Meriden to receive $11.6M in FEMA money for flood control, funding 75% of total project

The city received two grants totaling more than $11.6 million from the Federal Emergency Management Agency aimed at addressing flood control in the downtown area, Congressional lawmakers said Tuesday. The funding from FEMA will support $11,165,250 million of the city’s $14.7 million total project cost. The project includes channel realignment and profile adjustment, removing two undersized bridges that constrict water flow, floodproofing buildings along the brook, creating riparian floodplain and wildlife habitat, modifying impacted utilities, and installing a waterfront trail system. An additional $480,000 grant from FEMA will fund costs for the administration and management of this project. Improvements will be made along an 1,800 foot stretch of Harbor Brook spanning from Cooper Street in downtown Meriden to the Amtrak railroad near Colony Street. The former ION Bank building on Hanover Street was razed to make way for the channel widening and deepening. Another building at 116 Cook Ave., an area prone for flooding, has been slated for demolition and reconstruction to make way for a new senior center.

https://www.myrecordjournal.com/News/Meriden/Meriden-News/FEMA-gives-Meriden-$11-6-million-for-flood-control.html

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