Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Secretary of Health, published photos on Himelf’s Sunday and his grandchildren who swim in a contaminated Washington Creek where swimming is not allowed because it is used for seven runoff.
Rock Creek, which flows through much of the northwest of Washington, is used to drain the excess of wastewater and the rain of the duration of rainwater. The stream has a generalized “fecal” contamination and high levels of bacteria, including E. coli, and the city has banned swimming on all its river paths for more than 50 years due to the generalized pollution of Narby Corny Rock.
“Rock Creek has levels of bacteria and other infectious pathogens that make swimming, vadeo and the other contact with water are a danger to human health (and pet),” he wrote the national parks service on a website, adding river roads, river roads, river roads, toe watingaass, aquáreas toe, plane airplanes at the height of the waters. Watersaass, fingers of foot fingers, feet fingers?
But Mr. Kennedy during the weekend shared photos of himself swimming in Rock Creek, with an image that shows him completely submerged in the water. Mr. Kennedy said in the publication of social networks that he had swim in Rock Creek Duration a Mother’s Day walk in Dumbarton Oaks Park with his family, including his grandchildren, which are also seen in the photos swimming in contaminated water.
Dumbarton Oaks Park is downstream of Piney Branch, a tributary of Creek rock that receives around 40 million gallons of overflowing waters of stormwater and rainwater not treated every year, according to the DC Water and Serwer authority. The city authorities plan to build a tunnel that reduces the amount of wastewater that flows to Piney Branch and Rock Creek.
A spokeswoman for Mr. Kennedy did not respond to a request for comments.
It was the last of a series of peculiar incidents related to the outdoor person of Mr. Kennedy.
When he was a teenager in the 1970s, Mr. Kennedy won a reputation as a reckless adventurer, eating meat and lasting diseases on trips to South America and in African safaris. Later he obtained notoriety for his handling of the bodies of dead animals, including a whale and a baby bear.
Mr. Kennedy also said that a parasite worm “had gotten into my brain and had eaten a part and then.”