Patrick Houston, a North Philadelphia resident, told Council the Built to Last whole‑home repair program run by the Philadelphia Energy Authority (PEA) has made progress but lacks operations funding to administer repairs at scale.
"PEA says each home costs about $34,000 to complete," Houston said, noting the $8,250,000 HOME allocation will reach only a fraction of eligible homes and that thousands remain on waiting lists. He asked Council to allocate $4,000,000 to PEA’s operating budget to expand delivery.
Emily Abendroth of the Here for Climate Justice Coalition echoed the request, saying PEA programs like Built to Last and Solarize Philadelphia leverage city dollars: she repeated testimony that each city dollar in PEA investment has spurred roughly $90 in local clean‑energy investment, and urged Council to make funding for PEA operations steady rather than annual fight.
Mitch Tannen and others described PEA as a vehicle for green jobs, lower utility bills and displacement reduction, and urged Council to preserve or increase the PEA operating request in the FY27 budget.
Why it matters: Witnesses framed the $4,000,000 operating request as necessary to translate capital allocations into completed home repairs and to multiply private investment, arguing failure to fund operations will limit program reach.
What’s next: Testimony was part of public comment during the budget hearing; Council will consider operating budget requests in committee and during the budget adoption process.