• Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind

The Latest

All Topics

Publisher’s Letter: What do we value?

By Alex MulcahyCan a business succeed if it puts its values first? In the cover story this month, we look at three cacao-plant businesses that focus on the welfare of the farmer as their primary goal. (The Philly Foodworks ad on the inside back cover has a similar message, and it’s worth reading about their

More
June 19, 2019
2 mins read
All Topics

Dads With A Plan: Climate Dads are getting you worried about climate change

By Jillian BaxterClimate Dads, a group founded by a couple of  Philadelphia fathers, has partnered with This Place Will Be Water  to spread the word that rising sea levels won’t just affect coastal communities. Neighborhoods all over Philly - Port Richmond, Fishtown, Society Hill, and Southwest Philly, just to name a few- all face serious

More
June 14, 2019
1 min read
All Topics

Urban Garden, 101: Workshop teaches how to build and manage gardens for schools and communities

By Jillian BaxterThe Pennsylvania Horticultural Society (PHS) is offering a workshop June 18th-20th to teach how to design, build, and maintain an accessible and sustainable garden. The workshop is a mix of lecture and hands-on activity – teachers and community leaders will offer training, and attendees will actually build a garden.

More
June 14, 2019
1 min read
All Topics

High Time: Judy Wicks launches statewide nonprofit devoted to keeping hemp and cannabis local

by Jillian BaxterSustainability icon Judy Wicks does not want John Boehner, or people like him, bogarting the burgeoning cannabis and hemp business. Boehner, former Speaker of the House and longtime defender of anti-marijuana legislation, now stands to make millions from the sale of marijuana investment firm Acreage Holdings as a member of the board. Meanwhile,

More
June 11, 2019
1 min read
All Topics

End of Times: New online resource calculates that humanity’s time will be up in 4155

By: Jillian BaxterAnything on your to-do list? UK-based marketing agency Blueclaw claims you have about 2,136 years until climate change spurs a series of unsurvivable catastrophes that decimate the whole of the human population and commences what we like to call “the end the world.” Better get moving!The online guide How Will the World End

More
June 6, 2019
1 min read
#121 June 2019/All Topics

Long Live the Black Woman: Speaking on work, love and race after 100 years of life

By Constance Garcia-BarrioBlack women centenarians have seen Philadelphia go from oil lamps to LEDs. Their recollections paint a spoken portrait of the faith that has leavened their lives, and of their bedrock work of homemaking, guiding children, nursing the sick and other tasks essential for a thriving city.

More
May 29, 2019
4 mins read
#121 June 2019/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature

The Internet of Beings: Despite rainy weather, participants logged thousands of critters, plants and fungi in this year’s City Nature Challenge

By Bernard BrownJust past midnight on Friday, April 26, a common greenbottle fly sleeping on a leaf was immortalized by Navin Sasikumar in iNaturalist as Philadelphia’s first observation for the City Nature Challenge 2019. 

More
May 29, 2019
3 mins read
#121 June 2019/All Topics

Backing the Band: Community organizations have been instrumental to the success of music programs in Philadelphia public schools

By Steve NeumannChris argerakis, a music teacher now in his 11th year at Andrew Jackson Elementary School in South Philly, remembers how desperately his program needed money when he began teaching at the start of the 2007 financial crisis. To raise funds, he resorted to cold calling local businesses within a four-block radius of the

More
May 29, 2019
6 mins read
#121 June 2019/All Topics

Sweet N’ Local: These three companies deliver delicious treats without the bitter aftertaste of exploitation

By Estelle TracyAs a local food supporter, you know where your food is coming from. You pick berries at the orchard and get Brandywine tomatoes from the farmers market. Over time, you even develop a preference for a coffee origin. 

More
May 29, 2019
7 mins read
#121 June 2019/All Topics

Fertile Grounds: Two Philadelphia public schools demonstrate how to get food waste out of landfills and educate the next generation at the same time

By Alexandra JonesOn the two-acre Henry Got Crops urban farm at W.B. Saul High School in Roxborough, it’s easy to forget you’re still in the city. Lambs frolic near their mothers on green pastures while ruddy-colored cows placidly chew their cud. Salad greens grow green, purple, and red in tidy rows, destined to be harvested

More
May 29, 2019
6 mins read
Previous 1 … 106 107 108 109 110 … 398 Next

Recent Comments

  1. Bill Rees on A pair of chestnut trees in Wissahickon Valley Park are mysteriously unscathed by pathogenic fungus
  2. Bernard Brown on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  3. Dawn M on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  4. Suzanne Hagner on Despite its popularity, Pennsylvania’s solar energy future remains stalled
  5. Ebo Nunoo on Artisanal chocolate brings a Ghanaian immigrant back to his roots

© 2022 - All rights reservedGrid Magazine

  • Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Online Store
  • Donate
  • Distribution
  • Magazine
  • Contact
  • Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind