The Day

Keeping the clean water flowing

Constructi­on to begin on new tower in Montville

- By DANIEL DRAINVILLE

— Water Pollution Control Authority Superinten­dent Derek Albertson, speaking at Wednesday’s groundbrea­king ceremony for the new water tower to be built at 50 Cook Drive, said he expects the tower will last 40 years.

Constructi­on will begin “very, very soon,” he said, and is expected to finish before the end of this year.

The new $2.3 million tower will provide vital water pressure for the delivery of clean drinking water to 500 WPCA customers and fire hydrants throughout the town, and also be easier to maintain than the current one that has been there since 1999, he said. It will be built next to the current one, and will not interrupt water service.

In November 2020, after a routine inspection showed that the 25-yearold tower’s steel-welded coating was failing, the WPCA applied for a grant from the state Department of Public Health’s Drinking Water State Revolving Fund to pay for a project to replace it. The grant will fund half of the project, while a 20-year-loan with a 2% interest rate will pay for the other half, he said.

On Wednesday morning, he and other local and state officials donned hard hats and green vests and grabbed shovels in the shadow of the current 98-foot-tower for the ceremony.

“I just want to take a moment to enjoy this,” Albertson said. “This is a milestone for the town of Montville.”

He said he was proud that federal, state and local agencies had cooperated to bring residents an essential service — clean drinking water.

The WPCA had originally discussed multiple options to fix the failing coating, including repainting the tower, Albertson said. But painting would cost a lot and it would have to be repainted again in 20 to

30 years. So instead, the WPCA decided to completely replace the tower with a same-sized one that uses technology that doesn’t need repainting.

The new tank will be built of glass-plated steel plates manufactur­ed by Dekalb, Ill.-based CST Industries. They will be installed by Aquastore, a local distributo­r for the panels, Albertson said. The glass will coat the inside and outside of the approximat­ely 530,000-gallon tank.

Other constructi­on work will be done by Preston-based Suchoki and Son.

In addition to replacing the tank itself, the tower will feature new emergency power and electrical controls.

Albertson first recognized former Mayor Ron McDaniel, who helped start the project in 2022 and had hired Albertson to be WPCA superinten­dent in October 2018.

Mayor Leonard Bunnell has continued the project, he said, “running in lock step with what the former mayor started.”

Bunnell said the groundbrea­king signified more than just the start of the structure itself, adding the water tank “represents a shared vision for everyone in town’s access to clean water.”

He pointed to the tower and developmen­t on Route 32 as signs of positive growth for the town he believes will continue.

“Let us look forward to the day when the water from this tank flows freely,” Bunnell added.

 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? From left to right, WPCA chairman Chuck Longton, WPCA Superinten­dent Derek Albertson, former mayor and current WPCA Administra­tor Ron McDaniel, Connecticu­t Department of Public Health Deputy Commission­er Lisa Morrissey, Mayor Leonard Bunnell Sr., Connecticu­t Department of Public Health Environmen­tal Engineer Raul Tejada, and Connecticu­t Department of Public Health Public Health Chief Lori Mathieu, Wednesday, during the groundbrea­king ceremony for the Cook Hill water tank in Montville. The current water tank, left, is in the background.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY From left to right, WPCA chairman Chuck Longton, WPCA Superinten­dent Derek Albertson, former mayor and current WPCA Administra­tor Ron McDaniel, Connecticu­t Department of Public Health Deputy Commission­er Lisa Morrissey, Mayor Leonard Bunnell Sr., Connecticu­t Department of Public Health Environmen­tal Engineer Raul Tejada, and Connecticu­t Department of Public Health Public Health Chief Lori Mathieu, Wednesday, during the groundbrea­king ceremony for the Cook Hill water tank in Montville. The current water tank, left, is in the background.

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