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After three-plus terms, Philly Councilman Bill Greenlee will not seek reelection

When the 65-year-old councilman leaves his seat at the end of the year, he will have served 40 years on Council — 26 as a staffer and 14 as a councilman himself. His departure puts a second at-large seat in play.

File photo of Democratic ward leader Bill Greenlee speaking to reporters in 2006 after being chosen as a candidate for one of three vacant City Council seats in Philadelphia.  Daily News Photo / Jori Klein
File photo of Democratic ward leader Bill Greenlee speaking to reporters in 2006 after being chosen as a candidate for one of three vacant City Council seats in Philadelphia. Daily News Photo / Jori KleinRead moreJori Klein

Philadelphia City Councilman William K. Greenlee announced Monday that he will not seek a fourth full term on City Council, opening a second vacancy on the 17-member board.

“I’ve been weighing one way or another, and figured this was the right time” to call it quits, Greenlee, a Democrat, said in a brief interview. “You have to be all in for a citywide election. … I couldn’t see myself raising the money I needed to raise and going to three or four events a night.”

When Greenlee, 65, the majority deputy whip, leaves his seat at the end of the year, he will have 40 years of service with Council — 26 as a staffer to Councilman David Cohen and 14 as a councilman.

His announcement comes three weeks after Councilwoman Blondell Reynolds Brown said she would not seek another term. That leaves two of the seven at-large seats up for grabs in a year when dozens of candidates are expected to run.

As of Monday, 23 people had registered political action committees with the Board of Ethics for at-large seats. More names are likely to emerge next week, when prospective candidates can start circulating petitions; to run for an at-large seat, candidates must have 1,000 signatures.

“Having some new ideas, new blood, is good,” Greenlee said.

He will likely have some say in choosing some of those new voices. Greenlee said he plans to remain Democratic leader of the 15th Ward in Fairmount.

Greenlee’s announcement comes on the heels of a crushing legislative defeat. His Council colleagues last week killed a proposal he sponsored that would have forced pharmaceutical companies to register with the city and track their gifts to doctors. Greenlee intended for the bill to address in part the city’s opioid epidemic.

In an uncharacteristic move, Greenlee took to social media Thursday to try to shame the members who voted against the bill. Asked if that vote was a final straw in his decision to bow out, Greenlee said, “It certainly didn’t make me reconsider.”

Greenlee grew up in Philadelphia and graduated from St. Joseph’s Preparatory School and Temple University. He worked on Cohen’s campaign for Council right out of college and joined his office in City Hall. When Cohen died in 2005, Greenlee won his seat in a special election. He then was elected three times to a full term.

Greenlee has been one of Council’s more progressive voices, championing paid sick leave, wage equity, and wage theft laws among those he backed. On Monday, he said the paid sick leave legislation, which requires employers with at least 10 employees to offer the benefit, is the one of which he is proudest. “It’s something that affected a lot of people in a positive way,” he said.

Council President Darrell L. Clarke said, “Bill’s decades of service to this city are marked by his unparalleled work ethic, his devotion to lifting up the so-called little people, and his commitment to the integrity of this body.”