Skip to content

A town square for an unsquare town

redbankgreen

Standing for the vitality of Red Bank, its community, and the fun we have together.

WATER PLANT FIXES TO COST $3 MILLION

WaterplantThe vessel numbered 1 is one of four tanks at the Chestnut Street water plant that the state says must be replaced. Three others are at the Tower Hill facility.

Maintenance work at the Red Bank water utility that was to have cost $675,000 will now set back water users over $3 million, according to borough documents.

Authorization of bonding for nearly $3.1 million is on tonight’s borough council agenda, reflecting the costs of replacing all seven filtration tanks used by the municipal water utility at two locations.

At issue are four tanks installed in the 1940s at the borough’s Chestnut Street public works facility and three others atop Tower Hill that are about 130 years old.

“There’s nothing wrong with the tanks,” says engineer Christine
Ballard of T&M Associates. But the state Department of Labor
requires that they be certified as safe for inspection, and under new
regulations, they would not be, she says.

The older, rivet-sealed
tanks “date back to the 1880s, and probably couldn’t be certified,”
says borough Administrator Stanley Sickels.

A big factor in the cost of the project is that the roofs will have to be removed from the two buildings that house the tanks in order to replace them, Sickels says.

Borough officials are hoping to meet a March 2 deadline under which the utility might qualify for zero-interest bonding under a state incentive program.

The issue was first broached at the council’s last meeting, on January 26, but cost estimates were not available at the time.

“The state is saying, ‘If you can get it in in time, you can get it interest-free,'” said Councilman Art Murphy.

He cautioned, though that the borough has to pay T&M for each project it is directed to work up specifications for, and “we might end up spending on specs we don’t get money for.”

The cost of the tank replacements, though “will not impact the overall tax rate because it will be funded through our self-liquidating water and sewer authority,” Mayor Pasquale Menna said.

Councilman Ed Zipprich asked Ballard if the end result would be better-quality water.

“We meet all the DEP water-quality standards,” Ballard replied. She compared the job to “changing your pool filter. It’s so we don’t have water-quality problems in the future.”

Here’s the ordinance that will be introduced tonight: Download 2009-4. 

Email this story

Remember: Nothing makes a Red Bank friend happier than to hear "I saw you on Red Bank Green!"
Partyline
YAPPY TOGETHER
RED BANK: Look for this cutie pie, named Sacramento, at Yappy Hour on Broadwalk Saturday. He's looking for a new home.
YELLOW RAINCOAT DAY
On a rainy May morning, the only golden sight on Broad Street this morning were the matching raincoats of Eileen and her dog Benny.
STOP. JUST STOP.
RED BANK: For those who don't get the meaning of a stop sign, crossing guard Diane Johnson amplifies the message with some colorful outfits. ...
RECORDS SKIP INTO TOWN
RED BANK: Devotees of vinyl records expected to drop needle at Broad and Mechanic Saturday. Here's why.
Feline fortunes on Monmouth Street
Christopher Russell and feline pal Princess take in some fresh air on a warm May night Thursday in the doorway of Gina’s Psychic Bouti ...
GOING UP?
RED BANK: Public Library will be closed Friday for the start of elevator construction. (Click for more.)
TREEBIRTH
RED BANK: Replacement of nine trees gets underway on South Street, where a wholesale removal angered residents last September. (Click for mo ...
RIVERSIDE FLOW
New Jersey Flow Arts brings together jugglers, poi spinners, hoopers and more weekly in Riverside Gardens Park.
Honeybee swarm carted away
Beekeeper Tanya Ptak of Ptak’s Apiary inspects a swarm of honeybees that chose a flower pot in the courtyard of Red Bank Primary Schoo ...
BELOVED POISONED DOG PHOTO SURFACES
   
THREE ON TOUR
RED BANK: Three borough sites will participate in a weekend of self-guided tours of 52 historic locations in Monmouth County May 4 & 5.
VOLUNTEERS GET INTO THE WEEDS
Toting plastic trash bags, 51 volunteers conducted a walking litter cleanup on Red Bank's West Side Saturday.
“IT’S A PARTY AT WAWA!”
You wish you could vibe like Brian, who lives on the other side of Hubbard’s Bridge. He caught redbankgreen’s attention in Red B ...
POPE OKS ORATORY
RED BANK: St. Anthony of Padua obtains papal approval to establish Oratory of St. Philip Neri, a community of priests and brothers devoted t ...
RED BANK: NEW MURAL BRIGHTENS CORNER
RED BANK: Lunch Break founder Norma Todd is depicted in a mural painted this week on the front of the newly renovated social service agency.
TULIPS TOGETHER
Spring tulips taking in the sunset outside the Molly Pitcher Inn in Red Bank Monday evening.
RIVER RANGERS RETURN
River Rangers, a summer canoeing program offered by the Navesink Maritime Heritage Association, returns this summer for up to 20 participa ...
DOUBLE DYLAN IN RED BANK
Trucks for a production company filming what one worker said was a Bob Dylan biography have lined Monmouth Street the past two days with cre ...
AFTER THE RAIN
A pear tree branch brought down by a brief overnight storm left a lovely tableau on the sidewalk in front of Red Bank's Riverside Gardens Pa ...
CONE OF UNCERTAINTY
Asked by a redbankgreen reporter why these cones were on top of cars, the owner of the car in the foreground responded: “That’s ...