Chattanooga Times Free Press

$10.8M loan will fund more sewer work

- BY BEN BENTON STAFF WRITER

Ongoing sewer improvemen­ts in Cleveland, Tennessee, got a $10.8 million boost this week from a state loan.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee and Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on Commission­er David Salyers announced the loan this past week. It comes from the Clean Water State Revolving Fund Loan Program and is aimed at infiltrati­on and inflow correction­s within Cleveland’s sewer collection system, officials said.

The loan has a 20-year term at 0.73% interest. Greg Clark, Cleveland Utilities’ manager of wastewater collection­s, said that rate was less than half the rate the city got on another $10 million program loan in 2018.

“Typically what we’ve done is, we get a $10 million loan and inside of that we’ll typically perform three rehabilita­tion projects with that money,” Clark said Thursday. “Each year we’ll bid a contract somewhere in the vicinity of $3 million to $3.5 million, just depending on how the work plays out until we utilize all those funds.”

The loan will fund work along South Ocoee Street and in the Dalton Pike area of South Cleveland, along with additional improvemen­ts near Bowman Hills off of North Ocoee Street, Clark said. Some streets north of the Bowman Hills area also will see some improvemen­ts, he said.

Specific loan-funded work in those areas includes “cured-inplace” lining to rehabilita­te existing main sewer lines and rehabilita­tion of lateral lines to customers and maintenanc­e holes throughout the project area, Clark said.

Clark said a little money left from a 2018 loan will be combined with the new loan to help keep overlappin­g projects going. Ongoing evaluation and smoke testing of the sewer system helps identify areas of greatest need and make the most efficient use of the loan funds, he said.

“These loans from the State Revolving Fund Loan Program address important infrastruc­ture needs and demonstrat­e our commitment

to assisting communitie­s throughout our state,” Gov. Lee said in a statement on the loan.

“These loans should have a big impact,” Salyers said.

Loans from the state’s program have provided millions for sewer projects in Cleveland over the years, Clark said.

More recently, the city was given a $10 million loan in March 2018 for similar sewer problems and another $1.3 million loan for related infrastruc­ture work three months later. The interest rate at that time was 1.58% and 1.56%, respective­ly, according to previous Times Free Press reports. The $1.3 million loan was increased in 2019 by $379,500 for a collection system expansion to include the installati­on of about 7,750 linear feet of sewer lines to replace septic tanks.

Clark said projects are prioritize­d and an effort is made to take on several projects in one area at the same time, when possible, for better efficiency and pricing.

Sometimes other activities speed work.

Clark said the Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion is planning to repave portions of South Ocoee Street and Dalton Pike, so Cleveland officials want to get scheduled work there done ahead of TDOT’s work so the new pavement isn’t marred immediatel­y.

Clark said the loan program has been a boon for Cleveland’s sewer system, compared with funding through municipal bonds, and that helps keep rate increases to a minimum.

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