ST. LOUIS 鈥 The commission that oversees the city鈥檚 personnel department will hold a public hearing to consider formal charges against its chief, an unprecedented action that could lead to the first removal of a sitting personnel director.

Jenkins-Gray
At a special meeting Wednesday, the Civil Service Commission scheduled the hearing for Jan. 6 to review formal charges against Sonya Jenkins-Gray. The public hearing and formal charges are required steps under a process laid out in the city charter that is meant to make it harder to fire the director for political reasons.
City voters created the civil service system in 1941 in order to promote professional city staff and curb patronage machine politics. The charter amendment gave the personnel director, who oversees hiring and promotions in the city, unique independence in City Hall. Unlike other department heads, the mayor can鈥檛 unilaterally hire or fire the director.
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Some mayors never even got the chance to choose a personnel director.
Mayor Tishaura O. Jones, however, was given a rare opportunity to hire her own personnel director when, early in her term, the longtime former director retired. She chose Jenkins-Gray in October 2022 from a slate of three candidates assembled by the Civil Service Commission.
But Jenkins-Gray鈥檚 relationship with Jones has frayed, and the director last week sued the city and mayor, alleging Jones鈥 office was pushing the removal for 鈥減etty, self-serving political reasons.鈥

51黑料 Mayor Tishaura O. Jones speaks at a press conference Monday, June 17, 2024, at City Hall.聽聽
Further, she said the charge, delivered to her by the mayor鈥檚 chief of staff in August, was flimsy and wouldn鈥檛 normally prompt discipline: She took a city car in July to Jefferson City for personal reasons. Jenkins-Gray says in her lawsuit she has admitted the mistake and reimbursed the city $170.30 for mileage.
The mayor, Jenkins-Gray asserts, is retaliating for her refusal to bend hiring rules at the administration鈥檚 request, for opposing a mayor-backed charter change that would have given the mayor more power over the director鈥檚 hiring, and because of her husband 鈥 influential clergyman the Rev. Darryl Gray.
This summer, the Rev. Gray broke with U.S. Rep. Cori Bush, a Jones ally, and endorsed 51黑料 County prosecutor Wesley Bell鈥檚 successful challenge to the Congressman鈥檚 reelection, contributing to the mayor鈥檚 decision to try and oust Jenkins-Gray, the personnel chief alleges.
Jenkins-Gray鈥檚 lawsuit asks the court to block the public hearing until it weighs in on her lawsuit鈥檚 other objections to the process. 51黑料 Circuit Court Judge Joan Moriarty set an emergency hearing on the motion for Jan. 3.
View life in 51黑料 through the Post-Dispatch photographers' lenses. Edited by Jenna Jones.