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The Latest

#173 October 2023/Editor's Notes/transportation/Urban Nature

Editor’s Notes: A Commitment To Less

I drive, walk and bike with one eye following the pavement, scanning for dead animals. It comes from my background as a herper, someone who recreationally searches for reptiles and amphibians. A popular way to find the critters I love is “road cruising,” in which you drive around and look for them crossing the pavement.

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October 2, 2023
2 mins read
#173 October 2023/Air/Public Health/transportation

Truck traffic pollutes Philadelphia’s most vulnerable neighborhoods

Carol Foy, a lifelong Grays Ferry resident and community advocate, knows how dangerous air pollution can be. “I lost a son over a decade ago who had lung problems,” she says. “He was only 33 years old.” After moving out of Grays Ferry, her son moved by the oil refinery in South Philadelphia. He lived

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October 2, 2023
3 mins read
#173 October 2023/Water

Scientists and advocates zero in on what is really killing whales

Regina Asmutis-Silvia cannot forget the gaze of a humpback whale stranded on a beach in Chatham, Massachusetts. With fellow members of an International Wildlife Coalition team, she worked to dig under the whale to relieve the pressure of its body-weight on vital organs. They hoped the high tide would carry the whale back to sea,

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October 2, 2023
4 mins read
#173 October 2023/Community/Food

Weavers Way celebrates 50 years of food and community

Today, Weavers Way Co-op counts more than 10,000 member households, with storefronts in Ambler, Chestnut Hill and Mount Airy, and a new store due to open this year in Germantown. But long-time member Sylvia Carter can remember 50 years back to its humble beginnings as a buying club in a church basement. Carter moved to

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October 2, 2023
3 mins read
#173 October 2023/Community/transportation

Are Philadelphia’s efforts to eliminate traffic deaths stalling out?

Samara Banks was the life of the party. Everyone waited for her to arrive at family gatherings, knowing that she would be the one to rally her cousins and entertain the crowd with a song or dance. “She was always happy and hopeful,” Latanya Byrd says. “She loved children and people loved her naturally. And

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October 2, 2023
10 mins read
#173 October 2023/transportation/Urban Nature

Can a car insurance fee protect wildlife from collisions?

By Carolyn Kousky and Noah Raven Busy roads and wildlife are a bad combination. Collisions between vehicles and wildlife not only kill and injure animals — they can also cause substantial property damage and injure or kill drivers and passengers. In 2020, Pennsylvania had the highest total number of animal-vehicle collisions reported through insurance claims

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October 2, 2023
3 mins read
#173 October 2023/Bicycling/Bike Talk/transportation

Electric bikes can help fight climate change and solve social inequities.They also pose serious hazards. Where do they fit on the streets of Philadelphia?

Last fall, I was cruising down a street in Mount Airy on my new electric bike, joyfully accelerating into the wind and relishing in emission-free transportation, when suddenly it hit me. The pavement, that is. An SUV facing the wrong way on the two-lane road jumped out from a line of parked cars in front

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October 2, 2023
8 mins read
#172 September 2023/Editor's Notes/education/Environment/Politics

Editor’s Notes: Do As I Say, Not As I Do

Anyone who has raised children knows the frustration of watching a kid imitate your worst habits. Maybe you hear them swearing, exactly how you do. Maybe you tell them to get off their phone, and then they catch you checking yours under the table at dinner. Maybe you tell them to eat better, and you

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September 4, 2023
2 mins read
#172 September 2023/Community/education/Race and Equity

Docents give energizing presentations on local Black history

The late autumn wind began to bite during the 1838 Black Metropolis walking tour last year, but historian Michiko Quinones warmed the 10 participants with stories of riches, a riot and secret dealings in Philly’s antebellum Black community. “Some 20,000 Black people lived in Philadelphia in the late 1830s,” Quinones said. “The 1838 census showed

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September 4, 2023
5 mins read
#172 September 2023/education/Environment

Roxborough magnet school gives students the opportunity to be environmental problem solvers

Michael Cano hadn’t thought much about environmental issues or agriculture before attending Lankenau, the School District of Philadelphia’s environmental sciences magnet high school. “I found out about [Lankenau] because of family that went there before me and told me of a positive experience they had.” By his junior year he found himself in Washington, D.C.,

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September 4, 2023
3 mins read
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