St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones has yanked the parking brake on City Treasurer Adam Layne’s high-profile plan to buy and upgrade several Midtown parking lots, dismissing the price tag as “ridiculous.” The move leaves a key surface parcel near Olive Street and North Compton Avenue in limbo and intensifies a long-running tug-of-war over who controls the city’s parking assets and the revenue they generate.
The Treasurer’s Office oversees the city’s Parking Division and has promoted efforts to modernize operations and create more stable revenue, including programs that reduce fines and channel money into infrastructure. According to the Treasurer’s Office, parking functions as a self-funded operation that supports enforcement and other services.
Plan Put On Ice After Mayoral Pushback
Layne’s plan called for buying and improving multiple Midtown lots, with particular focus on the lot at the southeast corner of Olive Street and North Compton Avenue. That proposal is now on hold after Jones and another senior official concluded the deal would cost too much to justify pursuing. As reported by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Jones blasted the proposed price as “ridiculous,” and Layne acknowledged the city would step back to reassess its next move.
Why This Parking Fight Hits A Nerve
The standoff taps into broader frustration over basic city services and the political heat that comes with any program that brings in revenue. Coverage in St. Louis Magazine has highlighted how residents place a premium on day-to-day services, a dynamic that helps explain why leaders may be wary of big up-front purchases that could appear to pull focus from more immediate needs…