Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Participating Philadelphia Restaurants


During the week of March 21-27, these restaurants will be asking for dollar donations from patrons for the water they usually receive for free. All money raised goes towards UNICEF's water initiatives. (Full description and more details at http://www.tapproject.org/)

If you're planning on eating in a restaurant during this time, consider making it one of those below!

Steven Starr Restaurants:

Alma de Cuba

Buddakan

The Continental

El Vez

Jones

Morimoto

Butcher & Singer

Tangerine

Barclay Prime

Continental Midtown

Parc

Pizzeria Stella

Pod

Non-Starr

Pizza Rustica

SangKee Noodle


For photos taken during World Water Week, go to http://onebigpuddle.org/index.php ,

a great site devoted entirely to global and local water issues. Take time to check them out!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Philadelphia Tap Project

What is the UNICEF Tap Project?

In 2007, the UNICEF Tap Project was born in New York City based on a simple concept: restaurants would ask their patrons to donate $1 or more for the tap water they usually enjoy for free, and all funds raised would support UNICEF’s efforts to bring clean and accessible water to millions of children around the world.

Growing from just 300 New York City restaurants in 2007 to thousands across the country today, the UNICEF Tap Project has quickly become a powerful national movement.

During World Water Week, March 21-27, 2010, the UNICEF Tap Project will once again raise awareness of the world water crisis and vital funds to help the millions of children it impacts daily. All funds raised support UNICEF's water, sanitation and hygiene programs, and the effort to bring clean and accessible water to millions of children around the world.

UNICEF’s Role

UNICEF has saved more children’s lives than any other humanitarian organization, and UNICEF is committed to doing whatever it takes to achieve the goal of reaching the day when ZERO children die of preventable causes. Currently, UNICEF provides access to safe water and sanitation facilities while promoting safe hygiene practices in more than 100 countries.

In alignment with the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, UNICEF is working with its partners to reduce the number of people without access to safe water and basic sanitation by 50% by 2015, which will also save children at risk from waterborne illnesses, the second highest cause of preventable childhood deaths.