Week in photos Oct. 16 -22, 2022.

The Mount Lebanon Education Support Professionals and their supporters picket inside of Mt. Lebanon High School before a school board meeting on Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, in Mt. Lebanon. MLESPA have been working without a contract for over a year, and some get paid around 13 dollars an hour. (Post-Gazette)
From left, Raquel Arthurs, Sharon Aprea, and Nicole Novak, all supporters of the Mount Lebanon Education Support Professionals hold a sign that reads “#Respect” as they picket with others inside Mt. Lebanon High School before a school board meeting on Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, in Mt. Lebanon. MLESPA have been working without a contract for over a year, and some get paid around 13 dollars an hour. (Post-Gazette)
Mount Lebanon’s Leah Kessler tries to get the ball past Bethel Park’s Kristen Horgan on Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, at Mt. Lebanon High School. (Post-Gazette)
Bethel Park’s Artemis Conaboy and Mount Lebanon’s Tegan Hoover go after the ball on Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, at Mt. Lebanon High School. (Post-Gazette)
Mount Lebanon’s Melia Peer heads the ball in front of Bethel Park’s Emma Bucheli on Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, at Mt. Lebanon High School. (Post-Gazette)
Mount Lebanon coach Seth Young talks with his players during halftime on Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, at Mt. Lebanon High School. (Post-Gazette)
Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey listens as Richard Ford, commander of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Major Crimes, talks about the recent spate of gun violence during a press conference Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, at the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Headquarters on the North Side. (Post-Gazette)
City of Pittsburgh Public Safety Director Lee Schmidt talks about the recent spate of gun violence during a press conference Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, at the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Headquarters on the North Side. (Post-Gazette)
The city of Pittsburgh skyline looms as a River of Steel boat pass under the Fort Duquesne Bridge Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, on the North Shore. (Post-Gazette)
A man pauses to read the information under the “Flyboy” mural on a building at the corner of Wallace Avenue and Pitt Street in Wilkinsburg, near the MLK, Jr. East Busway Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, in Pittsburgh. The mural was created by Hebru Brantley, a Chicago area artist, following Brantley’s gallery show, “I wish I knew (how it felt to be free)” at the August Wilson Center in 2017. The mural is a project of the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust. (Post-Gazette)
Donnie Jodikinos of Jodikinos Family Farm and Greenhouses braced himself against a cold breeze at East End farmers’ market on a chilly Monday, Oct. 17, 2022. Next to Jodikinos is employee Saul Berg. The market continues from 3:30-6:30 pm Mondays through Nov. 7. (Post-Gazette)
David Wadley, left, of East Liberty, checks out the peppers at East End farmers’ market on a chilly Monday, Oct. 17, 2022. At right is Donnie Jodikinos of Jodikinos Family Farm and Greenhouses. The market continues from 3:30-6:30 pm Mondays through Nov. 7. (Post-Gazette)

Ruth Quint, of McCandless and a volunteer with the League of Women Voters, left, holds up a sign and talks to people about voter registration as they wait in line to enter Acrisure Stadium before the Steeler game on Sunday, Oct. 16, 2022, on the North Shore. (Post-Gazette)

Kim Mudd, of Brighton Heights and a volunteer with the Black Political Empowerment Project, or B-PEP, talks with people about voter registration as they wait in line to enter Acrisure Stadium before the Steeler game on Sunday, Oct. 16, 2022, on the North Shore. (Post-Gazette)

From left, Paul and Heather Stazetski, of Dunbar, talk to Ruth Quint, of McCandless and a volunteer with the League of Women Voters, and Kate Mann, a volunteer from Squirrel Hill, about voter registration on Sunday, Oct. 16, 2022, outside Acrisure Stadium on the North Shore. Paul and Heather were already registered to vote. (Post-Gazette)

The 300 block of Cedar Avenue, where four people were shot last night, as seen on Sunday, Oct. 16, 2022, on the North Side. Three of the four people died. (Post-Gazette)
Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey, right, listens as Richard Ford, commander of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Major Crimes, talks about the recent spate of gun violence during a press conference Monday, Oct. 17, 2022, at the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Headquarters on the North Side. (Post-Gazette)