Pine-Richland, PA|News|
At the Barre: Daily Method Fitness Studio Opens This Weekend
This fitness franchise opening in Pine is the first in the Pittsburgh region.

A lifelong reader with a passion for plot, it was only natural that Jessica continue her love-affair with words by becoming a journalist.
A graduate of Duquesne University with a degree in Communications/Journalism, Jessica landed her first reporting job with The Penn-Trafford Star, a weekly newspaper owned by Trib Total Media.
Jessica helped launch the paper, which went on to have one of the highest circulations in the Trib family of weeklies. As the sole reporter for the paper (where she did everything from type up school lunch menus to cover breaking news),
Jessica racked up six Keystone Press Awards in the statewide competition for feature beat reporting, news beat reporting, general news, and a personality profile.
From Penn-Trafford, Jessica became a reporter for The Sentinel, a daily newspaper in beautiful Carlisle, PA. She added three more Keystone Awards (for spot news, news feature and a feature story) to her resume before moving back to her hometown of Pittsburgh to rejoin her then fiancee and take a job as a general assignment reporter with The Beaver County Times.
Jessica also spent time in marketing and copy-writing before returning to her journalistic roots as the Local Editor for Cranberry Patch and, later, Pine-Richland Patch.
She couldn't be more thrilled.
Along with her husband and two dogs— Jackson and Tucker—Jessica lives in Cranberry.
When she's not busy covering the community, you can find her curled up with a glossy magazine (preferably People or InStyle), sipping on a sugar-free vanilla latte, practicing hot yoga or gabbing over a glass of wine with the neighborhood gals.
Much to the chagrin of her husband, she adores home improvement projects. It's good thing her dad is a contractor!
Beliefs
At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them.
In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way.
And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know.
This fitness franchise opening in Pine is the first in the Pittsburgh region.

The shotgun-toting suspect was wearing a hoodie with a fire company logo on it.
The ranking was determined by the number of college-level tests given at a school in 2012 divided by the number of graduates that year.
The home on Old State Road is more than a century old.
The school was one of many across the country to participate in “bubbles of awareness” for autism month.
Cranberry will roll out the red carpet for a chaperoned affair.
A longtime volunteer and single mother of three, Kim Long was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma last June.
Cranberry, Adams Area and Zelienople firefighters assisted at the scene.
Firefighters rescue a cat from the burning building on Old State Road.
The theater in Richland is open to the community.
Certified child passenger safety technicians will check your child's car seat.
Certified child passenger safety technicians will check your child's car seat.
Crews will begin dismantling the wooden Playtime Palace at Community Park this week.
Proceeds benefit the St. Barnabas Free Care Fund.
Patch gives you a rundown of what's going on around the community.
If you’ve noticed some, um, unusual scents in the spring air, Patch knows what it is.
As a way to enhance safety practices, Franklin Park and Marshall participate in a Traffic Incident Management training exercise with fire and law enforcement agencies from around the region.
If you’ve noticed some, um, unusual scents in the spring air, Patch knows what it is.
If you’ve noticed some, um, unusual scents in the spring air, Pine-Richland Patch knows what it is.