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Beyond the Overflows

Extra Water Underground Delays Massive Waste Tunnel Operation to 2026

Posted on June 1, 2025

By Elijah Polance
UConn Journalism

In 2016, the Metropolitan District Commission (MDC) began con­struct­ing a stor­age tun­nel to hold untreat­ed sewage and rain­wa­ter dur­ing storms. It is called the South Hartford Conveyance and Storage Tunnel and was sup­posed to be com­plet­ed by the end of 2023. But delays with the con­trac­tor and a relat­ed law­suit advanced the pre­dict­ed oper­a­tion to fall 2026.

The delays were due to excess water under­ground dur­ing drilling, said Susan Negrelli, direc­tor of engi­neer­ing and plan­ning for the MDC. She said that with such large-scale projects, there are inevitable unknown fac­tors that can­not be account­ed for before­hand.

“The con­trac­tor claimed they had more water that they had to deal with in the tun­nel as they were exca­vat­ing than the design plans showed,” Negrelli said. “So that slowed them down con­sid­er­ably.”

That con­trac­tor, Kenny Obayashi, sued the MDC, which announced the par­ties set­tled in March by agree­ing to about $51 mil­lion for addi­tion­al change orders, the MDC report­ed in a state­ment. The tun­nel con­tract was ini­tial­ly priced at $279 mil­lion, but the total cost is now list­ed as $335 mil­lion.

MDC spokesman Nick Salemi said in a state­ment sent to all media, “It is not uncom­mon for own­ers, and by exten­sion its con­trac­tors, to encounter dif­fer­ing site con­di­tions in the con­struc­tion of deep rock tun­nels, in this case a tun­nel approx­i­mate­ly 200 feet below the sur­face.” The MDC said Obayashi’s com­pa­ny, KOJV, had sub­mit­ted sev­er­al change orders for the tunnel’s three reach­es. The orders totaled more than $100 mil­lion. MDC agreed with some of the claims but dis­put­ed the amount of the extra costs. All but $28 mil­lion of the $51 mil­lion agreed upon was eli­gi­ble for Clean Water Fund grants and loan fund­ing.

The tun­nel mea­sures four miles long and runs 200 feet under­ground, with enough space for the tunnel’s 18-foot diam­e­ter. It was car­ried out with a bor­ing machine named IRIS, which began drilling in 2019 and fin­ished in 2022. It will hold waste from West Hartford and south­ern areas of Hartford.

Nick Salemi, spokesper­son for the MDC, said delays in the drilling process set back con­struc­tion of the water pump sta­tion. He said the pump sta­tion could not begin con­struc­tion until the tun­nel was fin­ished.

“The tun­nel por­tion went slow­er than antic­i­pat­ed, which pushed back some of the other work,” Salemi said. “The pump sta­tion is in con­struc­tion right now.” The sta­tion will trans­port the stored waste and stormwa­ter upwards and across a road to the Hartford Water Pollution Treatment Facility. Upon treat­ment, the cleaned water will be released into the Connecticut River.

Negrelli said the pump station’s orig­i­nal planned com­ple­tion date of July 2026 may may be pushed later.

“We’re deal­ing with some delays with some elec­tri­cal equip­ment,” Negrelli said while show­ing jour­nal­ists the pump site in April. “So we’re think­ing about the late sum­mer or fall of 2026.”

Salemi said the pump sta­tion relies on physics to move the water upwards. “The whole thing works on grav­i­ty,” he said. “There’s not a lot of elec­tric­i­ty to get it 200 feet to the plant. The pump sta­tion pumps the water up across the street to the treat­ment plant.”

Construction of the pump sta­tion is being car­ried out by the engi­neer­ing com­pa­ny Arcadis, which has done work for other MDC projects. Greg Bazydola, Arcadis project man­ag­er for the pump sta­tion, said the work bal­ances fac­tors like automa­tion, pre­vent­ing excess water pres­sure buildup, and avoid­ing excess humid­i­ty, which can dam­age equip­ment.

Two shafts in that sta­tion extend under­ground to meet the pump. The first shaft was where the tun­nel drilling began with a crane low­er­ing IRIS to the nec­es­sary depth. Now that the tun­nel itself has been dug, this shaft will be repur­posed to screen large solids and grit from water stored in the tun­nel.

“You want to pro­tect those pumps that are down there from big debris so it doesn’t wear any­thing,” Bazydola said.

Eventually, more waste from the Franklin Avenue area of South Hartford will also flow into this pump sta­tion. Those con­duits have yet to built. That project is called Contract Four, also called the East Conduits. The Franklin Avenue con­duits do not need to be fin­ished for the tun­nel to work.

TOP IMAGE: At the future pump site, a shaft goes down 200 feet to meet the end of the waste tun­nel. Photo by Christine Woodside

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ABOUT THIS PROJECT

Eight journalism students at the University of Connecticut spent three months reporting on the combined sewer overflow repair project in Hartford and getting to know some of the real-life, sometimes devastating impact this pollution has exacted on the people who have endured it for decades.

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