PACDC’s activities have culminated in $180 million to date in new resources for affordable housing and neighborhood economic development.
Philadelphia Inquirer has an excellent editorial on the case to increase funding for the Philadelphia Housing Trust Fund
Today’s Philadelphia Inquirer has an excellent editorial on the case to increase funding for the Philadelphia Housing Trust Fund (see below). A hearing is scheduled for tomorrow afternoon at 1:00 p.m. on a City Council ordinance introduced by Councilman Clarke to achieve this.
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Editorial: Give them shelter
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/opinion/20091208_Editorial__Give_them_shelter.html
Heading into mid-2008, Mayor Nutter and City Council decided to make a critical, five-year investment to help low-income Philadelphians keep a roof over their heads. But then the roof caved in on the city budget.
Out the window went a plan to increase by $3 million a year the city's contribution to its Housing Trust Fund, which has helped more than 4,000 families with housing needs since its inception four years ago.
The city's first-year investment was halved, then eliminated during the current budget year as the city's fiscal crisis worsened amid the state budget stalemate. Instead of growing by $6 million over two years, the fund received only $1.5 million from the city - while the housing needs of many Philadelphians became more dire, particularly those facing mortgage foreclosure.
So it's welcome news that Councilman Darrell L. Clarke and state Rep. John J. Taylor (R., Phila.) are trying to jump-start new local funding for the trust fund. A pair of proposals from Clarke will receive a hearing Wednesday afternoon in City Hall, and Taylor has introduced enabling legislation in Harrisburg.
Clarke's main plan is to boost the Housing Trust Fund fee from $70 to $100 for registering a deed or mortgage in the city. During the real estate downturn, that revenue stream has fallen from $14 million a year to about $8 million. The fee increase could add $3.5 million to $5.5 million annually, depending on home sales.
That's a relatively pain-free means of bolstering the housing fund. But it would come on top of an earlier $30 deed and mortgage fee hike that goes into the city budget. That has apparently given the Nutter administration second thoughts, even though the fee is small in the context of large real estate transactions.
So Clarke has an alternative, which calls for diverting into the housing fund half of the recent $30 increase. That would mean an up to $2 million adjustment in the city budget.
Either way, investing in the housing fund makes good sense. By supporting affordable housing, as well as providing rent and mortgage-foreclosure aid, the fund helps stabilize neighborhoods, create jobs, and backstop the city's tax base.
Related Posts
- $15 Million Boost Over Five Year for Philadelphia Housing Trust Fund
- Philadelphia Avoids Plan C Budget, Housing Trust Fund Still Takes Hit
- Rep. Taylor Re-Introduces State Legislation for Philadelphia Housing Trust Fund
- City Council Advances Housing Trust Fund Bill
- State Legislation Authorizing Funding Increase for Philadelphia Housing Trust Fund Advances in Senate
PACDC Fact
-
-
The Philadelphia Housing Trust Fund has raised nearly $80 million since September 2005 to expand housing opportunities for more than 6,000 Philadelphia families.
-
The CDC Tax Credit Program has fostered 35 partnerships between businesses and non-profits that is providing $60 million in new funding for CDC neighborhood economic development.
-
PACDC’s Member Services programming builds capacity of CDCs through technical assistance and training, sharing of best practices, networking, and promotion of the local CDC industry.
-
The local CDC industry generated $3.3 billion in economic impact in Philadelphia during the past 20 years.
Find Your Lawmakers
Tell them what you think![]()
PACDC Visitors
Donate Online
Your contribution to PACDC helps make affordable housing and neighborhood economic development possible.

Donor Choice Campaign:
Designate PACDC on your Campaign Form
(Donor Choice #12966)
