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The Latest

#164 January 2023/Water

The Water Department’s nautical efforts to keep plastic out of the ocean

Three Philadelphia Water Department (PWD) trash skimming boats ply the waters of the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers, floating goalkeepers trying to prevent plastic debris from reaching the ocean. The current circulating around the North Atlantic leaves a quiet section of ocean in the middle called a gyre. A patch of plastic garbage hundreds of miles

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January 2, 2023
3 mins read
#163 December 2022/Energy

Infographic: Why heat pumps are the future of heating and cooling

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November 28, 2022
1 min read
#163 December 2022/Culture

Sponsored Content: Mission Relief brings the power of CBD products to Weavers Way

When Manny Jose and Devon McCardell met in 2010, they discovered two things in common: both were grappling with anxiety and neither was finding relief in conventional treatments (e.g., SSRIs). Over the next decade, the friends kept in touch, doing their own separate research on the therapeutic effects of cannabidiol — or CBD, as it’s

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November 28, 2022
2 mins read
#163 December 2022/Community

Through life-stabilizing services and treating guests with dignity, Broad Street Ministry meets great need

In 2005, Bill Golderer, then pastor of the Presbyterian church at 315 S. Broad Street, ripped the pews out of the sanctuary to create a big dining room bathed in light from stained glass windows. That move helped thrust the historic limestone church, now Broad Street Ministry (BSM), toward radical, inclusive hospitality. Today, BSM offers,

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November 28, 2022
5 mins read
#163 December 2022/Culture/Feminism

As Lois Volta’s time writing for Grid comes to an end, many more exciting projects are in the works

In 2018 I wrote a zine called “Don’t Deny It, You Need a Self Help Manual on How to Be Clean.” I wrote it as a cheeky way to establish some ground rules or an understanding of domestic behaviors with any new cleaning clients. I also started to send it out to magazines and radio

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November 28, 2022
2 mins read
#163 December 2022/Circular Economy/Editor's Notes/Recycling

Editor’s Notes: Going in Circles

It was almost 15 years ago that Van Jones wrote his book “The Green Collar Economy: How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems,” and not quite four years ago that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ed Markey introduced the outline for the Green New Deal. The green economy was the holy grail, but now in

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November 28, 2022
2 mins read
#163 December 2022/Circular Economy/Recycling

A new nonprofit works to shift our economy from linear to loop

Grid spoke in October with Samantha Wittchen, director of programs and operations at Circular Philadelphia, which she cofounded (with Grid’s Nic Esposito) in June 2021. Circular Philadelphia aims to drive the growth of a thriving circular economy in Greater Philadelphia through advocacy, education, infrastructure development and collaboration. The following interview has been edited for length

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November 28, 2022
4 mins read
#163 December 2022/Community/Environment/Environmental Justice/Litter/Urban Nature/Water

Philadelphians struggle with insufficient resources for park development and maintenance

On October 2 a large pile of tires was dumped below the Whitaker Avenue Bridge in Tacony Creek Park. One tire lodged in a forked trunk of a tree growing below the bridge. Two others had hooked a branch of another tree and remained suspended about 15 feet up in the air. A tire dropped

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November 28, 2022
15 mins read
#163 December 2022

On the trail of America’s pioneering ornithologists

On a frigid January morning I made a pilgrimage to the grave of Alexander Wilson, the so-called “Father of American Ornithology,” at the Gloria Dei Church cemetery at Christian Street and Columbus Boulevard in South Philadelphia. I didn’t know exactly where it was, but the old cemetery is small, and in about five minutes I

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November 28, 2022
4 mins read
#163 December 2022/Urban Nature

Twelve-year-old launches nonprofit to save butterflies by building one microhabitat at a time

If Noah Raven, founder of Monarch Defenders, dashes from plant to plant in his pollinator-friendly garden with the kinetic energy of a 12-year-old, there’s good reason: he is one. Raven’s Monarch Defenders website rivals that of any big-budget nonprofit. Complete with a mission statement, educational facts, resource citations, ways to take action and an interactive

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November 28, 2022
4 mins read
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