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Sewer camera footage could save Greenburgh taxpayers millions

The sewer system was damaged after a manhole collapse in 2024, leading to a temporary pump setup that neighbors say has been noisy and frustrating.

Jeremy Hopwood

May 20, 2026, 9:12 PM

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Greenburgh officials say new high-resolution sewer camera footage could dramatically reduce the cost of fixing a sewage failure at 100 East Hartsdale Ave.

The sewer system was damaged after a manhole collapse in 2024, leading to a temporary pump setup that neighbors say has been noisy and frustrating.

At Tuesday night’s Town Board meeting, new Public Works Commissioner Frank Morabito and town staff presented findings from a specialized CCTV inspection of the damaged pipe. Officials say the footage shows the break appears to be near the street — not under the building’s foundation.

That could mean the repair may not require major excavation, which had helped drive earlier estimates as high as $24 million.

Residents say the situation has been confusing and dragged on for too long, but town officials say the new findings could point to a much less expensive fix.

More camera inspections are expected this week as Greenburgh evaluates the new repair option.

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