ST. LOUIS 鈥 Almost six months after a much-debated $135.3 million plan to allocate federal pandemic aid was signed into law, St. 亚洲无码 city agencies have yet to spend most of it.
A report submitted Tuesday to an aldermanic panel by Mayor Tishaura O. Jones鈥 office showed that only about $3.4 million of the total had been paid out by Jan. 31.
The disclosure spurred criticism from Aldermanic President Lewis Reed, saying it鈥檚 disappointing that only 2% of the money 鈥渉as been put to work to bring much needed relief to the people of St. 亚洲无码.鈥 Time is of the essence, he added.
Nick Dunne, a spokesman for Jones, said the spending has taken this long because the city must follow its own procurement process, federal rules and requirements outlined by the Board of Aldermen for some programs when it passed the bill.
People are also reading…
鈥淭he city is moving as quickly as possible,鈥 he said.
Referring to some programs already started, he said, 鈥淲e鈥檝e already moved millions of dollars to St. 亚洲无码 families. We鈥檝e boosted our (COVID) vaccination rates. We鈥檝e been able to stand up programs to support our youth.鈥
While the report listed only limited spending so far, an item-by-item breakdown included did show activity has occurred on most of the planned allocations. Agencies said they are working to award contracts and taking other steps to eventually carry out the programs involved.
Among the largest outlays so far has been for the $500 direct cash payments that Jones pushed hard for last year during the board鈥檚 deliberations on the plan.
As of the report鈥檚 Jan. 31 cutoff date, $925,000 had been spent on the cash aid program. Officials added at an online Tuesday hearing that the figure has grown since then.
City Treasurer Adam Layne, one of several officials who took part in the Housing, Urban Development and Zoning Committee session, said more than $1.5 million has now been distributed in the program.
By Sunday, officials said, 3,818 applications for the $500 payments had been processed. In the next week and a half, Layne said, 鈥渨e will be nearing the 5,000 threshold.鈥
About $950,000 has been spent so far on efforts to increase the city鈥檚 COVID-19 vaccination rate, including $105,000 on canvassing and other community outreach, $78,000 on mobile clinics and nearly $727,000 on gift cards to provide an incentive to get coronavirus shots.
The city has handed out 2,065 $100 gift cards at vaccination clinics run by the city Health Department and 3,303 through federally qualified health centers. The board allocated $1.25 million for the gift card program.
The $135 million is the first allocation of money the city is receiving from the American Rescue Plan Act approved by Congress last year.
Aldermen voted to spend $168 million but Jones vetoed $33 million she contended violated federal rules; that amount has yet to be reallocated.
Reed issued his statement late Tuesday afternoon, a few hours after the committee meeting.
Police OT
Meanwhile, Jones aide Nahuel Fefer told the aldermanic panel that the police department doesn鈥檛 anticipate using during the current fiscal year any of the $5 million for overtime pay for officers included in the spending plan.
Aldermen had added that money, essentially restoring $4 million in police allocations cut at Jones鈥 request from the regular city budget for the fiscal year, which ends June 30.
Fefer said the city has until 2026 to spend any ARPA money but also suggested that the city may need to reappropriate it. He said there are needs for OT pay in other parts of city government but didn鈥檛 elaborate.
Aid for homeless
Tuesday鈥檚 report also said the city had spent about $392,000 and obligated about $7.8 million for emergency shelter for the homeless.
Human Services Director Yusef Scoggin said that included 125 鈥渙verflow beds鈥 at five locations.
Some advocates for the homeless with private agencies have said that鈥檚 not enough to handle the total number of homeless people in periods of extreme cold weather who typically won鈥檛 go to shelters.
The city is still working to finalize contracts for millions more in other new homeless services.
Originally posted at 6:58 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 8.