Associated Press
FERGUSON, Mo. — Ferguson city leaders, struggling to balance a budget decimated by fallout from the unrest that followed the police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown, will ask voters in August for a second tax increase, Mayor James Knowles III said Monday.
The Ferguson City Council, at a special meeting on Sunday, voted to put on the Aug. 2 ballot a proposal to raise the city utility tax by 2 percent. Knowles said approval of the increase would generate about $700,000 annually. The proposal comes after voters in the St. Louis suburb in April approved a half-cent sales tax increase and narrowly defeated a property tax increase.
Brown, who was black and unarmed, was fatally shot by white officer Darren Wilson on Aug. 9, 2014. A St. Louis county grand jury and the U.S. Department of Justice cleared Wilson of criminal wrongdoing. He resigned from the police force in November 2014.
The shooting led to months of unrest that included looting. Sales and property tax revenue in Ferguson has dropped off sharply over the past 21 months, while legal fees have risen drastically.
The city also took a financial hit due to court reforms it put in place. The shooting raised awareness about a court system that generated revenue largely on the backs of poor and minority residents. Knowles said reforms were implemented within weeks of the shooting.
In March, the city agreed to additional reforms as part of a settlement with the Justice Department. The settlement aimed at eliminating racial bias and profiling in Ferguson’s criminal justice system is expected to cost at least $2.3 million over the next three years. But Knowles said it is the lost revenue, not the cost of the Justice Department agreement, that is behind the tax increase proposal.
“If we still had the revenue we used to have, doing the consent decree would not be a big deal,” Knowles said. “We’ve had millions of dollars of revenue fall from sales tax, property tax and court revenue.”
Ferguson’s budget deficit reached nearly $3 million before the April tax was approved.
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