Shownotes
St. Louis Mayor Cara Spencer joins Erik and Jacob to take stock of downtown's momentum — and confront the city's toughest structural questions.
Six months after calling on the business community to plant a flag downtown, Mayor Spencer returns to the Arch City Report to assess what's changed. With the Rams settlement bill moving through the Board of Aldermen — potentially allocating $55 million for downtown redevelopment, the riverfront, and North City — Spencer breaks down exactly how those dollars would be deployed and what private matching investment could follow.
But the conversation quickly turns to the harder questions: a state-appointed police board demanding a 22% pay raise with 24-hour notice, the strain on city services from a declining tax base, and whether St. Louis can realistically meet all of its pressing needs without a bigger structural fix. Is it finally time for a serious conversation about city-county merger?
Topics covered:
- Downtown development progress — Millennium site, Ballpark Village Phase 3, AT&T Tower, and Mansion House
- How the $55M in Rams settlement funds would be allocated across downtown, the riverfront, and North City
- The city's role as facilitator vs. doer in redevelopment
- The breakdown with the state police board and the battle over officer pay and benefits
- The case for regionalizing government functions — and whether opposition to merger is softening
Arch City Report is sponsored by Maryville University and Cass Commercial Bank.