STLPR0%
Organizers, tornado survivors demand $150M for north St. Louis recovery 77%
By Hiba Ahmad0%
5/15/2026, 9:53:17 PM
Topics: Government Politics And Issues
BS Summary: This article contains 15 faulty reasoning types, including Appeal to Emotion, Appeal to Authority, and Loss Aversion, with Negativity Bias as the most egregious example at 27.4% saturation with 95 hits. Analysis detected 611 faulty-reasoning hits from 347 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 69.2% and a BS Rank of 77% (3,977 of 16,813 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 76.40% of the article peer group.
Over a hundred people rallied on the steps of City Hall in downtown St.
Louis on Friday and demanded $150 million in Rams settlement funds for tornado recovery.
The demands come after Mayor Cara Spencer and Board of Aldermen President Megan Green announced a bill that would allot $110 million to tornado recovery and north city rehabilitation on Thursday.
“We need immediate and meaningful investment from the Rams Settlement Fund — no less than $150 million dedicated towards tornado recovery, housing stabilization, rebuilding, and bringing families home,” said Paula Vickers, a mother of two and north city resident whose home was damaged by the tornado.
Action St.
Louis Executive Director Kayla Reed said her organization arrived at $150 million because it would mirror the $50,000 worth of repairs the city said it would make for each storm-damaged home in north city.
Residents have submitted over 2,500 applications for home repair, according to the city’s repair progress tracker, which is updated daily.
“I want to see homes rebuilt, blocks reoccupied.
I want to see new homeowners moving into north city.
I want to see families being able to celebrate Memorial Day in their backyards [by next year],” Reed said.
The city has struggled to stand up a home repair program since the May 16 tornado, in part because the damage to some properties is too extensive and costly, according to Chief Recovery Officer Julian Nicks.
The city has completed repairs for 24 homes.
Reed said organizers will work with board members to push for an amendment to the current version of the Rams settlement bill this month.
“We've been saying north city is the north star, because when we think about north city and all the history and all the divestment and all the neglect that we witness, this is an opportunity to respond to that,” Reed said.
The bill also puts $55 million toward revitalizing downtown and $65 million toward infrastructure and neighborhood improvements throughout the city.
Projects include $30 million for improving the city’s water infrastructure.
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