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  • 02 May 2022 1:30 PM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    Philadelphia needs poll workers. Help champion democracy—become a poll worker today.

    Poll Workers open voting machines at the beginning of the day, check voters into the polling place and support the functioning of the polling place.

    Individuals interested in filling these positions must attend training and be available to work on Election Day from 6:15 AM until election materials are picked up from the polling place location sometime after 8:00 PM.

    Appointed Poll Workers must be qualified electors of Philadelphia and meet all other qualifications required of election board officers.

    Learn more and apply below.

     

    Become a Poll Worker


  • 02 May 2022 1:22 PM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    May is Asian Pacific American Heritage Month! Established by the U.S. Congress in the 1990s, Asian Pacific American Heritage Month highlights the stories of people in the United States who are of Asian or Pacific Islander descent. This includes people from the Asian continent and islands across the South Pacific including Hawaii, American Samoa, Federated Islands of Micronesia, Guam, and more.

    This May, the City of Philadelphia and many community organizations are hosting celebrations as part of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month! See some of these events listed below.

    Celebrating Asian Pacific American Heritage Month! | Mayor's Office of Public Engagement | City of Philadelphia

  • 25 Apr 2022 1:13 PM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Philadelphia Department of Public Health has relied on local data to guide its efforts to mitigate the crisis. This has included the department’s changing recommendations and mandates about wearing masks to reduce the spread of transmission.

    In early April 2022, a worrying rise in case counts and hospitalizations prompted the City to announce a new mask mandate. Philadelphia residents masked up and redoubled their efforts to protect themselves and others. Thanks to them, the Health Department was happy to announce the end of the mask mandate on Friday, April 22, 2022. This decision was based on an assessment of hospitalization data and Philadelphia’s overall risk level.

    Masks are still strongly recommended in indoor public settings to help reduce transmission and keep Philadelphia at a low risk level.


  • 22 Apr 2022 11:47 AM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    The mask mandate ended with a unanimous vote from the Philadelphia Board of Health Thursday, and city health commissioner Cheryl Bettigole said the entire system being used to evaluate COVID-19 risk in the city was being scrapped.

    ”It is a rescission of the existing metrics that would require masking at a certain level,” said Bettigole.

    A news release from the Philadelphia Department of Public Health Friday morning confirmed the end of the tiered risk evaluation system.

    With the end of the indoor mask requirement, which required people to wear masks within indoor public settings like businesses, offices, and gyms, the city shifted to a “strong recommendation” that people cover their faces.


  • 18 Apr 2022 2:25 PM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    Hands Around City Hall

    On April 29 help us to form a human chain around City Hall by joining hands in a moment of silence as we honor the many people who have experienced sexual assault.

    We will draw attention to the work that needs to be done to ensure continued support of survivors and provide resources from many partner organizations.

    Sign up below.

    Hands Around City Hall


  • 12 Apr 2022 3:11 PM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    Philadelphia loves a champion! In 2021, five Philadelphia youth teams brought home national titles in football and cheer. 

    The championship teams will celebrate with their family, friends, and local communities this Saturday, April 9, at a Celebration of Champions hosted in their honor.

    Celebration of Champions honors a year of national titles for Philadelphia youth athletes | Office of Special Events | City of Philadelphia


  • 12 Apr 2022 3:00 PM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    New Year, Same Problem

    The pesky spotted lanternfly is about to emerge from its nests. So, April is the time to stop the insects before they take over another summer in southeastern Pennsylvania.

    Pennsylvania Wants You to Stop the Spotted Lanternfly Before It Hatches (msn.com)

  • 11 Apr 2022 2:46 PM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)
    Philadelphia’s indoor mask mandate is coming back. The city said Monday that it’s reached the Level 2: Mask Precautions stage of its four-tiered COVID-19 response system and it will reimpose the mask mandate on April 18.


    Philadelphia Reinstating Indoor Mask Mandate After Moving Into Level 2 Of 4-Tiered COVID-19 Response System – CBS Philly (cbslocal.com)


  • 07 Apr 2022 10:53 AM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

     La bohème returns to the AVA stage, April 28-May 14, 2022, performed by our award-winning Resident Artists. The story of love and loss against the backdrop of some of the most familiar and lush melodies in opera is sure to delight audiences and transport them to the streets of Paris. 

    CAST AND CREATIVE TEAM


    Maestro Christofer Macatsoris leads the AVA Opera Orchestra

    Jeffrey Buchman directs


    Sung in Italian with English supertitles


    La bohème Cast* (in order of appearance)

    • Rodolfo – Zach Rioux, Sahel Salam
    • Marcello – Kevin Godínez 
    • Schaunard – Peter Barber, Benjamin Dickerson
    • Colline – Eric Delagrange, Griffen Hogan Tracy
    • Benoit/Alcindoro – Cody Müller
    • Mimì – Yihan Duan, Renée Richardson
    • Musetta – Loella Grahn, Emily Margevich
    • Parpignol – Shawn Roth


    *Cast subject to change, date of each cast to be announced at a later time

    Performance Dates:


    • April 28, 2022, 7:30 PM - Young Professionals performance at AVA
    • April 30, 2022, 7:30 PM at AVA
    • May 3, 2022, 7:30 PM at AVA
    • May 5, 2022, 7:30 PM at AVA
    • May 7, 2022, 7:30 PM at AVA
    • May 10, 2022, 7:30 PM at Centennial Hall at the Haverford School, 450 Lancaster Ave, Haverford, PA 19041
    • May 14, 2022, 7:30 PM at Central Bucks South High School, 1100 Folly Rd, Warrington, PA 18976
    • For this performance, please call AVA for student or ADA tickets at 215-735-1685

    Get tickets here

  • 06 Apr 2022 10:22 AM | Travis Oliver (Administrator)

    Taken from the Wall Street Journal:

    Cities across the U.S. are grappling with the messy details necessary to make permanent the outdoor-dining sheds, igloos and patios that helped restaurants stay afloat during the height of the pandemic.

    Seattle, Denver, Atlanta and Los Angeles are in the process of developing plans to make their expanded outdoor-dining programs permanent. These programs were often set up to be temporary and allowed restaurants to apply for permits that gave them permission to use parking spaces and sidewalks for dining space. New York City officials are fighting a legal challenge seeking to block its outdoor-dining program

    New Orleans will begin reviewing plans this month for a permanent outdoor-dining scene. Adjustments made during the pandemic have led restaurant owners in the tourism-dependent city to rethink their priorities, said Jeff Schwartz, economic development director for New Orleans.  

    “Giving businesses an option of thinking about whether they prefer parking or tables, I think is a question that we haven’t asked before,” Mr. Schwartz said. “And it’s exciting to be able to have those kinds of conversations.”

    An outdoor-dining area in Queens, N.Y., in January. For many New York City restaurants, the outdoor-dining program has been a lifeline.

    So far, 40 businesses in New Orleans are participating in the program, which allows restaurants to set up dining space in public parking spots. The city expects more to join once the program becomes permanent, he said. 

    Expanded outdoor dining on sidewalks and on parking spaces, once a novelty at the beginning of the pandemic, has become a vital source of income for many restaurants over the past two years. In Los Angeles, a survey of restaurants with curbside dining areas found that 81% said they would have permanently closed without the outdoor modifications, according to city officials.  

    But making those programs permanent can be tricky for city officials with limited funds to ensure outdoor dining is safe, clean and accommodating for people with disabilities. They also have to navigate the concerns of neighbors and other businesses and balance that with the desires of the restaurants. 

    The process can be fraught. In New York City, a coalition of residents sued to block the city from making its outdoor-dining program permanent, which currently has over 12,000 establishments participating. They said many of the dining sheds that dot their neighborhoods have become eyesores and magnets for rodents, while patrons noisily eat dinner and drink in the street.  

    “There’s more rats, trash, noise, crowds,” said Diem Boyd, a resident of the Lower East Side of Manhattan and one of the people suing to stop the outdoor-dining program. “That’s the reality of the situation.”

    For many New York City restaurants, the program has been a lifeline.

    Alfredo Angueira operates a bar, beer garden and speakeasy in the Bronx. Those three businesses were “barely able to hang on” in the early months of the pandemic, he said. 

    Then, he said he invested a “couple thousand dollars” in outdoor-dining structures. “To say it saved us…that is not hyperbole. That is not me talking it up,” Mr. Angueira said. “That’s the truth. It saved us.”

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

    Do you hope pandemic-driven outdoor dining spots will remain in your city? Why or why not? Join the conversation below.

    Outdoor dining also offers a safer option for diners when Covid-19 infections rates surge. New York City health officials on Friday again recommended that people wear masks in indoor settings, as Covid-19 cases have begun to rebound. They stopped short of reimposing any requirements.  

    In the New York lawsuit, the plaintiffs attempting to block the outdoor-dining program allege the city failed to conduct a proper environmental-impact review when considering making the program permanent. A state judge agreed with the plaintiffs and ordered the city to conduct a study to examine what environmental impacts a permanent program would have on the city. 

    A New York City Hall spokesperson said the city is reviewing its legal options.  “The city has been undergoing a thorough and careful process in preparation for a permanent outdoor dining program,” the spokesperson said.  

    In Portland, Ore., more than 1,000 businesses are participating in the city’s outdoor-dining program. So far, restaurants haven’t had to pay for outdoor-dining permits, a policy that is set to end Aug. 31. 

    The city will then begin charging restaurants participating in the program, said Dylan Rivera, a spokesman for the Portland Bureau of Transportation, which oversees the program. 

    The fees will pay to staff teams of engineers to design standards for outdoor spaces, ensuring they have appropriate access for people with disabilities, don’t block visibility at intersections and include other safety measures, Mr. Rivera said. The fees are also expected to help replace the revenue lost from having metered parking spots replaced by a dining space, he said.

    Portland hasn’t yet determined how much the fees will be. The Portland Bureau of Transportation has asked the city council to approve enough funding for the program for the next three years to keep the fees modest, Mr. Rivera said. The city’s budget process is ongoing. 

    “If we don’t get council support, then at minimum those fees will be much higher than they would have been otherwise,” Mr. Rivera said. 

    High permit fees for outdoor dining, however, could alienate some businesses. There was an outcry from restaurateurs in Boston’s North End neighborhood over the $7,500 fee they are being asked to pay for 2022. 

    The permit would pay for mitigation measures, such as increased trash cleanup and rodent control caused by outdoor dining, city officials said. 

    Mayor Michelle Wu said late last month that North End restaurants could pay a monthly fee of $1,500 that would stretch over the course of five months, giving more flexibility to restaurants that can’t pay $7,500 upfront. About 80 North End restaurants participated in the program last year, according to city officials. 

    Restauratants in Boston’s North End neighborhood would have to pay a $7,500 fee to participate in this year’s outdoor-dining program.

    “I believe we can come to a situation this summer where our community members, which includes our residents and our restaurant owners, are all thriving,” Ms. Wu said at a news conference. “We need the resources to do that.”

    Joe Kinsella, a resident of Boston’s Beacon Hill neighborhood, said the city should hold off on imposing these fees on restaurants in the North End. 

    “I think this is an issue we shouldn’t be fighting this year,” Mr. Kinsella said. “Just let everybody do outdoor dining again, call it part of the pandemic. Let’s get one more year behind us and make it stable for next year.”

    Jen Royle, the chef and owner of Table, a restaurant in the city’s North End, said she hopes the restaurant community will be able to reach an understanding with residents worried about trash and rodents.

    “We’re not here to make any residents miserable. They have good points and we have good points,” Ms. Royle said. “The screaming and yelling, it’s not helping anybody. I think everyone’s doing more talking and not enough listening.”

    Write to Joseph De Avila at joseph.deavila@wsj.com and Camille Furst at camille.furst@wsj.com



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