A student renter who just moved into a house near Weber State University and found a backed-up drain on move-in day is dealing with two problems: the drain, and the fact that they have no idea what is in the ground, no line history, and may not have landlord authorization to schedule a service call. That is the reality of the campus area — high rental turnover means most callers are new to the property, most properties have older pipe that has been rented through for decades without inspection, and the coordination path between tenant, landlord, and service provider adds a step that owner-occupied homes do not have. The Ogden campus area around Weber State University includes student rentals, apartment complexes, older single-family homes that have been converted to rentals, and small commercial spaces. Sewer camera inspection, drain cleaning, hydro jetting, and sewer line repair and replacement are all available — but the authorization and coordination come first.
Start with who you are: student renter, landlord, property manager, homeowner, or business. Then tell us the symptom — one slow drain, multiple fixtures backing up, a floor drain that overflows, or a clog that has happened before. If you are a renter, we will help you understand the scope so you can communicate it to the landlord and get service authorized. If you are a landlord managing multiple properties near campus, we can discuss a maintenance approach that catches problems between tenants instead of reacting to emergencies during the semester. Every truck carries a jetter rated to 3,850 PSI with 300 feet of hose and a camera that scopes up to 200 feet — both on the same visit.