Detroit Water and Sewerage Department: Governance and Services
The Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) is the primary municipal utility responsible for delivering drinking water and managing wastewater collection across the City of Detroit. Operating under the authority of the Detroit City Charter and subject to oversight from multiple state and federal regulatory bodies, DWSD serves one of the largest municipal water systems in the Great Lakes region. Understanding how the department is structured, how it delivers services, and where its authority begins and ends is essential for residents, property owners, businesses, and policymakers navigating Detroit's utility landscape.
Definition and scope
DWSD is a city department operating under the executive branch of Detroit's municipal government, accountable to the Mayor and subject to budgetary review by the Detroit City Council. Its core statutory mandate is to provide potable water service and residential/commercial wastewater removal within the corporate limits of the City of Detroit.
The department's authority is grounded in the Detroit City Charter, Michigan's Municipal Water Supply System statute (MCL 123.161 et seq.), and federal Safe Drinking Water Act (42 U.S.C. § 300f et seq.) requirements administered through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE).
Scope and geographic coverage: DWSD's direct service area is the City of Detroit. The department does not govern water service to suburban communities in Oakland, Macomb, or Wayne counties outside Detroit's borders — that regional wholesale function is handled by the Great Lakes Water Authority (GLWA), a separate regional entity created in 2016 under an intergovernmental agreement. DWSD and GLWA are legally distinct: DWSD operates Detroit's retail water and sewer system; GLWA owns and operates the regional infrastructure serving approximately 127 suburban communities (Great Lakes Water Authority). This distinction matters for billing disputes, infrastructure complaints, and service interruptions — issues originating outside Detroit city limits fall outside DWSD's jurisdiction.
How it works
DWSD's operational structure encompasses three core service functions:
- Water distribution: Treated water is delivered through a network of distribution mains, pressure zones, and metered connections. Source water originates from Lake Huron and the Detroit River, treated at facilities operated under GLWA's ownership but distributed locally by DWSD within city limits.
- Wastewater collection: DWSD maintains the local sewer collection system, which channels sewage and stormwater through a combined or separate pipe network to regional interceptors owned by GLWA for treatment.
- Billing and customer service: Residential and commercial accounts receive metered billing tied to consumption data. Accounts in Detroit receive bills from DWSD, not from GLWA, for retail service.
The department is financed primarily through user rates — fees paid by customers for water and sewer service — rather than through Detroit's general fund appropriations. Rate adjustments must follow a public notice and approval process involving the Detroit Board of Water Commissioners, a five-member body appointed under the City Charter. This enterprise-fund model means DWSD's capital programs and operational expenses are tied directly to rate revenue stability.
Regulatory compliance is layered: EGLE enforces Michigan's Safe Drinking Water Act at the state level, while the EPA Region 5 office (EPA Region 5) provides federal oversight. Lead and copper monitoring, as governed by the Lead and Copper Rule under 40 C.F.R. Part 141, requires annual testing and public reporting through Consumer Confidence Reports.
Common scenarios
Property owners and residents interact with DWSD in four primary situations:
- Service connections for new construction or renovation: Any new water or sewer tap within Detroit requires a permit and inspection coordinated through DWSD and the Detroit Building Permits and Inspections process. Connection fees are set by ordinance and vary by meter size and pipe diameter.
- Water shutoffs for non-payment: Detroit has experienced significant public attention over residential water shutoffs. Under Michigan law (MCL 141.121), municipalities may discontinue service for nonpayment, but state and local protections — including the Detroit Water Residential Assistance Program (WRAP) — provide income-qualified residents with bill assistance to avoid disconnection.
- Infrastructure failures and main breaks: When a water main breaks, DWSD's Operations Division dispatches repair crews. Residents are directed to DWSD's customer service portal or Detroit's 313 non-emergency line to report outages. Response protocols distinguish between city-owned mains and private service lines connecting the main to individual properties — the property owner bears responsibility for the private service line from the curb to the structure.
- Lead service line replacement: Following lead pipe concerns documented across Michigan, Detroit committed to a city-wide lead service line replacement program. DWSD administers this program, which replaces both the public and private portions of lead service lines at no cost to eligible residents, funded in part through federal infrastructure allocations (EPA Lead Service Line Replacement).
Decision boundaries
A critical distinction separates DWSD's authority from adjacent jurisdictions and entities:
| Scenario | Responsible Party |
|---|---|
| Retail water/sewer billing — Detroit address | DWSD |
| Wholesale water supply to suburban municipalities | Great Lakes Water Authority (GLWA) |
| Sewer overflow permit violations | Michigan EGLE and EPA Region 5 |
| Building permit for new service connection | Detroit Buildings, Safety Engineering and Environmental Department |
| Stormwater detention on private property | Detroit Planning and Development / Zoning |
| Water service disputes — suburban community | Relevant municipality or GLWA |
The Detroit Department of Public Works manages street drainage infrastructure distinct from DWSD's underground sewer mains — these two systems intersect but fall under separate departmental authority. Oversight of DWSD's financial practices is subject to review by the Detroit Auditor General, particularly for capital expenditures and contract compliance.
For the full context of how DWSD fits within Detroit's broader municipal structure, the Detroit Metro Authority homepage provides an orientation to the city's departmental ecosystem. The Detroit Financial Oversight framework also governs DWSD indirectly, since major capital bond issuances for water infrastructure require compliance with the city's post-bankruptcy fiscal controls established under the Plan of Adjustment confirmed in 2014 (U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of Michigan, Case No. 13-53846).