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

The Latest

#186 November 2024/Food

The Food Issue

Grid has been writing about food since our beginning. It’s not just because we enjoy eating and thinking about what we’ll eat next, though we do. It’s because it matters. It takes a lot of resources to produce the food we eat. More than half the land area of the United States is devoted to

More
November 1, 2024
1 min read
#186 November 2024/Food

Infographic: Break It Down

More
November 1, 2024
1 min read
#186 November 2024/Editor's Notes/Urban Nature/Water

Editor’s Notes: The Cold, Wet Truth

For a few years now, I have been avoiding writing an article about freshwater mussels like the one Kyle Bagenstose wrote for this issue. His article airs doubts about the claim that restoring native freshwater mussels can help clean polluted waters — just as efforts are ramping up to breed and reintroduce mussels to our

More
November 1, 2024
2 mins read
#185 October 2024/Art/Community/Environment/Urban Nature/Water

Watershed fellows teach practical knowledge and artistic expression at environmental centers

On yet another wet weekend, a group of ten braced a downpour to walk along the trails of Strawberry Mansion’s Discovery Center for a wild plant tour. Their journey began at the trail entrance, where an innocuous weed was growing. Tour guide Lady Danni Morinich, a local herbalist and forager, identified the plant as yellow

More
October 4, 2024
5 mins read
#185 October 2024/Community/education/Environment/Environmental Justice/Politics/Race and Equity

Internship program empowers teens to learn, lead and organize around environmental and housing justice

On a chilly night in February, a group of young people gathered on the steps of City Hall, armed with hand-painted artwork, prepared speeches, chants and community speakers; the Philly Thrive interns had organized a press conference to support housing justice in Grays Ferry. They were calling on City Council to support affordable housing legislation

More
October 4, 2024
2 mins read
#185 October 2024/Community/education/Environment/Environmental Justice

Student-helmed docuseries investigates the systemic problems that lead to violence in their communities

When shootings skyrocketed in Philadelphia during the pandemic, teenagers were among those most affected. In the face of this crisis, students at Dobbins Technical High School in North Philly set out to unearth the root causes of the violence sweeping the city. “Future Visions” is the result — an enormously affecting documentary series that follows

More
October 4, 2024
4 mins read
#185 October 2024/Community/education/Race and Equity

A Black-led, parent-driven organization is pushing the School District of Philadelphia to make schools more joyful and less punitive

On a treeless sidewalk on a day in May that feels much hotter than its 75 degrees, there’s an ice cream truck serving a long line of people, while several plastic machines are cranking out a flurry of bubbles. Some of the bubbles hurtle toward 440 North Broad Street, the headquarters of the School District

More
October 4, 2024
7 mins read
#185 October 2024/Environment/Environmental Justice/Politics/Recycling

With a little political will, City Hall can curb the scourge of illegal dumping

On a drive through Tacony Creek Park in the spring of 2020, Lawncrest resident Dallas Herbert Sr. could barely get around illegally-dumped construction debris and tires. He was appalled. An executive board member of the Lawncrest Community Association, Herbert asked his older neighbors about this particularly trashed stretch called Snake Road; many informed him that

More
October 4, 2024
5 mins read
#185 October 2024/education

The Education Issue

At times it feels like only yesterday we were in school, rushing into the hallways at the sound of the bell and then slouching into desks facing the teacher at the front of the classroom. You might recall the combination to your locker, and certainly the anxiety of facing a test you hadn’t studied enough

More
October 4, 2024
1 min read
#185 October 2024/Community/Environment/Urban Nature

Walking group traverses the changing landscapes and diverse neighborhoods along the perimeter of the city

On September 6, a group of 18 gathered at the Delaware River waterfront with Walk Around Philadelphia. Setting off from Cherry Street Pier, some planned to cover 10 miles on that day’s stroll while others planned to do 120 — completing a circuit of the entire city of Philadelphia. All were bound to learn something

More
October 4, 2024
4 mins read
Previous 1 … 18 19 20 21 22 … 400 Next

Recent Comments

  1. Mike Heaney on A proposed bill could force the City to re-examine its waste and recycling contracts
  2. Bill Rees on A pair of chestnut trees in Wissahickon Valley Park are mysteriously unscathed by pathogenic fungus
  3. Bernard Brown on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  4. Dawn M on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  5. Suzanne Hagner on Despite its popularity, Pennsylvania’s solar energy future remains stalled

© 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