Ting Lai
Tenant threaten to appeal to legal
28 April 2020 | 23 replies
How much money are you saving on trying to repair the hot water tank as opposed to replacing it?
Dianne S.
New member from Northern Colorado
30 April 2016 | 36 replies
And I see some of the shakiness in Weld County with oil & gas being in the tank as it is.
Jeremy Trier
Oil Tank - Leave it or remove it
13 September 2019 | 8 replies
I bought a place that had an oil furnace that didn't work (she had portable space heaters everywhere-crazy) and the seller had to replace it with a heat pump and remove the old oil tank as a condition of the sale.
David H.
Underground oil tank
25 September 2020 | 5 replies
Usually, only heating oil USTs associated with commercial properties are regulated. thus, most home heating oil tanks may and often are taken out of service without any oversight from state regulators.Second- the rules that are in effect for heating oil tanks are usually less stringent than for diesel or gasoline tanks since heating oil tends to thicker and may not migrate as far. as a result, many states just require tanks to be cleaned out. they may also require the tanks to be filled with sand or concrete to prevent collapse. but sampling may not be required.Third- the key to determining if a tank has leaked is to collect soil samples from around and beneath the tank (groundwater also if groundwater is shallow). another quick way to see if a tank is leaking is to "dip" it with a stick that has a paste that turns color in the presence of water. generally, if water has gotten into a tank, it can mean oil has leaked out of the tank (although a certain amount of condensation may be present even where there is no leak so this is not a infallible test).Fourth- if there is currently a tank in the basement, ask the owner if there used to be a buried tank (a/k/a underground storage tank).Fifth, If the tank has impacted the soil, the cleanup generally varies from $25K to $50K though the costs will depend ont he depth of the contamination. i once had a home with a heated pool that had pressurized piping and used diesel. the contamination went down 40 feet and the consultant went crazy excavating the soil to the tune of $400K!!!
Brian Zaug
tenant keeps running out of oil
5 January 2018 | 10 replies
Do a little investigating and see if any social service agencies will fill his tank as a stop gap measure.