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The View from DEEP May 11, 2012. Dennis J. Greci, P.E. Supervising Sanitary Engineer Connecticut Association of Water Pollution Control Authorities. The Clean Water Fund: Official Priority List 2012-2013. The FY 2012-13 Clean Water Fund Project Priority List is now in effect.
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The View from DEEPMay 11, 2012 Dennis J. Greci, P.E. Supervising Sanitary Engineer Connecticut Association of Water Pollution Control Authorities
The Clean Water Fund:Official Priority List 2012-2013 • The FY 2012-13 Clean Water Fund Project Priority List is now in effect. • A copy of the document has been posted on the web at: • http://www.ct.gov/deep/cleanwaterfund
The Clean Water Fund:What we’ve got: • Fiscal Year 2012 funds: • FY 2012 Revenue Bonds : $180,000,000 • FY 2012 General Obligation Bonds : $ 90,600,000 • Total FY 2012: $ 270,600,000 • Federal Capitalization Grants : $ 17,314,000
The Clean Water Fund – FY 2013 • Fiscal Year 2013… • FY 2013 Revenue Bonds : $ 180,000,000 • FY 2013 General Obligation Bonds : $ 92,000,000 • Total FY 2013: $ 272,000,000 • Federal Capitalization Grants : $17,000,000 (est’d)
The Clean Water Fund-What’s being funded… • Combined Sewer Overflow Projects • Denitrification / Treatment Plant Upgrade Projects • Remainder for planning, cost increases and several smaller projects
The Clean Water Fund-CSO Projects • Hartford MDC $44.3M • Greater New Haven $4.6 • Bridgeport $15.6M
The Clean Water Fund-Denitrification • Major Treatment Plant Projects FY2012-2013 • Hartford ($192.9M) • Middletown ($ 25 M) • Norwich: ($20 M) • Bristol: ($ 14.4 M) • Cheshire ($ 31.3 M)
The Clean Water Fund: Eligibility Determinations • CWF Regulations have specific eligibility criteria, and DEP has history of documented eligibility determinations on a number of issues. • Municipalities should consult with DEP on eligibility BEFORE constructing financial models on which they base decisions.
Clean Water Fund Change: New reserves • Emergency Power at WPCFs: • For upgrading emergency generators to full plant capacity. • $2,000,000 per year, (20% grant, 2% loan) • Pump Station Improvements: • For upgrading pumping stations to improve energy efficiency and provide resiliency during power interruptions. • $10,000,000 per year (loan only)
Legislation: Public Act 12-11 • Affects information distribution and notification after sewage bypass or CSO event • Takes some requirements that were in NPDES Permit and makes them state law. • Requires DEEP to post maps and impact data of areas potentially affected by CSO events. • Requires DEEP to post impact data regarding sewage spills.
Legislation: S.B. 440 • Not yet signed by Governor • Clean Water Fund 30% grants likely to be applied to all phosphorus upgrades • May have other non-point phosphorus measures included.
NPDES Permits: Phosphorus • New Phosphorus limits on DEP website for affected treatment facilities • New permits with phosphorus limits are being processed. • Some communities seeking additional technical review before more stringent limits are put in place.
Decentralized • The Old Saybrook decentralized project of upgrading individual systems continues. • First contract complete, two other contracts underway. • Lessons learned so far: Upgrading individual septic systems in lieu of community or centralized system isn’t that much cheaper.
Operator Certification • The next test: Wednesday, July 11, 2012 • Applications due no later than close of business Friday, May 25th, 2012 • Test fee STILL only $240
Conservation and Development Policies Plan Update for 2013-2018 • Public information meetings coming this summer • Coordinate with your local planning official for details
New Web Address • You can now get directly to the Municipal Facilities website: • www.ct.gov/deep/ municipalwastewater