Philadelphia City Council will hear a proposal to tack on a "housing impact fee" to new development.

The purpose, according to NewsWorks, is to protect against pushing out existing, low-income and longtime city residents.

As NewsWorks explains, under the "impact fee," developers would pay between $1.10 and $4.80 per square foot of new market-rate houses and rental units, which could generate "between $3.4 million and $12.2 million" for the city's Housing Trust Fund to help build and maintain affordable housing.

"Between 2000 and 2012, in the gentrifying portions of West, South and North Philadelphia, housing prices skyrocketed, while incomes shrank," a recent report from the Philadelphia Coalition for Affordable Communities found. " During that same timeframe, the African-American population in those neighborhoods decreased by 22%-29%. Meanwhile, the Caucasian population increased."

The "housing impact fee" is one of several ideas advocates are proposing to Philadelphia City Council members to hopefully double the Housing Trust Fund, NewsWorks reports.

Read the full NewsWorks report here.



