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Cianbro takes on dock project, Brewer to use funds for trail
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
When plans for
Cianbro’s Eastern Manufacturing Facility were laid on the table in 2007,
they included a commercial marina — paid for with a federal earmark —
that other businesses in the area could use.
Cianbro officials
recently have decided to build the pier using company money and have
reduced the scope of the project, General Manager Joe Cote said Tuesday.
The move is great
news for Brewer because it will allow the city to use the 2005
transportation earmark to begin work on a planned riverside trail, said
D’arcy Main-Boyington, Brewer’s economic development director.
The earmark, now
valued around $1.1 million, was awarded to Brewer for transportation
improvements associated with the city’s waterfront, she said.
“With no more need
to use the earmark for the pier project, we can now free it up for other
uses,” Main-Boyington said in a June 30 e-mail to City Manager Steve
Bost. She went on to say that “the legislative language allowed for only
a very narrow range of uses, but our Riverwalk trail is specifically
written in as an acceptable use.”
Brewer’s proposed
historic waterfront trail is an interactive riverside walking trail with
a visitors center that eventually will stretch from South Brewer to
Indian Head Trail Park, located north of the Penobscot Bridge.
“We’re currently
looking at Phase One — the area between the three bridges,”
Main-Boyington said. “We’ll build the trail first, with park benches and
lighting, with plans in place” for additional amenities that could be
added later.
The cost to
complete Phase One is “going to be at least double that, maybe more,”
Main-Boyington said, referring to the million-dollar federal earmark.
Concept plans
unveiled by Informal Learning Experiences Inc. of Washington, D.C., in
2006 call for a 12-foot-wide riverside walking, biking and hiking path
of asphalt built upon the recently completed shoreline stabilization
project that was done in partnership with the state’s Department of
Transportation.
Elements of the
region’s past, including riverside mills, brick making, boat building,
ice harvesting, fishing, the old ferry system and the river’s
destructive power, are spotlighted in the designs for Phase Two of the
trail.
The city also is
applying for DOT trail grant funds to help pay for the riverside trail,
Main-Boyington said. She added that since Cianbro will not be using the
federal earmark funds, the site, which is owned by South Brewer
Redevelopment, now can be sold to the company.
The site needed to
be owned by the city or a nonprofit group in order to qualify for the
funding, Main-Boyington explained.
“They will be
exercising their option and taking full control of the site,” she said,
adding the transfer of ownership is expected to be completed by the end
of the year.
Cianbro officials
basically decided that “Cianbro will support its own capital
improvements,” Cote said.
“This will be the
best for all the parties,” he said. “They [the city] can use the funds
to directly benefit the community itself. We know our benefit for the
community is to put people to work.”
The Brewer
manufacturing site has a deep-water bulkhead, big enough to handle the
massive barges needed to move modules and other items too large to move
by road or rail, but it is too large for smaller boats to use.
The designs for the
planned Cianbro-owned and -operated industrial pier are 70 percent
complete and are based solely on future contract needs, Cote said,
adding that initial contacts already have been made with state and
federal agencies about constructing the pier.
He said businesses
in the region could request to use the dock, which is planned for a
location just north of the bulkhead.
“We’re a friendly
neighbor and good corporate citizen,” he said. “I don’t think you’ll see
us offloading coal… [but] we’ll talk to anybody.”
Cianbro recently
completed a multiyear contract building refinery modules in Brewer for a
Texas expansion project. The site is relatively idle while officials
work to get a new contract.
“We’re getting
closer to our next project,” Cote said, adding that officials expect to
announce a new contract “sometime in the next month.”
A copyright
article from the Bangor Daily News, Tuesday, July 6, 2010 by Nok-Noi
Ricker.
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