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Middle Zoners Approve Whitesboro Sewer Project

Environment | 1 year 6 weeks ago | Comments 4
Tags: WHITESBORO

By Joe Hart

By Joe Hart, Whitesboro residents can expect a pump station similar to this one, located on Linda Lane in Green Creek, to be built soon on Wildwood Avenue.

WHITESBORO –– Residents in this community will soon be getting rid of their old septic tanks and gaining a new municipal sewer system.

To that end, representatives from Middle Township appeared before the township zoning board May 8 for permission to construct a sanitary sewer pump station here on Wildwood Avenue.

The facility would consist of a one-story 20 by 28 foot brick building surrounded by a wooden plank fence.

According to Kathleen K. Meers, director of the municipal sewer department, the township has been pursuing a sewer system in Whitesboro for six years.

The township requested a use variance for a deviation from the conditional use standard in the suburban residential zone in which the property lies. Public utilities are permitted, but only as a conditional use.

The project required variances for lot area and fence height also.

Several neighbors of the proposed site objected to the project.

They said they were worried that the building would block site lines and the safety of children in the area would be compromised. They also thought the appearance of the facility would not be in character with the neighborhood.

The neighbors suggested moving the pump station to a wooded area down the street.

Meers said the proposed site is the most suitable for the facility because of its low-lying nature.

“Wastewater flows downhill from gravity so the pump station must be below the surrounding homes,” Meers told the zoning board.

She also said the facility would merely be “a roofline above a six-foot fence with landscaping.” She invited the neighbors to visit any of the 18 other similar stations throughout the township.

The other pump stations are located in Del Haven, Stone Harbor Boulevard, Avalon Manor, Rio Grande, Court House, Shunpike and Green Creek.

Meers said the township only provides collection services and no sewer treatment. So there would be no odors or discernable noise, she said.

Zoning Board Chairman James McLaughlin said he knew they were quiet from personal experience. He used to live next to the Mechanic Street pump station and hardly knew it was there, he said.

“This station would pump wastewater to Rio Grande and then to the Cape May County MUA’s (Municipal Utilities Authority) treatment center on Route 47,” she said. “We’ve never had any complaints of noise or odors at our other sites.”

Other collection stations send sewage to Lower Township MUA and the Seven Mile treatment facilities.

Aside from the building, the project would include installing sewer pipes in the streets with lateral hookups at the curb line to each residence.

The township receives federal funding for these sewer projects from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development program.

Meers said homeowners are responsible for the cost of the mandatory connection from their homes to the hookups. The county Health Department also requires homeowners to pump and close their septic systems, she said.

For those who can’t afford the hookups, funding for the connection costs is available through the state Department of Community Affairs Community Block Development Grant program, Meers said.

Anyone interested in the grants is asked to contact the township grants office at (609) 465-8731.

Meers said homeowners could also reduce their costs by forming a group to hire plumbers and contractors together.

The zoning board unanimously approved the township’s application.

Meers told the Herald the project would be going out to bid in the near future. Once the bids are accepted, she said residents would be given a rough construction schedule with work commencing in August, she hoped.

Contact Hart at (609) 886-8600 Ext 35 or at: jhart@cmcherald.com

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Comments (4)

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Fri, 05/23/2008 - 2:13am - Posted by: Anonymous

Since when does the government do anything to help without an ulterior motive? The only reason they are doing Whitesboro is because it was recently declared a growth area and they will give grants to buyers in that area. Plus having sewer ran there also means there will be more buildable lots available. Now tell me the government is just trying to help.

Thu, 05/22/2008 - 8:05am - Posted by: acampbell

Quit your griping. I live in Middle Township and was flatly told we will NEVER get sewers, and would I ever be glad to have the sewer come into my neighborhood. If you enjoy playing with septic tanks and worrying about over runs and flooded yards, come to my house. I'll take sewers any day. The installation of sewers improves the value of your home and makes the quality of life so much higher. Some people never appreciate the good things a local government is trying to provide. Don't like it? Move!

Thu, 05/22/2008 - 7:42am - Posted by: Anonymous

How can a project like this get iniciated. The area south of the parkway on the N. Wildwood Blvd, is fully populated yet there is no public sewer or water. The water is extreemly iron concentrated and who knows what else in in the water. Because of is close locations to the wetlands, the sewerage eventually seeps iinto the tital areas. The water line is just a few feet below the surface. The area needs community assistance. II is the worse enviremental hazard in the township.

(ED. NOTE: The area's water needs are partly served, in the northern end, by N.J. American Water. That was installed because of many polluted wells, and was done several years ago with government assistance. The Edgewood-Whitesboro sewer project is also being done with federal funding because of numerous failing septic systems.)

Thu, 05/22/2008 - 1:42am - Posted by: Anonymous

Funny they don't tell you average cost of the mandatory connection. and how much your new monthly fee will be. just one more added expense to our already high monthly expenses. seems to me that it is a way for the township to get more money out of us.

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