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The Latest

All Topics/Design/Race and Equity

BIPOC-run urban design firm develops community centers that serve modern life and historic preservation

David Rose—or Javat Agni, his Indigenous name—wasn’t aware of Germantown’s history until graduate school. As a descendent of the Cheraw people (aka Saura) of the Sauratown Mountains, he knew of the horrors settlers brought upon Indigenous peoples. “My whole life, growing up, we didn’t hear all the best stories about the settler states. We [heard]

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December 17, 2020
6 mins read
All Topics/Circular Economy/Politics/Recycling

Where did roadside campaign signs end up after the 2020 election?

 In the weeks and months leading up to any election, campaign signs begin to crowd lawns, medians, and planters, and all roads can seem like battleground interstates.  The 2020 elections were no different in Philadelphia, with rival campaigns for Senate and House seats, PA Attorney General, PA Auditor General, and State Treasurer adding to the

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December 16, 2020
4 mins read
#139 December 2020/All Topics/Race and Equity

The homeless of Philadelphia acted collectively, and got results

They needed somewhere to go. In March 2020, the City of Philadelphia began to disperse the homeless population that had settled around the Pennsylvania Convention Center, citing fears of a COVID-19 outbreak. Then in May, the city cleared the Philadelphia International Airport of its homeless population as well. In total, 51 people were cleared from

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December 14, 2020
11 mins read
#139 December 2020/All Topics/Bicycling/Politics/transportation

Bike Talk: Will the Biden administration bring the transportation progress we need?

Eager to put the last four years in America’s rear view, President-elect Joe Biden and his transition team have published their first batch of plans for their time in the White House, some of which include exciting news for bicycling, public transit and walking. Pledging to allot federal funding for alternative transportation modes, the Biden

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December 11, 2020
3 mins read
#139 December 2020/All Topics/Community/education/Environment/Water

Program instructors teach students how the city’s waterways shaped our past and affect our present

Some classrooms keep guinea pigs or guppies as pets, but last year at Cook Wissahickon School in Roxborough, sixth-graders tended young freshwater mussels. “The students feed them and then, when they reach a larger stage, the Fairmount Water Works will place them in a creek,” says Jose L. Ramos, a middle-years reading and English language

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December 9, 2020
3 mins read
#140 January 2021/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature

An environmentalist’s take on why John Heinz’ annual deer hunt is what’s best for the natural ecosystem as a whole

The sun is barely above the horizon when we creep between the trees and quietly enter the blind. I load the arrow into the crossbow, looking eagerly out of the mesh window. It’s the first day of my first hunt. I’ve never killed anything and I’m not sure that I can. “I like this spot,”

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December 7, 2020
5 mins read
#139 December 2020/All Topics/Feminism

Dear Lois, In an age where I’m always looking at myself, how do I accept my reflection?

I find myself looking in the mirror more these days. I’m noticing the bags under my eyes. I see the lines on my face, telling me that I’m starting to age. The targeted ads that I saw at the beginning of the pandemic were preparing me for this moment. Now that I see my image

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December 6, 2020
3 mins read
#139 December 2020/All Topics/Climate-Change/Editor's Notes

From Complicity to Consciousness

I was stunned twice when, in 2018, I read an essay in The New York Times entitled “A Forest of Ancient Trees, Poisoned by Rising Seas.” The author writes about the 400 and 500 year-old black gum trees along the Delaware Bay in South Jersey doomed by climate change, then proceeds to catalog reports from

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December 5, 2020
2 mins read
All Topics/Race and Equity

Two Haitian families detained in Berks County are set to be deported

On November 25 a few dozen people stood outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office around the corner from Chinatown to protest the deportation of 23 families, which include 28 children. Two of those families are being held at Berks County Residential Center, ICE’s Philadelphia Field Office, located in Leesport, PA, about 70 miles

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December 4, 2020
2 mins read
All Topics/Climate-Change/Culture/Environment

Philly filmmakers created a PBS documentary about technologies that could curb long-term effects of climate change.

Amidst shots and descriptions of swirling hurricanes, raging fires, and dying ecosystems, the documentary Can We Cool The Planet? begins with the words of climate strategist Jane Long, “We can’t go back, there is no path backwards.” But what if there was? Philadelphia filmmakers Ben Kalina and Jen Schneider, and their team of collaborators from

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December 4, 2020
3 mins read
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