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Philadelphia locals are divided over a crackdown that could remove 85% of Airbnb and Vrbo listings. A local Airbnb host said it's unfair and doesn't support it, even if it means less competition. The move could eliminate 85% of short-term rentals, or nearly 1,700 pads, according to the city's own estimate. It's a tiny window that seems unfair, local host Rob Brown told Insider. As a local, she's also experienced disturbances with short-term rentals in the area.
Persons: Lisette Santiago, Santiago, Rob Brown, Brown, Mark Squilla, WHYY, Airbnb, We've, she's, She's Organizations: Service, city's Department, Licenses, City, Temple University, Department, Travelers Locations: Philadelphia, Wall, Silicon, North Philadelphia, Temple
The city estimates nearly 1,700 short-term rentals are at risk of being removed from the platforms. By the city's own estimate, the crackdown could shut down 85% of all short-term rentals in the city — or nearly 1,700 units. Scottsdale Councilmember Solange Whitehead told Insider that issues over short-term rentals had reached a boiling point. In Bozeman, Montana, where short-term rentals nearly doubled during the pandemic, some locals have called for a permanent ban. Host Michael Rutkowksi told Insider that the town should start with enforcing the licensing requirements already on the books.
Persons: Jim Kenney, that's, Mark Squilla, WHYY, Airbnb, We've, Solange Whitehead, Michael Rutkowksi Organizations: Philadelphia, Service, city's Department, Licenses, City, Scottsdale Locations: Philadelphia, Wall, Silicon, Phoenix, Scottsdale , Arizona, Bozeman , Montana
Consensual sex workers and advocates say the law, an addition to Section 230, makes them less safe. I was doing online work in the past and this feels more dangerous' or 'I've experienced assault' since it happened," Cleary told Insider. After FOSTA was passed, sex workers, advocates, and some anti-trafficking groups predicted this outcome, warning lawmakers that the overbroad law would lead to a chilling effect and reduced resources for consensual sex workers and trafficking victims. If this law has had an effect on rates of trafficking in the United States, it has evidently only increased the risks sex workers and trafficking survivors face." "As Bardot Smith has said, 'Sex workers are often the canaries in the coal mine,'" Kendra Albert, the cyberlaw clinic instructor at Harvard Law School, told WHYY.
Persons: Rebecca Cleary, I've, Cleary, FOSTA, they're, SESTA, Lexi, HuffPost, TechDirt, Bardot Smith, Kendra Albert, WHYY Organizations: DC, Service, Communications, Twitter, Baylor University and West Virginia University, Craigslist, Harvard Law School Locations: Wall, Silicon, United States, Florida
Philadelphia officials are urging residents to refrain from "celebratory" gunfire on July 4. District Attorney Larry Krasner said firing a gun in the air is both dangerous and a crime. "Don't do stupid," Krasner urged Philadelphians. "Celebration should be safe," District Attorney Larry Krasner told reporters during a Monday morning press conference in West Philadelphia. The woman, who received stitches, told a local ABC affiliate that she agreed whoever was firing their gun into the air was "stupid."
Persons: Larry Krasner, Krasner, Philadelphians, , Benjamin Franklin, celebrants, WHYY, Krasner —, Vonda Hairston, Hairston Organizations: Service, Philadelphia, ABC, Philadelphia Sheriff's Locations: West Philadelphia, Port Richmond, Pennsylvania
A Philadelphia high school denied a student her diploma after she did "The Griddy" at graduation. The student said the principal told her she could not get a diploma because she made the audience laugh. Do not say nothing because I want my diploma," Abdur-Rahman told WHYY, a public radio station in Philadelphia. Abdur-Rahman told WHYY that the principal told her she could not receive her diploma because she made the audience laugh. Philadelphia High School for Girls Principal Lisa Mesi did not immediately return Insider's request for comment on Saturday.
Persons: , Renee Hadiyah Reid, Hafsah Abdur, Rahman, Abdur, Reid, WHYY, Lisa Mesi Organizations: Service, District, Philadelphia High School, Girls Locations: Philadelphia
Françoise Gilot, a tireless artist who defied simple categorization — and efforts to define her merely as a footnote in the story of her former lover Pablo Picasso — died Tuesday in New York. The early years of her career coincided with World War II and the Nazi occupation of Paris. In 1970, Gilot married her second husband, Jonas Salk, a virologist who developed one of the first polio vaccines. "Paloma à la Guitare" by Francoise Gilot (1965) was part of Sotheby's (Women) Artists Sale in 2021 in London, England. In 2012, Gagosian staged the first exhibition of Gilot’s work alongside Picasso’s, “Picasso and Françoise Gilot: Paris–Vallauris 1943–1953,” which focused on works made during their relationship.
Persons: Françoise, Pablo Picasso —, Aurelia Engel, Gilot, Engel, Madeleine Decre’s, Picasso, Carlton Lake, , Picasso’s, Pablo Picasso, Francoise Gillot, Roger Viollet, ” Gilot, , Claude, Paloma Picasso —, Luc Simon, Paris ’ Galerie Louise Leiris, York’s David Findley, Simon, Engel’s, Jonas Salk, Salk, Paloma, Francoise Gilot, John Phillips, Gerald Joyce, Jonas Salk —, Jonas, Gagosian, “ Picasso, John Richardson, Richardson, John Bright, , Jacques Chirac, Nicolas Sarkozy, WHYY’s Terry Gross Organizations: The Art, CNN, The New York Times, Paris ’ Galerie, United, Galleria Santo, Galerie Coard, Salk, Salk Institute, Acatos Publishing, New York, Penske Media, Museum of Modern Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, ville de, New Orleans Museum of Art, National Museum of Women, Arts, of Arts, National Merit, Legion Locations: New York, Paris, Neuilly, Seine, Nazi, Europe, United States, Venice, Dantesca, Turin, Pierre, , San Diego , California, Sotheby's, London, England, California, Antibes, ville de Paris, Washington , DC, France
The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania filed a federal complaint Thursday alleging one of the largest school districts in the state has created a widespread culture of discrimination toward LGBTQ students, particularly those who are transgender and nonbinary. The lawyers interviewed dozens of LGBTQ students and their parents, as well as current and former teachers and staff. The bullying forced some of them to miss school, and in 2019, a former transgender student attempted suicide, according to the complaint. Serving more than 18,000 students, Central Bucks drew national attention in 2021 as debates over pandemic policies gave way to larger culture-war clashes in the community. Amid a surge in anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and policy in school boards across the country, Walczak said, the alleged circumstances at Central Bucks are not an isolated situation.
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