Washington_Suburban_Sanitary_Commission

Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission

Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission

Political subdivision of Maryland


The Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission (WSSC Water) is a bi-county political subdivision of the State of Maryland[2] that provides safe drinking water and wastewater treatment for Montgomery and Prince George's Counties in Maryland except for a few cities in both counties that continue to operate their own water facilities.

Quick Facts Abbreviation, Formation ...

The Commission is one of the largest water and wastewater utilities in the United States. WSSC Water serves about 1.9 million people in an approximately 1,000-square-mile (2,600 km2) area. It owns and manages over 11,000 miles (18,000 km) of water and sewer mains.[4]

Operations

A bi-county agency, WSSC Water has extensive regulatory functions. It promulgates and enforces the plumbing code for its jurisdiction as well as reviews and approves contract plans for extensions of water and sewer mains. The agency operates 3 reservoirs (plus shared access to a fourth reservoir), 2 drinking water filtration plants, and 6 water resource recovery facilities. It also collects wastewater which is treated at the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant (operated by DC Water) in Washington, D.C.[5][6][7]

Facilities

Reservoirs

  1. Shared resource with Fairfax County Water Authority and Washington Aqueduct. Jennings Randolph Lake, operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, is also shared by these water suppliers.

Drinking water filtration plants

  • Patuxent
  • Potomac
  • Robert Morse (in operation 1936-1962)[8][9]

Water Resource Recovery Facilities

Seneca Wastewater Treatment Plant in 2011
More information Plant, Location ...
  1. Design flow (maximum) in mgd: million gallons per day
  2. WSSC Water allocation is 169.90 mgd. Total plant capacity is 370.00 mgd.

Management

WSSC Water is overseen by six commissioners, three from Montgomery County and three from Prince George's County. These commissioners are appointed by their respective county executives with the approval of the county councils. The day-to-day operations are the responsibility of a general manager/chief executive officer, who supervises a staff of over 1,700. The Commission's budget information can be found here. The agency's headquarters office is located in Laurel, Maryland.

History

In 1911, Asa Phillips, sanitary engineer for the District of Columbia, convened a meeting with local residents to discuss the problem of Montgomery and Prince George's counties polluting the streams that flowed into the District. The pollution of the streams was a major health concern for the residents of the District of Columbia. The people at the meeting advised the Maryland General Assembly that a study of the problem was needed. The Assembly passed a bill authorizing the Governor of Maryland to appoint a study commission in 1912.[10]

As a result of the recommendation of the study commission, Maryland Delegate Paul Waters introduced a bill to establish the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, and the General Assembly passed the bill on April 8, 1916. WSSC Water was originally created to study the drainage situation in Montgomery and Prince George's counties and to recommend the best possible sewage system.[1]

In 1918, the Commission released its report, written by Robert B. Morse and Harry Hall, to the General Assembly. The report recommended establishing a permanent Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission as a bi-county agency for water and sewage. The report included a plan for construction for the next 22 years. T. Howard Duckett drafted a law officially establishing WSSC Water as a permanent bi-county agency. Following lobbying by E. Brooke Lee, the law was passed, effective May 1, 1918. William T.S. Curtis of Montgomery County, Emory H. Bogley of Montgomery County, and Duckett of Prince George's County were named commissioners.[10]

Duckett visited Elizabeth, New Jersey, which had financed its sewage plan by having a front-foot benefit charge and a land tax, with the house connections installed at the cost of each property owner. WSSC Water requested a similar arrangement in Maryland, and the county governments certified the levy in March 1919, using the rate of $0.015 per $100 of assessed property.[10]

Drinking water facilities

In 1919 WSSC Water purchased the Takoma Park water system, which drew water from Sligo Creek. To provide additional capacity, the commission bought a used water filtration plant from Culpeper, Virginia, and installed the system along the Northwest Branch near Burnt Mills. This facility was replaced with a new system, the Robert B. Morse Water Filtration Plant, in the 1930s. Later, a pipeline was built to bring water from the Patuxent River at Mink Hollow to the filtration plant in Burnt Mills. Triadelphia Reservoir was built on the Patuxent and opened in 1943.[10]

In 1944, the Patuxent River Filtration Plant was built near Laurel. The T. Howard Duckett Dam and Reservoir was completed in 1952, adding more capacity.[10] The 2023 average delivery level for the Patuxent plant is 110 mgd.[11] The Potomac River drinking water plant opened in 1961, with an initial capacity of 30 mgd.[12] The 2023 average delivery level is 280 mgd.[11]

Sewage treatment facilities

WSSC Water connected its trunk sewers near Washington, DC into the Blue Plains system beginning in the 1930s, as the treatment plant began operation. The commission built its first sewage treatment plant in Bladensburg in the 1940s; in the 1950s this plant was closed as additional connections were made to the Blue Plains system. Most of the WSSC sewers in Montgomery County are now served by the Blue Plains plant, except for the northern portion of the county, which is served by the Seneca plant, which opened in the 1970s. In Prince George's County, the Parkway plant was built in the 1950s, followed by the Piscataway and Western Branch plants in the 1960s.[12]

See also


References

  1. "Suburban Drainage Study. Marylanders Interested in Bill Which Is Likely to Benefit District". The Washington Post. April 9, 1916. p. ES13. ProQuest 145459141 via Proquest.
  2. Financial Information (Report). Laurel, MD: Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission (WSSC Water). 2021-05-20.
  3. WSSC Water. "Our Governance". Retrieved July 10, 2017.
  4. "Overview". WSSC Water. 2021-05-20.
  5. "Water Filtration". WSSC Water. 2021-05-20.
  6. "Wastewater Treatment". WSSC Water. 2021-05-20.
  7. "Innovation: Burnt Mills Plant". WSSC Water. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
  8. Marston, Christopher H. (2008). "Robert B. Morse Water Filtration Plant, Cover Sheet". Historic American Engineering Record, MD-166. National Park Service.
  9. Brigham, Arthur. "The Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission". The Montgomery County Story. Montgomery County Historical Society. 21. 3. August 1978.
  10. "Production Department". WSSC Water. 2022-04-29.
  11. "WSSC History". WSSC Water. 2021-05-20.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Washington_Suburban_Sanitary_Commission, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.