Did you know that talks of City-County merger/consolidation have been discussed and voted on rather recently?
"...[Democratic Alderman A.J.] Cervantes [of the 15th Ward] began to seek support for a board of freeholders from both St. Louis City and St. Louis County to address the separation that resulted from the 1876 divorce. Cervantes hoped the plan would create one metropolitan city or bring the city into the county again as another municipality. Another possible scenario would involve the creation of metropolitan districts to administer services in both the city and county (75)."
The end result of the board of freeholders was to create a multifunctional special district of governance presided by a board comprising members of the city and county, non partisan. The vote on this proposal took place in 1959. This plan was widely rejected, in part because it did not address governmental fragmentation in the area, and Mayor Tucker wanted to see the city rejoin the county. A second attempt emerged shortly after in November 1961:
"...a stalwart contingent of reformers recommended a 'Borough Plan to Revitalize St. Louis.' Proponents of this plan favored the most radical change possible: the creation of a single new political subdivision ecompassing both the city and county. All existing governmental bodies would be consolidated (83). The plan called for twenty-two boroughs to be created within the new combined jurisdiction, eight in the city and seven in the county, with an additional seven spanning the boundary between the two. After supporters collected thousands of signatures, this plan went before city and county voters in November 1962...On Election Day, the borough plan went down in ignominious defeat. In the city of St. Louis, 74 percent of those voting opposed it. In the county, the rejection figure was 79 percent..."
Today, this plan would create a "federation" government of a city of 1.3 million people, making it, I believe, the seventh largest city in the country. Something to think about, huh? The "Fourth City" (St. Louis was the fourth largest city in the U.S. in 1900, I believe) becoming the "Seventh City"? Interesting...
I ask you also, what would it take for you to vote yes on a consolidation/reform plan? Would you prefer some form of multifunctional district in the first plan which would call for reorganization of services and not of governments, or the more radical governmental reorganization of plan two? Would you favor consolidation at all? Discuss at will.
The above quotes, by the way, are from "St. Louis Politics: The Triumph of Tradition" by Lana Stein. The quotes come from pages 109-110. Very interesting book. Recommended for any St. Louis nut like I am. (Sorry if I misspelled anything retyping the quotes or if something doesn't make sense, I'm tired.)
"...[Democratic Alderman A.J.] Cervantes [of the 15th Ward] began to seek support for a board of freeholders from both St. Louis City and St. Louis County to address the separation that resulted from the 1876 divorce. Cervantes hoped the plan would create one metropolitan city or bring the city into the county again as another municipality. Another possible scenario would involve the creation of metropolitan districts to administer services in both the city and county (75)."
The end result of the board of freeholders was to create a multifunctional special district of governance presided by a board comprising members of the city and county, non partisan. The vote on this proposal took place in 1959. This plan was widely rejected, in part because it did not address governmental fragmentation in the area, and Mayor Tucker wanted to see the city rejoin the county. A second attempt emerged shortly after in November 1961:
"...a stalwart contingent of reformers recommended a 'Borough Plan to Revitalize St. Louis.' Proponents of this plan favored the most radical change possible: the creation of a single new political subdivision ecompassing both the city and county. All existing governmental bodies would be consolidated (83). The plan called for twenty-two boroughs to be created within the new combined jurisdiction, eight in the city and seven in the county, with an additional seven spanning the boundary between the two. After supporters collected thousands of signatures, this plan went before city and county voters in November 1962...On Election Day, the borough plan went down in ignominious defeat. In the city of St. Louis, 74 percent of those voting opposed it. In the county, the rejection figure was 79 percent..."
Today, this plan would create a "federation" government of a city of 1.3 million people, making it, I believe, the seventh largest city in the country. Something to think about, huh? The "Fourth City" (St. Louis was the fourth largest city in the U.S. in 1900, I believe) becoming the "Seventh City"? Interesting...
I ask you also, what would it take for you to vote yes on a consolidation/reform plan? Would you prefer some form of multifunctional district in the first plan which would call for reorganization of services and not of governments, or the more radical governmental reorganization of plan two? Would you favor consolidation at all? Discuss at will.
The above quotes, by the way, are from "St. Louis Politics: The Triumph of Tradition" by Lana Stein. The quotes come from pages 109-110. Very interesting book. Recommended for any St. Louis nut like I am. (Sorry if I misspelled anything retyping the quotes or if something doesn't make sense, I'm tired.)







