CLAIRTON, Pa. — The sale of United States Steel was always going to be a global affair. Reporters from across the world descended into the Monongahela River Valley, south of Pittsburgh, to cover President Donald Trump's celebration of the next chapter of an industrial icon.
The question in the cradle of American metalmaking: Would a new Japanese owner break the doldrums of postindustrial decay?
''I have faith. I know Nippon Steel is going to pull us through here, get us back up and moving,'' says lifelong resident Dorcas Rumble.
Beset with illnesses and caring for a granddaughter with severe asthma, Carla Beard-Owens has all but lost hope. ''I had confidence years ago that they would change, get better air and help clean it up,'' she says. ''And it's still the same as it was when I was growing up.''
On whether Nippon will usher in change, ''at this point, I'd rather see it than believe it.''
An August explosion at the U.S. Steel Clairton Coke Works that killed two people heightened the stakes, and a new mayor is raising that city's hopes. But many who live and work in Clairton are wondering if they can hope for a sustained departure from decades of disinvestment and persistent pollution.
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This story is a collaboration between Pittsburgh's Public Source and The Associated Press.