Defending the Pittsburgh area taxpayers and businesses against the burdensome taxation and regulation of Big Government

Mission Statement

The Allegheny Institute is a non-profit research and education organization. Our mission is to defend the interests of taxpayers, citizens and businesses against an increasingly burdensome and intrusive government. To that end, we will formulate and advocate public policies that roll back the size and scope of local government as well as create a more accountable government. Our efforts will be guided by the principles of free enterprise, property rights, civil society and individual freedom that are the bedrock upon which this nation was founded.
Introduction: In 2020 the COVID pandemic caused a major decline in public transportation usage as huge numbers of commuters worked from home instead of commuting to a workplace. The work-from-home culture has persisted for over five years and is still being realized in languishing passenger counts, not only for Pittsburgh...

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Accomplishments

Policy Briefs

vol26
No: 05

Introduction: In 2020 the COVID pandemic caused a major decline in public transportation usage as huge numbers of commuters worked from home instead of commuting to a workplace. The work-from-home culture has persisted for over five years and is still being realized in languishing passenger counts, not only for Pittsburgh Regional Transit (PRT) but for other transit agencies around the country.

This Policy Brief examines five transit agencies to assess the degree of recovery from the huge bus and light rail ridership decline in 2020. Ridership and expenditure data for 2019 and 2024 (the most recent available) were analyzed for PRT and four systems, two with similar service area populations as PRT and two significantly larger. These include Baltimore (Maryland Transit Administration); Boston (Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority); Denver (Denver Regional Transportation District) and Houston (Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County).

vol26
No: 04

Each time a deed or mortgage is recorded in Allegheny County, a portion of the recording fee goes toward a fund that pays to demolish blighted structures.  Based on annual reports and financial data, the county has spent less than half of the money derived from the fee to achieve that purpose.

Colin Mcnickle At Large

Op-Ed

PRT, other transit agencies, missed chance to rein in costs

vol26
No: 05

The COVID-19 pandemic caused a major decline in public transportation usage in 2020 as huge numbers of commuters worked from home instead of traveling to a workplace.

That work-from-home culture has persisted and continues to be realized in languishing passenger counts, not only for Pittsburgh Regional Transit (PRT) but for other transit agencies around the country, say researchers at the Allegheny Institute for Public Policy.

But a troubling ancillary metric surfaced as ridership lags became chronic, say Jake Haulk, president-emeritus of the Pittsburgh think tank, and Frank Gamrat, its executive director (in Policy Brief Vol. 26, No.5).

Is Pittsburgh trading one vacancy problem for another?

vol26
No: 02

It is a deeply troubling number by any accounting: Nearly a full quarter of all classes of downtown Pittsburgh office space was vacant through the third quarter of 2025, concludes the latest report from the Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL) real estate firm.

“Keep in mind [that] one year ago, the rate was 19.5 percent and pre-pandemic it was just 16.9 percent at the close of 2019,” reminds Frank Gamrat, executive director of the Allegheny Institute for Public Policy.

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Blog

Downtown Pittsburgh Office Vacancy Rate (Q3 2025)

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Pittsburgh Land Bank

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Pennsylvania’s Electricity Generation

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Pennsylvania Transportation Funding

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Pittsburgh’s Paid Sick Leave Policy

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Office Vacancy Rate 3

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