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Inside the D.C. hot spots where Trump and his MAGA allies will play

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Inside the D.C. hot spots where Trump and his MAGA allies will play


When Donald Trump, his aides and his allies swept into Washington, D.C. in 2017 they had an obvious hangout. 

Trump had turned the Old Post Office building into the ornate Trump International Hotel Washington D.C., located just four blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. 

It gave those in the MAGA movement a comfortable cocoon away from the droves of liberals who make up the vast majority of the population of the nation’s capital. 

Now, eight years later, that property is a Waldorf Astoria, meaning MAGA doesn’t have a natural home base – unless Trump buys it back, as some reporting suggested he might last week. 

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The nearby Harry’s – the Hotel Harrington’s dive bar that had its reputation tainted due to being outed as a Proud Boys hangout – also shuttered since Trump was last in office. 

Hill Country Barbecue, where Trump White House staffers often gathered Wednesday nights for the popular live band karaoke session, is in the middle of lease negotiations.

But the restaurant group’s founder & CEO Marc Glosserman assured DailyMail.com that it was sticking around. 

‘We have been working with our landlord to extend our lease in this location, and we fully expect to secure a long-term future for Hill Country there,’ Glosserman said in an email. ‘It’s great to learn that we have fans in the incoming administration!’ he added. 

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Washington, D.C.’s Trump International Hotel turned into a Waldorf Astoria during President Joe Biden’s administration. President-elect Donald Trump has still held press conferences there and aides and allies still frequent the Waldorf due to its proximity to the White House

Hill Country Barbecue was a popular hangout for Trump White House during the first Trump administration. Young aides would frequent the Wednesday live band karaoke sessions. Now the establishment's Boot Bar holds line dancing sessions

Hill Country Barbecue was a popular hangout for Trump White House during the first Trump administration. Young aides would frequent the Wednesday live band karaoke sessions. Now the establishment’s Boot Bar holds line dancing sessions

That hasn’t always been the enthusiastic greeting Trump-aligned restaurant-goers receive in D.C. 

Trump’s Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen once attracted a crowd of protesters yelling ‘shame’ while she was dining at MXDC’s now shuttered downtown location in 2018. 

That occurred days after Stephen Miller, who is returning for Trump 2.0, got called a ‘fascist’ by a fellow patron at another Mexican restaurant, Espita Mezcaleria, which has since closed. 

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One D.C. pizzeria that congratulated Trump on his victory last month received online hate from some D.C. residents. 

But there overall seems to be a thawing this time around.  

‘I think there’s more of an open mind these days,’ said a former and future Trump White House staffer who declined to be named to speak freely. ‘I think it’s like a different world right now.’

David Rubenstein, the billionaire philanthropist who is the Chairman of the Boards of the Kennedy Center, expressed an eagerness to see Donald and Melania Trump join D.C. society a little more. 

Speaking to DailyMail.com at the recent Kennedy Center Honors he noted how Trump skipped the A-list event in the past but added ‘now we’re looking for the future.’ 

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Supporters watch returns at a campaign election night watch party

Supporters watch returns at a campaign election night watch party

Now President-elect Donald Trump is seen departing the Washington, D.C. Waldorf Astoria - which formerly was his Trump International Hotel. Trump and his aides and allies still continue to frequent the space due to its close proximity to 1600 Pennsylvania

Now President-elect Donald Trump is seen departing the Washington, D.C. Waldorf Astoria – which formerly was his Trump International Hotel. Trump and his aides and allies still continue to frequent the space due to its close proximity to 1600 Pennsylvania 

‘I’m optimistic that he will want to come, but we’ll see. I can’t speak for him,’ Rubenstein said. ‘We always invite the President United States, and we’ll make certain that he knows about the invitation.’ 

Restaurateur Fritz Brogan, whose Mission Group restaurants include some favorite hangouts in Washington’s Navy Yard neighborhood, said he’s also observed more openness this time around.

‘I think in 2016, 2017 the city was more adversarial against Trump and his administration,’ Brogan said. ‘Now you see Mayor Bowser and the city try to work across the aisle and work with the incoming administration on returning workers to the office and bringing the (football) stadium back to D.C. 

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‘I think people are hoping that there’s sort of a flood of people and new revenue and maybe a safer D.C. in a couple of years,’ he added. 

Brogan pointed that D.C.’s restaurant industry is in a very different place than it was in 2017 – thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, traditionally downtown workers tele-commuting and a ballot initiative that raised the minimum wage for tipped workers.     

‘That’s why I think a lot of people these days are happy to take any kind of customer, whether it’s a tourist, a MAGA person, or whomever it might be, if they have money they want to spend,’ the restaurateur said. 

Brogan was miffed by a Washingtonian story that came out earlier this month that suggested that workers – as well as the expected patrons – would resist high-profile Trump-aligned customers.

He pointed out ‘our industry is in tough shape right now.’ 

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One Trump White House staffer pointed to one of Fritz Brogan's Navy Yard bars as a potential weekend hangout: Royal Sands Bar, which is Florida-themed and has an interior that looks like a swimming pool. Trump's now a Florida resident and tapped a lot of Floridians for his staff

One Trump White House staffer pointed to one of Fritz Brogan’s Navy Yard bars as a potential weekend hangout: Royal Sands Bar, which is Florida-themed and has an interior that looks like a swimming pool. Trump’s now a Florida resident and tapped a lot of Floridians for his staff

‘You want to focus on revenues first and political opinions second,’ Brogan said. 

In the piece, one D.C. restaurant veteran, the National Democratic Club’s Zac Hoffman, predicted bad behavior from liberal patrons. 

‘You expect the masses to just ignore RFK eating at (Washington restaurant) Le Diplomate on a Sunday morning after a few mimosas and not to throw a drink in his face?’ Hoffman said.

Hoffman was referencing Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Democrat-turned-independent-turned MAGA embracer who’s now Trump’s pick for Health and Human Services secretary, despite being a prominent anti-vaxxer. 

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But the story went further when Suzannah Van Rooy, a server and manager at Beuchert’s Saloon in Capitol Hill, told Washingtonian that she would refuse to serve ‘any person in office who I know of as being a sex trafficker or trying to deport millions of people.’ 

But those quotes got Van Rooy fired – with the restaurant saying in an Instagram post that her comments ‘clearly violate our zero-tolerance policy on discrimination.’

In a separate post on the social media site, Beuchert’s called Van Rooy’s comments ‘inappropriate, hostile, intolerant and unacceptable.’ 

‘In January, we will begin serving our fourth administration as a neighborhood restaurant open and welcoming to all,’ the post continued. ‘We will always be a safe space for all.’ 

Dirty Water hosted a number of 2024 events for the D.C. Young Republicans. Owner Luke Casey said the H Street NE dive bar skews toward young GOP staffers due to the low price point, the fact that it sells Busch Light and plays country music

Dirty Water hosted a number of 2024 events for the D.C. Young Republicans. Owner Luke Casey said the H Street NE dive bar skews toward young GOP staffers due to the low price point, the fact that it sells Busch Light and plays country music

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Dirty Water owner Luke Casey laughed when asked if his bar was a ‘safe space’ for Trump aides and other D.C. Republicans. 

He noted that it was ‘kind of crazy that you have a political party that has control of all three branches of government and you still need a safe space in the nation’s capital.’  

The dive bar located in D.C.’s H Street neighborhood, which isn’t too far away from Capitol Hill, became the place for D.C. Young Republicans to host events associated with the 2024 campaign – including debate watch parties and a Trump-themed election night shindig. 

He explained to DailyMail.com that the bar – which sometimes boasts $20 to $30 open bar specials – became an intern and young Hill staffer hangout because of the low price points. 

‘And we play country music, where like nobody else is going to do that,’ Casey said. ‘So. like, it does lean Republican.’ 

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Casey said he personally leans Republican too but added a caveat. ‘I care a lot more about sports than I do about politics,’ he said. 

He expected the bar would do something for Trump’s inauguration but wasn’t sure yet because January 20 is the same day as the College Football Playoff National Championship. 

Casey also said he didn’t think Trump’s senior aides would flock to the hangout but it would continue to attract GOP-leaning, younger staff – but added that’s not the point anyway.

Another bar that's been getting some pro-Trump buzz is the new Butterworth's but that's because Steve Bannon has rented out the Capitol Hill restaurant on several occasions due to the fact that he lives nearby

Another bar that’s been getting some pro-Trump buzz is the new Butterworth’s but that’s because Steve Bannon has rented out the Capitol Hill restaurant on several occasions due to the fact that he lives nearby  

‘Nobody is coming to Dirty Water to talk about politics, let’s put it that way. You’re coming because you want to have a good time and it just so happens that people who drink Busch Light happen to lean a lot more Republican than they do Democrat,’ he said. 

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Another bar that’s been getting some pro-Trump buzz is the new Butterworth’s but that’s because Steve Bannon has rented out the Capitol Hill restaurant on several occasions. 

Bannon has long entertained in Washington and used to do so from his Capitol Hill rowhome, which was dubbed the ‘Breitbart embassy,’ when he ran that news organization. 

The Embassy would host parties featuring petting zoos and mariachi bands. 

More recently he’s opted to rent bar space several blocks away – in what used to be D.C.’s historic Pour House.    

Butterworth’s Chef Bart Hutchins wouldn’t speak to that – but has been noticing an interesting eating trend, which could be driven by RFK Jr. and his Make America Healthy Again movement combining itself with the MAGA brand. 

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‘For ten years I’ve been cooking and building restaurants in D.C. I’ve focused on farm to table food, natural wines and the type of “back to the earth” cuisine that can be a hard sell,’ he noted. ‘As a result my audience has mostly been a certain type of young urban hipster or Berkeley fashioned older hippy types.’

‘In the past year and a half I’ve seen an uptick in younger right wing customers who are asking for bone marrow, organ meats, organic vegetables and sulpher-free wines,’ he observed. 

A former and future Trump White House aide said one of the White House adjacent bars could become the Trump 2.0 team's hotspot, including Bottom Line, a dive bar that's been a D.C. establishment for decades

A former and future Trump White House aide said one of the White House adjacent bars could become the Trump 2.0 team’s hotspot, including Bottom Line, a dive bar that’s been a D.C. establishment for decades 

The White House aide also mentioned Union Trust, which opened up in 2017 and is a new favorite among the downtown happy hour crowd. The aide said hangouts may just come down to convenience, with Union Trust a block and a half away from the White House

The White House aide also mentioned Union Trust, which opened up in 2017 and is a new favorite among the downtown happy hour crowd. The aide said hangouts may just come down to convenience, with Union Trust a block and a half away from the White House  

The White House aide who spoke to DailyMail.com said that the Trump 2.0 hangouts may just come down to convenience.

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One of the reasons Trump’s hotel was such a gathering place for staff was it’s location. It’s why the Waldorf Astoria continues to draw a pro-Trump crowd. 

‘It is so convenient, it’s just like right there,’ the Trump aide said. 

The source mentioned a number of bars surrounding the White House too that could end up being ground zero for White House staff – including the old school dive bar the Bottom Line, the newer Union Trust and then he anticipated, like during the first Trump term, aides and allies would head to Navy Yard. 

The Navy Yard neighborhood – that surrounds D.C.’s ballpark – became the place that many of Trump’s staffers moved during his first term. 

‘What some people fail to realize is our Fridays are f***ing tough. You know what I mean? You go home, you’re like, I want to get out of this suit, let’s just go to one of these bars,’ the aide said. 

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There, the aide said, the Brogan-owned Mission and Royal Sands are popular options. Royal Sands, in particular, looks like an indoor swimming pool and is Florida-themed – which might attract a number of members of Trump’s incoming team. 

Kate Andersen Brower, the author of The Residence and other books on D.C. institutions, suggested that the MAGA crowd may ditch Washington for the city’s ritzier suburbs, specifically the McLean area of Virginia. 

A Trump White House aide pointed to Mission Navy Yard as a potential place White House aides and allies will gather on the weekends, as many of the younger staffers picked the Navy Yard neighborhood as their place of residence

A Trump White House aide pointed to Mission Navy Yard as a potential place White House aides and allies will gather on the weekends, as many of the younger staffers picked the Navy Yard neighborhood as their place of residence 

She pointed out that D.C. and the Maryland suburbs voted for Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, while Virginia is governed by Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a Trump ally.  

‘Look at the percentages in D.C. who voted for Trump versus Kamala: huge. So I think that there’ll be more in like the McLean, Virginia area,’ she told DailyMail.com. 

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Three weeks after Trump’s election win, Youngkin filmed a video aimed at staffers relocating to the area. 

‘I want to personally invite you to make Virginia your home,’ Youngkin said. 

But even bumping out to the burbs may not make life easier, Brower pointed out, as many federal workers live there too – and Trump, along with Department of Government Efficiency advisers Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, have pledged widespread cuts. 

Firing doesn’t make for good friendships.

‘His promises to cut a bunch of federal government workers, when so many of them live in the suburbs, will only make it harder,’ Brower pointed out.

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‘People are really worried about their jobs. I mean, I’m sure you have friends in the government who aren’t sure what they’re going to do, and it’s a scary time, and so I don’t think they’ll be very welcome.’ 





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Students at Southeast charter school outperformed 75% of DC on citywide math test – WTOP News

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Students at Southeast charter school outperformed 75% of DC on citywide math test – WTOP News


Two years ago, leaders at Center City Public Charter School’s Congress Heights campus made a decision to offer more advanced math classes to some of their oldest students.

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Students at Southeast charter school outperformed 75% of DC on citywide math test

Two years ago, leaders at Center City Public Charter School’s Congress Heights campus in D.C. decided to offer more advanced math classes to some of their oldest students.

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The choice was complicated, and some educators wondered whether the kids would be ready.

To prepare for the possible change, Principal Niya White and her team visited high schools, both nearby and farther away, to see how algebra was being taught.

In some classrooms, White would see former students sleeping in the back. They were bored or had already finished their work.

For White, that made the choice clear — in order to set students up for success, they needed to expand their offerings so kids felt challenged and engaged by the time they reached high school.

“I’m born and raised here,” White said. “I was given the option of whether to leave Southeast D.C., leave D.C., go off to do things and come back. There are a lot of folks and a lot of students or a lot of families that don’t ever get that option. They’ve got to have it.”

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Now, the Southeast D.C. campus is offering pre-algebra to seventh graders and algebra to eighth graders. In the 2024-25 school year, 70% of eighth graders at the school either met or exceeded expectations on the citywide standardized math test.

Education news outlet The 74 first reported that’s a stronger mark than the 64% of eighth graders who met or exceeded expectations in Ward 3. Only one-fourth of all D.C. students did the same.

Jessi Mericola, who teaches seventh and eighth grade math, was one of the educators who considered whether students were ready to make such a significant leap.

Initially, half of the rising eighth graders did an accelerated seventh grade curriculum, and then attended summer school to finish the curriculum so they could take algebra in eighth grade.

This year, for the first time, all of seventh grade is being accelerated so next year, “all of our students will be doing algebra,” Mericola said.

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“We found that if we tell them they’re ready for it, they believe you, and they want to meet that expectation,” Mericola said.

Each class has about 20 students, with the largest in the school at 26, she said. Classes are divided into sections. There’s an individual review on a recently learned concept, a small group review on something from earlier in the year and then a full group lesson.

Mericola co-teaches with a colleague, and even if a student is struggling to grasp an idea, “we come back and reteach things from before that maybe you missed it the first time, but you catch it the second time; and if you miss it the second time, you catch it the third time.”

It’s an approach, White said, comes from avoiding the assumption that “we can’t move a child forward because of something or one of the things they haven’t mastered yet.”

Eighth grader Kennedy Morse said math was a struggle before she got to the Congress Heights campus, but now, it’s become one of her strongest subjects.

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She’s gained confidence from tutoring help and being able to ask questions without judgment.

“It was really shocking for me to be on a higher level,” Morse said. “It was hard. It was hard at first.”

Leonard White had a similar experience.

“I’m actually glad that they can believe in me to do the harder work in these classes,” White said.

While getting access to more advanced math classes at a younger age could help students take more rigorous courses in high school and college, Principal White said with any change, the focus is helping “show them all the possibilities and help them make the choice for themselves, versus it being forced upon them.”

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Washington Commanders to pay DC $1M to resolve lawsuit over abusive workplace culture – WTOP News

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Washington Commanders to pay DC M to resolve lawsuit over abusive workplace culture – WTOP News


Brian Schwalb, the District’s attorney general praised the new ownership for rectifying the Commanders’ internal issues.

The former owners of the Washington Commanders will pay the District of Columbia $1 million to resolve a 2022 lawsuit that alleged the NFL franchise misled its fans regarding the team’s toxic and abusive workplace culture in order to protect the its brand.

Dan Snyder still owned the team at the time, and as D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb announced the settlement Monday, he praised the new owners for rectifying internal issues, including accusations of rampant sexual assault and harassment.

“The Commanders’ current owners have commendably opened a new chapter in the team’s history, committing to ensure all employees are protected from abuse and treated with dignity,” Schwalb said. “I want to thank the victims for coming forward to tell their stories — without their bravery, none of this would have come to light.”

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A group led by Josh Harris purchased the Commanders in 2023 from Snyder, who had faced pressure to sell the team after a series of scandals and decades of perceivable mediocrity on the field.

Since then, new ownership has strengthened the team’s human resources department and implemented an anti-harassment policy and an investigation protocol for complaints of misconduct, Schwalb’s office said in a news release.

Under the agreement, the team will maintain those reforms, along with paying $1 million to D.C.

The NFL separately fined Snyder $60 million in 2023 after its own investigation concluded that he personally engaged in multiple forms of misconduct, including sexual harassment.

D.C.’s suit accused Snyder and the team of misleading the public about what they knew regarding the hostile work environment and Snyder’s role in creating it.

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The Commanders and Snyder deny all the allegations and are not admitting wrongdoing by reaching a resolution, according to the terms of the settlement.

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Army Corps: Reservoir expansion ‘doesn’t fix, but improves’ DC’s drinking water supply for future Potomac River emergency – WTOP News

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Army Corps: Reservoir expansion ‘doesn’t fix, but improves’ DC’s drinking water supply for future Potomac River emergency – WTOP News


Developing a regional solution to enable all local water companies to share drinking water in the event of a future Potomac River emergency remains a long-term challenge facing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Developing a regional solution to enable all local water companies to share drinking water in the event of a future Potomac River emergency remains a long-term challenge facing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. But the Corps is leaning-in to near term solutions, for now, because current issues “are quite, quite dire.”

In an interview with WTOP, Trevor Cyran, Chief of the Civil Works project management office of the Baltimore District Corps of Engineers, elaborated on the Corps’ ongoing three-year feasibility study funded by Congress and the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.

Last week, during a House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee hearing, lawmakers pressed the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to explain what’s being done to secure solid backup options for the D.C. region’s drinking water.

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D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton challenged the Corps after learning that the study that Congress authorized to identify a secondary water source for the region was being narrowed to only expanding the current Dalecarlia Reservoir, adjacent to the Washington Aqueduct, which remains the only source of drinking water for D.C., Arlington, and parts of Fairfax County, Virginia.

“Expansion of the reservoir is not a secondary water source,” Norton said. “With only a one day of backup water supply, human-made or natural events that make the river unusable would put residents, the District government and the regional economy at risk.”

Cyran said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers doesn’t disagree.

“We’re trying to find a quick win that addresses some of the near-term issues, because they are quite, quite dire,” Cyran said. “The Dalecarlia expansion would add approximately 12 hours of water storage into the system,” he said. “So, while we know that doesn’t fix the problem, it improves the situation.”

Recently, drinking water in D.C., Northern Virginia and Maryland has remained safe because the January collapse of a portion of the aging Potomac Interceptor regional sewer line happened downstream of the main Potomac River water intake serving the Washington Aqueduct.

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“We’ve moved forward with the Dalecarlia expansion, as our most probable recommendation,” said Cyran. “The Corps is laser focused on delivering something right here, right now that can actually help with the issue, while still exploring some of those long term solutions.”

Cyran said the dangers to public health and the economy are substantial, with the Potomac as the sole drinking water source. “It’s not a great situation — we’ve seen a very real risk come to fruition recently, with the spill.”

While drinking water has been unaffected by the spill, the advisory for the public to avoid contact with the Potomac River remains in effect in the District and Montgomery County, where the Potomac Interceptor spill happened, along the Clara Barton Parkway.

The advisory is expected to be lifted Monday, by the D.C. Department of Health, as E. coli levels have recently returned to the typical range for D.C.’s rivers.  The District’s Department of Energy and Environment is now doing daily testing of the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers.

How would increased storage at Dalecarlia Reservoir look?

According to the Army Corps, expanding the Reservoir over 54 available acres would provide approximately 70 million gallons per day, doubling the capacity at Dalecarlia. Since the land is already owned by the Washington Aqueduct, it would not require acquiring any land.

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Cyran said it’s not yet certain whether the expansion would provide an extra 12 hours of storage of raw water from the Potomac, or finished water, after it had gone through the Washington Aqueduct’s water purification process.

Regardless, either option would result in the Aqueduct having more water on hand, if drawing water from the Potomac was suddenly unsafe.

Another near-term option that wouldn’t require land acquisition would be advanced treatment, Cyran said.

“We could implement something that allows us to treat for a wider array of contaminants, if you had a spill,” said Cyran, although noting the recent spill from the Potomac Interceptor, which poured approximately 240 millions of raw sewage into the Potomac, “might not be a good example” of how the technology would work.

The Army Corps list of possible solutions includes reusing water. In November 2025, DC Water outlined its own plans to recycle water from the utility’s Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant, the largest of its kind in the world.

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Quarry storage cannot happen quickly

During its ongoing study, the Army Corps has identified possible long term regional solutions, including the potential use of the Travilah Quarry in Montgomery County, Maryland, and two quarries in Loudoun County, Virginia, owned by Luck Stone.

10 years ago, in December 2016, WTOP first reported that the Travilah Quarry, located on Piney Meetinghouse Road in Rockville, was quietly being considered by DC Water, WSSC Water, and Fairfax Water, as an alternative source of water, if the Potomac River were unavailable.

“The three utilities, and the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin, along with the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments have been working over the last several years to look at alternatives to get better interdependencies, to have more resilience in our system,” said Tom Jacobus in 2016, while he was general manager of the Aqueduct.

Now, a decade later, the logistical, real estate, and financial challenges of obtaining a quarry which could be interconnected between DC Water, WSSC Water, and Fairfax Water remain.

“We’re not saying they can never happen, we’re just saying they cannot, in any way, shape, or form, happen quickly,” said Cyran. “Travilah is still an active quarry, so that can’t even be considered for storage until they’re done mining, which might be 30 years from now.”

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The Dalecarlia Reservoir expansion would not be regional solution, Cyran said.

“That would only benefit folks who are tied directly to the Aqueduct at this time,” he said. “However, while we’re going to be looking at other alternatives that we could potentially spin off and continue to look at, that would address some of those more regional issues.”

‘We can’t hand half-baked ideas to Congress’

While an interconnected, resilient system, that could provide additional water sources and storage to DC Water, WSSC Water, and Fairfax Water would be optimal, Cyran said the Corps is limited by a Congressional paradigm that limits its feasibility study to four years and five million dollars.

“We can’t hand half-baked ideas to Congress,” Cyran said.

With the Corps’ current focus of implementing near-term improvements, quickly, the agency will continue to use its expertise to envision a more resilient, long term solution.

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“We are committed to looking at this issue and try to explore some regional solutions, within the paradigms of the legislation that we have to operate within,” said Cyran. “If Congress wants to consider something else to expand our authority, we could maybe look at a bigger solution, with more time and money.”

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