On the other will be Josh Fox, director of the Oscar-nominated documentary Gasland. (The movie with the shot of the flaming kitchen faucet.)
Both will forcefully express their position on the gas-extraction method known as fracking, which is widely used for drilling the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania.
As mayor of the host city, Michael Nutter no doubt would like to welcome the industry bigs and thank them for bringing their business here, something he occasionally does for conventioneers.
But as a Democrat who wants to make Philadelphia the greenest city in the nation, he could be seen as betraying core principles and political allies.
Instead, he seems determined to stay on the sideline.
Nutter was listed as a speaker at the industry gathering, inciting the environmentalists into a letter-writing lather. When the mayor later requested that his name be taken off the list, the "freedom from fracking" folks claimed credit.
"That is false. That is not the case," said Nutter spokesman Mark McDonald. He said that the industry group had listed the mayor as a speaker prematurely, and that Nutter had decided well before any letters of protest arrived not to speak.
The anti-fracking groups now are encouraging Nutter to attend their convention. Any chance of that happening?
"I can't imagine that he would," McDonald said.
- Troy Graham
Off the streets but on the radar
Philadelphia has made an international impression with a strict curfew on teens and Mayor Nutter's promise to go after parents whose unsupervised children join in the moblike sprees recently plaguing the city.
This month, Nutter declared Center City and University City off-limits after 9 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays to anyone younger than 18; those minors have to be off the streets by midnight in the rest of the city.
Everett Gillison, deputy mayor for public safety, has been on radio in Australia, Britain, and Germany, those countries curious about a practice they equate with wartime and totalitarianism.
U.S. cities are also intrigued. Detroit has called for advice. Kansas City, Mo., also struggling with downtown youth violence, is interested in the city law that holds parents accountable for kids' behavior, Gillison said.
Gillison wants it known that the city is not outlawing childhood after dark.
"You can be a 13-year-old and be in town," he said. "You just have to have somebody that's responsible for you with you." - Inquirer staff