Improvements Planned Along Asheville Hwy., Allens Bridge
Rd.
By BILL
JONES
Staff Writer
Mary Ruth Tackett,
the state director of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Development Agency, on Friday
joined Glen Hills Utility District officials in announcing the awarding of $1.4 million in federal
funds to help the district upgrade its water lines and add to its water-storage
capability.
"Safe, reliable water is a fundamental building block for
every healthy, growing community," Tackett said during a check-presentation ceremony outside the
utility district's Newport Highway operations center.
"Thanks to the
support of our congressional delegation, Rural Development has the financial resources to help Glen
Hills Utility District meet the growing needs of the families and businesses it
serves."
A press release issued by the Rural Development Agency
indicated that the Glen Hills Utility District is receiving a $1,176,000 million federal loan and a
$224,000 federal grant for water infrastructure improvements.
Chris
Myers, the utility district's general manager, said the federal funds will be used to install
12-inch water lines along Asheville Highway and West Allens Bridge Road, build a new 300,000-gallon
water-storage facility off Doyle Davis Road in the Cedar Creek community, and replace older water
meters with new ones that can be remotely read.
Won't Help Houston
Valley
After the morning ceremony, Greene County Mayor Alan Broyles and
Glen Hills Utility District General Manager Myers said the federal funds announced won't help the
utility district extend water lines to residents of the Houston Valley Road, Tweed Springs Road and
Rader Lane areas whose wells have gone dry.
Broyles and Myers stressed
that county and utility district officials are pursuing other federal funds to extend the utility
district water lines into those areas. Myers said about $1.7 million in federal funds would be
required to extend utility water service into the water-starved
areas.
Mayor Broyles used the occasion to ask representatives of
Tennessee's two U.S. senators and Rep. David Davis, R-1st, of Johnson City, who were in attendance,
to push for federal funding for extending utility water service further into Houston Valley and
other water-starved areas.
In remarks made during the ceremony, Lloyd
"Hoot" Bowers, the Glen Hills Utility District's president, recalled that he had been associated
with the district since 1970, when it only had 145 customers along Newport Highway.
Serving 5,800 Customers
Currently, Bowers said, the
Glen Hills Utility District serves some 5,800 customers in an area "from Greystone to
Warrensburg."
He noted that the district's commissioners and employes are
"very excited" about the project that the federal funds will enable them to
complete.
The district has some 300 miles of water lines spread across
its service area, Bowers said.
A Rural Development Agency press release
said the funds also will be used "to improve system reliability by looping [water] supply
lines."
Looping water supply lines, the release said, "enables a damaged
segment of a supply line to be bypassed so that water continues to reach customers.
Speaking during a check-presentation ceremony outside the Glen Hills
Utility District's operations center at 2722 Newport Highway, Rural Development State Director
Tackett said the funds awarded to the Glen Hills Utility District are part of $28,204,200 in Rural
Development water loans and grants announced Friday across the state.
One Of 12 Statewide
Glen Hills, she said, was among
12 utility districts statewide that are to share in the $28 million.
She
also noted that there continued to be "a great need" for similar water-system improvement projects
in East Tennessee.
Water improvement projects are funded through Rural
Development community programs, which provide financing for drinking water, waste-water treatment,
solid waste disposal, and storm-water facilities for rural residents, according to the news release.
Loans and grants are made to public and cooperative entities serving
rural areas with a population less than 10,000. USDA Rural Development invested nearly $59 million
last year to improve water and waste-water infrastructure for Tennessee communities.
Mayor Broyles Comments
Greene County Mayor Broyles
recalled that, as a youth growing up in the Warrensburg community of western Greene County, he had
never imagined that utility water would be extended into that area of the
county.
When he was a youth, he said, the Warrensburg area did not yet
have telephone service, much less utility water.
But for years now, he
said, he has been a customer of the Glen Hills Utility District.
Broyles
noted that it had taken "everyone working together" to obtain the federal funding announced
Friday.
Rep. Yokley Comments
State Rep.
Eddie Yokley, D-11th, of Greene County, in whose district much of the Glen Hills Utility District's
service area lies, said before the ceremony that he was happy to see the district receive federal
funds for improvements.
"I'm certainly proud that the district will be
able to improve water delivery," he said. "This will help a lot of citizens obtain water with the
pressure they need. We need to keep improving."
Rep. Yokley also said
that, once the economy improves, he hopes to be able to pursue state funding for other
water-improvement projects.
Rep. Hawk
Comments
State Rep. David Hawk said he was pleased to learn that the Glen
Hills Utility District, which serves a portion of his legislative district, would be receiving
federal funds.
"This is a great announcement for Greene County," Hawk
said. "I'm looking forward to working with Rural Development to bring more of these grants to Greene
County in days to come."
Charles D. Brooks, area director for USDA Rural
Development, said during the ceremony that he first was involved with water-system improvement
projects in Greene County in the 1970s.
Even then, he said, Greene County
was "in the forefront" of counties that were pursuing water-system improvements.