Prop Y
Issues bonds in the amount of $500 million to comply with federal and state clean water requirements. PASSED
YES 74,29480.9%
Prop 1
Amends charter to remove obsolete provisions, modernize certain provisions, references and language and change certain provisions to align with current practices of the District. PASSED
YES 48,37653.7%
Prop 2
Amends charter to provide that an affirmative vote by two members of the Board of Trustees appointed from the City of St. Louis and two members appointed from St. Louis County shall be necessary to pass any ordinance, resolution, regulation, rule or order. PASSED
YES 47,89653.9%
Prop 3
Amends charter so that the Rate Commission Representative Organization shall only have one voting delegate; the Rate Commission Report shall be issued to the Board of Trustees no later than 165 days after receipt of a rate change notice; the Board of Trustees is deemed to have accepted a Rate Commission Report if not rejected by the Board of Trustees
Уже размывает новую грунтовую дорожку: Зеленую рощу затопило талыми водами
ural.kp.ru - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ural.kp.ru Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
«Можно заняться воркаутом на SUP-бордах»: Зеленую рощу в Екатеринбурге затопило талыми водами
ural.kp.ru - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ural.kp.ru Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
MSD Proposition Y
Prop Y will fund five years of upgrades for MSD’s “Project Clear” consent decree with the federal government, which in turn will cost a minimum of $4.7 billion over two decades to fix sewage overflows and other sewer system improvements. Funding Project Clear through bond issues could add several billion dollars of interest to the final tab.
Proposition Y was originally intended to go to voters in April 2020, but the vote was postponed after the onset of COVID-19 restrictions and stay-at-home orders in the weeks leading up to that election, which was ultimately postponed until June.
In addition to Proposition Y, voters will also be presented with several potential changes to MSD Project Clear’s Charter. The work to be funded during this period, which is necessary to improve water quality in the region as part of an agreement between MSD, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Missouri Coalition for the Environment, includes nearly 300 projects d
The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District has a $500 million bond issue, Proposition Y, on the ballot April 6.
Prop Y will fund five years of needed upgrades for MSD’s “Project Clear” consent decree with the federal government, which in turn will cost a minimum of $4.7 billion over two decades to fix sewage overflows and other sewer system improvements. Funding Project Clear through bond issues could add several billion dollars of interest to the final tab.
But the federal government is requiring MSD to fund those upgrades, no matter the cost to ratepayers. As pointed out in an op-ed from frequent MSD critic Tom Sullivan, the sewer district should have tried to fix and fund these problems many decades ago but didn’t.