USDA funds for sewer repairs await town meeting vote

KENT — First Selectman Bruce Adams and Sewer Commission Chairman John Casey confirmed that chances are very good the town will get a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) funding package to pay for an upgrade to the aging sewer system.

A special town meeting was  scheduled for Wednesday, June 30, at  Town Hall for town residents to vote on whether the town should accept the funds. The meeting was held after The Journal went to press; results of the vote will be printed in the July 8 Lakeville Journal.

Casey estimated that the system was built sometime in the 1800s.

The grant is for $933,600, Adams said, and the funds would be spent on designing and completing a complete system rehabilitation.

“However, ‘might’ is the operative word in terms of receiving the grant,� Adams said of the money. “We started work on this four months ago. The head of the state’s USDA toured around town and was impressed. She said we qualify for it.�

Casey said 45 percent of the package, approximately $420,000, will be a grant from the USDA.

The other $513,000 will be a loan with a low interest rate that would be paid back over the course of 40 years.

Adams explained the Sewer Commission, and not the town, will pay the loan back over the course of the 40 years.

As part of the project, the main sewer line on Bridge Street, which was originally built in 1886, will be relined.

“Those pipes are so ancient,� Casey said. “We’re going to be relining it with something similar to a plastic insert for all 4,000 feet of lines. That will solve a lot of problems.�

The second part will be to either refurbish or rebuild the pumping station located by Kent Center School’s athletic fields.

The sewage from the sewer system goes from the pumping station through lines underneath the Housatonic River, to the sewer plant.

“It needs to be rebuilt,� Adams said.

However, Casey said it was up in the air whether the station would be rebuilt or refurbished.

The funds will also be used for upgrades to the sewer plant, including energy-efficient pumps.

Before the town receives the grant, a town meeting vote had to be held in order for the town to accept the funds.

“I hope the town approves it,� Casey said. “There really is no reason for them not to.�

Once voters approve accepting the funds, and after the town receives the funds, the projects will go out to bid.

“Hopefully construction will begin as soon as possible,� Adams said. “I have noticed as I’ve worked here in Town Hall that things move slowly.�

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