WHYY By City Councilmember Helen Gym speaks at a city council meeting. (Emma Lee/WHYY) Philadelphia’s primary source of legal and social-service support for low-income tenants facing eviction is gearing up to fight for its future this budget season. Under Mayor Jim Kenney’s proposed budget, the Philadelphia Eviction Prevention Project — a city-funded collaboration between Community Legal Services, Clarifi, Legal Clinic for the Disabled, SeniorLAW Center, Tenant Union Representative Network, and Philadelphia VIP — would see its budget cut in half. The mayor’s spending plan includes about $931,000 for the project — less than half of the $1.8 million secured for 2020 and the $2.1 million given in the prior year. The proposal doesn’t include any funds specifically for the city’s Right to Counsel initiative, which guarantees low-income tenants an attorney in eviction cases.