The Pitt News
Pitt Senate Council analyzes effects of federal budget cuts See Online
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | March 23, 2017 | Volume 107 | Issue144
Locals respond to bus rapid transit, land trust Rose Luder
Staff Writer After introducing new routes for the Bus Rapid Transit, the Pittsburgh Port Authority approached locals at the Oakland Planning and Development Corporation town hall meeting for their opinion. About 30 local Pittsburgh residents attended the OPDC town hall meeting at the Oakland Career Center Wednesday night. The discussion focused on plans for a new land trust program and gathering resident feedback on the Port Authority’s BRT system — or what the Port Authority team referred to as “a light rail on wheels.” Attendees recorded their feedback in a survey and then took to the floor to talk to representatives from OPDC and the Port Authority. The majority of the meeting focused on presenting the BRT, a new electric bus system that would travel on specially designated lanes from Oakland to Downtown. The Port Authority, which has been developing the project, released possible plans for the BRT routes March 9. Senior Planner for the Pittsburgh Department of City Planning Justin Miller said BRT is still its early stages. He said the system would use electric-powered buses capable of traveling faster than gaspowered buses, primarily running from
PITT FOOTBALL PRO DAY PAGE 8 Pitt football players line up to watch their former teammates run the 40-yard dash. Meghan Sunners
ASSISTANT VISUAL
EDITOR
Pitt hires full-time psychiatrist
James Evan Bowen-Gaddy Assistant News Editor
After months of long waits and few available psychiatrists, Pitt announced more on-call counselors to schedule same-day appointments and a new fulltime psychiatrist Wednesday. Pelin Duzenli, who will begin in April, currently practices as a licensed psychiatrist and behavior scientist at the Tidewater Physicians Multispecialty See Town Hall on page 2 Group and Chessen Behavioral Health,
both in Newport News, Virginia. Duzenli will join Jennifer Prins, a board-certified psychiatrist, hired in November, who now works two days a week at the Counseling Center. Prior to Duzenli’s appointment, the Health and Wellness Center has not had a full-time psychiatrist in place for students to visit since October 2016, when John Brooks left his position. In addition to Duzenli’s appointment, the Counseling Center announced
a “day-call intake system,” in which students should be able to see a counselor within 20 minutes of arriving at the Center, according to a release from Student Affairs. Prior to this system, students would often wait a week or longer to see a counselor if they were not in a crisis. Now, there are counselors in place who are on-call and do not have pre-set appointments, according to Shawn Ahearn, diSee New Psychiatrist on page 3