P2 - Commercial Plumbing Inspector [extra: Quality]
The job ticket flashed on his tablet:
He followed the dialysis supply line—blue PEX with a certified medical stamp. Clean. Professional. Then, twenty feet later, the blue line stopped. Someone had spliced in a twelve-foot section of —the kind used for standard commercial drains and vents, never for medical water. p2 - commercial plumbing inspector
As he typed the final violation code, Leo thought of his first P2, ten years ago: a daycare with a cross-connected boiler feed. Kids had gotten sick. He’d sworn then that no shortcut would slip past his flashlight. The job ticket flashed on his tablet: He
He met the facility manager, a nervous woman named Carla, in the basement mechanical room. “The main shut-off is here,” she said, pointing to a massive gate valve. “But the problem isn’t on the prints. The night shift says the pipes sound like someone hitting them with a hammer at 2:17 AM. Every night.” Then, twenty feet later, the blue line stopped
“No,” Leo said, handing her the tablet to sign. “I’m saving your license and someone’s life. Tell the general he can explain this to the state review board.”
He backed out of the crawlspace, brushed dust off his knees, and pulled Carla aside. “Who did the renovation on 3C six months ago?”