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Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.

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Presentation on theme: "Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection."— Presentation transcript:

1 Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection

2 Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection The View from DEEP May 11, 2012 Dennis J. Greci, P.E. Supervising Sanitary Engineer Connecticut Association of Water Pollution Control Authorities

3 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

4 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

5 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)

6 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

7 The Clean Water Fund- CSO Projects Hartford MDC $44.3M Greater New Haven $4.6 Bridgeport $15.6M

8 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)

9 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.

10 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)

11 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.

12 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.

13 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.

14 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.

15 Operator Certification The next test: Wednesday, July 11, 2012 Applications due no later than close of business Friday, May 25 th, 2012 Test fee STILL only $240

16 Conservation and Development Policies Plan Update for 2013-2018 Public information meetings coming this summer Coordinate with your local planning official for details

17 New Web Address You can now get directly to the Municipal Facilities website: – www.ct.gov/deep/ municipalwastewater

18 Questions…?


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