Chattanooga Times Free Press

Grant received for water lines

- BY TYLER JETT STAFF WRITER Contact staff writer Tyler Jett at 423-7576476 or tjett@times freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @LetsJett.

The federal government gave Chattooga County, Georgia, $750,000 to replace its Vietnam War-era water pipes that leak and barely pump water fast enough to fight fires.

The Georgia Department of Community Affairs awarded the grant to the county Friday morning. Commission­er Jason Winters applied for the money to replace the water lines in the Mountain View area, located in the northern part of the county, next to U.S. Highway 27.

He hopes the grant will allow the county to replace three miles of water lines. As part of the grant, the county agreed to throw in $88,000 of its own money.

“This little project, there are a lot of positives to it,” Winters said. “It solves maintenanc­e issues. It helps with fire protection. It serves a lot of homes.”

This will be the second part of a threephase plan in the Mountain View area. Overall, Winters said, the project will replace water lines that run to 325 homes in the county. It will also build out lines that serve the Trion Industrial Park, about 133 acres next to U.S. Highway 27.

Trion’s water system services the area. But Dixie Specialty Fibers is building a plant in the park, giving Trion its first actual company there.

Winters said the county’s water line can back up the park if Trion’s fails. Or, if another plant needs added water pressure to do its work, the county can help.

Winters said the pipes in the Mountain View area date back to the

1950s and 1960s. Different stretches are made of different metals, such as ductile iron. The county will replace them with the standard CPVC pipes. Because the materials on the pipes are so old, they frequently leak, tying up maintenanc­e workers.

“They were never intended to be put in and used for 50 or 60 years,” Winters said, adding the new pipes should last three or four decades.

The older pipes were also 2 or 4 inches in diameter, while the new ones will be 6 or 8 inches. That will increase water pressure to the homes. In emergencie­s, the water pressure to fire hydrants also will be stronger.

“With most fire department­s now and most equipment,” Winters said, “you really need a 6-inch line to feed the fire hydrant. You really need that pressure.”

As with the second phase, the county funded the first phase of the water line replacemen­t mostly through a Community Developmen­t Block Grant. In 2015, the community affairs department gave the county $500,000, which Winters said covered about 2 1/2 miles of new water lines.

The grant program originates with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, which gives a chunk of money to the community affairs department. The state agency then awards grants based on applicatio­ns.

Overall, the department announced $40 million in grants to 60 communitie­s in Georgia on Friday. Of that money, about $38.2 million will fund infrastruc­ture changes. The other $2.8 million go toward economic incentives.

“(The Community Developmen­t Block Grant) is a vital community developmen­t tool for rural Georgia,” community affairs Commission­er Christophe­r Nunn said in a statement. “This program’s impact can be felt in every corner of our state.”

“It solves maintenanc­e issues. It helps with fire protection. It serves a lot of homes.”

– JASON WINTERS

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