All tagged 2020/07

A Rally, a March, and a Call to Action

A Black Lives Matter rally and march will take place Saturday, July 18, at Umoja Park in Swarthmore. The goal is raising awareness of the Black Lives Matter movement and its #WhatMatters2020 priorities. These include fighting racial injustice, police brutality, economic injustice, and voter suppression, as well as advocating for common-sense gun laws, LGBTQIA+ and human rights, and reform of the criminal justice and education systems.

Panel Wrestles With Racism and Inclusion

As the country wrestles with racial justice in the wake of the May 25 killing of George Floyd, Swarthmore’s Human Relations Commission (HRC) is attempting to finalize a mission statement, draft a diversity and inclusion statement for the borough, and identify concrete steps to improve Swarthmore’s racial climate.

Quiet July Council Meeting

Swarthmore Borough Council debated the benefits of continuing work over Zoom versus returning to in-person meetings at its July 13 legislative session. Also, a settlement has been reached for 311 Cedar Lane / 409 College Ave., some discussion of an anti-racism resolution, and a police policy review.

District Ponders how to Mitigate Risk

The Wallingford-Swarthmore School District plans to open schools for in-person instruction this fall, Superintendent Lisa Palmer wrote in a July 3 email to the school community. “However,” she continued, “we know school must look different.” Palmer went on to discuss the district’s tentative plans, which seek to balance the district’s preference for in-person instruction with concerns about the spread of COVID-19.

You Think Weird

Recently, I tried to convince a kid on my block that the soap bubbles he was blowing were his captured thoughts drifting up to outer space and that aliens were collecting them and storing them in a glittering galactic library. He stared at me for a long moment, then said, “You think weird.”

College Releases Fall Plan

Freshman and sophomores are the two main cohorts of Swarthmore College students invited to campus this fall. Incoming transfer students and resident assistants will also be permitted on campus. But even for those students, very little about college life will be normal.

Hoppy Days Near for Co-op?

Have a beer after work on the terrace of the Swarthmore Co-op? Pick up a bottle of wine along with your chicken and your dish soap? Many Swarthmoreans have long dreamed of such scenarios. Now those dreams are one giant step closer to coming true.

Corona-Summer Reading

Why do so many people seem embarrassed when they tell me what books they love and what books they’ve never read? And why do so many people tell me they know I’ll love a certain book when they have no idea what kind of books I love?

Board Adjusts Calendar, Approves ‘Teaching Tolerance’

School in the Wallingford-Swarthmore School District will start one week earlier than originally planned. The school board hopes this modest but significant measure would mitigate effects of a second wave of the coronavirus by keeping people out of school buildings for longer periods this fall and winter. Also, the anti-bias organization Teaching Tolerance will conduct a series of professional development workshops for WSSD teachers and staff next year.

Learning From Lockdown

I’ve seen a lot change because of COVID-19. I recently graduated from Swarthmore-Rutledge School, and I liked that my online instruction schedule was flexible. Still, I missed things like playing capture the flag and dodgeball with my classmates in gym class. I have learned a lot during the pandemic, like remembering to be grateful for everything and adjusting to changes. Staying at home is tough sometimes, but I’ll remember a lot about this time when I’m older.