Vol. 105 Issue 145
@thepittnews
New apartment complex to help students
Tuesday,April 7, 2015
Pittnews.com
GREEN THUMB
Dale Shoemaker Assistant News Editor
A Texas-based development company has proposed to build an off-campus apartment building in Oakland that will resemble Pitt’s dorm halls. Campus Advantage said Monday that it will construct a 13-story, 137-bedroom apartment complex primarily housing students at 3407 Forbes Ave., near Magee-Womens Hospital, where a single-story commercial building stands. Construction is slated to begin next February and be completed by the fall of 2017, said Scott Duckett, the company’s chief executive officer. Allegheny County’s 2015 County Assessed Value of the lot, owned by UPMC, was $450,600. Though the end cost could change, Duckett said, Campus Advantage’s estimated cost for the complex is $25 million. Some students, however, said they are skeptical of living in a place off-campus that has similar restrictions to one of Pitt’s residence halls. As part of the lease agreement, students must agree to follow local and community laws and ordinances, including a policy forbidding the use of illegal drugs, Duckett said. Hunter Saunders, a sophomore finance major, said living in the new building will depend on its price. Freedom is what makes living off-
Apartments
Students from Plant 2 Plate work in the local garden on Oakland Avenue Monday.
Nate Smith | Staff Photographer
Feminism and fracking: Activist speaks at Pitt Mark Pesto For the Pitt News
Even after twice spending more than two weeks in jail, Sandra Steingraber emits passion — but not anger — when she talks about her opposition to fracking. Steingraber, a biologist, author of four books and grassroots activist, spoke to more than 100 people about the roles she and other 3 women play in the anti-fracking movement on
Monday at 7 p.m. in the William Pitt Union. In her lecture, “Fracking Is a Feminist Issue: Women Confronting Fossil Fuels and Petrochemicals in an Age of Climate Uncertainty,” Steingraber spoke about the 15 days in 2013 she spent in a Chemung County, N.Y., jail for trespassing after she blocked trucks from entering a natural gas facility in upstate New York. Crestwood Midstream, then Inergy, wanted to use this facility to store fracked natural
gas in old salt mines under the banks of Seneca Lake, she said. Storing natural gas under Seneca Lake could potentially contaminate this vital source of clean drinking water, according to Steingraber. After continuing her protests in defense of Seneca Lake, Steingraber was arrested again in November 2014 and spent another 15 days in jail.
Fracking
2