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Initially, the apartment maintenance team was reluctant to contact an electrician.

The maintenance team for the apartment initially hesitated to contact an electrician.

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Butt_Patties • 568 points
Bet anything if your friend calls the fire department to get the fire marshal or the state’s electrical/building inspector it’ll be fixed by the end of the next day. The landlord will be pissed about it though, so make sure your friend keeps their ass covered in the future to avoid retaliation.

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collegekid1991 • 124 points
Thanks for the insight.

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[deleted] • 50 points
> state’s electrical/building inspector states don’t have inspectors. that stuff is done on a county or city level. and there is a very good chance they don’t do anything at all. it looks like a breaker failed to trip. you’d call the insurance company and they would handle it. although if that’s all the damage, it wouldn’t meet your deductible so you’d just call an electrician and have them handle it if you can’t do it yourself.

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eKSiF • 25 points
If this is a recurring issue as OP stated its something other than just a breaker fault, even the most half assed local inspector better shut this shit down.

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[deleted] • 7 points
you have waaaaaay too much confidence in inspectors. they are not required to have a lot of experience where I am (and in most places). I have seen things pass inspection that should not have and I have seen AHJs make up codes and requirements.

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eKSiF • 19 points
I work for a utility, I’ve had more than my fair share of shitty inspectors. However, once the words “fire” or “blown up” are introduced, complacency should leave the building.

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[deleted] • 4 points
when I worked in residential code enforcement, our only real tools were to fail the inspection or to put in a stop work order, but they didn’t like us doing stop work orders because they want things brought into compliance, and a stop work order is the opposite of that. we had some trouble with some landlords literally just stopping work and then the residents complained to city council and the landlord said ‘the city told us to stop work!’ and then the head of codes enforcement got dragged through the mud in the papers. dude had to explain that a stop work order is really a ‘stop *all other work and fix this one issue* order’ but by that point the damage was done and so word came down we weren’t to do that anymore

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Doxbox49 • 5 points
My city has some of the toughest inspectors in the country. They would all shut it down. Depends on where you live

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twoaspensimages • 2 points
Our last inspector used to be an industrial sparky. He knew NEC. That was about it. I had to show him the vents were full of water at rough. He didn’t know to check. He asked my tile setter what Red Guard was at drywall. He’d never seen it before. SMH.

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TheBonanaking • 1 points
In Washington State we have state electrical inspectors through Labor and Industries.

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twoaspensimages • 1 points
Some states have inspectors. Some states are city and county. Some states the larger localities have inspectors and the places with few people only have state electric and plumbing inspectors.

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StoneCypher • 975 points
just call the fire department

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ralleee • 194 points
and the mortician

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StoneCypher • 265 points
the nice thing about the fire department is that they will be there in ten minutes, the owner will be there in another ten, and the electrician will be there by the end of the hour, or the landlord will pay for hotels until it’s fixed well. one nice thing

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Tools4toys • 77 points
The fire department would likely pull the meter off, requiring an electrical inspection. The not nice part is, you won’t have power for 2-3 days while the electricians come and replace this service panel, and then the inspector comes and approves the work before the power company reinstalls the meter. That it is 34° C now, might make it uncomfortable.

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StoneCypher • 47 points
> The not nice part is, you won’t have power for 2-3 days it’s several thousand dollars a day per tenant if the power’s out for code violations. they will pay for the overnight electrician

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b4n4n4p4nc4k3s • 10 points
It’s the inspection that’s the pita in that case, unless your city/townships really on top of it with getting them out there. In mine they’re out there quick to get something shut down, less so for the follow-up.

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TruthFlavor • 8 points
I believe a building on fire gets a lot hotter than 34°.

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Tools4toys • 2 points
I just mean after they cut off the electrical, and you now have to sit in no AC apartment until they get the power back on.

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SlitScan • 2 points
rental apartments cant be occupied if there is no power for a sustained period of time. (they arent considered habitable) most jurisdictions its anything over 24 hrs. the only exemptions are for a state of emergency. the landlords insurance would need to provide accommodations.

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Alaira314 • 1 points
> the landlords insurance would need to provide accommodations. Which is the issue. You think a landlord who does *this* is going to play along well with accommodations? They’ll drag their feet, and maybe a court would rule in your favor, but you know how much time and effort that is to be made whole? And that’s even assuming it’s *possible* to be made whole. There’s so much fuckery that the courts wouldn’t care about. What if you have pets, which are unwelcome at most hotels? What if you have non-portable pets that *can’t* be taken with you? What if the hotel you’re told to use isn’t on a bus line, so you can’t get to work while you’re staying there? What if you bring bed bugs home? What if you don’t have the money to pay out of pocket right now, making reimbursement after the fact a moot point? Forcing a full building reinspection is the last-ditch nuclear move, only to be used when all other options have been exhausted. Even if none of those concerns apply to you, you’re not the only person living in that building, and what gives you the right to impose those things upon others unless there’s truly no other choice?

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SlitScan • 2 points
this is why taxes and regulation are good. and only suckers vote for people who cut them.

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Tools4toys • 1 points
You’re not wrong, the thing we’ve seen are residents in some locations don’t want to be out of their apartment for too long, afraid looters will come in and steal their stuff. Most places though have individual meters, and as long as their electrical service isn’t off, they can stay once the inspector approves the CO. Had a fire in Richton Park, 96 unit Senior High-rise which was totally evacuated. Most residents were finding family to stay with, but the county was telling them you must provide rooms for all people, regardless. Once they saw the cost for 80+ hotel rooms, and transportation to them, they got the inspector out at 6am to get all but 3 units approved for occupancy.

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PlumbinCracka • 16 points
If it takes you more than 8 hours to do a panel, you’re incredibly slow.

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jibishot • 50 points
And let me introduce a house from pre 1920. Just incase you don’t know; there’s not room, nothings square and it’s been subdivided into 9 apartments.

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PlumbinCracka • -18 points
I work with tons of electricians. A panel change should not take more than a day dude.

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xThereon • 21 points
On a normal residential building, probably not. An apartment complex (or building) is different. They’re usually sloppily done, haphazardly wired (thanks scummy landlords!), and management puts everything off until they absolutely have to do it.

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dr_dan319 • 12 points
This is literally a 16 space sub panel, maybe 150 amps. Change out on this is maybe a couple hours. Trouble shooting the cause beyond just a bad breaker/faulty bus bar could take longer, but this is like a half day to a days job, nothing more. Dude might not be an electrician, but I am and he’s right.

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unknownpoltroon • 1 points
my old house was built in 1890 somthing, and the wiring was added in and upgraded by amateurs over the century . we called in an electrician to fix something and the man spent 10 minutes just staring at the wiring in the breaker box and swearing before starting

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a1cshowoff • -1 points
You work with them, but you plainly are not one. Sit down.

What do you think?

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