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Brian Smith, the newest member of the Energility team provides useful information for both residential and commercial buildings on getting ready for the cooler weather in the following article.

There is a time and a place for everything

By Brian Smith

I learned a lot from my dad- He taught me (painfully for both parties) how to drive a stick, how to play euchre (lead the right bower), some basic carpentry skills (measure twice/cut once), right ti-ghty vs lefty loosey (do NOT cross-thread) and a myriad of other skills. However- the most important take away is the idea that there is a time and place for everything. This is very applicable in nearly all aspects of life, none more so than getting your personal/commercial property ready for winter.

If you haven’t noticed- it is starting to get cold. I have quietly taken my flannel shirts out of the closet and will be in full Carharts soon enough.  No reason to worry- it is not going to snow in the next couple of weeks (probably?) but rest assured- it will snow soon.  You might want to get the snow blower fueled up and ready. The days of getting in your car and driving to work when the temperature is 70 degrees F at 6:00 am are gone. There might be one or two days left, but the temperatures are dropping. The leaves are dropping. Your electricity bills should be dropping.  Oktoberfest is nearly over.

Don’t let that lull you into a false sense of security. The electricity bills may be easing up, but the natural gas bill is coming. I don’t budget for using natural gas until October.

It is now October.

There might not be White Walkers approaching the wall, but I assure you- Winter is coming.

Here are a couple of questions to ask yourself:

 What are you doing to ensure that the heat will be available, and the water is either removed or properly cared for to avoid freezing?

Unfortunately, the time and place that most people are aware of a problem is when they are calling a vendor for a costly expense.  They reach the vendor and are told that it will be 2 days until they can get there as many people had the same idea of waiting. It will probably be after hours when after hours rates apply. If Black Friday is when retail makes their budget numbers for the year, the first substantial cold spell is when plumbers and pipefitters make their budget number for the year.

You can alleviate yourself of this painful experience. Flooding water from a broken water line is a problem that is avoidable. Your furnace will stop working at some point. You can make that point much further down the line and hopefully when the weather is cooperating. Not that there is a good time for a furnace to break down, but January, in Ohio, is a particularly bad time. Maybe the worst.

              When it comes to water- drain it. If you can’t drain it- verify that you can’t drain it. Understand WHY you can’t drain it. If you still can’t drain it- insulate it. Heat it. If you heat it- VERIFY that your heater works. If you have an electric/gas unit heater next to a water line that you want to avoid freezing- but the gas valve is closed or the breaker that serves this tripped 9 months ago- The water line will still freeze. Physics apply.

Nobody wants to have the conversation with a tenant as to why their equipment is ruined.

Nobody wants to have the conversation with the insurance adjuster.

Nobody wants to have the conversation with their spouse.

These conversations are usually loud, one sided and relatively unpleasant.

Be the superhero that you know you can be. YOU have the power.

This is the time AND the place.

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