Recent News

‘Slow Down to Get Around’ City Workers

Slow down when you drive around a stopped trash truck or other utility vehicle. The Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) reminds people that being extra careful around workers is not just a good idea; as of Monday, Oct. 1, 2018, it’s the law in Maryland. The “Slow Down to Get Around” law protects trash and recycling collectors by requiring drivers to change lanes as they approach stopped utility vehicles, or to slow to a “reasonable and prudent speed” when they drive past. 

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Two DPW Workers Lauded for Heroism

Baltimore City Department of Public Works employees Tony Carl Clark and Martine Smith are being lauded for saving a life while on the job performing their daily graffiti removal duties. Clark and Smith were traveling along the 1300 block of Baylis Street when they were flagged down by a man.  They stopped, and the man asked the two City workers to help him render assistance to a woman who was unconscious in the driver’s seat of her vehicle.  

Remnants of Hurricane Florence Trigger Sanitary Sewer Overflows

The remains of Hurricane Florence brought heavy rain to the Baltimore area on Tuesday, Sept. 18, and resulted in approximately 19 million gallons of stormwater mixed with sewer water, most of it flowing into the Jones Falls.

Design Build Executive Committee Meeting

AGENDA
Design Build Executive Committee Meeting
Friday, September 28, 2018 at 11 am
DPW Director’s Conference Room

Smart Cans Arriving to Keep Baltimore Beautiful

Smart Cans – sun-powered trash compactors that let Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) sanitation employees know when they need to be emptied – are arriving on sidewalks in South Baltimore.

DPW Delivers Fall Cleaning & Greening Opportunities

As fall blows in, Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) is offering opportunities for residents to clean, beautify, and green their neighborhoods.

The highlight of the City’s fall clean and green opportunities will be the Mayor’s Fall Cleanup on Saturday, Oct. 27. Call 311 now to register your cleaning activity.

Heavy Labor Day Weekend Rain Leads to SSOs

A downpour on Sunday, September 9, resulted in approximately 24.5 million gallons of stormwater, mixed with sewer water, entering the Jones Falls. An additional 3,000 gallons overflowed into the Gwynns Falls. Almost all of this was released through structured overflows. 

DPW Prepares for Hurricane Florence

In anticipation that Hurricane Florence may affect the Baltimore area later this week, the Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) is taking steps to keep its around-the-clock water and sew

storm preparations

Heavy Labor Day Weekend Rain Leads to SSOs

A downpour late on Friday, Aug. 31, resulted in approximately 6.4 million gallons of stormwater mixed with sewer water spilling from the sewer system into city waterways. 

seweroverflowJones FallsSSO

Baltimore’s Drinking Water Reservoirs Have Excellent Storage as Fall Approaches

Baltimore City Department of Public Works Director Rudolph S. Chow, P.E., announced today that Baltimore’s three raw-water reservoirs will enter autumn with an abundant supply of water for our 1.8 million customers.

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