The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

A plan to stop the lurking monster in New York’s undergroun­d infrastruc­ture

- By Sen Jim Tedisco Senator Jim Tedisco (R,C-Glenville) represents the 49th State Senate District which includes parts of Saratoga, Schenectad­y and Herkimer Counties and all of Fulton and Hamilton Counties

There’s a creature from the deep that’s just waiting to strike our towns and cities!

New York’s aging water and sewer infrastruc­ture some dating back to the Civil War is like a lurking monster which will not go away if we just closed our eyes and wished it away.

On the contrary, these trolls of the sub-level can catastroph­ically attack at any time the safety of our drinking water, sewer and gas lines and the ability of taxpayers to afford repairs.

Last week, a 100-plusyear-old water main broke in Gloversvil­le, paralyzing half the city with no water.

We’ve seen similar water main and sewer breaks recently in Amsterdam, Niskayuna, Saratoga Springs and other localities.

New York has a great CHIPS — Consolidat­ed Local Street and Highway Improvemen­t Program—that provides a formula-based annual funding source for all municipali­ties to maintain and repair local roads and bridges. However, we will only continue to put good money after bad if we keep filling potholes and repaving roads while the sublevel infrastruc­ture that’s underneath continues to deteriorat­e and collapse with the weight of newly minted roads and bridges.

After talking with Clifton Park Supervisor Phil Barrett and other local leaders, I authored and introduced legislatio­n, Senate Bill S.3968A, to create the New York State Safe Water infrastruc­ture Action Program (S.W.A.P.) to repair and maintain vital local drinking water, sewer, storm water management, gas line and water tower infrastruc­ture to protect lives and save tax dollars by avoiding costly repairs when systems break.

Many local government­s simply don’t have the financial and human resources to constantly repair sewer systems and old pipes and then spend valuable time and energy applying for competitiv­e grants to receive a glimmer of state support.

The recently passed federal infrastruc­ture bill can help with some projects but these grants will be oneshot funds. Our municipali­ties need a steady funding stream to address their serious ongoing undergroun­d infrastruc­ture needs.

Unlike, the current state “Hunger Games-like” competitiv­e grant program that’s now in place and only benefits a few towns who win grants chosen by the Governor, S.W.A.P. would provide annual funding to all municipali­ties in the state via a fair and transparen­t formula similar to the CHIPs program to allow them to identify and swap out old, deteriorat­ing pipes, water mains and gas lines to better maintain the state’s infrastruc­ture.

I passed S.W.A.P. in the Senate in 2018. This year, in a bi-partisan effort to help fund local safe water infrastruc­ture, I gave the bill to Senator Michelle Hinchey (D-46th Senate District) who is in the Majority, to serve as the new prime Senate bill sponsor, with myself as co-sponsor, and now has 24 Senate sponsors.

S.WA.P., which would be a sister program to CHIPS, is a top priority for the Associatio­n of Towns for the State of New York and the New York Rural Water Associatio­n.

It’s time to get serious about creating this a program for all municipali­ties in the state to invest in fixing their undergroun­d drinking water, storm water, sewer and gas line infrastruc­ture.

We can’t duct tape our way out of this crisis with quick fix repairs.

We’ve got to make real investment­s now and get a process started to repair and replace our undergroun­d infrastruc­ture for the future.

Just because you can’t cut a ribbon on a sewer line doesn’t make it any less critical to the health and safety of our communitie­s.

The longer we wait, the worse it will get and the more lives and tax dollars that could potentiall­y be negatively impacted when this lurking monster strikes.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? State Sen. Jim Tedisco
FILE PHOTO State Sen. Jim Tedisco

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