Connecticut Post

Sewer work progressin­g in Ansonia

- By Michael P. Mayko

ANSONIA — Crews have dug about 22 feet of the 30-foot trench needed to reach the broken sewer pipe that is threatenin­g businesses along Pershing Drive.

“They’re putting in more shoring today,” said Michael D’Alessio, the city’s Public Works director, on Wednesday. “It’s probably going to take them at least three more days before they can reach the broken pipe and start to replace it.”

The nearly 100-year-old pipe which services Pershing Drive, and Howard and Clifton avenues, broke Feb. 22 dumping raw sewage into the Lemko Club and threatenin­g the Haddad building.

Pershing Drive is lined with several businesses including Duchess Restaurant, Dunkin’ Donuts, Alexander Hardware and CVS, among others.

Cost of repairing the break is estimated at $760,000.

A temporary pump is being used to send raw sewage around the breakage to the Water Pollution Control Authority treatment plant on the other side of the Naugatuck River

Frank Pepe Constructi­on is general contractor for the project; subcontrac­tor Brennan Constructi­on is doing the shoring, digging the trench and eventually replacing the pipe.

“Pepe has a backhoe and tri-axle dumptruck on the scene,” D’Alessio said. “They’re hauling our millings down there to build a road for their equipment.”

The cracked pipe is on a sloped area that leads down to the Metro-North Railroad tracks and the Naugatuck River. It is near the entrance to the Riverwalk.

A ramp is being built inside the trench to allow workers to reach the broken pipe.

Mayor David Cassetti said he has appointed Fred D’Amico, the city’s engineer, to conduct a daily inventory of all the work done each 24-hour time period.

The city will use a camera to photograph a nearby trunk line that leads to the sewage treatment plant to determine if there are any cracks in it. Pepe recommende­d to both the Board of Aldermen and the Water Pollution Control Authority last month that the extra search be done while the equipment is there.

“That way you’ll be able to sleep at night,” he said.

“I suspect we’re going to find hairline cracks in it,” the D’Alessio said. “If that’s the case, we are going to reline it now.”

Cassetti said he expects the cost to reach around $1.1 million if the city needs to reline the nearby line.

February’s break is the third sewage line break in the past four months. In December, during the last stages of the renovation of Wakelee Avenue, two lines broke — one at the intersecti­on of Wakelee and Mary Street and the other near the intersecti­on of Wakelee and Dwight Streeet.

And heavy rainfalls played havoc with sewer lines at both Grove Street and Crescent Street, which is near Howard Avenue and the city’s Middle School, last year.

“A lot of our infrastruc­ture is very, very old,” D’Alessio said. “We’re working on starting a 10-year project to have cameras photograph all our lines to determine if there are any problem areas.”

Meanwhile, the Ansonia Board of Aldermen voted Tuesday night to accept the resignatio­n of Nunzio Parante, who stormed out of last week’s Water Pollution Control Authority meeting after the commission­ers voted to pay the cost of the sewer replacemen­t project.

Parente, who served as the WPCA chairman, recommende­d only paying part of the estimated $760,000 repair bill and to have the city pick up the rest.

Cassetti commended Charles Stowe, a first ward alderman and WPCA commission, for making the motion that WPCA pay the entire bill.

The mayor said Stowe spoke up “on behalf of our residents” and as a result ensured “the Water Pollution Control Authority pays for work done to pipes that go to their plant.”

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Steel shoring is unloaded at the site of the sewer pipe break on Pershing Drive in Ansonia on March 6.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Steel shoring is unloaded at the site of the sewer pipe break on Pershing Drive in Ansonia on March 6.

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