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Trump declares that the US government will step in to protect Potomac River following sewage leak

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that the federal government would step in on Monday to protect the Potomac River after a major sewer pipe collapsed in Washington, D.C., last month. In a post on social media, Trump said: "I'm directing Federal Authorities immediately to provide all necessary management, direction, and coordination to protect the Potomac River, the Water Supply of the Capital Region, as well as our precious National Resources in our Nation’s Capital City."

Maryland's Democratic governor Wes Moore has accused the Republican administration of failing to act on this issue. He also said that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency had not attended a legislative hearing held Friday?on cleanup.

The spokesperson for the Governor said that the Trump administration had not gotten the memo about their actual responsibility here. She added that the federal government was responsible for the Potomac Interceptor sewage line, the source of the sewage spill.

On January 19, a sewer line collapsed in Montgomery County, Maryland. This caused an 'overflow of over 240 million gallons of wastewater (909 million liters). The University of Maryland has called it the largest sewage spill in U.S. History.

Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley have found high levels of bacteria that cause disease and fecal pathogens. This raises urgent concerns for public health and highlights the dangers posed by an aging sewer system.

The EPA stated that it did not invite Maryland state legislators to brief them on the spill, as DC Water and Maryland had led the response to the leak. The EPA will continue to perform its oversight function, coordinate with DC Water, and inform Congress.

FEMA TO STEP IN, SAYS PRESIDENT

Trump stated that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which has experienced significant staff reductions since Trump took office in early 2025 will coordinate the response. Climate activists have criticised Trump's reductions in domestic climate regulations as well as the U.S. withdrawing from global environmental agreements.

Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, D.C., said that she had no comment about Trump's announcement, but pointed out a page from the website of the local government which stated that?drinking waters in the area were safe and weren't affected by the sewage leak. According to the website,?DC Water has been working on measures that will contain the spill and fix the pipeline.

Trump, since returning to the White House in 2017, has tried to exert control over Democratic-led areas, including the nation’s capital. He has done this by using armed immigration agents, National Guard troops and threats of?cutting federal funding.

Since Trump's first deployment in August, more than 2,000 National Guard soldiers have been stationed in Washington. Trump claims that his actions are meant to improve domestic security. Democrats and rights activists say that these actions are aimed at political opponents, and they amount to federal overreach. (Reporting and editing by Scott Malone; Paul Simao, Lisa Shumaker, and Scott Malone)

(source: Reuters)