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Board meetings and strategic plans from Victoria V. Anwuri's organization
The meeting commenced with a roll call establishing a quorum, followed by an opening reflection/prayer led by guests from Carol House Quick Fix Pet Clinic. Key legislative actions involved the Third Reading and Final Passage of several Board Bills, including those establishing traffic control measures (three-way stop at Shenandoah/Virginia Avenues, speed humps in various wards/blocks), authorizing cooperation agreements regarding the Prop NS program and the Syndicate Trust Community Improvement District (CID) termination, and approving amendments/establishment of other CIDs. Funding appropriations were addressed for capital maintenance of the flood wall ($5,000,000 initially, later substituted for $4,100,000) and water infrastructure repair ($1,200,000) using American Rescue Plan Act interest funds. The Board also worked on bills concerning car rental operations at the airport, authorizing parking revenue bonds up to $5 million, submitting charter amendments regarding election methods and general language modernization to voters, and imposing a business license fee for short-term rentals to fund affordable housing and right to counsel. Several resolutions were adopted honoring Police Detective Gregory Rodden, Police Officer Cole Bornhop, Detective Timothy Simms, and Police Officer James Massey as Detectives/Officers of the Year for 2025 for the Second Police District. The meeting concluded with adjournment until Friday, February 27, 2026.
The meeting involved the third reading and final passage of several Board Bills, including those dealing with traffic calming measures such as installing speed humps on various avenues and blocks, and vacating portions of air rights and streets for commercial development and parking consolidation. The Board considered ordinances establishing a sales tax reimbursement account for a project at 3942 Laclede Avenue, ordering a special election for the Office of the Sheriff, and amending procurement thresholds. The Mayor submitted appointments for the Waterman Lake/Special Business District, Washington Place Special Business District, and reappointment for the DeBaliviere Place Special Business District. Additionally, the Board dealt with appropriation of funds received under the American Rescue Plan Act for tornado impact recovery and water infrastructure repair. The Board also discussed resolutions regarding adopting rules and regulations, amending the Board of Aldermen rules, and recognizing the City of St. Louis as a Bird City, alongside several courtesy resolutions.
The meeting commenced with roll call to establish a quorum. The key discussion points involved committee updates. The Community Engagement Committee reported on expanding partnership and outreach activities with the Department of Health, including leveraging updated brochures and planning presence at community events like coat and food drives during winter months. The Academic Partnership Committee is planning a Public Health Internship Showcase event in October. The Governance Committee established its focus areas for the year: board composition and filling vacancies, modernizing the charter language related to health policy, and enhancing training and onboarding processes, including Sunshine Law training scheduled for March 5th. The quarterly joint committee discussed a shared vision and reviewed public health priorities; its next meeting is set for April 14th. Advocacy updates included opportunities related to the Missouri Public Health Institute and Capitol Day events. Department of Health updates covered influenza activity, noting current case counts were below the five-year mean and significantly lower than the previous year. Information was also shared regarding a recent measles exposure case linked to travel through a local airport, emphasizing isolation and vaccination as key preventative measures. Finally, an overview of the Community Health Assessment and Improvement Plan (CHIP/CHA) was scheduled.
The meeting, following an overview of the total citywide capital needs inventory, focused on detailed discussions for specific categories, namely Category A and B concerning streets and bridges. Presentations detailed seven recommended projects with attached funding, including the River Pair Boulevard reconstruction, Christy Greenway extension, and Skinker McCausland traffic signal replacement, with funding seeking local matches for already awarded grants. Two new projects with pending grant applications (Lindle Multimodal Improvements and South Kings Highway traffic signal replacements) were also reviewed. Additionally, three projects without current funding requests—Cass Avenue phase 2 reconstruction, Brickline Greenway segment, and the old stable bridge project—were highlighted for context. Specific discussions covered the $20 million River Pair Boulevard reconstruction, which features safety upgrades, widening, and multimodal improvements, and the $3.1 million Christy Greenway extension connecting to existing infrastructure. The Skinker/McCausland traffic signal replacement, part of Traffic Management Enhancement Phase Nine, aims to modernize approximately 20 signals, improve air quality, and include ADA/curb ramp compliance, with specific focus on sidewalk improvements under the Metroink Bridge. Funding requests were also presented for the engineering phase of the Lindle Multimodal Improvements project, which proposes a two-way cycle track and road diet, and the South Kings Highway traffic signal replacement project.
The committee meeting focused on two primary board bills. Board Bill 131 concerned the amendment of a cooperation agreement with the Gateway Foundation regarding a building facility in City Garden, shifting its primary use from restaurant operations to a visitors center, concession stand, and community/gallery space. The committee members expressed strong support for this proposal as a means to activate the space. Board Bill 132 involved the vacation and transfer of ownership of a portion of the MacArthur Bridge located on the Illinois side of the river to East St. Louis, intended to relieve the city of maintenance costs (estimated at $3 million for demolition) and liability associated with the asset, which was transferred for a nominal fee of one dollar.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
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