CASCO — Voters in Casco and Otisfield are expected to vote in June on spending between $400,000 and $500,000 to repair the Pleasant Lake dam in Casco.
The Casco town meeting will be held Wednesday, June 15; Otisfield will meet Saturday, June 25.
Each town would be responsible for half of the costs of the shared project, but the exact amount will not be known until bids are opened Monday, May 16, and one is accepted. Bids are due at the Casco Town Office by 4:30 p.m. on May 16.
Among the problems the winning contractor will face is to install a sluice to ensure the thousands of fish in the state hatchery downstream of the dam have water to stay alive during construction, and the potential noise from the construction to the guests of the adjacent Pleasant Lake House.
The dam regulates the water level of the 3.8-mile-long Pleasant Lake. There are numerous homes and cottages around the lake, as well as the Seeds of Peace International Camp on the western shore and Camp Arcadia for Girls on the eastern shore, both in Otisfield.
The dam has been jointly owned, operated and maintained by Casco and Otisfield since 1994. It previously was owned by Hancock Lumber.
According to the Maine Dams Inventory, the 110-foot-long, 12-foot-high dam was built in 1850, repaired in 1980 and has low-hazard classification, meaning there is nothing significant downstream that would be affected by a dam breach.
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