Maryland’s congressional delegation is crying foul after revelations that Joint Base Andrews quietly leaked 32,000 gallons of jet fuel into nearby land and water, with lawmakers claiming the Air Force kept the incident under wraps far too long.
The leak, discovered earlier this year, has sparked outrage among local leaders demanding answers about how long contamination went unchecked and what steps are actually being taken to clean it up.
The letter addressed to Secretary of the Air Force Troy Meink was signed by all but one of Maryland’s senators and representatives. They accused the base of botching containment efforts and failing to keep state authorities informed, describing an unacceptable delay that may have worsened pollution in Piscataway Creek.
“It is of the utmost importance that Joint Base Andrews fully assess and remediate any damage caused by this leak and take protective measures to prevent an incident like this from happening again in the future,” the lawmakers wrote, signaling clear frustration with how slowly the Air Force responded.
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Joint Base Andrews sits just under nine miles from Piscataway Creek, which feeds into the Potomac River.
According to the Maryland Department of the Environment, the leak occurred between January and March of 2026 — yet the state didn’t hear about it until March 23, after residents noticed a telltale fuel odor and a slick sheen spreading across the creek water.
Only 10,000 gallons of the total spill were contained early on, leaving approximately 22,000 gallons of jet fuel seeping into the surrounding ecosystem. Officials say that between discovery and disclosure, Joint Base Andrews failed to promptly report the incident to Maryland authorities as legally required. The full scope wasn’t made public until April 8.
“The base failed to promptly disclose leaks as required by its state oil permit and did not report the full extent of the discharge until April 8, 2026,” the Maryland Department of the Environment said.
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The admission has intensified scrutiny of the Air Force’s transparency regarding environmental hazards tied to its installations.
The spill adds insult to injury for local communities already battling previous contamination issues tied to “legacy pollution” from the same installation.
Lawmakers’ letter pointed to persistent PFAS contamination in the nearby creek, noting this latest incident exacerbates already strained environmental conditions.
“Legacy pollution from Joint Base Andrews has already resulted in PFAS contamination in Piscataway Creek and the surrounding area, and this fuel spill adds to existing environmental stressors affecting the watershed,” the lawmakers warned, hammering home that this is not an isolated event but part of a larger pattern.
The congressional delegation wants hard data — not vague reassurances. They asked when the leak was first detected, how officials determined exactly how much fuel was lost, and what concrete remediation strategies are being executed. They also demanded a clear plan to keep the public and relevant agencies updated going forward.
The Air Force, however, insists it’s taking the situation seriously. A spokesperson for the base released a statement declaring that mitigation measures are underway, including the deployment of absorbent materials, containment devices, and environmental response teams working to keep contamination from spreading.
“Joint Base Andrews is committed to working closely with environmental authorities to ensure full compliance with federal regulations and to ensure all necessary actions are taken to achieve a timely and effective spill response and cleanup to protect human health and the environment,” the base stated in a prepared release.
Nevertheless, skepticism remains high among Maryland officials and residents. Many view this incident as another sign of bureaucratic opacity that too often plagues Washington’s dealings with military environmental accountability.
Critics argue that if the War Department expects local communities to trust its stewardship, transparency should be automatic — not forced by congressional inquiry.
This episode underscores an issue that often gets brushed aside: maintaining operational readiness while also protecting the environment. Strong national defense shouldn’t require weak communication or environmental shortcuts.
The Trump-era ethos of strong leadership and honesty in government resonates here — when American institutions make mistakes, they fix them fast and tell the truth about it.
But this response hasn’t yet satisfied the lawmakers waiting for hard facts. Until they get a full accounting of how 32,000 gallons of jet fuel quietly bled into Maryland’s soil and waterways, the Air Force’s credibility on this front is going to stay under the microscope.
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