By lunch time things were looking great. Kendall had finished painting the dining room, Mai and I had finished a coat of paint in the upstairs bathroom and it was covering well. All we had left was to cut three pieces of base shoe, install them along the stairs, caulk the downstairs bathroom, touch-up painting, reattach the sink to the wall upstairs… etc. Maybe we were a little ahead of ourselves and looking back now, I don’t know why we thought we’d get out of there early.
I rinsed my hands in the sink after caulking the joint and instantly heard the water flow onto the bathroom floor. Shutting off the water and looking behind the sink I discovered the tail of the drain was no longer attached to the trap. It had broken at a thread.
The next three hours were full of phone calls, the generous help of three site supervisors, and thankfully a fixed drain! As Kendall and I were on our way to Menards to pick up a new part, I had a moment to step away and saw the situation as a blessing. The piece could have dislodged or started leaking at any moment and the fact that it happened with us there; we were able to save the homeowner the cost of a plumber and the supplies… not to mention we learned something about plumbing.
After nine hours out on site, we returned to the office for a final surprise. A taxi van had tried to turn around and sunk into a pile of snow and ice. Kendall and Mai were on top of helping the guys get out. It took four of us rocking the vehicle to finally get it out of the rut. The two guys thanked us for being their saviors that evening. I had to laugh. If everything that happened earlier that day hadn’t occurred, we would have never been there for those two guys. It was another day as an AmeriCorps; we were getting things done for America.
-Kelly McDermott
Get more information about AmeriCorps positions with Twin Cities Habitat for Humanity.