State & Local News
St. Louis County Faces M/WBE Whistleblower Lawsuit
March 21, 2026
Nathaniel Adams, director of St. Louis County's Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprise (M/WBE) program, has filed a lawsuit alleging retaliation after whistleblowing on mismanagement and conflicts within the program. The lawsuit claims violations of Missouri's whistleblower protection law, citing punitive actions including suspension following his disclosures and proposed reforms intended to improve program integrity and oversight.
- This development highlights potential governance and compliance risks within municipal M/WBE programs that procurement professionals should be aware of.
- Contractors and vendors engaged with St. Louis County's M/WBE initiatives may experience programmatic changes or increased scrutiny as reforms are considered.
- Procurement officials should evaluate internal controls and transparency measures in M/WBE programs to mitigate risks of mismanagement and ensure adherence to whistleblower protections.
- Organizations involved in M/WBE contracting in Missouri should monitor legal and policy outcomes that could affect program administration and contractor relations.
The lawsuit says these actions go against Missouri law, which prevents public employers from punishing employees for disclosing information they believe shows wrongdoing, including mismanagement, waste of public funds, or abuse of authority.
— Nathaniel Adams
Agencies
St. Louis County