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Major rate hikes for St. Louis water customers start journey to mayor’s desk 22%
By Rachel Lippmann0%
5/21/2026, 7:58:59 PM
Topics: Government Politics And Issues
BS Summary: This article contains 21 faulty reasoning types, including Appeal to Emotion, Negativity Bias, and Pessimism Bias, with Confirmation Bias as the most egregious example at 13.7% saturation with 89 hits. Analysis detected 829 faulty-reasoning hits from 649 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 35.8% and a BS Rank of 22% (13,121 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 78.00% of the article peer group.
Legislation meant to put the St.
Louis Water Division on stable financial footing has started working its way through the Board of Aldermen to Mayor Cara Spencer.
Michael Browning of the 9th Ward introduced a series of rate hikes at the board's meeting on Thursday.
The plan boosts rates by about 90% over the next six years, starting with an 18% increase on July 1.
“This is a generational investment to make sure that we're saving our municipally owned water system,” Browning said.
“We're in a situation where our rates have not been keeping up with the cost of delivering safe, clean drinking water, much less the maintenance of our infrastructure that is aging and reaching a breaking point.”
Last week, Director of Public Utilities Niraj Patel told the aldermanic committee debating the fiscal 2027 budget that without the increases, the department will not have enough money to cover critical expenses such as treatment chemicals and electricity to power its water treatment and pumping facilities.
Seven years of deficit spending have wiped out any reserves.
The bill set for debate at the Board of Aldermen comes after a rate sufficiency study and is meant to keep the department solvent in the long term, Patel said Thursday.
“We were reactive.
Today, we are being proactive,” he said.
Patel said the proposed hikes would allow the department to meet its expenses, restore its reserves and start building up the capacity to pay for $700 million in capital improvement needs.
The department is also likely to get some portion of Rams settlement dollars, though the exact amount is still up for discussion.
If adopted as written, the water division would phase in a set of seven rate hikes for both metered and flat-rate customers between July 1 and January 2032:
18% on July 1
18% on Jan.
1, 2027
6% on Jan.
1, 2028
6% on Jan.
1, 2029
6% on Jan.
1, 2030
5% on Jan.
1, 2031
5% on Jan.
1, 2032
The new rates would be adjusted for inflation every year on Jan.
1.
A city resident would be paying about $29 more per month in 2032 if the plan is fully implemented.
Spencer said that even with the increases, city rates will still be lower than those paid by people served by private companies.
For the first time, the city would charge lower-income residents an “affordability rate.”
Exact eligibility terms are not laid out in the legislation, but Patel said they would be based on income, eligibility for other utility relief programs or being affected by a disaster like the May 2025 tornado.
The bill as written allows the city to negotiate with large new customers like data centers to pay a higher rate than other current customers.
“If we had a big user like a data center, that would actually be very, very helpful in taking on some of the cost of these infrastructure needs that our water department has,” Spencer said.
The proposal would also phase out the discounted rates paid by the city’s hospitals as well as the Zoo and Art Museum.
Starting Jan. 1, they would pay the same amount as other metered customers.
Billy Brennan, a spokesman for the zoo, said in an emailed statement that the institution had been aware of the coming changes.
“That said, this will significantly impact our budget as it wasn’t something we were planning for.
We will have to pivot,” Brennan said.
Other institutions did not immediately respond to emails or phone calls seeking comment.
Special rates for schools and certain charitable institutions would remain in place.
The legislation will be heard in the Public Utilities and Infrastructure Committee, with a public hearing set for 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
It will then need two separate votes at the Board of Aldermen to reach Spencer’s desk.
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