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The Latest

#146 July 2021/All Topics/Circular Economy/Climate-Change/Energy

The Energy Co-op is now offering biogas sourced from landfills

Alexandra Kroger, energy program director at The Energy Co-op, is hoping that Philadelphia’s biggest utility providers notice the work they are doing and get inspired. “As the demand for our renewable energy products becomes more apparent, PECO and PGW might see that as a market signal favoring renewable energy,” Kroger says. “We can’t speculate if

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July 27, 2021
2 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Community/Environment/Race and Equity/Urban Nature

Audubon employees have unionized for better conditions, but the national organization has yet to recognize the collective

Last fall labor organizers at the National Audubon Society began asking non-managerial staff at the 116-year-old environmental organization whether they would like to form a union in partnership with Communications Workers of America (CWA). A majority of staff, including workers in Philadelphia, voted yes, but Audubon has yet to recognize the group as an entity

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July 25, 2021
3 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Race and Equity

Inspired despite their grief, two mothers of shooting victims organized to help others like themselves

I was awake, curled in bed in a fetal position, about a year after my son, Khaaliq Jabbar Johnson was killed over a parking space,” says Dorothy Johnson-Speight, founder and executive director of Mothers In Charge (MIC), which assists parents of murdered children. “I had a vision where grieving mothers with bullhorns stood in a

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July 23, 2021
3 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Climate-Change/Environment/Water

Philly floods—a lot. The city’s floodplain expert tells us what we need to know

San Francisco has its earthquakes and Miami has its hurricanes, but the disaster Philadelphia most often confronts is flooding. Flooding is the most common natural disaster in the country, with Pennsylvania experiencing the most flood occurrences of any of the 50 states. And climate change all but promises that the near future will be wetter,

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July 21, 2021
3 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Food/Shop Local

Philly-based vegan delivery app focuses on good food, fast service, and supporting local restaurants

It seems like delivery services can bring you anything these days—from medication to paper towels to tacos. But King of Prussia-native Jordyn Adegun noticed there were barely any options for vegans on food delivery apps. Motivated by his own desires to find good food as well as help out his fellow vegans, Adegun started Live

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July 20, 2021
5 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature

Cemetery group seeks to balance honoring the dead and promoting wildlife

Straddling the border between Southwest Philadelphia and Delaware County, Mount Moriah Cemetery has long been one of my favorite places to observe wildlife. I turn up salamanders and snakes. I watch deer watch me before snorting in alarm and bounding away, white tails flashing. More than once a red fox has kept an eye on

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July 18, 2021
3 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Energy/Environment

Sunoco’s Mariner East 2 ruins quality of life in Delaware County through eminent domain

Along the long, winding roads of Glen Riddle, a small community close to Media in Delaware County, sits Glen Riddle Station Apartments, a 124-unit complex at the center of yet another Mariner East pipeline controversy. On May 26 more than 200 residents of Glen Riddle Station found themselves without water, and Pennsylvania State Police launched

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July 16, 2021
6 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Community/Food

New venue offers a place to discover plant-based food and history

When you think of historic Philadelphia, images of the Liberty Bell, the Declaration of Independence and the Betsy Ross House might come to mind. Now add the genesis of the vegetarian and vegan movements to that list, says the American Vegan Society (AVS). On June 15 the national nonprofit held a soft opening of the

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July 14, 2021
1 min read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Bicycling/Shop Local/transportation

New Black- and Latino-owned shop aims to expand the cycling community

There’s a new bike shop in town, and for co-owners Adena Brewington-Brown, Michael Brown and Isaiah Urbino, it’s about way more than selling bikes. The trio—a married couple and their “third wheel”—wants The Tricycle Shop to be a community space where everyone will feel welcome and comfortable. Setting up shop in the same location that

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July 12, 2021
3 mins read
#146 July 2021/All Topics/Feminism

Dear Lois, How do I decide who (and what) is allowed in my home?

After a year and a half of this global pandemic, I am finally starting to work with clients in their homes again, and I’m realizing that I am not the same person I was before COVID-19 hit. I now have different values regarding what a home is and how it operates. An embroidery I have

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July 10, 2021
3 mins read
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