Baltimore officials said Monday they don’t intend to stop contaminated wastewater from the Norfolk Southern train derailment in Ohio from coming to a private treatment company in the city, but they will deny that company the right to discharge the treated wastewater into the city’s sewer system.
A Baltimore company plans to treat wastewater from a train derailment in Ohio, but its process could be in jeopardy following a decision by city officials to block the company from disposing water into city sewers. Here are five things you should know.
Baltimore officials said Monday they don’t intend to stop contaminated wastewater from the Norfolk Southern train derailment in Ohio from coming to a private treatment company in the city, but they will deny that company the right to discharge the treated wastewater into the city’s sewer system.
Vandals sawed an arm and a scabbard off two Baltimore Confederate statues last summer, according to Baltimore’s Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation, who discovered the damage in September but the exact date the Lee-Jackson Monument and the Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument lost their bronze appendages is unknown.