GREATER ST. LOUIS INC MEMBER SUPPORT DROPS 12 PERCENT IN YEAR TWO
Meanwhile, much of its work remains shrouded in secrecy by its for-profit real-estate side hustle
The annual IRS-mandated reporting is in for the self-proclaimed “unified voice” of the region’s business community. And the top-line results uncomfortably resemble the area’s population struggles.
Greater St. Louis Inc. (GSL) reported a membership-support drop of $1.67 million – or 12 percent – in 2022. GSL reported membership dues of $12.2 million, down from $13.8 million in 2021, its first year in existence, according to its Form 990 filing.
But the key point unique to St. Louis is unchanged: The group’s largest reportable item: providing $550,000 in reimbursed services to the private company Arch to Park Equity Fund LLC., headed by its chairman, Andrew C. Taylor of Enterprise Holdings. Its profits remain unreported and therefore, unknown.
Total compensation for CEO Jason Hall was $472,936, a 3.1 percent increase over 2021.