Date: Fri 15-May-1998
Date: Fri 15-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
water-drainage-Rosenthal
Full Text:
Water Drainage Woes Are Newtown's No. 1 Complaint
(with cut)
BY STEVE BIGHAM
First Selectman Herb Rosenthal has been in office for more than five months,
and he is already received phone calls from residents on just about every
issue.
People call with complaints about potholes, high taxes, noise, etc. But, to Mr
Rosenthal's surprise, the one complaint he hears more than any other has to do
with water drainage.
"I get more comments about water than anything else," he said Tuesday. "People
are always asking me, `What can you do about these water problems?'"
As Public Works Director Fred Hurley points out, water mixed in with gravity
usually spells trouble for homeowners. Run-off from roads creates huge
problems when it flows into yards and basements.
Many of the complaints about water come from residents who live on private
roads in the private communities of Sandy Hook. When it rains, the water
simply runs off onto people's properties. There, however, the town's hands are
tied. Since the town does not own the roads, it cannot do any work on them.
And, according to the first selectman, it would be too costly for the town to
take them into its road system. Most are far too narrow to be considered legal
thoroughfares, and in order for them to be widened, portions of residents'
properties would have to be chewed up.
"I don't think people realize the extent of the damage caused by water," Mr
Hurley said. The biggest cause of failure to roads is water.
Beavers have also been known to create water problems in town. The dams they
build clog drainage pipes and usually cause flooding. Often, drainage culverts
become clogged by leaves dumped by residents.
Poor drainage can become a real hazard in the winter when water buildup
transforms itself into ice.
A solution? There isn't one. Drainage problems will exist as long as there is
rain, town officials say. Curbs, catch basins and storm-water sewers are used
to combat the problem, but the water will continue to flow.
And Mr Rosenthal will continue to hear the complaints.