The bill is co-sponsored by five Council members: Helen Gym, Jamie Gauthier, Mark Squilla, Derek Green, and Kendra Brooks.
Gauthier is the only district Council member currently supporting the measure. The rest are at-large. All 17 seats on City Council will be on the ballot in 2023.
“New blood invites innovative, bold ideas that challenge the status quo and prioritize the needs of Philadelphians, which is something we as a Council body should aspire to,” said Brooks in a statement.
The 10 Council members who did not co-sign Domb’s bill could either not be reached for comment, or said they were not ready to weigh in on the legislation.
The bill requires a hearing before it’s considered by the full Council. Under the rules of Council, Clarke will effectively decide whether the measure even gets a hearing. Those decisions are rarely made the same day a bill is introduced, and are often based on whether the measure has a chance of passing.
Pat Christmas, policy director for the good government group Committee of Seventy, said he hopes the bill moves ahead, with voters getting an opportunity to weigh in at the voting booth.
“This should not be a lifetime job, which for some of our elected officials it has been,” said Christmas.
Philadelphia voters approve the overwhelming majority of ballot measures, striking down just three of them since the 1960s, according to the Committee of Seventy.