Building project plans on display at Plymouth board meeting Monday
PLYMOUTH – Town residents are invited to see the layout and design scheme for a proposed addition of office space to the southeast side of the Plymouth Fire House.
The documents will be on display at the town board’s monthly meeting at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the fire house, located at 3461 state Highway 23.
Town Supervisor Jerry Kreiner said the 2,200 square foot proposed addition will be built for an estimated $305,000. The funds are currently available after what he described as a decade of “prudent planning” by town councilmen. The project’s price was estimated high for planning purposes, he added.
The addition will provide space for four offices, a meeting room and a records storage room. Offices will be for the town clerk, town justice and town supervisor, with one shared by the town assessor and code enforcement officer.
Delaware Engineering of Syracuse is very near completion of the required environmental impact statement for the structure, after which the project will go out to bid. The board anticipates breaking ground in spring.
“We’ve been talking about this since the day we started talking about building the fire house,” said Kreiner. “It was supposed to have been a community building. We’ve finally regrouped and got around to doing what the public anticipated us to do from the beginning.”
The district building was completed about 11 years ago.
“We want to share the plans with anybody who is interested and show exactly what we’re doing,” he said.
In other news, the Plymouth town board passed a resolution Feb. 14 to sign a lease with AT&T to construct a cell tower on top of Pike Hill on Cook House Road. The tower would potentially bring in about $1,250 a month for the town, Kreiner said.
The communications conglomerate approached councilmen about a year ago, hoping to build a tower that would provide coverage on the west side of the Chenango River Valley, north and south in the valley.
The project is in the permissive referendum process, or 31-day waiting period to see if any petitions are filed opposing it. Kreiner said the board hopes to have the tower erected this summer.
Chenango County has discussed contracting with a cell company to lease space on its new nine-tower 911 emergency management communications system. Kreiner said the negotiations were taking too long, and AT&T had “gone ahead and contacted individual towns.” He described current cell coverage in Plymouth as “not very good.”
The documents will be on display at the town board’s monthly meeting at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the fire house, located at 3461 state Highway 23.
Town Supervisor Jerry Kreiner said the 2,200 square foot proposed addition will be built for an estimated $305,000. The funds are currently available after what he described as a decade of “prudent planning” by town councilmen. The project’s price was estimated high for planning purposes, he added.
The addition will provide space for four offices, a meeting room and a records storage room. Offices will be for the town clerk, town justice and town supervisor, with one shared by the town assessor and code enforcement officer.
Delaware Engineering of Syracuse is very near completion of the required environmental impact statement for the structure, after which the project will go out to bid. The board anticipates breaking ground in spring.
“We’ve been talking about this since the day we started talking about building the fire house,” said Kreiner. “It was supposed to have been a community building. We’ve finally regrouped and got around to doing what the public anticipated us to do from the beginning.”
The district building was completed about 11 years ago.
“We want to share the plans with anybody who is interested and show exactly what we’re doing,” he said.
In other news, the Plymouth town board passed a resolution Feb. 14 to sign a lease with AT&T to construct a cell tower on top of Pike Hill on Cook House Road. The tower would potentially bring in about $1,250 a month for the town, Kreiner said.
The communications conglomerate approached councilmen about a year ago, hoping to build a tower that would provide coverage on the west side of the Chenango River Valley, north and south in the valley.
The project is in the permissive referendum process, or 31-day waiting period to see if any petitions are filed opposing it. Kreiner said the board hopes to have the tower erected this summer.
Chenango County has discussed contracting with a cell company to lease space on its new nine-tower 911 emergency management communications system. Kreiner said the negotiations were taking too long, and AT&T had “gone ahead and contacted individual towns.” He described current cell coverage in Plymouth as “not very good.”
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