Ferguson postpones discussion on tax breaks for development and data center project 39%
By Chad Davis0%
4/24/2026, 10:00:00 AM
BS Summary: This article contains 23 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Hasty Generalization, and Ambiguity (Equivocation), with Appeal to Emotion as the most egregious example at 15.2% saturation with 119 hits. Analysis detected 993 faulty-reasoning hits from 785 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 44.5% and a BS Rank of 39% (10,277 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 61.10% of the article peer group.
Ferguson leaders have halted tax break discussions for a redevelopment at the former Emerson campus that would include a data center until at least April 30.
The council voted Thursday night to pause what could become a significant Ferguson development project that has faced a lot of criticism from residents.
“There’s a lot of things in my mind that haven’t been answered yet,” new Mayor Adrian Shropshire said.
“This is a very serious situation that we have in our own city.”
Shropshire initially made a motion to halt the vote by 30 days, before that motion was rescinded as he can’t make a motion since he’s the mayor.
Councilman Jamil Franklin, who is opposed to the tax abatements, made a motion to hold a special meeting next week.
“We decided a week would be better than prolonging this process,” Franklin said.
“I think most of the council, we know where we want to vote, where we stand.”
Almost every public commenter Thursday objected to the proposal or called for the vote to be delayed.
The meeting sparked contentious debate between some commenters and council members.
The proposal could issue up to $22 billion in industrial revenue bonds that the city would use to finance the redevelopment of the 217 acre campus and lease to SSL Investments.
The project is spearheaded by attorney Jim Onder who has said the center would become a multiuse innovation hub.
At minimum, the development would require the city to make an initial $1 billion investment in equipment and a total investment of $2.6 billion.
The maximum scenario would require an initial $7.5 billion investment in equipment with a total investment of $19.5 billion between 2029 and 2050.
Both scenarios assume SSL Investments would invest $810 million to acquire the site and construct project improvements.
The plan also includes 15 years of real property tax abatements.
Instead of taxes, the company would pay the city at least $822,463 a year, the amount of real property taxes generated from the site in 2024.
The company has to retain at least 250 jobs on the campus to receive the real property tax abatements.
For the personal property tax abatement, the company has to add 100 jobs.
Developers expect the project to bring in $30 million in new tax revenue to Ferguson during the abatement period.
Onder and developers said last month that the center would abide by federal, state, and local environmental regulations.
They also said the campus would only use diesel power for backup generators.
But the planned project has brought plenty of concerns over its environmental and economic impacts.
The St.
Louis County NAACP was concerned by the quick turnaround to vote on the measure.
Ferguson Human Rights Commission opposes the current proposal.
The Ferguson-Florissant School District have also opposed the current plan and has asked the city to continue discussions and negotiations with SSL Investments.
“To strip money from our districts now is a slap in the face,” said Terry Tyson, vice president of the Ferguson-Florissant Board of Education.
“I’m just shocked that we’re having this conversation.”
The vote comes as city leaders said Tuesday that Ferguson could face financial hardships.
City Manager David Musgrave said the city’s best options are the Emerson redevelopment, a tax increase for emergency services or looking at areas of unincorporated St.
Louis County to add different tax bases.
“Those are all long term goals.
The easiest fix in the short term is this development agreement,” Musgrave said Tuesday.
Some residents said the campus would generate significant tax revenue for the region.
“The simple analysis says the current tax revenue generated by the Emerson property will grow significantly after year one and continue to grow in future years more than they are earning today,” Ferguson resident Larry Robinett said Tuesday.
Other residents were concerned about the implications of the project and the fast turnaround to vote on the bill as data centers across the region have brought environmental concerns.
Almost every resident Thursday either objected to the bill or asked for it to be delayed.
“Every single one of you that vote yes tonight can kiss your seat goodbye,” Ferguson resident Melanie Marie said.
“Pause the vote because if this bill was truly good for Ferguson, you wouldn’t be afraid to pause the vote and prove it.”
After the Festus city council voted to approve a data center proposal, every incumbent running for reelection on the council lost earlier this month.
In a separate meeting on Tuesday, Marie said residents are being asked to trust city council without a community benefit agreement or even the names of the tech companies behind the project.
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