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Residents press Bowie leaders over brown water as council outlines $180M pipe replacement effort

City of Bowie City Council (listening session) · April 24, 2026

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Summary

Multiple residents reported brown/discolored tap water; mayor and staff said discoloration comes from iron pipe sedimentation, the water meets EPA safety standards, and the city is pursuing federal funds, rate adjustments and phased pipe lining to address an estimated $180 million of infrastructure work.

Residents repeatedly reported brown or discolored tap water during the Bowie budget listening session and asked what the city is doing to fix aging water mains.

Mayor Mike Estev and city staff described the discoloration as tuberculation (iron buildup inside aging pipes) that can be kicked up by routine disturbances such as fires or repairs. “The sedimentation... comes from the water system basically just being iron pipe,” the mayor said, adding the discoloration is visually unpleasant but that the system continues to meet EPA safety standards.

Staff outlined a multi‑pronged approach: pursue federal funding aggressively, modestly increase the water rate to accelerate pipe replacement, and continue phased lining and replacement projects. The mayor said the system requires about $180,000,000 in lining and pipe replacement and described their fastest recent year as roughly 1.75 miles of pipe replaced at an estimated cost of about $3,000,000.

Officials said the city water system operates as an enterprise fund, funded by ratepayers, and that about 40 percent of Bowie households are on the city system while the remainder receive water from WSSC. Mayor Estev urged residents experiencing persistent discoloration to contact Public Works and noted a rebate program exists for home filtration systems that meet program criteria.

Council members and residents urged accelerated action; staff said speed is constrained by the water fund’s revenue and the need for outside funding. The council described ongoing outreach to federal representatives and acknowledged the tradeoffs residents face if rates rise to hasten capital work.

The city did not announce a specific new rate increase at the listening session; officials said they will evaluate pace and funding options as part of the budget and utility planning process.