Starting next year, towns in St. Louis County will not be allowed to draw more than 12.5 percent of their revenue from traffic fines. (The previous cap was 30 percent.) Last week I noted that one tiny town, St. Ann, has responded by laying off 10 cops and rethinking the value of a notorious speed trap. Now comes word that another mini-municipality plans to eliminate its police force altogether.
Facing the loss of the traffic fines and court fees it relied upon for funding, the town of Charlack, MO, is dissolving its tiny police force and contracting out from a new player on the law enforcement scene in the St. Louis area. The North County Police Cooperative (NCPC), an outgrowth of neighboring Vinita Park's own police force, will take over responsibility for the handful of streets that make up tiny Charlack….
Charlack exemplifies the exploitative standard operating procedure common among many of St. Louis County's odd-shaped municipalities. It sits astride a couple thousand valuable feet of interstate highway. That strip of asphalt was Charlack's money tree. Prior to this summer's reforms, the tiny hamlet of 1,300 people was getting nearly 29 percent of its total operating revenue from municipal court fines and fees.
Another town in the area, Wellston, recently opted to eliminate its police department and join the NCPC. (Indeed, that is basically how the NCPC got started.) In that case, the new law wasn't the impetus—Wellston got only 12.2 percent of its money from fines and fees. It just couldn't afford its force. As Pyke writes, Wellston "had 17 patrol officers and 23 total staff, or one for every hundred residents."
In the wake of the Ferguson riots, the technocrats' favorite fix for the St. Louis region has been a mass consolidation of city and county governments. Instead, the state made a simple change to the incentives those little towns face, and they're adjusting in ways that could cut back on those local shakedowns without eliminating the advantages of a decentralized system. It won't end all the area's problems; but even if it just makes Missouri marginally less dystopian, it's a step in the right direction.
Bonus link: Elinor Ostrom argued that highly centralized governments, such as those that result from city/county mergers, are inferior to "polycentric" systems, in which political units of varying size can cooperate but act independently, without a clear hierarchy. I applied her ideas to the post-Ferguson debate in this article.
Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com
posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary
period.
Subscribe
here to preserve your ability to comment. Your
Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the
digital
edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do
not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments
do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and
ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Nice, I'd like to see more contracting out between cities. It does a lot to cut down corruption and up effieceny to have your services not only being sold to your voters but to other cities.
Say what you will about the brazen lack of ethics involved in Charlack's purely profit-motivated policing policies, the North County Police Cooperative clearly has a kerning problem. Look at that door.
My town rents officers from the Sherriff's dept. They still badge the vehicles and uniforms to look like city cops. It seems to work fairly well, but then again we've only had 1 murder in our entire history and the biggest problem the cops have to deal with is the occasional drunk driver or domestic violence case.
Nice, I'd like to see more contracting out between cities. It does a lot to cut down corruption and up effieceny to have your services not only being sold to your voters but to other cities.
Wellston "had 17 patrol officers and 23 total staff, or one for every hundred residents."
That's a whole lotta serve-and-protect.
Say what you will about the brazen lack of ethics involved in Charlack's purely profit-motivated policing policies, the North County Police Cooperative clearly has a kerning problem. Look at that door.
COOPE|R ATIVE
Can't be unseen.
IDK, I thought it was pretty good work for a retriever.
Now, an English Setter on the other hand...
Shame on you.
To its credit, the dog looks pretty embarrassed about it too.
"It did require lots and lots of gallons of Aqua Regia, though. Our thanks to our procurement department for stepping up to do that job."
+1 barrel of Prussic acid?
My town rents officers from the Sherriff's dept. They still badge the vehicles and uniforms to look like city cops. It seems to work fairly well, but then again we've only had 1 murder in our entire history and the biggest problem the cops have to deal with is the occasional drunk driver or domestic violence case.
the biggest problem the cops have to deal with is the occasional drunk driver or domestic violence case meeting their monthly revenue quota.
Libertarian Moment.