This is a new one for me. This lady must have forgotten her meds.
This happened yesterday (Thursday). The staff assistant (aka secretary) was the lucky one that took the calls.
SC calls mid-morning, complaining about a frog in her toilet. How did the frog get there? More than likely it got into her house and found its way into her loo. But according to her, the frog came up thru the sewer line and into her toilet.
SC says she wants someone to come out and remove the frog, and to find out where the frog could have gotten into the sewer line.
First of all, we don't do house calls. We are CITY. If its in your house, you call a plumber to take care of it. Your property, your responsibility.
Secondly, the frog could have gotten in anywhere. There are hundreds of miles of pipe, many storm drains and lift stations where critters love to crawl into to escape the heat.
SC called 4 times that day, demanding we come fix the "problem." SC said she couldn't use the toilet because of the frog. She demanded we check the sewer lines in her neighborhood for "frog sized holes" in the lines. Umm, no.
Finally, after the last phone call, the staff assistant filled us in on the calls. The WW director was there. He's a very cool guy (kinda looks like Santa Claus). He hears the story and says "Sounds like a fire department problem. You know kitten up a tree? Well, frog in a toilet is the same thing." Then the director looks around the room, looks at me and says "Knightmare, you have the most experience with customer service. Call her back and tell her that you'll come out retrieve the frog. Then check for open manholes on her street, and look at the storm drains while you're out there."
Me: WTF? "What? No way. I don't do house calls. I got out of the customer service jazz. Send Ralph." (Ralph is the Environmental Impact guy)
Dir: *laughs* "I just wanted to see if you'd actually go do it."
Me: "Yeah, that's right... Haze the new guy."
The director calls the woman back, and tells her that we won't be coming out to get the frog. He does tell her to flush her toilet and her frog problem will "disappear."
I'm glad I don't have to deal with this malarkey any more.
This happened yesterday (Thursday). The staff assistant (aka secretary) was the lucky one that took the calls.
SC calls mid-morning, complaining about a frog in her toilet. How did the frog get there? More than likely it got into her house and found its way into her loo. But according to her, the frog came up thru the sewer line and into her toilet.
SC says she wants someone to come out and remove the frog, and to find out where the frog could have gotten into the sewer line.
First of all, we don't do house calls. We are CITY. If its in your house, you call a plumber to take care of it. Your property, your responsibility.
Secondly, the frog could have gotten in anywhere. There are hundreds of miles of pipe, many storm drains and lift stations where critters love to crawl into to escape the heat.
SC called 4 times that day, demanding we come fix the "problem." SC said she couldn't use the toilet because of the frog. She demanded we check the sewer lines in her neighborhood for "frog sized holes" in the lines. Umm, no.
Finally, after the last phone call, the staff assistant filled us in on the calls. The WW director was there. He's a very cool guy (kinda looks like Santa Claus). He hears the story and says "Sounds like a fire department problem. You know kitten up a tree? Well, frog in a toilet is the same thing." Then the director looks around the room, looks at me and says "Knightmare, you have the most experience with customer service. Call her back and tell her that you'll come out retrieve the frog. Then check for open manholes on her street, and look at the storm drains while you're out there."
Me: WTF? "What? No way. I don't do house calls. I got out of the customer service jazz. Send Ralph." (Ralph is the Environmental Impact guy)
Dir: *laughs* "I just wanted to see if you'd actually go do it."
Me: "Yeah, that's right... Haze the new guy."
The director calls the woman back, and tells her that we won't be coming out to get the frog. He does tell her to flush her toilet and her frog problem will "disappear."
I'm glad I don't have to deal with this malarkey any more.
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