Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes it is true. Va Water has an insurence plan you can enroll in to cover both the sewer line and the water line (also your responsibility)
My water bill was getting higher and higher so we called them out. Sure enough, the 60 year old galvanized pipe was leKing like a sieve. They replaced it with new copper and We didn't pay a dime. Contractors told me it would normally be $7000. This was in Del Ray in 2018
Of course it cost you, you paid it in premiums. We priced this out and it seemed like a wash. It’s kind of like pet insurance, it’s more for financing than really saving yourself $.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it is true. Va Water has an insurence plan you can enroll in to cover both the sewer line and the water line (also your responsibility)
My water bill was getting higher and higher so we called them out. Sure enough, the 60 year old galvanized pipe was leKing like a sieve. They replaced it with new copper and We didn't pay a dime. Contractors told me it would normally be $7000. This was in Del Ray in 2018
Anonymous wrote:The real outrage are the plumbers charging 25k for something that costs 8k, I know because when we build houses that's the cost without profit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Alexandria we had to do this. The homeowner policy they offer is a scam. It has so many exclusions and a cap. It didn’t pay a penny. We’re in old town and the water company did the replacement from the middle of the street to out tie in, which was under the sidewalk in front of our house. There was an old access point in the sidewalk there. From there to our basement, we had to pay. It was pricey bc we had to lift up the old brick sidewalk and out it back down exactly.
Interesting... in VA it looks like each county has its own municipal water and sewer company?
Alexandria City says this about who repairs sewer pipes: if the lateral was installed before or after 1955 makes a difference:
Property Owner Responsibilities
Residents are important partners in the City's work to maintain Alexandria's sewer connections and prevent backups.
Sewer laterals are pipes that carry sanitary sewage from buildings to the City's sewer mains.
For sewer laterals installed before July 1, 1955, it is the responsibility of the individual property owner to maintain and repair laterals from the curb to the property.
For sewer laterals installed on or after July 1, 1955, it is the responsibility of the individual property owner to maintain and repair everything from the infrastructure to the actual sewer main.
https://www.alexandriava.gov/public-works/sewer-and-hydrant-maintenance
Anonymous wrote:In Alexandria we had to do this. The homeowner policy they offer is a scam. It has so many exclusions and a cap. It didn’t pay a penny. We’re in old town and the water company did the replacement from the middle of the street to out tie in, which was under the sidewalk in front of our house. There was an old access point in the sidewalk there. From there to our basement, we had to pay. It was pricey bc we had to lift up the old brick sidewalk and out it back down exactly.
Property Owner Responsibilities
Residents are important partners in the City's work to maintain Alexandria's sewer connections and prevent backups.
Sewer laterals are pipes that carry sanitary sewage from buildings to the City's sewer mains.
For sewer laterals installed before July 1, 1955, it is the responsibility of the individual property owner to maintain and repair laterals from the curb to the property.
For sewer laterals installed on or after July 1, 1955, it is the responsibility of the individual property owner to maintain and repair everything from the infrastructure to the actual sewer main.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For many people, the property line is between the street and sidewalk (so a pipe under the front yard and extending under the sidewalk is all on their land).
Ack. OK, that’s a new piece of information. In what state and county is this true? How do you know exactly where your property line ends? In Maryland from what WSSC says, I thought it seemed pretty clear that they would be responsible for anything under the street up until the homeowners property started. I assumed that your property started when your land or grass started. The part you’re responsible to maintain and mow. Come to think of it. We are required to shovel our sidewalks, so maybe that is our property as well? Yet we are not required to maintain the surface of the sidewalk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If so - it seems INSANE to me that people in NOVA are expected to arrange and pay for repairs under a paved city street. Is that actually happening? How can low income people even afford it?
Home ownership is not cheap. How do low income afford to replace the roof on their house? That costs more than many water/sewer fixes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This has happened to two people I know, one in Montana ($25k repair) and one in Massachusetts ($15k repair).
I think it’s pretty universal that homeowners are responsible for the pipes out to the main.
Typically home equity is where they get the funds to cover it if they don’t have a solid savings account.
Pipes from your house under your yard, I understand being the responsibility of the home owner.
It's the part about them being responsible for repairs that are located under a city or county street that I don't understand. I just always thought if a street needs to be broken up and dug down into, that the city or county handles that. I think that would make the most sense for them to come through one time, when they maybe are repairing something else, and just put in new connections to the homeowner's laterals from the main. Doesn't that make more sense financially - to do it all at once on a street, replace all the pipes, and then fill the road back in and pave it.
It just doesn't make sense for each individual person on a street block - say the block has 40 houses on it - as each set of individual connections from the main to the lateral starts to rust out (and they were probably put in almost 90 years ago) that each individual house... 40 of them -- individually digs up just their portion of the street and gets the repair, and then paves over in a patchwork fashion.