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How Penn State trustees plan to vote on campus closures could run afoul of transparency law

This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom dedicated to investigative and public-service journalism for Pennsylvania. Sign up for Talk of the Town, a weekly newsletter of local stories that dig deep, events, and more from north-central PA, at spotlightpa.org/newsletters/talkofthetown. The Penn State Board of […]

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This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom dedicated to investigative and public-service journalism for Pennsylvania. Sign up for Talk of the Town, a weekly newsletter of local stories that dig deep, events, and more from north-central PA, at spotlightpa.org/newsletters/talkofthetown.

The Penn State Board of Trustees plans to meet virtually this month to determine the fate of multiple campuses, a decision that will impact the futures of thousands of students and employees.

However, the online-only nature of the meeting could run afoul of Pennsylvania’s public meetings law, according to legal experts.

“There’s nothing in Pennsylvania law that allows a virtual only public meeting under the Sunshine Act,” said Melissa Melewsky, media counsel for the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association, of which Spotlight PA is a member.

If the meeting’s legality is challenged in court, a judge could potentially overturn any decision made at the meeting, she added.

Trustees will not consider closures on a campus-by-campus basis when they hold the special meeting, a university spokesperson told Spotlight PA. Instead, they’ll vote on a single plan from President Neeli Bendapudi proposing which campuses to shutter. The plan will require a simple majority to pass.

Trustees will gather at the University Park campus this week for a series of in-person meetings ahead of graduation festivities, but campus closures are not on the agenda.

According to three people with knowledge of the board’s schedule, trustees are instead expected to vote on the president’s proposal when they meet virtually this month. The trustees held a similar, virtual-only meeting last May to pass the $700 million Beaver Stadium renovation plan.

This structure could be problematic, Melewsky told Spotlight PA, as Pennsylvania’s Sunshine Act — the law requiring transparency and public access to the meetings of governing bodies like Penn State’s board — doesn’t expressly allow for virtual-only meetings. However, only a judge can rule whether the law was broken.

“If there’s an issue under the Sunshine Act and someone feels the law has been violated, they have a statutory right to pursue the issue in court,” Melewsky said. “And if a court would find there was a violation, the court could do a number of things, including rescinding any official action taken at that public meeting.”

In recent weeks, some trustees have questioned the university’s stated reasons and goals behind shutting down locations, the first sign of public fractures among leaders over how Penn State is handling the statewide campus system.

Meanwhile, the people whose livelihoods and communities are at risk have grown more vocal.

An open letter to trustees asking Penn State to consider options other than closing locations received hundreds of signatures, though it’s unclear if board leadership will see it. Andrea Adolph, a Penn State New Kensington professor who authored the piece, said the letter is too long for the board’s online public comment portal — the primary way the board gets public input. The website limits submissions to 500 words.

Penn State has not allowed in-person or virtual spoken comments during public meetings since 2021.

Joy Ramsingh, an attorney who specializes in public meetings law, told Spotlight PA a strong legal argument could be made that the board’s conduct exploits loopholes in Pennsylvania transparency statute and is contrary to what the General Assembly intended.

“If you’re going to go and you’re going to have days of back-to-back meetings and then, five days later, you’re doing a virtual meeting just because this is more of a stickier subject, I think you’re in hot water as far as the Sunshine Act is concerned,” Ramsingh said.

Neither Penn State’s Office of Strategic Communications nor its board leaders responded to questions about the public comment procedures or the legality of its virtual meetings.

Trustee and faculty pushback

The details of the president’s proposal to close campuses remain unknown. The university has previously said it will keep at least eight of its locations — Abington, Altoona, Behrend, Berks, Brandywine, Great Valley, Harrisburg, and Lehigh Valley. These campuses have the largest enrollments and are in regions of the state with stable or growing populations.

The remaining locations — Beaver, DuBois, Fayette, Greater Allegheny, Hazleton, Mont Alto, New Kensington, Schuylkill, Scranton, Shenango, Wilkes-Barre, and York — are under review by Bendapudi’s administration and could close after the 2026-27 academic year. The university has said it will retain a presence in Northeast Pennsylvania and the Pittsburgh region.

Until an announcement last month, it was unclear whether the university’s governing body would be involved in the decision. A university spokesperson previously declined to say whether or how trustees would be involved, and the president said publicly that closing campuses was an administrative decision she would make. Board support might not be unanimous.

In April, a group of five current and former university leaders, including current alumni-elected trustees Ted Brown and Jay Paterno, published an op-ed in StateCollege.com calling on the university to delay a decision until other options are considered. The declining commonwealth campus enrollments, often cited in arguments for closure, have flattened in recent years and the statewide system’s budget deficit costs Penn State less than 1% of its total budget, the group argued.

Paterno told Spotlight PA he would like to see more innovative choices for the campuses beyond staying open or closing. Trustees should be more involved with this plan given the potential impact, he said. “I would rather be a year late than a day early on a decision this big,” Paterno said.

Alice Pope, another co-author of the op-ed and an emerita trustee who cannot vote on a proposal, told Spotlight PA she feels the decision is being rushed.

“Before we take the irreversible step of closing any of our campuses, it seems to me we should first come together as a community to reimagine how we should fulfill our land grant mission in the next hundred years,” Pope wrote in a statement. (Brown did not respond to a request for comment for this story.)

The op-ed sparked Adolph, the New Kensington professor, to also write a public letter.

“Until very recently, we were all under the impression that the board was all there, all on board, and perhaps even hired [Bendapudi] to do this work,” she told Spotlight PA.

As of May 6, Adolph’s letter has received more than 600 signatures, including from alumni-elected trustee Barry Fenchak.

The statewide campus system, the letter argues, helps Penn State embody its land grant mission. Closing campuses would backtrack on the promises made to students across the state, the document reads.

Penn State’s commonwealth system enrolls a more racially diverse group of people, a greater percentage of Pennsylvania residents, and more first-generation college students than University Park, according to data reviewed by Spotlight PA.

One signatory of Adolph’s letter, Victor Brunsden, told Spotlight PA he wants trustees to reject Bendapudi’s closure plan. The administration has not been transparent about how it’s making decisions, including the criteria that will determine which locations survive, the Penn State Altoona professor said. First, the university said closures were a financial decision, he said, then the administration said some campuses were not providing students with the “Penn State experience.”

“That statement implies to me that unless students are able to go to every home football game, unless they are able to be in classes with 1,000 other students at the same time, they are not getting the ‘Penn State experience,’” Brunsden said. “It’s insulting to the work that a lot of my colleagues, both faculty and staff, do at the campuses. I think it’s insulting to the students, too.”

Last week, Nicholas Rowland, the academic trustee on Penn State’s board, wrote in StateCollege.com that Penn State should not operate like a business. “Our campuses are not line items to cut or assets to liquidate; they are integral parts of the whole,” Rowland said. “They are family. And while every family faces difficult seasons, we do not abandon one another when times are hard. We come together.” (Rowland did not respond to a request for comment for this story.)

Public comment

While these critiques from sitting trustees are notable, Penn State’s board has 36 voting members. Dissent from even a dozen trustees would not stop or delay a closure plan. Rejection would be historic.

A previous Spotlight PA analysis of trustee voting data between 2019 and 2024 found that the trustees passed nearly 85% of measures without a single oppositional vote. The board voted down just four of the 328 measures it considered during this period, three of which were motions a trustee proposed mid-meeting. The other, in July, was an option for how trustees should be elected to the board.

Apart from those votes, most trustees had not recorded a single dissenting vote, the analysis showed.

A university spokesperson said the public can provide written comments online ahead of the meeting. Penn State has not allowed in-person or virtual spoken comments during public meetings since 2021.

Restricting public comment — through moves such as requiring submission deadlines or not allowing in-person statements — raises free speech questions, Ramsingh said. Limiting speech generally backfires, she said, and draws more attention to the topic.

“The board doesn’t have to agree with what the public says,” Ramsingh said. “But that’s the piece that I think a lot of them don’t understand: It’s that hearing an opinion that is contrary to yours is not an attack. It’s this idea that we can come together when we have different opinions. We can disagree. … We’re going to do all this together in the same room. But if you try to suppress that, this is like trying to drown a fire out with kerosene.”

Adolph said her open letter is exactly the kind of statement that the trustees should hear in person. Otherwise, there’s no way to ensure the trustees receive that perspective, she said.

Spotlight PA, in partnership with the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, sued the trustees in December 2023 for alleged violations of the Sunshine Act. The suit — which was amended to include additional allegations following the board’s February and May 2024 meetings — argues the trustees illegally conducted public business in private. The case is ongoing in the Centre County Court of Common Pleas.

SUPPORT THIS JOURNALISM and help us reinvigorate local news in north-central Pennsylvania at spotlightpa.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability and public-service journalism that gets results.



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North Adams Foote Memorial Skating Rink to replace roof with more than $500,000 in state money | Northern Berkshires

NORTH ADAMS — The Peter Foote Vietnam Veterans Memorial Rink is in serious need of a new roof — and the state has agreed to pay for it. In a Wednesday news release, the state Department of Conservation and Recreation said the money “is part of DCR’s ongoing effort to ensure families and residents have access […]

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NORTH ADAMS — The Peter Foote Vietnam Veterans Memorial Rink is in serious need of a new roof — and the state has agreed to pay for it.

In a Wednesday news release, the state Department of Conservation and Recreation said the money “is part of DCR’s ongoing effort to ensure families and residents have access to welcoming and safe recreational facilities that provide important opportunities for activity as well as serve as community hubs.”

The replacement will cost about $537,000, with completion slated for the summer and before the rink’s fall season opening, and consists of replacing the 36,000-square-foot roof with PVC roofing membrane and new insulation.

The city took the rink over from the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, which didn’t own it but had a lease with the state, in 2008. The city signed a long-term lease and committed to putting money into the rink. Around the same time, the DCR made a major change in its management of skating rinks throughout the state, ceding control to private operators and municipalities. Now, the rink is owned by DCR and managed by the city.







An MCLA hockey team banner

A Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts hockey team sign hangs over a goal at the Peter W. Foote Vietnam Veterans Memorial Skating Rink. MCLA hosted its first hockey game in 20 years in 2023. The rink is in line for a roof replacement, paid for by the state, to be completed before the end of the year.




Between expanded youth hockey programs, open skating and more, the rink is a popular spot in the city, even more so now that MCLA hockey has returned to the rink after a 20-year hiatus.

State Rep. John Barrett III, D-North Adams, who was instrumental in getting the DCR to fund the project, recalled his efforts as mayor in 2008 to secure a long-term commitment of $1.1 million from the state for the upkeep of the rink, which was built in 1969.

“DCR was getting rid of all of its rinks, and MCLA backed away from it, ending their hockey program and no longer running the rink,” he said Thursday. “We took it over, and it has become most successful, and hasn’t cost the city any money. It’s a tremendous resource for Northern Berkshire.”

“I never thought I’d be around to promote this,” Barrett said. “I know it’s in desperate need, like it was when I took it over. I thank the DCR and the Healey administration for not walking away from commitments made two administrations ago.”







Sign for North Adams skating rink

The Peter W. Foote Vietnam Veterans Memorial Skating Rink, built in 1969, is set to get a new roof. The state Department of Conservation and Recreation, is picking up the tab.




North Adams Mayor Jennifer Macksey said that one of her first actions as mayor, in January 2022, was to work with DCR on maintaining “this important community and regional asset.”

“Fortunately, one of our biggest concerns with the rink is being addressed,” she said in the news release.





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Saskatoon Blades forward Cooper Williams commits to UND – Grand Forks Herald

GRAND FORKS — UND coach Dane Jackson said in his introductory press conference last month that he wants the Fighting Hawks to be a leader in recruiting Western Canada. On Friday, UND landed one of the top-performing young players in the Western Hockey League. Saskatoon Blades forward Cooper Williams, who tallied more points than any […]

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GRAND FORKS — UND coach Dane Jackson said in his introductory press conference last month that he wants the Fighting Hawks to be a leader in recruiting Western Canada.

On Friday, UND landed one of the top-performing young players in the Western Hockey League.

Saskatoon Blades forward Cooper Williams, who tallied more points than any 2008-born player in the WHL this season, announced his commitment to UND on Instagram.

Williams scored 21 goals and tallied 57 points in 68 regular-season games for the Blades.

The 6-foot, 150-pound Calgary native was one of six finalists for the WHL’s Rookie of the Year honor.

“He’s very, very smart,” Saskatoon coach Dan DaSilva told

Global News

in December. “He has a high hockey IQ. He’s in the right position. He knows where to go on the ice — both offensively and defensively. That’s his biggest asset, I’d say, is his ability to think and to read plays.”

Williams, 17, is expected to return to the Blades next season. His date of arrival on campus is yet to be determined.

Williams, who is eligible for the 2026 NHL Draft, visited UND last week.

“It was awesome,” he said. “Everything was so cool. I met a couple of guys on the team. They were awesome. The staff was awesome as well.”

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Cooper Williams’ commitment announcement on Instagram.

Williams said he had been thinking about attending college for a while. He signed with Saskatoon, but in November, the NCAA changed its rules to allow players from the three Canadian Hockey Leagues to retain their college eligibility.

“I was thinking about (college) for a while now, even before the WHL Draft,” Williams said. “It was a 50-50 split. It’s awesome that the rules changed.”

Williams said he knew about UND because of former Fighting Hawks defenseman Jacob Bernard-Docker, who helped coach hockey at Williams’ elementary school in Calgary.

“I talked to one other school over the phone, but I didn’t want to check out other schools,” Williams said. “(At UND), the facilities are great, the campus is unreal and it just seemed like the right fit for me.”

Williams is the second 2008-born player to commit to UND, joining West Fargo’s Keaton Jundt.

UND has a commitment from one 2009-born player in forward Eli McKamey, who accelerated his education and will be a senior next year.

The Fighting Hawks have been busy building the 2025-26 roster since Jackson was announced as head coach in late March.

Their 2025 commitments have included freshmen Jack Kernan (center) and Jan Špunar (goaltender). They’ve also picked up transfers Ellis Rickwood (Clarkson center), Anthony Menghini (Minnesota Duluth winger), Isaac Gordon (Michigan Tech winger), Gibson Homer (Arizona State goaltender) and Zach Sandy (Minnesota Duluth goaltender).

Williams is the first non-2025 commit of the Jackson era.

Brad Elliott Schlossman

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Brad Elliott Schlossman

Schlossman has covered college hockey for the Grand Forks Herald since 2005. He has been recognized by the Associated Press Sports Editors as the top beat writer for the Herald’s circulation division four times and the North Dakota sportswriter of the year twice. He resides in Grand Forks. Reach him at bschlossman@gfherald.com.





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SEC Hockey? Nashville set to host all SEC conference club hockey event

The University of Texas Hockey Team has seen great success on the ice, they’ll look to build off that success at the Southeastern Collegiate Frozen Showcase in 2026. Ice hockey is gaining ground in the heart of SEC country, with club teams from several Southeastern Conference universities set to take center stage at the inaugural […]

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The University of Texas Hockey Team has seen great success on the ice, they’ll look to build off that success at the Southeastern Collegiate Frozen Showcase in 2026.

Ice hockey is gaining ground in the heart of SEC country, with club teams from several Southeastern Conference universities set to take center stage at the inaugural Southeast Collegiate Frozen Showcase in January 2026.

While the SEC and NCAA do not officially sanction the sport, club hockey programs representing Texas A&M, Arkansas, Georgia, Missouri, Texas, Auburn, Alabama, and Mississippi will compete in the American Collegiate Hockey Association (ACHA) Men’s Division II event at the Ford Ice Center in Nashville from Jan. 9-11, 2026. The showcase highlights the rapid growth and increasing competitiveness of non-varsity college hockey across the South, with many of the team’s who’s institutions are of members of the Southeastern Conference having great success on the ice.

The Texas Longhorns, fresh off a standout season, are among the featured teams. Texas punched its ticket to the ACHA Division II National Championship after a dramatic run at regionals in Colorado, including an overtime victory against the University of California, Berkeley. The Longhorns’ success reflects a broader surge in interest and achievement for hockey programs at SEC schools, many of which compete in the ACHA or the AAU’s College Hockey South Conference.

Club hockey in the region has seen significant expansion, with College Hockey South now comprising 50 teams from 30 schools across eight states. Some SEC programs, including Ole Miss, Georgia, Auburn, and Alabama, are exploring the formation of an all-SEC hockey league, citing increased interest and recruitment. “There’s been a lot of discussion around SEC, ACHA and other options,” said Max Mona, head coach of the Vanderbilt Club Hockey team. “We’ve given our players the flexibility to decide on leagues and scheduling.”

For now, the Southeast Collegiate Frozen Showcase will serve as a marquee event for SEC hockey enthusiasts, offering a glimpse of the sport’s rising profile in the region and the potential for even greater growth in the years ahead.





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Illinois State Transfer Sara Wabi Signs with Mizzou Gymnastics

Story Links COLUMBIA, Mo. – University of Missouri gymnastics has signed graduate transfer Sara Wabi from Illinois State, head coach Shannon Welker announced on Friday.  The Chicago native joins the Tigers after four seasons with the Redbirds, helping lead the team win the 2023 and 2025 Midwest Independent Conference (MIC) Championship and a […]

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COLUMBIA, Mo. – University of Missouri gymnastics has signed graduate transfer Sara Wabi from Illinois State, head coach Shannon Welker announced on Friday. 

The Chicago native joins the Tigers after four seasons with the Redbirds, helping lead the team win the 2023 and 2025 Midwest Independent Conference (MIC) Championship and a trio of All-MIC First Team recognitions during her senior season. Wabi’s performance earned her a bid to compete on bars as an individual in the Seattle Regional of the 2025 NCAA Championships. 

“We are thrilled to welcome another high-level transfer to our program,” Welker said. “Sara is an elite competitor and brings great experience after competing at Illinois State for the last four years. She is a huge addition to our uneven bars squad – we cannot wait to begin working with her.” 

 

In 2024, Wabi saw action on floor and bars in every meet and was named to the All-MIC Second Team on both bars and floor at the MIC Championship. She scored 9.875 or better nine times during the season.

Wabi’s first collegiate meet came in 2023, where she competed on floor for the entirety of her sophomore year. She earned All-Midwest Independent Conference First Team honors on beam and bars that season as well. 

Before college, Wabi competed for Aspire Gymnastics Academy. During the 2021 Illinois State Meet, she placed second on bars, fourth on beam, seventh on floor, eighth on vault and fourth in the all-around.

Daughter to Steve and Sheryl Wabi, Sara was born on November 20, 2002.

FOLLOW THE TIGERS

For all the latest on Mizzou gymnastics, stay tuned to MUTigers.com and follow the team on Facebook, X, and Instagram.





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Preview and Match Day Live

Photo courtesy Pittsburgh Riveters SC USL W-League – Great Forest Division Riveters (0-0-0) vs. Cleveland Force SC (0-0-0) Friday, May 16 | 7 p.m. | Highmark StadiumTV: SportsNet Pittsburgh+  |   Streaming: SportsEngine Play Pittsburgh Soccer Now Coverage Team:  Rachael Palmer (reporting / social media updates), Ed Thompson (photography) Match Day Updates After much hype and a strong […]

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Preview and Match Day Live




Photo courtesy Pittsburgh Riveters SC

USL W-League – Great Forest Division

Riveters (0-0-0) vs. Cleveland Force SC (0-0-0)

Friday, May 16 | 7 p.m. | Highmark Stadium
TV: SportsNet Pittsburgh+  |   Streaming: SportsEngine Play

Pittsburgh Soccer Now Coverage Team:  Rachael Palmer (reporting / social media updates), Ed Thompson (photography)

Match Day Updates

After much hype and a strong marketing blitz rarely ever seen for a pre-professional club across the United States soccer landscape, the Pittsburgh Riveters SC finally get to take the field when they face Cleveland Force on Friday night at Highmark Stadium (7 p.m. kickoff).  Pittsburgh Soccer Now’s Rachael Palmer and Ed Thompson will be there to cover the match and all the festivities surrounding it.  Look for updates and more to come here on this thread.

6:05 p.m. — STARTING LINEUPS

Image

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Preview / Getting to know the Riveters SC

Riveters are led by Head Coach Scott Gibson — who’s been part of the Hounds Academy for nearly two decades.

The team will face a 10-game slate in the league’s new Great Forest Division.

For Gibson, one of the toughest tasks will be squad selection. The Riveters have depth at every position, both homegrown and nationally recruited, which will be a benefit over the course of a condensed schedule. But for this one-off opening night, Gibson has only a handful of training sessions from which to glean his ideal starting 11.

Tessa Dellarose, the former U.S. U-20 international and 2024 NCAA champion with North Carolina, is one of the few locks for the 11 and will wear the captain’s armband for the team’s historic debut. As the first player announced for the team last fall, the midfielder will be crucial in a pivot role for the Riveters.

“We want to improve and we want to mesh together each game,” the Tar Heels midfielder said. “Most importantly, inaugural season or not, we want to compete and we want to win.”

Coffield stated that coach Scott Gibson has set a priority for the team to build its chemistry quickly. It’s a tough task, with players encompassing more than 20 different colleges.

“I think we’re looking to make an impact,” Former Mars standout and current Indiana University midfielder Piper Coffield explained.

“It’s our first year and Scott mentioned about us gelling and getting to know each other with a quick turnaround. We started training on Monday and have our first game on Friday, but I’m optimistic about this group. We’re looking to win some games and score some goals. I think it’s going to be an exciting season.”

Scouting Cleveland Force

The Riveters’ first opponent is a somewhat familiar one, as the Force is a longtime opponent of teams from the Riverhounds Academy at the youth level.  

Much like Gibson, the Force are led by a Head Coach who has been an instrumental part of the club’s Youth Programs and Girls ECNL Director, Rob Miller.

Now, each club has a proper women’s First Team, and it makes for a fitting start to begin their history with an installment of the classic Pittsburgh/Cleveland rivalry.

The Force could have an advantage of having a core group of players that have been playing together longer.  Last year, they posted 5W-6L-1D record in W-League’s Central Conference Great Lakes Division.

One player to look out for with Cleveland is McKenzie Muir, who has been a key player at Duquesne the past three seasons.  The rising senior scored eight goals total on the Bluff and was among Cleveland’s leading scorers last season, scoring six goals in 10 matches.

A little bit more history…   

Cleveland Force SC were formed in 2018 after a merger of three of Cleveland’s most prestigious Youth Soccer Clubs: CSA Impact, Cleveland United, and Internationals SC, and the club joined W-League in 2023.    More than a dozen youth and senior national team players, more than 40 professional players, and more than 500 collegiate players have come through the Force organization. 

The “Cleveland Force” name has been associated with both a men’s indoor soccer team and a women’s soccer team. The original Cleveland Force was a men’s team in the Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL) from 1978-1988. 

Unlike Pittsburgh — Cleveland does have a clear path toward having a women’s professional soccer team, as one of the signature franchise in the Women’s Professional Soccer League (WPSL) as one of the founding markets, according to Spectrum News

PSN’s Pittsburgh Riveters SC Coverage

‘It’s incredible:’ Pittsburgh Riveters looking toward home opener, debut

Pulse of Pittsburgh Soccer: Kicking off this week, Riveters announce ground-breaking broadcast deal while Steel City men debut in USL League Two

Pulse of Pittsburgh Soccer: Riveters SC, Steel City FC to compete in USL W-League’s Great Forest Division

Riveters Roster / Coaches

No.   Name               Pos.    Height  Age        Hometown (Previous team)

1    Bailey Herfurth GK 6’0” 21 Northport, N.Y. (West Virginia Univ./Tampa Bay United)

2   Kennedy Neighbors M 5’7” 20 Newburgh, Ind. (Indiana University)

 Sydney Lindeman D 5’8” 21 Murrysville, Pa. (Towson University)

4   Kelsey Salopek D 5’4” 20 Munhall, Pa. (Kent State University)

5   Kate Friday M 5’7” 19 Fox Chapel, Pa. (Xavier University)

6   Emily Kirkpatrick D 5’5” 22 Pittsburgh, Pa. (Towson University)

 Sabrina Bryan F 5’3” 26 Cecil, Pa. (Hofstra University)

8   Carolina Lucci F 5’4” 26 Monaca, Pa. (Chowan Univ./Swan City SC)

  Abi Hugh M 5’4” 22 Huntington, W.Va. (N.C. State University)

10  Carola Fontán M 5’2” 20 Les Franqueses del Vallés, Spain (Univ. of Cumberlands)

11   Lucia Wells F 5’4” 20 Pittsburgh, Pa. (University of Pittsburgh)

12   Bella Vozar D 5’1” 19 Pittsburgh, Pa. (American University)

13   Holly Pascoe F     5’4” 26 Christchurch, New Zealand (Point Park University)

14   Tanum Nelson M 5’8” 20 Duxbury, Vt. (Cornell University)

16   Pauline Nelles GK 5’10” 23 Bonn, Germany (Arizona State University)

17   Gina Proviano M 5’6” 22 Pittsburgh, Pa. (Long Island University)

18   Robin Reilly F 5’6” 18 Latrobe, Pa. (West Virginia University)

20    Annamarie Williams M 5’9” 19 Natrona Heights, Pa. (University of Virginia)

21   Ella Bulava D 19 Latrobe, Pa. (University of Maryland)

22   Piper Coffield D 5’8” 19 Mars, Pa. (Indiana University)

23   Gill Stewardson D 5’6” 21 Campbell River, B.C. (Point Park Univ./Harbourside FC)

24   Chloe Kuminkoski D 5’11” 23 Pittsburgh, Pa. (Loyola University, Md.)

25   Ashlyn Basinger  F 5’3” 20 Waynesburg, Pa. (University of Cincinnati)

26   Aris Lamanna GK 5’11” 19 Murrysville, Pa. (Coastal Carolina University)

28    Reagan Casper D 5’5” 20 N. Huntingdon, Pa. (Univ. of Maryland-Baltimore Co.)

29    Jayden Sharpless M 5’7” 21 Pittsburgh, Pa. (Duquesne University)

31    Ava Boyd F 5’7” 19 Pittsburgh, Pa. (University of Pittsburgh)

32  Aleena Ulke D 5’4” 21 Pittsburgh, Pa. (Syracuse University)

33   Lilly Bane F 5’9” 18 Canonsburg, Pa. (Canon-McMillan HS)

34 Tessa Dellarose M 5’5” 21 Grindstone, Pa. (University of North Carolina)

35  Olivia Damico M 5’4” 23 Victor, N.Y. (Penn State University)

37 Ishpreen Marwah F 19 Tampa, Fla. (University of Southern Mississippi)

38 Mackenzie Dupre M 5’8” 21 Upper St. Clair, Pa. (Syracuse University)

39 Sydney Ritter F 5’7” 20 Berlin, N.J. (West Virginia University)

43 Minah Syam M 5’3” 19 Pittsburgh, Pa. (Bowling Green University)






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Santa Monica College student arrested by ICE, according to the school

Santa Monica College student arrested by ICE agents near his West LA home Santa Monica College student arrested by ICE agents near his West LA home 01:19 A Santa Monica College student was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, according to the school.  The arrest happened near the student’s West Los Angeles home […]

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Santa Monica College student arrested by ICE agents near his West LA home



Santa Monica College student arrested by ICE agents near his West LA home

01:19

A Santa Monica College student was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, according to the school. 

The arrest happened near the student’s West Los Angeles home on May 5, according to SMC. School officials said he was deported but is physically safe and seeking legal aid. 

The community college said federal agents have not been on their campuses. 

“We recognize the fear, anxiety, and uncertainty many in the college community may be feeling, especially—at this time—undocumented/immigrant students, and those from mixed-status families,” the community college wrote. “Santa Monica College remains committed to upholding an inclusive teaching-learning environment where all students may pursue their educational goals, irrespective of immigration status.”

The school also released the administration’s process if federal immigration agents enter the campus. Resources for immigrants can be found on their website here.



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