A report released by the Army Corps of Engineers on Thursday identified three levees in the District metropolitan area and two in Maryland so weakened by decay and vegetation that they pose a risk of failure in a flood.

The list included a levee at Potomac Park facing the Potomac River, a second on the Anacostia River and a third on the shore at Bolling Air Force Base. The report also identified two damaged levees on both banks of the Anacostia River in the towns of Bladensburg and Hyattsville, Md.

“Trees located in some of these levees can cause a levee failure and seeping,” Tony Vidal, chief of civil works for the Corps, said. “They have potential to cause a real problem.”

The Corps included no costs for repairs in their report. Cost figures of engineering assessments of the sites will be carried out by the towns, Vidal said. The individual towns, however, will be responsible for the repairs.

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“The owners are responsible for operation and maintenance,” he said. “We are here to inspect.”

The towns that own the individual levees have 90 days to file a report with the Corps that includes their plan for repairs, Vidal said. Towns not in compliance with the Corps of Engineers also risk losing their flood insurance from FEMA, he said.

“The Army Corps did this work a year ago, and I assume the Army Corps should have some responsibility,” Hyattsville City Administrator Elaine Murphey said.