- Northern New York Newspapers
- Watertown Daily Times
- The Journal
- Daily Courier-Observer
- NNY Ads
- NNY Business
- NNY Living
- Malone Telegram
MASSENA The repair of an aging water pipe on Lesley and Old Orchard roads has village and town officials at odds with each other.
Homeowners along that pipe have paid village water fees for years even though their homes lie nearly a mile outside the village limits. The pipe is aging and needs to be replaced, Department of Public Works Superintendent Hassan A. Fayad said.
Over the last couple years, residents near the end of the pipe began experiencing rusty water. The water was still drinkable but looked bad and was problematic for laundry, Mr. Fayad said.
It was a perception thing, he said.
Joseph G. Buffham, who lives on Old Orchard Road, said his water and his neighbors often came out discolored.
It was completely brown at times, Mr. Buffham said. It would just clog the filters of the refrigerator.
The village and town cant agree on who is responsible for the pipes replacement. The pipe is not in a town water district, Councilman Charles A. Raiti said. The town is currently consolidating its districts but has no plans to fold that pipe into one, he said.
How can we fold something into our water consolidation when we dont own it? he asked.
But village officials dont want to pay for a water pipe in the town.
The people in the village of Massena are subsidizing the town, and it shouldnt be that way, Mr. Fayad said. They should be in a district where the district is self supporting.
Mr. Fayad had set aside $100,000 in his upcoming budget to repair the line, a cost which would have fallen to all village ratepayers. But board members told him to take that project out. Trustee Timothy J. Ahlfeld said the village board wants to do the right thing for all of its residents.
The village cant find paperwork on the 6-inch pipes history or its owner, Mr. Fayad said. The village inked an agreement with businessman Edward Kaneb Sr. and several others in the late 1950s to install a 10-inch water pipe from the village limits out to the nearby Highland Hotel and the surrounding area. Mr. Kaneb agreed to finance the materials and the village provided labor.
At some point, someone else hooked onto that 10-inch pipe with a 6-inch extension that now needs to be repaired, Mr. Fayad said. As homes sprouted up along the line over the years, they began paying the village water fees.
Timothy A. Burley, a town-retained engineer, said the lack of paperwork on the waterline has been problematic.
It kind of makes it cloudy, he said. It leaves it in many cases ... open to a liberal interpretation.
In the meantime, the DPW has allowed the end of the pipe to leak to prevent the homeowners from receiving rusty water. Mr. Fayad estimated the pipe could be losing over 200,000 gallons a month.