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Broken WSSC sewage pipe may take more than a week to fix

WASHINGTON 鈥 A Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission sewage pipe that broke Thursday, sending millions of gallons of waste water into Piscataway Creek that afternoon and evening, is still broken and it may take more than a week before it鈥檚 ultimately fixed.

By late Thursday night, WSSC had begun diverting the waste water into drainage basins on the site of the treatment plant in Accokeek, Maryland. From there, the utility started building temporary pipes to bypass the basins and send the waste water directly into the plant for treatment. Each pipeline is about 2,000 feet long, but only one is up and running.

鈥淎bout half of it [the waste water] is going into the retention basins and half of it is moving through the 2,000 feet of temporary pipe,鈥 said WSSC spokeswoman Lyn Riggins. With crews hard at work on a second pipeline, by midweek she聽expects all of the waste “to be flowing through聽the 4,000 feet of temporary pipe,” with the retention basins used as a backup.

But the permanent fix needed at the site of the broken sewer line is far more complex than your average water main repair.

鈥淪itting on top of that sewer main are high voltage electrical lines,鈥 said Riggins. 鈥淪o it鈥檚 not a simple fix where we can flip a switch and de-energize those lines.

鈥淲e鈥檙e working on a plan. We鈥檝e been working around the clock through this weekend to figure out how we can do that. As soon as we can safely do that then we can dig down and start addressing the repairs on the broken sewer line.鈥

Those electrical lines are covered by plastic pipes, which are then encased in concrete. Just getting to them will be difficult.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the process that we鈥檙e working through right now,鈥 said Riggins, 鈥渋s to make the situation safe. We need to de-energize those high voltage lines right now.

鈥淲e have to deal with the electrical lines first, and then start addressing the repairs. That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 going to be a multiday, very complicated repair process.鈥

Over three-million gallons of sewage made it into Piscataway Creek Thursday, but Riggins stressed that all sewage, at this point, was either moving through temporary pipes directly to treatment or being contained in those special basins on the site of the plant.

鈥淏y early next week we should have a better understanding of what鈥檚 going on with the electrical lines and then hopefully we can safely dig and figure out what鈥檚 going on with the sewer line,鈥 said Riggins.

John Domen

John has been with 蜜桃视频app since 2016 but has spent most of his life living and working in the DMV, covering nearly every kind of story imaginable around the region. He鈥檚 twice been named Best Reporter by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association.聽

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