Politics & Government
Newtown Municipal Authority To Ask Courts For Permission To Sell Sewer Plant Site
The authority acquired the land by eminent domain for $11.5 million in 2024 with plans to build a wastewater treatment plant at the site.

NEWTOWN, PA — The Newtown, Bucks County Joint Municipal Authority will be asking the courts for permission to sell a 17.5-acre property on Lower Silver Lake Road, originally proposed as the site of a new sewer treatment plant.
The authority acquired the land by eminent domain for $11.5 million in 2024 with plans to build a wastewater treatment plant at the site.
The authority said it made the move to contain spiraling sewer rate hikes, which are forecast to impact its ratepayers well into the future as a wholesale customer of the Bucks County Water & Sewer Authority.
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Residents living near the site of the treatment plant in neighboring Middletown Township, however, protested plans for the plant, eventually forcing the authority to halt work on the proposed facility a year ago. The authority eventually dropped its plans altogether after it lost the support of the Newtown Township Board of Supervisors.
Under the eminent domain law, the authority was obligated to offer the land back to the original owners for $11.5 million, the price the authority paid to acquire the land. The former owners had 90 days to respond to the authority's offer, which expired without a response, the authority confirmed this week.
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During public comment at this week's sewer authority meeting, former supervisor John Mack said he'd like to see the land remain as open space and be donated to the township.
"Rather than selling the land to developers, the Authority should donate the property to the township so it can be preserved permanently as open space," he said. He suggested the authority donate the land to the township for $1 with the stipulation that it never be developed.
Others, however, have asked the authority to sell the land and to reduce rates accordingly.
After acquiring the land, the authority raised rates by 47 percent, 26 percent of which was to fund the acquisition of the sewer treatment plant property.
The board, which is made up of appointed representatives from Newtown Borough and Newtown Township, has not made any decisions regarding the disposition of land or what it would do with the proceeds from a sale of the property.
The property had initially been proposed by KRE for a 245-unit apartment building complex. KRE was in the process of challenging the validity of the township’s ordinance when the authority began condemnation proceedings to acquire the property.
The Newtown, Bucks County Joint Municipal Authority (NBCJMA) serves 9,000 sanitary sewer customers in Newtown Township and Newtown Borough. NBCIMA’s system consists of 101 miles of gravity sewers and 2,630 manholes and eight metering sites. It maintains five wastewater pumping stations and more than 50 easements.
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