The CEO told investors that Caleres is restructuring, which he expects will save the company $7.5 million annually, and $2 million fiscal year. He didn't give details.
Greater St. Louis Inc. and the city announced the news in a report to Mayor Tishaura O. Jones on their work to bring two of downtown’s largest empty buildings back to life.
Brooklyn, Illinois, is the oldest, and one of the few surviving, majority-Black incorporated towns in the U.S. Archaeologists want to help get it on the map.
The Missouri case raised questions about the possibility of human-to-human bird flu transmission, but officials said there is no evidence of other people being infected.
A judge has ruled that the city’s economic development agency did not renege on an agreement it made with developer Paul McKee’s primary lender over north St. Louis land deals.
Rep. Deb Lavender called for an override of a $2.5 million cut to a program that investigates seniors’ complaints of abuse and neglect in nursing homes.
Rancho Healthcare and Rehab Center, a 120-bed nursing home, received 20 health citations, above the average number in the U.S., during a health inspection last year.
A couple is suing a Florissant officer and the city, claiming the cop copied and shared her nude photographs that he found on her phone during a traffic stop.
St. Louis County Republican Councilman Dennis Hancock tried to hire his daughter as his legislative assistant. He's not the only one to hire a relative.
Low river levels are forcing barge companies to limit the soybeans, grain and other cargo they carry to prevent barges from potentially getting stuck. That means less profit for farmers.