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What are the red bus lanes in Pittsburgh? Here's what you need to know.

What are the red bus lanes in Pittsburgh? Here's what you need to know.

CBS News30-05-2025
Red bus lanes are popping up in parts of Pittsburgh, and enforcement is underway.
These new red lanes are for buses and emergency vehicles only. The exception is the striped parts in turning lanes.
Starting on Friday, any driver stopped in the red lanes will be warned. After that, a driver will be ticketed. A ticket will run you $173. If you park in a red bus lane, your vehicle will be ticketed and towed.
"It's convenient for people taking the bus, but what about the people who aren't?" John Thomas said
This isn't a Pittsburgh problem. It's an issue everywhere. One woman KDKA spoke to on Friday is from Philadelphia.
"A lot of people out here drive. I know we're in the city, but we need to make space for the drivers as well," Denim said.
However, riders of the bus have a different perspective.
"You'll see people in every neighborhood, they just stop wherever they want to instead of pulling aside. I think the bus needs to get where they're going," Denise said.
Right now, it is the verbal enforcement period. But in the coming weeks, there will be actual enforcement.
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Hank Poore Foundation gives inclusion kits to Rise Center families
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Hank Poore Foundation gives inclusion kits to Rise Center families

The Hank Poore Foundation wants to make it easier for groups in the Tuscaloosa community to be able to include people with varying abilities in their activities. The Rise Center wanted to help the foundation get its message out. The collaboration produced an Aug. 15 ice cream social loaded with smiles dripping with the remains of the frozen confections and all the new Rise families received packages from the foundation containing helpful tips to make it inclusion easier. Organizers want the families to be the first to receive the packages and hope to distribute others in the community. Ashley Ferry, executive director of the Hank Poore Foundation, said, "We applied for a grant with the Tombigbee RC&D Council so we could collaborate with Rise on this parent support program. We worked with some of the staff and teachers here at Rise and we created an inclusion kit that parents can take and use." The kit includes a children's book written by Kelly Gregory, titled, "Say Hello." Also in the kit are suggestions, tips and pamphlets, stickers and magnets to help people learn how to make inclusion a normal part of life. More: Rise Center preschool program celebrates 50 years at University of Alabama "The idea with the book is if you see someone who is different or has different abilities, just say 'Hello,' be a friend," Ferry said. "What we really envision is parents can take this kit and give it to a coach, or a dance teacher, or an art teacher and say, 'Here are some tools to help you be more inclusive in what you do,' " Ferry said. The author of the book provided a substantial discount to the foundation and the grant from the RC&D Foundation was $10,000, allowing the foundation to create 325 kits. Parents attending the back-to-school ice cream social were given the kits to take and use. For more information about the Hank Poore Foundation, go to For more information about the Rise Center, go to Reach Gary Cosby Jr. at To support his work, please subscribe to The Tuscaloosa News. This article originally appeared on The Tuscaloosa News: Foundation's kits help make inclusion an everyday part of life Solve the daily Crossword

As partisan redistricting battles flare, Maine constitutional officers weigh in
As partisan redistricting battles flare, Maine constitutional officers weigh in

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As partisan redistricting battles flare, Maine constitutional officers weigh in

Voters cast their ballots at the Quimby School gymnasium in Bingham, Maine on Tuesday, November 5, 2024. (Photo by Michael G. Seamans/ Maine Morning Star) Since President Donald Trump asked Texas to redraw its congressional maps to find five more Republican seats ahead of next year's elections, some Democratic states are considering redistricting to counter the effort. Maine is not, at least according to Gov. Janet Mills, though an anonymous group tried to encourage the Pine Tree State to intervene earlier this month by flying planes over Augusta with banners that read 'Mess with Texas.' The state's constitutional officers, Attorney General Aaron Frey and Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, both Democrats, condemned Texas' move, and Trump instigating it, as a blatant abuse of power. But, they said Democratic states exploring the avenues legally available to them to redistrict outside the regular schedule is understandable. 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Strawbery Banke Museum announces opening date and renaming of historic building
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