Date: Fri 07-Mar-1997
Date: Fri 07-Mar-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
sewer-operation-firm-bids
Full Text:
Town Seeks Private Firm To Run Sewer System
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The town is seeking a private firm to operate, maintain, and administer the
municipal sewer system now under construction.
The work involves running the sewage treatment plant currently under
construction at the end of Commerce Road, operating four sewage pumping
stations, and maintaining the network of sewage collection lines in the
Borough, Sandy Hook Center, and Taunton Pond North.
Newtown's Public Works Director Fred Hurley said the town is asking companies
to provide specifics on how they would operate the sewer system, including
their business plans, staffing, and costs for various services.
In its "request for proposals" on sewer system operation, the town is
accepting submissions until March 27.
Mr Hurley said it's unclear how much money it will cost the town to run the
sewer system, but added he expects it will cost "several hundred thousand
dollars annually."
The town wants applicants to explain the various types of services they can
provide, plus the costs for such services, Mr Hurley said. From those lists of
services, the town will choose the ones that are required to operate the sewer
system, he said.
As public works director, Mr Hurley will oversee the contract between the
sewer system management firm and the town. The initial term of the contract is
expected to be five years, with possible renewal options.
After interviewing firms interested in running the sewer system, the Water
Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) will make a recommendation on hiring a
company to the town's Purchasing Authority.
In December, the WPCA received responses from eight firms interested in
operating the sewer system.
Those responses followed "requests for qualifications" sought by the town from
various firms to learn whether the companies are technically capable of
managing the sewer system.
After the Newtown system is completed next fall, more than 20 miles of sewer
mains will carry sewage to the plant at the end of Commerce Road. The new
treatment plant also will handle sewage now treated by the state's sewage
plant on the Fairfield Hills grounds.
Firms that responded to the town's request for qualifications include: OMI,
Inc, of Greenwood Village, Colorado; Earth Tech, Inc, of Glastonbury; PSG of
Houston, Texas; ST Environmental Services, Inc, of Glen Cove, N.Y.; United
Water of Harrington Park, NJ; Weston and Sampson Services, Inc, of Peabody,
Massachusetts; Wheelabrator EOS, Inc, of North Andover, Mass.; and Woodward
and Curran of Dedham, Mass.
The firms that already have submitted their qualifications to the town are the
types of companies that are best suited to operate a sewer system, Mr Hurley
said.
Firms that have not yet submitted their qualifications to the town have will
until March 20 to do so, after which they would submit their operating
proposals.
The treatment plant now being built at the end of Commerce Road will be highly
automated. The facility will be unattended at nights and on weekends. An
estimated five to seven people would work there, with probably no more than
five people working there at any one time, according to Mr Hurley.
Telemetry equipment will transmit information on the operation of four sewage
pumping stations and the sewage plant to a central computer. Computers will be
used to automatically regulate the sewer system's operations. If major
operational problems arise, alarms would sound and automatic telephone calls
would be made to alert staffers. Certain problems could be remotely corrected
via computers linked to the sewage plant by telephone lines.
The town hopes to hire a firm to run the sewer system by summer. The system is
slated to be completed by October.
The town is under a longstanding state pollution abatement order to rectify
groundwater pollution problems posed by failing septic systems. In 1992,
voters approved spending up to $34.3 million to build a sewer system.
