Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Spring Valley. It's a lovely neighborhood. Expensive, but great public elementary school, beautiful homes, lots of trees, young families, etc.
Every new buyer knows about the munitions issue and is given a ton of documentation and information from the Army Corps of Engineers. Our house has never had an issue, which is true of most of the neighborhood. I'm sure buyers can make educated decisions on whether or not to move forward based on the information they receive.
I mean, I guess everyone has different tolerances for risk, but buying somewhere that "most' houses don't have problems with toxic munitions dumps leaking into the groundwater, I mean, okaaaayyyyy...
Kinda like saying, it's OK to drink water from the Potomac, most people who do that don't die...
"Most" is something like 970 homes out of 1,000.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Spring Valley. It's a lovely neighborhood. Expensive, but great public elementary school, beautiful homes, lots of trees, young families, etc.
Every new buyer knows about the munitions issue and is given a ton of documentation and information from the Army Corps of Engineers. Our house has never had an issue, which is true of most of the neighborhood. I'm sure buyers can make educated decisions on whether or not to move forward based on the information they receive.
I mean, I guess everyone has different tolerances for risk, but buying somewhere that "most' houses don't have problems with toxic munitions dumps leaking into the groundwater, I mean, okaaaayyyyy...
Kinda like saying, it's OK to drink water from the Potomac, most people who do that don't die...
Anonymous wrote:Why would anyone who is planning to raise their children in their home buy in Spring Valley. The risk alone prevented us from buying....would you gamble with your children's lives? I also love the idea that these families shop at Whole Foods and try to eat organic and live healthy lives, but yet they are wiling to buy a house on top of a known WWI chemical weapons dump. Fascinating!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you a Republican? I'm completely serious. It's known for being where a high concentration of DC's tiny population of Republicans live.
And also the poison soil.
Coincidence?

Anonymous wrote:I live in Spring Valley. It's a lovely neighborhood. Expensive, but great public elementary school, beautiful homes, lots of trees, young families, etc.
Every new buyer knows about the munitions issue and is given a ton of documentation and information from the Army Corps of Engineers. Our house has never had an issue, which is true of most of the neighborhood. I'm sure buyers can make educated decisions on whether or not to move forward based on the information they receive.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Spring Valley. It's a lovely neighborhood. Expensive, but great public elementary school, beautiful homes, lots of trees, young families, etc.
Every new buyer knows about the munitions issue and is given a ton of documentation and information from the Army Corps of Engineers. Our house has never had an issue, which is true of most of the neighborhood. I'm sure buyers can make educated decisions on whether or not to move forward based on the information they receive.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Spring Valley. It's a lovely neighborhood. Expensive, but great public elementary school, beautiful homes, lots of trees, young families, etc.
Every new buyer knows about the munitions issue and is given a ton of documentation and information from the Army Corps of Engineers. Our house has never had an issue, which is true of most of the neighborhood. I'm sure buyers can make educated decisions on whether or not to move forward based on the information they receive.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Spring Valley. It's a lovely neighborhood. Expensive, but great public elementary school, beautiful homes, lots of trees, young families, etc.
Every new buyer knows about the munitions issue and is given a ton of documentation and information from the Army Corps of Engineers. Our house has never had an issue, which is true of most of the neighborhood. I'm sure buyers can make educated decisions on whether or not to move forward based on the information they receive.
Anonymous wrote:I believe the OP had no idea about Spring Valley. I have noticed lately that people don't talk about the munitions issue anymore and soil cleanliness is also not mentioned in many listings. I thought, by law, they had to disclose, but it's not in many of the write-ups or online descriptions. I think new buyers have no idea that this issue has been going on for over 20 years. Pretty sketchy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But what about the strip clubs?
There's just one. It's not a big deal.