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Prevent Electrical Safety Hazards From Storm-Damaged Equipment
Katrina Aftermath Reveals Hidden Dangers From Cleaned And Dried Parts, Waived City Inspections
(HIT) - Homeowners recovering from storms can prevent
serious electrical safety hazards by taking proper precautions with
water-damaged equipment and inspections before reconnecting their
power. Learning from the Katrina aftermath, an investigative report
titled "Disaster After the Disaster," in Electrical Contractor
magazine was the first to uncover the risks of an emergency ordinance
that lets New Orleans homeowners waive electrical inspections by a city
or parish inspector—combined with cleaned and dried equipment
that may look safe, but needs to be replaced.
Approved by the city council and signed by Mayor Ray Nagin in January,
the ordinance allows homeowners to authorize licensed electricians to
certify that residential systems are safe to activate. Reporter Jeff
Griffin discovered the practice through a source while researching an
earlier Electrical Contractor story on the risks of the resale of flood-damaged electrical equipment.
"My sources emphasized the serious risks of waiving inspections by city
inspectors while reconnecting power with previously submerged, cleaned
and dried equipment that could result in serious hazards," said
Griffin, an Oklahoma City construction and tools writer. "Are there
hundreds or thousands of structures in storm-affected areas that will
suddenly go up in flames when water-damaged wiring shorts out and
faulty breakers fail to shut off power?" poses the article.
As Griffin reports, safety is the reason for electrical inspections.
The long-established and accepted practice is for inspections to be
conducted by qualified professionals representing the jurisdiction in
which properties are located. While waived city inspections can help
speed service to power-starved homeowners, the story said the practice
now raises several concerns:
- The emergency ordinance in New Orleans
provides the opportunity for numerous abuses such as compromising the
inspection process, which could lead to serious safety issues.
- Buildings in other areas previously inspected
under other emergency procedures may have been reconnected to power
even though electrical components were damaged by floodwater and should
have been replaced.
- For contractors making inspections, there is the risk of liability should failures occur in properties they inspected.
- Unconfirmed reports recently surfaced that
buildings in other south Louisiana jurisdictions are being reconnected
to power without replacement of water-damaged electrical components.
"As the leading publication representing the electrical
contracting industry, Jeff’s story will hopefully drive change in
a practice that presents long-term, hazardous implications," said Electrical Contractor Publisher John Maisel.
Griffin references the National Electrical Code (NEC), stating that
equipment cannot be exposed to agents including fumes, vapors and
liquids that can deteriorate the equipment.
During initial clean up, a volunteer reported that some Gulf property
owners, volunteers and hired workers cleaned debris from electrical
components and flushed them with water, exposing them to further damage
and creating a false sense of security. The cleaned and dried equipment
has showed no evidence of exposure to flood water, and inspections by
inexperienced or disinterested personnel would not identify that they
needed replacement.
Griffin found that the neighboring Jefferson Parish never waived
inspections. According to electrical inspectors in Gulfport, Biloxi and
Bay St. Louis, Miss., all electrical inspections are currently being
made by city inspectors.
He reports that City of New Orleans Chief Electrical Inspector Larry
Chan said the city requires replacement of all electrical components
that were previously submerged.
The full article is available at www.lhprmc.com/PDFs/EC.disaster.story.swf.
Published by the National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA), Bethesda, Md., Electrical Contractor
magazine delivers 85,000+ electrical contractors and more than 65,900
electrical contracting locations, more than any other industry
publication.
Telephone: (301) 657-3110. Web site: www.ecmag.com.
Courtesy: Home Improvement News and Information Center
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