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- How to prepare, clean up and store your spread — without the bellyache.
- Your carpet installation is a significant investment, both in monetary terms and overall home image. It is important to implement a maintenance program from the beginning.
- Home improvement expert Danny Lipford brings good news to your hot water budget.
- Studies show an estimated 32 percent of people who own a two-car garage can only get one car inside because of the clutter. Here's what to do.
- If not properly installed, maintained and operated, air duct components may become contaminated with particles of dust, pollen or other debris.
- Adding enzymes to laundry detergents provides consumers with the cleanest wash yet.
- Your water supply may require extra measures for best results.
- Barry J. Izsak - the Immediate Past President of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO) - shares some of his best organizing tips.
- Homeowners use water for many purposes, including drinking, cooking, washing, heating, humidifying, flushing (the No. 1 use of water in a home) and their pets. Those are just a few reasons homeowners should make sure they understand what’s in their water.
- Your health deserves a basic understanding of where asbestos can be found and what you should do if your home has it.
- Key to removing tough toilet bowl deposits.
- If your faucet is not flowing as freely as it should, Danny Lipford exlains how to cleanse the assembly at the spigot's end.
- There are three different technologies available today for high efficiency toilets (HET) designed to help homeowners save water and help the environment.
- Lead, rarely a concern at water's source, may indeed be present by the time that water pours out of your tap. Here's what to do.
- Save money and prevent water damage with the same techniques used to preserve the water supply.
- As a result of a recent flooding disaster, your home may look like a river ran through it. Here's what to do right away.
- Did you know that easy-to-fix household leaks could waste at least 10,000 gallons of water per year (and 10 percent of your water bill)?
- Whether you are the victim of a flood or your plumbing sprang a leak while you're on vacation, the Institute of Inspection Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) offers some helpful suggestions on what to do.
- EPA and HHS urge caution in areas exposed to contaminated flood water.
- Each year, the average American home wastes more than 10,000 gallons of water on easy-to-fix household leaks.

