There's an internet myth about a $10,000 fine for backfeeding a residence with a generator.
I have searched and searched my state and other states and federal code for a statute that imposes such a fine and have found nothing.
In fact the Governor of NJ has a web page discussing exactly the topic of back feeding and nowhere is there a mention of any fines.
The governor implores people to use caution and to do it using an electrician.
I think the whole fine thing is a fiction of the power companies.
It is a fact is that if one fails to disconnect the generator backfed house from the mains coming in from the utility service that very bad things can happen including loss of life for some poor sod who takes for granted that the power is going to be down and fails to test a line before servicing it. Bad day for him.
The result can be death for him and very possibly a species of manslaughter or homicide charges for the homeowner who set the genny up. Certainly his family will sue the living begeebus out of the homeowner.
Then there's your insurance company which will probably refuse to pay claiming that you were doing something prohibited by code and that's why the house burnt.
Any given state or town may have code violations it can pursue too.
But I've never seen a $10,000 fine anywhere other than in various internet forums where some poster just believes it to be true and repeats it like it was gospel.
There's one in this forum from 2010 claiming to know about this fine.
If on the off chance you know of a statute in any state or at federal that provides for this $10,000 fine I would very much like to learn what state, code section, and title it is under.
I haven't found it and I do not believe it exists.
What put me on to this was a self proclaimed expert unspooling me some 4 wire #6 multistrand in a home depot ( to use as a backfeeding cord) who adamantly insisted that, if caught, I'd face this mythical fine. I didn't challenge him, he didn't need to hear my resume. And of course I am not an expert in residential electrical code. Hell I barely know it exists. But, It seemed such a huge fine and he seemed to adamant and he was knowledgeable about the things an electrician needed to be knowledgeable about.
So, not wanting to be the dummy who didn't look into things, I went to my sources and sought out this fine and found nothing.
Maybe it's got nothing to do with generators per se but rather it's tied to a person screwing around with the power and harming some one or some thing? Maybe using backfeeding as the dominant search ?
Kansas has this:
17-1907 and 17-1908 wich has a $500 fine and a year in prison
MD has
Section 6-303 - Public utility interference - Electrical equipment.
Which has a $500 fine
TX has title 43 and 49 and it has fines
CA has similar statutes with fines
But no Tend Grand fines have I found.
I have searched and searched my state and other states and federal code for a statute that imposes such a fine and have found nothing.
In fact the Governor of NJ has a web page discussing exactly the topic of back feeding and nowhere is there a mention of any fines.
The governor implores people to use caution and to do it using an electrician.
I think the whole fine thing is a fiction of the power companies.
It is a fact is that if one fails to disconnect the generator backfed house from the mains coming in from the utility service that very bad things can happen including loss of life for some poor sod who takes for granted that the power is going to be down and fails to test a line before servicing it. Bad day for him.
The result can be death for him and very possibly a species of manslaughter or homicide charges for the homeowner who set the genny up. Certainly his family will sue the living begeebus out of the homeowner.
Then there's your insurance company which will probably refuse to pay claiming that you were doing something prohibited by code and that's why the house burnt.
Any given state or town may have code violations it can pursue too.
But I've never seen a $10,000 fine anywhere other than in various internet forums where some poster just believes it to be true and repeats it like it was gospel.
There's one in this forum from 2010 claiming to know about this fine.
If on the off chance you know of a statute in any state or at federal that provides for this $10,000 fine I would very much like to learn what state, code section, and title it is under.
I haven't found it and I do not believe it exists.
What put me on to this was a self proclaimed expert unspooling me some 4 wire #6 multistrand in a home depot ( to use as a backfeeding cord) who adamantly insisted that, if caught, I'd face this mythical fine. I didn't challenge him, he didn't need to hear my resume. And of course I am not an expert in residential electrical code. Hell I barely know it exists. But, It seemed such a huge fine and he seemed to adamant and he was knowledgeable about the things an electrician needed to be knowledgeable about.
So, not wanting to be the dummy who didn't look into things, I went to my sources and sought out this fine and found nothing.
Maybe it's got nothing to do with generators per se but rather it's tied to a person screwing around with the power and harming some one or some thing? Maybe using backfeeding as the dominant search ?
Kansas has this:
17-1907 and 17-1908 wich has a $500 fine and a year in prison
MD has
Section 6-303 - Public utility interference - Electrical equipment.
Which has a $500 fine
TX has title 43 and 49 and it has fines
CA has similar statutes with fines
But no Tend Grand fines have I found.