§ 268. Increase and improvement of facilities. 1. Whenever the board of supervisors shall determine it necessary to acquire additional lands or interests in lands or to acquire or to construct (1) water rights, wells, reservoirs or basins in order to maintain an adequate source of water supply, (2) water quality treatment units or devices and related apparatus and equipment, (3) additional trunk, interceptor and outfall sewers, pumping stations, sewage treatment and disposal works and appurtenances, street lateral sewers, or other facilities, (4) additional drains, pumping stations, or other improvements or to perform other work of a permanent nature such as dredging, widening or straightening of streams and water courses, or, (5) refuse disposal and incinerator plants, including all necessary facilities and equipment appurtenant thereto; or whenever the board of supervisors shall determine it necessary for the proper maintenance and service of such facilities to increase, improve or reconstruct the facilities thereof, including the acquisition of additional lands, or interests in land therefor, the board of supervisors shall cause a map and plan of the proposed improvement together with an estimate of the cost to be prepared by the county engineer or an engineer duly licensed by the state of New York. When the map and plan and estimate of cost have been completed, the board of supervisors shall call a public hearing thereon and cause a notice thereof to be published and posted in the manner prescribed in section two hundred fifty-four. Such notice shall describe in general terms the proposed improvement or the location of the lands to be acquired, shall specify the estimated expense thereof, and, if zones of assessment have been established in such county district, shall specify the proposed allocation of the cost thereof as between such zones. Such notice shall further state the time when and the place where the board will meet to hear all persons interested in the subject matter thereof. After such hearing and upon the evidence given thereat, the board of supervisors shall determine (a) whether it is in the public interest to acquire or construct the proposed improvement; and (b) if zones of assessment have been established in such county district, the allocation of the cost thereof as between such zones. If the board of supervisors shall decide that it is in the public interest to acquire or construct the proposed improvement, the board of supervisors shall direct the administrative head or body to proceed with the improvement in the manner provided by section two hundred sixty-two. In case the purchase of lands only is involved, the board of supervisors may cause such lands to be purchased for the district.

Terms Used In N.Y. County Law 268

  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.

In Suffolk county, notwithstanding any other general or special law to the contrary, a sewer district may construct excess capacity for the treatment and disposal of sewage and scavenger waste from outside the district if the district has one or more executory contracts with other districts, municipalities or corporations, public or private, that wish to avail themselves of such excess capacity.

2. In like manner, the board of supervisors may, after the public hearing held upon due notice, replace obsolete, inadequate, damaged, destroyed or worn out apparatus and equipment or acquire additional apparatus and equipment.

3. Whenever it is proposed or required that the county in which a district is located shall finance an expenditure or contract for the purposes authorized in this section by the issuance of the bonds, notes, certificates or other evidences of indebtedness of the county therefor, or shall assume the payment of annual installments of debt service on obligations issued to finance the cost of facilities, pursuant to section two hundred sixty-two of this article, and the cost to the typical property or, if different, the cost to the typical one or two family home is above the average estimated cost to the typical properties or homes for similar types of expenditures as may be annually computed by the state comptroller, no such expenditure shall be made or contract let, unless the state comptroller, on behalf of the state, shall consent to such expenditure.