The Day

Bond panel OKs millions for projects across state

Removal of docks at sub base included in plans

- By KEITH M. PHANEUF

The State Bond Commission approved financing Friday for a wide array of economic developmen­t initiative­s and the first wave of relief for homeowners struggling with crumbling foundation­s.

The panel allocated bonding for: soccer stadium renovation­s and other projects in downtown Hartford; grants to several expanding private companies; and for a project to remove docks and mooring blocks encroachin­g on the U.S. Naval Submarine Base in Groton.

“This is a significan­t win for Connecticu­t’s economy,” Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, who chairs the bond commission, said after Friday’s meeting.

The commission approved $17.9 million for several projects overseen by the Capital Region Developmen­t Authority.

The largest of those involves $10 million in planned renovation­s to Dillon Stadium in Hartford.

A group headed by Woodbridge businessma­n Bruce Mandell is hoping to bring an expansion team from the United Soccer League to the stadium, located in Colt Park, in 2019.

Another $5 million earmarked for the authority would be used for renovation­s to the Church Street parking garage in downtown Hartford.

The bond commission approved $35.5 million in financing to provide a second, forgivable loan to one of the world's largest hedge fund managers, AQR Capital Management, to assist in its expansion.

The firm, which already has added 797 jobs with state assistance, must retain all of those and create another 189 within the next five years to receive loan forgivenes­s.

Other financing approved Friday to provide grants and loans to expanding businesses include:

$14 million for ASML US in Wilton, which manufactur­es optical lithograph­y machines, part of a process used to make computer chips. The grant will help the the company expand and add at least 524 new jobs in the next seven years.

$4 million to Morgan Truck Body to establish a new manufactur­ing facility in Plainfield and create 120 new jobs.

$2.5 million for Okay Industries Inc. to expand manufactur­ing facilities in Berlin and New Britain and create 62 new jobs.

$2 million to Polamer Precision Inc. to expand its New Britain manufactur­ing facility, which is expected to create 200 new jobs within the next three years.

$1 million to help Viiv Healthcare Company relocate from Wallingfor­d to Branford and add 20 jobs within the next five years.

$1 million for Global Atlantic Financial Company to support its relocation from Simsbury to Hartford and to create at least 59 new jobs in the next seven years.

The commission also approved $525,000 for the town of Waterford to demolish derelict docks and mooring blocks across the Thames River from the naval base in Groton to enhance submarine operations.

The commission also approved $350,000 in startup funding for the Connecticu­t Foundation­s Solutions Indemnity Company, which will administer the state's relief program for homeowners struggling with crumbling foundation­s.

More than 34,000 homes, primarily in eastern Connecticu­t, have foundation­s that are crumbling, at least in part, because of quantities of the mineral pyrrhotite present in the concrete aggregate, according to a January 2017 report from the Department of Consumer Protection.

Many homeowners' claims have been denied by insurance companies on grounds that the problem did not meet their policies' definition of a structural collapse — leaving residents to face the huge cost of foundation replacemen­t or repair.

The new state budget enacted last October created a quasi-public, nonprofit insurance company charged with helping homeowners repair or replace crumbling foundation­s with the least possible borrowing.

The company also can help homeowners pay for testing of their foundation­s.

Lawmakers authorized $20 million in bonding this fiscal year and in each of the following three to support the Crumbling Foundation­s Assistance Fund.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States