O’Rourke wants to create a transit access fund to help SEPTA riders with low incomes. If passed, an amount equal to 0.5% of the general fund would be used to support the new fund each year, enough to provide free transit to roughly 60,000 city residents.
The goal is to create a permanent funding source for the city’s Zero Fare program. The measure, introduced in April, is a response to a budget battle over funding for the program, which saw Mayor Cherelle Parker restore dollars for the popular initiative after initially proposing to effectively discontinue it. Under a pilot, the program provided free SEPTA passes to 25,000 low-income people.
Supporters of the Affordable Philly agenda cheered for speakers at the press conference at LOVE Park on October 9, 2025. (Kimberly Paynter/WHYY)
The measure requires a charter change, meaning it must be passed by voters at the polls after it’s approved by lawmakers. O’Rourke wants the ballot question to go before residents next year.
A third bill proposes another charter charge to bar the city from selling the Philadelphia Water Department. The department has been publicly operated for more than 200 years. The measure is considered preemptive.
The overwhelming majority of Americans get their drinking water from public systems. But since the passage of Act 12 in Pennsylvania, private water companies have been pushing to take control of those systems, raising concerns about the customer costs.
To date, a state commission has approved at least a dozen acquisitions.
“Towns and cities have steadily been privatizing their water systems across the nation and the Commonwealth. And everywhere it’s happened, rates have skyrocketed,” O’Rourke said.
More broadly, O’Rouke said the Affordable Philly Now initiative is about pushing back against the economic policies of President Donald Trump’s administration.
“Look at our nation right now — the anxiety that people have about their pockets and our politics. I believe people need more avenues to plug into something to fight for some tangible, material change that they can see at this moment,” O’Rourke said.