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PAGE ONE: State Plans To Raise And Widen Church Hill Rd Railroad Bridge
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Charles T. Holden thought that his tractor-trailer truck was 12-foot, 5-inches
high. He was wrong.
The 35-year-old truck driver from Naples, Fla., discovered his miscalculation
last Sunday morning when he attempted to drive the 13-foot, 5-inch vehicle
beneath the railroad overpass on Church Hill Road (Route 6).
The bridge, hanging just 12 feet, 7 inches above the street, claimed another
victim, crumpling the roof of the truck and causing its walls to buckle.
Residents have become used to seeing truck roofs peeled back like the tops of
sardine cans. But that may change. First Selectman Bob Cascella has received a
letter from the State Department of Transportation (DOT) officially informing
him that the DOT's engineering office is developing plans to replace the
bridge.
The new bridge will be higher and wider, increasing the vertical and
horizontal clearance underneath, according to Earl R. Munroe, Transportation
Engineering Administrator for the DOT's Bureau of Engineering and Highway
Operations.
Tim Gaffey, DOT project manager for the bridge project, said the roadbed under
the bridge won't be changed. The supporting structure of the new "through
girder" steel bridge will be higher, increasing the clearance from 12 feet, 7
inches to 14 feet, 6 inches.
The bridge supports will be moved to create an opening that could eventually
accommodate four lanes of traffic, Mr Gaffey said, but he stressed that there
are no immediate plans to widen the road.
"At this point, we will maintain two lanes as they exist today," he said.
During the construction period the existing bridge will be moved five feet to
the west. The new bridge then will be built 20 feet to the east.
"The bridge will be 100-feet long because it will be on an angle between the
abutments," Mr Gaffey said. He said that after the replacement bridge is
built, at a cost of $2 million to $2.5 million, it will be turned over to the
Housatonic Valley Railroad for ongoing maintenance.
The HVR bought the bridge from Conrail several years ago and had no intention
of replacing it. The DOT decided to do the project at its own expense because
of the problems with the underpass that affected truck traffic on the state
road. The project will be constructed with 80 percent federal funds and 20
percent state aid.
Mr Munroe said the present schedule indicates that design plans will be
available in May 1996, "after alternatives are studied, environmental reviews
conducted and other federal and state requirements complied with."
He said it is not anticipated that a formal public hearing will be needed on
the bridge project but, if there is adequate interest on the part of the
public, an informational meeting will be conducted. An official announcement
of the bridge project will be made soon by the DOT, he said.
The project is named Project No. 96-174, replacement of Railroad Bridge No.
00460 over US Route 6, Newtown.
Mr Gaffey said the required environmental study should not cause the same type
of delay that has occurred with the bypass road through the Fairfield Hills
campus.
"There may be some contamination in the railroad ballast caused by chemicals
used to keep the weeds from growing up," he said, "but we don't expect this to
be a problem. It isn't as complicated as getting wetlands permits."
Mr Munroe asked Mr Cascella, in a letter, to let the DOT know if any work is
planned for the roadway beneath the bridge since it is better to tear up the
pavement only once.
"By completing such work prior to or at the same time as the proposed
construction, the traveling public can be better served," he said.
Mr Cascella said he has written to Mr Munroe, informing him that there are two
local projects that would directly affect the railroad bridge project:
construction of the new sewer system and construction of the bypass road.
"The town is installing a wastewater sewer system that will be placed directly
under the railroad bridge," Mr Cascella said. "Tentative dates for the sewer
installation at this location are spring/summer 1996."
Mr Gaffey said the DOT probably wouldn't advertise for bids until late spring
with construction to begin in the late fall and continue through spring 1997.
Mr Cascella said he is also concerned about the traffic flow through town
while the bridge project is underway because the state also is scheduled to
begin work on the bypass road next summer.
"The tentative construction dates I have been given for this (bypass road) are
the summer of 1996 through the summer of 1998," the first selectman said.
"This may be problematic owing to the fact that Route 6 (Church Hill Road) and
Mile Hil Roads through the Fairfield Hills campus are the only major east/west
roads through Newtown," Mr Cascella said.
But obviously, he added, "our community is certainly pleased to see progress
on this much needed replacement."
Library Vote Postponed
Town Fails To Advertise
The town meeting on the proposed $4.1 million renovation and expansion of the
Cyrenius H. Booth Library has been postponed until Wednesday, October 25,
because the first selectman's office didn't post the required legal notice.
"It was our fault," First Selectman Bob Cascella said. "The town meeting date
was set by the Board of Selectmen, but my office never got the legal notice to
The Bee. It was an oversight."
The law requires that a legal advertisement be placed in a local newspaper at
least five days before the town meeting. News articles published in the
newspaper cannot substitute for the legal notice.
After Mr Cascella discovered the problem on Tuesday, he scheduled a special
meeting of the Board of Selectmen for Thursday morning to set a new date for
the town meeting. The town meeting will be held at 7 pm on Wednesday, October
25, at Newtown High School.
Library Director Janet Woycik said she was disappointed about the postponement
of the town meeting which originally had been scheduled for Thursday evening,
October 12.
"I hope that all the library supporters will keep their enthusiasm and come
out to vote on October 25," she said.
Mrs Woycik said she and several members of the Library Board of Trustees would
be at the high school on Thursday evening to explain to anyone who showed up
that the meeting had to be postponed.
Mrs Woycik said the two-week delay would not affect the $350,000 construction
grant which the state has awarded for the project. She also did not believe it
would require that the project be re-bid.
Mr Cascella said he has asked the town attorney, David Groggins, to speak to
the general contractor to ask for an extension of the time allowed in the
construction contract for construction to begin.
"I don't believe it will be a problem," Mr Cascella said.
The proposed 22,000-square-foot library addition includes a new reference
area, a children's library, young adults room, fiction room and a meeting room
plus parking for 80 cars in a lot behind the building. Major renovations also
will be done in the existing building. The only improvements made to the
library since it was built in 1932 have been the addition of restrooms and an
elevator in 1980.
The town already has spent $250,000 for the library architect fees. Although
procedure requires that the town vote to bond the entire $4.1 million,
$3,750,000 actually will be bonded because the town has been promised the
$350,000 state grant.
