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	<title>Comments on: Sewage back-up: Is this possible, and if so, how/why it happened and how could we prevent it from reoccurring?</title>
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	<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/</link>
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		<title>By: Brendan  Emmerson</title>
		<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/comment-page-1/#comment-80</link>
		<dc:creator>Brendan  Emmerson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jul 2008 00:38:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/#comment-80</guid>
		<description>If papertowels will make it through the toilet then it will definetly make it the rest of the way to the tap unless there is an obstruction along the way. The problem is likely at the conection from your main line to the city sewer tap. This connection is usually made with a ruber boot(also known as a fernco coupling )and is the first place that tree roots penetrate a line. occasional stop ups are consistent with tree root invasion and water will slowly pass through. Call a plumber that has a camera long enough to see the problem for sure.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If papertowels will make it through the toilet then it will definetly make it the rest of the way to the tap unless there is an obstruction along the way. The problem is likely at the conection from your main line to the city sewer tap. This connection is usually made with a ruber boot(also known as a fernco coupling )and is the first place that tree roots penetrate a line. occasional stop ups are consistent with tree root invasion and water will slowly pass through. Call a plumber that has a camera long enough to see the problem for sure.</p>
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		<title>By: Nathaniel  Wilkins</title>
		<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/comment-page-1/#comment-79</link>
		<dc:creator>Nathaniel  Wilkins</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jul 2008 13:29:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/#comment-79</guid>
		<description>I think it is clear that without TP someone used papertowels and flushed them.  They clogged the pipe.  Then it rained/snow melt and the water backed whatever was in your line and maybe a gift from the main line into your basement.  

I live in a city and the lines are 4 internally and 6 to the street but a line of over 100&#039; is unheard of here.  A line that long has lots of places for snags.  Debris will catch at snags which are especially found at junction points.  It would have been helpful to know if the junction point to the main line was problematic.  A scope would have told you this.  

You have bubbles because you have pressure in the lines.  There isn&#039;t suppose to be any.  Will it happen again?  Yes.  

Your options?  1. Talk to the town engineer.  

2. It would be best if you come armed with an engineering report.  This will cost you and the amount depends upon the testing/exploration required. If the line is scoped out again make sure you get a tape of what the scope sees for later review.  

3. The sanitary engineer you hire should suggest alternatives.  

     a. One engineering alternative is to pump all of your waste water and seal your gravity drain system.  This may have failure problems but you would never get someone elses business.  

     b. Check valves in sewer lines do not work well.  When debris gets caught in them they will not close.  A gate valve will work, but if it is manually controlled someone will have to man it at the right time.

     c. the town will have to re-engineer the main sewer lines.  Law suits are sure to be involved.  Lawyers will get rich clients will have to compromise.    

Skip all of this and move out suing the people who sold you the house.  You will still need an engineer but your lawyer might hire him. 

Flushing your lines as mentioned above is good.  I would suggest you add in a full tub or so as well.  Furthermore I would suggest you make sure this is done before any major rainstorm or once a month... but this still won&#039;t prevent the main sewer from backing up into your house.   Just what comes out first will be cleaner. 

As an aside for clean ups I use several bottles of bleach while there is still water on the basement floor.  (keeps things healthier.)  Before it is all completely subsided or afterwards rehydrate and use a wet/ dry vac set for wet pickup.

EDIT:
For my money the plumber who thinks it is a broken sewer line would have to answer the question of why, when it rains or there is snow melt, you get a sewer back up?  While a broken sewer line will be the snag that I mentioned earlier by itself it will not explain the sewer backing up under those conditions. The only explaination is the unlikely one that you don&#039;t want to hear... that there is a problem with the mains.  You may ALSO have a broken sewer line but only a blockage in the main line in the street (with all the same causes) will effect your system in this way.  (With the one exception of your also having storm runoff or roof drains going into your sewer line.  [This is currently illegal in my area and requires a separate drywell to avoid exactly this kind of problem.])</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I think it is clear that without TP someone used papertowels and flushed them.  They clogged the pipe.  Then it rained/snow melt and the water backed whatever was in your line and maybe a gift from the main line into your basement.  </p>
<p>I live in a city and the lines are 4 internally and 6 to the street but a line of over 100&#8242; is unheard of here.  A line that long has lots of places for snags.  Debris will catch at snags which are especially found at junction points.  It would have been helpful to know if the junction point to the main line was problematic.  A scope would have told you this.  </p>
<p>You have bubbles because you have pressure in the lines.  There isn&#8217;t suppose to be any.  Will it happen again?  Yes.  </p>
<p>Your options?  1. Talk to the town engineer.  </p>
<p>2. It would be best if you come armed with an engineering report.  This will cost you and the amount depends upon the testing/exploration required. If the line is scoped out again make sure you get a tape of what the scope sees for later review.  </p>
<p>3. The sanitary engineer you hire should suggest alternatives.  </p>
<p>     a. One engineering alternative is to pump all of your waste water and seal your gravity drain system.  This may have failure problems but you would never get someone elses business.  </p>
<p>     b. Check valves in sewer lines do not work well.  When debris gets caught in them they will not close.  A gate valve will work, but if it is manually controlled someone will have to man it at the right time.</p>
<p>     c. the town will have to re-engineer the main sewer lines.  Law suits are sure to be involved.  Lawyers will get rich clients will have to compromise.    </p>
<p>Skip all of this and move out suing the people who sold you the house.  You will still need an engineer but your lawyer might hire him. </p>
<p>Flushing your lines as mentioned above is good.  I would suggest you add in a full tub or so as well.  Furthermore I would suggest you make sure this is done before any major rainstorm or once a month&#8230; but this still won&#8217;t prevent the main sewer from backing up into your house.   Just what comes out first will be cleaner. </p>
<p>As an aside for clean ups I use several bottles of bleach while there is still water on the basement floor.  (keeps things healthier.)  Before it is all completely subsided or afterwards rehydrate and use a wet/ dry vac set for wet pickup.</p>
<p>EDIT:<br />
For my money the plumber who thinks it is a broken sewer line would have to answer the question of why, when it rains or there is snow melt, you get a sewer back up?  While a broken sewer line will be the snag that I mentioned earlier by itself it will not explain the sewer backing up under those conditions. The only explaination is the unlikely one that you don&#8217;t want to hear&#8230; that there is a problem with the mains.  You may ALSO have a broken sewer line but only a blockage in the main line in the street (with all the same causes) will effect your system in this way.  (With the one exception of your also having storm runoff or roof drains going into your sewer line.  [This is currently illegal in my area and requires a separate drywell to avoid exactly this kind of problem.])</p>
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		<title>By: Dominique Cross</title>
		<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/comment-page-1/#comment-78</link>
		<dc:creator>Dominique Cross</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Jul 2008 23:46:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/#comment-78</guid>
		<description>What a wonderful graphic gescription of a problem. I deduced from your question that you live in the USA. Well I live in the UK and just to let you know you are not alone here. We get the Sewer-surge too, but only when we get prolonged rain say 2/3 days. What happens here is that a lot of Surface water enters the sewer, so much so that the pipes cannot take it, the pump station cannot pump it fast enough, so we get a Back-up. This in turn back-fills the local manholes, and so the sewage continues to back up the smaller pipes. when you hear the gurgling in the pan, or the bath/tub then do not flush the toilet. When the rain stops the problem resolves itself. Normal  mis-use only creates local  blockage or partial blockage. I agree with your doubts on the statements made by the plumber re the varying size of the pipes extending to the mains, absolute rubbish. Here in Britain, the pipework from the house to the main drain is 4 no matter how distant, without problems because the regulation falls. .which are, for every 100ft run, you must have a fall of 1foot, to maintain a clean pipe. I hope this helps you with your nasty problem.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What a wonderful graphic gescription of a problem. I deduced from your question that you live in the USA. Well I live in the UK and just to let you know you are not alone here. We get the Sewer-surge too, but only when we get prolonged rain say 2/3 days. What happens here is that a lot of Surface water enters the sewer, so much so that the pipes cannot take it, the pump station cannot pump it fast enough, so we get a Back-up. This in turn back-fills the local manholes, and so the sewage continues to back up the smaller pipes. when you hear the gurgling in the pan, or the bath/tub then do not flush the toilet. When the rain stops the problem resolves itself. Normal  mis-use only creates local  blockage or partial blockage. I agree with your doubts on the statements made by the plumber re the varying size of the pipes extending to the mains, absolute rubbish. Here in Britain, the pipework from the house to the main drain is 4 no matter how distant, without problems because the regulation falls. .which are, for every 100ft run, you must have a fall of 1foot, to maintain a clean pipe. I hope this helps you with your nasty problem.</p>
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		<title>By: Tyler  Hartshorn</title>
		<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/comment-page-1/#comment-77</link>
		<dc:creator>Tyler  Hartshorn</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 26 Jul 2008 21:29:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/#comment-77</guid>
		<description>you can by a check valve so when it backs up the valve closes you should get one.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>you can by a check valve so when it backs up the valve closes you should get one.</p>
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		<title>By: Ayla Lockwood</title>
		<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/comment-page-1/#comment-76</link>
		<dc:creator>Ayla Lockwood</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Jul 2008 04:56:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/#comment-76</guid>
		<description>The storm water ( rainfall from the city streets) and waste water ( the drain lines from your house---and all the other houses in your neighborhood ) all go into the same city sewer pipe in the street. If there is too much at once then the sewers back up into the houses. When the storm is over they recede back down the drain.
 You need to put in Stand Papes in your basement. They are 2 inch pipes  about 36  inches long attached to your floor drains.
 Its the only safe thing that works.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The storm water ( rainfall from the city streets) and waste water ( the drain lines from your house&#8212;and all the other houses in your neighborhood ) all go into the same city sewer pipe in the street. If there is too much at once then the sewers back up into the houses. When the storm is over they recede back down the drain.<br />
 You need to put in Stand Papes in your basement. They are 2 inch pipes  about 36  inches long attached to your floor drains.<br />
 Its the only safe thing that works.</p>
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		<title>By: John  Sheehan</title>
		<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/comment-page-1/#comment-75</link>
		<dc:creator>John  Sheehan</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jul 2008 16:04:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/#comment-75</guid>
		<description>Sewage pipe: 1 drop per 100 feet run! Steeper than that and water &#039;runs away from waste leaving it high and dry!   Sounds as if someone somewhere has used hand towel paper and flushed, it didn&#039;t move fast enough and is now stuck in the pipe. I have no idea what your plumber told you, but you have 4 pipe to the main line, and that pipe sounds as if there is a wad of crap near the main line. I have no idea why your line was not snaked to the main, as it should have been in the first place. My suggestion is... flush your toilets ...all of them over and over...there is no one else&#039;s sewage hooked to your exit line (by code, at any rate)...this will give a washing effect to the line, and if the line is not carrying as it should, at least the water that comes back up will not have the mess in it that you have experienced. The good news is (could there be good news here?) the waste you are getting everywhere is from your own house. The only way other house&#039;s waste could come up in yours is the main is far too shallow, it is plugged (partially), and you are the low man on the totem pole. IF this happens again, I would have the city out to examine the sewage system...AND, if a plumber is called again, make sure the drain line is snaked TO THE MAIN LINE! You are being charged for insufficient work. Good luck, Goldwing</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sewage pipe: 1 drop per 100 feet run! Steeper than that and water &#8216;runs away from waste leaving it high and dry!   Sounds as if someone somewhere has used hand towel paper and flushed, it didn&#8217;t move fast enough and is now stuck in the pipe. I have no idea what your plumber told you, but you have 4 pipe to the main line, and that pipe sounds as if there is a wad of crap near the main line. I have no idea why your line was not snaked to the main, as it should have been in the first place. My suggestion is&#8230; flush your toilets &#8230;all of them over and over&#8230;there is no one else&#8217;s sewage hooked to your exit line (by code, at any rate)&#8230;this will give a washing effect to the line, and if the line is not carrying as it should, at least the water that comes back up will not have the mess in it that you have experienced. The good news is (could there be good news here?) the waste you are getting everywhere is from your own house. The only way other house&#8217;s waste could come up in yours is the main is far too shallow, it is plugged (partially), and you are the low man on the totem pole. IF this happens again, I would have the city out to examine the sewage system&#8230;AND, if a plumber is called again, make sure the drain line is snaked TO THE MAIN LINE! You are being charged for insufficient work. Good luck, Goldwing</p>
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		<title>By: Anna Phillipson</title>
		<link>http://www.soakaways.com/sewage-back-up-is-this-possible-and-if-so-howwhy-it-happened-and-how-could-we-prevent-it-from-reoccurring/comment-page-1/#comment-74</link>
		<dc:creator>Anna Phillipson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jul 2008 17:44:09 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Bucket and chuckit.    Preferably away from the house</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bucket and chuckit.    Preferably away from the house</p>
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