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The Latest

#139 December 2020/Community/Design/education/gardening/Race and Equity/Sponsored Content

You don’t need to pave paradise to put up a park

Sponsored Content

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December 2, 2020
2 mins read
#139 December 2020/All Topics

Look back at how activists in 2020 set their sights on creating a better, kinder city

Imagination ran wild this year as activists and protesters envisioned a city much different than the one we live in. Philadelphians marched down Broad Street, climbed the Philadelphia Museum of Art steps and gathered at Malcolm X Park in West Philadelphia, demanding change with chants, signs and determination. Temple University communication professor Jason Del Gandio

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December 1, 2020
8 mins read
All Topics/Art/Culture/Shop Local

Creators reimagine the yellow pages to tell the stories of Philly’s working-class heroes.

In February 2019, a group of nine creative engineers, researchers, artists, and designers who had been working and playing together for years founded the Philadelphia Packaging Company. United around attributing value to objects of all shapes, sizes, and traditional economic worths, the collective began telling the stories of businesses that engage in packaging or selling

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November 27, 2020
3 mins read
All Topics/Shop Local

Reading Terminal Market has exceeded their $250,000 fundraising goal

Hard times have been felt throughout the Reading Terminal Market. “The bar does 5 to 10% of what it normally does, and produce is down 50%,” says Jimmy Iovine, co-owner of Iovine Brothers Produce and Molly Malloy’s Pub. Tootsie Iovine, owner of Tootsie’s Hot and Cold Buffet had to shut down her operation entirely. “I

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November 25, 2020
2 mins read
All Topics/Feminism/Shop Local

Here’s an online, one-stop shop where you can buy art and merch from women, trans, non-binary and gender non-conforming Philly vendors

As Philadelphia enters its second lockdown due to increased cases of COVID-19, local business owners are buckling down for hard times under the expectation that most Philadelphians will remain inside unless on essential trips until Jan. 1. Rebecca Aronow, founder of the event company House Cat, is worried about the impacts of the second shutdown

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November 25, 2020
6 mins read
#138 November 2020/All Topics/Environment/Race and Equity/Urban Nature/Water

Watershed fellows create video series to promote Camden nature preserve

With birds singing in the background, three fellows at the Alliance for Watershed Education (AWE) walk through Camden’s Cramer Hill Nature Preserve. They point out a frog in a puddle, examine bones and feathers of a wild turkey, and point out invasive plants, among other conservation challenges. They wrap up with a request for visitors

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November 22, 2020
3 mins read
#138 November 2020/All Topics/Art/Culture

Philadelphia’s mural artists uplift and inspire the city

The imp of irony plotted an odd course between painter Jane Golden and Philadelphia. If Golden hadn’t gotten a grim diagnosis years ago, the city could have missed out on lots of healing. Since her arrival here decades ago, Golden, 67, executive director of Mural Arts Philadelphia, has brought wholeness to many neighborhoods with museum-quality

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November 19, 2020
4 mins read
All Topics/Race and Equity

Stretched thin by budget cuts, nurses and their union demand better treatment

Hundreds of nurses at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Langhorne, PA, participated in a strike on Tuesday, November 17 as negotiations with their employer, Trinity Health Systems, remain at a standstill. Nurses of St. Mary’s and their union, the Pennsylvania Association of Staff Nurses and Allied Professionals (PASNAP), have drawn attention to staffing concerns at

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November 17, 2020
1 min read
All Topics/Environment/Environmental Justice/Urban Nature

Philadelphia is considering restricting the use of pesticides on public land early next month week—but the protective measure would make it harder for us to fight invasive plants

In late October, the Public Health and Human Services Committee of Philadelphia’s City Council sent a bill that would regulate the use of pesticides on public land to the full council for a vote Thurs. Dec. 03. The bill, titled “Healthy Outdoor Public Spaces,” was introduced by Committee Chair Councilwoman Cindy Bass. The bill only targeted

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November 17, 2020
9 mins read
All Topics/Politics

Have we learned nothing from 2020?

Well into the eighth month of a mismanaged pandemic that caused Great Depression-level unemployment, lame duck President Trump and members of his party are posturing toward a coup to remain in office. The general tone surrounding the “soft coup” is the same tone America has had towards climate change and the coronavirus, “if we ignore

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November 16, 2020
3 mins read
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