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From YouTube: Meet The People: Josh Schneider
Description
On this episode of Meet The People, Josh Schneider talks about his role in Office of Community Health & Safety, his passion for helping others, and why an underrated Billy Joel tune is his go-to karaoke song.
A
A
I
am
the
communication
technology
manager
in
the
city
of
pittsburgh's,
department
of
innovation
and
performance,
and
today
we're
going
to
do
something
a
little
different
because
we're
not
going
to
talk
to
an
employee
who's
been
here
for
a
long
time
and
is
going
to
be
here
for
a
long
time
we're
going
to
talk
to
an
employee
who's
actually
leaving
the
city
very
soon,
but
he's
already
had
such
a
huge
effect,
a
positive
effect
on
the
city
as
a
whole
in
his
short
time
here
that
before
he
walks
out
the
door
and
forgets
about
us
little
people
for
the
rest
of
his
life,
we've
decided
to
bring
in
josh
schneider
from
the
office
of
community
health
and
safety,
to
tell
us
all
about
what
he's
done,
what
he's
doing
now
and
what
he's
going
to
be
doing
in
the
future.
B
A
So
normally,
what
I
do
is
talk
to
employees
around
the
city
about
how
they've
grown
in
their
jobs,
and
but
you
had
quite
a
bit
of
work
history
before
you
even
got
here.
Can
you
why
don't
you
give
us
a
little
bit
of
background
where
you
from
and
how
you
got
to
the
city
of
pittsburgh
before
you
even
started
working
for
the
city?
Sure.
B
So
I
came
to
the
university
of
pittsburgh
because
of
the
school's
strengths
in
that
when
I
came
here,
I
started
out
as
pre-med,
but
I
then
went
into
the
emergency
medicine
program
at
pitt
where
my
junior
year
basically
was
just
a
paramedic
school,
so
I
became
a
paramedic
in
undergrad,
while
majoring
in
emergency
medicine
and
in
the
course
of
working
as
a
paramedic.
I
confirmed
my
love
for
practicing
as
a
clinician
and
treating
patients,
but
I
saw
so
many
systemic
issues
that
I
knew
I
wanted
to
address.
B
I
didn't
feel
like
I
would
be
satisfied,
making
a
difference
on
a
person-by-person
basis.
I
wanted
to
more
practice
medicine
at
scale
on
a
larger
level
through
policy,
and
so
I
kind
of
took
me
down
this
road
after
leaving
pitt.
I
did
americorps
vista
in
the
mayor's
office,
the
city
of
pittsburgh,
and
I
basically
did
overdose
prevention
work,
which
kind
of
led
into
the
role
I'm
in
now
when
the
office
of
community
health
and
safety
was
created,
where
I
became
the
overdose
prevention
coordinator
in
that
office.
B
So
that's
kind
of
the
road
that
I've
taken
to
lead
me
here.
I
also
am
a
public
health
advisor
with
the
national
disaster
medical
system,
which
is
part
of
the
department
of
health
and
human
services
at
the
federal
government.
So
that's
like
an
intermittent
position.
Kind
of
works
like
the
national
guard,
where
you're
deployed,
if
you
need
to
be
like
respond
to
a
disaster-
hurricane
flooding,
national
special
security
incident
like
the
super
bowl
or
things
like
that.
So
that's
a
relatively
new
position,
but
an
area
I'm
interested
in
as
well.
A
B
Was
really
fortunate
to
be
here
as
the
office
was
being
created
because
I
reported
directly
to
laura
dragowski
as
an
americorps
vista
when
laura
worked
in
the
mayor's
office,
so
you
know,
as
laura
was
crafting
the
proposal.
I
was
there
to
talk
with
her
about
it
and
just
see
it
all
come
to
fruition.
So
it
was
very
interesting
to
see
it
go
from.
You
know
just
laura
and
I
talking
on
zoom
during
the
pandemic.
A
B
This
prospective
office
that
would
come
to
be
sometime
in
the
future
to
now
working
with
about
15
other
people,
everyone
from
social
workers
to
project
managers
and
seeing
the
work
of
the
office
that
we
always
talked
about,
take
shape.
A
So
what
was
it
like
as
an
americorps
vista
and
then
becoming
a
full-time
city
employee?
Did
you
as
the
fir
as
the
city's
first
ever
overdose
prevention
coordinator?
Did
you
write
your
own
job
description.
B
I
didn't
write
my
own
job
description.
I
definitely
had
conversations
about
like
what
that
kind
of
position
would
look
like,
certainly
didn't
actually
write
the
words
that
you
know
went
to
the
department
of
human
resources,
but
when
I
was
completing
my
services
in
americorps
vista,
it
was
very
clear
the
need
for
someone
to
directly
coordinate
this
work
at
the
city
of
pittsburgh.
B
Obviously,
for
the
for
many
many
years
for
many
many
decades,
the
city
pittsburgh
has
not
had
a
direct
role
in
public
health,
although
you
know
that
that
role
has
fell
to
the
county,
and
while
the
county
does
a
good
job
at
things
like
overdose
prevention
and
human
services
work,
there
are
always
people
that
will
inevitably
fall
through
those
gaps
and
the
people
that
fall
through
those
gaps
ultimately
fall
onto
public
safety
and
public
safety
does
fantastic
work,
but
they're
not
always
trained
to
handle
some
of
the
situations
they
have
to
contend
with,
and
so
it
was
important
that
you
know
someone
is
directly
involved
in
coordinating
policy
and
programs
around
overdose
prevention,
specifically,
especially
because
it
is
such
a
pertinent
issue.
B
At
this
time
I
mean
the
overdose
crisis
reached
a
peak
in
2017
dropped
off
in
2018
a
little
bit
when
narcan
was
widely
distributed,
but
is
now
approaching
the
levels
that
it
was
at
in
2017,
which
we've
just
seen
with
the
release
of
some
data
yesterday,
showing
another
increase
yet
again
in
overdoses.
So
it
was
important
that
someone
was
coordinating
this
work
at
the
city
level
and
also
someone
with
experience
in
public
safety.
A
So,
since
the
office
of
community
health
and
safety,
as
we
now
know,
it
is
the
first
of
its
kind
for
the
city
of
pittsburgh,
what
has
been
all
of
public
safety's?
I
guess
I
know
I'm
generalizing
this
by
saying
it
this
way.
But
what
has
been
the
department
of
public
safety's
reaction
to
another
group
of
people
saying
we'll,
take
this
off
your
hands
and
we'll
focus
on
these
things
that
you've
been
asked
to
focus
on
for
a
really
long
time.
B
I
think
there's
probably
a
lot
of
recognition
among
people
on
public
safety,
whether
that's
police,
fire
and
ems-
that
there
are
a
subset
of
calls
and
individuals
and
situations
that
they
have
to
deal
with,
that
they
were
never
meant
to
deal
with,
particularly
police,
and
so
with
that
recognition
comes
another
recognition
that
we
need
additional
staff
and
professionals
to
take
on
some
of
that
work.
So
you
know
we
don't
like
to
frame
the
office
of
community
safety
as
replacing
any
other.
B
Of
public
safety,
rather
it's
adding
to
what
already
exists.
That's
fair,
so
I
think
when
we
frame
it
like
that,
it
actually
has
a
pretty
positive
reaction
among
people
in
public
safety.
Obviously
I
can't
speak
for
them
or
speak
generally,
but
that's
generally
what
I've
encountered
and
we
also
have
liaisons
from
each
of
the
three
main
bureaus
in
public
safety.
B
A
Been
reading
so
I'm
a
voracious
reader
and
I
read
a
lot
of
books.
I'm
in
this
kick
right
now
of
1940
ish
to
1980-ish
american
politics,
and
what
I've
learned
through
these
books
that
I've
been
reading
is
that
various
bureaus
of
the
american
government
refused
to
coordinate
with
each
other
cia
fbi.
They
would
keep
secrets
from
each
other.
They
wouldn't
share
information,
so
I
imagine
with
police,
fire
ems
and
community
health
and
safety
all
together,
working
together.
A
B
B
Well,
I'm
not
really
joking,
but
it's
interesting
because
you
know
when
you
say
our
our
parents,
our
grandparents
can
look
at
our
government
and
not
recognize
it
now.
Ems
didn't
even
exist
until
the
1970s
and
it
started.
A
B
B
But
yeah
I
mean
a
lot
of
the
work
of
ochs
is
grounded
in
collaboration
with
all
different
parts
of
the
city
and
not
just
public
safety,
also
with
the
law
department
to
inform
things
with
the
department
of
innovation
and
performance
with
city
planning,
with
with
so
many
different
bureaus
and
offices,
because
when
you're
talking
about
health
and
safety,
which
is
the
the
primary
focus
of
our
office,
given
the
name
of
the
office,
it
doesn't
just
require
public
safety.
There's
so
much.
That's
involved
in
community
health
and
safety.
B
A
And
I'm
imagining
also
that
you're
making
decisions
or
putting
forth
policy
based
on
real-time
information
or
close
to
real-time
information
based
on
the
types
of
things
that
you're
working
on.
B
B
Well,
certainly,
everything
that
we
do
is
grounded
in
evidence
and
things
that
are
informed
by
public
health,
but
we
there
are
a
lot
of
different
areas
that
inform
the
work
that
we
do.
I
think
chiefly
concerns
that
we
hear
from
the
community
and
we
have
a
community
engagement
portion
of
our
office.
We
have
two
great
individuals
eric
and
malaysia
that
are
leading
our
public
engagement,
community
outreach
efforts
and
a
lot
of
what
we
do
is
grounded
in
the
concerns
we
hear
from
them
and
the
priorities
that
they
want
us
to
focus
on.
B
We're
also
informed
by
lived
experience
of
people
that
are
going
through
these
situations,
which
is
similar
to
but
not
directly
the
same
as
community
engagement,
and
then
there's
also
evidence
evidence
informed
by
by
public
health
by
science,
peer-reviewed
research
that
informs
the
work
that
we
do
and
also
speaking
to
the
professionals
that
have
been
doing
this
work
for
a
while,
so
hearing
directly
from
police
paramedics
from
firefighters
to
to
inform
all
this.
So
it
all
comes,
I
think,
from
many
different
places,
but
those
are
the
main
places
where
the
work
is
informed
from.
B
A
B
And,
of
course,
the
area
that
I'm
focusing
on
is
a
difficult
one
and
the
problem
is
not
getting
better,
it's
actually
getting
worse,
but
I
love
my
job
because
all
my
life,
I've
wanted
to
be
in
a
position
where
I
could
identify
a
problem
and
actually
be
in
a
position
to
do
something
about
it.
That's
what
I've
been
looking
forward
to
since
I
you
know.
A
B
Becoming
interested
in
healthcare
and
I'm
finally
in
that
place-
and
it's
also
the
intersection
of
so
many
areas
that
are
of
great
interest
to
me
and
in
areas
with
great
potential
to
help
people.
So
it's
the
intersection
of
public
safety,
which
I
have
a
background
in
it's
the
intersection
of
public
policy
and
public
health.
B
You
know
three
things
that
I
think
always
need
to
be
joined
together
in
order
to
provide
for
the
health
and
safety
of
members
of
our
community,
and
so
because
I
get
to
sit
at
the
intersection
of
those
three
things
I
get
to
interact
with
so
many
people
that
I
love
to
work
with.
I
get
to
interact
with.
B
I
will
be
incredibly
sad
to
leave
my
job
because,
while
I
do
very
much
intend
to
go
back
to
a
place
in
the
future,
where
I
can
be
in
a
role
to
be
the
intersection
of
all
those
types
of
issues
again
and
and
make
change
on
a
a
broad
level,
I'm
gonna
miss
that
for
the
three
years
that
will
be
away
from
from
this
type
of
work.
A
All
of
that
said-
and
I
know
we're
going
to
get
to
what
you're
doing
next
in
a
little
bit,
but
in
your
time
here
with
the
city.
What
do
you
think?
Are
your
top
500
accomplishments
and
go
you're
on
the
spot?
No,
really
just
what
are
one
or
two
or
three
things
that
you're
most
proud
of
while
you've
been
working
here
for
the
city
of
pittsburgh.
Sure.
B
So
there
are
so
many
great
things
that
we've
done,
that
I'm
really
proud
of,
but
overall
I'd
just
say
that
in
our
general
approach
to
overdose
prevention
has
been
one
based
on
harm
reduction,
so
it's
reducing
the
negative
consequences
associated
with
any
range
of
activities
rather
than
just
ignoring
or
condemning
the
negative
effects.
So
you
can
think
about
driving
a
car.
B
As
an
example,
we
were
just
talking
about
driving
cars
before
this
driving
a
car
is
an
inherently
dangerous
activity
right,
but
instead
of
outlawing
having
a
driver's
license
or
outlawing
cars
altogether,
we
have
steps
that
we
take
to
make
driving
a
car
safer.
We
have
seat
belts,
traffic
laws,
we
have
airbags
and
all
things
like
that
manufacture
regulations.
B
So,
instead
of
saying,
let's
outlaw
cars,
we're
going
to
make
it
safer,
we
do
the
same
thing
with
substance
use
instead
of
saying
we're
going
to
put
people
in
jail
for
using
substances
or
punishing
them
in
some
way.
We
can
actually
take
steps
to
make
it
safer,
so
we
can
make
sure
that
all
city
pittsburgh
staff
that
interact
with
the
public
are
trained
in
overdose
prevention
and
have
narcan
available
to
them
in
the
course
of
their
jobs.
We
can
decriminalize
fentanyl
test
strips
that
allow
people
to
make
more
informed
decisions
when
they're
using
drugs.
B
So
you
know
those
are
some
of
the
things
we've
done.
Also,
one
thing
I
want
to
mention
as
well
is
our
pre-hospital
bieber
morphine
program,
which
has
been
my
baby
here
at
the
city
of
pittsburgh
and
something
I
wanted
to
do
from
day,
one
as
an
americorps
vista
and
we're
finally,
by
the
end
of
this
month,
hopefully
expanding
to
all
of
pittsburgh
ems.
B
You
know,
ems
really
doesn't
have
the
ability
to
connect
these
patients
to
any
sort
of
resources.
There's
no
referral
power
in
ems.
So
what
we've
done
is
equipped
paramedics
with
a
very
effective
recovery,
medication
called
suboxone
or
bubonorphine
people.
My
office
call
it
the
boopadoop
program,
because
buprenorphine
is
a
very
difficult
word
to
pronounce
which
gives
paramedics
the
ability,
after
someone
has
been
revived
from
an
overdose
to
reverse
somebody's
withdrawal
symptoms.
B
So,
instead
of
having
to
go
out
and
use
again
to
reduce
their
withdrawal
symptoms,
they
can
give
them
buprenorphine
or
suboxone
same
drug,
and
they
can
make
them
feel
better
in
real
time
and
then
refer
them
to
a
telemedicine
line
where
they
can
get
more
than
medication
prescribed
to
them
within
24
hours.
This
is
a
medication
that
is
very
difficult
to
get
in
a
very
short
amount
of
time.
This
is
a
low
threshold
program,
that's
helping
more
and
more
people
every
single
month,
and
so
that's
one
of
the
things
I'm
most
proud
of.
B
So
yeah,
that's
a!
I
guess,
a
few
things
that
we've
been
working
on
that
I
I'm
proud
of
on.
A
A
much
smaller
level
I
think,
what's
most
you
were
talking
about
the
having
narcan
and
how
to
administer
it
and
when,
when
your
boss,
laura
was
fairly
still
still
fairly
new
to
the
city.
She
came
to
this
room
and
she
gave
a
narcan
training
to
me
and
my
staff
and
gave
us
stickers.
We
have
stickers
all
over
the
place
here.
I
still
have
narcan
on
my
desk.
Does
narcan
have
an
expiration
date,
narcan.
B
Does
have
an
expiration
date,
but
it's
important
to
note
that
if
all
you
have
with
you
is
expired
narcan
when
you're
looking
at
someone
who's
having
an
overdose,
you
should
still
use
it.
Narcan
when
it
expires,
does
not
become
harmful
if
anything
it'll
just
become
less
effective,
but
it
probably
will
still
work.
But
if
you
can
get
your
hands
on
new
narcan,
that's
not
expired,
then
you
should
do
that.
B
A
I
think
those
are
the
types
of
things
those
types
of
trainings
can
only
be
beneficial
to
city
employees.
I
can't
imagine
one
of
my
staff
or
colleague
is
going
to
have
a
some
sort
of
substance
overdose
during
work
hours,
but
it's
still
good
to
have.
B
It
well,
you
know,
I
wouldn't
say
that's
necessarily
given
and
I'm
not
trying
to
say
anything
against
anybody's
staff
or
any
staff
at
the
city
of
pittsburgh,
but
it
is
possible
right
substance,
use
affects
it
can
affect
anyone
right,
and
so
we
want
to
make
sure
it's
widely
available,
but
also
you
can
think
about
it.
In
terms
of
you
know,
walking
to
work
every
day.
B
B
They
can
also
take
it
home
with
them
right
and
then
you
know
use
it
if
they
come
across
someone
in
their
community
wherever
they
live
in
the
city
of
pittsburgh,
so
it's
just
good
to
get
out
there
and
that
everyone
can
have
access
to
it.
A
B
But
you
know,
obviously,
some
of
the
things
we're
getting
into
are
like
more
advanced
forms
of
home
reduction
like
certain
service
programs.
So
there's
the
further
up
the
chain
you
go
of
home
reduction,
the
more
involved
you
get
with
it,
the
more
you
realize
it
is
really
the
only
not
the
only,
but
it
is
the
chief
solution
to
making
substance
use
safer
and
saving
lives.
That's
great.
A
B
It's
you
know
just
because
of
the
people
that
I
work
with,
and
you
know
laura
creating
the
office
and
empowering
me
and
and
the
people
we
work
with
to
do
so.
Much
of
this
amazing
work
and
also
a
lot
of
it,
wouldn't
be
possible
without
the
people
in
public
safety
or
helping
me
implement
it.
So
it's
I
know
it
can
be
cliche
to
say
maybe,
but
it
truly
is
a
team
effort.
Really
really
is
so.
Why
would
you
leave
this
so.
A
B
Us
so
I
asked
myself
the
same
question.
Why
would
I
leave
a
job
where
I'm
able
to
do
all
this
great
work
and
and
really
make
an
impact,
which
is
what
I've
wanted?
My
whole
life
so
at
the
end
of
july
I'll
be
leaving
the
city
of
pittsburgh
very
sadly
I'll,
be
going
to
law
school
at
the
university
of
connecticut
in
hartford,
connecticut,
starting
in
the
end
of
august.
B
B
Certainly
it
will
be
in
the
area
of
public
service.
I
would
love
to
work
for
government
in
the
future.
I've
learned
in
this
job
that
I
love
working
for
government
government
is
where
it
where
it's
at,
if
you
want
to
make
change
government
is
where
you
can
really
make
it
happen,
so
I
don't
really
foresee
myself
going
into
like
corporate
law
or
anything
like
that.
Nothing
against
people
who
are
in
corporate
law,
but
so
you're.
B
Yeah
yeah,
probably
not.
I
really
want
to
go
into
the
area
of
public
policy,
but
but
we'll
see,
but
certainly
in
the
area
of
public
service.
A
A
Amazing,
so
you
have
this
you're
almost
a
legacy
there.
B
In
the
city
sure-
and
you
know
it'll
be-
I
love
pittsburgh
and
I've
grown
to
love
it
so
much
over
the
past
six
years.
It
will
be
nice
to
be
closer
to
my
family
again,
but
it
will
be
really
hard
leaving
the
city
pittsburgh,
I'm
trying
to
do
all
of
the
fun
pittsburgh
things.
I've
always
wanted
to
do
in
the
last
couple
of
weeks
here
so
I'll
be
sad
to
leave.
A
I
I've
only
been
to
hartford
once
in
the
last,
maybe
25
years.
So
I
don't
ask
me
for
suggestions
or.
B
A
I
worked
the
whalers
left
and
I
stopped
paying
attention
to
the
city
I
went
about
maybe
about
four
years
ago
for
a
college
reunion.
I
went
down
roads
that
weren't
there
I
there
were
one-way
streets
that
were
facing
the
other
way.
Now
it
was
very
strange.
B
A
To
the
right
of
it
is
the
red
sox
fans
and
to
the
left
of
it
is
the
yankee
fans
so.
B
B
But
while
I
love
going
to
pirates
games
and
love
pnc
park,
I
think
I
I
retained
my
yankees
fandom.
A
So
hartford
has
a
brand
new.
Oh
it's,
not
britain!
It's
a
couple
of
years
old.
They
have
a
minor
league
team
there.
It's
the
yard,
goats,
it's
right
in
downtown,
beautiful
stadium,
right,
downtown,
yeah,
it's
since
the
whalers
left,
and
they
only
have
minor
league
hockey
there.
Now
it
was
nice,
it
was
a
nice
addition
to
the
downtown
area
I
drove
by
the
stadium
when
it
was
first
built.
I
think
that's
when
I
was
there.
B
Stadiums
are
on
my
mind
today
because
of
the
the
change
of
the
name
of
heinz
field.
I
saw
something
funny
on
twitter
this
morning.
That
said,
it's
the
worst
thing
to
happen
to
heinz
field
since
bain.
B
B
Or
they
have
medical
emergencies
and
then,
especially
when
I
was
precipitating
in
paramedics
with
the
city
of
pittsburgh,
like
I
went
to
a
lot
of
basements
and
were
like
what
are
these
random
toilets
just
sitting
in
the
middle
of
like
they're
just
out
in
the
open,
and
so
I
asked-
and
I
learned
what
the
pittsburgh
party
is,
so
that
would
actually
be
a
great
name
for
the
like
the
alca,
maybe
like
the
alka-san
field,
alka-san
stadium,
I
don't
know,
I
don't
know
if
an
authority
can
buy
it.
B
A
My
pittsburgh
potty
story
is
the
first,
my
my
wife's
from
pittsburgh,
but
when
we
moved
here
together,
we
were
renting
an
apartment
in
squirrel
hill
and
the
movers
were
pulling
bringing
things
into
the
apartment,
and
my
wife
says
you
need
to
go
down
to
the
basement
and
find
the
thing
whatever
and
I
go
down
to
the
basement
and
I'm
opening
cabinet
doors,
and
I
don't
know
what
I'm
doing.
I've
never
been
in
this
basement
and.
B
A
Open
what
I
think
is
a
closet
door
and
I'm
staring
at
a
man
sitting
on
a
toilet
and
I
close
the
door
and
I
go
back
upstairs
and
my
wife
says:
do
you
have
it?
I
go
no,
but
why
is
a
man
on
a
toilet
in
our
basement?
Oh
my
goodness,
and
that's
when
I
learned
pittsburgh
party,
but
the
the
owner
of
the
the
house
had
made
a
what
essentially
was
an
was
an
outhouse
in
the
house.
A
A
B
A
B
Vienna
by
billy
joel,
oh
interesting,
love,
billy,
joel.
It's
kind
of
sad,
though.
A
24
in
1999
josh,
so
what
was
your
favorite
cartoon,
he-man
and
gi
joe?
Those
are
good
ones
key
man,
because
of
course
you
would
want
to
follow
a
man
in
his
underwear,
as
he
runs
around
with
a
sword
right
who
wouldn't
and
gi
joe,
because
the
bad
guys
were
like
storm
troopers.
They
couldn't
hit
the
broadside
of
a
barn.
A
B
A
All
right:
here's
your
big
pittsburgh
question.
Okay,
you
love
pittsburgh
right.
B
A
A
Okay,
so
as
a
paramedic,
you
probably
a
lot
quicker
than
the
rest
of
us
understood
the
importance
of
masks
once
the
pandemic
hit
yeah.
So
what
is
your
favorite
coveted
mask
that
you
have
seen
on
people
over
the
last
two
plus
years.
A
B
During
like
the
height
of
the
pandemic,
so
that
was
really
good,
although
it
was
very
hot.
I
most
often
go
to
my
trusty
n95,
but
I
definitely
saw
a
lot
of
funny
ones
online,
like
milk
jugs
or
something
like
that,
but
I
don't
think
I
saw
any
ones
that
were
too
ridiculous.
A
So
when
your
boss
was
on
this
show,
just
by
herself,
she
and
I
had
a
long
discussion
about
my
silence
of
the
lamb's
mask.
A
Mask
yeah,
but
I
like
the
masks
that
look
like
somebody's
face
like
a
totally
unshaven.
A
A
I
know
you're
leaving,
and
I
know
that
it's
not
like
people
are
gonna,
pick
up
the
phone
and
call
you.
But
if
people
want
information
about
the
office
of
community
health
and
safety
or
any
of
the
programs
that
it's
providing
or
any
of
the
work
that
it's
doing
and
somebody's
watching
the
show
and
wants
that,
how
do
they
get
involved?
Get
information.
B
Well,
in
any
general
questions,
you
can
email,
ochs,
pgh,
pittsburgh
pa.gov.
There
also
is
the
opportunity
on
our
website
ochs
website
to
schedule
office
hours
with
anyone
in
our
office.
If
you
have
specific
questions
about
a
specific
area
of
work,
you
can
schedule
office
hours
and
you'll
see
our
live
calendar
and
you
can
just
schedule
time
with
us
to
talk
about
it.
A
couple
people
have
done
that
with
me,
but
yeah
any
general
questions
just
reach
out
to
that
email
or
schedule
some
office
hours.
B
I
think
it's
set
up
to
be
virtual
right
now.
I
because
it
was
created
during
the
time
when
we
were
all
virtual
all
the
time,
but
I'll
get
back
to
you
on
that
about
in
person
in
the
future.
A
All
right,
well
josh,
thank
you
for
the
time
you've
been
with
the
city
for
all
the
work
that
you've
done
for
the
way
you've
brought
these
issues
to
the
forefront
we
wanna.
Thank
you
for
everything
you've
done
with
the
city
of
pittsburgh.
While
you've
been
here,
we
wish
you
a
continued
success
in
law
school
and
that's
the
other
thing
you're
going
from
pre-med
to
pre-law.
B
B
B
A
Come
back
and
see
us
sometime,
I
will
and
when
laura
still
hasn't
filled
the
position
in
three
or
four
years
make
sure
to
give
her
a
call
and
say
you
want
the
job
back
and,
of
course,
she'll
be
in
the
corner
talking
to
herself
and
bring
hair
out
of
her
head.
But
yeah.
B
I
I
I
will
do
that
and
the
work
will
carry
on.
I
promise
you,
but
thank
you
very
much.
It
really
has
been
the
honor
of
a
lifetime,
and
I
want
to
keep
doing
this
in
some
capacity,
but
this
has
been
the
best
job.
I've
ever
had.
A
All
right
and
to
those
of
you
watching,
I
say
thank
you
for
watching
and
we'll
see
you
next
time
right
here
on
meet
the
people.