Grant will help repair 120-year-old pipe system


SHARON — It was a Good Friday that proved to be absolutely divine for the Sewer and Water Commission.

On that day the commission received a telephone call from United States Department of Agriculture Rural Development Area Director Mary Grasso saying that the town had been approved for a $1.6-million grant to improve the sewer system.

"It was unexpected," First Selectman Malcolm Brown said. "The Connecticut office, under last-minute pressure to get out a certain number of grants, squeezed us in. Grasso said, ‘Guess what? You got the money.’"

Under the Rural Development Grant, $700,000 is grant money and the remaining $900,000 is a loan with a 4-percent interest rate. The money will help the town to rehabilitate and upgrade an aging sewer system, portions of which are more than 120 years old, according to Brown.

"Some of the piping was laid in the 1880s and ’90s," Brown said. "They’re made of clay and are cracked and breaking."

The money will also go toward refurbishing the sand filtration plant and replacing two septic tanks there, Brown said.

The town applied for the grant, as well as one with through the state Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) Clear Water Fund, in 2003, after engineers conducted a study and found the current sewer system to be in need of repairs.

The town was "too far down" the DEP’s list to be eligible for funds, Brown said, and the commission had all but given up hope on a USDA grant until Grasso called.

"I’m not sure when the first spade will drop," Brown said. "But it will be much needed."

USDA Rural Development State Director David Tuttle will be at the town green on Tuesday, July 3, to present a check to Brown and members of the Sewer and Water Commission at 10:30 a.m.

"I’ll be in the back row," Brown said of the scheduled ceremony. "Members of the commission will be up front. After all, they’re the ones most responsible for this."

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