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The Philadelphia Inquirer
Technology, Information and Internet
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19,837 followers
"In a free state, there should always be an inquirer asking on behalf of the people." -John Norvell, 1829
About us
Since 1829, The Philadelphia Inquirer has been “asking on behalf of the people” by providing essential journalism for the diverse communities of the Philadelphia region. The Inquirer, a for-profit public benefit corporation owned by the non-profit Lenfest Institute, produces Pulitzer Prize-winning journalism that changes lives and leads to lasting reforms. Its multiple brand platforms — including newspapers, Inquirer.com, e-Editions, apps, newsletters, and live events — reach a growing audience of more than 10 million people a month. “In a free state, there should always be an inquirer asking on behalf of the people: Why? Why? Why?” — John Norvell, Inquirer co-founder
- Website
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http://www.inquirer.com
External link for The Philadelphia Inquirer
- Industry
- Technology, Information and Internet
- Company size
- 201-500 employees
- Headquarters
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1829
- Specialties
- media , local news, journalism, advertising, digital media, newspapers, newsletters, events, website, apps, and news
Locations
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Primary
100 S. Independence Mall West
Suite 600
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106, US
Employees at The Philadelphia Inquirer
Updates
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In half of the United States' 50 most populous metros, a starter home isn't affordable for a household making the local median income, Redfin says. Prices and demand are up and housing supply is down.
Two Philly-area counties are top U.S. markets for affordable starter homes
inquirer.com
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Here's a look at the new dining options in Philadelphia and the suburbs, from the fancy (Mona) to the casual (Federal Donuts & Chicken).
The fall 2024 restaurant forecast: A Mike Solomonov oyster bar, a reborn West African spot, and a bistro behind a secret door
inquirer.com
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Legislative leaders in Trenton called the idea “a game-changer” for Camden, while a prominent Chinatown activist warned that the Sixers were simply trying to “scare politicians" in Philadelphia.
N.J. floats up to $400M in tax incentives for a Sixers arena development in Camden
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The legislature gave a boost to developers of historic buildings in Pennsylvania by increasing the annual size of the state's historic tax credit from $5 million to $20 million.
Pennsylvania’s historic preservation incentive received a huge boost this summer
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Up and down the Jersey Shore, buyers have been knocking down old, smaller homes and building McMansions. The owners of this historical Avalon home hope to find a buyer who won't demolish it.
A family who’s owned the Avalon ‘Monstrosity’ for 130+ years hopes to sell the home — on one condition
inquirer.com
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In Philadelphia, 500,000 people depend on SNAP. But 15 out of 100 people are still food insecure.
It’s been 60 years since LBJ made food stamps permanent to end hunger, but food insecurity is still high
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The money is a record round of annual funding for conservation and education programs focused on the watershed, which spans Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York.
$38M in funds for nature trail at FDR Park, Camden ‘waterfront schoolyard,’ invasive mud snails, other projects
inquirer.com
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Hanwha, which agreed to pay Aker $100 million for the drydocks, cranes and other shipbuilding facilities, promises to expand the yard and seek Navy work.
New owner wants to bring back Navy shipbuilding at Philly Shipyard
inquirer.com
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Metal plants are seeking even tariff protection against cheap imports from China and its many trading partners. Victory could bring back hundreds of jobs at this Pennsauken plant.
These South Jersey metal makers say unfair imports slow sales, hiring. Would more tariffs help?
inquirer.com