Selectmen: Another study needed for King Hill runoff

SHARON — A plan to mitigate the runoff of water onto a property on King Hill Road will take a while longer to implement.

During a special meeting at Town Hall on Tuesday, Oct. 20, the Board of Selectmen decided that another study is needed before they can develop the plan.

At a previous meeting on Oct. 13, the board reviewed a report from Todd Parsons, principal engineer from Lenard Engineering from Winsted. He was hired by the town to conduct a limited study of the property.

While Parsons came up with four potential solutions to the problem, resident Florien Palmer told the board not to pursue any of them.

“What I think the selectmen should do is reach out to Lenard to get a proposal for creating a model of the watershed,� Palmer said. “A model would show the watershed’s topography, the direction of flow, the velocity and hydraulics. Regardless of what you ultimately choose to pursue, you need a model.�

Palmer added that once the model is developed, it would give the selectmen an indication of which option to pursue.

“In order  for them to figure out how much water is flowing, where it’s going, and what size pipes might be needed, ultimately you’re going to need a model,â€� Palmer said.

The selectmen agreed with Palmer.

“If we gotta do it, we gotta do it,� Selectman Tom Bartram said. “If it gives us a clearer picture, then it has to be done.�

Margaret Keilty, who co-owns the property with Mark LaMonica, voiced her dissatisfaction to the selectmen.

“I need to know if this is going to take a year, two years, six months,� Keilty said. “I need something to go on.�

Palmer told Keilty that he could not give her an estimate.

“You are not going to get the model finished and out to bid before bad weather,� Palmer said. “It’s the end of October.�

“I want somebody to put the thumbscrews to somebody and get this to start moving,� Keilty said. “I am tired of coming to meetings and I’m sure you’re all sick of me.�

“If I was totally sick of you, Margaret, I would not have worked on this problem at all,� First Selectman Malcolm Brown said. “If I could give you a schedule I would give it to you, but it would not be realistic of me to give you one.�

Brown said he would contact Lenard to get an estimate for a model.

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