Water (issues) everywhere


AMENIA — Water, and specifically expansion of the town water district was the main agenda item at the Town Board’s March 15 meeting. Members discussed a new town well and the possible construction of a water tower in the Depot Hill Road section.

Town Water Superintendent Gary Bonds has long said that Amenia needs a new well due to the age of the three other wells and increased water usage.

However, well testing was stalled last April due to a lawsuit filed by Wassaic resident Pat Nelligan.

Nelligan’s property is adjacent to the fourth well site on Lavelle Road.

The Wassaic resident claimed well construction could damage his property’s wetlands.

Last spring, the Freshwater Wetlands Appeals Board (FWAB) agreed and decided the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) shouldn’t have issued a permit to the town of Amenia to site the well in a wetland.

Through an application process, the Town Board sought a new permit from the DEC in order to conduct further testing, as well as another permit that would allow the well to be sited in a wetland.

Last month, the DEC approved the town’s application.

At the board’s Feb. 8 meeting, the Town Board unanimously agreed that it should be the project’s lead agency under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) process.

Well issues may have implications on a proposed 19-lot subdivision called Amenia Hills that is slated for a parcel on Depot Hill Road.

At past meetings, Bonds said without the new well, there may not be enough water to supply the project.

Developer Richard Syms is willing to build, as well as pay for, a roughly 100-foot tall water gravity tank to increase water flow on the property.

The inclusion of Amenia Hills into the town water district is an unknown at this point.


Nelligan speaks


During public comment, Wassaic resident Nelligan said the Town Board recently acknowledged that additional information was needed before the SEQRA process on the well application could begin.

Why, he asked, did the board start the SEQRA process last month if they didn’t have that information?

"We’d thought we’d get it," answered Janet Reagon, town supervisor, who added that DEC has "not been forthcoming with information."

"I could have told you, you wouldn’t," said Nelligan, who referred to himself as "the water guy." "For the Town Board to drag this on while DEC is dragging their feet is irresponsible ... Well 4A may never come online."


Board misses step


 

Mid-meeting, Attorney to the Town Michael Hayes informed the board that the three issues currently on the table are the Syms water tower, possible water district expansion and Well 4A.

All three issues require separate applications, he added.

The attorney said that while the board became the well application’s lead agency, it never circulated literature to involved agencies. The same goes for the water tower application, Hayes said.

Regarding a possible expansion of the water district, neither a notice of intent nor circulation occurred.

Through a motion, the board assumed lead agency of the water district and will soon circulate for the other two applications.

The Town Board meets again tonight at 7 p.m. for a special meeting focusing on the comprehensive plan and related issues. Water issues, meanwhile, will most likely be discussed in the near future.

 

Mid-meeting, Attorney to the Town Michael Hayes informed the board that the three issues currently on the table are the Syms water tower, possible water district expansion and Well 4A.

All three issues require separate applications, he added.

The attorney said that while the board became the well application’s lead agency, it never circulated literature to involved agencies. The same goes for the water tower application, Hayes said.

Regarding a possible expansion of the water district, neither a notice of intent nor circulation occurred.

Through a motion, the board assumed lead agency of the water district and will soon circulate for the other two applications.

The Town Board meets again tonight at 7 p.m. for a special meeting focusing on the comprehensive plan and related issues. Water issues, meanwhile, will most likely be discussed in the near future.


 

 

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