Recent News

Application for Qualitative Control Waiver

SC-956 Improvements to the Sanitary Sewer Collection System in the Herring Run Sewershed Part I: Sanitary Sewers, Northeast Baltimore City, Baltimore City, Maryland

Application for Redevelopment Waiver

Holabird Academy PK-8
1500 Imla Street
Baltimore City, Maryland

Application for Redevelopment Waiver

Yard 56
5601 Eastern Avenue
Baltimore, Maryland 21224

Application for Redevelopment Waiver

Walbrook Mill Apartments
2636 W. North Avenue
Baltimore City, Maryland

DPW Releases Fiscal Year 2017 Annual Report

The Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) Fiscal Year 2017 Annual Report is now available. The 23-page report features DPW’s continued commitment to improving its water billing system, its role in the acclaimed documentary “Rat Film,” and projects to rehabilitate the City’s water and sewer infrastructure.

Sanitary Sewer Overflow Numbers in Steady Decline

Sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) in Baltimore have been in decline for five consecutive years, falling 31 percent since Fiscal Year 2012, according to a review by the Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW). In the fiscal year concluded June 30, 2017, Baltimore recorded 464 SSOs. That is down from 670 SSOs in Fiscal 2012.

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Application for Qualitative Control Waiver

Water Main Replacement and Rehabilitation at Franklin Square Neighborhood and Vicinity

Application for Qualitative Control Waiver

UPTON NEIGHBORHOOD AND VICINITY WATER MAIN REHABILITATION
Locations: Upton Neighborhood and Vicinity
Baltimore City, Maryland

Holiday Recycling is Easy - New E-cycling Vendor

Remember this holiday season to recycle your old, broken, and unwanted electrical appliances by dropping them off at any of Baltimore’s five citizen drop off locations.  You may be helping to support jobs for workers with physical or mental challenges.  Baltimore’s new electronics recycling vendor – CyclePoint from SourceAmerica – creates sustainable jobs for people with significant disabilities.

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Accidental Release of Magnesium Hydroxide

The Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) announces the accidental release of 856 gallons of magnesium hydroxide into the Patapsco River. The chemical, which is used during the wastewater pretreatment process, started to leak at 1 p.m. on the afternoon of Friday, Dec. 8.

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