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  • Trump is changing the way aid goes to cities. Philly stands to lose tens of millions of dollars for housing.

    Trump is changing the way aid goes to cities. Philly stands to lose tens of millions of dollars for housing.

    Philadelphia stands to lose tens of millions of dollars in federal funds intended to fight homelessness under a plan issued by the Trump administration that advocates say could significantly disrupt permanent housing programs and return formerly homeless people to the streets.

    The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development released the plan earlier this month, saying it would “restore accountability” and promote “self-sufficiency” in people by addressing the “root causes of homelessness, including illicit drugs and mental illness.”

    Nationwide, advocates say, the HUD plan could displace 170,000 people by cutting two-thirds of the aid designated for permanent housing.

    The number of individuals in Philadelphia at risk of losing stable housing hasn’t been tallied because the city’s Office of Homeless Services (OHS) is still reviewing the plan’s impact, said Cheryl Hill, the agency’s executive director.

    Overall, there are 2,330 units of permanent housing, many of them financed by $47 million the city received from HUD last year, according to city officials.

    The new strategy comes as Mayor Cherelle L. Parker attempts to move ahead with an ambitious plan to increase the supply of affordable housing in the city. Parker declined to comment on the Trump administration’s policy shift.

    A preliminary analysis by HopePHL, a local anti-homelessness nonprofit, estimates around 1,200 housing units with households of various sizes would lose federal aid and no longer be accessible to current residents, all of whom are eligible for the aid because they live with a physical or mental disability.

    HUD plans to funnel most of the funding for permanent housing into short-term housing programs with requirements for work and addiction treatment. The agency also said that it’s increasing overall homelessness funding throughout the United States, from $3.6 billion in 2024 to $3.9 billion.

    “This new plan is disastrous for homelessness in Philadelphia,” said Eric Tars, the senior policy director of the National Homelessness Law Center, who lives and works in Philadelphia. “The biggest immediate harm would be that those who were once homeless but are now successfully living in apartments will be forced out of their homes.”

    Other critics say the policy is based on a failed model that strips away civil liberties and doesn’t address what scholars and people who run anti-homelessness agencies say is the main reason Americans are homeless: the dearth of affordable housing.

    “We have broad concerns about what we’re seeing,” said Candice Player, vice president of Advocacy, Public Policy and Street Outreach for Project HOME, the leading anti-homelessness nonprofit in Philadelphia. “We are all in a very difficult position here.”

    Amal Bass, executive director of the Homeless Advocacy Project, which provides legal services to those experiencing homelessness, agreed, saying the city is “bracing for homelessness to increase in Philadelphia as a result of these policy choices.”

    The need to house thousands of people suddenly made homeless would force cities, counties, and states to spend money they may not have, according to a statement from the National Alliance to End Homelessness.

    Asked for comment, a HUD spokesperson sent a statement saying the agency seeks to reform “failed policies,” and refutes claims that the changes will result in increased homelessness.

    HUD hopes that current permanent housing shift to transitional housing will include “robust wraparound support services for mental health and addiction to promote self-sufficiency.”

    The agency added that it wants to encourage the “12,000 religious organizations in Pennsylvania to apply for funding to help those experiencing homelessness.”

    New restrictions on ‘gender ideology extremism’

    The federal government funds local governments to address homelessness through so-called Continuums of Care (CoC), local planning bodies that coordinate housing and other services. In Philadelphia, the CoC is staffed by the city’s Office of Homeless Services, and governed by an 18-member board, including homeless and housing service providers, and physical and behavioral health entities.

    In its plan, HUD will require the local planning bodies to compete for funding, and will attach ideological preconditions that could affect how much money a community like Philadelphia receives.

    For example, the new HUD plan “cracks down on DEI,” essentially penalizing a local board for following diversity, equity, and inclusion guidelines. HUD would also limit funding to organizations that support “gender ideology extremism“ — programs that “use a definition of sex other than as binary in humans.” And HUD will consider whether the local jurisdiction“prohibits public camping or loitering,” an anti-encampment mandate that advocates such as the Legal Defense Fund say criminalizes homelessness.

    Funding for programs that keep people in permanent housing could be cut off as early as January, according to HUD documents.

    Philly an early adopter of Housing First

    The new HUD policy dovetails with the views of President Donald Trump, who signed an executive order in July that sought to make it easier to confine unhoused people in mental institutions against their will.

    Trump has also said he wants municipalities to make urban camping illegal, helping to clear homeless encampments from streets and parks. He’s expressed a preference for moving people who are homeless from municipalities to “tent cities.”

    Planners in Utah are working toward creating such a facility known as an “accountability center” that would confine people who are experiencing homelessness and force them to be treated for drug addiction or behavioral health issues.

    HUD’s new direction is a repudiation of Housing First, which gives people permanent housing and offers services without making them stay in shelter and mandating treatment for drug abuse or behavioral health issues. Philadelphia was an early adopter and was the first U.S. city to use it specifically for people with opioid disorders, according to Project HOME, which was cofounded by Sister Mary Scullion, an early proponent of Housing First.

    Time and again it’s been proven that “offering, rather than requiring, services to help those who are homeless, has greater effect,” said Michele Mangan, director of Compliance and Evaluation at Bethesda Project, which provides shelter, housing, and case management services to individuals experiencing homelessness in Philadelphia.

    The administration’s move toward transitional housing and required treatment hasn’t worked before, according to Dennis Culhane, a social policy professor at the University of Pennsylvania who’s an expert in homelessness and assisted housing.

    The people most in need of help couldn’t comply with clean and sober requirements and were evicted, he said.

    “It’s a misguided approach that blames the victim and fails to address the lack of affordable housing,” Culhane said. On the other hand, Housing First has had an 85% success rate in helping to lead people out of homelessness, Culhane said.

    He added that he “distrusts the administration’s motivation. It just wants people out of sight and moved into fantastical facilities with tents and alleged care because they’re seen as a nuisance.”

    Ultimately, said Gwen Bailey, HopePHL’s vice president of programs, it’s not clear whether the Trump administration “thinks it’s doing the right thing. I don’t know their data.

    “But in Philadelphia right now, today, I see all kinds of people facing frightening situations.”

    Staff writer Sean Collins Walsh contributed to this article.

  • Your guide to Philly’s 2025 Thanksgiving Day Parade

    Your guide to Philly’s 2025 Thanksgiving Day Parade

    When you think of a Thanksgiving parade do you immediately picture the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City? Well, you shouldn’t! Not when Philadelphia has its very own parade that happens to be the oldest Thanksgiving parade in the country. New York City may have Snoopy, but we have Red Fraggle from Fraggle Rock, OK? And if that’s not hip enough for you, we also have Peppa friggin’ Pig. Take that, Charlie Brown.

    Now in its 106th year, the 2025 6abc Dunkin’ Thanksgiving Day Parade will be stacked with performers and stars like Kelly Ripa and, did we already mention, Red Fraggle from Fraggle Rock? The cast of Abbott Elementary will be there too.

    Whether you plan on attending in person, or catching it on television, here is everything you need to know about the nation’s first (and best) Thanksgiving Day parade. Happy Thanksgiving, Philly.

    Red Fraggle from the hit TV show “Fraggle Rock ” makes her way down 16th Street toward the Parkway during the 6abc Dunkin’ Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2023.

    Parade route

    This year’s 6abc Dunkin’ Thanksgiving Day Parade broadcast starts at 8:30 a.m., with the parade kicking off at 9 a.m.

    The route starts at 20th Street and John F. Kennedy Boulevard and heads east toward 16th Street, where it turns left and heads north to the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. From there, the parade follows the Parkway west to Eakins Oval and the Philadelphia Art Museum, where it concludes. The parade is free to attend.

    Weather

    Thanksgiving is still a few days away, but early reports from Weather.com are calling for partly cloudy skies with highs hovering in the mid-40s and lows in the 30s.

    Make sure to check the National Weather Service the day before Thanksgiving for the most accurate forecast.

    Thanksgiving parade road closures

    The following street closures will be in effect on Thursday, Nov. 27:

    Midnight to noon

    • 20th Street between JFK Boulevard and Market Street

    2 a.m. to 11 a.m.

    • 20th Street between the Ben Franklin Parkway and Race Street

    5 a.m. to noon

    • 20th Sreet between JFK Boulevard and Arch Street

    6 a.m. to noon

    • 20th Street between Market Street and the Ben Franklin Parkway

    7:30 a.m. until the end of the parade

    Full parade route, including:

    • JFK Boulevard from 30th Street to 16th Street
    • 20th Street from Market Street to the Ben Franklin Parkway
    • 16th Street from JFK Boulevard to the Ben Franklin Parkway
    • Ben Franklin Parkway to the Art Museum

    Parking

    There will be “Temporary No Parking” signs posted in areas on and around the parade route starting Wednesday, Nov. 26, at 6 p.m., the Office of Special Events said. Cars parked in prohibited parking areas will be relocated. If you believe your car has been relocated, The Inquirer has a guide on what to do when you’ve been “courtesy towed.”

    Metered parking elsewhere in the city is free on Thanksgiving. Additionally, you can check the Philadelphia Parking Authority’s website for a list of parking garages and parking lots around the parade route.

    SEPTA service

    The parade route is blocked off to traffic, impacting SEPTA’s bus service from 2 a.m. until 5 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 27.

    Routes affected during this time include Route 2, Route 7, Route 17, Route 27, Route 31, Route 33, Route 38, Route 43, Route 44, Route 48, Route 49, Route 124, Route 125, L1 OWL.

    For detailed information about route detours, check SEPTA’s System Status Page at septa.org. You can also follow real-time updates on the agency’s System Status website, via TransitView on the SEPTA app, or on X at @SEPTA_Bus.

    Actor Lisa Ann Walter, from “Abbott Elementary,” waves to the crowd during the 105th Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2024 in Philadelphia.

    Parade floats and performers

    Guests this year include the aforementioned Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos, Ryan Seacrest, Vanna White from Wheel of Fortune, former NFL quarterback Troy Aikman, and Good Morning America weather forecaster Sam Champion. There will also be performances from the iconic funk group Cameo and Motown legends the Four Tops.

    As for the floats, you saw our note about Red from Fraggle Rock, right? What more could you want?

    Where to watch

    If you’re looking to attend the parade, you can watch from anywhere along its route, for free.

    Some favorite spots to watch include the Franklin Institute, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Eakins Oval, and Logan Circle.

    How to watch from home

    The parade will air live from 8:30 a.m. until noon on 6abc and can be streamed via the station’s website, the 6abc Philadelphia News App, or on Disney+ and ABCNewsLive beginning at 9 a.m.

  • New Jersey teen charged in murder of his mother

    New Jersey teen charged in murder of his mother

    A 17-year-old in Mays Landing, N.J., was charged with the murder of his mother, 49-year-old Julissa Serrano, on Saturday, the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement.

    Prosecutors said the Hamilton Township Police Department received a 911 call on Saturday evening about a young man with a knife at Meadowbrook Condos in Mays Landing. When officers arrived, they found Serrano with multiple stab wounds. She died from her injuries after being transported to a nearby medical center, the prosecutor’s office said, and her cause of death is pending an autopsy.

    Officials did not release the name or any other details about the 17-year-old. He was charged with murder, possession of a weapon for unlawful purpose, and unlawful possession of a weapon, the prosecutor’s statement said. He is now in custody at the Harborfields Atlantic Youth Center.

    Attempts to reach Serrano’s relatives and next-door neighbors were not immediately successful.

    The Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office Major Crimes Unit and the Hamilton Township Police Department are leading the investigation, and ask that anyone with information about Serrano’s death call the Major Crimes Unit at 609-909-7666.

  • The green bean casserole, an iconic Thanksgiving side dish with a N.J. connection, turns 70 this year

    The green bean casserole, an iconic Thanksgiving side dish with a N.J. connection, turns 70 this year

    In 1955, Dorcas Bates Reilly of Haddonfield was tinkering with her team in the home economics department at the Campbell Soup Co., trying to recreate a casserole recipe that a manager had tasted somewhere. The team had been tasked with using ingredients most American families would already have on hand.

    After a series of experiments, documented on a typed recipe card that is now part of the National Inventors Hall of Fame, Reilly, who was 29 at the time, hit upon the six-ingredient winner.

    Now known as green bean casserole, the dish that has become a Thanksgiving icon turns 70 this year.

    The original green bean casserole recipe card in the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

    The “Green Bean Bake,” as it was called at the time, mainly relied on green beans and Campbell’s condensed cream of mushroom soup, along with a splash of milk, soy sauce, and black pepper. Crispy fried onions topped it off.

    “It was such a rewarding feeling when your recipe was published,” Reilly told Drexel University’s alumni spotlight when she visited the campus years later. She had graduated from Drexel’s Home Economics program in 1947.

    She never knew her careful experimentation (“onions too salty, beans lack freshness, too many onions,” she wrote in an early version of the recipe) would become a national star.

    “How would she know of the thousands of recipes she worked on over all those years that there was one that stood out?” Reilly’s daughter, Dorcas R. Tarbell, 64, asked.

    Before settling on the final ingredients, Reilly had played around with adding Worcestershire and slices of ham. Campbell’s began printing Reilly’s recipe on the back of its cream of mushroom soup can labels in 1960.

    Dorcas Reilly, on the set of live TV commercials that were filmed in the late 1940s atop the original Campbell’s plant in Camden. Reilly was a Campbell’s Soup kitchen supervisor in 1955 when she combined green beans and cream of mushroom soup, topped with crunchy fried onions. It is the most popular recipe ever to come out of the corporate kitchen at Campbell’s.

    Tarbell said her mother had not known how popular the dish was until 1995, 40 years after its creation.

    That was when Campbell’s marketing team studied sales data and found that cream of mushroom soup sales spiked in October and November, and dropped in January. They told Reilly that her recipe was the company’s most-requested ever.

    After that, Reilly became “the ambassador of the green bean casserole,” Tarbell said. Each year, she talked to radio stations and newspapers, and traveled to stockholder meetings to talk about the dish.

    Reilly died in 2018 and was celebrated in obituaries across the country as the “grandmother of the green bean casserole.”

    Thomas H. Reilly, 99 years old, is reflected in his foyer mirror as he looks out the front door of his home in Haddonfield at the giant inflatable green bean casserole his daughter ordered to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the famous dish.

    This year, to celebrate the anniversary of her mother’s famous dish, Tarbell ordered an enormous, custom-made, inflatable green bean casserole to bedeck the lawn of her 99-year-old father and Reilly’s widower, Thomas H. Reilly.

    “I thought, what better gift can I give than to honor the love of his life through the green bean casserole?” Tarbell, who lives down the street, said. “At this point, you have to have humor in life.”

    In a town full of yards featuring inflatable Thanksgiving turkeys and pilgrims (and a few early Santas and snowmen), the six-foot side dish stands out.

    Also in honor of the 70th anniversary, Reilly’s niece, Evelynne Bates Stoklosa, who is 80, established a research grant in honor of her aunt through Phi Upsilon Omicron, a national honor society for the Family and Consumer Sciences, the modern name for home economics. The research focus for the next two years will be “areas representing culinary arts, food science, nutrition, and dietetics.”

    As for her mother’s dish — which is especially popular in the Midwest — it will likely appear on more than half of Thanksgiving tables nationwide this week, Campbell said.

    Growing up, Tarbell said the family never ate green bean casserole. But after they realized Reilly had created a star dish, the family embraced it.

    “Of course, we have green bean casserole at Thanksgiving,” Tarbell said, adding, “We have it at Christmas. We have it at Easter.”

    Dorcas Reilly and a small unnamed admirer, with the iconic green bean casserole Mrs. Reilly invented.
  • Philadelphia’s Ukrainian American community rebukes proposed Russia-Ukraine peace plan

    Philadelphia’s Ukrainian American community rebukes proposed Russia-Ukraine peace plan

    About 60 people gathered at a North Philadelphia Ukrainian American club on Sunday afternoon to condemn a U.S.-brokered proposal to end Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    Waving Ukrainian flags and hoisting signs that read, “Appeasement Isn’t Peace,” demonstrators outside the Ukrainian American Citizens’ Association described the plan as a laughable, “copy-and-paste” of Russia’s demands, signaling America’s willingness to capitulate to the Kremlin.

    The peace deal put together by Washington and Moscow calls for Ukraine to cede territory, reduce its military, and give up on NATO membership — stipulations that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has categorically rejected in the past.

    “Nobody in their right mind would ask a country to give up its territory,
its military, its freedoms,” said Ulana Mazurkevich, president of the Philadelphia-based Ukrainian Human Rights Committee. “They do not know Ukrainians. … We will not give up — we fight, we fight, we fight.”

    The 28-point blueprint to end the nearly four-year war may force Ukraine to choose between standing up for its sovereignty and preserving American allyship, Zelensky said last week when the proposal was leaked. Simultaneously on Sunday, world leaders convened in Geneva, Switzerland, to discuss the contentious plan. (Trump has pushed Ukrainian officials to accept the plan by Thanksgiving.)

    “We will rebuild but it won’t be the same, and I just feel such pain and anger at how much they have taken from us over and over and over again,” the rally’s co-organizer Mary Kalyna said. “It’s not just dirt, there are people there.”

    Kalyna added: “It’s like a reward for the aggression, which we will not stand for. We cannot stand for it.”

    Olena Chymch (right), from Germantown, joins other Ukrainians and Ukrainian Americans at an emergency rally Sunday Nov. 23, 2025, to protest the 28-point “peace plan” for Ukraine.

    While Russia would make almost no concessions, the plan would severely weaken an already decimated Ukraine; in return, Kyiv — which has said it was not involved in the drafting of the peace proposal — would receive international security guarantees and reconstruction assistance.

    Bucks County U.S. Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, a longtime defender of Ukraine and member of the Ukraine Caucus, called the plan “Russian-drafted propaganda” on social media.

    “This moment requires Peace Through Strength, not appeasement,” the Republican congressman wrote on X.

    Between renditions of the Ukrainian national anthem and “Glory to Ukraine” salutes, protesters on Sunday also rebuked the plan’s amnesty agreement, which would likely mean Russian officials and soldiers could not be prosecuted for war crimes. “The rapists, the murderers, the genocidal maniacs … are all supposed to be forgiven — absolutely no prosecutions,” said Ukrainian American Eugene Luciw.

    “That’s what America stands for? Does America stand for justice?”

    This article contains information from the Associated Press.

  • ‘Philly will eat you alive’: Runners brave the deceptively challenging route of the city’s marathon

    ‘Philly will eat you alive’: Runners brave the deceptively challenging route of the city’s marathon

    Feet blistered, toenails were lost.

    Some chafed in places unimaginable.

    Others questioned it all as they attacked the hill leading to the Manayunk portion of the race.

    For the thousands of runners who crossed the Philadelphia Marathon finish line Sunday, the view of the Philadelphia Art Museum steps capped a blissful, sometimes brutal, 26.2-mile run.

    Whether they ran for personal bests or charity, the roughly 17,000 registrants couldn’t have asked for better weather, which largely remained in what studies say is the sweet spot of 39 to 50 degrees. No brutal winds to report, either.

    The fine weather was a stroke of luck for runners and spectators alike.

    Philadelphia resident Latasha Clark, 47, and her daughter Brianna, 23, began waiting at Eakins Oval around 6:30 a.m., when it was much colder, with a homemade sign that read “you go girl” with carefully cut out letters.

    Clark expected her daughter Trinity to finish around 11 a.m. but she wanted to secure a visible spot along the final mile. Philadelphia would mark her daughter’s first marathon and she trained for it while juggling classes at Arcadia University. Clark didn’t want to miss the photo finish and she wasn’t taking any chances.

    “She would run every morning before class,” said Clark, beaming with pride. “She would call and wake me up and say, ‘I’m ready to run.’”

    The crowd turnout did not go unnoticed.

    First-time marathoner Charlie Marquardt, 31, said the spectators “really helped out” and he was ultimately able to run the race he wanted thanks to the weather and motivation. A new father as of March, Marquardt said he was likely going to take it easy for a bit and try to do the Broad Street run in May.

    Caroline Kellner, 31, was also grateful for the crowds. The Ewing, N.J., resident couldn’t believe how many people were out cheering so early in the morning, calling it “the most spirited marathon” she’s participated in. There isn’t a huge running community in Ewing, said Kellner, making training runs somewhat lonely.

    “Here I feel like the first 10 to 15 miles, you just feel so good,” she said of the spectators. “Then, you know, you hit mile 20, and it’s hanging on for dear life.”

    The Philadelphia Marathon course is often billed in running circles as a relatively flat race. But there are some hills, and the one that leads to Manayunk’s boisterous Main Street is a bit of a cruel tease in timing.

    Before the Manayunk crowds appear, toting shots of beer and doling out pastries and high fives, there’s a stretch of road where all you hear is the echo of sneakers bouncing off a wall — it’s tough for spectators to gather there.

    It’s around the 18-mile mark that marathoners will sometimes hit “the wall,” a sign that a runner’s store of carbohydrates has slowly been depleted and calories are in need of replenishing. Still, the famous wall is as much psychological as it is physical.

    Sharon Tejada (right), a co-leader of Queer Run, encourages the roughly 17,000 runners heading out on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway at the start of the annual Philadelphia Marathon on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025.

    New York City runner Mitch Kapler, 43, might be in the minority, but said he enjoyed the silence in a moment when his energy was drained and he needed to focus.

    “Especially in the back part, there’s an element of not wanting to see as many people,” he said, adding that he appreciated that the course offered a taste of the city as well as a hint of scenic foliage.

    In a way relatable to many long-distance runners, Kellner joked that she “blacked out” the memory of the lead-up to Manayunk, choosing to remember the effervescent crowds instead.

    Burlington Township, N. J., resident Brooks Sanders, 42, said that the final section of the race is what, in his mind, makes Philly harder than the New York City Marathon.

    “Philly will eat you alive,” said Sanders, who said people tend to underestimate the course difficulty. “In New York, you can rely on a crowd.”

    For this race, that motivation has to come from the runner in the Kelly Drive stretches, where there aren’t a lot of people. And sometimes, runners like Kapler and Sanders fall short of personal goals. Wrapped in a Mylar blanket, Kapler was already planning his Philly Marathon “revenge tour” and Sanders, who was a few minutes shy of qualifying for the Boston Marathon, similarly planned his return.

    Sanders said even the setback was part of the journey. He began running in 2021 when the love of his life and mother of his two children was diagnosed with stage 4 metastatic breast cancer. Running became therapeutic and he appreciated that the Philadelphia Marathon had close ties with the American Association of Cancer Research. By raising money for a possible cure, he felt he was doing something.

    Though Sanders’ wife died last year before he ran the New York City Marathon and the Philadelphia Marathon, he remains a devout supporter of the AACR, the weekend’s title sponsor, whose runners collectively fundraised more than $800,000.

    Between the amount raised for charity and the uncontrollable, such as weather, race organizers were pleased with the weekend’s turnout for the 8K, half marathon, and Sunday’s full marathon.

    Kathleen Titus, Philadelphia Marathon Weekend race director, said even with last-minute dropouts, organizers expect close to 17,000 runners to have hit the road Sunday after pulling from a 3,000-person wait list.

    Iris Annais, from Mexico City, talks to her mother, Rosa Gonzalez, back at home after finishing the Philadelphia Marathon on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025. It was her fifth marathon.

    One striking note from Sunday, said Titus, was the rise in first-time marathoners. The top female runner, 26-year-old Anna Oeser from Connecticut, ran her first marathon at 2:34:55. People who took up running during COVID-19 lockdowns have graduated from their 5K, 10K, and half-marathon races.

    “Over the past couple of years, we have seen the surge in participation in sport,” Titus said. “But people who maybe got their toes wet during the COVID period are now taking to the streets.”

    It wasn’t all first-timers on the course, however, with South African professional runner Melikhaya Frans, 35, winning the male category with 2:13:57. He was a last-minute addition to the race after the Sanlam Cape Town Marathon, a major, was canceled due to weather.

    The top male in the wheelchair category was Miguel Vergara of California at 1:44:22. Hannah Babalola of Illinois won the female wheelchair category at 2:15:21.

    The push rim wheelchairs head out on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway at the start of the annual Philadelphia Marathon on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025.

    Close to the finish line, families waited for their loved ones with changes of clothes and slippers.

    Joanna Campo, 50, a triathlete all too familiar with this particular feat of endurance, waited for her 17-year-old nephew from Rhinebeck, N. Y., to finish his first marathon, ready to provide some levity.

    “I’ve been training for months to hold this sign,” read Campo’s poster board of encouragement.

    The teen’s mother, Concetta Ferrari, 43, hoped to squeeze in some Philadelphia sightseeing but figured they’d probably let her son “soak in a bathtub and sleep.”

  • Trump renews call to jail Democrats, including two from Pa., after calling their video statement ‘punishable by death’

    Trump renews call to jail Democrats, including two from Pa., after calling their video statement ‘punishable by death’

    President Donald Trump doubled down on his call for six Democrats — including two members of Congress representing Pennsylvania — to be jailed over a video directed at U.S. troops.

    Writing on his Truth Social platform Saturday night, Trump once again claimed without evidence the six Democrats were traitors for telling troops to “refuse illegal orders.”

    “IT WAS SEDITION AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL, AND SEDITION IS A MAJOR CRIME,” Trump wrote in all caps. Trump had previously described their actions as being “punishable by DEATH” and shared one post from a supporter who wrote “HANG THEM GEORGE WASHINGTON WOULD !!”

    “To suggest and encourage that active duty service members defy the chain of command is a very dangerous thing for sitting members of Congress to do,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday. “And they should be held accountable. And that’s what the president wants to see.”

    U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, who represents Chester County, was among the six Democrats — all military veterans or members of the intelligence community — featured in a video urging service members to uphold their oath to the U.S. Constitution.

    “This administration is pitting our uniformed military and intelligence community professionals against American citizens,” the Democrats said in the video.

    A spokesperson for Houlahan did not immediately respond to a request for comment Sunday.

    After Trump’s initial call for the Democrats to be jailed and face the death penalty, the district offices of Houlahan and U.S. Rep. Chris Deluzio in Western Pennsylvania were targeted with bomb threats Friday, according to spokespersons for the elected officials.

    “Thankfully, the staff there as well as the office in Washington, D.C. are safe. We are grateful for our local law enforcement agencies who reacted quickly and are investigating,” a spokesperson for Houlahan wrote on social media.

    The video also features Sens. Elissa Slotkin of Michigan and Mark Kelly of Arizona, along with Reps. Jason Crow of Colorado and Maggie Goodlander of New Hampshire.

    “Leadership climate is set from the top, and if the president is saying you should be hanged, then we shouldn’t be surprised when folks on the ground are going to follow suit and say even worse,” Slotkin said on MS NOW Thursday.

    During an appearance on CNN Friday, Houlahan said she’s used to facing threats as an elected official, but the four-term member of Congress said this situation is unique.

    “I’m just continually stunned by the fact that I’m worried about [my safety] because the commander in chief, the president of the United States, has called for my death,” Houlahan said Friday morning. “That’s something that should just be chilling for everybody.”

  • ‘The sorrow that never goes away’: Mother of Mount Airy man who died in Northeast Philadelphia plane crash describes her grief during remembrance event

    ‘The sorrow that never goes away’: Mother of Mount Airy man who died in Northeast Philadelphia plane crash describes her grief during remembrance event

    Amira Brown doesn’t feel hope or joy seeing pictures of her son, Steven Dreuitt Jr.

    When she seeks solace, she instead turns to the people and things that Dreuitt touched, she told a gathering Saturday in an East Mount Airy church basement ballroom. She thinks of a young girl nicknamed “Precious” — a girl her son mentored and trained to play basketball, and who grew up to be a coach.

    “Every time I see her play, that puts a smile on my face,” Brown said. “I know that Steven taught her. Steven did that.”

    Dreuitt was among those killed when a medical jet crashed on Cottman Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia earlier this year. All six people who were aboard the plane — including an 11-year-old girl — died; at least 24 people were injured, and dozens of nearby homes caught fire or were damaged by debris.

    “I just keep trying to keep my head up, and I just keep going,” Brown said of the grief. “I just keep pushing.”

    Brown retold the events of Jan. 31 before a somber, 50-person crowd at Oxford Presbyterian Church as part of an annual remembrance service for grieving families. She said she had been messaging with her grandson Ramesses Raziel Dreuitt Vazquez on Jan. 31 just before the crash, which occurred a little after 6 p.m.; Dreuitt’s older son was at home waiting for his parents to return, she said.

    Dreuitt, 37, was driving his fiancee, Dominique Goods-Burke, and Ramesses, then 9, home from Macy’s when the Learjet medical transport plummeted from the sky, slammed into the ground, and exploded.

    The father — a family man who loved playing video games with his sons and cooking at his job at the Philadelphia Catering Co. — died at the scene. Goods-Burke, 34, described by her family as a fierce woman of “confidence, warmth, and creativity,” was hospitalized for months before she died of her injuries. Ramesses suffered serious burns to more than 90% of his body, requiring extensive medical treatment.

    Ramesses, now 10, has been transferred from a Boston hospital to one in New Jersey, according to Brown. His mother recently told CBS Philadelphia the boy hopes to be home by Christmas.

    While Brown spoke extensively about her pain, she also used the pulpit to recognize and bring light to the nearly 150 lives celebrated at the event, led by funeral director Ervina White Beauford.

    “When things happen, people talk,” she said. “But once the talk stops, there’s no one there but us. We all have different stories, but the one thing we all have in common is the pain, the hurt, and the sorrow that never goes away.”

  • The Philadelphia Marathon weekend returns, starting with a half marathon

    The Philadelphia Marathon weekend returns, starting with a half marathon

    Thousands of runners braved the fog, mud, and light drizzle Saturday for the return of the Dietz & Watson Philadelphia Half Marathon, one of three races on marathon weekend.

    Before 7 a.m., participants were in their corrals and ready to go, waiting on the 2200 block of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, just east of Eakins Oval. The weather did not favor them, but the jackets, winter hats, and layers of clothing covering their bodies would soon be discarded along the track and donated to the Salvation Army.

    Corral by corral, racers headed out for the 13.1-mile route, with the light of City Hall’s clock in the distance and the Philadelphia Art Museum behind them.

    After running through Old City and Center City, across the Schuylkill, past University City, and by Fairmount Park, Ariel Sanchez, 28, was back at Eakins Oval in an hour and a half. His mother, Aurelia Villegas, came from New York City for the day just to see him run.

    “I don’t run at all, just when I am trying to make it to work on time,” Villegas said. “But this is my first time coming to see him run in Philadelphia, and I am so proud.”

    Sanchez, a medical student, took on running as a break from the books and intense studying. He has been running for the last 387 days.

    “It’s kind of nice to be outside. … It’s a really beautiful course,” Sanchez said. “Philly is an underestimated city, so it’s good that people can come and see it.”

    Aurelia Villegas arrived in Philly early Saturday to watch her son Ariel Sanchez cross the finish line.
    Runners braved the fog, mud, and light drizzle on Saturday for the return of the Dietz and Watson Philadelphia Half Marathon

    A block away, a 3-year-old boy rose above the crowd on his uncle’s shoulders, looking for his mother, Leora Sauter, with a sign reading: “Go Mom! You are so fast.”

    Sauter, 32, has run many races before, including the Boston Marathon, her husband, Daniel Sauter, said. But this half marathon is special: It’s her first race since their daughter was born in 2024.

    “It is her way of recovering from postpartum and going back to the things she loves,” Daniel Sauter said. “She spends so much time taking care of us, it’s good she gets to do something for her.”

    As the family’s eyes fixated on the runners, Leora Sauter ran by, prompting their cheers. Pushing through her last stretch, she made it to the finish line in less than two hours. The family will be back on the Parkway on Sunday to see Daniel Sauter complete the AACR Philadelphia Marathon.

    Daniel Sauter and his family showed up to support partner Leora Sauter on her first race postpartum.
    Runners braved the fog, mud, and light drizzle on Saturday for the return of the Dietz and Watson Philadelphia Half Marathon

    Nearly 30,000 participants were expected to run throughout the weekend, including the marathon on Sunday, the half marathon, and Saturday’s Rothman Orthopaedics 8K. Some were professional runners, able to finish the half marathon course in less than an hour. Others were there for the memories.

    “Started from the couch … now he’s here!” read a sign held by three Villanova college students. They came to support their friend Joe.

    “It’s bittersweet. We are graduating this summer, so we are trying to squish every moment together,” said Sofia Arrascue, 21.

    After four years of friendship, the half marathon became a way for the seniors to further bond as graduation day approaches. Over the last couple of months, they have been picking up their friend from training locations and giving him confidence to finish the race, so seeing him run by toward the finish line felt like a full-circle moment.

    “Everything feels so uncertain; some of us are applying for jobs, others are applying to school, so all we have right now is each other,” said Majo James, 22.

    Rory Freeman,Majo Jame, and Sofia Arrascue came to support their friend Joe.

    That same desire to show up for loved ones spurred Jose and Mayra Rodriguez to take a plane from Puerto Rico to Philadelphia to see their daughter, Monica, cross the finish line.

    De pura cepa,” Mayra Rodriguez screamed upon spotting her daughter at the finish line, a reference to her Puerto Rican strength.

    After running for two hours and 21 minutes, Monica Rodriguez greeted her parents with a hug, banana and water bottle in hand.

    “It was hard. My thighs feel like two pieces of ham,” said Monica Rodriguez, 29. “But this is something you have to do at least once, even if it’s just a one-time experience. You are always going to remember it.”

    Monica Rodriguez’s parents, Jose and Mayra, came from Puerto Rico to support her.
  • City Councilmember Jeffery Young’s plan to relocate the Cecil B. Moore Library met with pushback from community who want to see it renovated

    City Councilmember Jeffery Young’s plan to relocate the Cecil B. Moore Library met with pushback from community who want to see it renovated

    During an occasionally contentious Saturday meeting on the future of the Cecil B. Moore Library in North Philadelphia, City Councilmember Jeffery Young Jr. told residents he wants to build a new library instead.

    But, as with Young’s previous suggestion that the city move the library, residents held fast to their stance that the 64-year-old building should be preserved.

    “This space is easily accessible to everyone who needs it, and that’s why it should be renovated, not relocated,” said Cierra Freeman of the Brewerytown Sharswood Neighborhood Coalition.

    She criticized Young for proposing a plan without any “tangible written documents” — and for presenting a solution that she said nobody had asked for.

    Young said he wants to build a new library less than a half mile away, using city property on 19th Street. He argued that the community — and teens in particular — would be better served by a new facility.

    “The systems in this library are old,” Young told the crowd of about 40 people gathered at the library on Cecil B. Moore Avenue near 24th Street. “They’re old. As we continue to use this space, things are just going to continue to fall apart.”

    It was the second time this year Young proposed a plan for the library. In March, he suggested that the city demolish the building and replace it with a new library that has affordable housing units above it — an idea that also drew intense pushback from community members.

    This time, Young suggested the current building be kept as a public space.

    Like the street it is on, the Cecil B. Moore Library is named for the civil rights figure — a World War II veteran, lawyer, and politician who, while serving as the Philadelphia NAACP president, played a central role in the push to desegregate Girard College.

    The building has issues with its aging HVAC, plumbing, and electrical systems, all of which need to be upgraded, according to the Save the Cecil B. Moore Library Greater Coalition. The library was closed from January through March this year due to problems with the heating system.

    Other renovation plans include building a new teen space, adding windows, an elevator to the basement, and ADA-accessible bathrooms, and other initiatives, the group said.

    Due to the city’s long tradition of councilmanic prerogative, Council members have near-total control over whether projects in their districts move forward. Young has not yet filed a “notice to proceed,” a necessary step to release funding and begin renovation, according to the coalition.

    Young said the needs of young people have changed significantly since the 1960s. He described a space with things like podcasting studios and e-gaming technology that he said would draw in young people.

    Councilmember Jeffery Young speaks to community members at the Cecil B. Moore Library Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025.

    “If you look at this community, there is nothing to attract teenagers,” Young said. “Our kids deserve better. Our kids deserve new things.”

    But many of those present, including Cecil B. Moore library worker and AFSCME union member Kate Goodman, said that moving the library east toward Temple University would remove a prime resource from a neighborhood that needs spaces for people to congregate.

    “It’s a half-mile, but it’s a whole world of difference,” said Jordan Holbert of the proposed move.

    Event moderator Joel Northam said that if the funds are not released soon, costs of labor and supplies will keep going up, shrinking the amount of work that can be done.

    “We literally can’t afford to have this put off,” Northam said.

    He suggested that the next step would be to support a campaign to unseat Young in 2027.