Trending...
- City of St. Louis Proposed FY2027 Budget Approved by Board of Estimate and Apportionment, Focuses on Workforce, Public Safety and Neighborhood Stability
- HRC Fertility's Dr. Christo G. Zouves Appointed to San Mateo County Medical Association Board of Directors
- Altruvest and Financial Executives International Canada Announce Strategic Partnership to Strengthen Nonprofit Boards Across Canada
Mayor Cara Spencer announced today that the City of St. Louis, alongside taxpayer and Budget Director Paul Payne, has filed a lawsuit challenging the State Takeover Law (HB 495) as unconstitutional.
The mayor expressed disappointment that legal action is now required, but also acknowledged this was a necessary step as the City and the Board of Police Commissioners have been unable to reach an agreement over the budget for the Police Department, which affects the budget of every other City department.
"This is a measure we do not take lightly. Regrettably, we are at an impasse in terms of what the law requires the City to provide, so we must ask the courts to intervene and provide that necessary clarity," said Mayor Spencer. "While difficult, this is an essential step to prevent a financial crisis and bring legal certainty back to our City's governance."
The lawsuit seeks to overturn the law entirely and stop significant unfunded mandates from being forced on St. Louis taxpayers. It is filed to advocate for the City's financial stability and the constitutional rights of city officials and residents.
More on Missouriar
"My commitment to the officers who put on the uniform every day and do dangerous work remains non-negotiable. My disagreement is with the Police Board's approach and the harm that would cause to all City services and residents," said Mayor Spencer. "This lawsuit seeks clarity and to protect all those who work for our City, and our right to provide a safe, clean and healthy place to live for all St. Louisans."
The decision to file a lawsuit was made following a challenging budget season with the Board of Police Commissioners. The Police Board certified a budget of $250 million on Feb. 25, excluding costs that would raise the actual expense to the City to $274 million. That is a cost that the City cannot cover without resorting to layoffs and severe cuts to essential services, including refuse, street repair and water service.
Yesterday, the City's budget director recommended a fiscal year 2027 budget for the SLMPD that includes the 7% pay increase approved by the Police Board in January. It represents a 4.3% increase over the fiscal year 2026 budget, reflects $7.5 million more in General Fund dollars above fiscal year 2026, and is an estimated 25.4% of City general revenue.
More on Missouriar
The budget certified by the Police Board of $250 million did not include line items for retirement or Park Rangers, and excluded City Marshals costs. These required costs would mandate the City expend $274 million. The BoPC has also failed to provide allocation figures for contract funds, grants and asset forfeiture revenues.
What is even more concerning is the Police Board's printed assertion that, under their calculations, the city could be on the hook for as much as $333 million. They also continue to assert that their position is that the Rams settlement funds and the City's reserves should also be considered general revenue. The City simply sees no argument for that, and has repeatedly stressed this.
"It's simply not true," said Mayor Spencer. "Treating the Rams funds and reserves as general revenue means they would soon be exhausted because they lack recurring revenue streams. The Rams settlement was a singular allocation, and the City's reserves are designated for maintaining the City's solvency and must be safeguarded."
The mayor expressed disappointment that legal action is now required, but also acknowledged this was a necessary step as the City and the Board of Police Commissioners have been unable to reach an agreement over the budget for the Police Department, which affects the budget of every other City department.
"This is a measure we do not take lightly. Regrettably, we are at an impasse in terms of what the law requires the City to provide, so we must ask the courts to intervene and provide that necessary clarity," said Mayor Spencer. "While difficult, this is an essential step to prevent a financial crisis and bring legal certainty back to our City's governance."
The lawsuit seeks to overturn the law entirely and stop significant unfunded mandates from being forced on St. Louis taxpayers. It is filed to advocate for the City's financial stability and the constitutional rights of city officials and residents.
More on Missouriar
- David Cavanagh Launches AI SEO Company For ChatGPT And AI Search Visibility
- Matthew Cossolotto Spotlights Make a Promise Day 2026 Events, Including Official Launch of Harness Your PromisePower and Issuing a "Peace Promise"
- Slyman Bros Appliances Expands Access to Savings with New Weekly Outlet Showroom Hours
- Columbia Fire Department responds to residential structure fire, May 8
- Landmark Expands Services to Include Specialized Glass and Glazing Solutions Across Los Angeles
"My commitment to the officers who put on the uniform every day and do dangerous work remains non-negotiable. My disagreement is with the Police Board's approach and the harm that would cause to all City services and residents," said Mayor Spencer. "This lawsuit seeks clarity and to protect all those who work for our City, and our right to provide a safe, clean and healthy place to live for all St. Louisans."
The decision to file a lawsuit was made following a challenging budget season with the Board of Police Commissioners. The Police Board certified a budget of $250 million on Feb. 25, excluding costs that would raise the actual expense to the City to $274 million. That is a cost that the City cannot cover without resorting to layoffs and severe cuts to essential services, including refuse, street repair and water service.
Yesterday, the City's budget director recommended a fiscal year 2027 budget for the SLMPD that includes the 7% pay increase approved by the Police Board in January. It represents a 4.3% increase over the fiscal year 2026 budget, reflects $7.5 million more in General Fund dollars above fiscal year 2026, and is an estimated 25.4% of City general revenue.
More on Missouriar
- As Pentagon Releases Ufo Files, Debut Ya Novel Predicted It All
- RAATV Premieres Original Reality Series "The Access Index: Jackson" June, 19
- Connecticut Resident Develops Patent-Pending Concept Exploring a New Approach to GPS Navigation
- JP Events Azerbaijan to Host 2nd Women in Motorsport Event During the Azerbaijan Grand Prix Week
- Autonomous AI A.L.I.C.E. Discovers Hardcoded API Key in Commercial Enterprise Security Software
The budget certified by the Police Board of $250 million did not include line items for retirement or Park Rangers, and excluded City Marshals costs. These required costs would mandate the City expend $274 million. The BoPC has also failed to provide allocation figures for contract funds, grants and asset forfeiture revenues.
What is even more concerning is the Police Board's printed assertion that, under their calculations, the city could be on the hook for as much as $333 million. They also continue to assert that their position is that the Rams settlement funds and the City's reserves should also be considered general revenue. The City simply sees no argument for that, and has repeatedly stressed this.
"It's simply not true," said Mayor Spencer. "Treating the Rams funds and reserves as general revenue means they would soon be exhausted because they lack recurring revenue streams. The Rams settlement was a singular allocation, and the City's reserves are designated for maintaining the City's solvency and must be safeguarded."
0 Comments
Latest on Missouriar
- HealthBook+ and Stonebrook Risk Solutions Partner to Bring Predictive Intelligence to Healthcare Risk
- Robert Woeger Releases New Christian Teaching On Salvation, Heaven, Hell, And Eternal Life
- Umbrella Becomes First FinOps Platform to Support AWS Billing Transfer Onboarding
- RECYCLEXPERT FZE Strengthens Leadership in Data Destruction UAE and GCC with Certified Secure ITAD Services
- Assymetrix Launches the Deepest Independent Prediction Market Data API
- CCHR: 'Plant-Based' Psychedelics Push Masks Synthetic Drugs and Billion-Dollar Profits
- BTR: i2 Group Launches i2 Amplify, a Community Platform for Intelligence Professionals Worldwide
- L.A. Watts Summer Games Announces Free Pelé Tribute Event at Magic Johnson Park
- Robert Woeger Releases Christian Teachings On Daily Agreement With God And Guarding The Heart
- SUMOFIBER Fuels Explosive Growth With netElastic vBNG
- City of St. Louis Shares Updated Proposal for Data Center Regulation, Invites Public to Second Hearing
- Columbia: Providence Road bridge over I-70 to be replaced; local partners invest in gateway improvements
- NRx Pharmaceuticals (N A S D A Q: NRXP) Accelerates Into National Spotlight as Manufacturing Launch, Federal Policy & AI-Driven Breakthroughs Converge
- Columbia: Summer Lunch Program returns June 1, 2026
- Expanding Into High-Margin Battery Recycling With Black Mass Strategy plus Scaling AI Infrastructure & Global Supply Chain Platform: N A S D A Q: MWYN
- Long-Distance Couples Spend Nearly $7,000 on Travel Before Moving In Together, New Mayflower Research Finds
- imggpt Launches AI-Powered GPT Image Generator and Photo Editor for Creative Teams
- Intuitive Flow Systems Launches Mokēd Meditation Whistle
- More Life Summit 2026 Announces Gary Brecka & Mr. Olympia Derek Lunsford as First Speakers for Miami Event
- Michael H. Kaplan, Colorado Workers' Compensation Attorney, Rallies Athlete Unions Against Proposed Legislative "Carve-Outs"