Middletown and Newtown Township residents are rallying to stop the construction of a 2.5 million-gallon-per-day water treatment plant in Bucks County.
In September 2024, the Newtown Bucks County Joint Municipal Authority proposed its own wastewater treatment plant to alleviate costs to taxpayers* from mounting rate increases by the Bucks County Water and Sewer Authority, which currently manages wastewater treatment. To construct the plant, the authority acquired 17.5 acres on Lower Silver Lake Road, near the township’s border with Middletown Township.
Middletown and Newtown Township residents who live close to the site formed a steering committee in November 2024 to oppose the plan.
*[This was the rationale for proposing the plant in Newtown. However, analysis by outside experts have suggested that this. Read "Flushed Finances: Why Newtown’s Sewer Plant Could Cost You More." Also, read what Elen Snyder has to say below about the REAL reason.]
It's About More Construction & Development
[Elen Snyder, chair of the Newtown Board of Supervisors and board member of the joint municipal authority] said part of the reasoning for building the wastewater treatment facility was to allow more construction in Newtown. Right now, she said, the water and sewer authority does not allow for more buildings to be connected to the existing sewer system because of overflow concerns and fear of overburdening the Neshaminy Interceptor, which transports sewage from Bucks County to Philadelphia.
"In areas like the Business Commons part of town," Snyder said, "that is impacting the township’s ability to attract new businesses and developments to stimulate economic growth. We can’t allow anybody to build in that part of town, because there is no access to the sanitary sewer."
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More Resident Comments Welcomed! I will post selected comments from other residents. Feel free to email me your comments: john@johnmacknewtown.info or you can email township officials and/or supervisors. Please refer to the Township Directory for those email addresses. Find the proposed 2025 budget here.
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