Pittsburgh Local Pulse

Pittsburgh Thaws Out: Winter Storm, Housing Tracker, and Tech Growth Shape the Week


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Good morning, this is Pittsburgh Local Pulse for March 3, 2026. We kick off with the winter storm gripping our city this morning, bringing freezing rain that glazed bridges and overpasses around the Liberty Bridge and Parkway West. Many Pittsburgh area schools started two hours late, so families, plan accordingly if youre heading out. PennDOT banned tractors without trailers, RVs, and motorcycles from major highways like I-376, dropping speed limits to 45 miles per hour, all to keep us safe amid slick roads. Expect lingering flurries today, but clearing by evening with highs near freezing.
Shifting to City Hall, Council unanimously approved a bill from South Side Councilman Bob Charland to launch a public housing dashboard tracking new units built each year and occupancy rates citywide. This tool will help us see real progress on affordable homes, especially as demand heats up near East Liberty hotspots.
Our job market stays strong, with PNC hiring learning specialists for branch training downtown and Aerotek posting general production roles paying around 45 thousand annually. Market research analysts here average 88 thousand a year, per recent data. Meanwhile, Mayor OConnor cold-called dozens of tech CEOs this week, luring firms like Factify to expand operations along the North Shore, streamlining permits to four weeks.
Pittsburgh Water reports our lowest lead levels ever, with all lead lines set for replacement by 2027 at no direct customer cost despite that recent rate adjustment. Pitt ramps up over 50 online hybrid programs in engineering and social work, drawing working adults nationwide without relocating here.
No major crimes in the past day, though emergency crews cleared a crash halting traffic both ways on the Fort Pitt Bridge this afternoon. On sports, Steelers brass assumes Aaron Rodgers returns next season but only if we upgrade wide receivers with our 45 million cap space. Penguins gear up for homestands at PPG Paints Arena.
Looking ahead, catch PTL chats on culture and food tomorrow morning. Students, Pittsburgh Public Schools budget talks align spending with goals like underserved access, no tax hikes beyond 3.5 percent planned. Feel-good note: A new housing tracker empowers neighborhoods from Shadyside to the Strip District.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and subscribe for daily pulses. This has been Pittsburgh Local Pulse. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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