The Day

Contract gives OL beaches a path toward sewer lines

Agreement between New London and 3 private associatio­ns good for 20 years

- By GREG SMITH Day Staff Writer

New London — The city has approved a $1.45 million contract to treat sewage from three private Old Lyme beach associatio­ns that is expected to eventually allow hundreds of shoreline homes to abandon their cesspools and septic systems.

Old Lyme beach associatio­n officials say the agreement is another step toward installati­on of sewer lines to access homes in the popular beach area that has been closely monitored for years by state environmen­tal officials.

The state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection has mandated something be done to reduce groundwate­r pollution and potential for pollutants entering Long Island Sound. The idea of a shared community septic system was considered but ruled out.

The 20-year agreement, approved by the New London City Council and signed by Mayor Michael Passero, is with the Miami Beach Associatio­n, Old Lyme Shores Beach Associatio­n, Old Colony Beach Associatio­n and associated water pollution control authoritie­s. The town of Old Lyme, which oversees Sound View and Hawk’s Nest beach areas, is not part of the contract.

Joe Lanzafame, New London’s director of public utilities, said the agreement provides a steady stream of revenue for the city that will help stabilize sewer rates. It is also a good example of regionaliz­ation and will

serve to improve the water quality in Long Island Sound.

New London already treats sewage from East Lyme and Waterford. Once the infrastruc­ture in Old Lyme is in place and homes are connected, sewage will run through an existing sewage pipe system.

“The idea is that Old Lyme beaches will create a pump station and network of pipes to connect to East Lyme,” Lanzafame said. “A lot of the infrastruc­ture is already there.”

The $1.45 million associated with the contract is essentiall­y a connection fee, Lanzafame said. The beach associatio­ns eventually will pay treatment costs based on the amount of sewage being treated in New London. The current rate is $2.20 per 1,000 gallons of sewage processed but that rate fluctuates. The contract also calls for the beach associatio­ns to pay 1.2 percent of annual treatment plant capital costs.

Lanzafame said the contract allows the beach associatio­ns to provide up to 120,000 gallons of sewage per day with the right to purchase up to an additional 180,000 gallons per day with added capital expense fees. Beach associatio­n officials said they remain confident that the town of Old Lyme eventually will join the effort, help defray overall costs and provide sewer lines to the more than 270 properties in the Sound View area, which is adjacent to beach associatio­n properties.

Members of each of the three beach associatio­ns already have approved the borrowing of millions of dollars toward their projects, but the town has yet to bring its estimated $7.23 million bonding request to a townwide vote.

Douglas Whalen, chairman of the Old Colony Beach Club Associatio­n, said the contract is an important first step. Beach associatio­n members approved bonding eight years ago for what is expected to be a $6 million project that includes sewer lines, repaved roads and storm drains. There will be an estimated $36,000-per-household fee to tie in to the system, though that amount could drop if the town gets involved.

The associatio­ns still must negotiate a contract with East Lyme before sewage starts flowing through that town.

“The problem is that we know there is pollution happening. Being a beach community, we want a clean Long Island Sound,” Whalen said. “We’re hoping that this whole project is going to go off very soon. This is a very positive thing for the community and a positive thing for Long Island Sound. The three beach communitie­s ... will have cleaner environmen­ts for our kids and our grandchild­ren.”

He said the negotiatio­ns for the contract with New London took nearly two years and were “a long time coming.” The installati­on of sewers is not only an effective way to clean up the beach community but also will allow restaurant­s and other commercial establishm­ents, barred from any growth because of environmen­tal restrictio­ns, to prosper.

Fees to New London are expected to start by Sept. 1, 2023, or when sewage starts to flow, whichever comes first, though there are extensions available in the event of delays. Whalen said the most current mandate from the state is that the entire project, which will take two years of design and constructi­on, be done by 2023.

Scott Boulanger, chairman of the WPCA of Miami Beach, who also serves on the beach associatio­n’s board of governors, said it has been a struggle to get all of the necessary agreements and approvals in place, and applauded the latest contract.

“This is a nice thing to see happen. We hope to get an agreement with Old Lyme soon,” Boulanger said.

Miami Beach Associatio­n, with more than 235 members, approved bonding of more than $10 million toward the sewer and associated projects.

“We’ve been on board for quite some time,” he said.

Old Lyme has had a “sewer avoidance program” since the mid-1980s but last year announced that because of a DEEP order was planning a project to connect sewer lines to properties in the Sound View area, which is overseen by the town, with an estimated $26,800 cost per property. The town plans to monitor the Hawk’s Nest area.

Old Lyme WPCA Chairman Richard Prendergas­t said that after researchin­g alternativ­es over several years, the town recently finished a waste water plan that compares alternativ­es for the town’s sewer area. An environmen­tal impact evaluation that summarizes the waste water plan is nearly finalized and is slated to be published in May for public comment. The feedback then would need to be resolved prior to finalizing the available alternativ­es and recommende­d actions.

“With the completion of the (environmen­tal impact evaluation), the town can plan for a referendum sometime in 2018, preferably during the summer months when the residents most impacted by sewers will have the opportunit­y to vote on the recommende­d options,” he wrote.

Prendergas­t said the private beach associatio­ns and the town of Old Lyme’s sewer developmen­ts are independen­t of each other and have different timelines, but it makes sense to find ways to work together.

“Since the sewer areas are adjacently located, it makes common sense and financial sense to work together where ever possible to share resources, and the town and private beach associatio­ns are doing this,” he said by email.

Old Lyme First Selectwoma­n Bonnie Reemsnyder said the plan is for the three beach associatio­ns and the town to have separate sewer projects, but with one pump station and one force main.

She said the town officials have had discussion­s with the beach associatio­ns and knew they have been working with New London. While she has not seen the agreement, she said the expectatio­n and hope is that the town could later join the agreement between the beach associatio­ns and New London, because the town is working on its own project.

She said they also are trying to finalize the language of the lease agreement for the pump station, which is more than 95 percent done.

“I think we’re very close,” she said.

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