Water projects focus of funding search

MILLERTON — Strategy is the name of the game when it comes to the village pursuing funds to support some of the water projects it would like to execute. So explained Mayor John Scutieri following a recent Village Board meeting.

“We have to have projects on the shelf ready for another round of stimulus funding. [Working Foreman] Larry Merwin gave a priority list of water mains that need to be replaced, so we’ll be ready,� Scutieri said. “We have to get those projects ready to put the shovel into the ground. It takes a lot of time and money to get to that point where it is shovel ready, but our goal is to get to a project that is shovel ready, so that if another round of stimulus money comes around, we’ll be ready for it.�

According to the mayor, there are two water mains that are fairly old and developing leaks. It would be wise to replace those mains, he said. On South Center Street and Church Street the water mains that feed all of the lines there are more than 100 years old, and are getting costly to repair; Scutieri said the village should replace them instead.

“We want to put that on paper with the engineers for a shovel-ready project,� he said, explaining to make it shovel ready it needs the engineer’s plans and board approval. After that it needs approval for the grant, and the actual funds, to move forward. Even if the end product does not result with stimulus funds, the mayor said there are other funding sources available that could reward a shovel-ready project.

“Even if it’s not stimulus money, infrastructure money is always out there. Sometimes there’s matching grant money out there, and what makes that money so appealing is it is often 100 percent funding,� Scutieri said. “Whatever it is, we can look for some kind of grant to get it done. The whole reason for doing it now is so it can be on the shelf and when the grant money comes around we’ll be ready for it.�

And there’s plenty of work to fund. There is a water loop in need of connection from Maple Avenue covering all of Mill Street, a small section of South Center Street and all of Fish Street. A previous project replaced a water main along Wakeman Road, which had water problems that had plagued the village for years. Those kinds of problems can take a toll, as leaks tax the water system.

“As we go along and replace some of these water lines, the
healthier the water system we are going to have,� Scutieri said. “Otherwise they deteriorate and the inside of the lines build up with calcium and barnacles. Then the flow of water reduces and affects everybody.�

That can impact the flow of water in a home all the way to fire-flow, which is the amount of water firemen depend on to come out of the hydrants when fighting fires. They need a minimum of 4 inches of flow, according to the mayor, who said it’s hard for a small village like Millerton to budget for such projects without the help of grants.

For now, the Village Board is going to start preparations. It’s going to speak with its engineer and get some projects started on paper. It may take weeks, or months, to get them shovel ready from there. Then the board will check in with what Congress and the Senate has to say about available grants and see if there are any local funding opportunities around.

“I would say in the next six months we’ll have a better idea of where we will be,� Scutieri said. “None of these are emergencies, they don’t need to get done overnight. This is more a long-range plan, to get done in the next three to five years.�

But the mayor acknowledged that if such planning was done previously, the village would most likely have received stimulus funding on its first go-round.

“I don’t know about a cap [to any stimulus funding granted to municipalities],� Scutieri said. “I’ve heard of municipalities receiving in the millions of stimulus. Even if there were a cap, we wouldn’t reach it.�

If Millerton has its way, however, it would like the chance to try.

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