Date: Fri 22-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 22-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
roads-sewers-Hurley
Full Text:
Winter And Sewers Leaves Roads A Mess
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Spring officially began this week but the severe winter, coupled with
Newtown's continuing sewer project, has left a legacy of potholes on many
well-traveled roads.
Public Works Director Fred Hurley, accompanied by John Whitten and Michael
Anderson of Fuss & O'Neill, the town's sewer firm, told Legislative Council
this week that roads which are being sewered can only be temporarily patched
until all of the work is complete. Queen Street, for example, still needs
drainage work, which will be done by the town, and a new water main, which
will be installed by the water company, before permanent paving can be done
late this summer.
Mr Whitten told the council that part of the problem on Queen Street this
winter was a break in a water main which leaked 100 gallons a minute for a
month before a section of the road collapsed and the leak was discovered and
fixed.
Potholes on Church Hill Road at the I-84 overpass were temporarily covered
with steel plates until the State Department of Transportation objected. Now
the holes are filled with patch, a process which has to be done daily, Mr
Whitten said.
Councilman Jack Rosenthal asked why $1.5 million of the $2 million allocated
for roadwork this year has been spent yet 11 of the 19 roads identified for
roadwork had not been touched. The roads are mostly those which will have
sewer mains on them.
Mr Hurley said the town has about $700,000 left in money and materials, enough
to complete the work required on those 19 roads. In several cases it turned
out that anticipated work did not need to be done on those roads, so the town
was able to use that money to complete projects on other non-sewered roads
such as Buttonshop, Old Green and Horseshoe Ridge, he said.
Mr Hurley said because the sewer mains are installed very deep in the road and
require lateral lines to reach the houses, drainage cannot be installed until
the sewer work is completed. In some cases gas and water main work also has to
be done.
"After the mains and the laterals are in, the roads have to be left to settle
for about six months before they can be paved," he said.
Mr Hurley said the town could only estimate two years ago how much the work on
the sewered roads would cost "because we never know when we will hit ledge, or
what will happen when the roads and 30 to 40-year-old pipes are dug up."
Sometimes the work costs more than has been estimated, but other times it
turns out that the work is not required because the sewer project eliminates
the need, he said.
Mr Rosenthal said if the town was allocating $2 million a year on roadwork,
the public works director should be able to more accurately determine in
advance exactly where it will be spent.
The town has a five-year $10 million road plan which calls for the expenditure
of approximately $2 million a year. Mr Hurley has estimated that to upgrade
all town roads would require an expenditure of about $60 million.
