Date: Fri 04-Oct-1996
Date: Fri 04-Oct-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
Nunnawauk-water-Pootatuck
Full Text:
Impasse Over Water Rights Stalls Additional Housing For The Elderly
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
Nunnawauk Meadows continues to await word from the Pootatuck Fish & Game Club
regarding water rights for an expansion, but it may be the state that is
holding everything up.
Officials from the apartment complex for the elderly plan to add 24 units to
the Nunnawauk Road site but can't even begin the application process until
they figure out where their water supply will come from. Pootatuck Fish &
Game, which currently supplies water to Fairfield Hills and Garner
Correctional Institute as well as the existing units at Nunnawauk Meadows, has
yet to agree to the increase in service.
As Pootatuck president Mike Osborne explained, the club membership is
concerned about the future of the vacant Fairfield Hills Hospital and remains
hesitant about releasing water rights until the state decides what it plans to
do with the site.
"We're trying to preserve the aquifer, and we're not receiving any response
from the state," he said. "There will be a tremendous demand on the water no
matter what lies ahead at Fairfield Hills. It comes down to preserving the
environment down in the valley."
Pootatuck Fish & Game, which owns rights to the large aquifer that lies on its
property off Mile Hill Road near the Pootatuck River, has made it clear that
it would no longer freely hand out water rights.
A year ago, Nunnawauk Meadows officials and attorney Bill Denlinger met with
First Selectman Bob Cascella and Mr Osborne to discuss the water issue. At
that time, Mr Osborne said he would consult with his membership and get back
to Nunnawauk Meadows with an answer.
Bob Shaw, president of the building commission for Newtown Housing for the
Elderly, Inc, expected an answer in a couple of months at the most, but the
wait continues.
"They don't have the courtesy to even answer our request," he said.
"They just don't want to commit themselves to anything, and with water use
down to nothing at Fairfield Hills, except for the jail, we can't understand
why they are being so uncooperative," said Nunnawauk Meadows executive
director Frank DeLucia. "The elderly don't use a lot of water," he said.
In response, Mr Osborne said Pootatuck Fish & Game sent a list of their
questions and concerns to the state's Office of Policy and Management (OPM)
about a month after the meeting and still has heard nothing.
"We're willing to work with people but we need to know their plans," Mr
Osborne said.
Nunnawauk Meadows must settle the water issue before receiving a loan from
Farmers Home Mortgage. Mr Shaw believes his housing group has gotten stuck in
the middle of a dispute between the fish & game club and Hartford, which began
after the state apparently did not seek permission to use Pootatuck water at
the prison.
"We're just a non-profit organization trying to provide housing," Mr Shaw
explained.
Mr DeLucia said he is sympathetic to Pootatuck's environmental concerns, but
added, "we're caught in the middle here with their concerns with the state of
Connecticut."
Pootatuck's reluctance to grant additional water rights comes as no surprise
to Nunnawauk Meadows officials. Following a recent expansion, Pootatuck said
it objected to water going anywhere else besides Fairfield Hills.
According to Mr DeLucia, the only other choice for Nunnawauk Meadows would be
to dig its own well, but he said that would be too costly and very involved.
The elderly housing complex lies outside the water distribution system of the
Newtown Water Company.
We really don't have many choices," said Mr DeLucia.
Nunnawauk Meadows currently has a waiting list of 170 people.
