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The Latest

#141 February 2021/All Topics/Bicycling/Editor's Notes/transportation

Editor’s Notes: Crystal Clear

Everyday when I commute to work on my giant orange bike, American cultural values are on full display. There in the bike lane, a UPS truck has come to a halt. An Uber driver is looking at their cell phone, waiting for a passenger. A moving truck is slowly filling up with a lifetime’s worth

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February 17, 2021
2 mins read
#141 February 2021/All Topics/Community/Environment/Litter

Trash Club brings together people who feel passionate about getting litter off our city streets

  Step into the outdoor space of Sunflower Philly, a community center at North 5th Street and Cecil B. Moore Avenue, and you are surrounded by vibrant graffiti and street art. Christian “TameArtz” Rodriguez, art director and community manager for Sunflower Philly, explains that graffiti artists from all over the country and world came together

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February 15, 2021
6 mins read
All Topics/Art/Culture/Politics

Politicians and creatives come together to discuss the importance of local arts

On February 9 and 10, Philadelphia artists and creatives held the Digital Rally for Philly Arts, a livestream event spanning more than 24 hours designed to highlight the value of arts and culture in the city ahead of City Council’s budgeting decisions for the next fiscal year. The budget for the 2020-2021 fiscal year closed

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February 12, 2021
2 mins read
#141 February 2021/All Topics/Circular Economy/Recycling/Shop Local

Entrepreneurs put a zero-waste lifestyle within reach for Philadelphians

When Emily Rodia and Jason Rusnock began pursuing a low-waste lifestyle, they started small. They replaced single-use items in their lives—trading up for things like reusable water bottles and bamboo toothbrushes. Before they knew it, the amount of plastic they put out on the sidewalk each week had dwindled. Three years after starting their zero-waste

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February 12, 2021
4 mins read
All Topics/Circular Economy/Recycling

Single-use to-go containers create more household trash. Should Philly incentivize restaurants to switch to reusables?

Supporting local restaurants during the pandemic is a double-edged sword. With inconsistent and insufficient federal, state and local government intervention, many of our favorite eateries are barely able to keep their doors open (if they haven’t shut already). Although, Philadelphia’s government deserves praise for the expedited expanse of outdoor dining during the pandemic, the prime

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February 10, 2021
4 mins read
#141 February 2021/All Topics/Food/Shop Local

The South Philly Food Co-op is finally here

A decade in the making, the South Philly Food Co-op (SPFC) has opened its doors. Leigh Goldenberg, one of the first 100 member-owners at the co-op in 2011, joined before it had even begun searching for store locations. To Goldenberg, investing in the co-op early on was a commitment to a future vision of a

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February 9, 2021
4 mins read
All Topics/education/Public Health

Philadelphia Public School teachers strike, refusing to do in-person classes until schools are safe from COVID-19

  On a bitterly cold Monday morning, dozens of teachers and many of Philadelphia’s most prominent elected officials gathered outside of Samuel Gompers Elementary School in solidarity with striking teachers. Philadelphia educators are on strike in response to the the School District of Philadelphia’s plan for pre-K through second grade teachers to report to school

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February 8, 2021
1 min read
#141 February 2021/Design/education/Green Building/Public Health/Sponsored Content

Jefferson’s upcoming master’s program informs urban design with public health

Sponsored Content

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February 7, 2021
2 mins read
#141 February 2021/All Topics/Feminism

Dear Lois, How do I stay sane when I’m confined to my house all day?

Quarantine hasn’t been easy for anyone, and everyone is crazy in their own way. Is it normal to water your plants with your period blood? I don’t know. Is that something a crazy person does? Maybe. This time of isolation has been brutal. Humans are meant for connection, and after all the therapy, long walks

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February 5, 2021
3 mins read
#141 February 2021/All Topics/Circular Economy/Recycling

These Philadelphians are living waste- free lifestyles, and spreading the good word

Altering one’s lifestyle to limit waste is by no means an easy life practice, according to Ron Whyte. Whyte, project coordinator of the Mural Arts Philadelphia program Trash Academy, says the difficulty comes from an oversaturation of consumer culture. “We live in a system of extraction, production and consumption, and waste comes at the end

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February 3, 2021
4 mins read
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