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The Latest

#170 July 2023/Energy

A global climate debate heats up as a liquefied natural gas terminal looks for a home in Chester

The table was set, powerful people already gathered round and talking about the future, when Carol Kazeem walked in about 15 minutes late and popped the balloon. Kazeem, a first-term Pennsylvania state representative from Chester’s 159th district, has had a whirlwind of a year. When the former trauma outreach specialist and 31-year-old mother of three

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June 28, 2023
11 mins read
#170 July 2023/Art/Green Building

Philadelphia Art Commission is a force for sustainable building

What do you think the Philadelphia Art Commission does? You might correctly guess that it approves works of art purchased by the City or placed on public land, along with some street signs. But anyone who has tuned into a public meeting of the commission will have noticed that the nine-member body does more than

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June 28, 2023
3 mins read
#170 July 2023/Community/Food/gardening

Michael Wilcox prepares the Hunting Park Community Garden for a comeback

Across the street from one of the last remaining Catholic girls’ schools in the city, the Hunting Park Community Garden sits unattended behind a padlocked fence. Where nettle and knotweed grow in abundance and raised beds sit empty, the garden waits for the return of its loyal stewards. Michael Wilcox has been involved with the

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June 28, 2023
2 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature/Water

What if we had handed Cobbs Creek over to wild engineers?

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June 28, 2023
1 min read
#170 July 2023/Art/Community/education

Spiral Q advances change through creativity and cooperation

At Spiral Q’s West Philadelphia headquarters, puppet artists cut out cardboard, shape it into bulldozers and paint it to prepare for a protest march against the 76ers’ plans for a Chinatown arena. “There’s something childlike about them,” says Jacque (who did not provide a last name), while taking a break from painting cardboard miniatures of

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June 28, 2023
5 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature

Old baseball fields along Cobbs Creek are becoming a natural oasis

On a brisk and sunny March day, the dry grass of the south Whitby Meadow stood tall as a few dozen volunteers gathered with hand tools, potted shrubs waiting to be planted and bundles of live stakes — thin branches cut from black willow and silky dogwood trees intended to take root and sprout along

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June 28, 2023
3 mins read
#170 July 2023/Urban Nature

Not all of Philly’s finest parks are public

Are you searching for places in the area that allow you to enjoy what the outdoors has to offer? As summer heats up, many of us are looking for an urban (or rural) oasis that will let us briefly escape the hustle and bustle of city life to enjoy the natural environment. While popular locations

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June 28, 2023
3 mins read
#170 July 2023/Community/Race and Equity

Weavers Way Co-op’s vendor diversity initiative is building business and community, one BIPOC entrepreneur at a time

After the protests sparked by the murder of George Floyd in 2020 and the racial reckoning that followed, enterprises from major corporations to independent businesses around the globe released statements of support for the protests and commitments to do better. But Weavers Way, a cooperative grocery store founded in the historically diverse neighborhood of Mount

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June 28, 2023
2 mins read
#170 July 2023/Editor's Notes

Editor’s Notes: The Billionaires’ Agenda

On light posts around the city flyers proclaim “No Arena in the Heart of Our City,” protesting the proposal to build a new stadium for the 76ers in Chinatown. The billionaires pushing the scheme make vague promises about jobs and economic activity. The economic benefits of sports stadiums have long been debunked, but, more importantly,

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June 28, 2023
2 mins read
#169 June 2023/Environment/Urban Nature/Water

The decline of the oil industry along the lower Schuylkill River could offer tidal wetlands room for a comeback

A red-bellied turtle basking on a log next to a pocket of wetlands at Point Breeze on the Schuylkill River doesn’t know that it is threatened, legally speaking, or that its home is tiny compared to the once-expansive ecosystem that used to stretch far beyond its current territory. The controversy over a planned warehouse development

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May 29, 2023
3 mins read
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