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DC sues federal government over pollution in Anacostia River

The District of Columbia on Friday filed a lawsuit against the federal government over pollution in the Anacostia River, arguing it has inflicted 鈥渃atastrophic harm鈥 on the mostly poor and minority communities living along the urban waterway.
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FILE - An Anacostia Riverkeeper boat passes along the river during a tour on May 1, 2024, at Anacostia Park in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner)

The on Friday filed a lawsuit against the federal government over pollution in the Anacostia River, arguing it has inflicted 鈥渃atastrophic harm鈥 on the mostly poor and minority communities living along the urban waterway.

The lawsuit argues that federal government, which owns and controls the riverbed, has since the 1800s dumped toxic waste, heavy metals and chemicals including in the river and refused to clean it up. The 9-mile (14-kilometer) river flows through Washington, D.C. and parts of Maryland. For decades, it was treated as a municipal dumping ground for industrial waste, storm sewers and trash. That contamination largely affected communities of color.

The lawsuit alleges that PCBs from the Washington Navy Yard were dumped in the river along with hazardous chemicals from the Kenilworth Landfill and chemical waste from federal printing facilities. It also blamed the federal government for poorly managing the District of Columbia's sewer system, which led to the dumping of raw sewage and toxic waste into the river.

That pollution has led to swimming bans and warnings about fishing along the river, the lawsuit alleges, calling the federal government its biggest polluter.

鈥淚t has systematically contaminated the River through the indiscriminate dumping and release of hazardous substances and through destructive dredge and fill operations,鈥 the lawsuit says.

The Justice Department wouldn't comment on the lawsuit.

District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb said pollutants in the river don't break down and cause long-lasting harm to the environment, aquatic wildlife, and human health, including cancer, neurological and developmental disorders and birth defects.

Trey Sherard of Anacostia Riverkeeper, a group dedicated to restoring the river, welcomed the lawsuit for what he described as the federal government's 鈥渞eckless and significant pollution of the Anacostia River for over 150 years.鈥

鈥淲e had high hopes for the voluntary process the District initiated after advocacy by Anacostia Riverkeeper and other local nonprofits over a decade ago for the Anacostia River Sediment Project,鈥 he said. "Now we hope this lawsuit keeps the cleanup project moving ahead swiftly and completely with physical work on remedial actions in the river to begin this year, and with the federal government paying their fair share.鈥

The District of Columbia is demanding that the federal government pay for the river's cleanup.

The lawsuit comes as the District of Columbia has made progress in cleaning up the river and returning to a time when residents fished and boated and wildlife including bald eagles, osprey, cranes, kingfishers and eel thrived there.

A $3.29 billion sewer upgrade, including a series of tunnels drilled under the city to capture storm and sewage water, has reduced overflows into the river by 91%, according to DC Water, the city鈥檚 water utility. The final section of the Anacostia Tunnel System went online in 2023, and the overall system is expected to reduce overflows by 98%.

Pepco, the city鈥檚 utility, also reached an agreement with the District of Columbia to pay more than $57 million for discharging hazardous chemicals from their power plants into soil, groundwater and storm sewers for decades that polluted the Anacostia and other areas. The settlement was believed to be the largest in the utility鈥檚 history.

The payments will be used in part to clean up the river. Other measures the city government instituted like a fee on plastic bags since 2009 have also helped keep trash out, experts say.

Still, the Anacostia remains polluted. It received a failing grade for the third time in six years in 2023 from a nonprofit that grades the river鈥檚 health based on its fecal bacteria content and the state of its aquatic vegetation.

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The Associated Press鈥 climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP鈥檚 for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at .

Michael Casey, The Associated Press

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