Repair & Maintenance
Program
Age and exposure to the elements invariably cause
roof deterioration and eventually roof failure. As
a result, implementing a preventive maintenance program
to diagnose major roof problems before they occur
is critical to extend roof life, protect roof warranties
and significantly reduce emergency repairs.
Read the article below to see by properly maintaining
your roof, you will increase the life of your roof and
save thousands of dollars in unexpected costly repairs.
ROOFING: A Prescription for Savings
Managers in health care facilities discuss maintenance and inspection
strategies that benefit the bottom line — By Loren Snyder , Associate
Editor
Roof leaks in any facility can disrupt operations.
But hospitals are filled with unique work areas, such
as surgical suites, so a roof leak can have devastating
consequences, from structural damage to destruction of
expensive clinical equipment.
Worse still, institutional organizations defer envelope maintenance for
purely budgetary reasons. Many maintenance managers cite a familiar,
time-worn adage about maintenance operations in institutional settings
never earning any money — only spending it. This trend is the culprit,
they say.
Regardless of the reason, says Mike Van Wormer, director
of facilities for the Finger Lakes Health in New York,
building-improvement incentives simply are not available
like they were 15 or 20 years ago.
“ I can get incentives for lamp retrofits or cogen
applications,” he says. “But envelope incentives?
No way. Let’s face it, building envelopes just
aren’t that sexy.”
Even if envelope repairs are decidedly unsexy, regular and comprehensive
roof maintenance is incredibly important, as one hospital maintenance
manager recently learned. When a leak developed last year in the roof
above the intensive care unit of his hospital and started dripping on
a patient, he and his staff had to scramble to locate and stop the leak.
However horrifying, this anecdote illustrates the vital
role roofing maintenance plays in health care facilities.
Responsive, proactive maintenance and frequent inspections
are two ways to maximize roof performance and longevity.
But managers also should be prepared to undertake the
more difficult task of convincing administrators to set
aside a portion of the operation’s budget for capital
improvements, including roofing projects.
Roofing challenges
What’s unique about hospitals is the amount of equipment up their
roofs, Van Wormer says. But even when membrane fields are intact, riser
curbs and platforms require flashing, which can create a likely spot
for water entry.
Hospitals also differ from municipal or government-funded
buildings in the ways they use their maintenance money,
Van Wormer adds.
“ Those facilities – schools in particular – can
be notorious for ignoring physical facilities,” he
says. “Schools don’t have to be as diligent,
because in 20 years, when the current roof needs replacing,
they can set it to bond.” That’s why hospitals
need to be diligent about routine preventative maintenance — to
help conserve roofing longevity.
Rich Hertlein, manager of engineering and operations
for Cincinnati’s Bethesda North Hospital, agrees.
He says membrane roofs can shrink, and that curbs and
other roof penetrations can lead to leaks around the
flashing. As with Van Wormer’s operation, Hertlein
also has significant amounts of rooftop equipment located
in mechanical penthouses.
In addition to rooftop equipment, Hertlein says that his hospital’s
tendency to add onto existing structures can lead to leaks.
“ There hasn’t been a five-year period in
the history of the hospital when we haven’t added
on,” he says. “Part of the problem of adding
on is that we have to tie the new roof into the existing
wall system. The flashing on that part of the roofing
usually seems problematic.”
Dick Mariani, plant operations supervisor at Kenmore
(N.Y.) Mercy Hospital, has greater problems with membrane
punctures.
“ I’ve got a ballasted roof on an abutting
building that’s higher than the adjacent membrane
roof,” he says. “In strong winds, sometimes
the rocks blow down onto the membrane and then you’ve
got a leak.”
Located outside Buffalo, New York, Mariani’s
operation is subject to both high winds and heavy snow
loads. Mariani says that the weight of the snow load
also can cause debris to puncture the membrane.
Solutions
Because patient care is the foremost priority for health care organizations,
roof leaks repairs should be conducted as soon as the leak is discovered.
“ Any leak should be treated as an emergency situation,” says
Dave McCormick, assistant director of operations at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge,
and who’s responsible for the campus hospital roof
and the roofs of the school’s many research laboratories.
Beyond immediate-response efforts, managers say that
preventive maintenance, including inspections, patching
punctures and routine applications of waterproof, protective
coatings to all roof flashing, is essential for extending
roof longevity.
Regular inspections also are invaluable to a roofing
maintenance program. Managers might lament the amount
of mechanical equipment on their roofs, plus the associated
foot traffic of equipment repair personnel. But daily
foot traffic sometimes can be put to good use in making
quick visual inspections of the roof.
“ I’ve got seven air handlers up on my roof,
and the guys who go up there to work on those also check
for other problems, including roofing issues,” Mariani
says.
Hertlein and Van Wormer put staffs who service mechanical
equipment to similar use.
In addition to these informal daily inspections, managers themselves
also should perform scheduled inspections at least once annually. Savvy
managers should invite a roofing consultant or vendor – someone
who knows the roof and can answer a manager’s questions, and offer
suggestions and observations.
“ We’re lucky to have a vendor that does
some of that work for us gratis," Hertlein says. “He
identifies issues and helps us solve them, even though
we may not be looking at a roof that [his company] manufactured.
Vendors do a good job educating me, and the key is to
find someone you trust.”
Hertlein’s sentiment is common among institutional
maintenance managers. Van Wormer says that the Finger
Lakes Health System also schedules twice-annual inspections
conducted by a maintenance supervisor and local contractor.
“ We like to use vendors or contractors who are
local and who we trust,” Van Wormer says. Local
vendors know an organization’s needs and are familiar
with regional weather patterns – important considerations
to help maximize roofing performance.
Budget issues
Convincing hospital administrators that an ample budget for roofing maintenance
is necessary can be a hard sell, and it is harder still in today’s
faltering economy.
Van Wormer says that many maintenance managers face
a dilemma when it comes to receiving funding for physical
building improvements.
“ Resolution is not easily taken from a maintenance
standpoint,” he says. “We don’t make
money for the organization – we only spend it.
Ultimately, if physical buildings aren’t taken
care of because of heavy debt loads or because of deferred
maintenance, the organization is going to have problems
when building systems begin to fail.”
“ In a hospital setting, it’s not like I’m a beer can manufacturer,
and when I’ve got 92 cans coming from a line that’s supposed to spit
out 100, it’s cutting into my profits,” Mariani says. “Maintenance
just doesn’t work like that at a hospital. We’re not central to the
hospital’s ability to make money; we only spend it.
“ Patient-care priorities in a hospital must come
first, even if at the expense of other items. It’s
a juggling act where patient care must not be dropped.”
To help ensure maintenance departments receive adequate
funds for roofing maintenance, managers have adopted
some budgeting strategies.
Van Wormer says he schedules one of his twice-annual
roofing inspections shortly before capital budget requests
are due. In doing so, Van Wormer says he can note roof
conditions and know if he needs to attach additional
capital budget requests for his facilities’ roofs
He also says managers should not defer maintenance when
possible. Operations that conscientiously maintain their
facilities will be in good shape during economic slumps
and can defer some maintenance for a year or two until
the economy picks up again.
“ As debt-load increases, it becomes harder to
maintain interest on debt,” he says. “Because
most hospitals operate on a non-profit basis, they’re
confined to annual revenue. Hospitals are bound by current
fiscal status. Short-term losses are okay, of course,
as long as other sectors build non-operating revenues.
That’s why it’s so important for maintenance
departments to cut costs as much as possible.”
McCormick says it is essential to establish a fund every year for major
repair projects, including roofing.
“ The key to the program [at MIT] is that we get
defined money for roof replacements,” McCormick
says. “Not all of the money goes just to roofs;
it’s a fund for major repair projects, and some
of that money goes towards roof replacement. It’s
when you stop the money in that program that you develop
problems.”
He added that whenever MIT performs a renovation, the
facilities department folds recovering or reroofing into
the capital improvement costs of the renovation.
Ultimately, the surest way managers can maximize roofing system performance
is through relatively inexpensive regular preventive maintenance.
Hertlein says that because of routine roofing maintenance
at his organization, 15-year-old membrane roofs with
a 10-year guarantee still have intact membrane fields.
Hertlein’s case is proof positive that managers
who conduct regular preventive maintenance and respond
immediately to roof damage can extend roof longevity
and potentially postpone reroofing requests from capital
budget.
“ It’s the hidden costs that are expensive,” McCormick
says. “Fixing the problem is cheap. But potential
structural damage is expensive, or when you’ve
got leaks into laboratories or on specialized equipment.
That’s why roofing leaks can be so expensive."
“ Maintenance has to be incorporated into organizational
strategy,” Van Wormer says. [Administrators] “have
to know that physical building maintenance is vital to
their success and account for it in their budgeting strategy.”
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