University City Review -08-19-29 Digital Edition

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The West Philadelphia Skills Initiative launches first virtual training for EMTs conducted virtually, followed in partnership with Drexel by a hybrid of in-person and

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niversity City District’s West Philadelphia Skills Initiative (WPSI) is launching a partnership with Drexel University to train aspiring Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) for the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians (NREMT) exam. Unlike the majority of Skills Initiative

training programs, this cohort will serve all Philadelphia residents, regardless of zip code. This unique partnership blends virtual and in-person programming, and is the first WPSI training opportunity since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. The 13week curriculum will consist of WPSI foundational classes

virtual EMT training classes. The program concludes with an in-person administration of the NREMT exam on Saturday, December 19th. The Skills Initiative are recruiting goal-oriented, motivated individuals with highquality people skills across Philadelphia for this program. Interested applicants must be 18 years of age or older, reside

SERVING THE WEST PHILADELPHIA COMMUNITY

within the city of Philadelphia, possess a high school diploma or GED and valid PA driver’s license, be physically strong

and agile, and read at an 11th grade level or higher. Applications will be accepted through Tuesday, September 1st at 5 PM. Interested applicants can visit www.universitycity.org/ AUGUST 19, 2020 wpsi to learn more about the program and submit an application, available under “Opportunities for Job Seekers.” Applications are also available here: https://www.tfaforms. com/4845387. About University City District University City District is a partnership of worldrenowned anchor institutions, small businesses and residents that creates opportunity, and improves economic vitality and quality of life in the University City area of West Philadelphia. Our primary mission is community revitalization. emergency housing. We work within a place-based, Why can’t a major city data-driven framework to with so many resources find invest in world-class public a solution for homelessness spaces, address crime and once and for all? We turned public safety, bring life to comto the experts to find out. mercial corridors, connect lowLiz Hersh, director of the income residents to careers, Office of Homeless Services and promote job growth and in Philadelphia is a passion- innovation. Learn more at www.universitycity.org. ate advocate for the homeless whose care and concern X for those faced with the crisis of homeless was obvious ... throughout our interview. “On any given day in the city of Philadelphia, there are about 5,600 people who are experiencing homelessness,” said Hersh.

www.ucreview.com

The crisis of homelessness, an interview with Liz Hersh By Nathaniel Lee UC Review Correspondent

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ew problems have been as persistent as that of homelessness in Philadelphia. Despite the ups and downs of the economy, one thing remains consistent throughout times of abundance as well as times of hardship and that is the problem of homelessness. On any given day, some 900 people are actively living on the streets of Philadelphia without basic shelter. Thousands more are living in shelters or other

Liz Hersh, director of the Office of Homeless Services

8/25 (Virtual) Community Meeting: Development Proposed at 4701 Pine Street (over existing garage) From the Garden Court Community Association:

a zoning permit application for a substantial addition over the garage. It is a “by-right” MEETING DETAILS project that complies with the August 25, 2020 zoning code (the CMX-3 dis6:30pm trict), which means that there Participate online via are no variances requested, but Zoom: https://zoom. its scale triggers a Civic Design us/j/92539058123 Review (CDR) by the PhilaAnybody unable to get ondelphia City Planning Comline can call in: 646.558.8656 mission; the Garden Court Written comments accepted Community Association is the after the meeting (more on that RCO that has been assigned Development proposed at 4701 Pine Street. Photo submitted by GCCA. below) to convene the required community meeting in advance of new apartments in a 6-story every 10 units in the CMX-3 he owners of the Garthe CDR. addition over the garage, district) with the existing 260den Court Plaza (4701 beside the existing 14-story car garage. The developer has Pine Street) - Infinity WHAT IS BEING tower on the same parcel. shared their Civic Design ReCollective and Spruce Street PROPOSED? The project meets its parkview submission with GCCA. Commons - have submitted The project proposes 220 ing obligations (3 spaces for continued on page 4

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WE WILLX NOT BE PUBLISHING ON 8/26/20. WE WILL BE BACK ON 9/2/20. Page x

FINE ART

The Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show (RSFAS), uniquely distinguished as the oldest outdoor art show... Page 2

POLITICS.....................................3 FUNDRAISER................................5 NOTES ON MUSIC..........................7 CLASSIFIEDS..............................11


2 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • AUGUST 19, 2020

Mary Allegra Tribute

The Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show shares the healing power of art in September

The University City Arts League will be dedicating the “Mary Allegra Studio” and unveiling a plaque with her photo and 25 of the plays she adapted and directed at the Arts League from 1985 to 1992.

Zoom presentation

Saturday September 12 , 2 - 3:30 P.M. There will be a video, speakers, and an opportunity for people to share memories.

Please spread the word! For more information or to get the Zoom Link, contact

Frank Allegra, (215) 519 9350, utestpreps@comcast.net

Art patrons strolling the Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show in 2019. Photo: Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show

General Contractors, Painters, Roofers

Advertise your services in the Classified pages 215.222.2846

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he Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show (RSFAS), uniquely distinguished as the oldest outdoor art

show in the nation, will bring the healing power of art to all with a virtual event September 1013, 2020. The 93 yearold tradition of annually sharing original fine art in Rittenhouse Square of center-city Philadelphia will be transformed to an online art exhibition. The virtual format will allow art patrons to visit the show while social-distancing, and moreover, to reap the invigorating, inspiring and empowering effects that art can have on the viewer. The Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show: September 2020 Virtual Edition will feature the work of 101 jury-selected professional artists

from all over the U.S. and Canada. Artwork will be available for purchase throughout the weekend on the RSFAS online gallery at www.rittenhousesquareart.com. Special artists’ appearances, such as art technique demonstrations, artist interviews, and interactive art sessions will occur virtually throughout the event. The Show began its history in 1928 by a handful of local art students exhibiting art on clotheslines in Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia. The popularity of the “Clothesline Show” grew, and the show became an annual Philadelphia destination

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for tens of thousands of patrons who appreciate and collect fine art. The online format now offers this precious gift worldwide. “It’s well known that art helps us be optimistic about our future. Art is important to society because it is an essential ingredient to empowering the hearts of people,” says Sandra Sedmak Engel, professional artist and Rittenhouse Square Fine Arts Association Board of Directors Chair. “It’s our mission to share fine art and we’re honored to help spread a message of inspiration during these challenging times,” she added. Art patrons can experience the Rittenhouse Square Fine Art Show: September 2020 Virtual Edition, September 10-13, by visiting the RSFAS website – www. rittenhousesquareart. com, Facebook –@ rittenhouseart – and Instagram @rittenhousesquareart. For more information, please contact: Steve Oliver, RSFAA Executive Director 610-299-1343 or info@ rittenhousesquareart. com


AUGUST 19, 2020 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • 3

Analysis shows Pennsylvania has 2nd-most coronavirus restrictions among U.S. states

By Dave Lemery The Center Square or several months, a debate has raged in Pennsylvania between Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and the Republican majorities in the state Legislature over whether the administration’s coronavirus restrictions are appropriate or too restrictive.

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business and school reopenings and more. WalletHub talked to deemed them necessary. a number of outside Now, a new analyexperts about best pracsis by the financial services website WalletHub tices for reopening the economy, including Vlad that ranks the states by Tarko, a professor at the their COVID-19 restricUniversity of Arizona’s tions has placed Pennsylvania firmly near the Department of Political Economy and Moral Scitop. The Keystone State ence. landed at No. 2, second Tarko argued that only to California in the given human nature, renumber of constraints imposed on the popula- opening economic activity a bit on the early side tion. was probably inevitable. WalletHub has been Lawmakers passed a compiling state rankings But that didn’t mean number of bills in recent for restrictions since May, there were no options available to limit any months seeking to over- and Pennsylvania has negative effects. turn some of the meatended to be one of the “Main things that can sures imposed by Wolf most restrictive states in be done to mitigate the and Secretary of Health each iteration. But this problem, given premaDr. Rachel Levine, only week’s update saw the to see Wolf veto most of state’s highest placement ture reopening: substantially more testing, those bills. With Republi- yet. accelerated medical decans lacking the support The rankings were velopments, responsible needed to overturn a compiled using 19 metveto, the restrictions have rics, including face mask local political and business leadership on preremained for as long requirements, travel venting super-spreading as the administration restrictions, the pace of

events, and deregulating various economic activities in order to allow production chains to adjust faster,” Tarko wrote. “Governments should provide more substantial, and quicker, grants and prizes for COVID-related medical developments. They should also subsidize the drugs and vaccines, once they are developed, and other things, like masks, but abstain from price controls (which would be counter-productive).” So far, during the pandemic Pennsylvania has seen more than 120,000 diagnosed coronavirus infections and more than 13,700 deaths linked to COVID-19. Meanwhile, the most recent jobless numbers show a 13 percent unemployment rate, more than double what the state saw before the economy shut down.

Bills would give Pennsylvania families $1,000 each from COVID-19 relief funds to help cover educational expenses By Dave Lemery The Center Square rguments have been raging for months in Pennsylvania over how best to proceed with education during the coronavirus pandemic. Finding the solution that everyone can agree on for keeping children, teachers and staff safe while also maximizing the potential for learning has proven to be difficult, if not impossible. One potential method to at least address the possible learning deficits that have been seen is found in a pair of bills proposed in each chamber of the Legislature. Sen. Judy Ward, R-Hollidaysburg, and Rep. Clint Owlett, R-Wellsboro, are the sponsors of legislation that would create the “Back on Track Education Scholarship Account Program.” Owlett’s bill also has a Democratic cosponsor. The idea, according to their co-sponsorship memos, is to use funds available to the state from the federal CARES Act to give as many as 500,000 Pennsylvania

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families $1,000 each to use for education-related expenses. “This will help students in public schools make up for lost schooling through tutoring, online programs, or other educational services – that way teachers [can] make faster progress this fall,” Ward and Owlett said in a joint news release. “There are also kids who are currently in private schools who will have trouble staying there due to reduced family incomes. Back on Track ESAs can help them remain in their current school, which is particularly important during such a stressful time.” The funds would initially be available only to families making 185 percent of the federally defined poverty level, or about $40,000 for a family of three, according to Marc LeBlond of the Commonwealth Foundation, a public policy organization. After a midNovember deadline, the means testing requirement would expire and anyone could apply. Bills relating to school choice and funding that

can be used for private school or public charter school tuition have at times been part of fraught discussions in Pennsylvania. Last year, for instance, Gov. Tom Wolf vetoed a bill that would have massively increased the availability of educational improvement tax credits, which fund private school tuition. But to LeBlond, the one-time nature of the Back on Track bills, combined with the wide range of possible uses for the funds, should mitigate against a partisan divide on the topic. While school choice bills are sometimes attacked as being harmful to the public school system, the Ward and Owlett bills stand to benefit any family, regardless of what kind of school their children attend, he added. “We’re really looking at it like emergency pandemic relief, sort of like the bailout that everybody got the first two rounds of bailouts, something directly for the families,” LeBlond said. “I don’t think you would see with this widespread school switching, neces-

sarily, because it’s a onetime infusion of $1,000. People probably aren’t going to switch from their district school to a private school.” There is a bit of a time crunch, however. With the school year starting up within a few weeks and the CARES Acts funds needing to be used by the end of the year, lawmakers will need to move quickly to get the program up and running. LeBlond noted that even if the upcoming school year was to return to near normalcy – an unlikely proposition – the students of Pennsylvania have already seen their education degraded by the rocky end to the 2019-20 school year, in the early months of the pandemic. He cited the work of Stanford economist Eric Hanushek, who calculated that the impact of last school year’s interrupted instruction could mean as much as a 6 percent cut in lifetime earnings for the students who were affected. “If a family’s had some kind of hardship, parents lost a job, they lost income, they can’t

pay tuition,” he said. “And we’re seeing that. We’re seeing a lot of that go around, the loss of income. In places like Philadelphia, you have low income families, and they’re making say $32,000 a year, $2,000 of that’s going to tuition, which is really colossal, and that’s your household income. And so this can offset that in some way.” The Ward and Owlett bills are currently pending in the Education Committees of each respective chamber, and they could be taken up when lawmakers return to Harrisburg in September. The bill’s cosponsors in the Senate are Republican Sens. Ryan Aument, Camera Bartolotta, Scott Martin, Kristin PhillipsHill and Pat Stefano. In the House, the cosponsors are Democratic Rep. Danilo Burgos of Philadelphia and Republican Reps. Barb Gleim, Steven Mentzer, Greg Rothman, Tarah Toohil, Jesse Topper and David Zimmerman. Corrections and Clarifications A previous version

Review UNIVERSITY

CITY

218 South 45th Street

218 South 45th Philadelphia, PA Street, 19104 Philadelphia, PA 19104 Tel (215) 222-2846 Tel (215)222-2846 Fax (215) 222-2378 Fax (215)222-2378 Email editor@pressreview.net Email newsdesk@pressreview.net editor@pressreview.net graphics@pressreview.net graphics@pressreview.net Editor & Publisher Editor Publisher Robert& Christian Robert Christian Associate Publisher Assistant Editor Claudia Christian Jack Firneno Bookkeeping Associate Publisher Alexandra Christian Claudia Christian Graphic Designers Bookkeeping Kelly Kusumoto Tina Davis Kasia Gadek Graphic Designers Contributing Writers Kasia Gadek Bob Behr Kelly Kusumoto Haywood Brewster Marc Holmes III Contributing Writers Richard Lord Dea Mallin Nicole Contosta Thom Bob Nickels Behr David HaywoodTraub Brewster Napoleon F. Kingcade Columnists Nathan Lerner JohnMallin Lane Dea Henry Lazarus Thom Nickels Tim Legnani Contributing Editor Paulina Malek Thom Nickels Columnists Correspondent Jennifer Jones Nicole JohnContosta Lane Nathaniel Lee Henry Lazarus KamSales Williams Claudia Christian Sales Claudia Social Christian Media Tim Legnani Kelly Kusumoto Social Media Kelly Kusumoto

of this story incorrectly stated that the education scholarship accounts proposed as part of the “Back on Track” bills pending in the Pennsylvania Legislature were related to the Education Improvement Tax Credit bill passed last year by lawmakers and vetoed by the governor. There is no link between the two programs. Dave Lemery Regional Editor Dave Lemery is a veteran journalist with more than 20 years of experience. He was the editor of Suburban Life Media when its flagship newspaper was named best weekly in Illinois, and he has worked at papers in South Carolina, Indiana, Idaho and New York.


4 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • AUGUST 19, 2020

GCCA

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WHAT IS A CIVIC DESIGN REVIEW? WHAT ABOUT VARIANCES? Often times, community meetings are convened for projects seeking variances - relief from the zoning code in the form of height, setbacks, parking, uses, etc - from the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA). In such cases, the ZBA will either approve or deny those variance requests and the community meeting may help inform their decision, based on neighbors’ support or opposition. This project, however, is NOT seeking variances because the Department of Licenses and Inspections has determined that it is compliant with the zoning district applied to the property (CMX3). But the proposal is for more than 100 units of housing or 100,000 square feet of new gross floor area, the project re-

quires review by the City Planning Commission’s Civic Design Review Committee (CDR). Unlike the ZBA, which has the authority to grant or deny variances, the CDR is an advisory body, relying largely on the power of persuasion to influence projects. According to the City, the it is the role of the committee to consider how well the project’s design relates to the public realm—that is, the part of a development that people can see or physically access. Subjects of discussion may include: Sidewalks and streets. Open spaces. Public access. Building height and bulk. Landscaping. Parking and loading conditions. Building materials and transparency The committee then recommends improvements to the project that positively impact the public realm. Recommendations are advisory, and the development team may choose whether or not to implement them. The

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improved. CDR may require a deThe agenda of the 8/25 veloper to return to a second meeting to respond community meeting will, to its recommendations. generally, be as follows: Introduction by GCCA Project presentation by SO WHAT IS THIS development team COMMUNITY Key questions from MEETING FOR AND GCCA* HOW WILL IT Public comment/quesWORK? First, foremost, and as tions (time limited by the number of attendees, in always, we ask that evthe interest of giving everybody be considerate erybody the opportunity toward each other, the to speak) developer, and mem*GCCA has developed bers of the committee. Please bear with us as we a set of important-andlikely-to-be asked quesnavigate the challenges of holding a community meeting remotely in these unusual times. The purpose of this community meeting is twofold: 1. Inform near neighbors and the broader community about the project that is proposed; 2. Gather feedback to share with the CDR as that committee considers whether to ask the developer to make any design changes to the project. Note: community meetings before a ZBA hearing often culminate in a community poll of support or opposition Linda Blount to the granting of the variances in question; as By Linda Blount the CDR does not have the authority to grant or OVID-19 has deny a permit, a poll of gripped national community support/opheadlines for position will not be taken months. But long before at the meeting. Rather, the U.S. outbreak of the GCCA encourages novel coronavirus, the thoughtful questions and comments about the country was battling andesign elements that the other deadly epidemic: diabetes. CDR will consider and One of the leading how the project may be causes of death in the United States, the disease claims the lives of more than 83,000 Americans each year. And -- much like the COVID-19 -- diabetes disproportionately impacts people of color. That’s why it’s so encouraging that the Trump administration will soon make it easier for millions of diabetic Americans to manage their health. A newly announced proposal would cap the amount of money that Medicare beneficiaries pay out-of-pocket for insulin at $35. That reform will go a long way towards getting older patients with diabetes the medicines they need to stay healthy -- a fact that’s certainly worth celebrating. But it’s only one step toward tackling a health crisis that shows no signs of relenting. Diabetes doesn’t affect all groups equally. Black Americans are 60 percent

tions based on anticipated community interests and concerns. The questions have been submitted to the developer and they have agreed to provide written responses to the best of their ability. Please download and review our list of questions here: https://www. gardencourtca.org/ post/4701pinest AFTER THE COMMUNITY MEETING We want to be sure

everybody - including those who can’t attend can review material and give feedback on their own time. On this page, we will post the developer’s presentation, the developer’s answers to GCCA’s key questions, and a survey tool for providing written feedback, which we will include in our letter to the Civic Design Review Committee. The CDR is expected to hear this case on September 2nd.

New Insulin reform gives a shot in the arm to the health of Black Americans

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more likely to be diagnosed with diabetes than whites. Black women are particularly vulnerable -nearly 13 percent of Black women over 18 have the disease, compared with just 7.5 percent of white women. For many of these patients, staying alive requires rigorous adherence to a medication regimen, including regular injections of insulin. Unfortunately, these medicines can prove prohibitively expensive. In one recent survey, a quarter of diabetic patients reported using less than the prescribed amount of insulin because of the medicine’s cost. The persistent wealth and income gap between Americans of color and white Americans means that these financial burdens pose a unique challenge for black patients. Especially in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the inability to afford insulin has only deepened racial inequities that have plagued our nation for decades. After all, those with diabetes who are unable to manage their disease effectively -- a group in which African Americans are overrepresented -- are at heightened risk of severe complications from COVID-19. According to the Centers for Disease Control, black Americans account for 23 percent of deaths from the novel coronavirus, despite making up just 13 percent of the population. Reforms that enable patients of color to better manage their diabetes could vastly reduce such healthcare disparities. We hope that’s precisely what the administra-

tion’s newly announced proposal will do. Under this reform, more than 1,750 Medicare prescription drug plans will cap out-ofpocket costs for a variety of insulin products at $35 a month. That change will take effect next year. This will bring down pharmacy costs for the millions of Medicare seniors with diabetes -- including black Americans. But given the scope of the challenges facing diabetic patients, this reform still represents a modest improvement over the status quo. For systemic change, patients need policies that target the real drivers of high insulin costs. That begins with the opaque system that brings medicines to pharmacies. Every year, manufacturers provide over $100 billion in rebates and other price reductions on brand name drugs. But supply chain middlemen have pocketed these savings instead of passing them on to patients at the point of sale. Other drivers abound. Policymakers need to do everything they can to help less advantaged patients afford insulin. And on that measure, the administration’s new Medicare proposal is one step in the right direction. Linda Blount is president and CEO of The Black Women’s Health Imperative, the first nonprofit organization created by Black women to help protect and advance the health and wellness of Black women and girls. This piece originally ran in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.


AUGUST 19, 2020 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • 5

Passage of the Great American Outdoors Act on August 4 marks historic victory for our national parks and forests

John Judge President and CEO John of the Appalachian Mountain Club

By Haywood Brewster Staff Reporter

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resident and CEO John Judge joins with members of the Appalachian Mountain Club (AMC), America’s oldest and most vibrant recreation and conservation organization, in celebrating a landmark victory for everyone who cares about our nation’s most iconic landscapes: the passage of the Great American Outdoors Act (GAOA). This legislation ensures full and permanent federal funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), a visionary program established to protect our national parks, national forests, state and local parks, trails, and other public lands. The GAOA also includes billions of dollars for the next five years to address years of maintenance backlogs on federal lands. Signed by President Trump on August 4, the bill was first passed by the Senate on June 17 by a large bipartisan margin of 73-25, and then passed by the US House of Representatives on July 22 by an overwhelming and bipartisan vote of 310107. For decades, AMC staff, members and volunteers have worked

tirelessly as leaders in the LWCF Coalition, alongside other conservation groups, local elected officials, recreationists and business leaders advocating for the program. Comprised of over 1,000 members, for the past three years this powerful coalition was organized and coordinated by AMC staffer Amy Lindholm. In her role as LWCF Coalition Manager, Lindholm focused exclusively on raising awareness of the urgent need for this legislation and spurred action by grassroots groups to call, write and visit with members of Congress to show the widespread support for LWCF and the GAOA. AMC has championed the value and potential of this critically important conservation program for decades, fighting in each budget cycle for the highest possible annual Congressional appropriations and helping to lead the campaign for permanent authorization of the program (achieved in 2019) and full permanent funding. An innovative federal initiative when it was created 55 years ago, LWCF directs funds produced by offshore oil and gas leasing to conservation projects at the federal, state and

that will be open to the projects. Thanks to the public forever thanks Great American Outto LWCF, raising the doors Act, this federal profile of this muchfunding will continue to loved but little-known protect cherished places program. Our members across the United States, have used their voices including the Grand to speak up, and AMC Canyon, Acadia Nahas mobilized partners tional Park, Cape Cod across the country to National Seashore and work together in comthe Appalachian Trail, mon cause. At a time as well as regional sites when the country is di- enjoyed by AMC memvided in many ways, it bers in the northeast, is incredibly gratifying such as Sterling Forest that this issue brings State Park in New York us together around a and New Jersey; Cherry shared love of the outValley National Wildlife doors and belief in its Refuge in Pennsylvania; power to support our Silvio Conte National communities’ health, Wildlife Refuge, spanspirit and economic ning New Hampshire, asts, the success of perwell-being.” Vermont, Massachumanently reauthorizing local levels. Enacted LWCF dollars are setts, and Connecticut; and funding the Land in 1965, the fund was used to protect national and AMC’s Maine and Water Conservaauthorized to spend parks, areas around rivWoods lands, and many tion Fund may not have $900 million annumore. ers and lakes, national come to be.” ally, though Congress To learn more forests, and national Amy Lindholm adds, consistently redirected about the Appalawildlife refuges from “I have been truly honmuch of its funding chian Mountain Club, development, and elsewhere, leaving only ored to work on behalf please visit: www.outto provide matching half or less of the autho- of AMC in this effort. grants for state and lo- doors.org. AMC volunteers led rized funding for the countless trips to places cal parks and recreation intended conservation projects. Finally, after nd more than five decades and with AMC’s leadership, the Great American Outdoors Act has secured full funding for the LWCF in perpetuName: ity. In addition, this legislation provides $9.5 Address: billion to help fund the backlog of maintenance projects on federal Method of contribution: public lands, including  Check (Please make checks out to either Philadelphia Free Press or University national parks and naCity Review, and mail to 218 South 45th Street, Phila., PA 19104. Phone tional forests. 215.222.2374) “Now, perhaps more  Credit Card than ever, Americans Name on credit card: are showing how essential it is to be able to Address: access public land and water for both physi cal and mental health,” notes John Judge. “ConCredit Card Number: gress and the President have taken truly historExpiration date: Security Code: ic action to support our nation’s vibrant recreBilling Address: If it is different from your address ation economy and local communities. AMC has been fortunate to be the lead organizer of the LWCF Coalition for the past three years, and without the engagement of key stakeholders, as well as hundreds of thousands of AMC members and other outdoor enthusi-

Celebrate our 32 Year with us! A FUNDRAISING APPEAL

You can also go to GoFundMe.com and search for “Keeping Community Papers Alive in Philadelphia”.


6 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • AUGUST 19, 2020

The College of Physicians of Philadelphia announces new trustees tices at the Abramson Cancer Center at Pennsylvania Hospital.

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he College of Physicians of Philadelphia announced last week the addition of five new Trustees to the Board. The following esteemed physicians and leaders

in public health joined the Board of the College, effective July 1, 2020. “We are so pleased to welcome these five thought leaders to the Board of Trustees,” Chief Advancement Of-

ficer, Richard Fitzgerald said. “They each bring a unique perspective through their diverse backgrounds and experiences and we look forward to their contributions to the College.”

Generosa Grana, MD, FACP, FCPP (F’2018) Dr. Grana is the Director of the MD Anderson Cancer Center at Cooper, and a Professor of Medicine at the Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, specializing in Hematology and Medical Oncology.

ferson University Hospitals, as well as President and CEO of Aria Health. She was also formerly CEO and Executive Director of Pennsylvania Hospital. She has served on the College’s Finance & Investment Committee since July 1, 2019.

Cadence Kim, MD, FACS, FCPP (F’2015) Dr. Kim practices at Urological Associates, PC in Philadelphia, and is affiliated with Jefferson Health in Philadelphia. She is a former President of the Philadelphia Alexander Vaccaro, County Medical Society. MD, PhD, MBA, FCPP Kathleen Kinslow, (F’1997) CRNA, EdD, MBA, FCPP Dr. Vaccaro is the (F’2007) President, Richard H. Rothman Professor, and Chairman of the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery at the Rothman Institute. He is also Professor of Neurosurgery at Thomas Jefferson University, and Immediate Past President of the Janet F. Haas, MD, Cervical Spine Research FCPP (F’1999) Society. Dr. Haas is the Board Chair of the William About the The College Penn Foundation. She of Physicians of Philaalso serves as a Trustee Dr. Kinslow, who bedelphia for the University of gan her career in nursing, The College of PhysiPennsylvania, the Morris has more than 30 years of cians of Philadelphia Arboretum, and the Free experience in health care. was founded in 1787 by Library of Philadelphia. She recently served as a group of physicians Dr. Haas specializes in the Chief Integration Of- including Dr. Benjamin palliative care at the Uni- ficer and Executive Vice Rush, a signer of our naversity of Pennsylvania President at Thomas Jef- tion’s Declaration of InHealth System, and pracdependence. It is not an academic organization, as the name suggests, but a not-for-profit educational and cultural institution, with the mission of advancing the cause of health while upholding the ideals and heritage of medicine. The College is home to the Mütter Museum, America’s finest museum of medical history, which displays collections of anatomical specimens, models and Without your patronage, businesses, medical instruments in a restaurants, theaters and institutions nineteenth-century setting. This includes slides do not survive. of Einstein’s Brain, the 139 skulls from Hyrtl’s We all value the fabric of our city. collection, and a biannual rotation of art exIt is what makes Philadelphia a great city. hibits that accompany the themes and aims of Please support local business. the Museum’s collecUNIVERSITY CITY tions.

The fabric of Philadelphia:

Review


AUGUST 19, 2020 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • 7

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its of bright good news keep filtering into our same-old, same-old routines, enough to encourage us all to don those masks and step out into a few of our city’s reopened favorite attractions, obeying the rules of social distancing and frequent hand washing and use of hand sanitizers. The sumptuous Barnes Foundation at 21st and the Parkway now offers timed ticketing for advance reservations at 215 278 7100. All the great masters who used to live in the suburbs are artfully displayed here as Dr. Barnes wished and further good news is that the popular show “Marie Cutoli: the Modern Thread from Miro to Man Ray” has been extended through Aug. 23.  Isaiah Zagar’s vivid Magic Gardens is wowing visitors again with its stunning juxtapositioning of such found objects as mirrors, broken tiles, bottles, bicycle wheels, folk art and more, on view in two indoor rooms and a twolevel outdoor sculpture garden. Tickets must be reserved on line and the number of visitors will be severely limited. South St. between 10th and 11th Sts. Closed Tuesdays. phillymagicgardens.org.  The much missed and beloved Phila. Museum of Art is back for members as of Sept. 3 and for one and all as of Sept. 6. Numerous changes here include the use of only one entrance on the north side, a limited number of visitors at any one time or about half the usual number and now all galleries open at the same time. An exciting continuing attraction here is the extension of the dynamic Horace Pippin show, a genuine must-see, extended through December. Closed on Mondays and Tuesdays. The PAM’s

tiny exquisite cousin, the Rodin Museum a few block east down the Parkway, also reopens on Sept. 6 and boasts handsome gardens with benches just inside the front gates. 215 763 8100.  As of Sept. 3, the Museum of the American Revolution at 3rd and Chestnut Sts. will offer a new schedule, open Thursdays through Sundays and advance timed reservations are strongly suggested. 215 253 6731.  Eager to get out of the house and out of the city too? How about a short journey into the bucolic suburbs and a visit to a local winery that would very much welcome your business? Karamoor Estate offers not only its admired wines but outdoor dining. 21 miles from Center City in Fort Washington, 215 643 5800. And as the guidebook suggests, Elmwood Park Zoo is only 15 minutes further. And here’s another double header: Penn Woods Winery, 29 miles from Center City, reservations required. 610 459 0808; ask about required prepackaged lunch boxes for weekend visits. And Longwood Garden is only ten miles away.  Nostalgia hits us hard when times don’t live up to expectations, so think of the fun and roaring back to the good old Vaudeville-inspired days of The Ed Sullivan Show, now available in new high resolution clips and postings on a daily basis and covering the stiff-as-a-board host’s amusing gaffes and being wowed by his choice of guests from Anna Pavlova to the Beatles to Joan Rivers and so many others. Laughter is guaranteed as are a few tears for the good old days. Comedy is king here but viewers will also see great singers, animal acts, adored opera stars, and the unforgettable Senor

Wences. YouTube and other sites.  The great granddaddy of all fringe festivals, the hugely influential Edinburgh Fringe Festival, founded in Scotland in 1947 and a blockbuster event ever since, has had to cancel this year its vast assortment of live attractions totaling in the thousands and instead is being replaces for home viewers by Shedinburgh Fringe Festival taking place in the city’s familiar Traverse Theater but also in much tinier venues including many home-built sheds in gardens and backyards and parks as stages. These seductive if much simpler sites show their wares through Sept. 5 as a “brand new on line festival”. Available at www.shedinburgh.com A great chance to see acts/cabarets/plays/ musicals/solo shows and other rewarding curiosities from around the world and surely catch glimpses of stars of the future.  Closer to home, the energetic OperaDelaware presents Al Fresco Arias, another of its series outdoors in the company’s parking lot where a few limited drive-in spots are permitted and the majority of patrons are asked to bring their own chairs, masks, etc. This all new 45-minute concert features four familiar OD faces and voices: soprano Makeda Hampton, Academy of Vocal Arts alumna mezzo soprano Chrystal E. Williams, tenor Richard Troxell also an AVA alumnus, and baritone Timothy Mix. 7 pm on Aug. 27 and 28. 302 442 7807.  The celebrated Best Performances tv series takes on a fine one with their telecast of Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing” now through Sept. 12. TV star Danielle Brooks, much admired in “Orange is the New Black”, plays the lead in this

lighthearted summer romance. pbs.com.  The Metropolitan Opera’s free nightly streaming of their vast archives of new and older high resolution videos continues at 7:30 p.m. and are available until 6:30

p.m. the next day, each a break-taking look at wildly expensive and lavish decors and costumes with the world’s greatest opera singers in a brilliant cornucopia of titles. Upcoming: Aug. 19, Tchaikovsky’s

“Eugene Onegin”; 20, Verdi’s “Un Ballo in Maschera”; 21, Verdi’s “Simon Boccanegra”; 22, Rossini’s “Il Barbiere di Siviglia”; 23, Humperdinck’s “Hansel and Gretel”. metopera.org 


8 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • AUGUST 19, 2020

HOMELESS

without a home is too many and that somecontinued from page 1 thing should be done for each and every perWow! Huge number son facing this crisis, but, despite what we but it isn’t one facing regularly see or read or Philadelphia alone. In hear on our television fact, most major cities screens newspapers have to contend with and radio stations, the issue of homelessPhiladelphia does a ness but, says Hersh, fairly good job finding Philadelphia is doing a help for many of them. better job than most. “Most of them are “We do have the lowin emergency or temest number of homeporary housing situaless people who are tions. They may be in unsheltered of any of shelters, transitional the major cities in the housing safe-havens, country,” she said. recovery houses or resi“It’s a very big probdential drug treatment lem. Half a million programs,” Hersh said. people sleep outside “We have a little over or unsheltered every 900 people who are night across the United unsheltered meaning States so it’s a very sethey are actually on rious problem.” the street, so that’s the Wait, how do they magnitude of the prob- know how many lem in Philadelphia.” homeless there are? Hersh adamantly be- They count them. lieves that one person “Every year the

Federal government requires that we do a ‘Point- in-Time’ count and we literally go around every zip code and count people. We know a lot of where people are because we have homeless outreach teams out 24-7, 365 days a year and every community does this and so we are able to compare the numbers across the country,” said Hersh. “So, Philadelphia with our 900 plus people who are unsheltered, comparatively with the other major cities, we’re talking about cities with over a million people, Philadelphia has the lowest number.” Hersh isn’t consoled by this fact and won’t feel satisfied until every single person in Philadelphia has a

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place to live. “What I think is that one person is one too many. I don’t think anyone should be homeless in a country like the United States where there is so much wealth and we have so many people who have more than they can spend in a lifetime, there is really no reason ” she said. Hersh said there is a lot of talk about the numbers but it’s important to realize that those numbers represent people. “Our commitment is to try to make homelessness rare and not reoccurring.” With so much attention turned to the protests and encampment on Ridge Avenue and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway where homeless residents pitched tents on public property and refused to vacate until something was done to address their concerns, it would be easy to draw the conclusion that Philadelphia isn’t taking the issue of homelessness seriously enough nor prioritizing the needs of the homeless population. The response this reporter received from the Philadelphia Housing Authority, or lack thereof, would seem to confirm the notion that city administrators would rather put their attention and resources on other things. But maybe this isn’t altogether true. Maybe its just a big problem with many moving parts. “It’s a very serous problem. Last year about 18,000 people are moved through our system at one time or

another,” said Hersh. “Most people may become homeless for a short time and then are able to save up some money, tap into some network or we may be able to help them out and then they will move on; and then some people may become much longer situation in what we think of as chronically homeless.” Major city or not, Philadelphia does not have endless resources and like all major cities, require reinforcement and support from the Federal government. “The thing is, the Federal government has really stepped away and it leaves all the cities on their own and we do what we can, we help a lot of people, we do a lot of homelessness prevention, we provide a lot of emergency housing, and a lot of permanent housing for people who have all kinds of disabilities and will never be able to pay market rent,” she said. “I think we all agree that it’s not enough.” So why did the Federal government leave cities struggling on their own? “I think there is this idea out there that some people want to be homeless and I think some people have this old idea about opportunity that somehow if they just tried hard enough they can move up the ladder and I don’t think it’s really true for a lot of people,” Hersh said. Trying to work one’s way out of financial insecurity can be a lot like trying to get to the top of a mountain with

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one armed tied behind your back for various reasons. “We know now about systemic racism, we know about massincarceration and all of the economic, political and educational reasons why there really isn’t opportunity for a lot of people and there hasn’t been for a long time but I think there is still this old myth out there that if they just tried harder they wouldn’t be homeless anymore, they wouldn’t be poor.” “Those of us who live in the city and see the reality of low-wage work and all of the constraints that exist for people, we know that’s not true. We really need to have a better ladder of opportunity.” One way of helping someone up that “ladder” is to see that they have basic shelter. “We believe that it is nearly impossible to get and keep a job, to maintain sobriety or recovery, to get an education, to heal family relationships if you are not securely housed,” Hersh said. “You have to have a place to live, it’s the foundation. That’s why we really believe in the ‘housing first’ model. The reason we have so many people still out on the street and so many people who cycle through homelessness is because we don’t have enough affordable housing and we don’t have enough places for people to live that they can afford on very, very low income.” “That’s really the affordable housing crisis and that’s the homeless crisis. That’s really at the core,” she said. Hersh said that “the failure of the affordable housing crisis on the national level is one of the main reasons that we have homelessness.” We will explore the affordable housing crisis and how it impacts Philadelphia in an upcoming issue.


AUGUST 19, 2020 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • 9

City, Philadelphia Energy Authority encourage residents and businesses to install Solar with Second Annual Philadelphia Solar Week In addition to Solarize Philly and the Solar Savings Grant Program, PEA also leads Bright Solar Futures, a workforce development initiative to establish the nation’s first Solar Energy Career and Technical Education (CTE) program at Frankford High School. Rising 10th grade students are eligible to enroll now in the inaugural Frankford solar class which will start this Fall. PEA also offers solar training for young adults age 1830 through a paid training fellowship in partnership with PowerCorpsPHL. Bright Solar Futures is supported by an award from the U.S. Department of EnBy Haywood Brewster ergy.” Staff Reporter “The Philadelphia Energy Campaign posihe City of tions us as a national Philadelphia leader in leveraging and Philadelclean energy projects phia Energy Authorto drive equitable ecoity (PEA) kick off the nomic development,” said  Council President second annual PhilaDarrell Clarke (5th Disdelphia Solar Week, trict). “We know that encouraging Philadelsolar lowers electric phians to go solar to help drive the economic bills, creates living recovery. PEA reopened wage jobs, and reduces our climate impact. Solarize Philly on the Let’s continue to take 50th anniversary of the lead by powering Earth Day this year, Philadelphia’s New providing free remote Normal with solar ensolar assessments and ergy.” a new Solar Savings Solarize Philly is a Grant Program to include households of all group buying program income levels. Installa- to help all Philadelphians go solar. The tions for the program largest program of have resumed in line its kind in the nation, with COVID safety Solarize Philly has faguidelines. Interested cilitated a $10 million property owners can sign up at solarizephinvestment in Philailly.org.  delphia’s clean energy “Going solar in 2020 economy since 2017 will not only move us and created 94 jobs. Solarize Philly’s Solar toward our climate Savings Grant Progoals but is also good for our economy,” May- gram provides grants paired with financing or Jim Kenney said. to low- and moderate“Solar Week is an opincome households to portunity to celebrate how far we have come go solar at no upfront cost, and with utility and to support each other to do more to ac- bill savings from Year celerate Philadelphia’s 1. PEA started consultations for the Solar Savtransition to clean en-

T

ings Grant Program in August 2020. Spots in the Grant Program are limited, so interested households are encouraged to sign up now at solarizephilly.org. “The Solar Savings Grant Program made it possible to solarize my house, something that would have been financially out of my reach at this time. For me, going Solar is a critical and responsible step towards reducing non-renewable energy and combating climate change,” stated Megan Biddle, the first participant to sign a solar contract through the Solar Savings Grant Program. “Philadelphia City Council is proud to encourage Philadelphians to take advantage of the benefits of solar through the second annual Philadelphia Solar Week. Whether you are a property owner considering solar for your roof or a job seeker looking for a clean energy career, Philadelphia Solar Week has something for you,” added Councilmember Katherine Gilmore Richardson (At-Large), Chair of the Committee

on the Environment. Philadelphia Solar Week includes a full schedule of online events, including events for homeowners and businesses on how to go solar, a session on Doing Solar Business in Philadelphia, a Friday keynote and graduation ceremony for the 2020 Bright Solar Futures trainees. Job seekers are invited to attend a career panel on clean energy careers, and PEA put out a call for youth to submit artwork for a Solar Art Competition, with prizes sponsored by PECO. All events will take place virtually, and event details can be found at solarizephilly. org.  “In Philadelphia, we know solar creates savings, fights climate change and produces high quality local jobs,” said PEA’s Executive Director Emily Schapira. “Our second annual Solar Week will celebrate the growth of solar in our region, share the benefits of solar for the COVID recovery, and jumpstart careers for those who are positioned to benefit the most.”

ergy and sponsorship by PECO. About Philadelphia Energy Authority  The Philadelphia Energy Authority (PEA) is an independent municipal authority created in 2010 to advance clean and affordable energy goals for the City. PEA has facilitated over $100 million in clean energy projects in Philadelphia since 2017, creating more than over 1,000 jobs. PEA’s $1 billion Philadelphia Energy Campaign, launched in 2016 with the leadership of City Council President Darrell Clarke, will create 10,000 jobs by 2026 through the implementation of clean energy and energy efficiency projects. For more information visit www.philaenergy.org.

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10 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • AUGUST 19, 2020

SPORTS: Philadelphia Union sign Jack McGlynn to a homegrown player contract Academy product becomes 14th Homegrown Player in club history; Signing to take effect on January 1, 2021 By Haywood Brewster Staff Reporter

P

hiladelphia Union has announced that the club has signed current Union II midfielder Jack McGlynn to a Homegrown Player contract. A 17-year-old central midfielder, McGlynn joined the Union Academy in 2019 and becomes the 14th Homegrown player in Union history. The Homegrown contract will take effect on January 1, 2021. “We are excited to welcome Jack to the First Team,” said Ernst

Tanner, Union Sporting Director. “After signing with Union II, he has continued to impress the technical staff with his development after making an early impact with our USL team. His ability to play across the midfield and his capacity to process new information and put it in to action on the pitch at a young age shows how high his ceiling can be.” McGlynn joins the club after his time at the Union Academy and a great start to his pro career with Philadelphia Union II where he will play for the remainder of the 2020 season. McGlynn has appeared in five of Union II’s six matches in 2020, starting in four and logging 388 minutes of USL experience.

Midfielder Jack McGlynn

You’re at higher risk.

Earlier this season, McGlynn scored his first USL goal and added his first USL assist in a breakout performance against New York Red Bulls II in a 3-2 win (August 5). His performance in that match earned him his first USL Team of the Week honors. TRANSACTION: Philadelphia Union sign midfielder Jack McGlynn as a Homegrown Player on August 17, 2020, with the signing effective January 1, 2021. Name: Jack McGlynn

Position: Midfielder Height: 5’11” Weight: 140 Born: July 7, 2003 in Middle Village, NY Hometown: Middle Village, NY Citizenship: United States Acquired: Philadelphia Union sign midfielder Jack McGlynn as a Homegrown Player on August 17, 2020, to become effective January 1, 202 About Philadelphia Union The Philadelphia

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Union is an innovative, forward-thinking professional soccer club competing in Major League Soccer (MLS) and one of Philadelphia’s five major league sports teams. Driven by unprecedented fan support, MLS awarded the Philadelphia expansion franchise rights to Jay Sugarman in 2008 and the Union kicked off its inaugural season in 2010. The club has reached the finals of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup in 2014, 2015 and 2018, and has appeared in the MLS Cup Playoffs in 2011, 2016, 2018 and 2019. The Union play at Subaru Park in Chester, PA on the banks of the Delaware River. The custom-built stadium is part of the Union’s unique waterfront campus, featuring a historic power plant rebuilt into a 400,000 sq. ft. creative office building, a state-of-the-art Training Complex, over 7 acres of professional-grade practice pitches and multiple onsite parking fields. For more information about the Philadelphia Union, visit www.philadelphiaunion.com and follow @PhilaUnion on Twitter or Instagram.


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12 • PHILLYFREEPRESS.COM • UCREVIEW.COM • AUGUST 19, 2020

Tracey Gordon, Register of Wills to hold forum on tangled titles, wills and estates a generation that took pride in homeownert a time when long-time incumbent to ship, and it is in my become Philadelphia’s interest as the register incumbents Register of Wills, Gor- of wills to protect that are falling like dominoes pushed don have been a comtradition for all Philaby a new wave of new munity activist known delphians by introducto neighbors and ofchallengers with fresh ing comprehensive ficial for her committed probate reform” said visions of how people fight to beautify and and their communithen Register of Wills maintain her comties should be served, candidate Tracey Gormunity, protecting the don who went on to Tracey Gordon stood out. Neighborhoods in homes of its members win the seat. Philadelphia are being from conditions, cirPerfect Place Real aggressively gentrified cumstances and govEstate has long made ernment bureaucracy and long-term resiit their mission to help which makes maintain- the average citizen realdents forced to move out of their homes due ing their properties a ize the universal dream challenge. to rising taxes and, of owning a home “Within the next 25 even more daunting, and, like Gordon, have tangled titles, or homes years, over $68 trillion become advocates for in wealth will be trans- those who struggle to in which they are not ferred from Boomers listed on the deed of acquire and maintain to younger generations property of their own. the property in which they may have lived all (the largest wealth They made it their transfer in American of their lives. mission to not just sell history). I come from Before defeating A homes but to build

A

communities. To reach their mission of making home ownership a reality for the residents of the communities they serve, Perfect Place Real Estate have began a series of educational forums on the social media site Zoom. Issues such as Credit repair, property care and maintenance, and resources for property owners are discussed by professionals in the respective subjects and answers and questions from the community are accepted and answered. On Thursday, August 20th at 6:00 pm, Tracey Gordon, Register of Wills will join with Perfect Place Real

estate to host a special Forty-Acres F.R.E.E. [Financial Real-estate Education] Tour on the social media site Zoom forum on the topic of Tangled Titles, estates and wills and you are

encouraged to be our guest. Please use Zoom link below to join the forum: https:// us02web.zoom. us/j/87309391786

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