Pittsburg, PA
New Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy plan focuses on access, wellness and community
The Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy believes every Pittsburgher deserves clean, safe and beautiful parks — and not just the big ones like Frick or Schenley, says Parks Conservancy CEO Catherine Qureshi.
“I raised my children on the South Side and, of course, I would take them to Frick Park and Schenley Park and they loved it, but they loved Ormsby Park the best, and it’s just a small, little acre or so park,” she says. “You love the parks that are walkable and that you feel like are part of who you are.”
Qureshi hammered home the community value of Pittsburgh’s 170 parks while discussing the nonprofit’s new five-year plan.
“ We’re growing together as a community of park users,” Qureshi says. “We want to learn what our communities want, what inspires them, and wed that all together.”
The strategic plan, which was publicized on Monday, March 31, is part road map, part action plan for how the conservancy will shape parks through 2030. It rests on four priorities:
- Expanding access to clean, safe and welcoming parks for all Pittsburghers.
- Addressing environmental challenges through resilience and conservation projects.
- Growing opportunities for environmental education and wellness programs in Pittsburgh’s parks.
- Strengthening resources and aligning organizational capacity to enhance the Parks Conservancy’s overall impact.
Remaining at the organization’s core is its belief in the physical and emotional benefits that come with being in nature.
Recent years have brought the concerted growth of forest bathing and other nature-based therapy programs which, Qureshi says, can come in the form of simple yet meaningful experiences like feeling the dirt under your feet, seeing trees throughout different seasons, smelling the flora and hearing the fauna.
“Remember, [during the pandemic] five years ago there was no movie theater, going out to dinner or getting on a plane to go on vacation,” Qureshi says. “We were all really limited as a society what we could do, and people just came to the parks in droves.

“I think so many people who started that or made that more a part of their routine have continued it. Because you do feel better. You can put aside the cares of the day for a period of time and just be at peace and one with yourself and the parks.”
The conservancy’s plan takes Pittsburgh’s ecological challenges into account — combating invasive species, planting native ones and designing landscapes to allow the runoff of stormwater. Beyond that, the nonprofit is going all in on engaging diverse communities to give more Pittsburghers naturally therapeutic experiences.
Come next month, a sensory classroom and nature trail will open up at the Frick Environmental Center following a development process guided by 80 different disability groups.
The trail is the first of its kind in the city and first capital project under the new plan’s framework.
“It’s a third of a mile of trails now that are wheelchair and walker accessible, and more than that, that will have rest spots along the way and areas that you can engage with nature in a disability-sensitive way,” Qureshi says.
Also available on the trail is a free lending library, which will offer track chairs — wheelchairs with thicker, all-terrain tires — and digital binoculars that display an image on a tablet screen for trail patrons who may have limited mobility.
“We learned so much about what matters, what’s important and how we can build on this,” Qureshi says. “ But we’re always going to learn what is next in terms of access for people and learn from the community that uses it and from academic best practices.”
All park projects rely on community engagement, but engagement processes are often different, according to Qureshi.
For Homewood’s Baxter Park — which is about to begin its formal design process and is expected to break ground next year — the conservancy presented multiple plans to local residents at community events over an 18-month period.


“We got to a point where we had three separate models — same park, same amenities — … but you could actually touch and say ‘I think these trees should be here,’ and move them in the diorama, which was really neat,” Qureshi says.
“The hope there, and the expectation, is when it’s all built, people will say, ‘I remember that I put that little tree there!’ That’s kind of special.”
To Qureshi, the process is a win-win, because it gives communities input in parks that will persist for generations and it teaches conservancy staff what local communities really want in and from those spaces.
“We never want to just parachute in and do some big project,” she says. “We want to learn from the community.”
Read the Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy’s new plan in its entirety on the organization’s website. To learn about or provide feedback on your local parks, Qureshi recommends reaching out through the website or attending one of their events.
Pittsburg, PA
Record number of peregrine falcons counted in Allegheny County
In the early 1960s, the peregrine falcon population declined so sharply that the raptors weren’t even nesting in Pennsylvania. But now, the National Aviary says a record number have been counted in Allegheny County.
The National Aviary says six peregrine falcons were recorded in the county during the annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count. The nation’s longest-running citizen science project collects data on bird populations for ornithologists, the aviary says. It also plays a role in guiding conservation action, like what was needed to bring peregrine falcons back from the brink of extinction.
Because of the use of DDT, peregrine falcons were no longer nesting in the state of Pennsylvania by the early 1960s, the aviary said. But after the harmful pesticide, which negatively affects reproduction rates in birds, was banned in 1972, conservation efforts have helped the peregrine falcon rebound. It was removed from the federal endangered species list in 1999 and Pennsylvania’s list in 2021.
The record number of peregrine falcons in Allegheny County is thanks in part to the nest on top of Pitt’s Cathedral of Learning in Oakland. For the past two years, biologists with the Pennsylvania Game Commission have banded chicks born in the nest. Three were banded last year, and two the year before that.
People can watch Carla and Ecco raise their family in the nest on a livestream camera run by the National Aviary. Carla laid her first egg of the breeding season on March 16 last year, so the aviary says the start of another season isn’t too far away.
Pittsburg, PA
Police investigating two late-night McKeesport shootings
Police are investigating two shootings that happened less than 30 minutes apart on Sunday night in McKeesport.
Two men were injured in the shootings that happened at two different locations.
Allegheny County Police said that the department’s Homicide Unit was requested and responded to assist in the shooting investigations.
According to police, officers were first called to the area of Lysle Boulevard and Huey Street, where a man was shot just after 10:30 p.m. on Sunday night.
KDKA’s news crew at the scene saw the outside of the Sunoco gas station along Lysle Boulevard lined with crime tape and what appeared to be blood on the front door of the store.
Police also had an area taped off around the intersection of nearby 5th Avenue and Huey Street. The man who was shot in the area was taken to the hospital in stable condition.
Police said they are also investigating a shooting that happened in the area of an alleyway behind Madison Avenue, where another man was shot Dispatchers said the second shooting happened around 25 minutes after the first.
The two shooting scenes in McKeesport are located around 1/4 of a mile apart.
At the second shooting scene, KDKA’s news crew at the scene saw police taping off an alleyway between Madison Avenue and Petty Street.
Officers at the scene were shining flashlights and looking into a black sedan that had its flashers on. The man who was shot in the area of Madison Avenue was taken to the hospital in stable condition.
Police didn’t specify if the two shootings are believed to be related.
Pittsburg, PA
Silovs makes 22 saves, Penguins shut out Golden Knights | NHL.com
Vegas allowed two power-play goals on Pittsburgh’s four chances after giving up one on 12 opportunities the previous four games.
“I think we just had poor execution all game long,” Golden Knights forward Reilly Smith said. “Obviously, our penalty kill has been pretty good for us and that wasn’t good enough tonight.”
Rickard Rakell pushed it to 4-0 on another power play at 15:06, stopping a shot from Karlsson with his left skate and wrapping a shot around Hill.
Brazeau scored on a wrist shot from above the right circle at 14:59 of the third period for the 5-0 final.
“Second period, they took it to us,” McNabb said. “We were out of it, basically.”
NOTES: With goals from Kindel, Chinakhov and Brazeau, the Penguins have 73 goals by players in their first season with the team. It’s the most in the NHL this season and 13 more than the next closest (the Anaheim Ducks, 59). … The Golden Knights have been outscored 9-1 in the first and second periods of their first three games out of the break for the Olympics. … Karlsson has 908 points (204 goals, 704 assists), tied with Scott Stevens (908 points; 196 goals, 712 assists) for the 13th-most by a defenseman in League history. … Vegas forward Mitch Marner had a point streak end at six games (seven points; four goals, three assists).
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