Members of the board of directors at DC Water, the water authority for the city of Washington, D.C., joked Tuesday during a meeting about the possibility of shutting off plumbing to the White House amid the ongoing government shutdown.

Pointing to a notice DC Water had received from the General Services Administration (GSA) concerning delinquent pay due to the shutdown, members of the utility's board of directors joked that the city could consider cutting off water to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, according to WAMU.

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“We received an email Wednesday, January 2, from an individual at the bureau of fiscal services at the treasury,” DC Water CFO Matthew Brown reportedly said at the meeting, before explaining that the federal government had informed the company it would be late on approximately $5 million of its $16.5 million due water bill.

The board's chairman, Tommy Wells, responded with an inquiry about shutting off the government's water, apparently in jest.

“That brings up an interesting question,” said Wells, according to the news outlet. “Is there a time from nonpayment when we cut someone’s water off?”

“1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, is that what you’re talking about?” another member joked, according to WAMU.

A spokesman for DC Water explained to WAMU that the company was within its rights to shut off water to any nonpaying customer, though adding that such an option was only taken as a last resort.

“Conceivably, DC Water can shut off service for nonpayment to any customer,” spokesperson Vincent Morris told WAMU. “We don’t do it very often, it’s a last resort, we never want to do it.”

"Obviously, for things like the General Services Administration for the federal government it’s a slightly different process, because we know they’re good for the money, it’s just a question of when it’s actually going to be transferred," Morris added.

The ongoing government shutdown stretched into its eighteenth day on Tuesday, as President Trump Donald John TrumpBarr criticizes DOJ in speech declaring all agency power 'is invested in the attorney general' Military leaders asked about using heat ray on protesters outside White House: report Powell warns failure to reach COVID-19 deal could 'scar and damage' economy MORE pledged last week during a meeting with congressional Democrats to keep the government partially closed for months or years amid his dispute with the Democrats over border wall funding.