News

It will process three times as much water per second as the world’s largest existing groundwater treatment facility, officials said. The DWP will build a second, slightly smaller center near the ...
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power plans to build the world’s largest groundwater treatment center over one of the largest Superfund pollution sites in the United States: the San ...
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power may spend hundreds of millions of dollars in the next 20 years to capture rainwater and send it underground into the massive San Fernando Valley Ground… ...
"LADWP is investing in major infrastructure projects to meet drinking water regulations, such as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (LT2) and the Stage 2 Disinfectants ...
Marty Adams of the DWP says construction will begin in five years on two treatment centers that will open in 2022 and could produce about a quarter of the city's water, according to the Associated ...
In the works for more than a decade, the move is designed to meet new Environmental Protection Agency water quality standards limiting disinfectant byproducts, some of which are potentially toxic.E… ...
LADWP has agreed to replace all water bottles being used in response to the incident. On Jan. 15, a chlorine pump at the 99th Street Wells Water Treatment Facility malfunctioned.
Through LADWP’s Turf Replacement Program, businesses can get rebates of $5 per square foot for the first 50,000 sq. ft. and $3 per sq. ft. beyond, up to 7 acres max, to replace turf with drought ...
Some residents in the San Fernando Valley have reported an “earthy odor” coming from their drinking water, but officials say the cause of the smell is not harmful. In a statement issued Monday ...
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power says it needs to raise consumer bills in order to meet federal and state drinking water standards. The plan it's sending forward to the L.A. City ...
In Monday’s statement, LADWP said it began increasing its water quality monitoring, sampling and testing through the Los Angeles Aqueduct System earlier this month.