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Date: Fri 01-Nov-1996

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Date: Fri 01-Nov-1996

Publication: Bee

Author: ANDYG

Quick Words:

WPCA-sewer-extension

Full Text:

WPCA Approves High School Sewer Line Extension

B Y A NDREW G OROSKO

The Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) has approved extending a sanitary

sewer line from Sandy Hook Center to Newtown High School to collect wastewater

discharged by the school.

WPCA members October 24 unanimously approved a motion to have Fuss and

O'Neill, Inc, the town's consulting engineer, design the sewer transmission

line provided that the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)

formally recommends the use of federal Clean Water Fund grant money for the

project.

The money to extend the line beneath Route 34 from Crestwood Drive to the high

school property line will be repaid by the town to the DEP. Funding for sewer

facilities constructed on the high school property will be handled through the

state Board of Education.

Earlier this month, town Board of Education members who are concerned that the

high school's 27-year-old septic system is on the decline, unanimously voted

to have a sewer line extended to the school.

The estimated cost to extend a sewer line is about $550,000 to $600,000. A

sewage pumping station to propel high school sewage into the sewer system will

be needed.

The DEP recently informed the school board that the high school septic system

has problems and that the school should be connected to the sewer system.

School board members agreed that the alternatives to a connection, such as

building an on-site sewage treatment plant at the school or completely

rebuilding the septic system, would be prohibitively expensive.

In August, voters at a town meeting approved designating a portion of the

town's $34.3 million in sewer bonding for extending a sewer line to the high

school.

Earlier this year, in connection with $25 million expansion of the high

school, school officials learned that some domestic water wells on Oakview

Road contained water with nitrate levels higher than is acceptable to the DEP,

posing potential health risks to people who drink the water. Oakview Road is a

residential street west of the high school.

DEP officials have maintained that a malfunctioning high school septic system

caused the well water contamination.

While town officials have acknowledged that the high school septic system

probably contributes to the nitrate problem, they point out that the area is

the site of a former landfill and septage lagoon. The fertilization of school

athletic fields and horses kept in the area also are thought to be

contributing factors to the nitrate contamination problem.

The sewer line extension to the high school is intended to serve only the high

school and not properties lying along the sewer line extension.

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