Selectmen: Investment Is Necessary

WINSTED — Winsted selectmen have accepted an ad hoc commission’s recommendation to embark upon nearly $42 million in upgrades to the town’s infrastructure, including repairs and enhancements to the town’s schools, Town Hall, police and fire stations. With 54-percent reimbursement from the state, the price tag for taxpayers would be approximately $19 million.

Ad hoc committee Chairman David Villa presented a detailed plan to selectmen Monday night calling for restoration of the town’s structures.

“Like I said in April, we’re sitting on a liability jackpot,� said Villa. “It takes only one event...once the domino moves you won’t be able to stop it. I don’t make these comments lightly. Folks in the community who would like to put their heads in the sand, click their heels and go to Kansas — this ain’t Kansas, it’s Winchester.�

The suggested $41.9 million project was laid out in four separate three-ring binders, one filled specifically with photos of damaged buildings in need of restoration. Villa suggested  closing the police station and moving the department to a temporary certified structure. Villa said the area is unsafe, with an unusable holding cell and no area for private conversations. “If I had all the money in the world, it would not be enough to fix the police station,â€� Villa said.

Winsted Police Chief Nicholas Guerriero, Fire Chief Robert Shopey and Superintendent of Schools Blaise Salerno are among the officials who have shown public support for the ad hoc committee’s recommendations.

Villa said town projects would need to be phased in, as other projects are still up and running. He did mention that most of the current fire equipment is usable but that almost everything in each station is on a seven-year replacement cycle.

“Nothing we’re talking about doing are luxury items,� he said. “This is nobody’s candy. These are the real numbers.�

Villa noted that the proposed projects constitute the largest investment in Winsted infrastructure since the Great Flood of 1955. “We literally have buildings falling apart,� he said.

The Board of Selectman voted to send the final draft of the project to the town’s Planning and Zoning Commission for further action. Mayor Maryann Welcome said community members who wish to know more about the proposal should visit Town Manager Owen Quinn’s office in Town Hall, where the project portfolio is on file.

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