November 28, 2022

CT Construction Digest Monday November 28, 2022

CT Department of Transportation to get a new leader

Mark Pazniokas

The administration of Gov. Ned Lamont chose a railroad station Wednesday to say goodbye to Joseph J. Giulietti, the railroad lifer lured out of retirement four years ago to run the Department of Transportation, and ratify his choice of a successor, Garrett Eucalitto.

Giulietti, 70, who went to work on the railroad as a 19-year-old Penn Central conductor and left the industry as the president of the Metro North commuter rail system, only laughed when interrupted by the announcement of an arriving train at Union Station in Hartford.

“No, no, it’s OK,” Giulietti said. “It’s music to my ears, anyways.”

The press conference formalized what has been set for months: Giulietti will step down as commissioner in December, and Lamont intends to nominate his well-regarded deputy, Eucalitto, to run ConnDOT at a crucial juncture for the rebuilding of highways and mass transit in America.

Federal transportation funding is at an all-time high, available to Connecticut under formula and competitive grants. Virtually all of the state’s rail improvement priorities were included in the $24 billion in funding approved for the Northeast rail corridor.

But the DOT’s engineering ranks are understaffed, the state must provide matching funds, and the construction industry long has complained that Connecticut moves too slowly on infrastructure.  

Eucalitto, 41, who grew up in Torrington and lives in New Haven, is a departure as commissioner, neither a highway engineer nor transit executive. He is a self-described policy nerd, schooled in complexities of how to best finance massive infrastructure projects as well as how to assess their impact on what it means to commute and live in Connecticut.

“My decision to leave the DOT would not have been possible had I not known that Garrett Eucalitto is here to step up and step in,” Giulietti said. “No one is more passionate and committed to transportation, equity, inclusion and roadway safety than Garrett.”

Eucalitto had an unsatisfying stint as an underutilized undersecretary for planning and intergovernmental policy at the Office of Policy and Management, researching and developing transportation, environmental and regional planning initiatives for the administration of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy.

He left OPM in 2017 to become the transportation program director for the National Governors Association in Washington, where he previously had been a policy aide for U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman. Eucalitto said he had no intention of returning to Hartford until approached by Giulietti in late 2019.

Eucalitto was hired as deputy commissioner in January 2020.

Lamont praised Giulietti for recruiting his eventual successor.

“Garrett had, I thought, a really appropriate resume,” Lamont said. Then he smiled and glanced sideways at Eucalitto. “Worked for Joe Lieberman, Dan Malloy. What could go wrong with that?” 

Lamont lost a Senate race to Lieberman in 2006 and a gubernatorial primary to Malloy in 2010.

In Eucalitto, the agency is getting a leader with a holistic view of transportation, from what it means to be a pedestrian to how to replace 19th-century rail bridges that were designed during the administration of William McKinley and contribute to slower times today than when Giulietti punched his first ticket.

“We need to make our transportation network safer for anyone using our systems, which means continuing to improve our roadways, building out sidewalks and crosswalks, roundabouts, bike lanes, cleaning up our transportation system — making transit easier and more appealing for passengers,” Eucalitto said.

Rep. Cristin McCarthy Vahey, D-Fairfield, the co-chair of the legislature’s Transportation Committee, said she was sorry to see Eucalitto leave OPM in 2017 and thrilled when Giulietti brought him back as his deputy in 2020. She called him a big-picture “systems thinker.”

Giulietti hired him in part for his expertise in transportation financing. Connecticut is one of the few states that wholly rely on state bonding to finance transportation infrastructure, eschewing competitive federal loan programs such as TIFIA, the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act.

TIFIA loans require dedicated revenue sources, but they are cheap and can be paid back over as long as 75 years, an appropriate span for financing major rail bridges that remain in use for a century, Eucalitto said.

In the last budget, the General Assembly agreed to the administration’s request to create 206 new positions for the DOT, many of which will go to an Office of Innovative Financing. About 150 have been filled, he said.

Connecticut eliminated highway tolls in the 1980s, and Lamont failed to bring them back in 2019 to stabilize a nearly insolvent special transportation fund that relies on gasoline taxes and a share of the sale tax. A highway use tax on trucking that goes into effect in January will provide a new funding source.

Lamont and Eucalitto each responded quickly and curtly when asked about whether the administration would revisit tolls. Each said, “No.”

Eucalitto added, however, that every state that relies on gasoline taxes will have to find other revenue in 20 years as electric vehicles become the norm.

To help consumers cope with rising gas prices, the state suspended its 25-cents-a-gallon tax on gasoline in April through Dec. 1, costing about $30 million a month in lost revenue. Next week, the General Assembly is expected to meet in special session to pass a bill adding a nickel back every month until the full 25 cents is reinstated.

The state has made up the difference with federal pandemic relief money, as well as the higher revenues generated by a price-sensitive gross receipts tax on fuel. But Lamont said the state cannot afford the gas-tax holiday indefinitely.

“I’m pretty sensitive about the special transportation fund, especially given where we were four years ago, and given the increased demands,” Lamont said. “With all the additional money coming in from the feds, we still have to make a 20, 30, 40% contribution, depending on the competitive grant.”

Donald Shubert, the president of the Connecticut Construction Industries Association, said Eucalitto is well-positioned to take over the DOT.

“I’ve known him since he started doing transportation with Sen. Lieberman two decades ago, and he has has worked diligently towards this his entire professional career,” Shubert said.

The DOT is currently has 700 openings, and it is competing for engineers and other professionals in a tight labor market. 

“We definitely need more engineers. We’ve tapped I think every engineer that works in the state of Connecticut,” Eucalitto said. “We’re going to job fairs all across the tri-state region now as well.”

Historically, hiring has been slowed by the involvement of two other agencies, the Department of Administrative Services and the Office of Policy and Management.

Eucalitto said the process has improved, with DAS quickly posting job openings.

“It’s night and day compared to when I was at OPM. There’s a much better relationship between our sister agencies,” he said. 


CT’s next transportation commissioner differs from his predecessor. Is he a good fit?

Jim Cameron

The Connecticut Department of Transportation (CDOT) is getting a new Commissioner. After four years on the job, Joe Giulietti is retiring.

Gulietti has spent more than 50 years in transportation, starting as a brakeman and conductor on the old Penn Central Railroad while still a student at Southern CT State University.  He graduated to road foreman and then assistant manager for operating rules before joining the new Metro-North in 1983 as superintendent of transportation.

In 1998 he pulled up stakes and moved to Florida where, for 14 years, he ran the Tri-Rail commuter rail system.  Then Metro-North called him back to become President of the railroad from 2014 to 2017, when he retired after a health scare.

As he likes to tell the story, Giulietti got a cold call in 2018 from newly elected Governor Ned Lamont, beckoning him out of retirement (again) to become CDOT commissioner, his “job of a lifetime”.

Giulietti accomplished a lot in his tenure, delivering projects on-time and on-budget while being constantly pushed by his boss to speed up rail service to fulfill Lamont’s pipedream of “30-30-30” service.  The commissioner also took one for the team, serving as front man for Lamont’s unpopular tolls initiative, long since abandoned.

Insiders tell me Giulietti is heading south again to warmer climes, but I’m guessing he may resurface in some consulting role.  He knows too much to just sit on a beach.

The 70-year-old Giulietti’s successor is Garrett Eucalitto, his former deputy commissioner, a self-described “policy nerd”, not a railroad or highways guy.  Eucalitto, who’s in his 40s, may be the perfect guy for the job because the challenge at CDOT has changed.

The task now is finding the money and the talent to execute on long-planned transportation improvements.  While Connecticut is getting $5.38 billion in federal funding, the new commissioner has to match those funds with state money and compete with other states for $100 billion in additional funding for specific projects.

Eucalitto knows funding like Giulietti knew railroad switches.  The new commissioner spent time at OPM, the state’s Office of Planning and Management, which controls the budget purse strings.  And he worked for the National Governor’s Association, turning transportation wishes into funding realities.

But finding the money is only half the battle that Eucalitto will face.  He also needs to find talent to execute on the plans.  After years of attrition under the Malloy administration, CDOT still has 700 unfilled jobs.

Eucalitto says the agency is attending jobs fairs and scouring the region for engineers.  The CDOT is even having trouble hiring truck drivers, competing as it must with the private sector.

Eucalitto inherits an agency with a strong direction and good momentum.  The all-important Special Transportation Fund (STF) which subsidizes these projects is coming back from life support, the current “gas tax holiday” notwithstanding.

Asked if tolls were back on the table as a funding source for the STF, Eucalitto said “No… but…”  In 20 years when we’re all driving electric vehicles, a tax on petroleum products to pay for transportation will be an odd footnote in history.


Danbury moves ahead with ‘very exciting’ career academy after buying, rezoning west side hilltop

Rob Ryser

DANBURY — The city has acquired a 24-acre hilltop on the west side, moving forward its ambitious plans to open the first career academy of its kind in Connecticut by 2024, and provide badly needed classrooms for a student enrollment that has outpaced projections.

“The city of Danbury — I don’t want to use the desperate, but I am going to — desperately needs more schools,” said Paul Rotello, the City Council’s Democratic Minority Leader, during a meeting earlier this month. “I have high hopes for this.”

Danbury closed on the Apple Ridge Road property formerly used by Cartus Corp. on Tuesday afternoon and rezoned the light industrial campus into residential zoning on Tuesday night, clearing the way for the city to take the next step for the $164 million project.

“We are moving ahead with the rest of our approvals,” said Antonio Iadarola, Danbury’s engineer and public works director, during a Zoning Commission meeting earlier this month. “We are in the middle of seeking several approvals from the state for this project … to facilitate a well-developed, well-designed school that meets all the needs of the Board of Education and the state.”

Details about Tuesday’s closing were not immediately available on Wednesday, except that the city took ownership of the property shortly before 3 p.m., Iadarola said.

The closing is the latest development in the city’s emergency plan to catch up with runaway enrollment by converting the 270,000-square-foot office complex into a high school and middle school for 1,400 students. The new west side high school in conjunction with Danbury High School would incorporate Connecticut’s first “wall-to-wall” academy to provide career and college training for every high school student.

The career academy, which would be adjacent to the Wooster School to the south, is part of a larger $208 million spending plan approved by voters in June to build more classrooms across the city — including $27 million for a 16-classroom early childhood education center at Great Plain Elementary School.

The state has agreed to reimburse Danbury for 80 percent of its classroom construction costs.  

“This is a very exciting project for the city of Danbury and the Board of Education,” Iadarola said.

The city’s land purchase clears an ownership hurdle that was a key obstacle with Danbury’s previous plan to build its west side academy in three pods of the sprawling Summit office building development near the New York border. Although the city initially thought it would work to have a condominium-style arrangement with the owners of the Summit, that agreement fell apart in February, forcing the city to switch gears.

The new career academy would overlook a west side that continues to lead Danbury’s economy with large-scale residential development and new business activity. To get the academy plans off the ground, the city needed to revert to the zoning that was in place 40 years ago when the biggest thing on the west side was the Danbury Fair.

The 24 acres bought by the city, which was zoned light industrial, needed to revert to its 1979 status when the land was zoned residential, like the surrounding neighborhood.

“The zone change is a slight shift in the zone line that exists between the (residential) and the (light industrial) district that is to the east,” Iadarola said during a Nov. 10 Zoning Commission meeting. “This is not an isolation of a segregated zone, this is actually a shift of the existing zone line that exists.”

Rotello agreed.

“This is not spot zoning — it’s contiguous with other zones of a similar nature,” Rotello said. “As good as Cartus and Hologic were as neighbors, there is no crystal ball for determining what the future use of this parcel could be, and turning it into residential zoning and putting a school there is probably a much better fit and certainly for the existing school that is there at Wooster, which has been in Danbury for 100 years.”


Zone change spurs progress

ANDREAS YILMA

NAUGATUCK – The mixed use development project for Parcel B is moving ahead after a new downtown zone was created by town officials.

The Zoning Commission on Nov. 16 approved text changes to the land use regulations that creates a special development district for a “combined working, service, shopping, retial, restaurant/dining, entertainment, recreation, residential, hotel, medical, technology, industry, educational, energy creation, office and other compatible uses in a coordinated environment.”

“We’re trying to revitalize downtown and turn it into a combined downtown living, working, pedestrian friendly multi-mobile restaurant dining, entertainment, recreation residential and office use zone,” Mayor N. Warren “Pete” Hess said.

The text change has an effective date of Dec. 5. The commission also accepted a special permit application and set a hearing for Dec. 14 at Town Hall for the proposed mixed use residential and commercial development for Parcel B.

This comes after the Planning Commission, on Nov. 7, approved sending a positive referral to the Zoning Commission for both the text change and the zone change to six properties: 0 Maple St., 83 Maple St., 87 Maple St., 98 Water St. and 0 Elm St.

Along with the approval, the Planning Commission gave three recommendations – to add the word technology, to add research facilities in the area of alternative energy production and not allow drive-through commercial windows.

Earlier this year, the Board of Mayor and Burgesses chose Pennrose, a real estate development company headquartered in Philadelphia, and the Cloud Company, a Hartford-based firm, to develop 7.75 acres at the corner of Maple Street and Old Firehouse Road, also known as Parcel B. The borough board also approved a few months ago to select Bridgeport-based Corvus Capital Partners as the preferred developer for Parcel A, or the Naugatuck Event Center, at 6 Rubber Ave.

The new zone will incorporate Parcels A and B as well as Parcels Y and Z which are further south of the Naugatuck Event Center, and where there’s abandon vehicles and junk, Hess said.

“We’ve put together the engineering and development teams from Pennrose, from Corvus and from the town with all of our staff to come up with a regulation that will fit the needs so that we can develop these projects in a manner consistent with the regulations,” Hess said.

While those two projects begin to move ahead, the borough is spending its American Rescue Plan Act money to redo the infrastructure by bringing in all new sanitary sewers and storm water systems and the complete rebuild of Maple and Church streets, Hess said.

Hess said the borough has waited years to have a real commuter line on the Waterbury Branch Line which began this year. Changes to the demographics of downtown makes it much more attractive to investors and developers.

Pennrose Developer and Project Manager Karmen Cheung said the Parcel B development will be divided into three phases with 60 units for each. Developers plan for in the range of high 70s of parking spaces per 60 units. The parking lot will be located between the proposed building and the train station.

“I don’t envision that being an issue for our residents,” Cheung said.

“You’re going to see allocated just for the state of Connecticut, nothing to do with the parking for this project, on Parcel B, 70 parking spaces allocated just for the users of the train line,” Hess said.

Town Planner Lori Rotella said Pennrose Cloud submitted a special permit application on the week of Nov. 7 for the mixed use development of Parcel B.

“We want a vibrant downtown, a livable, a workable one and we want a lot of people walking around, going to restaurants buying things and have a lot more activity in downtown Naugatuck.”


Latest plan for Greenwich train station offers 'more modern approach' to design, according to architect

Robert Marchant

GREENWICH — In an initial review by town planning officials of a proposal to make the retail and restaurant complex at the Greenwich train station more inviting and accessible, the architect of the redesign said it would offer "an entirely different feel." 

Architect Frank Prial Jr. walked the Planning & Zoning Commission through the proposed reconstruction of Greenwich Plaza at Railroad Avenue and spelled out the new look planned for the key gateway to Greenwich.

It's "an entirely different sense of space," Prial said of the redesign that would feature large windows and materials drawn from the natural world. 

Commissioners did not raise any major criticism over the proposal during its first review last Tuesday. "Everybody is pretty happy," Chairwoman Margarita Alban said after asking members whether there were objections to the plan.

The proposal calls for the demolition of the Bow Tie Cinema movie theater, which is now closed. A 7,879-square-foot building of mixed-use space would be built at that site, including a 4,975-square-foot restaurant with a large outdoor patio, Prial said. Also, 2,170 square feet of retail space would be added next to the restaurant.

Developers said a movie theater is no longer economically viable at the site, due to changing consumer preferences.

The large new restaurant would have large sliding glass doors, "very welcoming, very inviting," said Prial, who worked on a renovation of Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan and a number of other railroad stations.

A major redesign of the exterior and interior of the Greenwich train station would be carried out, including new and improved pedestrian access, as part of the project, he said. 

The train station itself, Prial said, would be given a new glass facade with a large clock in the center and an extended canopy over the sidewalk, a design reminiscent of railway stations in Europe, the architect said.

"It's a more modern approach, cleaner," he said, calling the current train station "a lost opportunity" in welcoming travelers to town.

The redesigned station would enjoy more natural light, Prial said, and a large electronic sign on the inside, a "zipper," would post train times and announcements.

New stairways would be added to access the train platform, replacing what Prial called the unattractive and difficult stairs now in use at the station.

The cladding of the new structure would be in granite and limestone, along with cedar and a metal alloy that looks like bronze. The goal would be to reference the other significant buildings in central Greenwich that use those materials, Prial said.

The Ashforth Co. owns the site and is seeking approval for the new construction at the complex in the center of downtown.

Alos, a traffic consultant, John Canning, told the commission that Metro-North ridership has dropped substantially at the Greenwich train station in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has made traffic flow less of a problem in the area.

The proposed development, he said, would have little impact on the nearby streets. "It's not generating a lot of traffic, and it's dispersed," Canning said.

Alban, the commission chairwoman, said she had concerns about traffic problems if and when ridership returned to previous levels on the commuter train line, acknowledging that it was hard to predict with more residents working from home or on hybrid schedules.

Commissioner Peter Levy encouraged the development team to tone down an "urban" feel at the station and aim for "a little bit more of a small town" aesthetic.

The application was directed to go for another review at the Architectural Review Committee for additional input and the notes from the P&Z Commission, on fairly minor points about the redesign.

Prial, the architect, said the input from the P&Z Commission and the ARC had been beneficial. "The project is much better than it was," he said.

A vote on whether to approve the plan could come at a later meeting after another session with the architecture committee.


West Haven still awaiting Beach Street permit, hopes for April start

Brian Zahn

WEST HAVEN — A city official says the city is still waiting for a state permit that would allow for the raising of Beach Street, a holdup that has left a swath of the city's shoreline languishing.

The project to raise the street, an effort to protect against shoreline flooding, began five years ago. The city obtained the funding for the current phase in 2020. New owners of abandoned Beach Street properties have said they are waiting until the completion of the road raising project before beginning development.

City Engineer Abdul Quadir told the Planning and Zoning Commission that the city hopes to begin the project on April 1, 2023, using regular fill to raise the street about two to six feet, with a bike path and some sidewalks on city-owned property. Commission Chairwoman Kathy Hendricks said using natural fill materials would be an advantage, as the installation of retaining walls would create a risk that water from a major storm event would not recede back into the ocean if it were to breach the wall.

Earlier this year, city officials projected they would have the necessary state permits by fall. However, officials discovered a protected species of plant along the street, which requires a conservation plan that much be approved by the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection's Wildlife Division.

The road-raising is expected to provide protection against stormwater for planned restaurants, housing and hotels along that stretch of the city's beach. Chick's Drive-In, an iconic city eatery that closed in 2015, flooded during Superstorm Sandy and Tropical Storm Irene. 

Owners of the sites of the former Chick's Drive-In and Debonair Motel said last month they are eager to develop at those sites. but told the Register they are awaiting the completion of the road-raising project before moving forward.

Chris Marone, owner of the former Chick's, said project engineers advised them to wait so that the business does not open next to what is projected to be several months of construction. Sim Levenhartz, owner of the former Debonair Motel, said he is waiting to see what the sight lines of the beach from the property will be, as well as how much grading would be required for a parking lot, before development.

Marone said that he does not expect the road-raising project to have any impact on a plan to add 12 townhouse units to a section of the former Chick's parcel that had been used for restaurant parking.


On NIMBYISM and ‘opportunity’: Private developer tackles public problem of housing affordability

Elizabeth Reganr

Affordable housing developer Harold Foley’s latest project is not in anybody’s backyard.

The $16 million, 40-unit Brookside Commons affordable housing development is going up on 16 acres next to the Target store on Route 85 in Waterford. The commercial strip stands in stark contrast to the neighborhood around the former Cohanzie Elementary School where, several years ago, Foley made a failed bid to construct four new apartment buildings while saving the historic school from demolition.

The Georgia-based developer has leveraged 20 years of experience in multiple states to emerge as a success story in obtaining federal tax credits to help solve the affordable housing shortage in Connecticut.

The National Low Income Housing Coalition puts the gap at 85,403 units: That’s how many more low-income households there are than places for them to comfortably live.

Foley, owner of HF3 Group LLC, said he’s built about 25 affordable housing developments in Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee and now in this state. His Connecticut projects include two in Waterbury as well as East Lyme’s Rocky Neck Village.

Foley said community opposition remains one of the largest impediments to affordable housing projects, whether in the South or North.

In a phone interview with The Day, Foley said he abandoned plans for the Cohanzie development due to what he described as “a tremendous amount” of not-in-my-backyard resistance, or NIMBYism.

Foley’s plan for the site, vacant since the elementary school closed in 2008, included 35 apartments marketed at reduced rates to a mix of seniors, veterans and families making less than $58,000 a year. The nine remaining units would have been rented at the full market rate of $1,200 to $1,400.

An apartment is considered affordable by state standards when low- and moderate-income tenants don’t spend more than 30% of their income on rent and associated expenses.

While offering rents lower-income earners can afford is not a money maker on its face, federal and state programs seek to make the proposition more enticing through the use of tax credits. A developer who is awarded the tax credits from the government can then turn around and sell them to investors for the funding needed to make the project financially feasible.

Foley said the majority of Cohanzie neighbors who opposed the project were concerned about putting apartments in a neighborhood of single-family homes.

But there’s more to it, he added: “I think there are underpinnings, if you will, that pertain to neighborhoods not wanting to have families or individuals that do not earn enough money, if you will, to stay in the more traditional apartment complexes.”

About a hundred residents came out in 2019 to implore members of the Waterford Planning and Zoning Commission to reject the developer’s plan for the Cohanzie School site.

The lone person to speak in favor of Foley’s application was met with jeers and cries of “go home” from attendees. One woman openly wept at the idea of losing the small-community feel that she described as characteristic of Waterford. Others said they were concerned about the strain renters would put on traffic, public safety and the school system.

The commission struck down the application in a 4-1 vote because the development didn’t fit with the surrounding environment. Cohanzie School remains vacant.

A public problem in private hands

The federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program was established under the Tax Reform Act of 1986 to engage private interests in solving the affordable housing problem after public efforts failed.

The program is administered in this state by the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority (CHFA).

Since then, a movement has emerged to address housing segregation with tax credits. Led here by the Open Communities Alliance and Connecticut Fair Housing Center, advocates are working to direct more financing for affordable housing to suburban areas so lower income earners have options outside cities.

The scoring process used by CHFA to administer the federal tax credits awards points in several categories to prioritize sustainable developments that serve more lower-income people in places with the most “opportunity” for them to thrive.

A new map laying out the “opportunity” landscape of the state was unveiled last year. The authority’s aim is to support development in areas that are desirable to live in but which do not currently have many affordable options.

Both the Brookside Commons and Cohanzie sites are in the section of Waterford identified as a “high” opportunity area by the funding authority. The second highest ranking on the opportunity scale, it represents some combination of school quality, proximity to community colleges, job availability and access to public transportation.

The scale spans “very low” to “very high” areas of opportunity, with the most concentrated areas of highest opportunity occurring in wealthy enclaves of Fairfield and Hartford counties.

Waterford, along with Bozrah, Franklin, Old Lyme, Stonington and portions of East Lyme and Groton, are the only other high priority areas in a region critics argue has been overlooked by the funding authority.

Based on the map, New London and Norwich provide the least opportunity to help spread affordable housing options more equitably across a broader section of the state.

Nandini Natarajan, CEO of CHFA, said in a phone interview this past week that the scoring system for low-income housing tax credits allows more people to live where they choose.

She has said her agency typically finances about 1,300 housing units per year.

“We’re not necessarily dictating where people need to live,” she said. “We’re not saying you have to live in Old Lyme versus New London.”

She reiterated “opportunity rich” towns have crucial resources like good schools and job availability.

“That could be a good thing for some families,” she said. “Maybe other families don’t want to avail themselves of it because they like where they live. And that’s okay. I don’t think we’re dictating that. I think we’re providing opportunity, is how we look at it.”

‘Steering the money’

New London Mayor Michael Passero is a vocal critic of the LIHTC scoring process he said makes it difficult for developers to secure tax credit financing in the small city. In an interview with The Day earlier this year, he pointed to the proposed redevelopment of the vacant Edgerton School that was repeatedly rejected for tax credit financing.

The 124-unit Edgerton proposal was conceived to provide living quarters for some, if not all, of the residents who were displaced from the Thames River Apartments when the federally-subsidized high-rise complex was authorized for demolition in 2018. While the federal government had gotten out of the housing business with a 1998 law effectively halting new public construction, residents were provided with housing vouchers they could use on any qualifying rental, including affordable housing developments like The Edgerton.

The Edgerton developers tried for three consecutive years to get low-income tax credits but fell short of receiving enough points.

Passero said one of his roles as mayor is to try to get the state to understand “that people who require subsidized housing need to live in the urban centers because that’s where the services are, that’s where the transportation is.” That means reconsidering the points system, according to Passero.

“I mean, you can push the subsidized housing out into the suburbs, but I don’t know if that necessarily helps the families,” he said. “I still think there’s a need to build more housing and density in a city like New London. We support that here. My administration supports that. It just doesn't seem like state policy or federal policy is on our side right now.”

Passero said the scoring system has gotten “incrementally worse” for the city from the days of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy to Gov. Ned Lamont’s current administration.

“Lamont, I think, is really steering the money to other communities,” he said. “I see a lot of building in Waterford.”

Natarajan, appointed to her post in 2019, described the LIHTC program as “very competitive.”

She put the amount requested by developers in a given cycle at two to three times the available tax credits.

She responded to concerns from those like Passero by emphasizing there are other funding mechanisms through state agencies that can help finance projects. But she acknowledged LIHTC financing is the most sought after.

The scoring system is a way to put state housing priorities into practice, according to the CEO – and that’s “never going to please everybody.”

“There’s a certain encapsulation of the housing policy goals, and if you don’t meet it it’s not going to be a happy situation for you, unfortunately,” she said. “I don’t know what to say except come and talk to us about what you’re looking to do and we’ll work with you.”

Opportunity rich

For Foley’s Brookside Commons development in Waterford, CHFA documents show 80% of the 40 one- and two-bedroom units will be set aside as affordable. The largest chunk, at 16 units, is reserved for households that make from 25% to 50% of the area’s $102,700 median income. Eight units are reserved for those who make up to 80% of the median and another eight for those who can pay the full market rate. The units are deed restricted to remain affordable for 50 years.

Eight units are reserved for homeless families being served by regional social services providers. The proposal includes an on-site coordinator to provide support services to help the families, who must make less than 25% of the median income, remain stable in their new homes.

A family of four making $28,150 annually would pay $633 a month in rent for a two-bedroom apartment, based on state-mandated income limits for tax credit properties.

A family of four that makes $67,560 — or 60% of the area median income — would pay $1,521 per month for the same sized unit.

Reserving units for families experiencing homelessness and offering support services gave Foley the maximum number of points in categories that show the state’s preference for providing housing options for the lowest-income households.

Foley used “challenging” to describe a LIHTC application process that changes every two years.

“There are myriad various characteristics that one has to incorporate into their development in order to prevail in obtaining the tax credits,” he said. “All of these boxes have to be checked.”

Foley scored 74 points out of a possible 106 points for his Brookside Commons development in Waterford, according to the points calculation worksheet provided by CHFA. That includes six points for developments located in towns with less than 10% of their housing stock designated as affordable and eight points for being in a community of well performing schools with access to higher education and jobs.

The Brookside Commons development garnered unanimous approval this year from the CHFA Board of Directors for more than $9 million in loans and $900,180 in federal tax credit financing. The project was approved separately for $500,000 in tax credits from CHFA’s own state tax credit contribution program.

Foley said the job influx contributed significantly to his decision to build a mix of low income, moderate income and workforce housing in this part of the state.

“Southeast Connecticut was prioritized for affordable housing development because of the many well-paying employment opportunities that were emerging. That’s what drew us to Waterford and it drew us to East Lyme as well,” he said.

Foley recounted getting into tax credit development in Jackson, Miss., in 2003. He said the need remains for affordable housing for people of all incomes.

“Everyone’s not privileged to make $250,000 a year,” he said. “There are many residents that earn less than $60,000, $50,000, $40,000 annually. And those citizens and families deserve the same type of quality housing as their more affluent counterparts.”

November 23, 2022

CT Construction Digest Wednesday November 23, 2022

Bethel’s $12.3 million water treatment project goes to voters at referendum next week 

Kendra Baker

BETHEL — A referendum on funding for the proposed Bergstrom Well and Water Treatment Plant is set for Dec. 1.

The date was set during a special town meeting, attended by roughly 25 people, last Thursday.

The proposed plant would be located north of Joe Freebairn Field near the intersection of Plumtrees and Walnut Hill roads and allow the town to replace the subsurface water currently used for its water system with well water. 

Of the roughly $12.3 million needed for the project, nearly $10 million would be for construction, roughly $1.8 million for professional services, about $499,000 for contingency and $16,000 for legal fees.

Not all Bethel taxpayers would bear the cost — only those who get town water, according to Acting First Selectman Rich Straiton, who said there are 3,500 town water users in Bethel.

Straiton said their water rates will go up, but it’s not yet known how much as the town is “applying for over $3 million in grants, which will help lower the cost.”

The project is part of a 30-year capital improvement plan that the town embarked on after voters rejected a proposal to sell Bethel’s water system to Aquarion in 2013.

Since then, the town has built two new storage tanks, drilled two new wells, refurbished a couple of existing ones and renovated virtually every pump system. Part of the work involved the 2016 completion of the 750,000-gallon Eureka water storage tank, which allowed the town to move forward with plans to further expand Clarke Business Park.

According to Straiton, the well on the Bergstrom property would produce 800 gallons of water a minute that’s “much more suitable for the public water supply.” 

“Well water is much better than subsurface waters from reservoirs,” he said earlier this month, noting that wells provide “a more constant source of water” compared to reservoirs, which can yield drastically lower amounts of water during periods of drought.

Bethel voters will have from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Dec. 1, to vote at their designated polling places on the funding.

If approved, construction on the project is expected to start in spring 2023 and take about two years to complete.


Bridgeport landmark restaurant Testo's sold to developer

Brian Lockhart

BRIDGEPORT — If the walls at Testo's could talk, they would have far more to share than recipes for red sauce, meatballs, linguine with clams and filet mignon in a cognac gravy.

Democratic Town Chairman Mario Testa's well-known restaurant and banquet facility has for years been where Bridgeport's movers and shakers, and political insiders from around Connecticut schmoozed and cut the deals that, for better or worse, shaped the city's and state's government and its policies.

Soon, however, Testo's, located at 1775 Madison Ave. in the North End, will be gone and replaced with a four-story, 177-unit market-rate apartment complex. 

"It's sold. It's a done deal. December 31 is the last day,"  Ralph Giacobbe, Testa's nephew and the building's co-owner who has been running the operation, confirmed Tuesday.

Giacobbe said the restaurant sent letters over the weekend to customers who had booked around 30 different events there for 2023, letting them know the venue would no longer be available.

The buyer is Amit Lakhotia, who has garnered significant attention for redevelopment projects in New Britain. John Guedes' Bridgeport-based Primrose Companies has partnered with Lakhotia before and was hired to design and build the apartments.

Lakhotia Tuesday credited Guedes for introducing him to the site and to Giacobbe. He plans to break ground early next year and have his building occupied by mid-to-late 2024. He said he was attracted to the property because of the proximity to St. Vincent's Medical Center, the towns of Fairfield and Trumbull, Fairfield-based Sacred Heart University and the Westfield Trumbull mall. 

"I thought it will be attractive to millennials who do not want to buy with interest rates going up," Lakhotia said.

For months there has been speculation about the future of Testo's.

In late 2021 Giacobbe filed preliminary paperwork with the city for an apartment or condominium complex with underground parking on the property. He and his land use attorney, Raymond Rizio, in early January dismissed rumors of a pending sale. They instead argued the paperwork had to be submitted to get around height restrictions on new developments that took effect Jan. 1 as part of revised city-wide zoning regulations.

Giacobbe at that time indicated he expected Testo's to be running for a few more years.

“I have two kids. One’s in grad school. My son starts college. I’m not going anywhere for the next six years. It’s not for sale,” Giacobbe had said in January. “(But) down the road if my kids don’t want this business and I do want to develop it on my own or sell it, I could.”

Still, talk that Testo's might close sooner rather than later continued throughout the year. When Giacobbe's wife, Lilly, last spring applied and was hired as a project manager in Mayor Joe Ganim's administration, some took that as a sign the family was preparing to get out the restaurant business.

But Giacobbe on Tuesday insisted that when in January he said the property was not for sale, he had meant it.

"I had no intentions of selling. I did have six more years," Giacobbe, 55, said. "(But) you get an opportunity, you capitalize on it. I had a good run in Bridgeport. Made a lot of good friends. Met a lot of good people throughout the years. Our success is from Bridgeport and I'll never deny that."

Testa opened Testo’s 47 years ago at a different location on Federal Street, then moved to the current Madison Ave. address in a heavily residential section of the North End about 16 years ago. Besides catering to regular diners and hosting weddings and other functions, the facility has been the unofficial headquarters of Bridgeport’s Democratic Party, where members have held formal and informal political huddles over dinner and drinks.

Former Mayor John Fabrizi called the restaurant "a staple" and "an institution." He said from a purely business perspective, Testo's filled a "void" in the area for banquet halls.

"As far as politics go, U.S. senators, U.S. congressman, governors, mayors, the whole gamut has been through there for one reason or another," Fabrizi said. "If it was to get Mario's input and recommendation on certain issues or certain candidates, to holding local Democratic Town Committee meetings there. Republican politicians have been through there as well for the exact same reasons."

"That’s my uncle's forte, not mine," Giacobbe laughed.

Fabrizi said Testa, who could not be reached for comment, and the Giacobbes "put their blood, sweat and tears into that business."

The sale actually has its roots in a move the building's owners made a decade ago.

The Madison Avenue site has also been home to restaurants since the 1930s and there were tight restrictions on what could be constructed on the premises. So in the late 2000s Testa and Giacobbe launched an effort to convince city officials to make the property’s zoning more flexible and, in so doing, more marketable.

They succeeded in 2013 and Testo’s was granted an office/general retail designation. There was some intense opposition from neighbors who, fearing the land would eventually be used for housing or a dormitory for the nearby Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, filed a lawsuit that was eventually withdrawn.

City Councilwoman Jeanette Herron represents the neighborhood. On Tuesday she called the restaurant's pending closure "sad" and said she will be watching closely to see how the apartments are designed.

"I'm just hoping it ... doesn't take the ambiance of the North End away," Herron said. "It has to fit the community."

Another North End council representative, Michelle Lyons, said she too will miss Testo's.

"When you have an event, you go there," Lyons said. "The meals were good." 

She added opening 177 apartments there could have a major impact on the residential area.

"That's a lot of units," Lyons said.

Lakhotia said he understands the concerns. He said he will be offering plenty of on-site parking and amenities, the building will be well-kept and his tenants will help the city's economy.

"People are always worried when something new comes up," Lakhotia said. "This new change will bring modern apartments, modern, young people living in these apartments. We're not trying to disrupt the neighborhood. We're just trying to bring something modern, something new. This should add value to the neighborhood."

As for what Giacobbe will do after Testo's goes dark at  year's end, he said, "I'm not retiring 100 percent."

"I am gonna look for another location next year," he said. "I've got some stuff I want to do with my wife and kid, family obligations I want to tend to."

"We need to stop and smell the roses right now," Giacobbe said.


New Britain's Stanley Quarter Park pond will be dredged with hopes of returning it to its iconic former state

Ciara Hooks

NEW BRITAIN – The slightly dilapidated, unusable feature at Stanley Quarter Park, the infamous pond, will officially be dredged and returned to a new, beautiful useable state.

“This beautiful pond is absolutely an iconic part of Stanley Quarter Park and so many of our residents have wonderful memories here. A lot of us know Dan and Arlene Palmer, they got married here, and their bench is still here,” Mayor Erin Stewart said. “It’s a popular place for residents and visitors alike to be outdoors, enjoying nature and one of our most iconic scenes; when you’re seeing pictures of the City of New Britain you’re seeing photos of the pond house.”

Over time the quality of the water in the pond has declined significantly.

“You all know that investment in parks means a lot to the residents of this city, they are used tremendously, and ever since 2020 they’ve been used at an all time high,” said Eric Barbieri, Parks, Recreation and Community Services director. “So we’re super thankful for what you all do to support the parks and what’s going on here.”

The construction company for the project is Colossale Site Works and the architect engineers are GZA Geo Environmental Inc.

“Colossale has started the permitting and some of the things that they need to do to address the wildlife,” Barbieri said. “We want to get started right away and hopefully get some things done during the winter and be able to come into spring and maybe into June with just some type of turf reestablishment.”

This $956,000 project, which launched Monday, will restore the pond back to its former glory with some added perks and upgrades.

“First, crews are going to drain the water to allow for a safe dry working environment for sediment removal,” Stewart said. “I can ensure you that special care will be giving to wildlife relocation throughout this entire process. The Colossale team is working very closely with the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Fisheries Division to ensure that the part of the project is handled with the upmost care.”

Once the pond is drained Colossale will work on the excavation and removal of the accumulated sediment in two phases.

“The initial phase is going to include sentiment removal in the northern portion of the pond (by the tennis courts); with the second phase including work in the southern portion of the pond a few months after that,” Stewart said.

All sediment that is removed from the pond will be disposed off site in a former city landfill that’s located in Berlin on Christian Lane.

“The Colossale team will be using temporary coffer dams inside the pond to help control water placement throughout the entire project,” Stewart said. “They’re constructed of large sand bags and will be removed at the end of the project before the pond gets refilled. “

To ensure some longevity as a part of this dredging project several structural changes will be made to help keep sediment out and keep water circulation healthy so this shouldn’t be needed again for a few decades.

They are also going to look to put the two solar bees back in. They serve to bring water up from the bottom of the pond and shoot it across the top which keeps the water moving, the oxygen flowing and prevents algae from having the opportunity to grow and reproduce.

“We’re also going to do best we can to shore up the actual grass of the shore with some other kind of fabric and materials to make sure it doesn’t degrade and fade away into the water,” Barbieri said.

For the public’s safety access to certain areas of the park will either be restricted or temporarily closed.

After today residents can expect to see the crews working on the project Monday-Friday from about 7 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

Stewart said they are hoping the project will be completed by the end of the summer next year but there is no definitive date.

“This has been a multi-year process in the works just to get this ready through design, through permitting, which took the longest, and now construction, so we’re excited to see it start up,” said Jennifer Burke, GZA Geo Environmental. “It’ll be a good six month phase where they’ll be drawing it down, removing the sediment and then doing restoration at the end of the project and it should be great.”

The city received an over $3 million local bond for the renovation of Stanley Quarter Park which they have already used a portion to put in a new playground, new basketball courts, picnic pavilion and the road has been closed for traffic.

“I’m very nostalgic about being able to do the things that we’ve always done here back in the day, like seeing paddle boats in the water again, funyaks, it was a great fishing pond and we used to ice skate here,” Barbieri said. “We lost some of that recreational value and we’re hoping to get back to that.”


Developers pay $1.57M for Windsor properties for warehouse construction

Michael Puffer

Apair of local developers aiming to build a 218,000-square-foot warehouse in Windsor have just completed purchases of properties needed for the project.

The warehouse proposal of UW Realty VII LLC – a company of Glastonbury developer Bradford Wainman and South Windsor broker/developer Robert A. Urso – passed site plan review and gained a special permit from Windsor’s Planning and Zoning Commission in September.

UW Realty paid $1.57 million for five adjacent properties – totaling 21.5 acres – along Stone Road in transactions with three sellers. One was logged Oct. 18 and two more on Nov. 17.

The building site, which includes 12, 21, 27, 33 and 41 Stone Road, is located just southwest of Bradley International Airport.

“We have one of the last developable sites in Windsor that is warehouse zoned,” Wainman said. “It’s super attractive because you are so close to the highway.”

Windsor is among a cluster of north-of-Hartford towns that have seen intense interest from warehouse developers over the past decade. The addition of so many large warehouses to the area sparked concern among residents, which prompted some communities to move to adopt stricter zoning regulations.

Windsor, earlier this year, changed its zoning to require that warehouses in excess of 200,000 square feet obtain a special permit. That process requires more public input and gives the Planning and Zoning Commission greater discretion to consider a broader array of concerns.

The UW warehouse proposal was the first affected by the new special permit requirement. Wainman noted it received unanimous approval from the Planning and Zoning Commission.

“The Town of Windsor is very, very cooperative in development, especially where it is correctly zoned,” Wainman said. “It is a welcoming community.”

Town Planner Eric Barz said the site has “no residential neighbors to speak of,” rendering it a “pretty uncontroversial location.”

Wainman said he and Urso sought the approval on speculation. The partners will next move to demolish three modest single-family homes on the site, he said. Wainman was uncertain if he and Urso would move to build before a tenant is identified.

JLL began marketing the site in October. Wainman said he will shortly open talks with several interested parties. 


Everything Flows Downhill: Old Lyme residents mount challenge to sewer project

Marc E. Fitch

In a small community center in the Sound View neighborhood of Old Lyme, four homeowners gather at a folding table with stacks of documents they have compiled over several years. They are working to combat a large infrastructure plan by the Old Lyme Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) to install sewers in their neighborhood after the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) issued an administrative order reporting that residents’ septic systems may be polluting groundwater and the Long Island Sound.

Frank Pappalardo, Dennis Meluzzo and Mary Daley are the co-chairs and secretary of the Soundview Sewer Coalition, an LLC they formed with other neighborhood residents like John Grande to push back against the existing sewer plan. So far their work has included hiring an attorney, contracting a property appraisal company to provide an analysis and preparing, if need be, to file a lawsuit.

The group’s opposition to Old Lyme’s sewer plan is less about the typical NIMBY-ism one often sees in Connecticut towns – admittedly they thought the sewer idea to be a good one at first – and more about how the costs of the project are being allocated, whether there may be less costly alternatives and, finally, whether they are truly polluting the area at all.

Wrapped up in the politics of this issue are land and property deals by WPCA members in Old Lyme and in surrounding beach associations. Reviews of these deals and a closer look at which town areas have been added or removed from the sewer plan have left the Sound View coalition suspicious there may be ulterior motives at play.

Questions raised by the Sound View Sewer Coalition, and their efforts to get answers, have put them at odds with Old Lyme’s WPCA and with the surrounding municipal associations’ independent WPCAs. Now, the coalition feels they are being ignored by town officials hellbent on seeing this project through, no matter what. 

“We’ve been immersed in this thing for a number of years,” Pappalardo said. “Our approach here is not that we’re against everything, our approach here is let’s figure out the best thing to do. Let’s figure out what the problem is, if we have a problem. Now let’s figure out the best way to solve that problem.”

“We’re not engineers, but we’ve hired some and we’ve become very adept at some of these things just by being immersed in it,” Papparlardo continued. “We’re just saying let’s sit down and talk about this and figure out the best way to handle this, but our WPCA is just on a track and they’re refusing to move off that track and when you start to look at some of the personal dynamics involved here, it starts to make a little more sense.”

Until recently, Old Lyme had a sewer avoidance policy, meaning the houses in Sound View and other coastline neighborhoods in Old Lyme have septic systems.

DEEP’s concern, voiced in the aforementioned administrative order, had largely been based on the tiny lot size of the properties along Old Lyme’s coastline, the soil conditions, and testing results that showed elevated bacteria in the groundwater. In response to the administrative order, Old Lyme hired an engineering firm to look at the issue and determine possible solutions. The most cost-effective solution, they determined, was to install sewer lines in the coastline communities, which would then pump sewage up to New London’s waste treatment facility.

The cost of installing a sewer system in the Sound View neighborhood alone was estimated at $9.5 million and in 2019 Old Lyme held a town-wide referendum to authorize funds for the sewer project. 

The ballot measure put to Old Lyme passed 883 to 565, and there may be a good reason for that: only the residents of Sound View are on the hook to pay for it. The project will cost each property owner tens of thousands of dollars in up-front and long-term costs through property assessments.

According to a Q&A posted by the Old Lyme WPCA, the whole town should not bear the cost of the sewer project because only Sound View and the neighboring beach associations will benefit, but it was also a matter of getting the referendum passed. 

“Multiple Town agencies strongly believe that levying the cost across all households in the Town of Old Lyme would cause the referendum to fail. Many residents at the WPCA information meetings suggesting this method also agreed the referendum would fail,” the WPCA wrote. “To put forth a referendum that is believed to fail, is inappropriate and irresponsible use of town resources.”

The overall project costs across Sound View and neighboring beach associations have risen by roughly 30 percent since 2019, now topping out at $55 million after the COVID-19 pandemic created supply-chain problems and price increases. The longer the project is delayed the more likely prices could increase in the future, and that could lead to the project being tabled.

“It’s way more expensive than it should be because of COVID and supply disruption,” said Old Lyme WPCA Chairman Richard Prendergast. “I can’t understand the other reasons why, but if it becomes too expensive, it gets to the point where it’s just not reasonable. We need more financial help and, unfortunately, we hear about all this financial aid going to everybody and building infrastructure and we just don’t seem to qualify.”

Now, adding to the conflict, Prendergast and the beach association WPCAs are facing residents who feel it is already too expensive and want to look for other options. 

Sound View is probably not what one would imagine when thinking of a shoreline community: this is not the rich and powerful one percent of Connecticut’s Gold Coast. Sound View itself is made up of only three streets running from Route 156 to Sound View Beach, one of the only truly public beaches in Old Lyme. 

The 229 houses and commercial properties in Sound View are small, situated on fractions of an acre, and many are merely summer homes that have been passed down over multiple generations, including Pappalardo’s home, which was initially owned by his grandparents and which he plans to pass on to his son. He lives there only during the summer months. There are a few dilapidated commercial buildings that appear abandoned, although the coalition members say they are still owned. 

“This community is working class, graying people who have bought their properties planning to retire here,” says Mary Daley, who only resides at her Old Lyme home on the weekends. “That is what the community has become. The rest of the town thinks we’re an old-time rowdy group and we’re not, we’re just working people.”

Sound View Beach itself is shockingly tiny, comprised of two sections of sandy beach – one about fifty feet wide and another about forty feet wide – separated by a beachside restaurant and a bar. Frankly, it’s difficult to picture enough space for even a couple large families during the summer months.

To understand the sewer fight in Sound View, one must understand not only the neighborhood but how Old Lyme’s coastline is divided between the town and multiple beach associations that act as chartered municipalities and thus have their own WPCAs, which are managed by boards of volunteers. 

 

The Old Lyme sewer project affects five communities: Moving west to east they are Hawk’s Nest, the Miami Beach Association, Sound View, Old Colony Beach Association and Old Lyme Shores Beach Association. Both Hawk’s Nest and Sound View are considered part of Old Lyme and are regulated under Old Lyme’s WPCA. 

The remaining beach associations – Miami Beach, Old Colony and Old Lyme Shores – act as independent municipal associations and thus have their own WPCAs. The beach associations have come under criticism in the past for either restricting public access to their beaches or attempting to charge fees for the public to use their beaches.

And while the lines of demarcation matter when it comes to policies in Old Lyme, they are non-existent when walking around the neighborhood: walk a few feet to the right and suddenly you are no longer in Sound View and are now in Miami Beach. 

These are not large tracts of land occupied by large houses filled with rich people – and that is part of the problem, for Sound View at least, because the $9.4 million in estimated costs for installing sewer lines in Sound View will be divided among the people who live there and a smaller neighborhood just across route 156, called Miscellaneous Area B.

Area B is set alongside train tracks where a train runs by nearly once an hour, including over the course of Connecticut Inside Investigator’s interview and walk through the area. Once again, they are small, working-class houses.

The project cost will be recouped by the town by levying an assessment on each dwelling unit over the course of 20 years. According to an August 2022 presentation by the Old Lyme WPCA, the projected cost for each property owner in Soundview and Area B is $42,800, which would be paid off by a yearly assessment of $2,140 over 20 years.

“Based on their equations, there’s no typical homeowner, unfortunately, and they don’t distinguish between full-time residential, part-time and commercial at this point,” Daley said.

But that is not the only cost for homeowners associated with this project. The homeowners will also be responsible for retiring their current septic system and connecting to the sewer line. That will result in upfront costs ranging anywhere from $3,000 upwards of $10,000 depending on the size and scope of the work. The town, however, picks up the cost of the road repaving.

The cost assessment levied against each individual home, however, is the reason the Sound View Coalition has hired an attorney and threatened to file suit if the project moves forward. That’s because Connecticut state statute limits the assessment a WPCA can place on a property to how much that new benefit increases the property value.

The Sound View Coalition hired a property appraisal firm to estimate how much a sewer system would increase property values in Sound View. The appraisal, prepared by Marc P. Nadeau in 2020, found a sewer system would increase residential property values by roughly 7 percent and commercial properties by 10 percent. 

According to Nadeau’s report, the average residential property in Sound View was going for $348,940; a 7 percent increase in value from sewer installation would equate to $24,425 – almost half the WPCA’s estimated assessment on Sound View properties.

In June 2020, the Sound View Coalition’s attorney sent a letter to Prendergast warning the rest of Old Lyme’s taxpayers will have to pick up the tab for the sewer installation and legal costs if they move forward. 

“If the WPCA continues to press an obvious plan to distribute the cost of the sewering program onto my clients’ neighborhood in a disproportionate fashion, legal action is likely to follow,” wrote attorney Keith R. Ainsworth. “Old Lyme’s citizens might be unpleasantly surprised when they find they have to bear not only their fair share of the sewers that solve an order served on the town, but also that they have to bear the legal costs as well.”

The Coalition says their appraiser’s report and attorney letter were not well-received by the WPCA; the board argued the appraisal was biased and their attorney not well versed in the law. 

“Look, we don’t want to sue anybody, we’re not lawsuit-happy,” Pappalardo says. “Unfortunately, the only people who make out there are the lawyers, and I’m on the town commission, I know these people up there, and it’s an uncomfortable situation for me and it’s an uncomfortable situation for many other people.”

Prendergast says the lawsuit threat (and it’s not the only one, more on that later) is premature because the cost of the project remains in question. He also points to a sewer project in nearby Point of Woods that he says increased property values by 20 percent. Sound View Coalition’s assessment pegged the benefit at 10 percent.

“We have estimates, and in my view, my opinion, we’re not going to go forward with the project if it’s too expensive,” Prendergast said. “Now, an individual might say it’s too expensive and they have the right to appeal. A judge would then decide does their property benefit more or less than what’s been assessed to them, and they’ll have their expert, and we’ll have our expert. They’ve presented in one case that their expert said there’s going to be 5-7 percent benefit and other experts have said that it’s a lot more.”

Old Lyme has attempted to reduce the overall cost of the project, hopeful that Sen. Richard Blumenthal would be able to secure $11 million in federal funds for the project, which would basically bring the project back down to its original estimated cost. However, Congress didn’t approve the funding. 

The WPCA also hopes to secure Clean Water grant funds from the Connecticut DEEP to reduce the cost by 25 percent, but they have to show forward movement on the project first.

The assessments for the neighboring beach associations are more expensive, with residents in Old Lyme Shores seeing the highest cost assessment of $74,600, or $3,730 over 20 years, according to Old Lyme WPCA’s presentation, plus the additional costs of connecting to the sewer line and those rising costs could throw a wrench in the project if beach associations start backing out.

And for the beach associations in particular, time is of the essence. The chartered associations borrowed money from the state for the project and were supposed to start repaying that loan in 2023, although they received a one-year deferment. Nevertheless, the bill will eventually come due and without the sewer lines, the beach communities will have little to show for it.

“It seems like Old Colony and Sound View could go forward because they’re at their original budget, more expensive than we thought but still reasonable,” Prendergast said. “Old Lyme Shores and Miami are way more expensive.”

“The problem with two of the neighborhoods who can do it and two who can’t is we’re all relying on each other, sharing the pump house and the pump house, unfortunately, doesn’t get cheaper if only half the project uses it,” Prendergast said.

Sen. Paul Formica, R-East Lyme, says he is working with Department of Revenue Services Commissioner Mark Boughton to get infrastructure funding for the project to hopefully lower the costs.

“This project is a wonderful candidate for that infrastructure money, so I’m hopeful we can do something with that. I think that may bleed into the next session before that actually happens,” Formica said. “But if we get that infrastructure money for which that was designed, projects like this, and Commissioner Boughton agrees, then that will have a positive effect on the net costs to all the residents down there who are expected to be shouldered with all these dollars that no one can really afford.”

survey of residents taken by the Old Lyme Shores Association asked the question whether they should just walk away from the whole project, which they said would cost residents between $5,000 and $50,000 per residence in “sunk costs, future liabilities, legal fees, etc.” – a cost range that was critiqued by many commenters as too broad.

However, 66 percent of those surveyed in that association said the project should move forward provided they control the costs. Nearly 25 percent wanted to walk away.

 The root cause of the sewer fight in Old Lyme is based on DEEP’s concern that the postage-stamp-sized real estate parcels, fit snuggly together, do not allow for enough land to adequately house a proper septic system. That, combined with soil conditions and the threat of flooding, means the status quo sewer avoidance policy in Old Lyme may have to change. Indeed, some of the houses in Sound View are using very old systems with very little wiggle room. In some cases, the septic system may be under the house itself rather than the more typical minimum of 20 feet away. 

The testing of groundwater in Sound View and Hawk’s Nest, which is posted online, shows that both neighborhoods are – or at least were – experiencing higher levels of bacteria in the groundwater and it was most likely due to faulty and out-of-date septic systems. 

However, the testing results are only up until 2013 and the Sound View Coalition says there should at least be another round of testing done to confirm it is a problem, particularly in light of the septic pump-out program, which has been in place for more than ten years.

“We believe the complexion has changed since the ordinance has changed, when they went to seven-year pump outs,” Dennis Maluzzo said. “All of a sudden there’s been no more testing in Sound View.”

“There’s never been individual testing,” Daley said. “So, when they say we’re polluting, well I have a one hundred by one hundred lot with a thousand-gallon tank and a leech field and one and a half bathrooms for just me and my husband. I don’t think I’m polluting. There may be pollution in some of the older lots but there’s never been individual testing, so we don’t know.”

Prendergast concedes that there has been no new testing in Sound View but says DEEP knows from the topography of the land, the density of the lots and past testing that there is a problem. Besides, the town remains under the administrative order to either study the problem or propose a solution, and, in the case of Sound View, they proposed a solution.

But for the other neighborhood under the Old Lyme WPCA’s jurisdiction, Hawk’s Nest, they took a different approach; they chose to study the problem further and retest for pollution with the idea that they might be able to cut down on the size of the project.

Part of the reasoning, Prendergast says, is the topography and density of Hawk’s Nest; some parts of the neighborhood are situated tightly together like Sound View, while other parts in the northern section have half-acre lots, suitable for a modern septic system.

The other reason for retesting Hawk’s Nest may be more political, Prendergast says. He says a major property owner in Hawk’s Nest, who owns “like 50 houses,” suggested they would file a lawsuit to stop the project, “so we separated the two projects.” That property owner, identified as the Garvin family in online meeting minutes, owns a slew of rental beach properties in Hawk’s Nest called Garvin Family Cottages.

“The way DEEP framed the administrative order and the way they discussed with us that you have a notice of nuisance by our then DPH public official, so you either have to study it or you have to fix it and if you fix it you have to come up with an approved plan to fix it,” Prendergast said. “Those are our two options, so we’re fixing Sound View and we’re studying Hawk’s Nest.”

The results of the new testing in Hawk’s Nest have yet to be produced, but the Garvins took it upon themselves to hire Geomatrix, LLC, a waste management service out of Old Saybrook, to do its own testing of nitrogen and nitrate levels in the ground water of Hawk’s Nest.

Environmental scientist Sara Wigginton, Ph.D. wrote the report indicating no elevated levels of either total nitrogen or nitrate. “In addition to the low nitrogen values observed in groundwater monitoring wells, Hawk’s Nest is likely producing a much smaller annual nitrogen load compared to communities with longer periods of annual occupancy,” Wigginton wrote. “Seasonal homes, such as those at Hawk’s Nest Beach, generally load less nitrogen into the environment than houses occupied year-round.”

According to the official testing data from 2000 to 2013, Hawk’s Nest and Sound View had similar average levels of total nitrogen. While the averages were below recommended levels, there were spikes over time that surpassed safe levels in Sound View, according to the Environmental Impact Evaluation produced in 2018, which found 9 instances at different wells over the 13-15 year period. 

The Sound View neighborhood is also made up of many seasonal residents, but Prendergast says the amount of time a resident spends in Sound View does not matter when it comes to pollution. “The way laws are written, and the way pollution is written, you don’t get a pass if you just pollute sometimes,” Prendergast said. “If you’re going to be reasonably known to pollute and reasonably predicted, that’s a problem. They don’t account for seasonality.”

The Sound View Coalition also presented water testing data from the Department of Public Health and the Ledge Light Health District, which monitors water quality levels along Long Island Sound, from 2017 to 2021 showing only one instance in 2020 when bacteria levels in Long Island Sound spiked over safe levels, something of an anomaly when considering how much lower the levels were every other day the water was tested that year.

 They also point to Save the Sound’s 2020 annual report that gave the Eastern Basin of Long Island Sound an A rating, as it has for the last 12 years, according to the report. Sound View Beach was given an A- grade in Save the Sound’s 2021 Beach Report.

“There’s no data showing we’re polluting the Sound,” Pappalardo said. “On the contrary, we have data that shows we’re not polluting the Sound.

The Environmental Protection Agency in 2021 issued a report saying water quality in the Sound was improving significantly thanks to successful programs in Connecticut and New York to remove nitrogen through upgraded sewage treatment.

“There seems to be a lot of tests that have occurred over the years that have shown there are things that are not kosher down there,” Formica said. “Septics too close to wells and all of that. Certainly, we don’t want to be doing something we don’t need to do at a cost that’s prohibitive, but my understanding is that the people in Old Lyme have decided which of those beach associations are important to have those problems rectified and go from there.”

Prendergast says that even people who claim to have a new, engineered system are still compromised because the size of the lots are not large enough to support a septic system, but were essentially grandfathered into acceptance by the Department of Public Health.

“In most cases they don’t have enough land to have a fully compliant system,” Prendergast said. “But the Department of Health is not going to take away a person’s certificate of occupancy. That’d be a public disaster. They’re not going to kick somebody out of their house.”

 The push for sewers in Old Lyme has been running for roughly ten years now and during that time areas to be included in the plan, and the plan itself, have come and gone. White Sands, where Prendergast has a home, was originally included in the plan, only to be removed because it lacked the density of Sound View and the beach associations, according to Old Lyme’s Q&A, and Hawk’s Nest was relegated for further study due to differing density, topography and political pressure.

Miscellaneous Area B was incorporated into the Sound View portion of the sewer project and although the Sound View coalition says Area B’s inclusion was unannounced, Prendergast says it was a matter of trying to limit the scope of the project, saying the original engineering report included several more areas.

“We kind of pushed back,” Prendergast said. “There are a number of properties that shouldn’t have been involved and we clawed that back. Miscellaneous Area B is the same composition as Sound View, so there’s a couple exceptions. It wasn’t able to be clawed back.” He says other areas were taken over by the beach associations, but the shifting lines are all a bit complicated.

But in this small town and even smaller beach areas, property deals made by members of the associated WPCAs have raised suspicions by those opposed to the project, and at least one aspect of the sewer project the Sound View Coalition originally liked was stripped away.

The private beach associations have bathhouses alongside their beaches with toilets and showers. Sound View, on the other hand, has a collection of port-a-potties. Under the original plan, the port-a-potties would be replaced by a bathhouse, classing up the public beach, which would also serve as the pump station sending sewage to the New London treatment facility.

However, over the course of the project planning, the bathhouse for Sound View was scrapped and the location of the pump house was moved fifty feet away to a small tract of land that was owned by Scott Boulanger, chairman of the Miami Beach WPCA. Boulanger sold the land, which received an appraisal of $15,200 in 2019, to the beach associations for $50,000 in 2021, according to property records. 

Prendergast says he is unsure exactly why the location was changed – or why residents wanted a bathhouse to begin with – but says he believes the beach associations were fearful the town would pull out of the deal, “so they wanted to take it on their own and they went private land.”

The port-a-potties will remain, as Prendergast says he was informed by other WPCAs that bathhouses create more problems than they solve, with people flushing diapers and towels down the toilets.

There is also the former site of KiddieLand, once an attraction for youth in Sound View, which is now a vacant lot. The property was purchased in 2013 by Frank Noe, chairman of the Old Colony WPCA, and is now under the ownership of his company OL Properties, LLC. 

According to the Old Lyme WPCA’s meeting minutes from July 14, 2015, during public comment Noe said, “He can’t do anything with that property without sewers.”

“According to zoning, if this property were to burn down, he would have 1 year to rebuild, but if tears down on his own, he is not allowed to rebuild at all,” the minutes say. “He needs sewers to clean it up, clean up the street. He urged the town to move forward with compliance.”

Naturally, this leads those opposed to the project to believe there are ulterior motives in the WPCAs’ push for sewers and the accusations in town have apparently gotten under the skin of some officials. In a Q&A posted online by the Miami Beach Association, there was this question: 

Q: Correct me if I’m wrong, it is my understanding that you (Frank Noe) are in the process of putting up condos in Sound View and it would be in the best interest for you if this project continues. Shouldn’t you have disqualified yourself on the sewer project because this could be seen as a conflict of interest?

But Noe is not alone being stuck in limbo when it comes to properties in Sound View and all the neighboring beach associations.

There are several dilapidated-looking properties in Sound View and owners would be unwise to rebuild or refurbish them until the sewer question is settled: no one is going to construct a new building with a septic system if they’re just going to be forced to abandon the septic and connect to a sewer system with a $42,000 assessment on the property.

It’s not that Noe has a financial interest in the project, it’s that everyone does – whether for or against it – including residents who may have outdated septics, and no one can do virtually anything with their property until the matter is resolved one way or the other.

“It’s been over ten years now,” Daley says. “There are many homeowners in this area who want to upgrade their systems, but they won’t upgrade their own systems and spend ten or fifteen thousand dollars to do so if over your head is a bill of thirty, forty thousand dollars and you’ll have to pull it out. So, the ten-year delay in this project is contributing if there is pollution here.”

 “Without that infrastructure money, there’s going to be time-lapse,” Formica said. “People are going to wait, they’re not going to pull the trigger on this kind of dollar, otherwise you’re going to drive people out of their homes.”

The three beach associations in Old Lyme remain under a consent agreement, while the town of Old Lyme remains under an administrative agreement that Prendergast says functions like a consent agreement because the town didn’t object, but the reality is that for the project to move forward, the costs have to be within reason and that possibility appears to grow dimmer as time goes on.

“I know that the beach association leadership down there all worked very hard on this project and Old Lyme has certainly changed from one that was sewer avoidance 20 years ago to being a community that’s proactive and looking to solve some of these problems,” Formica continued.

The members of the Sound View Coalition say they want more confirmation that there is a problem with pollution to begin with and, if there is, want alternatives explored, including testing individual lots to see where the septic problems may lie and if they can be remediated, before moving ahead with the sewer project. In effect, they want further study, similar to what’s taking place at Hawk’s Nest.

“If there’s a problem, if someone’s septic system is failing, lets figure out how to fix that septic system with new alternative technology and utilize Clean Water Funds, which are acceptable to be used in that technology,” Frank said. “It may be ten houses, not a hundred or two hundred. So, let’s look at this thing in a more individualized basis that makes more sense.”

According to a presentation by all of the WPCAs, the idea of upgrading septic systems or installing advanced treatment systems on each lot was rejected because of excessive costs for design, installation and maintenance, as well as the fact that many systems would still be in a flood zone.

Furthermore, they argue, such measures would merely “kick the can down the road and will ultimately require reckoning.”

Nearby, the town of Old Saybrook faced a similar problem. The town had operated under a sewer avoidance policy for many years until DEEP determined that groundwater was being polluted by septic systems.

Rather than install sewers at a cost of $70 million, however, the town opted for upgrading residents’ septic systems using a combination of grant money and residents paying for the remaining half. The first phase of the project was completed in 2018, but the second phase to upgrade roughly 750 septic systems in the coastal neighborhoods has proven more difficult.

According to the Miami Beach Association’s Q&A, 700 houses in Old Saybrook have not been able to get approval for an onsite system and are looking for alternatives acceptable to DEEP. Plus, some of the engineered systems can be quite expensive.

But with costs for at least two beach associations – Miami and Old Lyme Shores – reaching high estimates in the wake of COVID, whether the Old Lyme sewer project moves forward remains in doubt. If the town backs out, or any of the associations, it could have a domino effect, and officials are looking anywhere and everywhere for financial support to see it through and reduce the cost for individual homeowners.

“The first thing we have to do is wait until things settle down and then try to get another quote to do it,” Formica said. “Prices were exorbitant, now they’re high. Hopefully, they’ll continue that trend if the economy takes a positive turn and doesn’t sink deeply into a recession. Hopefully, we’ll be able to keep these projects going.”

Brian Cornell, a seasonal resident of Miscellaneous Area B, says he thinks the project will cost him even more than estimated. Either way, it’s just money he doesn’t have. 

“We don’t know exactly what it’s going to be because we can’t get any bottom, solid numbers. The answer we always get from the WPCA is we don’t know the cost of the project is going to be until we’re done,” Cornell said. “Unfortunately, it’s a burden that’s going to go on a lot of people down here if the whole thing goes through, and I don’t have forty thousand dollars lying around.”