. The city lost the challenge to Columbus, Ohio, but federal officials were impressed with the city’s proposal and awarded a $12 million grant to help move it forward.

Over the years, the city has cobbled together a series of state and federal grants to finally move ahead with the concept. Skalican said the city hasn’t settled on which corridors will move ahead first, but two should be ready in the next two years and the other four in SPC’s next two-year funding cycle.

The corridors scheduled for smart signals, which also could allow Pittsburgh Regional Transit buses to have priority at intersections, are Bigelow Boulevard, Second Avenue, Centre Avenue, Penn Avenue, Route 51 and West Liberty Avenue. They also will be installed along Forbes and Fifth avenues, where PRT is building its University Line that will have dedicated lanes for buses between Downtown Pittsburgh and Oakland.

The city also has three bridge projects scheduled for construction funding over the next two years: the Swinburne Bridge over Saline Street in lower Oakland ($12.3 million); the 28th Street Bridge over the Martin Luther King Jr. East Busway in Polish Hill ($10 million); and the South Negley Avenue Bridge in Shadyside ($6.45 million). Skalican said Swinburne is scheduled for replacement in 2026 and 28th Street for major rehabilitation in 2027, but South Negley hasn’t been scheduled while the city works out details with Norfolk Southern Railroad, which has tracks pass under the structure.

Nine other city bridges have funds earmarked for design work for future replacement or rehabilitation projects.

The Transportation Improvement Program also includes funds for other city projects such as the Allegheny River Green Boulevard bike trail; reconfiguring the traffic pattern on Liberty Avenue through the Strip District to improve safety; and improving traffic on Brownsville Road in the South Hills, Beaver Avenue on the North Side and Penn Avenue in the East End.

The city received heavy criticism after the collapse of the Fern Hollow Bridge in January 2022 for not having pushed at SPC for funding to upgrade a series of poorly rated bridges. That has changed under the administration of Mayor Ed Gainey, which took office three weeks before the collapse and has made a concerted effort to be more involved in the agency that vets federal funding for transportation projects.

“We’ll have more projects on the TIP than ever before,” Skalican said. “We have seven or eight for construction funding now where we used to have only one or two.”

Overall, SPC expects to spend $1.7 billion on transportation projects over the next two years, up about 7% from the current plan. About 43% of that will be spent on bridges and 22% on roads across the 10-county area.

The commission covers Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Fayette, Greene, Indiana, Lawrence, Washington and Westmoreland counties and Pittsburgh.

Dom D’Andrea, SPC’s director of transportation, said about $860 million will be spent on 280 bridge projects and $437 million on roads. The region has reduced the number of bridges in poor condition from more than 20% to about 13%, but D’Andrea said, “There’s still more to do,” especially with bridges owned by smaller municipalities.

The agency has remaining hearings on the TIP in eight counties over the next three weeks, beginning with Westmoreland County at 1 p.m. Monday at the county courthouse. Go to the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission website for the full schedule.

View the full article at unionprogress.com.




Ellwood City Ledger: SPC seeking public comment on potential infrastructure improvements

Officials at the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission (SPC) have opened their public comment period for community members to share any concerns about local infrastructure.

As a part of their Transportation Improvement Program, the organization has opened an online survey for residents of Beaver County to share which potential infrastructure projects are most important to their communities until June 7. The SPC held an in-person meeting on Thursday detailing some of the previously suggested projects, but this open comment period will allow the public to share their ideas on what should be addressed by their studies.



These projects will become a part of the organization’s Long-Range Transportation Plan over the next 25 years. As a part of this strategy, smaller projects such as road improvements and traffic flows will be proposed to municipalities to improve infrastructure in smaller bursts. From 2025-28, over $4.5 billion is expected to be invested in areas around the region.

In addition to the online form, residents can submit comments via by email at comments@spcregion.org or through traditional mail by sending a letter to the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission’s address at PO Box 101429, Pittsburgh, PA 15237.

View the full article at ellwoodcityledger.com.