July 6, 2024
Loans

$20M loan to help Oak Ridge pay for new water treatment plant


Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee and Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation Commissioner David Salyers have announced that the city of Oak Ridge will receive a $20 million loan that a city official said will be used to help pay for the new water treatment plant construction.

Oak Ridge Public Works Director Patrick Berge said the loan will help pay for the $78.3 million membrane filtration water treatment plant, which is under construction on Pumphouse Road off of Scarboro Road. The plant is expected to be complete by July 2025, he told The Oak Ridger, and be up and running by the end of 2025.

Officials broke ground in October 2022 on what then-City Manager Mark Watson called the “largest public works project” in Oak Ridge’s history. The current water treatment plant was built by the government in 1943. 

Oak Ridge Public Works Director Patrick Berge speaks at the groundbreaking ceremony of the new City of Oak Ridge water treatment plant, Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2022.

The old water treatment plant was built by the government in 1943. DOE owned and operated the plant at its Y-12 facility and sold water to the city, according to information from the city. DOE gave it to the city in 2000.

In an October 2022 story, Watson said over a half century of erosion and ground shifting had damaged the plant’s base, and it was determined that it would be cheaper to build a new plant than to fix the old one. The existing plant, which will continue to operate until the new plant is constructed and tested, is currently at capacity and beyond its useful life.



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