• Welcome to the FREE TUGBBS forums! The absolute best place for owners to get help and advice about their timeshares for more than 32 years!

    Join Tens of Thousands of other owners just like you here to get any and all Timeshare questions answered 24 hours a day!
  • TUG started 32 years ago in October 1993 as a group of regular Timeshare owners just like you!

    Read about our 32nd anniversary: Happy 32nd Birthday TUG!
  • TUG has a YouTube Channel to produce weekly short informative videos on popular Timeshare topics!

    All subscribers auto-entered to win all free TUG membership giveaways!

    Visit TUG on Youtube!
  • TUG has now saved timeshare owners more than $24,000,000 dollars just by finding us in time to rescind a new Timeshare purchase! A truly incredible milestone!

    Read more here: TUG saves owners more than $24 Million dollars
  • Wish you could meet up with other TUG members? Well look no further as this annual event has been going on for years in Orlando! How to Attend the TUG January Get-Together!
  • Now through the end of the year you can join or renew your TUG membership at the lowest price ever offered! Learn More!
  • Sign up to get the TUG Newsletter for free!

    Tens of thousands of subscribing owners! A weekly recap of the best Timeshare resort reviews and the most popular topics discussed by owners!
  • Our official "end my sales presentation early" T-shirts are available again! Also come with the option for a free membership extension with purchase to offset the cost!

    All T-shirt options here!
  • A few of the most common links here on the forums for newbies and guests!

Are you flushing those supposedly "flushable" wipes?

T_R_Oglodyte

TUG Lifetime Member
Joined
Jun 6, 2005
Messages
17,251
Reaction score
9,458
Location
Mucky Toe, WA
You really shouldn't be ....

 
Unless you have an unlimited budget for plumbers and Roto-Rooter, DON'T.
Or if you like to pay more fees for discharge to your local sewerage agency or you like to see public sewers plug up and overflow more often.
 
People are flushing wipes like crazy these days. Even before the covid 19 toilet paper shortage these wipes have been a problem. I had a call on one of our rentals that the toilet wasn't working. I went over to see what was going on and used a cable to try to unclog the line. First pull was a cable covered in wipes. This didn't clear it. I have a power cable but it wouldn't go through and forcing it usually has bad results. Had to hire out and have the guys dig up the sewer line clean out as the clean out was totally plugged at the baffle. What a mess.

Interesting is that the wipes claim to be flush-able on the package. I know this because I wanted to charge the renters for the clog and they claim these were flush-able because the label said so. The cost was about $500. An amendment was signed to actually state what is permissible to flush, lol.

Bill
wipes.jpg
 
I know this because I wanted to charge the renters for the clog and they claim these were flush-able because the label said so. The cost was about $500. An amendment was signed to actually state what is permissible to flush, lol.

Bill
When they put "flushable" on the label, all that means is that it won't clog the toilet - in other words, that it can be flushed. It indicates nothing about what happens after it leaves the toilet.

Travelers in Latin America should be aware of the difference - in almost all areas TP isn't supposed to go in the toilets either, because of clogging issues.
 
If I hadn't seen the clog with my own eyes I would not believe these wipes turn into a big wad of hard paper machete. The wording in the rental contracts says no foreign objects in the toilet and gives some examples which now include all wipes and paper products except regular toilet paper.

The sinks drains have verbiage about what is acceptable and not acceptable going down the drain. We had one guy put paint down a drain and it hardened to cause a clog. Another guy washed Fix All down the drain and it floated up to the bathtub drain. His wife called to tell me there was a white rock in the bathtub drain.

All of these people were and are very good renters. I put these in the s### happens file, lol.

Bill
 
 
Had RotoRooter come out for a blockage. “Flushable” wipes and roots both were the culprits. Since it was a fixed price that was probably based just on a root clearance, I suspect they lost on this one since they planned on two hours and were here for four. No more “Flushable” in my plumbing systems.

Cheers
 
No Flushable wipe here. . They are going into a special trash bag. No "Flushable wipes in our septic tank system."
 
Last edited:
Our sewer department has said even tissues should not be flushed. They don't dissolve like tp.
Good idea to put this in rental agreements. I'm sure most people have no idea.
 

"“There’s no such thing as a flushable wipe,” says Clean Water Services chief of staff Mark Jockers, “even the ones that say they’re flushable.” "
 
As noted upthread, "flushable" only means that the wipe will not get stuck in the toilet bowl. It doesn't mean that they are compatible with a sewer system.
Congress is starting to take notice. House appropriators this week included language in the fiscal 2022 Financial Services and General Government bill report that calls on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate the marketing claims of flushable wipe manufacturers and make sure companies aren't misrepresenting the nature of their products.

House appropriators noted in the bill that the FTC in 2015 hammered out a consent order with Nice-Pak Products Inc., a maker of wet wipes, in which the company agreed to stop advertising moist toilet tissue as flushable unless it could substantiate that the product is safe to flush.

In addition, Nice-Pak will stop providing trade customers, such as retailers, with information to make such unsubstantiated claims. Costco, CVS, Target, and BJ’s Wholesale Club were Nice-Pak customers that sold the formulation of the company’s moist toilet tissue that was the subject of the complaint under their own private labels.

Nice-Pak logo, 'breaks apart after flushing'
“The evidence didn’t back up Nice-Pak’s claims that their wipes were safe to flush,” said Jessica Rich, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “If you claim a product is flushable, it needs to flush in the real world, without clogging household plumbing or sewer and septic systems.”

According to the FTC’s complaint, Nice-Pak violated the FTC Act by misrepresenting that a certain formulation of its wipes: 1) are safe for sewer systems; 2) are safe for septic systems; 3) break apart shortly after being flushed; and 4) are safe to flush. The FTC also alleges Nice-Pak provided the means and instrumentalities for retailers and others that marketed the product under their own label to make similar misrepresentations. The company’s tests did not reflect, real world household plumbing or septic conditions, the FTC alleged.
 
Last edited:
New Michigan law bans ‘flushable’ label on most bathroom wipes

LANSING, MI — They are the bane of wastewater treatment operators everywhere. Bathroom wipes, which are known for clogging sewage systems, can no longer be labeled as “flushable” in Michigan unless they pass certain requirements following passage of a new state law.

Public Act 43 of 2024 prohibits manufacturers from marketing most wipes as “flushable” and, instead, requires packaging include the words ‘Do Not Flush’ and a symbol dissuading people from throwing them in the toilet.
The law applies to any “premoistened nonwoven disposable wipe” that is composed “entirely or in part of petrochemical-derived fibers” and is “likely to be used in a bathroom and has significant potential to be flushed.” Violators can be fined.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer signed the bill into law May 22.
 
Bidet toilet seats are better. I wish resorts all had 'em.
 
Top