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https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/2026/04/02/potomac-interceptor-sewer-repair-delay/The D.C.-area utility responsible for a massive sewer line that failed catastrophically in January had planned to reinforce the aging section years ago but repeatedly delayed construction as federal officials studied potential environmental impacts, including risks to a blue wildflower and an endangered bat species, a Washington Post investigation found.
D.C. Water asked the National Park Service for permission to fast-track repairs in 2018, after inspectors found widespread corrosion and detached rebar in one area of the six-foot-wide concrete pipe that runs under federal parkland in Maryland, records show. The utility sought to strengthen a three-quarter-mile section that included the point that later ruptured.
Left unaddressed, it warned, the corrosion could “result in a catastrophic failure leading to the release of raw sewage into soil, groundwater, and waterways,” records show.
But the National Park Service’s environmental review dragged on for years and was still not complete when the pipe collapsed — a delay that experts said appeared to flout a 2020 federal rule requiring such examinations be done within one year.
“That’s a process gone wrong,” said Eric Beightel, a former director of the Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council, a body formed by Congress to streamline approvals for the nation’s largest infrastructure projects.
A review by The Post of more than 2,600 public utility documents reveals how concerns about the removal of trees and vegetation, along with other environmental impacts, postponed repairs to the Potomac Interceptor. The pipe continued to degrade for more than seven years before it failed on Jan. 19 and released one of the largest spills of untreated wastewater in U.S. history. Enough raw sewage to fill 364 Olympic-size swimming pools flushed into the Potomac River north of the nation’s capital, exacting an ecological toll that scientists are still trying to calculate.
National Park Service spokeswoman Christiana Hanson acknowledged the review process was lengthy but blamed D.C. Water for repeatedly proposing changes to its repair plans, which forced the Park Service each time to restart its environmental assessment, or EA.
“The length of the EA process is not a reflection of delays on the part of NPS,” said Hanson, a Park Ranger for the C & O Canal National Historical Park, which controls the Maryland land where the pipe failed. “It’s really showing more that the project scope and design changed over time … and that is set by D.C. Water.”
EXCERPT
Bottom line: It was the National Park Service's fault.

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