Intermunicipal Agreement

The Blue Plains Intermunicipal Agreement (IMA) of 1985 is the arrangement under which DC Water's regional facilities, such as the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant and Potomac Interceptor sewer, are funded, managed and operated. The District of Columbia, Montgomery and Prince George's Counties in Maryland, and Fairfax County in Virginia are all signatories to the IMA. The agreement defines the rights, obligations and responsibilities of the parties regarding the capacity at Blue Plains, management of facilities for wastewater transmission and treatment, and biosolids management. The IMA also resolved flow and capacity allocation issues while providing for a regional water quality program and biosolids management plan.

Since the IMA's signing in 1985, several significant changes have occurred in the region that the signatories could not foresee at that time - primarily the creation of DC Water (then DC WASA) as a quasi-independent instrumentality of the District Government. Federal requirements and technological advances have also changed the treatment process, greatly reducing the amount of nutrients DC Water can discharge into the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay. The chief administrative officers of the four jurisdictions recognized this concern and recommended that the Blue Plains IMA committees review the agreement and suggest a process and format through which it could be updated. The committees, working in conjunction with the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, defined key updates and produced an annotated version of the IMA to identify the areas that need to be updated or renegotiated. The participating jurisdictions are now renegotiating the IMA.

Upcoming Meeting

Board of Directors Meeting

April 24, 2023

Monday 9:00 AM

Announcement

DC Water Officials with NPS and ANC commissioners doing ceremonial groundbreaking
DC Water Breaks Ground on Piney Branch Tunnel, Final Phase of DC Clean Rivers Project

Today, DC Water broke ground on the Piney Branch Tunnel, the final major tunnel in our Clean Rivers Project. This work will help keep sewage and trash out of local waterways and make Rock Creek, the Potomac River, and the Chesapeake Bay cleaner for our community.

When we finish the Piney Branch Tunnel, it will hold at least 4.2 million gallons of rainwater and wastewater during heavy storms. Instead of overflowing into Piney Branch, that water will go to the Blue Plains Water Resource Recovery Facility, where it will be treated.

Latest Blog Post
Five photos from the American Water Works Association (AWWA) ACE26 conference featuring panel discussions, technical presentations, networking, and attendees posing at the ACE26 display.
ACE26 Highlights: How DC Water Advanced the Conversation on Water
More than 80 DC Water employees joined thousands of water professionals in Washington, D.C., sharing expertise, building partnerships and advancing conversations that will help shape the future of water.
Upcoming Meeting
Date
July 23, 2026
Thursday, 9:30 AM

Upcoming Events

Jul 23
Jul 25

Customer Service Center Announcement

Payment Plan Incentive: provides a credit back of 50% of the last 3 payments made. Eligible participants are residential customers who have had an outstanding balance for 60 days or greater and with an outstanding balance of $500 or more.