Where Westminster stands with utility service upgrades

The new Westminster City Council was brought up-to-date yesterday with utility language such as pop-off valves and step-down banks.  The mayor felt it was important for the council, which features three, first-year members, to know where the city stands with water and electric power upgrades.  So, they all listened and asked questions of engineers Troy Rosier and Richard Tucker in a near 90-minute workshop/meeting yesterday at the Westminster Depot.  Tucker, the city’s outside electrical power service consultant, gave a report on infrastructure upgrades which have accelerated in the work by the city’s current utilities superintendent, Leigh Baker.  And Rosier gave details of the outside funding possibilities to pay for thousands of linear feet of new water lines that’ll replace corroding PVC pipe that has been in the grounds for decades.