Posted on May 17, 2021
The Ghosts of the Rust Belt | On the Media | WNYC Studios
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Posted >1 y ago
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My new town. I'm right in the middle of all that. I work for the University of Pittsburgh (on the health side), many of my students do their administrative residencies with UPMC, and many of our alumni work for UPMC (both here and abroad).
This city has really evolved over the last 30 years. From being an older, blue-collar, industrial town years ago, to becoming a younger, vibrant, intellectual town today. The health industry has greatly expanded (two integrated delivery and financing systems), the universities have grown (Pitt, Carnegie Mellon, Duquesne, Robert Morris, etc.), and the tech industry has moved into town. Good jobs, reasonable cost of living, clean environment, great diversity, wonderful food, arts and culture, etc. No complaints here.
This city has really evolved over the last 30 years. From being an older, blue-collar, industrial town years ago, to becoming a younger, vibrant, intellectual town today. The health industry has greatly expanded (two integrated delivery and financing systems), the universities have grown (Pitt, Carnegie Mellon, Duquesne, Robert Morris, etc.), and the tech industry has moved into town. Good jobs, reasonable cost of living, clean environment, great diversity, wonderful food, arts and culture, etc. No complaints here.
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel, I worked for US Steel in Gary, In, for 28 years. The plant is still there but fewer workers. I started there in 1959 and took early retirement at the end of 1987. When I started there were 2500 workers at Gary Works when I left there about 6500 but producing more. All thru technology. Gary did go like Pittsburg, it went in the other direction. YouTube can show you what has happened to the town I grew up.
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When I got drafted and people asked where I was from, the first comment I got was that place is smoky and dirty. True. I worked in the mills but when I returned I quit and used the GI Bill to go to electronics school. The population really took a hit when the mills began to close in the early 80’s.
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