growler
Senior Member
- Location
- Atlanta,GA
Ran into an interesting problem the other day. A prospective customer has a 300 Amp sevice that needs some work. Another contractor did a service up-grade some time ago ( about a year ). This house has power and the meter is sealed but things don't look right to me. I think that there are a few more violations than would normally be let slide to get a final on a service up-grade so I call to see if there was a final on this job. The final had failed on the job and the power was only on because of a temp power release and the permit was still open.
The problem is this, " what do you do now"? The contractor that did the work is a real butt head and doesn't want to finish the job and the customer doesn't want him around because he threatened the customer with physical violence ( I talked to the EC and he sounds like a nut case ). I called the inspection department to find out why power is still on a year later with only a temp power release ( longest temp release around here is 90 days ) and they don't seem very interested in the problem.
I don't really want to touch the equipment because the minute I touch it this lets the original contractor off the hook because he can say things have been tampered with. He still has an open permit and no one really has a right to do anything.
I just told the homeowner he doesn't really need to pay me to work on the problem because he has already paid for an install and since it hasn't been finaled then the warranty hasn't started yet and I think the original contractor should be forced to complete his job in the correct manner and make the install safe. My idea was for the homeowner to call for a final on the job and let the inspector see this mess and let him explain why power is on. There is a breakdown in the system, somewhere.
Any ideas or is this just one for the courts to decide?
PS : I hate contractors like this because they give the whole industry a bad name.
The problem is this, " what do you do now"? The contractor that did the work is a real butt head and doesn't want to finish the job and the customer doesn't want him around because he threatened the customer with physical violence ( I talked to the EC and he sounds like a nut case ). I called the inspection department to find out why power is still on a year later with only a temp power release ( longest temp release around here is 90 days ) and they don't seem very interested in the problem.
I don't really want to touch the equipment because the minute I touch it this lets the original contractor off the hook because he can say things have been tampered with. He still has an open permit and no one really has a right to do anything.
I just told the homeowner he doesn't really need to pay me to work on the problem because he has already paid for an install and since it hasn't been finaled then the warranty hasn't started yet and I think the original contractor should be forced to complete his job in the correct manner and make the install safe. My idea was for the homeowner to call for a final on the job and let the inspector see this mess and let him explain why power is on. There is a breakdown in the system, somewhere.
Any ideas or is this just one for the courts to decide?
PS : I hate contractors like this because they give the whole industry a bad name.