citypaper: archives

Above It All
If you're a District resident who cares about cars, children, or crime, it sucks to be you.

Cover Story

On Jan. 31, the Washington Post reported scandalously high levels of lead in D.C. water. After conducting tests at 6,118 homes over the past summer, the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority (WASA) had found that two-thirds of the samples tested above the federal lead limit of 15 parts per billion.

What’s more, WASA had failed to inform the public—save for a cheery pamphlet indistinguishable from those throwaway newsletters the agency slides between the pages of water bills.

The people were predictably outraged. They decried all the players in sight—WASA, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and, of course, those pesky lead service lines.

Mayor Anthony A. Williams and At-Large D.C. Councilmember Carol Schwartz penned a letter calling the lead levels “unacceptable” and asked for congressional hearings on the matter. Melody Webb, of the parents’ group Water for D.C. Kids, said, “While experts seek answers, parents and caregivers want clean water alternatives now...”

But the municipal-failure-stokes-public-backlash story hadn’t played itself out just yet, thanks to another bout of city dysfunction: It took D.C. Department of Health bureaucrats about a month to send a health advisory letter to the homes most affected by the lead crisis.

And so another round of chanting bellowed from D.C. kitchens and bathrooms—cries of environmental racism, calls for more water filters, and the emergence of organizations designed to help residents decipher wonky water-speak. ... Continued

Issue of Apr. 2 - 8, 2004

News and Features

Columns

Eats

Movies

Music

Theater

Arts and Events

  • Dear Reader
    Richard Peabody has lost thousands publishing Washington's foremost literary magazine. If only he actually liked it here.
    Arts
  • Flesh Tones
    Artifacts
  • First Blood
    Artifacts
  • A Little Pat
    Books
  • Pure Projection
    Show & Tell

City Lights

This week's best in Arts and Entertainment.

DC SEARCH
calendar
restaurants
movies
classified
personals

Find an Event

Enter a keyword, select the type of event, and the particular day this week below.

Submit your event to the City Paper's Event Calendar.

Find a Restaurant

Enter a restaurant name, or select a cuisine and neighborhood below.

Find a Movie

Select a movie theater in the box below to see a list of all movies at that theater.

...Or view a full list of theaters, films, and showtimes.

Search Classified Ads

Post a Classified Ad

Find It

Find a Match

Age range: to
Find It

Who saw you? Check I Saw You
Looking for something kinky? Wild Side

City Paper Newsletter
advertisement

CP Events

Naughty and nice

This Week

Current Issue
The Issue of Sep. 5 - 11, 2008

This Week in
City Paper History

  • WILLIAMS EYEING HISTORY
    Aug. 28 - Sep. 3, 1998
  • The Big Takeover
    The Frodus conglomerate builds a Fairfax empire out of pancakes, bikini briefs, and hardcore irony.
    Aug. 29 - Sep. 4, 1997
  • Dicked Over
    Penile implants were sold as a safe cure for impotence, but a D.C. lawyer says the manufacturer gave his clients the shaft.
    Aug. 29 - Sep. 4, 1997
advertisement
advertisement