Our journalists spend countless hours with individuals and communities, uncovering complex stories that often carry hidden gems, which we’re now polishing off for you. Here’s what people are telling PublicSource about the issues important to Pittsburgh.


The funeral homes that are looking for white male employees are going to run out of white male students.

— Pittsburgh Institute of Mortuary Science and Point Park instructor Chelsea Cush





Our power never came from the [NLRB]. It’s just a tool that’s used to support us. … Our power always came from our membership.

A person with curly hair and a nose ring stands outdoors, with a cityscape of tall buildings and power lines in the background.

— Cas Borowitz, organizer for Starbucks Workers United and shift supervisor at a Starbucks in Pittsburgh






We don’t have any funds for anything at all. And that’s what you chose to do with your money.

— Rebecca Goldstein, who has experienced homelessness in Pittsburgh


We will be heard. You will hear us. We will fight for America. Will you?

At a Pittsburgh protest, one person passionately speaks into a megaphone while another reads from a paper. A partially visible sign in the foreground reads, "DEAR GOVERN..." amidst the spirited crowd voicing their concerns about Trump and Musk.

— Kali McLaughlin, an organizer with Indivisible






America should be a leader on humanitarian grounds, not only in things like space or wars.

Khara Timsina, executive director of the Bhutanese Community Association of Pittsburgh (BCAP), stands for a portrait at the organizations headquarters, on Friday, Oct. 6, 2023, in Brentwood. (Photo by Stephanie Strasburg/PublicSource)

— Khara Timsina, director of the Bhutanese Community Association of Pittsburgh


I don’t know how they got away with it for so long.

An older man wearing a blue cap and shirt, looks directly at the camera. His expression is serious and he has a mustache. The background is blurred.

— Jerome Maynor, 74, who was denied continuation of methadone in the Allegheny County Jail in 2021




Our mothers and their babies are dying [of] preventable causes, and that is unacceptable. Those numbers should be zero.

Three people sitting at a conference table with tablets, one speaking into a microphone.

— Dr. Margaret Larkins-Pettigrew, OB-GYN, senior VP at Allegheny Health Network and new member of the Allegheny County Board of Health







When Blacks were rejected from an establishment, they built their own.

A person holding a book with a green and red cover, featuring a photo and text about Bette King Cole. The person is wearing a ring and a necklace with a cross.

— Gwen Cole Strickland, whose mother, Bettie Cole, chronicled Black Sewickley


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