Blog
Thanks to the PA NewsMedia Association for recognizing Keeley and the Vial and our ongoing series about
raising children in the modern overdose crisis in their photo story and
series categories. I know I’m lucky to work for a paper that believes in
investing the time it takes to do these deep dives (and that allows me
to work with investigative reporter Rich Lord), and I hold dear the
trust given to us by the Ashbaughs and others who let me in to try to
show a bit of their lives.
Since this published, TJ and Kate’s four
little girls welcomed a baby brother named in honor of their late Uncle
Ricky, whose fatal overdose shook the branches of their family tree. TJ
lives knowing that could have been his fate, as well. As he raises his
children in recovery, he makes no secret of the disease that killed his
brother and turned his ex into a missing person, and has taught his
youngest daughter to give a goodnight kiss to the vial of his brother’s
ashes he keeps around his neck. Head to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette interactive here to see more photos and videos, read the story, and learn more about how T.J. and Kate are working together to acknowledge
the generational cycles of addiction in their family and how to best
raise their children to be aware of it.
Top photo: Michelle
Kenney looks out of the Allegheny County Courthouse window before the
start of the homicide trial of former East Pittsburgh police officer
Michael Rosfeld, charged in the fatal shooting of her son, 17-year-old
Antwon Rose II. “As a mom, you can’t prepare for this — you just have to
do it — there is no go-to map on this,” Ms. Kenney said. “I’ll treat it
as any other role that I have as Antwon’s mother. I just have to do
it.”
“We will continue to reach out to the community, to call on the community to come together,” said 1Hood activist/musician Jasiri X during a vigil in Rankin to honor Antwon. People gathered on
the basketball court in Hawkins Village where Antwon once played, a
painting of Antwon’s smiling face looking out above an altar of flowers
and candles. Addressing Antwon’s family, Jasiri said, “We will not
abandon you in this time… We are with you.”
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The words came after a
weekend of marches into businesses and through the streets in dark,
rain, and shine after the acquittal of former East Pittsburgh Police
officer Michael Rosfeld in the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Rose. The marches continued through the week, with hundreds of students walking out
from school and into the rain to flood the streets of downtown
Pittsburgh and chanting the name of Antown Rose II. Third grader Esme
carried a painting she made of Antwon that read, “This is why we kneel. #JusticeforAntwon.”
Across town at Woodland Hills High School, Antwon’s mother addressed
his former high school classmates. “I got up there and said what I would
have said to Antwon,” Ms. Kenney said. Don’t walk out of school in
protest, she told them. Get an education and work to effect change.
Vote. “Do what Antwon isn’t here to do.”
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If you have suggestions on stories you want to see from your Western PA community, feel free to contact me to start a conversation.
“It might not happen with one image, it might take thousands of images layered in a consciousness - a national consciousness, and individual consciousness - to really move people forward, move people to action, but I do believe images have that power.” -Lynn Johnson says it best.
Join me at Robert Morris University, let’s talk photojournalism and storytelling!
A year after our original reporting published, Rich Lord and I traveled back to see how “OD Road” is changing, slowly, into Recovery Road. Here in Pittsburgh’s once most fatal ground for the epidemic, overdoses are dropping, and 1,050 “saves” have been made — almost all by other opioid users — using naloxone distributed by Prevention Point Pittsburgh since 2017.
I had to check that my mouth wasn’t hanging open while visiting Donna Williams. She had opened up from her “raw, get out of my neighborhood” approach to people in addiction to wanting to offer clean needles and health services on her block instead. She baked cookies for the men in the recovery house up the street, she is partnering with a man who formerly sold and used drugs to transform the minds of her neighbors.
Despite the cautious optimism, ripples of trauma are still carrying through families for generations. Here’s what people shared with us.