Blacklick waterline project advances

david g. low

EBENSBURG — A Blacklick Township waterline project should be underway in May and design work for other sewer and water initiatives are being lined up to follow, Cambria Redevelopment Authority officials said last week.
The authority awarded a $133,530 low bid, one of 18 submitted, to Glenn Hope-based Norman G. Diehl Contracting to extend one mile of waterline to homes on Bethel Road that currently rely on wells.
‘‘These people are having trouble with gas in their wells,’’ said Redevelopment Director Larry Custer, noting that six homes will connect to the line.
While funding to do the work was allocated to remedy the health issue, the new waterline also will open up opportunities for others to build near the line and connect, Custer said.
The project, which involves adding two fire hydrants, is expected to take about two months and wrap up this summer.
Meanwhile, the authority awarded design work for three other projects, including two in Jackson Township and one in Washington Township to Cresson-based Hegemann & Wray Consulting Engineers.
The plans are a necessary step, Custer said, to get the sewer and water projects under construction by 2009.
n More than a mile of 6-inch waterline will be added along Chickaree Hill Road and 1,800 feet of line along Wagner Road, a project that will provide water to at least 26 homes. Funding is in place to pay for the project, Custer said.
n Less than a half-mile of new sewer line will be extended along Loraine Road in Jackson, where 18 properties will connect. Jackson Township is using its Community Development Block Grant funding for 2007 and 2008 to foot its portion of the bill, estimated at $320,000.
n In Washington Township, 2,500 feet of old waterline will be replaced along Memorial Drive, the second phase in the Lilly coal area project. The redevelopment authority has earmarked $80,000 in 2008 grant money to wrap up the project.
A storm collection system also will be built in Sidman, Adams Township, a project that will require 2,000 feet of sewer lines, Custer said. Design work on that project was awarded to Westmoreland County-based Morris Knowles & Associates.
Custer said the projects could be ready for bid later this year.
Mirror Staff Writer David Hurst is at 946-7457.

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14 Responses to “Blacklick waterline project advances”

  1. Anselm Says:

    I don’t know about that. There was a DHS agent at the local shooting range a week or so ago, shooting his handguns, pistol-grip short barreled shotgun, and rifle. He seemed to be having a grand old time. If he worked for the FBI he probably would have had to do actual work.

  2. Dora Says:

    That’s exactly what they want you to react.Here, have some more YouTube videos of people getting hit in the balls.

  3. Sterling Says:

    I said STEP AWAY FROM THE SHOES! SLOOOOOWLY.

  4. Bobbie Says:

    Currently headed by a Ghoul, who followed an incompetent. (I heard Mike Brown (”Doin’ a great job there, Brownie”) talk last year about his version of things and it still sounded like a giant clusterfuck.) That’s what that department should be named. “The Department of Homeland Clusterfucks.”

  5. Missie Says:

    Sure, complain all you want, but we haven’t been attacked since it was launched. Insert evil laugh here. Terrorists are doing more just letting us self-destruct, if they even give a crap anymore.

  6. Silvia Says:

    It will be only if you continue to elect people who have disgust for [good] government.

  7. Eileen Says:

    Anybody who laughs at this will be classified as a terrorist, put on a no fly list and raided by RIAA thugs…In festive pink with purple polka dots uniforms.

  8. Loyd Says:

    She hamstrung you?

  9. Honour Says:

    Epic Fail

  10. Lexi Says:

    It was also our anniversary.

  11. Christi Says:

    Ha! HA! HA!.. oh

  12. Otis Says:

    Anti Al Qaeda pants would work just as well as the DHS at a fraction of the cost.

  13. Alease Says:

    I don’t think anyone really ever thought that DHS was supposed to be a miracle cure to intelligence failures like 9/11. The idea was to get organizations whose primary focus was to prevent and respond to terrorism. The idea was to minimize the US vs. Them mentality, albeit I question how effective it is at eliminating the tribalism that many of intelligence agencies suffer from.The initial reorganization were rather expensive, but I doubt the costs after the reorg are much higher than they otherwise would have been.