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February 1, 2026
#201 February 2026/Climate-Change/Community/Environmental Justice/Featured/Public Health

Philly-area environmental justice groups are finding resilience in the wake of federal funding cuts

February 1, 2026

A crowdsourcing stormwater management project in Camden dodges the “woke DEI grant” purge

On Feb. 11, 2025, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz released a database of

February 1, 2026

PA Fibershed’s University Ambassadors educate peers on textile sustainability

Cristina De Jong, a master’s student studying textile engineering at Thomas Jefferson

February 1, 2026

A new photography project features portraits and interviews with the people who roll through Philly’s streets

Who rides in Philly? There’s the stereotype: the white, male, hip, young,

February 1, 2026

The Philadelphia Reforestation Hub is reducing waste while building careers

Deep inside Fairmount Park, some hardworking dreamers are changing the way Philadelphia

January 1, 2026

Publisher’s Notes: Aspiring to Inspire

Welcome to issue #200! I spent a lot of time over the

January 1, 2026

How deep is too deep for the Delaware River?

Delaware Riverkeeper Maya K. van Rossum always knew 45 feet was a

January 1, 2026

Philadelphia takes on companies over alleged deceptive plastic recycling claims

This story was originally published by The New Lede. When Philadelphia filed

December 12, 2025

Bennett Compost and Circle Compost announce merger

For nearly a decade, Philadelphians looking to begin their composting journeys have

Tshatshke Jewelry Studio brings a fresh perspective to locally-driven, sustainable jewelry

February 1, 2026

Anthony Sorrentino is bringing a “happy warrior” mindset to his new role as CEO of the Fairmount Park Conservancy

February 1, 2026

A decade after my first smartphone, I decided to flip the script

February 1, 2026

Eco Materials Passyunk Wash Plant gives contaminated soil a second life

January 1, 2026

Multitalented Temple alum’s new business is for the coffee connoisseur

January 1, 2026

Asylum Pride House welcomes LGBTQ+ immigrants

January 1, 2026

PECO gives a discount to customers heating with electric

January 1, 2026
  • Find out how flowers bloom at a reclaimed meadow. Photo by Noah Raven.

  • How does a coffee connoisseur make the perfect cup? Photo by Tracie Van Auken.

  • Who is that masked lawyer? Photo by Julia Lowe.

  • A circle unbroken. Photo by Chris Baker Evens.

  • Home at last. Photo by Chris Baker Evens.

Current Issue

#201 February 2026/Current Issue/Urban Nature

Naturalist’s book documents the fascinating and varied sex lives of our city’s wildlife

Will you find yourself alone again for Valentine’s Day? It can be hard to find the right someone, but you’re not alone. Female oriental cockroaches can also have a hard time finding a mate. But when one gives up on finding a male to settle down with, she moves on to plan B: The female

by Bernard Brown
#201 February 2026/Current Issue/Shop Local

Narberth refillery sells sustainable household products by weight

When people walk into SHIFT Sustainable Goods + Services, after the aroma of eucalyptus welcomes them in, they might find themselves looking at the chalkboard and wall of glass jars, feeling like they’ve stepped into a general store from a previous century. But at SHIFT, rather than creating nostalgia, reducing waste and protecting the earth

by Julia Lowe
#201 February 2026/Current Issue/Publisher's Notes

Publisher’s Notes: Controlling the Past

You know the story about George Washington and his confession to his father about chopping down a cherry tree? Historians agree that it’s a myth, or if you are feeling less charitable, a lie. The story was not introduced until 1806 in the fifth edition of a Washington biography by Mason Locke Weems, a minister

by Alex Mulcahy
#201 February 2026/Current Issue/Food/Shop Local

Fueled by social media, entrepreneurs open a sweet brick-and-mortar shop

Emily Grossman and Alyssa Bonventure, co-owners of All Aboard Candy, opened their Rittenhouse Square store last June with a clear mission. “If you’re an adult, we want you to feel like a kid again,” says Bonventure. “And if you’re a kid, we want to introduce you to the joy of feeling like a kid in

by Marilyn Anthony

Video

Bicycling/Bike Talk/Video

Video: I rode along with the PPA bike patrol to answer all your questions

Meet Craig Santoro, a bike commuter whose trek to work involves constantly dodging cars. From the vehicles parked in bike lanes to the vehicles whizzing by in driving lanes, the city’s streets are always keeping Craig on his toes. Cue the Philadelphia Parking Authority’s bike patrol. Follow Craig and the PPA as they bring us

by Craig Santoro

The Latest

#199 December 2025/education/Environment/Urban Nature

The Education Issue

In 2022, the Pennsylvania State Board of Education adopted new environmental literacy and sustainability standards. This is surely important — that all students in Pennsylvania learn about how to protect the environment and live sustainably — but how do we get them to take that education to heart? All the nature lovers out there know

More
December 1, 2025
1 min read
#199 December 2025/Cooking/Culture/Food

A University of Pennsylvania researcher’s Chinese New Year tradition features make-your-own dumplings

Even the most talented chefs began their food careers as eaters. Well before they were able to cook, they witnessed the magic of combining ingredients into delicious dishes, made for them by family, friends and other cooks. For some, need, desire — or even nostalgia — converts us from eaters to makers of the foods

More
December 1, 2025
3 mins read
#199 December 2025/Food/Urban Nature

Experience the joy of foraging persimmons

On my way out of the Cobbs Creek Environmental Education Center in October, I stopped to pick through the leaves around the American persimmon trees at the top of the driveway. It was a little early in the season, with plenty of fruit still on the tree, but I found a few little blobs of

More
December 1, 2025
2 mins read
#199 December 2025/education/Environment/Urban Nature

A teacher talks about what works in nature education

Stephanie Kearney has taught middle school science for 20 years. She uses the outdoors as a classroom, even when what’s outside is a schoolyard and the blocks of rowhouses around Penn Alexander School in West Philadelphia. Grid talked with Kearney to learn what it takes to bring the natural sciences to life for urban students.

More
December 1, 2025
3 mins read
#199 December 2025/Race and Equity

The 8 Seconds Rodeo spotlights Black horsemanship

One warm October night at Temple University’s Liacouras Center, tall, tan rodeo athlete Au’Vion Horton burst out of a high wooden chute on the back of a one-ton bull. As the bull plunged, spun and kicked to throw off Horton, the hum of the crowd at the East Coast premiere of the 8 Seconds Rodeo

More
December 1, 2025
4 mins read
#199 December 2025/Circular Economy/Environmental Justice/Recycling

A proposed bill could force the City to re-examine its waste and recycling contracts

In June 2026, Philadelphia’s current solid waste and recycling contracts are set to end, and a coalition of policymakers, industry professionals and advocates hope to use the contract expiration as a lever to fundamentally shift the City’s waste management practices toward circular approaches that include reuse, recycling, repair and composting — while addressing environmental justice

More
December 1, 2025
7 mins read
#199 December 2025/Community/education/Environment/Urban Nature

A park hub reopens in Cobbs Creek

On an afternoon in late October, students from Sayre High School were trickling into the Cobbs Creek Community Environmental Center’s community room to take off their waders and to review what they had found in the creek. It was a scene you might expect at any environmental center, but a relatively fresh one now that

More
December 1, 2025
2 mins read
#199 December 2025/education/Energy

Philly schools are supposed to get millions for rooftop solar. But federal and state policies are casting shade

A year ago, advocates of solar energy across Pennsylvania were flying high. Democratic state Rep. Elizabeth Fiedler, whose South Philly district stretches from Pat’s King of Steaks to Lincoln Financial Field, had just pulled off a political Hail Mary: successfully shepherding a clean energy bill through the gridlocked State Capitol. Titled Solar for Schools, the

More
December 1, 2025
7 mins read
#199 December 2025/Community/Energy

Philadelphia Gas Works agrees to hold first ever community meetings over reducing emissions

For the first time in the utility’s history, Philadelphia Gas Works (PGW) has agreed to hold community engagement meetings to discuss decarbonization. In a settlement agreement approved Oct. 9 by the Public Utility Commission (PUC), PGW agreed not only to a significantly lower rate hike than they initially proposed, but also to begin engaging in

More
December 1, 2025
3 mins read
#199 December 2025/education/Public Health

Through advocacy and judicial oversight, the School District of Philadelphia might move past asbestos

In June, the School District of Philadelphia’s long-running struggle to protect staff and students from asbestos in its aging buildings came to a head with federal criminal charges and an agreement with the U.S. Justice Department to take care of the problem once and for all. The Justice Department alleges that the Philadelphia School District

More
December 1, 2025
2 mins read
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