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The Philadelphia Inquirer
Technology, Information and Internet
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19,360 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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The third charging station among more than 80 funded through NEVI money is set to open this month in Aston. Here's the latest on charging in our area, as EV sales growth has slowed a bit in 2024.
Federally funded EV charging is arriving in the Philly region
inquirer.com
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Shahied Dawan, former CFO of the nonprofit Universal Companies, was convicted earlier this year of enabling thefts of more than $500,000 by the organization's CEO, Rahim Islam.
Executive at Philly music icon Kenny Gamble’s nonprofit sentenced to 18 months for embezzlement scheme
inquirer.com
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The Season 16 contestant has raised over $1.6 million for his foundation, which provides scholarships to cover the cost of addiction treatment.
How South Jersey’s Zac Clark turned his ‘Bachelorette’ fame into a platform for people in recovery
inquirer.com
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Sara M. Lomax, President and CEO of Philadelphia’s WURD Radio, opened up about Andrea Lawful-Sanders' interview with President Joe Biden.
WURD CEO accuses Biden campaign of pulling a ‘fast one’ on the radio station, says Lawful-Sanders wasn’t fired
inquirer.com
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Philly small-business lender was never a viable or profitable business, but merely used new investors' funds to fool old investors, Judge Ruiz found.
Par Funding was a Ponzi scheme, judge rules, clears way for investor payments
inquirer.com
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The average debt of a medical doctor who graduated from a Philadelphia-school is roughly $200,000.
Free medical school at Johns Hopkins? Here is how much debt Philly students could save if their schools did the same.
inquirer.com
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The clash over how much he should have to repay only further underscores the rift that has erupted between Dougherty and the union he led for nearly 30 years.
Local 98 wants its longtime leader John Dougherty to pay up after his convictions for bribery and embezzlement
inquirer.com
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The only other major peer city in Philadelphia's region to require municipal workers back in the office five days a week was New York, and they reverted to hybrid work last year.
Other Northeast U.S. cities have brought municipal workers back to the office. Just not every day like Philly.
inquirer.com
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A proposal would replace nearly two acres of surface parking in downtown Collingswood with two apartment buildings, a parking garage, and a public plaza. Not everyone is pleased.
A bleak jumble of parking lots in Collingswood could give way to apartments
inquirer.com