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Published: October 29, 2009 12:00 am
Village receives quarter-million-dollar grant
By JIM AUSTIN
Cooperstown Crier
Elected representatives
and agency officials were
on hand Friday morning at
the wastewater treatment
plant to make the formal
announcement of a quarter-
million-dollar grant the
village will receive.
The federal funds, which
come from the American
Recovery and Reinvestment
Act, will be used to
install new equipment at
the wastewater treatment
plant to pump the facility’s
effluent to reconstructed
wetlands, providing a longterm,
sustainable treatment
process.
According to the state
Environmental Facilities
Corp., the project will save
the village an estimated
$30,000 per year in operational
and maintenance
costs and further improve
the water quality of the
Susquehanna River and ultimately
the Chesapeake
Bay through significantly
cleaner discharges that reduce
nutrient pollution levels.
State Environmental
Facilities Corp. Acting
President Matthew Millea,
who lived in Cooperstown
until he was eight-years old,
said, ``Each Green Innovation
Grant Project represents
a step towards
building a `green’ industry
and sustainable water
treatment network in New
York state. I want to commend
the village of Cooperstown
for their determination
and vision to submit
this innovative project to
the Green Innovation Grant
Program.’’
In acknowledging the
grant, Mayor Carol Waller
focused on the members of
the village staff who worked
with engineers to create the
project and the successful
grant application, and Dr.
Theodore Peters, who has
served on the sewer and
water boards for a total of
35 years.
``I am pleased that the
village of Cooperstown’s innovative
project for waste water
treatment was given
this grant. It is through the
hard work and extra efforts
of the village staff, especially
our Clerk, Teri Barown,
our Senior Water Plant Supervisor
John Cankar and
our volunteer consultant
for our sanitation system,
Dr. Ted Peters, that this
project can be put into place
and save the residents from
extensive and expensive
renovations to this plant,’’
Waller said.
``Each of these people
played an important part
in this grant process, but I
want to single out Dr. Peters
for his continued expert
advice, intense interest
and hard work on behalf
of our village, all as a volunteer.’’
Peters said the village
and its plant operators are
already doing a good job
producing an effluent
which exceeds current
standards.
``We’re doing a fine job
with this 40-year-old
plant.
``I am glad to see that
Cooperstown has received
these federal dollars to protect
their water supply because
addressing the needs
of our region’s aging infrastructure
is critical to our
economic and environmental
success now and in the
future,” U.S. Rep. Michael
Arcuri said in a statement
read by his Deputy Director
Pete Scalise.
State Department of
Environmental Conservation
Commissioner and Environmental
Facilities Corporation
Board Chairman
Pete Grannis was represented
by DEC Region Four
Director Gene Kelly, who
commented, “Cooperstown
is demonstrating what it
means to be a green leader
by implementing infrastructure
improvements
that go beyond the status
quo and will result in significant
environmental
benefits.’’
State Sen. James Seward
also attended and admitted
he had mixed feelings about
the federal stimulus program,
but this project ``was
an excellent use of stimulus
funds.’’
Seward went on to say,
``As the headwaters of the
Susquehanna River and
the Chesapeake Bay, the
Village of Cooperstown
takes water quality very seriously.
This forward-thinking
project safeguards our
vital environmental resources
while at the same
time protecting the bottom
line for local taxpayers.’’
The recently-inaugurated
Green Innovation Grant
Program supports up to 90
percent of eligible project
costs for the installation of
innovative, cost-cutting solutions
for progressive water
conservation, energy-efficient
technologies to clean
water infrastructure.
The State Environmental
Facilities Corporation
received nearly 300 applications
totaling approximately
$468 million in
grant requests.
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