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Beyond the Overflows

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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.

MORE STORIES

  • by Charlotte Harvey The Problem: 50 Sewage Overflows a Year
  • by Justin Doughty Deadlines Pushed Back for $170M Sewage Separation Project
  • by Elijah Polance Tunnel Will Hold Waste from 17 Sewer Overflow Points
  • by Mia Jaworski Chronic Flooding Closed Hartford Neighborhood Hardware Store
  • by Julianna D'Addona Sharon Lewis: A Flood Led to Resilience
  • by Elijah Polance Sometimes Clean: A Profile of Wethersfield Cove
  • by Desirae Sin Whose fault is the flooding? It's complicated
  • by Noa Climor Uncontained Waste Can Make People Sick
  • by Julianna D'Addona For Cynthia R. Jennings, Lifetime of Flooding Fuels Fight for Environmental Justice
  • by Mia Jaworski What we can learn from deep tunnel systems in Chicago and Milwaukee
  • by Desirae Sin Pollution Hurts Delicate Life Cycles of Fish
  • by Noa Climor Bridgitte Prince Says North End Has Waited Too Long
  • by Desirae Sin How Sewage Treatment Usually Works
  • by Elijah Polance Extra Water Underground Delays Massive Waste Tunnel Operation to 2026
  • by Julianna D'Addona Increasing Rainfall Worsens Combined Sewer Overflows
  • by Desirae Sin Grant Program Funded 557 Flooding Fixes Before Halting
  • by Noa Climor J. Stan McCauley Says Hartford's North End Victimized by Political Apathy
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