On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 1:03 PM, William Allen Simpson <william.allen.simpson@gmail.com> wrote:
On 7/21/14 3:50 PM, William Herrin wrote:
On Mon, Jul 21, 2014 at 3:08 PM, Blake Dunlap <ikiris@gmail.com> wrote:
My power is pretty much always on, my water is pretty much always on and safe, my sewer system works, etc etc...
Mine isn't. I lost power for a three days solid last year, I've suffered 3 sanitary sewer backflows into my basement the last decade and you should see the number of violations the EPA has on file about my drinking water system. Only the gas company has managed to keep the service on, at least until I had a problem with the way their billing department mishandled my bill. Didn't get solved until it went to the lawyers.
And I'm in the burbs a half dozen miles from Washington DC. God help folks in a truly remote location.
Woah! Catching up on this thread -- AFAICT from public sources you (Herrin) don't actually have municipal electric or gas, and doesn't look like water/sewer either....
What you have are regulated monopolies, subject to what's known as "regulatory capture".
Right on power and gas, wrong on water and sewer. Until this year, water and sewer was owned and operated by the neighboring city of Falls Church (I'm in Fairfax county. Counties and cities are separate in Virginia. A place is either in a city or in a county but not both.), providing water directly and reselling Fairfax county sewer. After the worst sewer backflow last decade (which hit everybody on the street), the county stepped up a "blame the victim" process. See, they oversubscribed the sanitary sewer allowing new construction hookups and selling additional capacity upstream to the city as if all nearby county houses were following modern standards. But, most of the local neighborhoods were built in the 1950's when it was standard and then-lawful practice to hook areaway (basement stair) drains to the sanitary sewer. This results in modest stormwater intrusion which Fairfax didn't account for. Their solution? We'll install the cheapest possible backflow valve at our cost, but you have to agree that should it ever gunk up and fail that's your problem and oh by the way we think you're at fault anyway because you have an areaway drain and reconnecting it to the stormwater system so it doesn't back up when the valve closes is your problem. I have pictures where brownish water has pushed its way up to the top of the basement washbasins, a good three feet off the floor. Bastards. Regards, Bill Herrin -- William Herrin ................ herrin@dirtside.com bill@herrin.us Owner, Dirtside Systems ......... Web: <http://www.dirtside.com/> Can I solve your unusual networking challenges?