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Incumbent-less race lets 'Burgh hit reset button
Category: Metro Written by Associated Press

This combination of three file photos shows, left, then state Auditor General Jack Wagner in Philadelphia on Friday, May 7, 2010. The center photo shows Bill Peduto in a file photo from March, 2005. The photo at right is a 2006 file photo of Luke Ravenstahl, the incumbent mayor of Pittsburgh who is not seeking re-election. (AP Photos/Wagner/Matt Rourke, Peduto-Ravenstahl /Keith Srakocic)
by Joe Mandak
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Mayor Luke Ravenstahl's decision not to seek re-election has given whoever succeeds him an opportunity to shine a national spotlight on a city that continues to reinvent itself as a post-industrial 21st century success story, say political experts and the leading candidates to replace him.
Last Updated on Saturday, 18 May 2013 13:58
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Pittsburgh zoo unveils new tiger cub to public
Category: Metro Written by Associated Press

This photo provided by the Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium shows the new Amur tiger cub in a restricted area at the zoo. (AP Photo/Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium, Paul A. Selvaggio)
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Officials at the Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium are showing off their new Amur tiger cub to the public, though the 6-week-old cat can only be seen on a video monitor for now.
Last Updated on Friday, 17 May 2013 17:35
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Replacing Shealey: Prater-Holliday, Wilson seek District 1 board seat
Category: Metro Written by Rebecca Nuttall - Courier Staff Writer

LUCILLE PRATER-HOLLIDAY
After just one term, Sharene Shealey, District 1 representative of the Pittsburgh Public School District Board of Directors, decided
not to run for reelection in the upcoming May 21 primary election. Shealey’s departure has drawn two candidates for her seat, Lucille Prater-Holliday and Sylvia Wilson.
The two candidates joined others from around the district at a student led forum hosted by A+ Schools on May 8. In line with the forum’s theme, Wilson, a retired teacher, and Prater-Holliday, a community activist, both expressed a commitment to children.
“Every child deserves every chance to receive a high quality education,” Prater-Holliday said. “My wonderful experience as a student in the Pittsburgh Public Schools is the reason I have made this my life’s work.”
“Kids have always been at the very middle of what I’ve done,” Wilson said.
Wilson recently retired as the assistant to the president of the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers. This background reflects her position on the district’s “Empowering Effective Teachers” plan, which aims to put an effective teacher in every classroom.
“In Pittsburgh there are high standards when we hire teachers so we’re not getting the bottom of the barrel,” Wilson said.
“Ensuring every student has an effective teacher means making sure teachers have the support they need.”
Wilson and Prater-Holliday agreed on the importance of seniority in teacher placement and furlough decisions. However, Prater-Holliday said teachers should take a personality test because there are several who are not truly committed to children.
Similar to other candidates in the school board race, Prater-Holliday and Wilson agreed out of school suspensions were not an effective method of discipline.

SYLVIA WILSON
“There are alternatives to out of school suspensions because we know that some of our kids like to be out of school,” Wilson said.
Prater-Holiday said she had helped the former Peabody High School implement a peer court for disciplinary issues. She said this program combined with other alternative disciplinary measures reduced discipline issues by 51 percent.
The candidates were asked to offer solutions to balancing the district’s budget. Wilson said the best method would be to increase enrollment in district schools and did not provide methods for reducing spending.
“The school district’s budget is bigger than the City of Pittsburgh and why not, because our children are our greatest assets,” Wilson said.
Prater-Holiday also said increasing enrollment was paramount, but did not want to demonize area charter schools that are drawing students away from the district.
“Whether you have money or you don’t have money, you should be able to send your child to any school you want to,” she said of the opportunity charter schools provide for low-income families. “I think one of the ways we can attract families back to the schools is by doing a better job of educating the students we have now.”
In the past, Prater-Holiday served as president of community organizations ACORN and Action United. She also ran for Pittsburgh City Council in 2011.
Wilson worked as a teacher in the district for 26 years. She served as secretary of the PFT executive board for more than 30 years, beginning in 1979.
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Last Updated on Friday, 17 May 2013 10:02
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‘Social Welfare’ group runs ads against Gov. Corbett. But who are they?
Category: Metro Written by Public Source

A still from an advertisement paid for by Pennsylvanians for Accountability.
by Bill Heltzel
Pennsylvanians for Accountability runs television ads that accuse Gov. Tom Corbett of playing a shell game with the state.
But what game is the Pittsburgh advocacy group itself playing? It refuses to name its officers and directors. It conceals its funders. It uses a mail drop for an address.
Last Updated on Friday, 17 May 2013 14:25
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Replacing Colaizzi: DeFlitch, Kennedy face off in District 5 board race
Category: Metro Written by Rebecca Nuttall - Courier Staff Writer

STEPHEN DeFLITCH
Two parents with students in the Pittsburgh Public School District are running for the District 5 school board seat in the May 21 primary election. Current School Board Director Theresa Colaizzi has decided not to run for re-election after four terms on the board, leaving an open race for a district that includes Greenfield PreK-8, Mifflin PreK-8, and Minadeo PreK-5.
In addition to being concerned parents, there are several similarities between candidates Stephen DeFlitch and Terry Kennedy who both reside in Greenfield. When asked about how they would reduce the achievement gap between Black and White students at a recent candidate forum hosted by A+ Schools, both pointed to parenting as a leading factor.
“If I knew the answer to that, I could run for president,” DeFlitch said. “A lot of studies show the achievement gap happens over the summer months and when our parents aren’t involved in their children’s lives.”
“There are some of our parents who never graduated high school, never went to college,” Kennedy said, but also added that she believes culturally responsive curriculum would better engage African-American students.
One area where they disagree, measures for evaluating teacher effectiveness, could prove to be a determining factor in each of the school board races this election. After the new school board representatives take office, the district will renegotiate the collective bargaining agreement with the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers and the public is pressing the candidates on whether they will side with teachers or district administrators.

TERRY KENNEDY
“I think that the CBA coming up is extremely important,” DeFlitch said. “This is the one opportunity we have to do something about it, to get involved as a voting block.”
DeFlitch said he was in favor of evaluating teacher effectiveness through methods such as the value-added measure which looks at how students improve over the course of a year. Kennedy said she was in favor of putting the most effective teachers in the neediest schools, and believed the district already had effective teachers.
“Trust our union and our administration to put an effective teacher in front of every student,” Kennedy said.
Despite his approval of teacher evaluations, DeFlitch also believes teachers should have greater control over their schools. When it comes to the district’s budget and possible upcoming shortfalls, he said school staff should have input on how the district’s resources are allocated.
“I think principals and teachers who work with students everyday need to have a bigger say in where that money is going,” DeFlitch said.
DeFlitch has served on the Excellence for All, parent steering committee since 2004. He works in engineering as a quality/manufacturing manager.
Kennedy has been a member of the district’s parent teacher organizations since 1999. She currently serves on the Pittsburgh Local Task Force on the Right to Education.
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Last Updated on Friday, 17 May 2013 10:00
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