Civic IQ
Budget PlanningCapital ProjectsDetected Jun 9, 2026

Hillsdale’s April 30, 2026 financials and capital projects report show active investment in lead service line (LSL) replacements and broader water distribution improvements. The water fund has a capital line item for “FYE 2026 Lead Service Line Replacements” with payments to RJT Construction totaling over $33,000 year‑to‑date, and the April capital project sheet lists $450,000 budgeted for “Distribution System Improvements,” $85,000 for “Water meters/Nodes Replacement,” and multiple equipment items like a valve turning trailer and compressor. In the May 2026 Water & Wastewater report, staff notes high water loss (36%) trending down and ongoing potholing and verification of service line materials, indicating continued field work to locate and replace problem lines and leaks. This combination of budget capacity and active field activity suggests continued or expanded solicitations for civil contractors, leak detection, mapping, and construction services to meet regulatory lead line requirements and reduce non‑revenue water.

The city has recently completed a CDBG-funded water/sewer project (prior year) and is no longer rece...

Town of HillsdaleLead Service Line Replacement and Water Distribution Improvements

Why this matters for vendors

Early signals like this typically surface 6–18 months before a formal RFP is posted. Vendors who engage during the planning window help shape requirements, build relationships with decision-makers, and position ahead of the competition before the solicitation goes public.

Capital Projects

Where this sits in the buying cycle

Now

Capital plan & early discussion

Next 1–2 Q

Scoping & vendor outreach window

6–18 mo

RFP / solicitation posted

Later

Award & contract

Related

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Pre-RFP

The Westminster Conservation Commission agenda lists a continued Notice of Intent hearing for 0 & 88 State Road West (Depres) covering four townhouse apartment buildings totaling 32 units. This indicates an active private development proposal that must secure local environmental approvals before proceeding to detailed design and construction procurement. While the agenda does not name municipal funding, a 32‑unit townhouse project will create demand for civil and environmental engineering, site work, utilities, stormwater systems, landscaping, and potentially traffic and infrastructure improvements tied to conservation conditions. Vendors that support developers or municipalities with permitting, mitigation design, and construction-phase compliance could engage with the proponent or town staff as the project conditions are shaped.

Project is at the environmental permitting stage via Notice of Intent; conservation conditions may d...

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The Natick Planning Board is conducting an ongoing site plan review for redevelopment of 273 West Central Street as a mixed-use residential development with associated site improvements. The project is under detailed review against multiple sections of the Natick Zoning Bylaws, including aquifer protection requirements, with public hearings opened in March 2026 and continued through at least July 1, 2026. Because the project is still in the permitting and design review phase, downstream decisions on full site engineering, utilities, vertical construction, and related professional services are likely not yet fully awarded. Vendors in architecture, civil and traffic engineering, environmental services, mixed-use construction, and permitting support can position themselves to assist the developer or town with plan refinement, compliance documentation, and future phases such as infrastructure upgrades and inspections once approvals are finalized.

Project information is hosted on Natick’s OpenGov portal under record 226491; legal notices were adv...

Town of Natick
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Pre-RFP

The agenda lists a public hearing for Antone P. Roderick’s Definitive Subdivision Application at 128 Hart Street (Map 20, Lot 100-1). A definitive subdivision typically involves detailed civil design, roadway and utility layouts, and compliance with subdivision regulations, signaling future infrastructure and site construction work once approved. While no contractor has been identified, this stage suggests upcoming needs for engineering, surveying, roadway construction, underground utilities, and possibly inspection and clerk-of-works services. Vendors can monitor this item to time outreach around design refinements, permitting conditions, and subsequent bidding or construction support work associated with the new subdivision.

Project site is 128 Hart Street, Map 20, Lot 100-1, in Dighton, MA.

Dighton Electric Light District
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