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The Latest

#182 July 2024/education

Youth internship program sets its sights on year-round, paid placements

Natalie Sanchez had no inkling that the summer job she’d heard about through her high school, Philadelphia Virtual Academy, would launch her toward a new life. In 2021, Sanchez, then 17, worked as an intern at PECO Energy Company, a position she landed through the nonprofit Philadelphia Youth Network (PYN). “We [interns] worked 20 hours

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July 1, 2024
4 mins read
#182 July 2024/Art/Climate-Change/Community/Environmental Justice

Expansive mural depicts environmental destruction and the hope of climate justice through the lens of Indigenous culture

For three days last summer, smoke drifted down from forest fires in the Canadian taiga, some of it shrouding 1800 North American Street, where volunteers were working on a climate justice mural. Mirroring the dramatic depiction of oil spills, deforestation and smog being painted on the 300-foot long wall, the very real smoky orange haze

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July 1, 2024
4 mins read
#182 July 2024/Climate-Change/Public Health

Infographic: A Much Cooler City

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July 1, 2024
1 min read
#182 July 2024/Climate-Change/Farming/Food

The Philadelphia Orchard Project is cultivating fruit that could thrive in a hotter city

When the U.S. Department of Agriculture released an updated map of hardiness zones last November, gardeners and farmers in the Philadelphia region — and across much of the United States — found affirmation of the warmer weather they’ve been experiencing since the map’s last refresh in 2012. In just over 10 years, nearly half the

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July 1, 2024
4 mins read
#182 July 2024/Climate-Change/Editor's Notes/Public Health

Editor’s Notes: Sports & Summer Heat

In April, the Philadelphia Eagles scored a few days of positive publicity when quarterback Jalen Hurts donated $200,000 to install more than 300 air conditioning units in 10 Philly public schools. The problem the donation addressed is real; Philly’s ancient school buildings afflict our students with temperatures too hot to learn safely in our warming

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July 1, 2024
2 mins read
#182 July 2024/Climate-Change

The Global Warming Issue

It’s right there in the name: global warming. Step outside and the air is thick, like you’re breathing steam. Walking is almost too much effort. You try to find shade, but the treeless sidewalk offers no refuge from the sun’s rays. At night you open the windows to let in a fresh breeze, but only

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July 1, 2024
1 min read
#181 June 2024/Community/Cooking/Culture/Food/Shop Local

Sponsored Content: Aaji’s finds a growing market for lonsa, and gives back

Launched in 2021, Aaji’s is first and foremost, a family affair. Co-founders Rajus and Poorva Korde created the brand based on Rajus’s grandmother’s tomato lonsa recipe — a tomato-based dish that incorporates coastal Indian spices like asafoetida and turmeric. Aaji’s currently offers an original tomato lonsa, as well as garlic, spicy and spicy garlic flavors.

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June 1, 2024
2 mins read
#181 June 2024/Environment/Environmental Justice/Public Health/Race and Equity

The Environmental Justice Issue

In this issue we take a closer look at how environmental problems disproportionately affect communities of color, and particularly low-income communities of color. More than those of whiter and more affluent communities, their residents breathe air poisoned by industrial facilities like refineries or by the tailpipes of unending lines of cars and trucks. Often homes

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June 1, 2024
1 min read
#181 June 2024/Circular Economy/Community

Start-up launches pilot program to form an online circular toy economy

Nic Esposito wants to reimagine the retail industry; he believes that people, profits and the planet would benefit from leaving business as usual behind. That’s where Circa Systems comes in. Esposito founded the Philadelphia-based company in 2023 to create a more sustainable, local retail model, allowing paying members to purchase and swap mostly used products

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June 1, 2024
2 mins read
#181 June 2024/Community/Environment/Environmental Justice

Free repair program makes homes more livable and sustainable, staves off gentrification and makes neighborhoods safer

Antonette Russell’s house, like many others in Grays Ferry and neighborhoods across the city, has been in her family for decades. Her grandmother, community leader Irene Russell, was the first in the family to own the century-old, two-story brick row house on South Napa Street. The matriarch famously worked to improve nearby Stinger Square Park,

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June 1, 2024
5 mins read
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