Date: Fri 16-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 16-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
sewer-extension-septic-repair
Full Text:
Town Meeting Will Be Asked To Authorize Septic Repair Program And Sewer Line
Extension
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Voters at an August 22 town meeting will be asked to allow two new uses for
the municipal bonding that voters approved in 1992 to build the town sewer
system.
The town meeting is slated for 7:30 pm at Newtown Middle School, 11 Queen
Street.
Voters will be asked to authorize spending a portion of the bond money for a
septic system repair program for homes outside the sewer district. Also,
voters will be asked to approve spending some bond money to cover the costs of
installing sewer lines beneath Washington Avenue and Berkshire Road to provide
Newtown High School with sewer service.
Because the septic system repair project and extension of sewer lines to the
high school weren't listed in the 1992 resolution which specified the scope of
the sewering project, the town must receive formal permission from voters for
such uses of the municipal bond money.
After voters approved a maximum of $34.3 million in bonding for the sewering
project, preliminary cost estimates indicated the project would require
roughly $27 million in spending. As the project progressed, members of the
Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) added some technical improvements to
the sewage treatment plant to more thoroughly cleanse wastewater. Those
technical improvements pushed up costs. Also, sewer installers encountered
ledge in some areas where it wasn't anticipated, pushing up construction
costs. Also, some design changes were made for the treatment plant to protect
area of potential archaeological significance.
Septic Repair Program
The proposed septic system repair program would financially help eligible
residential property owners repair their failing septic systems outside the
town's sewer district. To be eligible, property owners must use the affected
properties for their primary residences.
The program provides subsidized federal loans and some small grants. Grants
could range up to 10 percent of a septic system's repair cost.
The average cost to repair a failing septic system is estimated at $10,000 to
$12,000. The smallest amount which would be loaned is $2,000. The largest
amount would be $20,000.
Those property owners helped by the program would follow the WPCA's rules and
regulations, including having their septic tanks pumped out periodically.
So far, more than 25 property owners have said they want to participate in the
septic system repair program, according to the town health department.
Program participants would be provided with loans at a two percent subsidized
interest rate. The loans could be repaid across 5-, 10-, 15-, or 20-year
terms.
Such two percent loans across 20-year terms are available to sewer system
users to pay off sewer assessments.
To be covered by the septic system repair program, the affected houses must
have been occupied before July 1, 1983.
If it is approved by voters at the town meeting, the septic system repair
program would operate until the fall of 1997.
The town is eligible to receive up to $660,000 from the federal government for
the program. Part of that money would be used to administer the project.
The money comes from the federal Clean Water Fund, money which typically is
used for sewer system construction. The state Department of Environmental
Protection distributes the money to municipalities on behalf of the US
Environmental Protection Agency.
Originally, the town planned to spend $156 million to build a sewer system
much larger than the one now under construction. Areas with failing septic
systems, which initially were planned for sewering but were later dropped from
the system, are expected to benefit from a septic system repair program.
Besides the septic system repair program, the town is developing a broader
septic system management program which includes anti-pollution policies and
regulations to prevent the need to expand the sewer system.
High School Sewer
Voters at the August 22 town meeting also will be asked to allow some of the
$34.3 million approved for sewer system bonding to be spent to extend a sewer
line from Sandy Hook Center to Newtown High School.
In May, the WPCA approved extending a sewer line from Sandy Hook Center to the
high school provided that the proposal gains approval at a town meeting and
from the school board. School officials have endorsed providing the high
school with sewer service.
Earlier this year, in connection with the school system's $25-million plan to
expand Newtown High School, the DEP learned that some domestic water wells off
Oakview Road contained water with higher than acceptable nitrate levels,
posing health hazards. Oakview Road is a residential road west of the high
school.
The DEP has maintained that the high school's septic system has caused the
well water contamination.
Town officials, however, while acknowledging that the high school septic
system probably contributes to the pollution problem, point out that the area
is the site of a former septage lagoon and landfill. School athletic field
fertilization and the keeping of horses in the area also are thought to be
contributing factors to the nitrate pollution problem.
The high school expansion project then appeared to be in jeopardy due to the
pollution problems.
But after negotiations with the town, the state agreed to let the high school
expansion project proceed, provided that the town agreed to extend a sewer
line to the high school or build a wastewater treatment plant at the high
school to remove nitrates from the high school wastewater.
The estimated cost for a sewer line extension to the high school is about
$550,000 to $600,000, according to Fuss and O'Neill, the town's consulting
engineers for the sewering project. A pumping station to move sewage from the
high school to the sewer system also would be needed.
The town is under a state pollution abatement order to rectify longstanding
groundwater pollution problems in the Borough, Taunton Pond North, and Sandy
Hook Center. The sewering project is intended to provide a permanent water
pollution solution.
The local share of the $34.3-million sewer project is about $17 million. The
$17 million will come from sewer assessment charges and general taxation. The
remainder of the money comes from state and federal sources.
