Philadelphia City Council members, our lawyers and our housing experts strongly disagree with the suggestion that the Council’s actions on the new H.O.M.E. Resolution are the cause of delays in delivering housing resources to Philadelphians.
Council’s responsibility is not to rubber-stamp legislation, but to ensure that any multi-billion-dollar public investment is legally sound and targeted to the Philadelphians who need it most. City Council unanimously voted to appropriate over $277 million in support of the Mayor’s H.O.M.E. initiative, which is $82 million higher than the first H.O.M.E. budget introduced on October 30.
Council members repeatedly raised concerns—directly and in good faith—about accountability, neighborhood equity, homeowner protections, and the long-term impact of the H.O.M.E legislation. Those concerns were raised early and consistently. Council’s action today strengthened the H.O.M.E resolution, not sabotaged it.
I heard clearly and directly from Councilmembers about critical issues they want addressed in the first-year HOME Plan spending. Those concerns center on accountability, neighborhood equity, and—most importantly—making sure that the deepest investments reach the poorest and most vulnerable Philadelphians.
As Council President, my number one responsibility will always be to fight for the interests of my members, and those concerns of Councilmembers and Philadelphians are fully reflected in this legislation.
City Councilmembers want shovels in the ground. Council wants homes repaired. Council wants families to stay in their neighborhoods. But Council also refuses to rush into issuing $800 million in debt without iron-clad legal protections and clear guarantees that the lowest-income Philadelphians will benefit from the first round of the H.O.M. E spending.
Threatening residents with a shutdown of the Basic Systems Repair Program and assigning blame does not move this process forward. Collaboration and working together does.
Important housing programs in City government will not be shutting down because of any delay in the first round of borrowing for the HOME program.
There is already plenty of money in the City’s current Fiscal Year 2026 $7 billion operating budget for these programs, so it is false to suggest that the services will stop operating. The city also has a $1.2 billion surplus from our Fiscal Year 2025 budget.
Every member of City Council and I remain fully engaged with the Administration to resolve remaining legal and policy issues swiftly and responsibly. City Council is preparing to introduce an amendment to the H.O.M.E bond ordinance as early as this week’s Council session to move quickly to ensure that funding for programs will be available as soon as possible.
Our shared goal is—and has always been—to deliver a HOME plan that addresses various housing needs for all Philadelphians, especially those with the greatest need.

