MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,253
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
According to Bill's recounting of the rules his burn pile size requires an inspection. Regardless of how many days the permit is valid for, it would be most useful to be on-hand when that inspection happens. I doubt he was waiting all that day for that inspection if he was told they were not coming, coming tomorrow, or two days later or whenever. The life of the permit is superfluous if he can't get the inspection done.
It sounds like it wasn't made clear when/how the inspection would take place. He requested something that didn't happen and apparently was lead to believe it would. That's wrong. Bill shouldn't have to play 20 Questions with someone to drag the process and timing out of the people who administer the rules. How would anyone even know what questions need to be asked?
If there is a set of rules to follow then the township & fire dept. need to make that work in a reasonable way. For burning that means next half-day or next day in my mind to be useful in planning for the weather. If it is worth inspecting then it's worth setting a time for when that will happen. If that falls through, then phone. It's simple courtesy.
I am teasing you about "lawyer talk" because your questions won't fix the core problem but seem to attempt to excuse the failure.
Had he gone to the township hall and:
Said "I need a burn permit, please".
Asked "When will the inspector come out?"
Asked "Once issued the permit, how long before it expires."
Said "Thanks."
That's two simple questions, not 20.