Here you go:
A
D.C. Council member on Monday called on the city to establish a relief fund
that would assist residents of a neighborhood often beset by flooding.
Kenyan
McDuffie (D-Ward 5) said the rainwater inundating residents in Bloomingdale
during Sunday night’s storms was fresh evidence of the need for District
government to intervene.
“No
resident should have to live like the residents of Bloomingdale have to live
now,” McDuffie said.
Sunday’s
storm prompted 27 calls to the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority about flooding,
about half of them from addresses within the adjoining neighborhoods of LeDroit
Park and Bloomingdale in Northwest Washington, said agency spokesman Alan
Heymann.
District
workers cleared catch basins and distributed sandbags Monday. The forecast of
one to two inches of rain over the next 24 hours is not expected to be enough
to cause additional flooding, Heymann said.
Bloomingdale
and LeDroit Park, west of North Capitol Street and north of Florida Avenue,
have long been plagued by flooding. The area’s antiquated sewage system has
been further strained by developers adding lines to serve new housing.
In
July, dozens of basement apartments were flooded by dirty water.
The
authority has undertaken a $600 million project to build a flood relief tunnel
by 2025. In the meantime, Mayor Vincent C. Gray (D) last month announced the
formation of a flood prevention task force to look for shorter-term solutions
for LeDroit Park and Bloomingdale.
McDuffie,
whose legislative district includes those neighborhoods, said he envisions a
relief fund as a local version of what the federal government establishes when
disaster strikes states, distributing money to residents whose homes are
damaged.
“There
are residents who have spent thousands of dollars hiring professionals to
remove sewage from their basements,” he said. “Now is the time to fix this.”
Asked
about the concept of a relief fund, Heymann said, “It’s something we’d have to
discuss with our board before we had any comment on it.”
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