Every so often, a toilet in the 3-stall restroom on my office's floor gets possessed by flushing gremlins. The toilet will flush constantly, for hours on end, until someone comes and fixes it. I've never seen toilets do this, yet these gremlins attack our little bathroom every few months.
On an environmental scale, it makes me sad, especially since my region has had ongoing water problems for years. As a matter of pure money, I can't imagine that it benefits our property management's bottom line at all. I wonder if their inability to provide functional plumbing has any affect on our lease rates?
Along the same lines, our office HVAC system is screwy. Since I spent a good amount of time editing a commercial real estate trade magazine, I know that providing consistent temperatures and a comfortable environment is notoriously hard in multi-office buildings, especially in buildings below the Class A level. Thermostats often control space in another office, and particularly if the building is older and has been fitted out repeatedly for different configurations of offices, the HVAC system loses all semblance of logic. Barring redoing the entire duct work, there's really not a solution. That's not even really a solution from a property owner's perspective, because even if all that money is spent redoing duct work, your tenant could up and leave at the end of a lease.
But what is ridiculous is that not only is the HVAC system turned off on the weekends, which is pretty common for the size and type of building, they turn it off at night. I can't possibly imagine how that is an efficient and money-saving strategy because not only are most employees who work in the building miserable on a daily basis, it has to take more energy to bring temperatures back up to bearable in the dead of winter. Sounds like they need to start reading some PF blogs :-)
It got me to thinking -- what are some of the small things we do on a regular basis that might be saving us money? Could any of them be shooting us in the foot?
- If it's yellow, let it mellow. Last year, in the midst of serious drought restrictions and the possibility of water rates going up, we went pretty hardcore with this old hippy saying. I now have to remind myself when we have guests that there's a time and place for everything. I could see this going haywire, however, if you end up with too much TP in the toilet when you finally do flush and end up having to call a plumber in for an expensive repair. I try to be conscious of the amount of toilet paper used, and will readily flush if it looks like there's too much in there.
- We line-dry probably about 25% of our clothes, and have for years. It really makes items like jeans last much longer, and I find that I like the stiffness that clothes get when they've been line-dried. I've also lost a few shirts to one of our cats, who likes to climb the drying rack. If it were a favorite or expensive blouse, I could wipe out my annual savings by having to replace clothes. The sooner I get the clothes folded, the less likely this is to happen.
- We do a good amount of bulk cooking, and it only saves us money if we actually take the time to portion out the food and vacuum-seal it. This doesn't always happen, unfortunately. It's like leftovers, sometimes it's stupidly hard to do the easiest things. I try to plan a little bit better with the timing, we most often let food go to waste when we finish cooking late at night and just don't have the energy.
- Install a programmable thermostat is wise advice often given to those looking to save money. No problems there! We have one already. That isn't programmed. We've lived in the house for 1.5 years, and still haven't programmed the thermostat. Why? No one knows. I'll spend hours updating my price book, but don't program the thermostat. And I know exactly where the manual is. In some ways, I'm just as bad as my office property managers and their toilets.






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