CLAYTON 鈥 The survey responses have been collected, the town halls held. Now, St. Louis County officials will have to square public input with their own goals for spending more than $85 million in federal pandemic aid.
Councilman Ernie Trakas, R-6th District, has called for $30 million for projects and social services in his mostly unincorporated south St. Louis County district.
Councilwomen Rita Days, D-1st District, and Shalonda Webb, D-4th District, are expected to press forward with a revised version of their earlier proposal to spend $50 million on public health-related investments in north St. Louis County.
And Councilman Tim Fitch, R-3rd District, has sponsored bills granting police department requests for roughly $34 million.
The council also is considering leftover requests from County Executive Sam Page鈥檚 2021 budget plan, including $1.1 million for Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell to add nine attorneys and five other staffers, $1.2 million for online services for residents, and $270,000 for the public health department for services including protective gear and public transport to and from its three health centers.
People are also reading…
The proposals were put on hold late last year over council concerns about meeting federal funding rules, which the U.S. Treasury finalized in January, and for a planned community survey, which launched in late February. That survey closed March 25 with 3,281 responses 鈥 a sliver of the county鈥檚 population of 997,187 鈥 with a few hundred coming from each of the seven council districts. Over the month, members of Page鈥檚 cabinet and council members also heard from residents directly at in-person and online town halls.
Days said Thursday that she had asked for a council hearing on the survey results on April 19. County Chief of Staff Cal Harris said Page鈥檚 office hopes to publish the survey results 鈥渨ithin the month.鈥 The county has until the end of the year to appropriate the funds.
Some community activists say the spending plans already before the council indicate county officials won鈥檛 seriously incorporate public input.
鈥淎fter a great deal of time and effort we finally opened a survey to the public so they could state their preferences directly,鈥 Chris Wilcox, a social worker with the North County nonprofit A Red Circle, told the council this week. 鈥淲e can make assumptions about what residents want from this funding, but if this effort was not simply an exercise in box checking we would need to hear from their own words before committing the remaining funds.鈥
Kelly McGowan, with the community activist group , urged Page鈥檚 office to consider holding more town halls or attending other community events to get feedback on the plans. Both Wilcox and McGowan had attended council meetings and town halls to track ARPA discussions and walked door to door to ask residents to fill out the survey.
鈥淪t. Louis County, it鈥檚 now your turn,鈥 McGowan said. 鈥淵ou need to be intentional and transparent.鈥
Two other public speakers at Tuesday鈥檚 meeting urged the council to adopt Trakas鈥 bill, which he revised at the meeting to scale back a proposal he made in November, originally calling for $62.5 million for the district.
鈥淎ll I ask is that District 6 receive our fair share,鈥 said Patrick Finn, a resident of the unincorporated Oakville area.
Trakas has argued most residents in the other six council districts have many of their government services met by municipalities that received their own allotments of federal aid.
The county鈥檚 88 municipalities have been allocated a total of about $127 million in ARPA funds, up from nearly $47 million they received in 2020 from the county鈥檚 $173.5 million in emergency pandemic aid.
鈥淔or far too long, unincorporated St. Louis County has been the redheaded stepchild of the county, with residents paying their share of taxes and not getting their due,鈥 Trakas said Tuesday.
Trakas said his bill incorporates input he鈥檚 received from South County residents, including at a recent ARPA town hall. It includes $15 million to address problem properties and infrastructure repair, $12.5 million for aid to businesses, $2.4 million for mental health support, child care and housing aid, and $2.5 million to create a substance abuse treatment center at the county鈥檚 South County public health center in Sunset Hills.
Webb, whose North County district includes the second largest portion of unincorporated neighborhoods, said she understood Trakas鈥 鈥渇rustrations鈥 and supported parts of his plan.
Her August proposal for $50 million for North County 鈥 which had called for two new public health centers, two mobile COVID-19 vaccination and health clinics and funding for a door-to-door public health campaign 鈥 is meant to address disparities between the Black-majority area and whiter, more affluent parts of the county. But it was on hold until the survey results came in, she said.
Residents were already 鈥渧ery skeptical that we鈥檙e actually going to take this information in and actually make decisions based on that,鈥 Webb said. 鈥淚f we move too quickly 鈥 that skepticism will become fact.鈥
And Webb asked Trakas to consider splitting his bill into separate parts so the council could consider each item.
Fitch last month what was one funding bill into three separate pieces of legislation: $15 million to build a new Central County precinct and evidence storage facility, $15 million to build a real-time crime surveillance center, and $3.8 million to buy 50 patrol vehicles.
Fitch said Thursday that he鈥檒l wait until after the survey results are released, but expects to seek council approval of each bill, which are based on requests from Chief Kenneth Gregory and recommendations from an outside consultant, Teneo, that reviewed county and city of St. Louis police departments in 2020.
Page has not publicly committed support or opposition to the plans introduced by the council so far.
鈥淲hile there are a lot of good ideas before the council, members rightly paused legislation on how to spend additional ARPA funding until ideas residents shared at town hall meetings and through online surveys are compiled,鈥 Page said in a statement Thursday. 鈥淚 look forward to seeing how our residents prioritize the funds to be spent in their communities.鈥
Days said calls for new public health centers could be discussed with a request from Page鈥檚 administration for funding to renovate the North County public health center in Pine Lawn. Instead of separate bills to address blight in unincorporated portions of North County or South County, one bill could boost funding for the county鈥檚 existing problem properties unit, she said.
鈥淥bviously we cannot fund everything, but I do think all of the requests are pretty much needed,鈥 Days said. 鈥淓verything won鈥檛 go to the 鈥楽outh County Strong鈥 proposal, everything won鈥檛 go to the police proposals. We have to prioritize them the best we can.鈥
Over the past year, the county has appropriated roughly $107 million from the ARPA windfall. The bulk 鈥 $80 million 鈥 was put, at Page鈥檚 recommendation, into the county鈥檚 general operating budget through 2024 to avoid cuts from revenue losses during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The council also has approved:
鈥 $11 million for public health COVID-19 testing and staffing.
鈥 $5 million for emergency housing aid.
鈥 $5 million for temporary pay raises for jail corrections officers.
鈥 $4 million to upgrade the police department鈥檚 20-year-old 911 dispatch system.
鈥 $2 million to extend a program providing digital tablets to homebound seniors.
鈥 $1 million for contracts with firms advising the county on meeting federal regulations for the funds.
鈥 $875,000 to pay for a vaccine incentive gift-card program.
鈥 $175,000 for temporary raises for employees working in-person during the recent omicron surge.