Date: Fri 25-Apr-1997
Date: Fri 25-Apr-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Apple-Blossom-contamination
Full Text:
Another Month's Delay For Water Contamination Clean-Up
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Residents of the Apple Blossom Lane area learned this week that the plan to
solve the water contamination problem in their neighborhood won't go to the
State Bond Commission for funding until at least May.
Health District Director Mark A.R. Cooper said the State Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) still wanted a few minor revisions to be made
to the version of the plan which First Selectman Bob Cascella approved on
March 31.
"I don't know what the changes involve," Mr Cooper said. "I asked Jonathon
Goldman at the DEP but I still haven't received a fax explaining the changes."
The DEP must approve the plan before it will be submitted to the bond
commission for funding. Design of the project is expected to require three to
four months to complete and construction is expected to take an additional
four to six months.
Donald Ferris of 62 Apple Blossom Lane attended the Newtown Health District
meeting on Monday to ask about the status of the project.
"It's taking a lot longer than we were told it would," he complained. "I think
somebody is dragging their heels."
"The final plan had better be water mains - I won't be satisfied with
filters," Mr Ferris said. "And if it doesn't get to the bond commission in
April or May, it won't get done by December."
"It will be tight," Mr Cooper agreed.
At a meeting last September in Newtown, residents of the Apple Blossom Lane
area were told the plan probably would reach the State Bond Commission last
October, with work to begin this month. But the DEP asked the town's
engineering consultants, SEA Consultants, Inc, of Rocky Hill, to do an
analysis of other possible solutions, such as digging a community well or
installing granulated activated carbon filtration systems at those houses
whose wells have shown traces of tetrachloroethylene (PCE).
Changes also were made in the three alternative plans which SEA originally
proposed. The plan now recommended by SEA is estimated at a 20-year cost of
$1.82 million, all of which will be paid by the state. The plan includes 8,330
feet of pipe, hydrants, a booster station, permit fees, testing, well
abandonment and a sampling program to monitor the groundwater to see if
additional homes are being impacted. This plan, referred to as "A" in the
report, would provide a water main extension to residents of Apple Blossom
Lane between No 21 and the intersection with Cedar Hill Road, plus Dogwood
Terrace, Prospect Lane, those houses on South Main Street not already serviced
by public water, including 134 and 136 South Main, and 30, 32, 32A, and 40
Cedar Hill Road.
For all other homes along Cedar Hill Road which the main will pass, and for
homes at 16 to 21 Apple Blossom, the report recommended that service taps be
installed to enable these homeowners to connect to the line in the future at
their own expense.
The report also recommends that a groundwater monitoring plan should be
implemented which would consist of 40 homes selected from the perimeter of the
predicted contamination migration area, including 64 Cedar Hill Road. Well
water sampling should be performed on a semi-annual basis for five years and
annually for the following 15 years to determine if contamination is
migrating, the report said.
If elevated levels of PCE are detected in the future, that home would be
supplied by public water if the house is adjacent to the water main. If it is
not adjacent to the main, the house would be equipped with a carbon filter.
