►
Description
City of Bloomington
A
This
is
a
about
time
of
sale
housing
if
you're
thinking
of
listing
your
house
near
future.
Here
in
Bloomington,
we
do
require
time
of
sale,
inspection
on
your
house,
it's
not
as
in-depth
as
everyone
thinks
it
is
time
of
sale,
we're
really
trying
to
maintain
the
housing
stock.
That's
in
the
city
here
we're
trying
to
fix
anything
that
we
deem
as
quote
hazardous,
and
we
address
stuff
that
maybe
we
label
as
a
below
minimum
requirements.
A
Those
just
mean
that
they
don't
meet
the
code,
but
it's
not
really
going
to
hinder
anything
and
it's
it's,
not
a
safety
or
a
health
issue
as
far
as
the
way
it's
installed.
So
those
are
the
two
main
things
that
we
try
to
focus
on
hazardous
and
below
minimum
requirements
with
that
I've
got
a
slide
presentation
houses
that
first
are
required
to
have
time
of
sale,
inspection
in
the
city
here,
according
to
our
website,
we've
got
it
all
listed
on
there
and
we
don't
do
multifamily
structures,
anything
four
or
more
units.
A
That,
usually
is
a
rental
issue
and
our
rental
department
takes
care
of
that
our
housing,
so
anything
under
that
condos
townhouses,
single-family
houses,
twin
homes.
Those
will
have
time
of
sale,
inspection
so
getting
on.
We
look
for
smoke
detectors,
that's
probably
the
most
important
thing
that
we
look
for,
but
once
you
have
a
first
line
of
defense
to
get
out
of
your
house
in
case
there's
a
problem,
so
smoke
detectors
are
required
in
every
bedroom
and
on
each
level.
A
So,
if
you've
go
into
your
home
today-
and
you
find
that
you
only
have
two
smoke
detectors,
one
on
your
basement
and
one
on
your
main
floor-
go
get
some
smoke
detectors
and
throw
them
on
your
bedrooms.
Manufacturer
does
have
requirements
on
where
to
place
them.
You'll
see
by
this
little
little
house
detail
down
there.
It
shows
bedroom
hall
bedroom.
The
black
dots
means
smoke
detectors.
A
A
That's
been
in
the
code
since
2000
since
2000
that's
been
in
the
codes
and
it's
been
required
previous
previous
codes.
Prior
to
that,
it's
always
been
a
level.
You
know
each
level
had
to
have
smoke
detection
we'll
get
to
that.
But
to
answer
your
question:
CO
detectors
are
required
within
ten
feet
of
the
bedrooms
or
in
each
bedroom.
That's
the
minimum
requirement
that
the
state
does
require
for
smoke.
Our
co
detection.
A
A
A
A
A
So
this
is
a
carbon
monoxide
detector,
a
battery-operated
one.
There
there's
also
the
kind
that
you
can
plug
in
and
they
work
off
a
power
they're
all
good.
Another
smoke
detector,
there's
plenty
of
them
out
there
location
where
we
don't
want
smoke
detectors
is
within
three
feet
of
a
ceiling
fan
the
ceiling
fan
blades.
You
want
the
smoke
to
get
to
the
smoke
detector
and
not
be
blown
away
from
the
smoke
detector,
so
the
the
ceiling
fan
blades
are
kind
of
a
hindrance
when
it
comes
to
smoke
detectors.
A
A
You
know
near
the
stairway
in
those
areas,
so
you
got
a
stairway
stairway,
stairway,
keine,
bedroom
bedroom.
If
you
got
any
bedrooms
in
a
basement
again,
you're
gonna
get
a
big
smoke
detector
in
that
and
we
get
into
electrical
issues.
This
is
always
fun
for
some
reason,
everybody
loves
to
do
electrical
and
I.
Don't
know
why
but
you're
talking
about
the
most
dangerous
part
of
the
house
and
we're
going
to
electrical,
but
people
like
to
do
it
so
I
got
a
lot
of
pictures
on
here
that
are
really
good
pictures
that
show
of
what
smoke.
A
What
what
we
deal
with
was
electrical.
This
is
our
handout
for
a
grounding.
This
is
your
service
grown
from
from
your
panel
box.
Your
water
is
your
service
is
one
of
your
grounding
features,
so
we
make
sure
that
you
got
a
jumper
that
goes
around
the
meter
itself
from
copper,
pipe
to
copper
pipe,
and
that
goes
back
to
your
panel
box
that
underground
copper,
wire,
nickel
or
copper
pipe.
That
goes
there.
That
is
your
ground
for
your
panel.
A
Open
electrical
biggest
items
that
we
see
this
isn't
an
attic.
We
always
make
sure
it's
got
covers
on
it.
You
know,
and
it's
properly
wire
nutted,
whether
it's
hot
or
it's
not
because
nobody
knows
one
way
or
another.
You
can.
If
somebody
finds
it
and
hooks
it
up,
it
could
be
hot
and
it
could
start
a
fire
or
electrocute.
A
This
is
an
adapter
to
one
of
the
old-style
outlets.
I,
don't
know.
If
any
of
you
remember
these,
but
these
are
those
sliding
plug
outlets.
Where
you
can
it's
a
to
problem
where
you
can
plug
in
at
any
port
on
it,
and
someone
started
running
some
electrical
outside
of
it,
and
that
creates
a
shocking
hazard,
it's
kind
of
dangerous
too,
so
this
was
a
the
dishwasher
wearing.
That
was
just
left
undone.
This
was
these
lot
of
these
pictures
were
taken
during
the
downturn
of
the
economy.
A
We
had
people
that
were
stripping
their
houses
of
everything
they
possibly
could
and
then
letting
the
house
go.
So
a
lot
of
these
pictures
come
from
that,
but
the
wiring
is
still
hot
and
it's
just
sitting
there.
You
know
it's
it's
whether
or
not
somebody
comes
in
and
monkeys
wrong
with.
It
gets
shocked
from
it
or
it
could
possibly
start
a
fire
if,
if
it's
shorted
out
in
some
way.
A
A
A
This
was
this
was
actually
kind
of
humorous
because
I've
never
seen
this
before,
but
someone
actually
cut
a
cord
off
of
a
hairdryer
and
where'd
their
garbage
disposal
with
it.
So
it
had
its
own
GFI
built
into
the
cord.
But
unfortunately
it's
not
right
for
use
with
garbage
disposal
and
it's
not
right
for
use
other
than
a
hair
dryer.
So.
A
Again,
we
always
make
sure
our
electrical
is
encased
in
a
box
and
properly
terminated,
disconnect
box.
This
is
a
old
panel
box
fuses,
and
can
you
see,
can
you
see
these
am
I
in
your
way?
Okay,
the
panel
box.
That's
up
there.
You
know
they've
left
it
all
wide
open,
so
anybody
can
just
stick
their
hands
in
there
and
start
poking
around.
A
Unfortunately,
with
that,
it's
it's
one
of
those
things
that
you
touch
the
wrong
thing
and
you
could
land
on
your
keister
and
maybe
a
trip
to
the
hospital
with
the
one.
With
the
circles.
That's
called
double
logging.
You
can
tell
when
something's
been
tampered
with
when
there's
more
than
multiple
wires
on
one
lug,
it's
not
allowed
by
National
Electrical,
Code
or
NEC
requirements.
A
Well,
when
we
see
something
like
this,
and
we
know
that
it's
been
tampered
with,
we'll
tell
you
that
we're
gonna
ask
for
a
certification,
which
means
that
you
get
a
licensed
electrician
to
come
out
there
and
certify
the
system
that
it's
been
safe
and
that
it's
in
proper
working
order.
Nothing
is
over
fused.
Nothing
is
improperly
wired
anymore,
he's
going
to
clean
up
the
system
for
you.
Basically,
that'll
will
usually
involve
a
permit,
so.
A
This
one's
great,
this
one
was
incredible
and
I
can't
tell
ya
I,
don't
know
how
this
house
did
not
burn
down
and
how
somebody
did
not
get
killed
in
this
thing,
because
that
service
panel
could
have
blown
up
in
their
face.
It
could
have
been
an
art
flash
right
there.
This
is
a
meter
mast
from
a
60
amp
service.
A
A
This
was
a
service
itself.
They
made
it
into
a
200
amp
service.
With
about
three
different
type
breakers.
It
was
still
carrying
a
60
amp,
the
wiring
for
16
amp,
not
to
carry
wearing
for
a
200
amp
service.
The
beauty
part
about
this
is
everything
in
this
house
was
electric.
They
had
the
hot
tub,
stove
AC
dryer,
the
general
use
outlets,
the
lighting
I,
think
even
the
water
heater
everything
in
there
was
electric.
A
The
only
way
this
house
managed
to
stay
in
working
order
was
these
people
must
have
been
cognizant
enough
not
to
use
one
appliance
when
another
one
was
going,
so
that
had
to
be
a
huge
juggling
act
when
I
saw
it
I
a
call
our
electrician
over
and
I
said.
Tell
me
what
you
see
here,
because
I
think
I
know
what
I
see
and
he
was
scared
to
take
the
cover
off
because
of
arc
flash,
but
this
could
have
easily
blown
up
at
him
and
that
house
could
have
burnt
to
the
ground.
A
That
was
one
of
those
things
that
we
got
the
whole
service
out
there.
We
made
him
remove
a
few
things
and
they
got
a
whole
new
service
put
in
and
it
was
all
upgraded
to
200
amp
service
I.
Believe
that's
what
the
next
buyer
wanted.
So
we
said
fine,
the
upper
corner
here,
extension
cords.
You
see
that
no,
you
don't
have
it
on
that
screen.
I'm!
Sorry
there
it
is
extension
cords
to
garage
door
opener.
A
Whenever
you
got
a
permanently
fixed
appliance,
it
has
to
have
its
own
dedicated
outlet.
We
don't
allow
extension
cords
to
be
used.
They're,
just
extension.
Cords
are
temporary
use
items,
they're
usually
allowed
for
90
days
and
then
you're
supposed
to
roll
them
up
and
throw
them
out.
If
they've
been
out
that
long,
it's
one
of
them
things
that
you
see
it
a
lot.
You
know
at
some
point,
is
it
gonna
hurt
anything
more
than
likely
not.
B
A
No
during
a
time
sale
we
find
it
quite
off
and
while
they're
selling
the
house
or
before
they're
putting
it
up,
it's
been
in
there
for
years.
So
a
lot
of
these
things
are,
you
know,
they're,
really,
not
hidden
people
just
look
at
them
everyday
and
they
they
don't
pay
attention
to
it.
They
don't
think
twice
about
it.
So
it's
it's
not
uncommon.
To
find
these.
A
These
are
two
styles
of
backflow
prevention.
You
got
this
brass
one
here
with
a
little
nut
on
the
end
that
one
is
for
an
outdoor
spigot,
there's
spigots
out
there
that
don't
have
backflow
prevention
to
them.
They
don't
have
that
little
round
dial
on
the
top.
That's
backflow
prevention.
They
just
look
like
a
spigot.
A
Those
need
backflow
prevention
on
them,
as
well
as
the
threaded,
the
threaded
spigot
at
your
laundry
tub.
So
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
people
still
have
the
older
style,
laundry
tubs
and
faucets.
In
there
they
don't
have
the
new
chrome
faucets
with
you
know
the
aerator
in
them
they're
just
the
old
old
style,
where
you
can
hook
a
garden
hose
or
a
laundry
hose
to
it.
Whatever.
A
Thank
you
sorry
about
that.
This
other
one
is
for
a
handheld
shower
handheld
showers
when
they
go
below
the
spill
line
of
a
tub.
Those
are
also
required
to
have
backflow
prevention,
so
any
pooling
water
that
can
come
in
there
does
not
get
introduced
into
the
into
the
handheld
shower
and
back
into
your
water
system.
It's
all
about
keeping
the
water
clean
for
drinking
and,
for
you
know
your
use.
So
these
are
just
adapters
that
can
go
on.
They
serve
the
purpose
of
backflow
prevention.
A
A
A
We
get
into
some
plumbing
issues
here
now
this
is
we
don't
just
look
for
hazards.
We
look
for.
What's.
Label
is
below
minimum
requirements
so
with
that
we
find
a
lot
of
things
that
are
just
really
wrong,
but
it
might
not
hurt
anything,
so
we
don't
call
it
out
as
a
hazard,
but
it's
wrong.
So
this
is
a
biscuit.
This
thing
has
multiple
problems
and
I'm.
Sorry,
this
piece
here
is:
this
part
is
covering
it,
but
you
got
a
first.
A
You
got
a
this
is
tied
into
two
sinks,
so
it
comes
in
here
like
this
and
it
dives
down
it
shouldn't.
Do
that
you
shouldn't
you,
have
the
s
trap
again
coming
down
there,
you
got
an
S
trap
and
then
there's
also
that
pleated
I
wish
I
had
a
pointer,
but
this
year
pipe
right
here
is
pleated
pipe,
that's
flexible,
it's
not
allowed
by
plumbing
code
use,
and
then
you
got
electrical
tape
on
the
one
fitting
because
it
leaks
well
at
the
time.
It's
not
really
leaking.
A
A
That's
the
other
thing
like
that
too.
It
was
invented
because
the
way
the
plumbing
configuration
was
there
was
no
vent
within
the
distance
needed
for
that
there
was
no
vent
coming
off
the
wall.
There
was
no
vent
near
the
floor,
so
it's
with
an
S
trap,
a
lot
of
times.
It's
a
siphon
trap
in
order
for
water
to
go.
Water
goes
by
gravity,
so
it'll
keep
siphoning
until
water
is
gone,
which
means
that
your
traps
dry
out
and
you
get
your
smell
sewer
gas.
So
you'll
really
like
the
smell,
but
I
all
means
great.
C
C
A
Is
also
a
nest
trap,
so
yeah
a
nest
trap.
They
just
turned
two
traps
upside
down
in
order
to
make
it
work
again,
this
one
is
invented
either.
This
has
gone
straight
into
the
ground.
There's
no
vent
within
sight
of
it
so
event
helps
to
drain
your
water
out.
You
know,
so
you
don't
get
that
glugging
sown
at
the
end.
When
you
hear
it
going
go,
go,
go,
go,
look,
that's
that's!
What
a
vent
takes
away
as
that
sound!
A
B
A
Because
they
make
it
doesn't
mean
they
can't
sell
it
and
use
it,
they
are
made
for
underground
use.
Only
so
when
you're
talking
above-ground
piping,
you
know
outside
of
the
soil
you're
talking
about
a
full
banded
coupling,
because
you
don't
want
movement
in
the
pipes.
When
you
get
movement
in
the
pipes
you
get
cracking
that
happens.
The
rubber
dries
up.
A
This
was
this
was
great
too.
This
was
a
looks
like
they
used
either.
I
can't
tell
if
this
was
vacuum
piping
for
sure
or
if
this
might
have
been
from
like
a
salon
type
use,
but
they
they
hooked
on
the
holes
there
and
the
piece,
the
piping
inside
the
wall,
where
the
hose
goes
into.
They
just
shoved
the
hose
right
in
there
and
just
ran
it
down
inside
there.
A
D
A
So
you
see
this
piece
here,
that's
a
p-trap
that
that
always
holds
a
water
seal
in
it.
Whenever
you
run
your
water
and
drain
it
out,
the
water
goes
through
and
as
soon
as
it
hits
the
top
there,
it
starts
to
drain
out
as
soon
as
it
as
soon
as
the
gravity,
the
water
stops
it
doesn't.
It
stops,
there's
always
a
water
seal
in
that
pea
trap
that
keeps
your
sewer
gas
down.
A
C
C
D
A
Some
more
stuff
with
backflow
prevention,
a
little
bit,
we
kind
of
mix
up
the
slides
a
little.
This
is
in
your
toilet
tanks.
Do
you
see
the
size
or
the
height
difference
between
these
two
pipes
here?
So
this
is
your
your
flush
tube?
This
is
your
fill
tube.
So,
in
order
to
keep
them,
you
know
for
the
proper
air
gap,
the
one
two
has
to
be
lower
that
little
mushroom
piece
on
top.
That
is
your
backflow
preventer.
That's
got
to
be
one
inch
above
the
middle
tube.
A
We
got
our
preventer
at
the
bottom
of
the
tank
here
technically,
if
the,
if
we
get
anything
that
happens,
say
a
main
break
or
you
a
waterline,
verse
or
prose
in
your
house
here
that
will
siphon
all
the
water.
That's
in
that
toilet
tank
back
into
your
clean
water
system.
I,
don't
know
if
you
really
want
to
drink
that,
but
I
sure,
don't
and
I
don't
want
to
have
to
flush
my
lines
out
and
try
to
get
them
all
sanitized
again
after
that.
So
it's
just
easier
to
put
him
back
for
a
Prevention.
That's
correct!.
A
This
is
a
another
good
one,
okay,
so
this
pipe
there's
black
pipe
on
the
floor
here.
This
was
in
a
basement
in
a
house
where,
back
in
the
day
it
was,
it
was
easy
for
people
to
throw
in
a
shower
that
a
free-standing
shower
above
the
floor
drain
or
just
throw
it
in
the
basement
plummet.
You
know,
run
water
to
it
and
run
everything
to
a
floor
drain.
Okay!
A
Well,
that's
that's
what
was
done
here,
one
of
those
old
metal
showers
and
they
ran
the
piping
in
there.
They
picked
up
a
sink,
ran
it
into
the
piping.
They
picked
up.
The
shower
ran
it
into
the
piping
and
they
also
put
the
condensate
from
the
furnace
into
the
piping.
What
you
can't
do,
but
that
whole
thing
ran
to
the
floor
drain.
So
all
your
bathing
water
was
running
to
your
floor
drain.
All
your
sink
water
was
going
to
the
floor
drain.
Basically,
you
had
a
huge
unsanitary
conditions.
A
Just
from
that,
because
most
people's
floor
drains
are
really
they
don't
work
that
well
they're
clogged
up
from
debris,
sediment
that
just
gets
there
from
people
sweeping
their
floors
and
maybe
they
sweep
crumbs
in
there.
It
doesn't
get
cleaned
out
very
well,
so
a
lot
more
clogged
up,
and
then
you
have
standing
water.
A
Floor
drain,
these
aren't
that
they
don't
show
up
very
good
on
these
pictures,
but
I.
Think
here
is
the
clean
up
plug
on
the
floor
drain
and
this
dark
hole
wish
I
had
a
pointer.
This
dark
hole
right
here
is
your
clean-out
opening.
We
always
make
sure
that
that
has
a
cleanup
plug
in
it.
So
for
one
you
can't
get
the
sewer
gas
back
up.
A
It
also
keeps
any
anything
that
lives
within
the
sewer
system.
You
already
know
that,
there's
probably
in
the
outdoor
sewer
systems,
there's
mice,
there's
other
rodents
and
stuff
that
live
down
in
there
and
that's
their
way
of
coming
up.
They
can
get
up
into
your
homes,
so
we
always
make
sure
that
those
are
closed
up
there
for
clean-out.
Only.
A
Here
we're
getting
into
water
heater
temperature
relief
else.
The
requirement
for
those
is
to
have
a
temperature
pressure
relief
valve
within
six
inches
of
the
tank.
It's
got
to
be
on
the
tank
within
six
inches,
not
in
the
piping
outside
the
tank
within
six
inches
of
the
water
heater.
At
this
point,
I
don't
know
if
you've
ever
and
I
would
I
would
love
for
you
guys
to
do
this
at
some
point.
A
If
you
go
home
and
and
google
an
explosion
of
the
water
here,
google,
it
and
it'll
take
out
their
house
it'll
go
right
through
your
roof.
It's
like
a
rocket
going
off.
Well,
that's
what
a
pressure
relief
valve
does
it
keeps
it
from
becoming
that
I'm
now
functioning
water,
heater,
it'll
the
valve
will
release
and
relieve
pressure
from
it,
but
it
releases
at
210
degrees.
A
So,
if
it's
not
in
the
tank,
it
can't
read
210
degrees,
it's
going
to
read
the
temperature
of
the
air
outside,
or
maybe
the
coolness
of
the
piping
and
the
water
outside
of
the
tank,
not
in
the
tank.
So
it's
not
gonna,
it's
not
going
to
go!
So
it's
it's
a
wrong
installation!
That's
also
nighttime.
We
get
fixed.
D
A
They
do
it's
the
older
water
heaters
that
are
still
around
in
a
lot
of
the
bloomington
homes.
Those
things
will
last
30
years,
and
why
do
people?
Why
am
I
gonna
change
it?
If
it's
not
broke
well
a
lot
of
times,
we
make
them
change
it
because
it
doesn't
have
that
temperature
pressure
relief
valve,
so
they
end
up
having
to
change
it
new
ones.
They
all
have
it
in
there,
so
you'll
be
hard-pressed
not
to
find
it
unless
it's
been
adapted
and
Jimmy
rigged,
somehow
that
they
don't
put
it
in
so.
A
A
A
Hand
wells
in
garage-
this
is
a
this
another
thing,
even
even
wills.
They
still
have
to
have
backflow
prevention
to
them.
So
it's
still
water
system
that
you
can
potentially
drink
off
of.
We
protect.
You
know
these
hand
pump
wells.
We've
had
a
few
of
them
out
here.
You
still
have
wells
in
your
basement.
Sometimes
people
turn
them
into
irrigation.
If
it's
got
a
spigot
that
you
know
they
use
it
for
drinking
water
or
maybe
they
tie
it
in
so
they
can
use
it
for
drinking
water
that
will
have
backflow
prevention
to
it.
A
We
will
get
that
put
on
there,
so
you
can't
get
your
well
contaminated
by
maybe
you're
using
it
for
outside
use
for
running
fertilizers
or
something
you
get
that
that
little
fertilizer
that
hooks
up
to
your
hose
and
you
start
spraying
your
lawn.
You
know
you
can
get
that
contamination
into
there.
So
that's
what
the
backflow
prevention
knows.
Another
thing
with
wells
too:
we
want
to
make
sure
that
wells
are
separated
from
city
sewer
or
not
city,
sewer,
sea
water.
A
Good
question:
that's
that.
A
It's
not
a
it's,
not
a
requirement
that
you
have
to
cap
them
unless
you're
not
going
to
put
them
back
into
service.
So
if
the
well
is
non-functional
and
if,
if
you're
not
going
to
use
the
well
or
put
it
back
into
service
and
maintain
it,
then
you
got
a
cap
it.
If
you're
going
to
put
the
well
back
into
service
and
use
it
you
can
have
it.
That's
got
to
be
separate
from
the
city
water
system.
No
piping
can
be
attached
to
the
city
water
system.
A
Good
luck
to
you
on
that.
You
almost
have
to
go
and
drill
a
new
well,
but
here's
the
downside
to
a
tool.
I
mean
capping
a
well
versus
putting
it
back
into
service
a
lot
of
times.
It's
cheaper
for
the
people
to
just
cap
the
well
than
it
is
to
put
thing
in
the
service
and
maintain
it,
because
that
is
a
requirement
by
the
state
and
the
state
is
the
one
that
forces
or
has
the
regulation
I
should
say
to
the
different
cities
as
to
Wells,
so
a
lot
of
people
when
they
buy
a
house.
A
They,
you
know
if
a
well
is
functional
and
grand
in
service,
and
it's
been
maintained.
People
like
it
because
they'll
use
it
for
exterior,
but
the
minute
it's
not
in
use.
They
don't
like
it
anymore,
it's
just
a
hassle
for
them.
So
most
people
just
let
them
go
and
leave
them
be,
and
that's
they're
just
trying
to
get
rid
of
Wells.
At
some
point,
and
just
say
you
know
what,
if
you
want
to
be
on
city
water,
be
on
city
water,
if
you're
going
to
have
a
well,
then
maintain
it
yeah.
A
A
Long
as
we're
at
Wells,
this
is
a
this
is
an
old.
Well,
this
is
the
pressure
tank
here,
that's
the
pump
right
back
in
the
corner
there
and
again,
if
it's
not
newest,
you
can
tell
this
thing's
never
been
used.
This
thing's
been
sitting
for
over
30
years,
not
even
touched
at
that
point.
It's
not
even
worth
porting
in
desert
into
service
because
with
well
you've
got
the
outside
tube
or
the
piping.
That's
there
and
you
got
a
rod
that
goes
down
inside
there
and
that
rod
is
already
seized
up
in
place.
A
It
can't
be,
it
can't
be
broke,
loose
or
anything
without
destroying
it.
So
you
know
you
get
a
company
out
there
and
they
work
at
it.
Work
at
it
and
work
at
it
and
they
get
that
rod
out
of
there
and
then
they
just
fill
it
with
either
a
neat
grout
or
a
bentonite,
and
that
seals
the
well
so
and
then
they
take
the
equipment
and
recycle
it,
throw
it
out
whatever.
C
A
B
A
C
A
Unfortunately,
though,
the
records
only
go
back,
I,
don't
know
exactly
how
far
they
go
back,
but
they
only
go
back
so
far
and
the
state
hat
was
keeping
records
for
a
period
of
time.
But
you
know
they
they
weren't
privy
to
every
single.
Well
that
got
capped
and
some
got
capped
and
never
the
records
never
made
it
to
the
state
or
native
to
the
city.
So
you
wouldn't
be
able
to
tell
for
sure
there's.
There
is
two
different
types
of
Wells
out
there.
A
You've
got
the
you
got
the
ones
where
you
see
them
inside
here
and
then
you've
got
the
outside
wells
that
the
tank
is.
Is
it's
not
a
tank,
but
it's
got
the
motor
and
the
pump
outside
and
it's
in
a
big
casing.
That's
outside
your
house,
so
I
mean
there's
a
couple
different
types
of
wells
that
are
out
there.
We
don't
have
Sand
Point
wells
here.
Those
are
shallow
point
wells
and
we
just
don't
have
those
our
wells
go
a
little
deeper
than
Sand
Point
moving
the
gas
lines.
A
A
We
find
a
lot
of
these
older
connectors
that
are
not
allowed
for
use
anymore,
because
the
listing
has
run
out
and
they're
made
of
a
certain
material
that,
when
they're
moved
because
they're
flexible
they're
moved
back
and
forth
a
lot,
they
break
they
crack.
Those
are
the
brass
type
connectors,
the
only
connectors
you'll
see
for
gas
and
again
these
are
appliance
connectors.
So
these
come
in
little
bags.
You
can
buy
them,
but
these
little
bags,
these
appliance
connectors,
they're
stainless
steel.
A
These
have
been
approved
for
gas
use
to
hook
up
an
appliance
without
running
a
hard
pipe
to
the
appliance
or
whatever.
So
we
try
to
get
some
of
the
old
connectors
out,
because
they're
old
they've
been
moved
around
too
much.
We
don't
need
a
gas
leak
coming
into
a
house.
We
don't
want
explosions
happening
here
in
the
city.
A
This
is
a
stainless
steel,
flexible
gas
line,
connector
that
ans
iz2
1.24.
That
is
the
that
is
the
listing
of
that
gas
connector
that
allows
it
to
be
used.
It's
been
tested,
it's
been
moved
around
many
many
many
times.
Thousands
of
times
made
it
through
the
listing.
They
get
the
stamp
of
approval,
that's
one
of
the
old
ones
that
we
say
no
to
that's,
that's
called
a
brass
craft.
It's
an
old
brass
connector,
still
gray
in
color.
You
can
find
the
new
ones
still
gray.
You
can
find
them
in
yellow.
A
You
can
find
them
in
black,
but
they
don't
sell
any
of
these
other
ones
anymore.
So,
when
you,
when
we
see
these,
we
get
them
out,
you
see
how
right
there
you
see
that
little
twist
in
there
I
hope
you
can
make
it
out
in
the
picture,
but
that's
been
twisted
this
way
and
you
can
tell
it's
been
diminished
in
size.
A
All
these,
this
whole
thing
has
just
been
removed
and
taken
out
of
their
open
gas
lines.
Definitely
make
sure
that
anything
that
is
not
hooked
to
an
appliance
is
sealed.
With
a
cap,
all
it
takes
is
one
person
to
just
nudge
that
little
valve
on
it
and
you
got
a
gas
leak
going
there
if
no
one's
in
the
house
for
a
long
time,
that's
gas,
buildup
one
flick
of
the
lights
could
start
that
thing
and
ignite
it.
So
we
make
sure
it's
all
capped,
even
if
it's
not
in
use.
A
Very
this
was
a
kind
of
an
intriguing
one
that
I
saw,
which
I'm
kind
of
you
know
to
be
honest
with
you,
I,
don't
know
what
the
person
was
thinking
when
they
did
this,
but
they
took
and
tied
the
plumbing
and
mechanical
venting
together
and
ran
it
out
through
one
port
in
the
roof.
This
is
a
plumbing
stack.
This
is
a
vent
stack.
Vent
stacks
have
to
go
through
your
roof
independently.
A
This
year
they
tied
this
corrugated
pipe
on
and
they
tied
it
in
with
this
other
corrugated
pipe,
and
that
was
running
to
the
backgrounds,
so
they
tied
them
all
together.
Basically,
we
can't
allow
that
the
vent
stack
for
the
plumbing
has
to
go
out
again.
This
is
your
main
stack
right
here,
which
is
fine.
This
was
an
additional
vent
stack
for
another
venting
that
had
to
be
done,
so
we
we
got
rid
of
that
mess
made
them.
Do
it
right,
everything's,
fine
and
dandy.
Now.
B
B
A
No,
no,
the
six
feet
isn't
measured
vertically
like
that,
because
you,
in
order
to
do
that,
you'd
still
have
to
go
all
the
way
down
and
around
and
then
down
just
to
shut
it
off.
The
six
feet
of
the
appliance
is
made
so
that
if
there's
a
problem
there,
you
pull
that
appliance
out
and
click
that
valve
off
right
there
right
johnny-on-the-spot,
not
fifty
paces
later,
and
you
know
finding
your
way
through
the
maze
it
that's
that's
the
requirement.
A
A
You
know
when
you
build
it
or
when
you
take
a
permit
out
and
you're
gonna
move
your
kitchen
though
you're
gonna
move
your
appliances
say
they
were
on
that
outside
wall
and
you
want
to
Center
them
more
as
an
island
or
something
and
you
move
your
plumbing
or
your
gas,
and
all
that
that's
when
your
valve
is
gonna
be
brought
in
by
that
appliance.
So
anything
like
that
will
be
will
be
updated.
A
A
Okay,
for
one
you've
got
it
sitting
on
a
couple
of
cinder
blocks.
What
happens
if
you
hit
the
cinder
blocks
or
you
hit
the
furnace?
Won't
that
thing
come
crashing
down
and
you
break
the
gas
line
on
it,
and
since
your
car
is
gas
and
it's
also
powered
by
electric,
don't
you
think
you'd
have
an
explosion
that
could
happen
there.
A
There's
a
lot
of
this
that
we
see
out
there.
You
know
it's
not
as
prevalent
as
it
used
to
be
just
because
a
lot
of
it
has
gotten
cleaned
up,
but
there's
still
people
out
there
that
like
to
do
it.
So
we
try
to
make
sure
that
it's
safe.
If
you're
gonna
put
a
furnace
in
a
garage,
it
has
to
be
raised,
18
inches
off
the
floor,
it's
got
to
be
secured
gas
line,
that's
gonna,
be
to
it.
It's
gonna
be
secured.
The
electrical
is
gonna,
be
proper,
the
whole
nine
yards.
A
A
We
get
into
structural
issues,
this
is
a
deck
that
was
supported
on
a
foundation
wall
now
the
corner
part
of
that
deck
that
you
do
see
there
that
is
holding
that
is
still
in
load.
Unfortunately,
the
you
can
see
the
crack
coming
down
right
about
in
here
on
the
foundation
wall.
That's
really
not
structural!
If
that
fails
the
deck
fails.
You
know
the
plinth
blocks
that
are
not
sitting
on
top
the
wall.
They're
not
attached
to
the
wall.
You
know
they
can
move
off.
A
A
See
the
light
through
the
basement
wall
right
in
the
middle
there
I
can
see
the
outside.
That's
also
a
structural
failure
in
the
wall,
that's
caused
by
ground
pressure
water
pressure
years
ago,
when
they
built
houses.
They
did
a
lot
of
masonry
walls.
They
they
didn't
put
rebar
in
them.
They
didn't
core
fill
blocks,
they
just
stacked
them
put
the
house
on
top
and
everything
was
good.
Well.
Ground
soils
tend
to
really
make
havoc
out
of
a
lot
of
those
type
of
houses.
You
got
clay,
you
got
silt.
A
Any
expansion
type
soil
sand
is
about
the
only
good
soil.
That
really
is
fine
with
masonry
block
because
it
filters
the
water
out
fast.
You
know
it
doesn't
build
up
pressure,
but
this
this
house
had
clay
in
that
area.
That's
exactly
what
it
does
when
you
don't
have
a
wall,
that's
properly
supported
or
braced.
If
it
makes
that
big
crack
and
it
blows
the
wall
in
that
compromises
the
whole
structural
value
of
the
house.
We
make
sure
that
gets
fixed
and
there's
many
different
fixes
out
there
from
fiberglass
mats
to
core
filling
them.
A
You
can
break
open
the
blocks,
fish
rebar
in
there
and
core
fill
it
again
and
then
close
it
back
up.
There's
like
these
claws
that
they
have
they
put
a
hole
in
the
yard
about
eight
feet
out
and
they
run
a
big
rod
out
to
that
hole
from
the
foundation
and
it
feeds
a
clamp
that
holds
to
the
ground
same
thing
to
the
wall
and
they
tighten
it
up
little
by
little
and
that
pulls
the
wall
back.
There
is
so
many
fixes
out
there.
It's
amazing.
What's
out
there
and.
A
Last
but
not
least,
this
is
kind
of
one
of
our
biggest
ones
that
we
always
see
and
we're
always
trying
to
protect
our
water
system,
we're
trying
not
to
clean
and
take
care
of
any
more
water
than
we
have
to.
So
we
don't
want
people
to
run
their
sump
pumps
to
their
domestic
water
system,
drainage
system,
sump
pump.
Water
is
always
supposed
to
go
to
the
outside
of
the
house.
A
There's
very
rare
circumstances
that
the
city
will
allow
you
to
run
your
sump
pump
into
your
house
domestic
drainage
system,
and
then
those
are
a
case-by-case
basis
based
on
groundwater
levels
where
it's
built
and
the
city
knows
exactly
where
they
are.
They
come
out
and
assess
it
and
they'll
make
the
determination,
but
for
the
most
part,
if
you
live
outside
of
any
lowland
swampland
or
anything
like
that,
you're
gonna
run
your
water
back
outside,
where
it
belongs.
A
A
B
A
It's
a
building
question
yes,
but
I'm!
No,
you
don't
have
to
have
handrails
on
each
side.
One
handrail
is
all
that's
required.
So
if
you've
got
one
going
down,
I,
don't
I
don't
get
concerned
about
the
height
of
it.
As
long
as
you
got
a
rail
we'll
note,
if
it's
under
the
correct
height
for
the
code
34
to
38
inches,
that's
the
height
that
handrails
are
supposed
to
be
installed
at.
If
you
got
one
in
there
for
your
little
kids
and
you
got
one
for
yourself,
I'm
not
gonna,
say
boo
about
it.
B
C
A
Those
would
also
be
labeled
as
below
minimum,
because
at
this
point
now
what
our
code
requires
is
you
have
to
have
a
guardrail
from
any
height
on
the
stairs
to
the
30
inches
and
below
so
from
the
floor.
You
measure
up
30
inches.
You
get
that
freebie
right
there,
30
inches
from
the
floor
up
to
your
stair.
Anything
at
that
level
does
not
have
to
be
guardrail.
Anything
above
that
gets
a
guardrail
any
other
questions.
D
D
A
D
A
D
C
A
C
A
A
D
C
B
B
B
B
A
5/8
is
only
required
where
it's
24
on
center
framing
or
it
separates
living
space
as
well.
So
up
above,
if
you
have
living
space
above
your
garage,
that's
got
to
be
5/8.
You
got
a
wall
comprised
of
on
your
house
to
your
garage,
1/2
inch
and
1/2
inch
on
the
inside
and
your
framing
is
all
centered
in
between
that
that's
a
1-hour
assembly
in
itself.