In a wide-ranging address Tuesday morning, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter revealed a slate of new proposals that would tap into the city's federal pandemic relief to hire police officers, distribute gun safes, bolster a guaranteed-income program, replace lead pipes and more.
"While there is much work ahead, today I stand confident that the state of our city is strong enough, resilient enough and bright enough to continue lighting the path forward," Carter said in his annual state of the city speech, which he delivered virtually. "Together, we will continue our drive to bet on each other. We will continue our unending pursuit of building a better community for our children and grandchildren."
The mayor, who was elected to a second four-year term in November, spent a lengthy portion of his 30-minute annual speech discussing three issues he has described as priorities for 2022: public safety, the COVID-19 pandemic and rent control.
Though Carter touched on a slew of broad goals and new ideas, he said the program details and funding plans for many of his proposals would be worked out later, after engagement with the City Council and the public.
Public safety
In the wake of a shooting Monday that left one dead and three wounded outside a homicide victim's funeral on St. Paul's West Side, Carter said he plans to propose an ordinance that would require legal firearms to be locked, unloaded and stored separate from ammunition when not under an owner's control.
The mayor also said "in recognition of the challenging economic situation we are all currently in," he will suggest using a portion of the $166 million St. Paul received from the federal American Rescue Plan Act to purchase and distribute firearm safes to lawful gun owners.
"This is a common sense way for us to take action on a local level to help keep illegal guns off of our streets, reduce the likelihood that they get into the wrong hands or are used in ways that are counterproductive to our community's goals," said Carter, who has advocated for stricter state and federal laws governing gun ownership.