WASHINGTON - Recreational activities on the Potomac River may be allowed sooner than many people expected after the sewage ...
The Virginia Department of Health is partially lifting its recreational water advisory for portions of the Potomac River ...
Recreational activity at the Potomac River may resume after the advisory was lifted in Washington, D.C., on Monday morning.
People who kayak, row, fish and paddleboard on the Potomac River may soon get the all clear to return after the massive sewage spill earlier this month.
The Virginia Department of Health (VDH) announced that it is partially lifting a recreational water advisory for the Potomac River, effective immediately.
Cabin John residents and local river clubs say they need data, guidance and water quality testing heading into the warmer seasons.
Several entities are conducting water quality sampling, primarily for E. coli. DC Water reports that E. coli levels are steadily decreasing.
A broken pipe sent a gusher of sewage into the river near Washington. Some people may try to row, sail or fish. But skeptics are steering clear.
The Virginia Department of Health is now officially warning residents to stay out of a 72.5-mile stretch of the Potomac River after weeks of sewage spill fallout. VDH issued a recreational water ...
More than 150 residents, many from Cabin John and Glen Echo, attended the DC Water community meeting held at Whitman High in Bethesda.