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Much of the meeting was spent reviewing the history of the service agreement that has the city and county sharing a drinking water and sanitary sewer system.
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Baltimore will soon have an official network of water trails to take in the city’s sights by canoe, kayak or stand-up paddleboard.
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A new task force of city and county leaders could lead to changes for the vast water and sewage system serving nearly 2 million people in Baltimore and nearby counties. Plus, city residents seek relief from sewage backups caused by Baltimore's century-old wastewater system.
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It’s estimated that 200 million Americans were exposed to PFAS through drinking water.
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The Baltimore City Fire Department ruled that the explosion was “accidental.”
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Clean Harbors will treat the water at their local facility and then send it back to Ohio.
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Under the state program requirements, the Baltimore City Department of Public Works is required to allocate payments as bill credits to customer accounts while also waiving late fees and interest penalties.
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An industrial wastewater plant in Baltimore will process a significant amount of contaminated water from the Palestine, Ohio train derailment. Then the treated water would be released into the Back River plant system.
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Officials want a task force to study how the city provides water to the region.
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City leaders questioned why the department withheld information from the public soon after E. coli bacteria was detected in drinking water.