gah...
so, a few weeks ago, a heavy rainstorm came
through here and the toilet started flushing slowly. at the time, i had
no idea what that meant - i didn't even know if i was on city or a
septic (i'm on city). but, some back and forth with the landlord and a
lot of googling have led me to believe that something is broken with the
piping.
the upside is i've learned a bit about how
this works. it's something i've never had to think about before. but the
way it's supposed to work is that the rain water goes into the storm
drain and down a separate pipe to the river, where it dumps in
untreated. the toilet water goes into a separate sanitary line and out
to the treatment plant. so, rainfall should never back up the toilet.
and,
yet it was clear from the beginning that rainwater is in fact slowing
down the toilet's drainage. it's not quite backing up. yet.
but, of course the response i'm getting is "that's impossible, it's not how the system works".
there's
since been two rainfalls that have caused the toilet to slow down at
levels that are proportional to the amount of rain that fell. small
rainfalls mean small issue. big rainfalls mean big issue. so, we've got
correlation and proportionality. the scientific method tells me we have a
causal relationship, here. but science has been less powerful than
faith. my scientific reasoning was met with an offer to use the
landlord's plunger.
but, what the causal relationship i
developed demonstrates is that there's either a break in the local line
(which would be expensive for the property owner to fix) or a break on
the city line. so, i asked the guy next door...
yup. he's getting backups from the rain, too.
now,
i need to convince them that they need to get the city in here to fix
something before the snow melts in the spring. as the relationship is
proportional, things could get messy down here if nothing happens before
then.
there's some construction on the main street a few blocks away to replace old sewer lines.
i'm
*hoping* that what's going on is that they have the rainwater
temporarily routed to the sanitary, and it will be corrected within a
few weeks. but, i have no evidence of this.
my other
suspicion is connected to the house across the street. there was a fire
there about a month ago, which is about when things started backing up.
the property's been completely shut down. if they shut the sump pump
off, the rainwater could be pooling in the basement and heading down the
floor drain - which is usually connected to the sanitary. that would
explain it. the problem is that it's hard to understand how that could
be generating *enough* water to back shit up without there being
significant blockage somewhere. but, then you need to ask the question:
what else has been flowing through the floor drain since then?
i've
done all i can do, though. i've proven to them that something is
crossed, and it's probably a city issue. now i just have to hope they do
something about it...
i'm honestly expecting a more
positive response from the main property owner than the guy upstairs. i
THINK i've got enough evidence to convince him. he mentioned calling the
city a few emails ago, so i think he'll get it.
but i can't risk this backing up in the spring and am going to have to call the city myself if i don't get a good response.
i mean, it's crystal clear that rainwater is flooding the sanitary somewhere, even if it's not supposed to.
what
was weird about the rain today, though, is that the sump pump didn't
come on until like an hour after it stopped raining, indicating it's
draining from somewhere - like the house across the street, maybe.
i've convinced myself it's the abandoned property next door.
so,
i've sent an email off to the windsor engineering department, asking
them about the sewer replacement (is the storm going through the
sanitary?) and what the procedure is for dealing with an abandoned
property that's not draining properly...