New privatization push.
It is hard for me to figure out how the math and timeline works, especially in this travel environment.
https://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/new ... s_headline
highlights:
The St. Louis-Kansas City Carpenters Regional Council and St. Louis city NAACP said they will work to gather some 22,000 signatures, forcing a Nov. 3 vote
The new plan would require the city accept no less than $1.7 billion from an operator. That amount could include defeasance of the airport's roughly $600 million in debt, which would be the responsibility of the firm.
Instead of allowing the city's aldermen to decide how to spend lease proceeds, it dictates that trusts be set up for various purposes. The "Police, Fire, and Safe Neighborhood Trust Fund," for example, would get 30% of proceeds, but not less than $300 million. Neighborhood development would get at least $200 million, plus $200 million for job training, $100 million for streets, $100 million for environmental cleanup, and the remainder for transit or other infrastructure.
It also envisions an operator making major capital improvements at Lambert, which a city-commissioned report has said could cost $141 million to $2 billion. The amendment says the "lessee alone" should use "commercially reasonable efforts" to upgrade Lambert's facilities so that they're in the top 10% of all large or medium hub U.S. airports, as graded by J.D. Power or a similar entity. And it addresses Lambert's airlines, putting caps on fees they can be charged and saying they should save $100 million under privatization, with 75% of that amount received in the first two years.
Payments from an operator would have to come no later than April 10, 2021.