Protecting Our

Natural Resources

Through Technology

» Home
» Introduction to Inflow & Infiltration - The Cause of Sewer Overflows
» Browse our Products
» Links
» News Archives
A SSO Example
» About Us
» Contact Us
News Article - Norwalk CT - Flooding, police pact fill agenda for council

 

Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2007 8:57 AM
 

Flooding, police pact fill agenda for council

 


Staff Writer

Published June 11 2007

NORWALK - Flooding solutions and a new police contract are on the agenda for the Common Council tomorrow.

Three flooding-related projects will go before the council at an 8 p.m. meeting at City Hall.

The council must approve a $1.7 million special appropriation, which would come from the Water Pollution Control Authority's reserve cash, to hire a Missouri firm to fix sewer lines in the Westport Avenue service area.

"During wet weather peak flow periods, the sewer system in this area is unable to handle the volume of flow, and as a result, the city has experienced sewer overflows and back-ups in this area," Finance Director Thomas Hamilton said in a recent memo.

The problem has caused sewage to back up onto streets and private properties. Until the sewer lines are fixed, the city has placed a moratorium on new developments that would add sewage to the Westport Avenue service area.

Insituform Technologies Inc. was the low bidder on the project, which also will address illegal hook-ups, involving items such as downspouts and sump pumps, from 15 residential properties to the sewer system.

Another agenda item calls for the council to approve a $334,000 contract amendment with Tighe & Bond, a consulting firm that studied flooding in Norwalk.

The amendment calls for the firm to design fixes for storm drainage problems that cause flooding in the Olmstead Place-Fitch Street and Buckingham Place-Lockwood Lane areas.

Also, the council must decide whether to accept an arbitration panel's award on a new police contract. Police have worked without a contract since July 1.

State-supervised arbitration on a new pact began in March after members of Norwalk Police Union Local 1727 voted down two tentative agreements between city and union negotiators.

The city mostly prevailed in arbitration, which involved salary hikes, medical coverage and other issues. If the new contract is adopted, union members' pay would increase by 14 percent over four years. The contract would go before a second arbitration panel if the council rejects the award.

 

 
 
 
  Copyright © 2007 USSI, All rights reserved.