The Secaucus Town Council has adopted an ordinance bonding $9,644,000 toward various capital improvements, i☂ncluding the construction of a new senior center.
The council voted unanimously to adopt the bond ordina🐻nce at its August meeting. While the 🔜bond is for $9.6 million, approximately $7.5 million will be borrowed, and the rest will be drawn from town reserves.
New senior center
Under the ordinance😼, $7,818,670 will go toward the construction of a new senior center at 101 Centre Ave. While the bond will foot mജost of the $7.8 million bill, the town has received a number of grants and is using other monies to supplement the project.
The old senior center at the site is currently🃏 being demolished, according to Town Administrator Gar👍y Jeffas.
“We’re almost ওdone,” Jeffas said. “They just have to level off some of the ground. So basically the dem🦩olition is done and [the new building] is in design.”
Jeffas said💖 the town is currently waiting to get architectural plans back for the new building.
Environmental remediation
The move came after the town realized that oil tanks underneath the old center ♍had been leaking for a number of years. Environmental remediation work needed to be🥀 done at the three buildings that composed the old center.
It was cheaper to st🌠art from scratch𝐆 then to remediate the existing center.
“🧸It just made sense, with everything that had to be done, for us to just go a🤡head and take the building down, do the cleanup of the site, and build the new building,” Jeffas said.
Jeffas said some of the contamination leached under the foundat♔ion, which made it cheaper to constr♐uct a new building.
No to jackhammers
“You can’t get equipment down there,” Jeffas said. “You liter🐷ally would have had to have people down there with sledgehammers and jackhammers trying to by hand. Everybody who evaluated it said the cost of doing that by hand, based on the way it is, would b🅷e unbelievable. It was not cost effective based on the age of the building and the issues that it had.”
The old center is now being demolished before remediation will begin, which will remove contaminated soil from th🃏e site that was formerly beneath the building. Following that, the town will need to send the project out to bid.
“Hopefully, by year’s end, we’ll have some plans back that will be more solidified, and then we can start the [bid] process,” Jeffas🅺 said.
Jeffas estimated that the bid process co👍uld began by the beginning of next ඣyear.
Serving the whole community
While the building will pri⛄marily serve as a senior cente෴r during the day, it will also serve the rest of the community.
“Our prior senior center, we called it a senior center but it had a very big room where they can do lunches, bingo, or whatever,” Jeffas said. “We’ll have that same thing, maybe even a little bit bigger.”
For the rest of the d🌄ay and evening, the facility will serve as a town community center for residents to hold events and meetings.
“It will be a community center too,” Jeffas said. “So it will be used by the seniors and then for other needs throughout the community.”
While the construction is ongoing, the community center on F🎐ront Street is functioning as a makeshift senior center. When the new senior center opens, it will be larger and more accessible to the handica𝄹pped.
Other improvements
Another big ticket item in😼 the capital bond ordinance includes $510,000 for the estimated cost of storm sewer and flood mitigation control improvements at a number of locations and the installation of an automatic pump c𝕴leaner at the High School Storm Sewer Pump Station.
The ordinance allots $380,000 in supplemental funding for the co🧔nstruction of a passive park on Farm Road; $308,550 for the resurfacing of various roads; and𓂃 $189,080 for the estimated costs of other various improvements to public buildings and facilities.
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