TOP STORY: State Warns Old Lyme to Get Moving on Sewer Project

Old Lyme Water Pollution Control Authority Chairman Steve Cinami has spent much of the summer addressing concerns from town officials and the public about a plan to bring sewers to the shoreline in order to garner support for a fall referendum.

OLD LYME–With town officials and residents of Sound View Beach still clamoring for answers about the latest developments in a longstanding push to bring sewers to the Old Lyme shoreline, the state has warned Old Lyme First Selectwoman Martha Shoemaker that time is running out.

Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protecton (CT DEEP) Deputy Commissioner of Environmental Quality Emma Cimino in an Aug. 15 email warned Shoemaker that state and federal funding amounting to roughly half of the project cost is in jeopardy if the town doesn’t move forward with a townwide referendum authorizing the funding necessary to award construction contracts by mid October.

Failing to complete “one or more of those milestones” by mid-October “will significantly impact” the town’s ability to pursue a Clean Water Fund grant for 25% of the total project cost and a forgivable loan for another 25%, according to Cimino. 

Sound View Beach, which is owned by the town, is responsible for up to $17.1 million of the $70 million proposal to require residents of three private beach associations and the town-owned Sound View community to install sewers. The state and federal funding would bring the Sound View contribution to $8.5 million.

The state going back to the early 1980s has pushed for an end to pollution emanating from local beach communities, leading to a 2018 consent order with Old Colony Beach, Old Lyme Shores, and Miami Beach that resulted in the current shared sewer plan. Sound View Beach, which is under town control, was added in 2019 after voters in a townwide referendum agreed to spend $9.5 million on the public portion of the project with the understanding that affected neighborhoods would fund it.

The town, which is participating voluntarily in the sewer plan at this point, is doing so under the threat of a consent order from the state like the one forcing the private beach associations to act. 

Sound View residents have long asked for more specific information about how much they will have to shell out as the municipal bond is repaid over 20 years. They’ve also questioned the data underlying the state’s contention that sewers are necessary to resolve the potential for pollution in the area.

The Board of Selectmen, waiting for answers to those questions, has declined to send to the Board of Finance a resolution that would trigger another town-wide referendum on whether to borrow an additional $7.6 million for Sound View’s portion of the project. The vote is necessary because rampant inflation has driven up the total cost of the project, though the promise of reimbursement from the state and federal government means Sound View ratepayers will actually be paying less than the amount authorized in the first referendum. 

Cimino told Shoemaker the agency was aware the Board of Selectmen had not yet voted on moving the increased bond authorization to referendum because they were waiting for the Old Lyme WPCA to share more information with selectmen and the public. 

“I want to emphasize the need for quick action at each stage to remain aligned with the association timelines,” Cimino said. 

The Old Lyme Water Pollution Control Authority on Tuesday held a contentious project presentation in front of a crowd of mostly Sound View residents. Meanwhile, costs continue to climb as bids last week came back unexpectedly high for the Miami Beach portion of the project, exacerbating selectmen’s concerns about the feasibility and affordability of the project.

Shoemaker on Wednesday in a phone conversation with LymeLine said the referendum would have to occur by Oct. 15 to meet the state’s demands. Logistical requirements involving planning and publicizing the referendum require a decision from both the Old Lyme Board of Selectmen and Board of Finance by Sept. 30, according to Shoemaker. 

The Board of Selectmen is slated to meet in a special meeting early next week, she said.

TOP STORY-UPDATED: Miami Beach Sewer Bids Are Unexpectedly High, Implications Not Yet Fully Understood

This Time Around, Miami Beach is Flush with Sewer Bids … But Costs Aren’t Going Down

Editor’s Note: This article was updated with information from the CT DEEP spokesman.

OLD LYME–Costs continue to climb as bids on Tuesday came back unexpectedly high for the Miami Beach portion of a $70 million project to bring sewers to the shoreline. 

Miami Beach Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) Chairman Scott Boulanger in a Wednesday phone interview with LymeLine said bids from four general contracting firms need to be vetted and distilled by project engineers with the Fuss & O’Neill firm before he can fully understand the implications for the already backed-up project. 

A failed bid process earlier this year yielded no responses, according to Boulanger.  

This time around, the bids to oversee the project ranged from the Ludlow, Mass.-based Baltazar Contractors $13.62 million to $21.97 million from C.J. Fucci Construction, Inc. of New Haven. Engineers from Fuss & O’Neill in cost estimates earlier this month predicted the project would amount to about $8.4 million. 

The second lowest bid was from Colonna Concrete and Asphalt Paving of Woodbridge for $17.69 million, followed by Tolland-based Genovesi Construction at $19.9 million. 

“The numbers came in a lot higher than anticipated,” Boulanger said. 

He said officials thought the cost would actually go down from the engineers’ estimates because of a redesign incorporated before the project went out to bid in June. The change involves using a single pipe rather than the more expensive double walled pipe, a move that town documents show was endorsed by the state Department of Health and the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (CT DEEP.)

The project is intended to connect Miami Beach residents to a sewer system spanning multiple beach communities. The association’s internal construction expenses are on top of its $5.03 million portion of a shared pump station and force main serving Old Colony Beach Association, Old Lyme Shores Beach Association and the town-owned Sound View Beach. 

Engineering and legal fees brought the total cost for the Miami Beach project to $21.9 million, based on the early August estimates. Federal and state funding reduced the impact on residents to $12.5 million. 

All four entities are under pressure from the CT DEEP to resolve the pollution issues that state officials say are emanating from local shores. 

The three private beach associations are under a formal consent order from the CT DEEP requiring them to fix the pollution issue, while the town is participating voluntarily under the threat of a similar mandate. 

It is unclear what will happen to the overall project if any of the participating communities drop out because they can’t afford to proceed. That leaves attention now on Miami Beach as officials try to gauge the viability of a project that will cost residents of the affected areas thousands of dollars per year over two decades. 

Members of the Old Lyme Board of Selectmen and Board of Finance are expected later this month to decide if another bonding request for the Sound View portion of the project should go to voters at a public referendum in September. The Old Lyme WPCA is seeking a total of $17.1 million, though federal and state grants cut by half the amount that Sound View users will have to finance to cover the project.

An informational session on the Sound View project is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on Aug. 26 at Lyme-Old Lyme High School. 

Selectmen have held off on a vote amid concerns about the affordability of the project for the Sound View ratepayers. Residents there have long asked for more specific information about how much they will have to shell out as the municipal bond is repaid over 20 years and have questioned the data underlying the state’s contention that sewers are necessary to resolve the potential for pollution in the area.

Affordability

Over at Miami Beach, the typical resident was already looking at total annual payments of $3,154 before the bids came back higher than expected, according to engineers’ estimates.

Connecticut DEEP Project Engineer Carlos Esguerra last year said the agency sets the amount that residents can reasonably be expected to spend at 2% of the town’s median household income (MHI), which he identified at the time as $122,000. That equated to $2,440 a year.

Cinami has said the state does not consider annual operations and maintenance fees as part of its affordability calculation when it comes to installing a municipal system. 

CT DEEP Spokesman James Fowler on Thursday said there is no federal or state definition of affordability when it comes to preserving and protecting water quality. 

“Similarly, there is no definition of unaffordability that allows a community to maintain a source or potential source of pollution,” he said.  

Fowler attributed the 2% median household income “guidepost” to historic U.S. Environmental Protection Agency guidance, which he said municipalities and water pollution control authorities have used to ensure public sewer infrastructure projects are financially manageable for rate payers.  

“If a project’s costs were estimated to exceed 2% MHI, a town or sewer authority would explore additional options to reduce financial impact like splitting a project into phases, deferring work not associated with pollution, the pursuit of additional funding, and/or requesting a longer project schedule to achieve compliance, based on an enforceable schedule of compliance steps,” he said. 

He emphasized that exceeding the 2% threshold “does not mean that communities don’t have to address identified pollution.”

Viable Solution?

Boulanger said he told members of the Miami Beach Association Board of Governors at a regularly scheduled Tuesday evening meeting that it’s critical to have a full understanding of the bid responses before making any decisions. He said he hopes to speak with the project engineers and obtain a spreadsheet with a breakdown of the results by Labor Day. 

“And then it becomes, you know, whether or not it’s continually a viable solution for the area,” he said. 

Asked if he has a sense which way the board members are leaning when it comes to the viability of the project, he said they’re still relying on him to collect the information that will tell them how much the project will cost all the homeowners in the beach association. 

“They’re listening to me on what I feel,” he said. “And I don’t have a feeling.” 

Ultimately, he said it will come down to the engineering firm’s interpretation of the results and how members of the Miami Beach Association choose to proceed. 

He said the association will also be discussing “viability and options” with state DEEP officials as well.

Boulanger, who has led the Miami Beach WPCA throughout the years-long effort to bring sewers to the area, said he has strived through multiple referenda and presentations to provide members with as much information as he can so they can make an educated decision.

“It doesn’t matter what I want to do personally,” he said. “It’s what does the community want to do?”

Old Lyme Shores has not yet gone out to bid for its portion of the project. Cinami has said the association was ordered by the CT DEEP to award a contract by Oct. 10. 

Part of the Old Lyme WPCA’s urgency to hold a referendum next month stems from contractor quotes for the Sound View project that will expire in October, which could lead to more price increases if officials have to go back out to bid.

Wastewater planning documents that first laid the groundwork for the project go back to at least 2012. The consent order from the state requiring the private beach associations to resolve their pollution issues was issued in 2018.

TOP STORY: Sound View Carousel Celebrates 100 Turns Around the Sun

Olivia Lathrop, granddaughter of Jerry and Dee Vowles, grabs a brass ring from the carousel purchased for her mother on what Jerry Vowles called “a crazy whim.” All photos courtesy of the Vowles.

OLD LYME—This carousel is turning 100.

On Saturday, Carousel Shop proprietors Dee and Jerry Vowles will ring in the centennial summer with free rides, 100 cent ice cream and hot dogs, t-shirt raffles and a celebration of the simple pleasures in life. 

“The carousel just brings happiness to a lot of kids and families,” Dee Vowles said. 

The merry-go-round at Sound View Beach has been spinning in its current incarnation since 1976, but the Vowles said the origin of the 20 painted horses goes back about a century. 

The Allan Herschell carousel was outfitted with a Coney Island brass ring dispenser when the horses first came out of the gate around 1925, according to specifications laid out by Jerry Vowles. A diesel engine propelled them while the steam-powered whistle of a calliope provided a soundtrack that would last for generations. 

Those celebrating the carousel’s 100th birthday will have the opportunity to suggest names for 16 of the horses. Monikers have already been bestowed on Rainbow, Magic, Buttercup and Sundae.

While the amusement ride still boasts original parts that helped the couple narrow its date of origin to 1924 or 1925, the circular march of time is evident in a soft-start electric motor, teflon bearings and digital music. 

Jerry Vowles said the couple disassembled and restored the carousel from 2008 to 2009. That’s when they used parts newly manufactured from original molds to replace some elements of the carousel. 

The Vowles bought the carousel operation in 1987 from Paul Bennanato. The merry-go-round had arrived in Old Lyme just over a decade earlier to replace the late 1800s-era model that had been there since 1948, according to Jerry Vowles. 

The couple’s daughter, Jennifer Lathrop, was an infant when they purchased the carousel. 

“It is her carousel,” Jerry Vowles said. “We bought it for her when she was two-months-old, kind of on a crazy whim.”

Dee Vowles said Lathrop and her brother Jay help out their parents while nephew Tommy Logio serves as manager. 

“So it’s definitely been a family affair,” she said. 

A busy evening in 2022 typifies summers in Sound View at the Carousel Shop.

She said other family members and friends who help the couple open and close the shop every year—including sister Ree and honorary sister Roe—will make the trip to Sound View for the carousel’s birthday celebration. 

“We’ve seen in the 37 years we’ve been here a real following,” she said. “People appreciate us being here, and having a good time at the carousel.”

The Carousel at Sound View Beach 100th Birthday Celebration will be held on Saturday, June 14, from 2 to 4 p.m. at 75 Hartford Avenue.