My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
03-29-2021 Council Packet
Orono
>
City Council
>
2021
>
03-29-2021 Council Packet
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
4/15/2021 9:22:22 AM
Creation date
4/15/2021 9:20:37 AM
Metadata
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
85
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
MINUTES OF THE <br />ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br />Monday, March 8, 2021 <br />6:00 o’clock p.m. <br />_____________________________________________________________________________________ <br /> <br />Page 5 of 23 <br /> <br />Walsh said it is in need of help. <br /> <br />Edwards noted the other major undertaking is down on the Casco Circle where they are combining some <br />road reconstructions, overlaying, and pretty significant storm water improvements to that area. The rest <br />of things are pretty normal road works and pavement replacements. <br /> <br />Seals asked when the projects would start and if they are phased or all at once. <br /> <br />Edwards said that will be up to the contractor so once awarded, the next step is for the contractor to come <br />back to the City with their plan to execute and phase these. They will communicate that to the impacted <br />residents. In the contract there are limitations for how long a particular roadway may be disturbed and <br />not repaved. It does pretty much give the contractor the entire construction season to get everything done. <br /> <br />Walsh said the good news is they budgeted $1,123,000 back in June for this and they are at $824,000 so <br />they are essentially $300,000 less which will help carry into the next year. They still have the road <br />budget at $750,000, the cell tower of $120,000, and any additional reserves over 50% and all that. This is <br />just another big chunk of change that is under budget that will help them get more roads done. It is all <br />good news. <br /> <br />Printup asked when these road projects are going on and whenever they get done, are residents able to <br />contact City Hall and see if they can get driveways done because the bulk of it is there. <br /> <br />Edwards answered what they normally do is provide residents the contact information for the contractor <br />directly so the City is not in the middle of a private/public transaction. Often contractors will do that. <br />Something else they have done in the past are private roads looking to be redone, then those home <br />owners’ associations may try to get a better deal from a contractor who is already in the area. Edwards <br />invited Dave Martini to the meeting today because this is the biggest project Orono does with Bolton and <br />Menk. His team puts all the technical work together to create the design for the City. They will usually <br />have a full-time young engineer as the construction manager to do all the interaction with the residents <br />and contractor. <br /> <br />Crosby asked if all of this is full replacement. <br /> <br />Edwards said it is a mixture. For example, Park Lane will be a complete reconstruction as they need to <br />get in to some utilities underneath it. Some of the roads in Navarre will just be a milling and overlaying, <br />removing the top layer of asphalt and putting new asphalt on top. <br /> <br />Walsh clarified the contractor knew that ahead of time for bidding because they had done all the <br />engineering work to know what condition the roads were in. <br /> <br />Seals said that sounds good and is what they heard when they knocked on doors many years ago: Roads, <br />roads, and roads. <br /> <br />Walsh said the public should know when doing these road constructions if there is a concern in <br />someone’s yard – for example, off of Wilders there were a lot of water issues and the residents brought it <br />up during construction. The City brought in more curb and gutter than originally planned. It cost more <br />money, but got all the water flowing correctly so it was not going into people’s yards. If there are issues
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.