What will keep Philadelphia’s ‘millennials’ in the city?

What will keep Philadelphia’s ‘millennials’ in the city?

A new report released by the Pew Charitable Trusts projects over half of 20-34 year-olds will be leaving Philadelphia in five to 10 years. This is taking into account this age group increased by about 100,000 between the years of 2006 to 2012. The so-called ‘millennials’ are concerned about putting down roots because of the poor condition of public school education, safety, career challenges and other factors. How does the City of Philadelphia keep its youth? Are the millennials to blame? Did the ‘Baby Boomers’ and “Generation Xers’ pave the way to the suburbs? We’ll talk to LARRY EICHEL, Director of the Philadelphia Program at The Pew Charitable Trusts; MATT OLESH, a parent who’s staying in the city; and ELIZABETH SPENCER, who just moved from South Philly to North Carolina, with her husband and infant, for better work.

Some of Philly’s Young Professionals Study How to Help the Schools

Some of Philly’s Young Professionals Study How to Help the Schools

Once your kids hit the age of 5, it's time to move to the suburbs. Or at least that's how it has gone for generations of middle- and upper-class parents in Philadelphia.

Most of the news out of Philadelphia schools lately has been the kind to lead city parents who have the option to start lining up a moving van: deficits, school closings, teacher layoffs, cheating scandals.

But these days some Philadelphians are taking a different approach.  In neighborhoods from Graduate Hospital to East Falls to Fishtown, they're vowing to stay put, pitching in to help their neighborhood school improve. And they're doing this well before their children are ready for kindergarten, or even before they're born.

Consider Ivy Olesh, a 30-year-old resident of the Graduate Hospital neighborhood who has become for many Philly parents a go-to source of advice on grassroots school-building.