Home Repairs That Can't Wait
by Courtney Ronan
If you're a homeowner, then you know that the old adage "bad things happen in
threes" is true. You wake up one morning and open your dishwasher. Although you started a
wash cycle before you headed to bed last night, your dishes are still dirty. Later that
morning, you toss a load of laundry in your washing machine and hit the start button. Ten
minutes later, you're frightened out of your wits by a loud knocking noise. It's your washing
machine, doing the laundry day boogie across the floor. You shut off the machine with your
clothes still sopping wet. But that's not all. A couple of days later, in the midst of a hot
summer afternoon, your freezer quits. Anyone who's survived a freezer outage in the summertime
has an intimate knowledge of what spoiled meat smells like. It's a smell you won't soon
forget, although you'd love to. You're faced with the chore of cooking as many thawing entrees
as you can, or tossing them - and your hard-earned money - away.
Welcome to the wonderful world of homeownership. And yes, although such scenarios can and
do happen to apartment renters, when disaster strikes, those folks need merely pick up the
phone and call maintenance. In your case, it's your financial responsibility, which is tough
transition for us first-time homeowners to accept.
Not all home catastrophes are this pressing, of course. Some are merely aesthetic in nature
- for example, peeling paint on your French doors. Some are very important but not potentially
catastrophic, such as a drafty window. When money doesn't allow you to address everything at
once that needs repair, how do you decide what to repair first? Just as you prioritized your
wish list of home improvements, you'll need to do the same with your home repairs. What must
be fixed now, and what can wait? First of all, you can probably avoid this dilemma altogether
if you tend to the ongoing maintenance needs of your home on a regular, seasonal basis. That
includes such projects as having your chimneys cleaned and clearing your air conditioning unit
of excess twigs, leaves and branches. But sometimes, even the most careful homeowners are
faced with multiple repairs. And sometimes it's not a matter if what's most pressing; it's a
matter of what's most expensive. Your budget tells you what comes now and what must wait until
later.
At the same time, however, you'll need to run down a list of questions to determine if your
problem is of such consequence that immediate action isn't an option, but rather a necessity.
The first question you must answer is if the area of your home in need of repair is placing
you and your family's safety at risk. The answer is "yes" not just to obvious
problems like high readings on your carbon monoxide detector. It's also yes when the lock on
your sliding glass door breaks, allowing the door to be shoved open with relative ease. Or
when electrical outlets are broken or damaged. Or when the padlock on the backyard gate is
missing. Or when the fence begins to lean slightly. These are all problems that demand your
immediate attention.
You'll also need to consider if the source of the problem is isolated, or if it involves a
larger system or area; for example, a crack in your foundation, leaky pipes, electric sockets
that don't work in one room, an air conditioner that seems to work hard but leave you and your
home overheated, or a roof that seems to leak in various spots throughout your home on a
frequent basis. You can't ignore your foundation; its integrity is vital to your home's
health. And although you might be tempted to ignore that constantly running air conditioner,
you're wasting a considerable amount money on electricity without enjoying the benefits. In
this case, it's a quality of life issue, too, if the temperature of your home is
uncomfortable.
Another important question to ask yourself: Are you either experiencing water damage, or do
you have reason to believe you could be risking water damage? Cracks in your foundation and
brown spots on the ceiling are dead giveways of either hidden damage or the potential for
further water damage. If you suspect this could be a problem, the time to respond - in other
words, call a professional to survey your home - is now. The longer you wait, the more damage
the water could cause your home, and the more expensive the consequences.
A drafty window may not bother you at first; after all, you can just put on a sweater and
forget about it ... until your heating bill arrives, that is. A drafty window or door (a very
common household problem which is easily and typically inexpensive to repair) is more pressing
than you might think because it's forcing your home heating system to work longer and harder
to compensate for cold-air entry. Merely caulking around your doors and windows could produce
significant bottom-line savings for you.
So which repairs are considered aesthetic? It's ironic that these less vital repairs are
the ones that command our attention as homeowners. They're usually the ones we can see - the
ones that "bother" us and call for our attention now. But if you're on a limited
budget, you'll want to place on the back burner such projects as a chipped doorframe (unless
it's an exterior doorframe), a scratched or burned countertop, a coil on your stove that stops
working, or sheetrock in your skylight that's beginning to exhibit the first signs of peeling.
These projects are important, to be sure, but when you're attempting to prioritize your home
repairs, you'll want to keep these jobs at the bottom of your list - for the time being, at
least.
It's easy to put off vitally important home repairs when the problem isn't constantly
staring us in the face (for example, a crack in your home's foundation). We don't witness the
consequences immediately, and so it's easy to procrastinate calling a professional and
spending the money to rectify the problem. But putting such repairs off can be costly not only
because they compound with time, but also in the sense that such problems as leaning fences,
roof leaks and electrical shortages could in fact be indicative of serious safety issues.
Repairs never come at a good time. So after resigning yourself to that fact of life, create
your priority list and open your wallet now ... reminding yourself that you're probably saving
money in the long run by addressing the problems now. |