Supervisor targets school building for upcoming grant application

AMENIA — A public hearing for the town’s 2010 Community Development Block Grant application will be held at the beginning of the Sept. 10 Town Board meeting.

“The Town Board and the audience need to come up with ideas,� town Supervisor Wayne Euvrard said at the meeting on Aug. 20. He also said that while highway department projects have had funding success in the past, he’s hoping this year’s application could go toward the former Amenia Elementary School building, which the board is considering turning into a Town Hall. Euvrard has previously said that green energy ideas for the building would be a good candidate for grant funding, and he mentioned solar panels or geothermal heating as possibilities to consider during the CDBG public hearing.

The Community Development Block Grant is worth up to $150,000. Last year’s project, Nelson Hill Bridge repair in Wassaic, was approved for funding.

Concerns raised about

lead-based paint

Euvrard reported later in the meeting that two reports on the Amenia Elementary School building have been submitted to the town. The first is a Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment; the second is a NYCERTA energy report.

Euvrard said that after reading the site assessment, he needed to see more information on a buried fuel tank on the property, as well as an asbestos abatement report.

“Other than that, [the building] passed with flying colors,� he said.

But Councilwoman Vicki Doyle felt differently. Doyle is concerned that there might be lead paint on parts of the building, and pointed out that the site assessment report did not test any paint for lead and specifically mentioned a test as the only way to know. She said there has been no paint sample analysis, and noted that the assessment reported the poor conditions of paint in several spots throughout the building.

“If there was any real danger there, they wouldn’t have let kids in there,� Euvrard argued.

“We paid somebody [to produce the report] who said that without a survey, there’s no way to know,� Doyle rebutted.

The issue was left unresolved.

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