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DC WASA customers can check their daily water consumption online and receive phone or email alerts if usage spikes, which could be a leak or plumbing problem. | |||
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DCWASA encourages customers to use water wisely and conserve our most important natural resource. Customers benefit from conserving water by lowering their water bills and doing something good for the environment. More Conservation Information
Like many older cities, a portion of the District is served by sewers, built at the end of the 19th century, that carry both sanitary sewage and stormwater in the same pipe to the wastewater treatment plant. The system works well in dry weather; but the sewers are not large enough to hold both wastewater and stormwater during heavy rainfall. As a result, overflow outfalls are installed along the system to reduce street and basement flooding by diverting polluting CSOs directly into the Potomac and Anacostia rivers, Rock Creek, and other tributaries. DCWASA is implementing a 20-year, $2 billion program to reduce 96 percent of these discharges. More Information On CSOs and DCWASA's Long Term Control Plan | |||
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