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St. Louis mayor announces $64M funding package related to COVID-19

On May 6, the city received a wire transfer of $35.2 million from the State of Missouri in the form of federal emergency relief funds through the CARES Act
Credit: UPI/Bill Greenblatt
St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson

ST. LOUIS — St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson announced plans for funding package related to COVID-19.

Krewson held a press conference Friday morning where she announced plans for a $64 million package to address the health, humanitarian, and economic needs of St. Louisans as a result of the pandemic.

“We know this global crisis will have devastating effects on our residents and businesses both in the short and long-term, and it’s our collective responsibility to prepare and plan for both,” Mayor Krewson said. “We must be intentional, deliberate, and thoughtful in recognizing that COVID-19-related hardships aren’t going away overnight and will be felt in every corner of our community, particularly our most vulnerable populations that have already been disproportionately affected.”

On May 6, the city received a wire transfer of $35.2 million from the State of Missouri in the form of federal emergency relief funds through the CARES Act.

Krewson said she is working with the state to recoup the additional $17 million the city believes it should have received originally as to have an equal amount per capita to St. Louis County’s allocation.

St. Louis County received $173 million from the CARES Act.  

The Krewson administration will work with the Board of Aldermen to introduce legislation for a $63.9 million COVID-19 funding package that includes investments across several departments including the Department of Human Services (DHS), the Department of Health (DOH), the Department of Public Safety (DPS), the Community Development Administration (CDA), and the St. Louis Development Corporation (SLDC).

Below is the proposed package:

• Under the proposed package, DHS would receive $20 million to address homeless prevention, street outreach, emergency shelters, eviction mediation, and the looming housing crisis as rising unemployment threatens individuals and families from their homes. This includes more than $5 million for rental and mortgage assistance, $3 million for utility assistance, and more than $2 million for rapid rehousing.

• CDA would receive more than $16 million address increased needs associated with food insecurity/distribution, affordable housing, health care services, utility assistance, and short-term working capital assistance. This includes $4 million to work with SLDC to provide grants to small businesses that were significantly impacted by COVID-19 Stay at Home orders, $5 million for affordable housing construction, and $3 million in utility assistance.

• DOH would receive more than $7 million to bolster its already unprecedented response to the global pandemic at the local level, support housing opportunities for individuals living with AIDS, expand telehealth bandwidth for federally qualified health centers,  and continue its expansion of contact tracing and access to COVID-19 testing to the public. This includes more than $2 million to increase staff capacity by adding 25 additional public health representatives and $1.5 million for personal protective equipment (PPE), training, and other support for early childcare facilities.

“St. Louisans have been so brave and resilient in the face of such terrible uncertainty, heartbreak, and economic and human loss. But I know many of them are still hurting and looking to us for help. I am hopeful we can work together to see this important legislation passed in a timely manner and these resources distributed equitably to make a difference for those who need it the most,"  Krewson said. 

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