AUSTINBURG TOWNSHIP — Government earmarks aren’t always for bridges to nowhere.
Though some members of Congress have given earmarks a bad name, U.S. Rep. Steven LaTourette, R-Concord Township, told Ashtabula County commissioners and Austinburg Township trustees he will fight for money for a good cause.
“What we are asking for here is an earmark, and earmarks can be made for goofy things or for good things. The Austinburg sewer project is a good thing,” he said.
LaTourette explained his intention to have a $1 million earmark placed on federal legislation, Wednesday afternoon at Austinburg Township Hall. He shared the stage with state Sen. Capri Cafaro, D-Hubbard, and County Commissioners Joseph Moroski and Deborah Newcomb.
LaTourette praised the commissioners and Austinburg Township trustees, telling the roomful of township residents “your trustees and county commissioners have done everything right in regards to finding the dollars and finding the people who can find the dollars.”
Township residents were told last year that public sewers will be constructed in the vicinity of Route 307 and Route 45 to service area residents, including those on Mill Street and Mill Street Extension, Betts Drive, Chestnut Street and Maple Street.
Estimated cost of the sewer project is $1.16 million. It will include 8,500 feet of sanitary sewer lines and a lift station at Route 45 and Route 307.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency project requires area residents to hook into the public sewer line. EPA has ordered the county to design and construct, or improve, sanitary sewers in the township. Under EPA’s schedule of compliance, the project must be completed by the end of 2008, said Larry Meaney, Department of Environmental Services director.
Properties required to hook into the sewer line will be assessed proportional shares of the project’s costs, Meaney said. The assessment can be amortized over 20 years, and payments, plus interest, will be added to residents’ property taxes. The sewer assessment amounts to an average of about $30,000 per affected household, not including a $4,000 tap-in fee.
The county has secured a $350,000 grant and a $150,000 zero-interest loan from the Ohio Public Works Commission, but the remainder will be the responsibility of township residents, Meaney said.
LaTourette and Cafaro say they will fight to find ever more funding to bring the sewer construction bill as low as possible for affected residents.
“The goal is to put everything we can together to bring down the cost of the project as much as possible,” he said.
Cafaro, who has been working closely with the Austinburg Township trustees to find money for the sewer project, said no stone will be left unturned in the search for dollars.
“We are searching under every rock for money. The good news is the Ohio Department of Public Works will make a whole new round of money available for infrastructure projects,” she said.
LaTourette said residents shouldn’t shy away from the word “earmark.”
“You all pay federal tax, and if they are going to hand it out in earmarks, the money should come back to Austinburg Township and Ashtabula County,” LaTourette said. “That is what earmarks are for.”
Local News
LaTourette, Cafaro want federal earmarks for sewer project
- Local News
-
-
Sports, academics to come together
SPIRE Institute will expand its educational base and accept international students into its sports performance programs through a partnership with the Andrews Osborne Academy, Ted Meekma, SPIRE management team member, announced Wednesday.
-
Grand Valley sixth grader wins Ashtabula County Spelling Bee
James Elliott, a sixth grader at Grand Valley Middle School, clinched his win of the 29th annual Ashtabula County Area V Spelling Bee by successfully spelling the words “physique” and “daffodil.”
-
Conneaut Chamber lauds top citizen, ‘Champions’
Nicholas Iarocci, Conneaut’s 2011 Citizen of the Year, needed plenty of gulps of water to complete his acceptance speech Tuesday night.
-
Conneaut’s unpaved roads will get priority status in 2012
Secondary roads in Conneaut will get the lion’s share of attention from the Public Works’ Department this year, said City Manager Tim Eggleston.
-
Felony charge filed in robbery
An Ashtabula woman who police said grabbed a woman’s purse inside a Conneaut supermarket late Monday afternoon faces a felony charge in Conneaut Municipal Court, according to reports.
-
Ashtabula County building projects readied for bids
Up to four improvement projects for county-owned buildings are being lined up for bids in the next month.
-
City of Ashtabula looking for new auditor
Six candidates have applied for city auditor, which City Council President J.P. Ducro IV says he hopes to fill by the end of March.
-
Red Cross holding breakfast for ‘Community Heroes’
The Red Cross Community Heroes Breakfast will honor 12 county residents March 3 at the Bernard Vacca Community Center.
-
New film showcases county’s scenic rivers
Ohio’s Scenic Rivers program, which protects stretches of 14 waterways — including three in Ashtabula County — is the focus of a new movie by a Dayton-based independent filmmaker.
-
Students can donate clothing to Goodwill
Many Ashtabula Area City Schools students will find themselves cleaning out their closets this week.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Sports, academics to come together





