Nearly 85% of those who voted in the recent non-scientific Sunday Poll disagreed with the statement that Gov Greitens should sign the bill that would strip St. Louis of setting its own minimum wow higher than that of the state. More than half picked the “strongly disagree” option.
Here’s the final breakdown:
Q: Agree or disagree: Gov Grietens should sign the bill limiting the minimum wage to the same $7.70/hr statewide.
Strongly agree 2 [6.25%]
Agree 1 [3.13%]
Somewhat agree 1 [3.13%]
Neither agree or disagree 0 [0%]
Somewhat disagree 3 [9.38%]
Disagree 7 [21.88%]
Strongly disagree 17 [53.13%]
Unsure/No Answer 1 [3.13%]
A thriving economy has goods/services being exchanged at good pace. Those with minimum wage jobs spend every dollar they get:
Those in the bottom 30% of the income scale make an average of $14,000 a year, including the value of many government benefits like food stamps or disability payments. But they spend more than $25,000, or 182%, of their annual income mostly on basic needs like housing, food and transportation, according to a CNNMoney analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
Worth noting is that this group includes senior citizens, who supplement their income from Social Security with savings, and students, who turn to mom and dad for help. Also, research shows that some underestimate how much aid they receive from the government.
But the data also includes many low-income families and individuals who just don’t make enough to get by. Often, they have to decide what bills to pay or they turn to payday lenders or credit cards. (CNN/Money)
This is 182% of their income, while the rich only spend 61% of their income. For the middle class it’s 89%. If we pay those at the bottom a little more the money will circulate through the economy — not sit in accounts here and abroad. Foe nearly 40 policies of both Republicans & Democrats have eroded the middle class and condemned the poor to a life of struggling to stay afloat.
St. Louis needs an improved economy — paying workers more is the best way to do so. Please contact Gov Greitens immediately and let him know he should veto the minimum wage bill.
May 22, 2017Downtown, Featured, ParksComments Off on A Look At The New Kiener Plaza (Photos & Videos)
A week ago I posted many photos of the old Kiener Plaza, see Remembering The Old Kiener Plaza. Today we take a close look at the new Kiener Plaza that opened over the weekend.
The first three images were taken the afternoon of May 8, 2017 from the SE corner of the Kiener West parking garage.
Also taken on the 8th
These next images were taken Monday 5/15 during a media preview.
The next group of images were taken before and after the ribbon cutting on Friday May 19, 2017:
This next batch of images were taken the evening of opening day, May 18th.
Yesterday my husband and I had a picnic at Kiener Plaza — I moved the table and chairs several times to stay in the shade.
Here’s a great time-lapse video included on the media’s thumb drive. I uploaded it to my channel because it wasn’t on CityArchRiver’s.
And a video I made from clips from opening day.
Overall I think they’ve done an outstanding job, but the previous space was so awful it was hard to not do better. Accessibly is excellent, as is the amount of seating. The trees are a good size and will provide good shade within just a few years. Very glad to have the Olympic Runner statue back –the original plan for the new Kiener Plaza didn’t include it.
The misses are few:
No good place for accessible food truck lines
No power supply for food trucks, so each must run noisy & polluting generators.
No public restrooms.
Excessive artificial lighting.
Same mistake as Citygarden — no plan to extend “hallway” East & West of borders. Shortsighted.
City’s auto-centric pedestrian crossing time limit regardless of time vehicle signal is green.
On Friday May 12th, in the final minutes of the session, the Missouri legislature sent a bill to Governor Greitens that would nullify St. Louis’ recent increase in the minimum wage.
The House failed to adopt an emergency clause on the bill, meaning it won’t immediately take effect should Gov. Eric Greitens sign it, which sponsoring House Rep. Jason Chipman said he had promised to do. The new minimum wage in St. Louis would instead be nullified in August if the measure becomes law.
Speaking to reporters after session’s end, Greitens said he’d have to take a close look at the bill before making a final decision. (Post-Dispatch)
Missouri’s minimum wage is $7,70/hr while St. Louis’ new minimum wage is $10/hr.
May 19, 2017Board of Aldermen, FeaturedComments Off on St. Louis Board of Aldermen: New Board Bills 5/19/2017 (#35-#36), Update On Board Bill #34 From Prior Week
B.B.#35 – Vaccaro – An ordinance protecting victims of automobile theft from paying storing, towing and administrative fees directly related to recovery of a stolen automobile by amending Ordinance 64668, approved June 11, 1999 and containing a severability clause.
B.B.#36 – Vaccaro – An ordinance mandating that the Director of Parks, Recreation and Forestry shall cause the construction of four well?lit basketball courts in Forest Park by October 1, 2017.
As of 5:30am the pages with the full bill language are not posted online, I’ll update this post once these are available. [UPDATED @10AM]
Today’s agenda can be viewed here. The meeting begins at 10am, it can be watched online here.
An update on last week’s meeting. Just before 7am on Thursday May 11th I downloaded the Week #4 agenda (view on Scribd). I then copied and pasted the list of new bills (#25-#34) into the post for the next morning. That night I updated the post with links to the bill pages. The Week 4 agenda currently posted online (Scribd) doesn’t include Bill #34 — 25 through 33 all match The video of the meeting shows no #34 was introduced — BB#33 was introduced at 28:53 in the video. However, a Board Bill #34 creating a buffer zone at abortion clinics is listed, though it shows no legislative action taken. Perhaps #34 will be formally introduced at a later date? I’ve downloaded copies in case it disappears.
May 17, 2017Featured, STL RegionComments Off on Readers: Lawsuit Against NFL Won’t Be Successful
On Friday we learned about the legal team coming to St. Louis to defend the NFL & Rams against the lawsuit filed by St. Louis:
To no one’s surprise, the NFL is sending in its “A-team” in the St. Louis breach of contract lawsuit over the relocation of the Rams to Los Angeles.
The Washington-based law firm of Covington & Burling will represent the NFL and 31 of its 32 teams, according to court records and sources familiar with the case.
The exception is the Rams, who are represented by Kirkland & Ellis, also a nationally prominent law firm but headquartered in Chicago.
Also representing the NFL and the 31 other teams locally is Jerry Carmody of Clayton-based Carmody MacDonald. (Post-Dispatch)
The case is filed in St. Louis Circuit Court (22nd): 1722-CC00976 – STL REGIONAL CONV ET AL V NATL FOOTBALL LEAGUE ET. (find on CaseNet)
In the recent non-scientific Sunday Poll a slim majority of those who voted don’t think the lawsuit will be successful.
Q: Agree or disagree: St. Louis’ lawsuit against the Rams/NFL will recoup millions spent trying to keep the team here.
Strongly agree 9 [16.67%]
Agree 5 [9.26%]
Somewhat agree 7 [12.96%]
Neither agree or disagree 3 [5.56%]
Somewhat disagree 1 [1.85%]
Disagree 8 [14.81%]
Strongly disagree 20 [37.04%]
Unsure/No Answer 1 [1.85%]
The home field advantage for the plaintiffs certainly helps, but the local jurors will need to be convinced. I’m not going to say either way because it is hard to predict outcomes of lawsuits. I’m tracking the case through CaseNet — the jury trial is currently scheduled to start at 9am on Monday October 2, 2017. The case is currently assigned to Judge Michael K Mullen.
I hope they’re successful, but I can’t help but think of Metro’s 2007 court loss. Not an apples to apples comparison — but it comes to mind as an embarrassing loss.
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