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The state's public health department has approved a plan to alleviate
groundwater contamination affecting private wells in the Appleblossom and
Cedar Hill Road areas, according to Newtown Health District Director Mark A.R.
Cooper.
Mr Cooper said Thursday morning that the approval was necessary before the
state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) will act to give its final
approval to the plan. DEP action is expected soon, he said.
The final plan must be voted upon by the state's bonding commission this month
if water main construction is to start in the spring.
The plan approved by the state health department is "Option A," one of three
possible plans proposed by SEA Consultants, Inc, the town's engineering
consultation. Option A provides a water main extension to residents of
Appleblossom Lane, Dogwood Terrace and part of Cedar Hill Road, stopping at 1
Old Gate Lane. In addition, a house at 64 Cedar Hill Road receives a
whole-house carbon filtration system. Groundwater monitoring also would
continue around the perimeter of the existing contamination semi-annually for
five years and annually for the following 15 years to determine if the
contamination is migrating and potentially impacting additional homes. This
plan costs approximately $1.74 million, all of which will be paid by the
state.
Mr Cooper said the source of the tetrachloroethylene (PCE), which contaminated
the groundwater, may never be identified as it may have occurred as long as 20
years ago and may have had multiple causes.
Once water main hookups are completed, the average property owner will pay
about $404 a year for water usage, based on an estimated quarterly usage of
16,000 gallons per household.
RDAsbestos contractors tour library
page 1
Six asbestos abatement contractors joined Public Works Director Fred Hurley
and Frank Krasnickas, building committee chairman, for a tour of the Cyrenius
Booth Library's interior Wednesday.
The building recently tested positive for asbestos and town officials want to
have it removed as soon as possible. In fact, First Selectman Bob Cascella
said Wednesday he plans to expedite the bid process so that abatement work can
begin shortly.
While work continues on the 22,000-square-foot addition, renovations to the
interior of the existing library remain on hold.
Mr Cascella told the Legislative Council Wednesday that it is too early to
tell if the abatement work will force the town to spend more than the $4.1
million the town voted in favor of spending for the project.
Once the abatement procedures are complete, workers still have three to four
weeks worth of renovation work left.
Tests from Hygenix of Stamford indicated that the levels of asbestos inside
the library exceeded federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards.
The asbestos concerns arose late this past summer, when representatives from
the Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) and the state's
Department of Health visited the site after a construction worker filed an
anonymous complaint.
Health District Director Mark Cooper said Tuesday he wrote a letter to the
library's board of trustees prohibiting anyone from entering the existing
building without being certified to handle hazardous material and dressed in
the appropriate garb.
