Warm Weather Helping Progress on Town Pool


FALLS VILLAGE — Things are looking up for Falls Village in its quest to get the new town pool up and running for the 2007 swimming season. And the mild winter has something to do with it.

"We have every hope that that we can get this thing open for this summer," First Selectman Pat Mechare said at last week’s Board of Selectmen meeting.

In an interview, Pool Committee Chairman Jim March said the concrete foundation for the pool house was poured three weeks ago by Vernali Concrete and the forms removed.

Licensed installer Robert Quinion has almost completed the septic system, which will still need final approval from the Torrington Area Health District.

Electric service has been connected and the well is operating.

"With this weather, we have been able to get a lot of things done that we had planned to do in the spring," March said.

Construction on the pool house will likely begin by the end of March or in early April. And it should not take long since it is a simple "pole barn" design. The structure will be built by volunteer carpenters. Lumber is being donated by former First Selectman Louis Timolat, a partner at the Falls Village Sawmill.

Connecticut Light & Power was partially to blame for the delays in getting the long-anticipated pool open. The company was slow to provide electrical service to the site.

March said a service request was put in last February but lines were only connected in October. The failure to provide electrical service sooner made it difficult for workers to pour the foundation and dig the well — jobs that typically require electricity on the site.

The excavation and the pouring of the foundation of the pool itself were completed in 2005, as were the underground plumbing and stainless steel exterior.Delays Over The Years

The pool was approved by voters in March 2003 and has been the subject of controversy ever since. It was supposed to have been built that summer but construction was delayed in part by a unsuccessful lawsuit filed against the town by a contractor who was not selected during the bidding process.

The pool process was also slowed by the need to find a site and obtain health department approval for a new well.

Some taxpayers also argued that the town could not afford the price tag; that there might be hidden costs; and there were possible health issues associated with the site near the town transfer station, which is located on the now-closed landfill.

The new pool will be built on 76 acres of town-owned land at the intersection of routes 63 and 126. Proponents say the location, known as Town Farm, would also have room for additional facilities that could be constructed over time, such as new ballfields and a skating rink.Old Pool Ordered Shut Down

The new pool will replace an aging facility next to the Falls Village Day Care Center on Page Road. It was little more than a muddy-bottomed, spring-fed pool lined with asphalt and Fiberglass. That pool was plagued with maintenance problems and was ordered shut down by the Torrington Area Health District at the end of the 2002 season.

The town’s swim team has been using the Canaan pool since 2003. But since then, Falls Village has not had to hire lifeguards and other personnel to staff a pool, resulting in financial savings.

In a town meeting in March 2005, residents voted 32-11 to increase the size of the proposed municipal pool from four lanes to six. The larger size will allow the town swim team to host its own meets, but it also increased the projected cost of the facility.

A reimbursement grant of $250,000 has already been secured from the state’s Small Towns Economic Assistance Program (STEAP). Savings of as much as $100,000 have already been set aside as a result of having no facility during the last four seasons. Further savings will be realized through volunteer labor and donated materials. Total costs were originally estimated at $400,000.

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