Date: Fri 01-Sep-1995
Date: Fri 01-Sep-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
sewer-Main-Street-trees
Full Text:
WPCA Due To Vote On Sewer Line Placement
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) members were poised to address the
thorny issue of sewer line placements along the east side of Main Street at a
meeting scheduled for August 31.
At the session, which was slated to begin after the deadline for this edition
of The Bee, WPCA members were expected to discuss and possibly act on where
sewer lines should be installed to serve 31 properties on the east side of the
thoroughfare.
The best place to install the sewers has been a controversial topic, with
discussion among Main Street residents shifting among three possible
locations: beneath Main Street; beneath the grassy area lying between the curb
line and the sidewalk; or behind the houses. A separate sewer line will serve
the west side of the street.
On August 23, WPCA Chairman Peter Alagna told the Borough Board of Burgesses
that the WPCA plans to pursue installing the sewer line along the curb line, a
route, he says, that is the most practical and economical one to serve
properties in that area.
But Attorney Robert Hall took issue with Mr Alagna's announcement this week,
saying that WPCA members had already decided to install the sewer lines behind
the houses on the east side of the street and hadn't voted to alter their
plans and place the sewers along the curb line.
The curb line area along the east side of the street has many public utility
lines both beneath and above it, Mr Hall said.
Mr Hall said he is planning to check public utility mapping for the area to
learn whether there is enough unobstructed space there for a sewer trench
which wouldn't adversely affect the stately trees along the street. Electric
power lines strung from utility poles and buried long-distance telephone lines
are located in that area, Mr Hall noted.
Mr Hall asked why sewers shouldn't be installed in the backyards along Main
Street as the WPCA has been planning to do.
Any WPCA vote to shift the sewer placement from backyards to the curb line
area which is made before WPCA members inspect public utility mapping would be
an "absolutely foolish" vote, Mr Hall added.
In 1994, the WPCA had decided to install sewers along the curb line. But Board
of Burgesses protests that doing so would damage or destroy the stately trees
lining the east side of the street led the WPCA to shift the planned sewer
route to the area behind the houses.
In recent weeks, Main Street residents unhappy with plans for sewers in their
backyards pressed WPCA members to instead have the sewers installed either
along the curb line or beneath Main Street.
Some Main Street residents say the WPCA hasn't made a good faith effort to
persuade the state Department of Transportation to allow the town to install
sewers beneath Main Street which is also state Route 25.
WPCA members have resisted placing sewers beneath Main Street, saying such a
location would make for traffic hazards, potential public safety hazards, road
maintenance problems and increased sewer project costs.
Mr Alagna said August 30 he sensed an "implicit concurrence" among fellow WPCA
members during in recent weeks that installing a sewer line along the Main
Street curb line is the best route for the sewer. Mr Alagna said he expects a
WPCA vote to be taken at the August 31 meeting to formalize that location as
the panel's choice for a sewer route.
WPCA members won't consider placing a sewer beneath Main Street, Mr Alagna
said. Construction work to hook up such a sewer line beneath Main Street to
houses on the east side of the street could result in public safety hazards
stemming from broken natural gas lines, according to Mr Alagna.
WPCA members have studied public utility maps for the Main Street area and
have found there's sufficient room to dig a sewer trench along the curb line
on the east side of the street, according to the WPCA chairman.
In recent weeks, Main Street residents have been circulating petitions to have
the WPCA place the sewer line under the street or along the curb line, but not
in the backyards there.
The town is under a pollution abatement order from the state Department of
Environmental Protection to resolve longstanding groundwater pollution
problems caused by failing septic waste disposal systems. The town is in the
midst of a $30.4 million sewer system construction project to meet the terms
of the abatement order. The sewer system is slated to be in operation in about
two years.
