Money is flowing into town coffers from grants and gifts

CORNWALL — Before their Oct. 20 board meeting was over, the selectmen were longing for a calculator, to tally a long list of grants and gifts coming into the town.

First Selectman Gordon Ridgway had received a phone call that morning advising him that another $36,000 was coming for repairs to Great Hollow and Great Hill Roads. That would be added to $110,000 already awarded from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (see related story, this page).

The board agreed to apply for a $29,285 grant under the same legislation for a solar voltaic system for the town offices.

A proposed system has already been approved under the program, meaning the project could go out to bid as early as next week, with construction sometime next year.

The 24 panels will be set up on the lawn behind the annex building. Ridgway said that building was chosen because it was the most practical and easiest to administer under the program guidelines.

The system will be able to power all electrical needs for the offices, including computers in the building, and may also be able to supply some or all power needed at Town Hall.

The system would be about half the size of the one currently being installed at Cornwall Consolidated School. That project was earned by the town because so many residents and businesses signed up for the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund’s 20 Percent by 2010 program.

Another grant, of about $7,000, was received from the state for historic document preservation at the libraries.

A bequest to the town from the estate of Judy and Larry Gates was described only as “substantial,� amounting to one quarter of the final determination of the estate’s value.

“When we get it, we will seek public input, probably in December,� said Ridgway. “It won’t go into the general fund, but will be set aside for some carefully planned use.�

Cornwall is also the recipient of a $4,150 Heritage Partnership Grant from the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area. The project is called “Visit Cornwall,� and will promote tourism with strategically placed brochure racks and a cooperative effort with the Cornwall Historical Society’s historic walking tour program.

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