Amenia holds first wastewater info session

AMENIA — Building on nearly six decades of discussion and study of wastewater treatment options essential to future development of the town’s central business district, the Wastewater Committee has overseen the creation of a new plan.

The 2022 Sewer Feasibility Study is ready for residents to review and comment upon.

The first of three opportunities to provide comment and ask questions was an information session held on Saturday, Oct. 1, at the Town Hall. The Wastewater committee gathered for a roundtable discussion open to the public, intended to clarify the plan and discuss the next steps toward establishment of a local sewer district.

Creating a district is a necessary step in securing grant funding to support the project, committee chairman Charles Miller explained.

A second public information session is scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 12, beginning at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall. The third session will be a Zoom meeting scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 18, beginning at 7 p.m., accessed through a link to be posted on the committee’s Facebook page and by means of a town-wide mailing.

“It’s amazing that in all this time nothing has changed,” said Town Board liaison Leo Blackman, referring to the decades of study and proposals.

“This is the moment,” Blackman added, citing availability of generous federal and state project funding for which the town seems fully qualified.

Preliminary plans prepared by the engineering firm of Tighe and Bond envision installation of 1,000-gallon septic tanks on most residential properties in the district.

The tanks would not require the usual leach fields, however, and some smaller properties could share a tank. Because of soil characteristics, small lot sizes and significant wetlands throughout the proposed district, the engineers recommend a system of pumps to carry liquid wastewater from the septic tanks to a treatment site, eliminating the need for leaching space.

The solids would remain in the tanks and be pumped out for treatment at sewer district expense every three to seven years.

The wastewater pipes to the treatment site would be installed by underground horizontal boring, rather than by trenches, according to the proposal reviewed by Miller.

Discussion focused on the need for increased housing density in the town center, with more tenants coming to live in apartments that might be situated on upper floors of existing buildings. At present, housing capacity growth is limited by insufficient septic support.

Blackman said that the ability to add more apartments would contribute to the town being more affordable. Additionally, he noted, if upper floors can be used for apartment living, then the assessed value of the building will rise.

Local architect Darlene Riemer asked about the town’s access to grant funding. Miller explained that the necessary step to begin the application process is for the town to form a sewer district. Federal infrastructure funding could cover half of the project costs, and state funding could add another 25% of coverage.

There are two ways to form a district, Miller said. The first is for property owners to petition the Town Board, acquiring a sufficient number of signatures under a prescribed formula combining residential and business owners. The other method is for the Town Board to create a resolution to be voted on through a referendum.

With light attendance at the Oct. 1 meeting, the Wastewater Committee joined in urging residents to attend one of the next two informational sessions in October to learn more about the project that would impact the future of the town over the next 30 years.

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