The Norwalk City Council approved a resolution on Oct. 16 establishing a policy for limited city participation in private stormwater improvement projects.
City staff said Norwalk has several private stormwater facilities — detention ponds, drainage ways and similar features — and previously had no formal process for assisting larger, private drainage projects. The new policy provides a consistent approach that requires meaningful private-party participation and limits city financial involvement to an equal-share model and a typical cap of $20,000 per project.
Lou Veil, a city staff member who presented the policy, said the goal is to allow the city to help where there is clear public benefit but to avoid being the primary funder. Under the policy, project proposals would be considered as part of the capital improvements program (CIP) when staff and property owners request funding; the city would decide via normal budget and CIP cycles whether to participate.
Council members asked how often the city receives these requests; staff said about one request every couple of years. The policy was intentionally structured to avoid creating a new review committee; staff said bringing funding requests into the CIP process keeps administration manageable.
The resolution passed unanimously on roll call. Staff described the policy as providing guidance rather than a standing funding commitment and said council retains discretion through the CIP process to increase participation if it chooses.