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Thursday, December 9, 2010

The Raw Byram News Feed

News
Police blotter: Arrested NY resident claims to be another man
Greenwich Time
A Yonkers, NY, man, was arrested after allegedly producing a false Mexican driver's license when he was stopped by police early Wednesday in Byram after ...
Lost highway: Valuation of homes abutting I-95 criticized
Greenwich Citizen
Byram Neighborhood Association President Michael Bocchino, was floored to find out that real estate taxes on his Tingue Street property will be going up ...
Laundromat as social hub: It all comes out in the wash
Greenwich Citizen
Just when I was thinking that all laundromats looked drearily the same, I walked into The Laundry Room in Byram. When Stravos Karipides graduated from the ...
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Flags Back On Mianus River Bridge - Greenwich Time

A group of 20 American flags that were installed on the Post Road bridge over the Mianus River last month and then were taken down due to weather have been re-installed. Members of the Byram-based Masons Acacia Lodge 85 and the Cos Cob Volunteer Fire Company paid for the flags and installed them on Veterans Day, but they were temporarily taken down due to torrential rains several weeks ago. The flags are now back on the bridge after volunteers installed sturdier brackets on Wednesday. The flags are expected to remain on display until late December to welcome home a local servicemen currently deployed overseas.

The flag display came together after a constituent brought up the idea to Selectman Dave Theis. The selectman then obtained permission from the town'sDepartment of Public Works, funding from members of the lodge and installation assistance from the volunteer firefighters, to make it happen.

Other towns, including Westport, have decorated their town bridges in a similar fashion, which was part of the inspiration behind the idea, organizers said.

BOB HORTON: Money finally flowing to Byram River project

Greenwich has now joined the federal government, New York state and Westchester County as co-funders of a U.S. Army Corps of Engineer study that it is hoped will lead to a restored and revitalized Byram River.

First Selectman Peter Tesei signed a contract just before Thanksgiving that promises the town will provide up to $200,000 in matching funds for an initial study of how best to clean up the river, according to an e-mail he sent Jo Conboy, chairperson of the Save our Shores environmental organization.

"We pushed and pushed for the town to sign this contract, and now it's finally been signed," Ms. Conboy said earlier this week. The local environmentalist said the first selectman indicated the matching fund would come from the town Department of Public Works budget.

While it is good news that the town finally came forward with funding, people who have been pushing for years to address Byram River environmental and flooding issues have learned to ratchet down their expectations. After all, the Corps of Engineers completed a study 10 years ago; yet Greenwich and other government entities never acted or funded the engineer's recommendations. The final price tag for river restoration is expected to be in the millions of dollars.

However tempered expectations may be, real progress in cleaning up the river is on the horizon. Port Chester just received $750,000 from New York state to repair its aging and suspect sewer system, which for years has leaked raw sewage into Byram River, Port Chester Harbor and Long Island Sound.

Greenwich residents have complained about Port Chester's sewage problems for years, but Ms. Conboy says Greenwich has some work to do in Byram as well. "Our side has not replaced main sewer lines right at the Mill Street bridge, and these leak right into the river," she said.

Storm and sanitary sewer pipes upstream of the South Water Street pump station, which feeds the town's wastewater treatment hub on Grass Island in Greenwich Harbor, often overflow during rainstorms, dumping raw sewage into the tidal waters. The same overflow situation exists at the Pemberwick pumping station on the banks of the Byram River.

Mr. Tesei did not respond earlier this week to e-mailed questions about the Corps of Engineers contract or the Byram sewer problems. A call to his office Thursday morning served as my introduction to the town's recently installed voice mail system. I left a message.

Assuming the Army Corps comes back with recommendations similar to those it developed 10 years ago, it will set up an interesting political battle over sewer and flooding priorities in town. Over the last several years Greenwich government has developed a penchant for studying water problems, not addressing them. It's tough to argue that "study" is not needed, but each year we study is another year lost to real work, and another year the overall price tag grows.

That price tag read $150 million at last glance. And that did not include whatever town funds would be needed for its share of the Byram River cleanup. If you live in a neighborhood with chronic flooding problems, be it Cos Cob, Old Greenwich or along Horseneck Brook, you probably feel that your neighborhood warrants being at the top of the priority list.

And then there's the question of how to pay for it in an environment where everyone seems to think town government spending is out of control. Like I said, this is going to be an interesting political battle.

Bob Horton can be reached by e-mail at bobhorton@yahoo.com.

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