"Ron Jackson and Shelley Welsch: Future of the region is better decided together"
https://www.stltoday.com/opinion/column ... 78b41.html
https://www.stltoday.com/opinion/column ... 78b41.html
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/cri ... b5e02.html“I’m going to do whatever I can to see the city survives,” Fair said last month. “We’ve got to fix the budget, and that’s the bottom line.”
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/gov ... 2921d.html“There’s too many municipalities in St. Louis County,” Reed said. “Just get rid of them.”
St. Louis is avoiding the inevitable that eventually the city and county will have to merge into one unigov system (at minimum regional service districts) to stay solvent. It may take 50 years, but most of St. Louis County outside the wealthiest municipalities are likely in big trouble.symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Jun 24, 2022^Pardon me as I sit here and merge municipalities in my mind. But I could easily see Bridgeton, Hazelwood, and potentially Florissant merged. As Florissant. (Let's kill this "Cahokia Heights" renaming trend where it started. Merge the municipalities, but not the names. The munis whose names are not chosen can become neighborhoods in the newly enlarged one, like Carondelet in St. Louis.)
I actually agree and have been making that case to folks as of late. The financial situation Is fairly bright for the city itself and it doesn’t have the weight of all that poor land use in the County. It also has some major institutions within its limits that theoretically will continue to provide some stability.addxb2 wrote:^ I disagree. The city is in a much better place than most perceive and has more control over its future. I could argue that it benefits from not being attached to less efficient land use and sprawling infrastructure. Quality of leadership is the primary issue and being merged with the county wouldn’t help.
I agree that the county munis need to be the focus of consolidation. They’re the most duplicative/wasteful of any government structure in our region. They also have the most to gain from cutting cost. A lot of county infrastructure is reaching the critical 50-75 year mark… at the same time.
More communities like Hazelwood will buckle as they realize single family housing and sales tax doesn’t cover asphalt, fire, police, and a parks department.
That may be true to a point, but the city doesn't benefit from being surrounded by bankrupted municipalities.addxb2 wrote: ↑Jun 24, 2022^ I disagree. The city is in a much better place than most perceive and has more control over its future. I could argue that it benefits from not being attached to less efficient land use and sprawling infrastructure. Quality of leadership is the primary issue and being merged with the county wouldn’t help.
Honestly I think any muni that goes bankrupt should be forced to dissolve or merge otherwise they're just kicking the can down the road to the next bankruptcy. Being financially solvent is literally not structurally feasible for many of them (ie. there is no way to balance the books with their current needed structures and infrastructure even if all current debt were erased).symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Jun 24, 2022^Pardon me as I sit here and merge municipalities in my mind. But I could easily see Bridgeton, Hazelwood, and potentially Florissant merged. As Florissant. (Let's kill this "Cahokia Heights" renaming trend where it started. Merge the municipalities, but not the names. The munis whose names are not chosen can become neighborhoods in the newly enlarged one, like Carondelet in St. Louis.)
I agree. While I’ve moved away from wanting an all out consolidation along the lines of BT, merging various suburbs together and reentering the city into the county should be a priority. The city would still have more control over itself, but other issues like policing, courts, etc. could be better addressed.MarkHaversham wrote: ↑Jun 25, 2022That may be true to a point, but the city doesn't benefit from being surrounded by bankrupted municipalities.addxb2 wrote: ↑Jun 24, 2022^ I disagree. The city is in a much better place than most perceive and has more control over its future. I could argue that it benefits from not being attached to less efficient land use and sprawling infrastructure. Quality of leadership is the primary issue and being merged with the county wouldn’t help.