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

The Latest

#174 November 2023/Community/Food/Race and Equity

Hunger relief nonprofit builds delivery service to get food from pantry to people

Margaret isn’t as mobile as she used to be. At 79 and still recovering from a car accident that forced her to learn how to walk again, she relies on her walker and cane to get around. Some days she doesn’t descend the stairs from the second floor of her North Philadelphia home because the

More
October 30, 2023
4 mins read
#174 November 2023/Farming/Food/Shop Local

Top local farms producing turkeys for this holiday season

With Thanksgiving right around the corner, many Philadelphia residents are beginning to plan where to buy ingredients for the big meal. Of course, turkey is a top priority, especially for those looking to buy local. Here’s a list of regional farms and how to get your hands on their turkeys. Lindenhof Farm Kirkwood, PA •

More
October 30, 2023
2 mins read
#174 November 2023/Art/Culture/Recycling/Shop Local

NextFab Holiday Gift Guide 2023

At NextFab, we believe that lasting memories start with the handmade. With an abundance of mass-produced goods stocking the shelves this holiday season, instead choose gifts that have that extra special touch. By shopping small and local you’re not only giving back to small businesses in your neighborhood but giving an everlasting gift made with

More
October 30, 2023
15 mins read
#173 October 2023/Public Health/transportation

Philly’s worst possible transportation disaster? A train derailment in Center City, experts say

First came the heavy rains. Then came the derailed train. On the morning of July 17, the Delaware Valley held its collective breath as reports came in that a freight train had derailed in Whitemarsh Township, a few miles from Philadelphia’s northwest border. The train carried rail cars containing hazardous materials and residents were evacuated

More
October 5, 2023
8 mins read
#173 October 2023/Community/education/Environment/transportation/Urban Nature

West Mount Airy comes together to beautify a regional rail station

On a sunny afternoon in late spring, 27 sixth graders from Mount Airy’s Henry H. Houston Elementary School skipped and hooted their way to SEPTA’s Carpenter Train Station, as if already savoring the adventure of planting trees there. “We identified flowers and pollinators along the way,” says Christine Bush, a STEM (science, technology, engineering and

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

Grid Readers Respond: what are the worst intersections in Philadelphia?

How does the Philadelphian cross the road? It isn’t always easy or safe. Dangerous intersections mean bikers, pedestrians and people with disabilities risk life and limb to simply get where they’re going. The risks they take are apparent in death and injury statistics — 49 pedestrians and cyclists were killed in 2021, according to the

More
October 2, 2023
6 mins read
#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.

More
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

More
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,

More
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

More
October 2, 2023
3 mins read
Previous 1 … 33 34 35 36 37 … 400 Next

Recent Comments

  1. Ruth Mooney on Three years of restoration at Buttercup Cottage
  2. John butler on PECO gives a discount to customers heating with electric
  3. Alecks Buckingham on New Jersey e-bike regulations to be tightened as concerns grow over use in recreational areas
  4. Susan on Book Review: The Neighborhood Project
  5. Mike Heaney on A proposed bill could force the City to re-examine its waste and recycling contracts

© 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