LOCK HAVEN Lock Haven City Council will consider a resolution which would declare a state of emergency regarding its water system. For months, the city
LOCK HAVEN Lock Haven City Council will consider a resolution which would declare a state of emergency regarding its water system. For months, the city ha
LOCK HAVEN Another step was taken recently in the city’s multi-year reservoir improvement project.
City council entered into a sales agreement which, if requirements are met, would see the city purchase one of its first of two supplemental water wells in Wayne Township.
The city is looking into the purchase of these wells to use when Keller Reservoir in Zindel Park is drained during the reconstruction of its spillway, City Manager Gregory Wilson said.
The first well, which a geologist has already explored, is situated on 9.1 acres of land at a cost of $200,000.
Wilson noted that the sale would only go through if the city drills successfully into the well and receives the required permits from the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP).