Pittsburgh Budget Clash, Home Invasions, and Snowy Weather: Your Local Pulse Update
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We start on Grant Street, where the budget fight at City Hall is heating up. Pittsburgh City Council and Mayor Ed Gainey are far apart on the 2026 spending plan, and council members are weighing a property tax increase after more than a decade without one. According to PublicSource and the Tribune Review, council is preparing for key votes later this month, and City Controller Rachael Heisler says council may be limited to about a 2 percent hike, not the 30 percent some have floated. That means we could see both spending cuts and a modest tax bump that will touch our monthly mortgages and rents.
On public safety, KDKA reports that a man charged in a Pittsburgh home invasion is now linked to other crimes across Allegheny County, and investigators say they are trying to connect the dots between several recent break ins. WPXI is also following a separate shooting and burglary in Wilkinsburg. Police say patrols are stepped up in those neighborhoods, and we should stay alert, especially on side streets off Penn Avenue and around Ardmore Boulevard.
Weather wise, we are dealing with a classic mixed bag. First Alert forecasters at KDKA and WPXI say we have a chilly day with clouds and a mix of light rain and wet snow showers, especially in the higher hills like Mount Washington and Squirrel Hill. Roads could be slick in spots early and late, but most of us should see just damp pavement. Temperatures hover in the upper 30s to low 40s, with a cold, breezy feel along the rivers and on the West End Bridge.
In neighborhood news, WPXI continues its investigation into condemned and collapsing buildings, and mayor elect Corey OConnor is promising to speed up demolitions once he takes office, especially in hard hit neighborhoods like Homewood, Carrick, and Fineview. Residents along streets such as Berg Place say they hope 2026 finally brings relief from dangerous, abandoned homes.
On the brighter side, a new Horizon Market just opened in New Kensington, and KDKA reports another Aldi has joined the lineup in our region, giving us more grocery options as food prices stay high.
For culture and fun, the Pittsburgh Post Gazette highlights a full slate of holiday markets and concerts this weekend, from Mannheim Steamroller downtown to local makers at pop up markets in Market Square and the Strip District. Over on the North Shore, the Sen. John Heinz History Center is showing off a new America250 bell sculpture featuring our skyline, part of the run up to the nations 250th birthday.
In schools, the Post Gazette notes that local students are leaning into the viral six seven classroom trend with creativity and humor, and some teachers in districts around the city are turning it into math and writing lessons.
Sports wise, the Penguins continue their homestand tonight at PPG Paints Arena, hosting the Montreal Canadiens, with puck drop at 7. The Pirates are making early offseason bullpen moves, and high school winter sports are ramping up, with local basketball teams tipping off across the city league and WPIAL.
For a feel good moment, KDKA and local radio partners are highlighting toy drives and food fundraisers, including motorcycle clubs and church groups dropping off donations at children’s centers and food banks from the Hill District to McKees Rocks.
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