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Well, at least they'll get their money's worth out of it. Before shutting it down, they'll use it right to the...right to it. Paves on. Yeah, that's how they do things here. It's a shame. That happens in all the big cities. It's just not happening here. No one wants to spend any money on the stuff. No, you're a plumber. This just happened to me when I lived in a high rise. My cousins, they had several high rises in Montreal that they take care of. And one day, I turned on the water one morning, and I smelled it right away. It smelled like crap. And it was brown, the whole sink. And then everybody in the building found out that the...I think it was the water pipe leaked in somehow sewerage. And I can't understand how sewerage can leak into a water pipe, but it did. Not only that, but it brought in sand and sediment. And it got in all the plumbing, you know, all the... Had to be all clean because of the...you know plumbing, you know, you hit all the washers and stuff. All that sand got in there, and it could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Just a big, sad-looking building. Luckily, the city of Montreal dropped us off drinking water every day. But man, you could even take a shower in it because it smelled like...it smelled like something, you know. Holy crap, I don't know how the sewage would get mixed in, but the sand and stuff happens almost every time there's a water main break. When they go to repair it, the pipes always end up like half full of sand and silt, and it all gets blown up into the building. It's crazy. You've got to change all the faucets and all the screens and all of this. It's a nightmare.

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