A group of business owners gathered to discuss the Climate Resilience Plan. (Photo: provided)
People in Philadelphia (including Hunting Park) know that our summers are getting hotter and more humid. As temperatures rise, warmer air can hold more moisture, often pulled from the nearby Atlantic Ocean, creating conditions for stronger, more unstable storms that can build quickly and cause heavy rain, strong winds, and sudden flooding. That same pattern can show up in the winter too—when temperatures drop low enough, that extra moisture can fall as heavier snow or dangerous ice, like the storm we experienced in January. These are not distant problems—they are changes we can see and feel right here at home.
When it comes to heat, neighborhoods in Philadelphia are vulnerable because they have lots of dark buildings built close together, lots of pavement, and few trees and green spaces. This creates an “urban heat island effect,” where heat from the sun during the day is absorbed into asphalt streets and parking lots and the dark roofs of houses. At night, the heat is slowly released, preventing our neighborhoods from cooling off.
Philadelphia is also vulnerable to flooding because it lies at the confluence of two rivers and is close to the ocean. Our sewers are often clogged by litter, especially in neighborhoods where we don’t have trash cans on every corner. We are also in the path of hurricanes that start further South and bring rain and wind to our city. This wind can knock down tree branches and electrical poles and cause power outages.
Even when extreme weather events don’t happen in Philadelphia, they can still affect us. Hotter weather and droughts mean that more forest fires happen in New Jersey, California, and Canada. Winds blowing from these fires can make the air in our city smoky and dangerous, making it more difficult to go to school or work.
When extreme weather happens, poorer neighborhoods are affected the most. Elderly people, children, and people with asthma and other health conditions get sick more easily during heat waves and on poor air quality days. Families living paycheck to paycheck cannot afford to stay home from work because of heat or smoke and have a harder time paying utility bills and affording air conditioners, air purifiers, repairs after floods, and other things that can help keep them safe at home.
What is climate resilience?
Climate resilience is a phrase used to describe all the ways communities can get ready for these impacts of climate change and help their neighborhoods stay safer. At Esperanza, we are working to create a climate resilience plan for the Hunting Park neighborhood. A climate resilience plan might combine several solutions, like environmental education and alerts from the city or physical changes like trees, shade structures, cooling centers, and so on. A plan might also include programs to help people make home repairs, upgrade appliances, or pay their bills. All these things can make a big difference, especially when we put them all together and think about what resources we need to take action.
A good climate resilience plan includes the voices and experiences of people who are dealing with climate change. If you live in Hunting Park, we want to hear from you! You are the expert on the ways extreme heat, poor air quality, and other climate risks have impacted your life. If you would like to help create Hunting Park’s Climate Resilience Plan, please reach me out 267-710-5265 or mdoyle@esperanza.us.
Wilfredo González, Cataño, Puerto Rico. May 6, 1946 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March 31, 2026. (Foto: LuzSelenia Salas)
There are people who pass through a community. And then there are people who become it.
Wilfredo González — Ito to all who knew him — was the rarest kind: the kind a community builds itself around, and doesn’t fully understand how much it needed, until he’s gone. The sadness that has followed in Philadelphia’s Latino community since Don Ito’s passing on March 31, 2026, says everything about the size of the life that came before it. But grief, when it is honest, is also a form of gratitude.
Hijo del taíno, hijo de la isla
Wilfredo González was born on May 6, 1946, in Cataño, Puerto Rico, where pride runs as deep as the roots of the ceiba tree. He was Boricua in the truest sense: not just by birth, but by spirit and the resilience the Puerto Rican people have carried across generations.
His family came to Philadelphia when he was young, part of the great postwar wave that brought tens of thousands of Boricua families to the mainland, carrying their language, their music, and their orgullo. Raised in North Philadelphia in a community of families like his own, seeking the American Dream, Ito graduated from Thomas Edison High School and was drafted shortly after.
El soldado
Ito served in the Vietnam War from 1966 to 1968 as a Point man and scout dog handler — one of the most dangerous roles in the infantry. He came home as a Sergeant, to a country that offered no welcome proportionate to the sacrifice — especially not for veterans of color from impoverished neighborhoods like his. As he had done in war, Ito forged ahead, leading the way.
(Foto: Cortesía/LuzSelenia Salas)
Dulce del teatropuertorriqueño: Where Ito found his Candi
Before Centro, there is a love story that must be told, because without Candi, there was no Ito, as we knew him.
Candida first caught Ito’s eye at the Teatro Puertorriqueño on Germantown Avenue next to his father’s store. A young beauty who was named Candi and just happened to be selling candy for the theater. Ito kept her image with him during war, and when he came home, he lovingly courted her until the time came to finally ask her mother’s blessing to marry.
They were married in 1969. For fifty-seven years, Ito’s beloved Candi was the steady grace beneath everything he did. What he poured out, she helped fill, which laid the foundation for the evolution of Centro Musical.
The Gonzalez Family at the Despida de Centro in 2014: Ray Gonzalez, Maria Cristina Gonzalez-Torres, Wilfredo “Ito” González, and Candida “Candi”Gonzalez. (Photo: LuzSelenia Loeb)
Un carrito lleno de sueños: From a wagon to the soul of el Bloque de Oro
Centro Musical was a family business that passed from generation to generation, beginning with Ito’s father Nestor, who started selling LPs out of a wagon, door to door through the streets of North Philadelphia. From that wagon, Nestor opened a small shop on Germantown Avenue around 1960, right next to the Teatro Puertorriqueño. Young Wilfredo helped after school, absorbing the experience and work-ethic it takes to run a small business in a marginalized community.
In 1970, Wilfredo proudly bought the store from his father and moved to 5th and Somerset, in the heart of El Bloque de Oro, the legendary commercial corridor between Lehigh and Hunting Park that was the spine and soul of North Philadelphia’s Latino community. Centro Musical, as Philadelphia would come to know and love, began to take shape. By 1996 the store had outgrown its building, the way something truly alive always does. Wilfredo purchased a bigger building a few blocks away on 5th and Lehigh Avenue where Centro Musical is to this day.
The legacy, already extraordinary, deepened into something that cannot be measured. Every organization in Philadelphia’s Latino community had a relationship with Centro Musical because Ito had a relationship with everyone, but it was never one man’s project. It was always, in every sense, a family affair.
Candi was there. Every day, or close to it, steady and warm and indispensable. Cristina and Ray grew up behind the counter. They learned about their father’s business, not from lectures but from watching him, day after day, year after year, choosing people over profit, choosing presence over convenience, choose love over everything. When Wilfredo officially stepped back in the early 2000s, he handed the store to his children. He became the consultant, which in practice meant he was still there, just with slightly more time for community and charlando, and less time behind the register
Yes, they sold the latest music and all types of goods from the island, but Centro was so much more. For more than fifty-five years, Centro’s doors were always open. To veterans needing a place to gather. To musicians needing a stage. To children needing school supplies. To families needing Thanksgiving meals. To anyone homesick for the island who just needed to hear Spanish spoken warmly and without apology. To the young person who did not yet know who they were but could feel, the moment they walked in, that they were somewhere safe.
Walk in on any afternoon and the whole world was there. Café in the air, salsa on the speakers, always a plate being passed. Around the holidays, parrandas broke out spontaneously — güiro, cuatro, voices rising in navideñas that spilled onto the block. In the back corner, La Esquina Famosa, its pitorro poured freely because everyone was family. And always, Ito — camera in your face. «¡Camara!» You smiled, because in his presence you were seen, completely, lovingly, and without judgment.
If you were a Latino artist passing through Philadelphia, you stopped at Centro and paid your respects to Don Ito. Celia Cruz. Marc Anthony. Victor Manuel. Gilberto Santa Rosa. Frankie Negron. Countless others. Not because you had to. Because some places and some people remind you of who you are and why you do what you do, and Centro Musical was that place and Ito was that person.
In 2014, Centro Musical changed ownership, with one last despedida unlike any other, celebrating fifty-five years of memories, music, and a declaration that this community exists, and matters. Centro’s new owner, Reinaldo Meléndez-Martínez, has honored the González family legacy with dedication and effort to keep up the community and love Ito built.
(Foto: Cortesía/LuzSelenia Loeb)
Life beyond centro: A founding member, a President, a pillar
Ito’s accolades are long and distinguished and he is memorialized in a mural at 5th and Somerset — the highest honor this community gives.
He did not do any of it for the honors. He did not do it for the mural. He did it because it was who he was, because his roots, his Taíno blood, his jíbaro spirit, would not let him do otherwise. El jíbaro no se rinde. He tends to know what is his. He shows up.
His daughter Cristina says it in four words: «What you see is what you get.» No performance. No persona. What Ito had, he gave to everyone. Equally. Fully. Without condition.
Even then, he was never fully still. Post 840 kept him. Election kept him. When Hurricane María devastated Puerto Rico, he organized relief, because when the island hurt, Ito hurt, and when Ito hurt, he did something about it. You could retire the man from the store, but love was not something you retired from. It was not a job. It was his nature.
Don Ito. Veterano. Esposo. Padre. Abuelo. Bisabuelo. Líder. Guardián del Pueblo. Hijo del Taíno. Jíbaro de corazón
La Raíz de todo: The family he loved most of all
Above everything else, above every honor and every organization and every initiative he helped build, Wilfredo González was a family man. That was the root of everything. That was the ceiba that held up his sky.
He loved Candida, his Candi, with a devotion that fifty-seven years only deepened. The girl he had first noticed at the Teatro, the one he had carried across a war and come home to, the woman who stood beside him through all of it, who gave him Cristina and Ray and his beautiful grandchildren, who was siempre presente at Centro the way he was, who made home a place worth returning to every single time. He did not just love her. He honored her and his family. Every day he was given.
Wilfredo González. (Foto: LuzSelenia Loeb)
El coquí sigue cantando: His roots hold. his legacy grows
No esperes que el coquí cante si tú no haces la lluvia. For fifty-five years, Ito made the rain. He made the music and community possible. He made people feel like they belonged to something and that something belonged to them.
Ito bent in the winds of war, poverty, and displacement and never once let go of the earth. He saw the veterans, the children, the families, the artists, the neighbors who needed, more than anything, to be seen. He invested in all of us by planting seeds of change, hope, and inspiration. Everything Ito planted is still growing. El que siembra recoge.
Each of us has an opportunity to honor Ito’s legacy and create our own, by nurturing the garden of community and leadership he dedicated his life to
La Cámara de Comercio Hispana de la Región Metropolitana de Filadelfia (GPHCC) celebró su reunión anual el 26 de marzo con el objetivo de empoderar a las empresas latinas y prepararlas ante los eventos históricos que vivirá la ciudad en 2026. (Foto: Impacto staff)
Filadelfia acelera sus preparativos para convertirse en el epicentro nacional de las celebraciones por el 250.º aniversario de Estados Unidos en 2026, y refuerza su estrategia con el impulso del portal Philly2026.com, la ampliación de programas comunitarios y nuevas oportunidades económicas para pequeños negocios, incluidos los liderados por empresarios latinos.
El sitio www.Philly2026.com, funciona como la plataforma principal de referencia para el público general y conecta a residentes y visitantes con calendarios de eventos, grandes celebraciones y programas oficiales del año 2026, cuando se conmemoran los 250 años de la firma de la Declaración de Independencia en Filadelfia. El portal enlaza información sobre actividades culturales, deportivas y vecinales, y dirige a otros sitios oficiales de la ciudad y de turismo relacionados con el Semiquincentenario.
Administración Parker lanza ayudas comunitarias y herramientas clave
En paralelo, la Administración de la alcaldesa Cherelle L. Parkeranunció recientemente una serie de iniciativas para garantizar que los beneficios de los grandes eventos de 2026 lleguen a todos los vecindarios. Entre ellas destaca un programa de subvenciones comunitarias por un millón de dólares, destinado a organizaciones sin fines de lucro para financiar celebraciones vecinales, actividades culturales, proyectos de embellecimiento y conmemoraciones históricas en distintos barrios de la ciudad.
Como parte de este esfuerzo, la ciudad también lanzó la aplicación “Access Philly”, una herramienta digital para consultar eventos en tiempo real, además de una guía de preparación para pequeños negocios y la extensión temporal de horarios para establecimientos del sector de hospitalidad. Las medidas buscan preparar a Filadelfia para la llegada de millones de visitantes durante eventos como la Copa Mundial de la FIFA 2026, el Juego de Estrellas de la MLB y las celebraciones del 250.º aniversario nacional.
“Se trata de garantizar que cada vecindario de Filadelfia forme parte de este momento histórico”, señaló la alcaldesa Parker durante la presentación del programa de subvenciones comunitarias, destacando la inversión directa en las comunidades locales.
Empresarios latinos se preparan para capitalizar 2026
La comunidad empresarial latina ya se está organizando para aprovechar las oportunidades económicas que traerá el histórico año 2026. La Cámara de Comercio Hispana de la Región Metropolitana de Filadelfia (GPHCC) celebró a finales de marzo su reunión anual, enfocada en preparar a los empresarios latinos para el impacto del Mundial FIFA y del 250.º aniversario de Estados Unidos.
Durante el encuentro, líderes empresariales y panelistas analizaron estrategias para aumentar la visibilidad de los negocios latinos, fortalecer alianzas y acceder a nuevas oportunidades comerciales. Representantes de la Cámara enfatizaron la importancia de que los pequeños y medianos negocios se mantengan activos, informados y conectados a los programas municipales disponibles de cara a 2026.
Jennifer Rodríguez, presidenta y directora ejecutiva de la GPHCC, destacó que estos espacios buscan asegurar que la comunidad empresarial latina no solo participe, sino que se beneficie de manera directa del crecimiento económico proyectado para la ciudad en 2026.
Celebraciones ya en marcha en 2026
Mientras se afinan los preparativos para el verano, Filadelfia ya mantiene activas actividades relacionadas con el inicio formal del año conmemorativo. Durante las últimas semanas se han realizado eventos cívicos y militares en Independence Mall, considerados actos simbólicos de apertura del año del Semiquincentenario.
¡Asimismo, continúa expandiéndose el programa “Ring It On! One Philly, A United Celebration”, con festivales comunitarios, activaciones culturales y mejoras urbanas en corredores comerciales de distintos vecindarios, reforzando la idea de celebrar no solo en el centro histórico, sino en toda la ciudad.
Un año histórico con impacto duradero
Con el lanzamiento de Philly2026.com, las inversiones comunitarias impulsadas por la Administración Parker y la preparación del sector empresarial latino, Filadelfia busca que el 250.º aniversario de Estados Unidos no sea solo una celebración histórica, sino una oportunidad de crecimiento económico y legado duradero para sus comunidades.
Las autoridades han reiterado que la información oficial, los calendarios de eventos y las oportunidades de participación continuarán actualizándose a lo largo del año en los portales oficiales y plataformas digitales de la ciudad, de cara a un 2026 que promete marcar un antes y un después en la historia de Filadelfia.
Chefs, restaurateurs, and members of the Garces Foundation during a previous annual benefit in Philadelphia. (Photo: Garces Foundation)
The Garces Foundation will once again bring together some of Philadelphia’s most prominent chefs, restaurants, and community leaders for the 14th edition of its annual benefit, one of the city’s most important spring culinary galas.
Under the theme “One Delicious Evening, Infinite Impact,” the event will take place on Thursday, April 23, 2026, from 6:00 to 9:30 p.m. at Live! Casino & Hotel in South Philadelphia. Inspired by a nighttime artisanal market, the evening aims to raise funds for the foundation’s health, education, and community support programs serving low-income immigrants.
The organization was founded in 2010 by James Beard Award–winning chef and Iron Chef José Garces and Dr. Beatriz Garces. Since then, the foundation has worked to provide access to medical care, dental services, English classes, and digital literacy training to thousands of immigrant residents across Philadelphia.
A Night to Celebrate Diversity
The gala will feature unlimited food prepared by more than 30 local chefs and restaurants, along with live music, folkloric dance performances, an artisanal market, art displays, and both silent and live auctions.
Participating restaurants include Amada, Buena Onda, Village Whiskey, White Yak, Little Fish, Tabachoy, Wilder, Hardena, Mom‑Mom’s Kitchen, El Mictlán, Cantina Dos Segundos, Luk Fu, and Juana Tamale, among others. Highlighted dishes will include Amada’s lamb meatballs with sherry cream, foie gras, and black truffle; bacalaítos with blue crab salad; cheesesteak bao; hamachi crudo; and scallop toast.
Guests will also enjoy wine, spirits, and cocktails, courtesy of sponsors such as Stateside Vodka and Komos Tequila.
Music will be provided by Suena Cimarrón, a group that blends contemporary rhythms with traditional sounds from Colombia’s Pacific region. The program will also feature folkloric dance performances by Colombia Mi Corazón Es Tuyo. Reflecting the artisanal market theme, immigrant artists and makers such as muralist Manuela Guillén and Venisbu, a Venezuelan and Wayúu handcrafted jewelry project, will also participate.
The Origins of the Mission
The Garces Foundation was born after the death of Felipe, a 26‑year‑old immigrant worker who suffered from thyroid cancer and delayed treatment due to barriers in accessing health care. The experience deeply affected José and Beatriz Garces, motivating them to create an organization to help others avoid similar situations.
“This is one of my favorite nights of the year,” said José Garces. “It brings together Philadelphia’s culinary leaders, artists, and community advocates for an incredible celebration with a powerful purpose.” As the son of immigrants, the chef emphasized the vital role immigrant workers play in the city.
Dr. Beatriz Garces added that every ticket sold and donation raised translates into medical care, education, and essential services for hundreds of immigrant families.
Impact and Auctions
In 2025, the foundation served more than 1,000 people, many with annual incomes below $13,000. Key initiatives include IDIOMA, which offers English and digital literacy classes, as well as Community Health Days and Sonrisa, programs providing free medical consultations and dental care.
The event will also feature auctions with exclusive experiences, including a private dinner for 10 at Amada Radnor, prepared by José Garces, Michael Solomonov, and Marc Vetri.
How to Attend
Tickets are $125 per person and include unlimited food and drinks, parking, and coat check. Cocktail attire is encouraged. More information: https://www.garcesfoundation.org/2026benefit
An Israeli Air Force F-15 fighter jet flies over central Israel, 31 March 2026. (Photo: EFE/ABIR SULTAN/Archivo)
The School District of Philadelphia is proposing to close 18 to 20 schools starting in the 2027-2028 school year as part of a $2.8 billion, 10-year facilities master plan. The proposal lists 70,000 vacant seats, poor building conditions, and budgetary constraints as the reasons for the many closures, transfers, and firings. The district plans to modernize 159 schools, and closures will impact thousands of students. The changes will affect the poorest neighborhoods, but this is not new. The city leaders have postponed decisions for decades. Education has not been a priority in most administrations. Looking back over the years, we can remember when the city lost control over the district. It isn’t just the city or the state that have not dealt properly with the problems of schools. The Trump Administration wants to close the Department of Education and has brought more budget problems to the states and cities. Future generations will suffer the effects of decisions to buy more guns and build bigger, and faster planes, while denying funds to our educational institutions. Let’s keep in mind that totalitarian governments always prefer an uneducated citizenry.
When Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro announced that the state would not require a college degree for new hires, the voters gave him a nod of approval. We are certain Shapiro understands the value of a good basic education, and he sees the need to reform. Many students attend classes in decrepit buildings and crowded classrooms. Solutions are not easy, but there must be a willingness on the part of our leaders to improve the situation in our schools. Firing teachers might help the budget, but it will discourage others from entering the profession. The problem is that many schools, especially in poor areas of this country, are not preparing our children with the most basic tools, and the main reason is lack of money. The federal government might have different priorities–therefore it is up to state and municipal governments to come up with solutions that will require sacrifices. We need to provide safe and productive environments for our children because they are the future.
An Israeli Air Force F-15 fighter jet flies over central Israel, 31 March 2026. (Photo: EFE/ABIR SULTAN/Archivo)
El Distrito Escolar de Filadelfia propone cerrar entre 18 y 20 escuelas en el año académico 2027-2028, como parte de un plan maestro de 10 años con un presupuesto de 2.800 millones de dólares. La propuesta cita 70.000 plazas vacantes, las malas condiciones de los edificios y las restricciones presupuestarias como las razones detrás de los numerosos cierres, traslados y despidos. El distrito planea modernizar 159 escuelas, y los cierres afectarán a miles de estudiantes. Los cambios repercutirán en los barrios más pobres, pero esto no es algo nuevo. Los gobiernos han pospuesto estas decisiones durante décadas. La educación no ha sido una prioridad en la mayoría de las administraciones. Podemos recordar cuando la ciudad perdió el control sobre el distrito. No es solo la ciudad o el estado que han fallado en resolver los problemas educacionales–la administración Trump pretende cerrar el Departamento de Educación y ha generado aún más problemas presupuestarios para los estados y las ciudades. Las generaciones futuras sufrirán los efectos de decisiones que prefieren comprar más armas y construir aviones más grandes y veloces, mientras se les niegan fondos a nuestras instituciones educativas. Tengamos presente que los gobiernos totalitarios siempre prefieren una ciudadanía sin educación.
Cuando el gobernador de Pensilvania, Josh Shapiro, anunció que el estado ya no exigiría un título universitario para las nuevas contrataciones, le dimos aprobación. Estamos seguros de que Shapiro comprende el valor de una buena educación básica y percibe la necesidad de hacer reformas. Muchos estudiantes asisten a clases en edificios en ruinas y aulas abarrotadas. No hay soluciones sencillas. Nuestros líderes deben buscar el modo de mejorar la situación. Despedir a maestros podría aliviar el presupuesto, pero desincentivará a otros a dedicarse a esta profesión. Sabemos que muchas escuelas —especialmente en las zonas empobrecidas de este país— no están dotando a nuestros niños de las herramientas más básicas por la falta de fondos. El gobierno federal tiene otras prioridades; por consiguiente, recae en los gobiernos estatales y municipales la responsabilidad de idear soluciones que, inevitablemente, exigirán sacrificios. Debemos proporcionar entornos seguros y productivos para nuestros niños, pues ellos representan el futuro.
Un grupo de dueños de negocios se reunió para hablar del Plan de Resiliencia Climática. (Foto: suministrada)
La gente en Filadelfia (incluido Hunting Park) sabe que nuestros veranos se están volviendo más calientes y húmedos. A medida que las temperaturas suben, el aire más cálido puede contener más humedad, a menudo proveniente del cercano océano Atlántico, creando condiciones para tormentas más fuertes e inestables que pueden desarrollarse rápidamente y causar lluvias intensas, vientos fuertes e inundaciones repentinas. Ese mismo patrón también puede aparecer en invierno: cuando las temperaturas bajan lo suficiente, esa humedad extra puede caer en forma de nieve más intensa o hielo peligroso, como la tormenta que experimentamos en enero. Estos no son problemas lejanos: son cambios que podemos ver y sentir aquí en casa.
Cuando se trata del calor, los vecindarios en Filadelfia son vulnerables porque tienen muchos edificios oscuros construidos cerca unos de otros, mucho pavimento y pocos árboles y espacios verdes. Esto crea un “efecto de isla de calor urbana”, donde el calor del sol durante el día es absorbido por las calles de asfalto y los estacionamientos, así como por los techos oscuros de las casas. Por la noche, el calor se libera lentamente, impidiendo que nuestros vecindarios se enfríen.
Filadelfia también es vulnerable a las inundaciones porque estamos al fondo de dos ríos y cerca del océano. Nuestros desagües a menudo se obstruyen con basura, especialmente en los vecindarios donde no tenemos botes de basura en cada esquina. También estamos en la trayectoria de huracanes que se originan más al sur y traen lluvia y viento a nuestra ciudad. Este viento puede derribar ramas de árboles y postes eléctricos, y causar cortes de energía.
Incluso cuando los fenómenos meteorológicos extremos no ocurren en Filadelfia, todavía pueden afectarnos. El clima más caluroso y las sequías significan que ocurren más incendios forestales en Nueva Jersey, California y Canadá. Los vientos que soplan desde estos incendios pueden hacer que el aire en nuestra ciudad esté lleno de humo y sea peligroso, lo que dificulta asistir a la escuela o al trabajo.
Cuando ocurren fenómenos meteorológicos extremos, los vecindarios más pobres son los más afectados. Las personas mayores, los niños y las personas con asma y otras condiciones de salud se enferman más fácilmente durante las olas de calor y en días de mala calidad del aire. Las familias que viven al día no pueden permitirse quedarse en casa por calor o humo y tienen más dificultades para pagar las facturas de servicios públicos y costear acondicionadores de aire, purificadores de aire, reparaciones después de inundaciones y otras cosas que pueden ayudarles a mantenerse seguros en casa.
¿Qué es la resiliencia climática?
La resiliencia climática es una frase que se usa para describir todas las formas en que las comunidades pueden prepararse para estos impactos del cambio climático y ayudar a que sus vecindarios se mantengan más seguros. En Esperanza, estamos trabajando para crear un plan de resiliencia climática para el vecindario de Hunting Park. Un plan de resiliencia climática podría combinar varias soluciones, como educación ambiental y alertas de la ciudad o cambios físicos como árboles, estructuras de sombra, centros de enfriamiento, y así sucesivamente. Un plan también podría incluir programas para ayudar a las personas a hacer reparaciones en sus hogares, mejorar electrodomésticos o pagar sus facturas. Todas estas cosas pueden marcar una gran diferencia, especialmente cuando las juntamos todas y pensamos en qué recursos necesitamos para actuar.
Un buen plan de resiliencia climática incluye las voces y experiencias de las personas que están lidiando con el cambio climático. ¡Si vives en Hunting Park, queremos escucharte! Eres el experto en las formas en que el calor extremo, la mala calidad del aire y otros riesgos climáticos han afectado tu vida.
Si te gustaría ayudar a crear el Plan de Resiliencia Climática de Hunting Park, por favor comunícate conmigo, Morgan Doyle al 267-710-5265 o mdoyle@esperanza.us.
Pablo Batista will lead the Esperanza Latin Jazz Showcase at Teatro Esperanza on April 17. (Photo: Provided)
Philadelphia will be the stage for an unprecedented event set to mark a milestone in the city’s cultural history. Renowned Grammy-winning percussionist Pablo Batista will lead the Esperanza Latin Jazz Showcase, a unique production that will bring together a full orchestra of musicians to revive the golden era of Latin jazz. The event will take place on Friday the 17th at 7:00 p.m. at Teatro Esperanza in Philadelphia, as part of the celebrations for the 250th anniversary of the signing of the United States Declaration of Independence.
Pablo Batista, an internationally acclaimed percussionist, is an award-winning master with more than 40 years of experience performing on global stages, recording, and touring alongside legendary artists. He is recognized for his virtuosity in Afro-Caribbean percussion, his command of multiple genres, and his cultural leadership, as well as his role as a music ambassador. With strong ties to Philadelphia, where he studied at Temple University and has actively contributed as an educator and mentor, Batista takes on the role of producer and curator for this project: “I feel very happy and proud. This is the first event of its kind in Philadelphia. A 22-piece orchestra has never performed this repertoire live here,” Batista explained, highlighting the unprecedented nature of the show.
A tribute to Latin history in Philadelphia
The Esperanza Latin Jazz Showcase is part of the Philadelphia 250 initiative, which commemorates 250 years of American independence. In this context, Esperanza Arts Center (EAC) aims to highlight the contributions of Latino artists across various disciplines who have left a profound and defining mark on the nation’s cultural landscape. As part of this celebration, a new Latin Jazz series is being launched for the first time at Teatro Esperanza, positioning the Latino community as a central force in this historic commemoration.
The performance also pays tribute to the great Latin orchestras of the 1940s and 1950s, inspired by iconic figures such as Tito Puente, Tito Rodríguez, and Machito. Batista emphasizes that this musical era has been underrecognized, despite the active presence of the Latino community in Philadelphia since those decades: “Latinos have been a fundamental part of the city’s cultural development. This event is a way to reclaim that history and present it at the highest level,” he stated.
The project also reflects the legacy of organizations the Asociación de Música Latinoamericana (AMLA), which have promoted music education, cultural preservation, and the advocacy of musicians’ rights in the city and live on at Esperanza today.
A cultural bridge for the community
For Daniel de Jesús, Music Education & Community Relations Director of AMLA at Esperanza, the concert carries deep cultural significance, particularly for Philadelphia’s Latino community.
Daniel de Jesús, Director of Music Education and Community Relations of AMLA, at Esperanza. (Foto: Courtesy)
“The April 17th concert holds real cultural weight because it reflects continuity across generations,” he explained. “AMLA (originally named Asociación de Músicos Latinoamericanos) was founded in 1982, before it became part of Esperanza. Over time, it evolved from its early form into a music school and is now part of a larger cultural institution.”
De Jesús also highlighted Batista’s connection to that legacy: “Pablo Batista played a role in that development. His return places him inside a living timeline. It shows that the institution did not disappear; it adapted and kept serving the community.”
For the Latino community, he added, the concert represents more than a performance—it is a moment of recognition and connection: “The concert connects past and present. It shows that our musical culture continues to grow and remains accessible. Many people in the community may not realize that this history belongs to them, but events like this make that connection visible.”
He emphasized that the music itself reflects the lived experiences of Latino communities in Philadelphia: “It comes from people who live, work, and build families here. This concert affirms that their cultural identity has a place on stage and in the city.”
An unprecedented show for the city
The event will feature an orchestra led by Jimmy López and Tony Pérez, a group of professional musicians who will perform classic arrangements with an elegant and carefully designed stage production. The scale of the performance, both in format and artistic level, makes it a unique addition to Philadelphia’s cultural offerings.
For Batista, this concert represents much more than a musical performance: “We want to present something at the highest level, something all of Philadelphia can be proud of,” he said.
The percussionist also extended an invitation to the entire community, beyond cultural backgrounds, to take part in the celebration: “We want Cubans, Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Brazilians, and all jazz lovers to come enjoy this experience. It’s a celebration of our music and our city.”
This event not only commemorates a key anniversary in U.S. history but also highlights the impact and evolution of Latino culture in Philadelphia, establishing itself as a must-attend event on the region’s cultural calendar.
Nancy Santiago is the Executive Director of Tribus Global, a company that advises governments and NGOs on social impact issues. (Photo: provided)
Of Puerto Rican descent, Nancy Santiago lives between the island and the Greater Philadelphia area, yet she is truly a citizen of the world. She is the Chief Executive Officer of Tribus Global, a company that advises governments and nonprofit organizations on social impact initiatives. Perla Lara, Editor‑in‑Chief of Impacto, spoke with the renowned psychologist, who has spent years working in government offices and has held senior roles across three presidential administrations, either as a public official or as an advisor on education, social investment, and health policy, as well as in nongovernmental institutions serving children affected by abuse, violence, and other forms of childhood trauma.
Nancy was born in Philadelphia, where she first began her advocacy for mental health, educational equity, and the future of young people. A specialist in social policy, she has worked in settings such as juvenile detention centers and school coordination offices, and has delivered lectures in several countries. Beyond her extensive professional background, one theme remains constant in her message: the urgency of listening to young people before it is too late.
Nancy is the daughter of a Puerto Rican father and a Philadelphia‑born mother, with a Colombian stepfather, embodying a rich Latino and urban identity. Her personal story passed through the same dysfunctional systems she now seeks to transform.
She was educated at Philadelphia High School for Girls and later attended Temple University, where she earned a master’s degree in family counseling. Her career began in the 1990s, working with young people involved in the juvenile justice system, where she identified the lack of meaningful pathways for adolescents to reintegrate into school.
“At that time, there was no real reintegration system,” she recalls. “A young person with legal issues was essentially excluded from the education system.” That reality prompted her to push for innovative initiatives for the time, including second‑chance programs, night schools, and mental‑health‑focused academic support systems.
That phase not only sharpened her career but also reshaped her understanding of public policy. “I learned what it means to navigate a system that is not designed to include everyone, especially Spanish‑speaking families,” she explains. The disconnect between institutions and the community was—and remains, in her view—one of the most significant barriers.
Her experience as an advisor in government and other institutions has led her to focus on promoting the mental health of children and youth. (Photo: provided)
A generation marked by fear
Today, Santiago observes with concern the so‑called generation alpha—those born after 2010—whom she describes as “children and young people profoundly different from any previous generation. They grew up amid constant instability; the pandemic stripped them of routines, family stability, and spaces for social interaction. Overnight, everything changed.”
That change was not only physical and logistical but deeply emotional. Children who had previously had minimal contact with the digital world suddenly became dependent on technology for studying, completing homework, socializing, and entertainment. “They were in front of a screen up to twelve hours a day,” she notes. “Neither they nor their parents were prepared for that.”
Yet within that reality, she identifies a strength: increased emotional awareness. “Today, a ten‑year‑old can say, ‘I feel anxious’ or ‘I need help.’ That didn’t exist before,” she explains. “It’s a generation that understands the importance of mental health, but doesn’t always have the resources to address it.”
Mental health: The need for prevention
For Nancy, the issue is not only cultural but structural. Schools, she argues, remain focused primarily on academics while neglecting emotional development. “We don’t teach children how to understand their emotions, and then we’re surprised when serious problems emerge at fourteen,” she says.
Prevention, she insists, is key. Early intervention improves quality of life and reduces long‑term risks such as school dropout and vulnerability to violence and recruitment by gangs and criminal organizations.
“These groups know exactly how to identify vulnerable youth,” she warns. “They offer what’s missing—community, belonging, someone who listens.”
She points to examples in Brazil, where Catholic Church initiatives have successfully attracted hundreds of young people by offering community and connection. “They’re responding to a real need,” she says. “The question is why schools or public health systems in this country aren’t doing the same.”
Social media: Addiction by design
Another major concern is the impact of technology, particularly excessive social media use, which Santiago does not hesitate to describe as a public health issue. “We know these platforms were designed to be addictive; recent lawsuits against Facebook and TikTok have confirmed it, and even Pinterest’s founder has warned about it,” she says. “Yet we allow children to spend hours on these platforms without knowing what they’re doing there.”
The consequences include sleep problems, learning difficulties, anxiety, and isolation. Most alarming, she notes, is the lack of regulation. “We regulate what can appear on television, but not what children consume on their smartphones,” she explains. “That’s a serious failure.”
Responsibility, she adds, does not rest solely with corporations or government. Parents must also take an active role—not by banning technology, but by engaging in dialogue and understanding what their children are seeing and why.
The risk of artificial intelligence
If social media was already a challenge, artificial intelligence has opened an even more complex front. Santiago references cases in which young people have turned to chatbots to discuss emotional struggles—with devastating consequences.
“We’re seeing situations where children seek support from a machine rather than a human being,” she warns. “That speaks volumes about the level of human disconnection we’ve reached.”
In some cases, these interactions have resulted in dangerous guidance, even suicide. “Not long ago, we were at the Vatican with a mother—an attorney—whose fourteen‑year‑old son died by suicide following advice from a chatbot. That is a true tragedy. There is no oversight, no regulation. It is extremely concerning.”
Still, Santiago does not dismiss technology altogether and calls for ethical AI models applied to mental health. “Technology can be part of the solution,” she emphasizes, “but only if it is designed responsibly.”
Her experience as an advisor in government and other institutions has led her to focus on promoting the mental health of children and youth. (Photo: provided)
Youth, power, and the future
Despite the risks, Santiago believes this generation holds tremendous transformational potential. She describes it as the largest, most diverse, and most informed generation in history.
“Even at twelve or fourteen years old, they are highly engaged with issues like climate change, social justice, and inclusion—yet they feel political systems do not represent them.”
She warns that gaps could have serious consequences. “In a very short time, they will make up much of the workforce and the electorate. If we fail to listen now, it will be much harder later.”
The risk she stresses is not only political but social. “A generation that feels excluded may disengage—or even confront the system. When young people feel unheard, they seek alternatives, and those alternatives can be dangerous.”
Immigration, identity, and memory
Santiago’s analysis also considers the role of Latino communities across the United States and critiques the tendency of some immigrant groups to distance themselves from their roots in pursuit of social mobility. “When we do that, we erase our history, and that comes at a cost—especially for young people,” she argues.
That disconnection is intensified under restrictive immigration policies, which create trauma for entire families, particularly children. “Children who see their parents handcuffed and deported grow up with deep wounds—wounds that can have long‑term consequences, and that society will ultimately pay for.”
She also highlights the economic dimension. “Immigration has sustained much of this country’s growth. Ignoring that is a serious strategic mistake.”
Not missing the opportunity
Despite the challenges, Santiago remains hopeful—but only if decisive action is taken. “We have to do two things,” she concludes. “Listen to young people and give them the tools to build the world they want.”
The alternative, she warns, is far too costly. “If we don’t listen, we risk losing an entire generation—and the world is not prepared to absorb that loss.”
Her message is clear: mental health, inclusion, and investment in youth are not secondary issues—they are fundamental pillars of the future. Ignoring them would not only be a mistake, but a grave historical failure.
Nancy Santiago is a strategic leader with more than two decades of experience in education, economic development, federal policy, and philanthropy. She has worked across two presidential administrations and collaborated with three U.S. presidents, playing a key role in the design and implementation of major public policy and federal initiatives.
She is currently CEO of Tribus Global, a hybrid executive advisory firm and nonprofit organization focused on driving lasting social impact. Most recently, she served in the Biden Administration as Deputy Director for Engagement and Senior Advisor to the U.S. Surgeon General, contributing to the landmark advisory on protecting youth mental health.
During the Obama Administration, she held senior leadership roles at the U.S. Department of Labor and the Department of Education. Her career also includes leadership in community finance, tech entrepreneurship, and the co‑founding of the Inicio Fund, an investment fund supporting Latino‑led businesses.
Based between Puerto Rico and New Jersey, she balances her professional work with salsa dancing, hiking, and community life.