Winter Woes and Warm Spirits: Pittsburgh's Christmas Day Forecast and Community Highlights
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We wake up today to a calm but gray Christmas Day across our three rivers. Forecasters at KDKA and CBS Pittsburgh say we get mild temperatures in the low 40s with a few lingering showers, then mostly cloudy and dry through the afternoon, before colder air and a mix of ice and snow move in tomorrow and could make post holiday travel tricky, especially on the Parkway East and I 79.
From City Hall, we are still feeling the impact of Pittsburgh City Council’s vote this week to approve about a 20 percent real estate tax increase to close an estimated 20 million dollar budget gap. Council members say this is meant to protect core services like police, fire, and public works, but we know it will hit homeowners in neighborhoods from Brookline to Highland Park when tax bills arrive.
Housing pressure keeps growing. The New Pittsburgh Courier reports the city has more than 20 thousand vacant homes, roughly 15 percent of our housing stock, even as families struggle to find affordable places in areas like the Hilltop and Homewood. City officials and the Land Bank are talking about faster foreclosures on long vacant, tax delinquent properties to get them rehabbed and back on the market.
In business news, the Pittsburgh Business Times highlights Pennsylvania’s big push to attract new data centers, with former coal and industrial sites around our region being eyed for billions in investment. That could mean construction and tech jobs for workers from Lawrenceville to Clairton over the next few years.
Downtown and in the Strip District, many shops along Penn Avenue are open limited hours today, especially the bakeries and fish markets that were jam packed yesterday for Feast of the Seven Fishes shopping. On the real estate side, agents say city homes now sit at a median price in the mid 200 thousands, up slightly from last year, with the hottest demand still close to busways and T stations.
On the crime front, Pittsburgh police and neighboring departments continue to look for an armed and dangerous suspect wanted in connection with a shooting outside the Washington Community Club on North Main Street last month. Detectives urge anyone with information to contact them, and patrols remain stepped up near busy nightlife corridors on Carson Street and in the Strip.
For culture and community, St. Paul Cathedral in Oakland is filled for Christmas services, the first with Bishop Mark Eckman leading, and North Park Ice Rink is open for holiday skating, giving us a classic winter outing even before the real winter weather arrives.
Sports wise, the Steelers are in late season mode with playoff hopes still in the balance, the Penguins try to climb the standings at PPG Paints Arena, and local high school basketball tournaments roll on at gyms from Oakland to McKees Rocks, giving our student athletes a big stage during break.
Our feel good story today comes from a local Girl Scout who worked with community leaders to create a new badge encouraging Holocaust education, a small but powerful reminder from a young neighbor that learning our history can bring us closer together.
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