Northern Liberties Neighbors Association (NLNA)

From Wikidelphia
Revision as of 16:24, 6 February 2016 by PaulSank (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

nlna.org/about-us

The Northern Liberties Neighbors Association gives the following descriptive information:

The NLNA is a civic association and 501(c)(3) nonprofit charitable organization. As such we may accept tax deductible contributions of any amount. Founded in 1978, the NLNA has been in operation for more than 30 years. The NLNA represents approximately 6,000 men, women and children, and more than 100 businesses, who call the Northern Liberties neighborhood of Philadelphia home. Our mission is to provide services and programs beneficial to all residents and businesses in the neighborhood, encourage and promote the preservation and beautification of our public spaces and to plan and monitor the growth and development of our neighborhood to the benefit of the community.

As a civic association, we represent the interests of our members. A member is anyone 18 or older who lives here, or who owns or runs a business here. We are governed by state and federal laws that apply to nonprofits.

Programs

This association summarizes its programs:

The NLNA is the engine at the heart of our neighborhood. We bring neighbors together and advocate for the community. Here’s just some of what we do:

  • Maintain the Community Center, a place that’s available for neighbors to meet and discuss community issues, or to rent for private affairs.
  • Run Zoning Meetings and attend Zoning Hearings at City Hall
  • Maintain Liberty Lands, our green oasis
  • Run Recycling Programs
  • Provide a Quality of Life Advocate for issues like trash, snow removal, vandalism & graffiti, abandoned cars, potholes, and more.
  • Run Clean & Green Programs and Initiatives that include storm water management, and street tree management
  • Organize Townwatch
  • Provide Neighborhood Updates Emails

Info

Editor's Note

Today as I update this page, the home page doesn't come up, so I've put the subject site's About page URL at the top of this entry. If the next editor that comes along would please try nlna.org, and if it works, put it at the top of this page.--PaulSank 15:21, 6 February 2016 (EST)