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The Maryland Department of the Environment says the Potomac is “healthier today than it was a generation ago,” barely three months after a crucial sewer line split open and flooded the river with close to 250 million gallons of untreated human waste. | Collector
The Maryland Department of the Environment says the Potomac is “healthier today than it was a generation ago,” barely three months after a crucial sewer line split open and flooded the river with close to 250 million gallons of untreated human waste.
The Washington Times

The Maryland Department of the Environment says the Potomac is “healthier today than it was a generation ago,” barely three months after a crucial sewer line split open and flooded the river with close to 250 million gallons of untreated human waste.

The Maryland Department of the Environment says the Potomac is “healthier today than it was a generation ago,” barely three months after a crucial sewer line split open and flooded the river with close to 250 million gallons of untreated human waste.

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