The hose that empties the washer into the ssink is exactly the one I'm talking 
about!
When the water drains from the hose that's connected to the washing machine, 
all that water comes back up through the drain in our laundry room!

Claudia

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Victor Gouveia 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, January 18, 2008 9:39 PM
  Subject: Re: [Bulk] Re: [BlindHandyMan] Very Upset Here!


  Hi Claudia,

  You said that you were emptying out the contents of the bucket into the 
  basin or sink.

  Is that basin or sink close enough that you can run the hose directly into 
  it, and if it is, is it large enough to hold the water that will be 
  generated by a large load?

  If it isn't large enough to accommodate a large load of laundry, will 
  accommodate a small load, that you can do for the time being?

  While you figure out the above, you may want to consider giving your local 
  FHA or HUD division a call to see if there are any programs you would be 
  qualified for.

  If you own the home, especially if both you and your husband are disabled, 
  there should be a few subsidy programs you would qualify for. These 
  subsidies may take the form of a low interest or no interest loan for the 
  repairs, or an outright grant to help with any modifications.

  Your state department may have similar programs you may want to look at 
  also.

  Some state programs are funded by the state, but are managed or overseen by 
  your municipal or county governments.

  Up here in Toronto, we have a number that we can call, a few numbers 
  actually, which provide all kinds of information like this.

  One is a local number called 211 Toronto, where a person dials the numbers 
  211 on any hard wired telephone and you get an operator who can give you 
  access to a library of social programs available to anyone in the city.

  Our federal, provincial and municipal governments all have general 
  information telephone numbers that you call, tell them what kind of 
  information or government program you are looking for, and they give you the 
  number you can call to get more information on that particular program.

  In many cases, if you don't know the exact program you are looking for, 
  these numbers also have detailed search programs that will look for certain 
  key words detailing the problem you are having, and they can give you a list 
  of possibilities to choose from.

  I'm not saying that these things are available in Toronto to brag or 
  anything, what I'm saying is that there must be telephone numbers of the 
  sort I outlined above that will give you the same, if not a similar service 
  to what I'm talking about in your area.

  There are also private charities that will help you with the funds you need 
  to make these kinds of repairs. A few that come to mind are the Lion's Club 
  and Habitat for Humanity.

  You might also want to try the local United Way, to see if they have any 
  programs that would help you look for and access this funding, or even 
  provide the funding outright.

  The way I figure it, if you feel you're above charity, just how above the 
  level of water are you when you're standing in three feet of water in the 
  basement? Grin.

  Anyway, hope it all works out for you.

  Victor Gouveia 



   

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