District of Columbia Environmental Profile

Comprehensive environmental data from EPA sources for District of Columbia (DC)

Overview

TRI Facilities
11
Water Systems
12
Superfund Sites
1
Total Violations
51
Total Releases
17.5K lbs
Health Violations
9
water systems

Largest Polluters

View all →
# Facility Total Releases
1 US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS MCMILLAN WTP WASHINGTON AQUEDUC 14.2K lbs
2 FORT TOTTEN READY MIX CONCRETE 1.8K lbs
3 US SECRET SERVICE 627 lbs
4 JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA BOLLING RANGES 381 lbs
5 US DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY-BUREAU OF ENGRAVING & PRINTING 280 lbs
6 US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS DALECARLIA WTP 152 lbs
7 FORT MYER CONSTRUCTION PLANT 2 60 lbs
8 FORT MYER CONSTRUCTION PLANT 1 14 lbs
9 SUPERIOR CONCRETE MATERIALS INC. - WASHINGTON 0 lbs
10 VIRGINIA CONCRETE-SOUTHWEST DC PLANT 0 lbs
11 VIRGINIA CONCRETE QUEENS CHAPEL PLANT 0 lbs

Water Quality

Systems with Health Violations

Water System Population Violations
PASCHAL SHERMAN INDIAN SCHOOL 220 14
JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA - BOLLING 19,312 11
Dibe Yazhi Habitiin (Borrego Pass) Day School-BIE 120 7
NAVAL STATION WASHINGTON - WNY 15,690 6
D.C. WATER AND SEWER AUTHORITY 632,323 5
Lake Valley Navajo School - BIE 60 3
BIE CHEMAWA INDIAN SCHOOL 900 3
Eastern Navajo Agency - BIE 455 1
Fort Wingate Community 550 1

Cities with Water Issues

Superfund Sites (1)

Site Name Status HRS Score
Washington Navy Yard NPL Site 48.57

Counties (1 total)

County Population Facilities
District Of Columbia 11

Largest Cities

Washington
Pop: —
11 facilities · 12 water systems

About This Data

This page aggregates environmental data from three EPA programs for District of Columbia: the Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) for industrial chemical releases, the Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS) for water quality, and the Superfund National Priorities List (NPL) for hazardous waste cleanup sites.

PlainEnviro presents this data without advocacy framing. Numbers reflect reported data and may not capture all environmental activity. For specific health or environmental concerns, contact your state environmental agency.