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Beyond the Overflows

Sharon Lewis: A Flood Led to Resilience

Posted on June 3, 2025

By Julianna D’Addona
UConn Journalism

On Dec. 4, 2022, flood­ing from a com­bined sewage over­flow destroyed prop­er­ty, keep­sakes, and appli­ances in the house of Hartford res­i­dent Sharon Lewis. The after­math of the flood also destroyed her con­fi­dence in her insur­ance cov­er­age.

Lewis had lived in the house at 32–34 Rutland Street most of her life and was about to move out of it, stor­ing her belong­ings in mov­ing boxes in the base­ment.

Then came a rain­storm on Saturday, Dec. 3, 2022. Lewis told the mov­ing com­pa­ny to delay the move by one day so they would not track mud in the house. According to a law­suit Lewis later filed, it rained between 3 and 4 tenths of an inch that day.  

She and her hus­band woke up Sunday morn­ing to a cold and dry house. Thinking there was a prob­lem with the heat, she asked her hus­band to go down­stairs and push the reset but­ton for the fur­nace.  

Upon open­ing the door to the base­ment, Lewis’ hus­band dis­cov­ered water had flood­ed up to the basement’s fourth step.

“I get up, I go down­stairs, open the kitchen door and—oh, my God—water was about to come up to the kitchen. I’m freak­ing out because my freez­er is float­ing. I can see sewage from all over the neigh­bor­hood float­ing in the water. I total­ly freaked out,” Lewis said in a vir­tu­al inter­view on March 12, 2025.

That day, the fur­nace was sub­merged and the oil tank was lift­ed off its legs and spilled oil into the base­ment, accord­ing to the law­suit Lewis filed in 2024.  

While a neigh­bor called the fire depart­ment, Lewis remem­bered just run­ning up the street, feel­ing as though the phone did not work fast enough.

The fire depart­ment said it could not pump the flood­wa­ter because it was not clean.

Frantic, Lewis called Hartford city offi­cials, who sent an inspec­tor. According to the law­suit, on Dec. 4, staff mem­bers from the city,  MDC, and elec­tric com­pa­ny (Eversource) came that day. A city inspec­tor ordered the water and elec­tric­i­ty turned off and told Lewis and her hus­band they must vacate until repairs could be made, accord­ing to the law­suit.

Lewis said the flood destroyed every­thing she owned as it sat wait­ing to be moved out of the house. “I’m a col­lec­tor, and I like antiques. I had so many antiques from slav­ery, from the deep South. I mean, things that I cher­ished my entire life. Gone. Couldn’t touch it, had to be thrown away.”

She said she lost fam­i­ly heir­looms, pho­tos, the fam­i­ly Bible and fam­i­ly doc­u­ments. “Everything is gone. It’s like my whole life dis­ap­peared overnight,” Lewis said.

From a hotel on Windsor Street, Lewis called her insur­ance com­pa­ny, which told her that the inci­dent was not cov­ered. Lewis, who had worked as an insur­ance under­writer for many years, said, “I was shocked, total­ly speech­less” because insur­ance had cov­ered her family’s ear­li­er flood from an over­flow.

“And it was anger, it was embar­rass­ment, it was shame, it was—how did I let this hap­pen? And I just hung up the phone.”

Lewis and her hus­band lived in the hotel at a cost of $1,000 per week for seven months. Friends set up a GoFundMe page to help cover costs, but Lewis said that made her feel ashamed. She then went to New Jersey while cleanup efforts were under­way.

The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) sent its Emergency Response and Spill Prevention Division, which sent “a con­trac­tor to pump out and san­i­tize her base­ment,” said Graham Stevens, chief of the DEEP Bureau of Water Protection and Land Reuse.

 “Typically, res­i­dents would call their Fire Department who would assist in arrang­ing for, or con­duct­ing, such work,” Stevens said in an email.

Lewis con­firmed that DEEP staffers had drained the flood waters but said that the base­ment flood­ed again the next day. She said that the MDC told her that sewage from her house had caused the new surge, but she said this was not pos­si­ble. “My ques­tion for them was, well, if it’s my sewage, while I was in New Jersey, how in the hell did I cause three more feet of water and fecal mat­ter to rise up in my base­ment?”

Initially, Lewis was told that 73,000 gal­lons of sewage flood­ed into her home. But she says, after the lat­ter flood­ing, she believes the num­ber was clos­er to 100,000 gal­lons.  

Meanwhile, Lewis was told by the city of Hartford that the water com­pa­ny was sup­posed to turn her water off in her house. Seeing that the inci­dent hap­pened in December, in which tem­per­a­tures are freez­ing, this was an urgent mat­ter. However, upon return­ing back to her house weeks later, on or about Dec. 24, Lewis and her hus­band heard a noise.  

“I said, ‘Oh no, oh no, oh no.’ The pipes for the bath­room are in the ceil­ing between the bath­room, which is upstairs, and the din­ing room. The din­ing room ceil­ing is on the din­ing room table. Water had been run­ning in my house for almost three weeks. The house was destroyed upstairs.”  

Lewis’s law­suit claims that the MDC did not shut off water to the house despite direc­tion from city offi­cials.

She also said that she believes her house was the only one in her neigh­bor­hood that did not receive a new lat­er­al, the waste pipe that con­nects the house to the street.

Lewis said that a staff mem­ber of the MDC told Lewis a sleeve may have been put around her pipe instead. “Why would they put a sleeve around my pipe, when my pipe was the one that start­ed this whole thing?” Lewis asked.

The MDC said it could not com­ment on these events or Lewis’ story.

Lewis now lives in an apart­ment in Bloomfield. All her fur­ni­ture is sec­ond-hand. A mov­ing con­tain­er sits out­side of Lewis’s Hartford house.

“Naturally, that led to a lot of issues with me per­son­al­ly, with depres­sion, because I had accu­mu­lat­ed a life­time of things that I want­ed to save, and in a few sec­onds, all of it was gone, destroyed.”  

Among the things destroyed was a long let­ter Lewis’ moth­er had writ­ten for her three daugh­ters before she died. Lewis had read part of the let­ter at the time but “I just got too emo­tion­al so I couldn’t fin­ish it,” she said.

Sharon Lewis in 2022, the year she won an award from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for her work help­ing res­i­dents advo­cate for safer liv­ing con­di­tions. Later that year, her house flood­ed from a sewage back­up. Handout photo

Lewis has worked in envi­ron­men­tal advo­ca­cy since way before she suf­fered this flood. She is the exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Connecticut Coalition for Economic and Environmental Justice, which lob­bied against the now-closed trash incin­er­a­tor in Hartford. She received an award for her activism from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in 2022. And she served on the state’s Connecticut Equity and Environmental Justice Advisory Committee (CEEJAC), to which she told the story of the flood at a meet­ing in 2023.

Stevens said her expe­ri­ence made an enor­mous impres­sion on CEEJAC, which includes rep­re­sen­ta­tives from other state agen­cies and the EPA.

 “After she shared this infor­ma­tion, I called MDC to ensure they were aware of the issue,” Stevens said in an email. “I also shared this infor­ma­tion with the EPA. EPA joint­ly reg­u­lates sewer sys­tems with the depart­ment.”

“Over the next sev­er­al weeks, Sharon Lewis’ expe­ri­ence result­ed in sig­nif­i­cant atten­tion from the depart­ment, EPA, and the media,” Stevens recalled. “What has result­ed is an unprece­dent­ed invest­ment in assist­ing the com­mu­ni­ty impact­ed by sewer back­ups,” he said.

This led to the pro­pos­al by the MDC, at the Department’s direc­tion, for the $170 mil­lion in projects to help and pro­tect the com­mu­ni­ty from sewer flood­ing and back­ups, includ­ing a grant pro­gram to reim­burse res­i­dents for dam­age.

“This new approach is pro­tect­ing the water­ways and the com­mu­ni­ty,” Stevens said.  

Lewis said this atten­tion by envi­ron­men­tal reg­u­la­tors was uplift­ing.

“I was so happy,” Lewis said. “I mean, that was like the most pos­i­tive and pleas­ant thing that could have even hap­pened when you’re total­ly down and you have friends in the indus­try who want to do all they can to help you.” 

Lewis is also part of the Water Justice Campaign, in which she helps peo­ple under­stand their insur­ance and ensure they get prop­er cov­er­age. People come with their poli­cies and Lewis ver­i­fies whether they have sewage back­up cov­er­age or not. She also helps peo­ple nav­i­gate con­ver­sa­tions with insur­ance com­pa­nies because she says it is so hard to under­stand.

“If you have inad­e­quate cov­er­age, when you have a claim, you’re going to have inad­e­quate com­pen­sa­tion,” Lewis said.  

After every­thing she has been through, Lewis con­tin­ues to be vocal about envi­ron­men­tal advo­ca­cy. Though, it is not with­out strug­gle.  

“I feel help­less. I feel that I can’t do any­thing because, some­times, you can be the best advo­cate in the world, but when things hap­pen to you, you don’t know what to do. I do for every­body else, but I can’t do for myself. I can’t explain why I can’t, but I’m help­less and pret­ty much par­a­lyzed,” she said. “I’ve been see­ing doc­tors for this and try­ing to get some help on why I just can’t get it togeth­er, but I’m total­ly destroyed by this. Totally destroyed.”

Lewis will con­tin­ue speak­ing up for this prob­lem despite all the hard­ship it has cost her.

“I knew exact­ly what I’d be doing in my retire­ment,” she said.


TOP IMAGE: The water level in Sharon Lewis’ base­ment as shown through the home’s hatch­way in Hartford, Connecticut, Dec. 5, 2022. Photo cour­tesy of Sharon Lewis

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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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