Barre, Vt.
Republican Gov. Phil Scott and city officials highlighted the $1 million project on Thursday.
The city in July demolished three homes bought through a Federal Emergency Management Agency buyout program so a flood plain could be created for the Gunners Brook that has repeatedly flooded the neighborhood.
The city also has removed a bridge that caused a choke point in the river, added concrete piles to collect debris and hopes to demolish two other homes this fall. The flood plain will become a public park with trees and shrubs planted along the brook.
“This was long overdue,” said Mayor Thomas Lauzon, who said residents of the low- to middle-income neighborhood repeatedly had been subjected to flooding.
“These basements would fill with water. Flood insurance wouldn’t cover it because the water wasn’t high enough. Homeowners (insurance) wouldn’t insure it. They were just constantly caught in the middle digging two feet of muck out of their basements,” the Republican mayor said.
Hundreds of millions of dollars in repairs to public infrastructure and private property have been completed around Vermont as the sixth anniversary of Tropical Storm Irene approaches. About 13 Vermont communities were cut off for days by flood waters that destroyed roads and bridges.
