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The Latest

#164 January 2023/Urban Nature

Despite overpopulation, you can’t shoot any deer you like

I would be lying if I said I’d never snuck in anywhere I wasn’t supposed to. I have gone herping (recreationally searching for reptiles and amphibians) all over Philadelphia, and more than once I have taken a look at a “No Trespassing” sign, glanced over my shoulder to see if anyone was watching and pressed

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January 2, 2023
4 mins read
#164 January 2023/Community/Culture

A Philadelphia woman supports girls to grow into confident adults

In 2011, an enraged 12-year-old stormed into the office at a charter school and marched up to Edwena Lanier, the office manager at the time and founder and leader of Girls Talk, a forum for girls aged 10 to 19. “She was furious because she’d gotten a D on an English paper,” says Lanier, 38,

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January 2, 2023
4 mins read
#164 January 2023/Circular Economy/Recycling

Local innovators divert glass from the landfill

Glass is 100% recyclable: it can be melted over and over again to form new glass products without any loss in quality. Most of it is not recycled, however, despite the fact that the planet is running out of the sand necessary to make glass and other products. The opportunity for glass recycling, therefore, is

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January 2, 2023
5 mins read
#164 January 2023/Culture/Food

Sponsored Content: Brand born from grief creates meals that heal

After tragedy struck Rajus Korde’s family in 2018, he had two revelations. The first was to find more meaning and purpose in his career. The second was that his family’s food was both an expression of love in times of joy and grief. “Food played this role, particularly around joy and celebration, for the majority

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January 2, 2023
2 mins read
#164 January 2023/Litter/Recycling

The city’s illegal dumping problem persists despite decades of efforts to curb it

To the south of 86th Street in Southwest Philadelphia’s Eastwick neighborhood you can’t drive more than a few yards on the cross streets before you run into concrete barriers. “We had them put up the barricades since they would pull back in the cul-de-sac and dump,” says Leonard Stewart, a longtime Eastwick resident and community

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January 2, 2023
12 mins read
#164 January 2023/Circular Economy

Sponsored Content: Goods — from soup to nuts to toilet paper — delivered without the waste

The Rounds launched in Philadelphia in 2019 with a very simple mission — to make home delivery of what they call “the boring stuff” as sustainable and as effortless as possible. “It’s hard to ask people, even those that are as sustainability minded as our members, to make big sacrifices in the name of sustainability,”

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January 2, 2023
2 mins read
#164 January 2023/Food

Infographic: We can help to curb household food waste as individuals

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January 2, 2023
1 min read
#164 January 2023/Editor's Notes/Recycling

Editor’s Notes: Wasted Time

Whether it’s the shame of encountering trash dumped in your neighborhood, the despair of seeing a littered landscape or the outrage of witnessing recyclables and trash being dumped into the same truck, everyone who lives in Philadelphia eventually feels the psychological toll of mishandled waste. It makes all of us feel helpless, and then, the

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January 2, 2023
2 mins read
#164 January 2023/Recycling

Dyvert’s innovative lids boost recycling rates

In a city with a long history of woeful recycling rates, Dyvert is trying to make a difference. The Philadelphia-based company aims to boost the circular economy by improving the messaging found around waste, recycling and compost bins to make them more effective and efficient. Its products offer public facilities the ability to display commonly

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January 2, 2023
2 mins read
#164 January 2023/Circular Economy/Litter/Recycling

How recycling lost its way in Philadelphia and what can be done to get it back on track

In July 2020, after spending several months of the pandemic wondering whether her trash and recycling would be picked up, Sarah Ausprich was frustrated. When it was collected, Ausprich, a resident of Philly’s East Passyunk neighborhood, watched sanitation crews repeatedly combine her trash and recycling in the same truck. Disillusioned by curbside collection, she decided

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January 2, 2023
12 mins read
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