Town looks at ways to fix Mill Brook dam

CORNWALL — While town officials address Mill Brook issues in the center of West Cornwall, an important flood control dam upstream is failing, creating the potential for major problems.In the midst of hurricane season, memories of last year’s destroyed bridge and washed-out property along the brook just above its confluence with the Housatonic River are still vivid, particularly for property owners and town officials seeking more permanent solutions. Long ago, Mill Brook was diverted to mills on the opposite side of Route 128. Left now to flow unheeded, those unnatural sharp bends turn the already high-velocity downhill brook into a force to be reckoned with.The Inland Wetlands Commission is in the process of considering a project on Michael Trapp’s property that includes a 60-foot long, 16-foot high wall. The Board of Selectmen approved Sept. 18 a $11,000 contract with an engineer who will look at ways to shore up the steep drop from River Road to the brook, the road bed and the vital one-lane bridge there. Any proposed work will be considered in light of potential impacts to all properties downstream.John and Julia Scott alerted the town last week that there is a serious problem with the dam on their property. It has created a pond in the peninsula between Cream Hill, Cogswell and Wright Hill roads. There is a lot of silt built up behind the 30-foot-wide concrete slab spillway. But, somehow, the brook breached the stone and earth beneath, creating a large hole that is likely to grow.First Selectman Gordon Ridgway went to the site, where 75 sandbags were stuffed into the hole and water was diverted through a pipe as a temporary fix.He said the dam is large and important enough that the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection is concerned and could dictate how the dam will be repaired. It will be a big and expensive job regardless, he said, adding that there are already six failed flood control dams between that site and the center of West Cornwall.

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