St. Charles County approves $379M budget focused on roads, parks

A freshly paved road before nearby trees in the winter.

February 4, 2026

The St. Charles County Council, Missouri, has officially approved its $379 million spending budget for Fiscal Year 2026, prioritizing roads, parks and emergency reserves. 

The largest portion of the budget – totaling $154.3 million – will go towards improving county roadway infrastructure. The county currently has plans to design or build 120 different road projects throughout the county, significantly enhancing mobility and transit safety for residents. Notably, the plan includes 26 newly funded projects within the 2026 Transportation Improvement Plan (TIP). 

Transportation projects featured in the TIP predominantly revolve around enhancing or building roadways. Improvements include widening roads, adding traffic lights, reconstructing asphalt and concrete streets, overlaying asphalt, replacing concrete slabs and crack sealing existing roads. Additional work may include realigning roads, installing curbs, gutters, storm sewer inlets, pipes, crosswalks, pedestrian and bicyclist amenities and other key transit safety features. 

Aside from roadway infrastructure funding, the budget will provide the Parks and Recreation Department with the support needed to improve recreational amenities countywide. The department plans to add more parks to the county, including the 785-acre Henges Wetlands Park and Education Center and Spring Bend Park. Once completed, the county park system will expand to nearly 5,200 acres. 

The budget will continue supporting ongoing construction and renovation at the county jail. The project will add additional bed space and a treatment unit to help improve health care. The county also plans to build a second pet adoption center. 

Among the final notable components in the budget, St. Charles County will continue modernizing the Emergency Communications Department’s 911 equipment to increase response times and safety. The county notes that the spending budget is required to have a 3% emergency reserve fund alongside 10% reserve for the general fund to maintain its good bond rating. 

Photo by Shenandoah National Park from Virginia, Public domain, from Wikimedia Commons

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