South Philly refinery workers file lawsuit, claim PES didn't give enough warning before layoffs An explosion in June 2019 ignited a fire and damaged the refinery's equipment, causing its …

They said things like “My life is at stake here” and “I have as much of a say as the men in suits upstairs.” Later, the protestors sang, told stories about how the refinery affected their health, and recited poems as office workers stepping out for lunch navigated their way through.“These polluting industries think they can come into our communities and just set up shop,” Cameron Powell, a Philly Thrive organizer, told Grist.

Most of the bids from real estate developers involved keeping the site as an industrial operation, the source said. According to court documents filed on Wednesday, Philadelphia Energy Solutions has When rumors emerged on Tuesday that Hilco was the buyer, Alexa Ross, one of the founders of Philly Thrive, said the group was “cautiously pleased” that it wasn’t a fossil fuel company but still had many questions about Hilco’s plans. Rachel Ramirez / Grist. Grist / John Greim / LightRocket via Getty Images Carol Hemingway asking security if she could enter the building where the closed-door auction is being held.Philly Thrive Organizer Alexa Ross speaking at St. Bartholomew’s Church before the rally.Climate activists gather in the streets of New York City to protest the closed-door auction to sell PES land.Climate activists gather in the streets of New York City to protest the closed-door auction to sell PES land. Please enable and refresh the page. In 2017, the company purchased a retired coal-fired power plant in Little Village, a neighborhood on the west side of Chicago, with plans to turn it into a million-square-foot warehouse and distribution center.The Chicago project also illuminates how long it might be before any development on the site in Philadelphia is up and running. “We want Hilco to know for a fact that leasing out land to operate the refinery or other polluting industries is not going to fly with us, and we’re going to keep up the same level of opposition to any kind of plans to lease with polluting companies,” Ross told Grist on Tuesday.Recent projects by Hilco offer insight into what that fight might look like. We as residents of the city of Philadelphia and New York are simply here to let them know that it’s not.”Though details are still scarce, it looks like Philly Thrive’s members may have gotten their way. Some bidders have since dropped out, though it is not clear how many. The refinery’s owner, Philadelphia Energy Solutions, is scheduled to reveal the winning bidder on Wednesday during a hearing at the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, which will need to approve the sale. “We’re going to see it all the way to the end until healthy land use is occurring over there and residents are really at the center of final decisions and negotiations of how that business is going to operate.”The way that humanity tackles this pandemic parallels how it might fight climate change. Sign up for our semi-weekly newsletter, Grist's comments only work with JavaScript. It wound down the roughly 150-year-old plant and laid off hundreds of workers over the following weeks.

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