Good news folks. The chief electrical engineer has decided that henceforth we will not require a jumper at the water heater between the hot and cold water pipe. Apparently, the pipe is bonded well enough by faucets and there is a small likelihood that it will become energized.I don't have a problem with it either way it gets done. This rule came from the top several years ago and I have written the correction a few hundred times. At this point, most of the electricians in my area are doing it without a correction from me. I suppose that I should give them a heads up and tell them that it's not required anymore.
One of the reasons that the rule has been tossed is that many of the inspectors never paid any attention to it to begin with. It's not too hard to get behind tossing a rule that few inspectors enforce. We could toss out a bunch of the code for that reason.
A few inspectors expanded on the rule and included the gas pipe in this bonding jumper at the water heater. Yes I know that the NEC doesn't require this if there is an appliance that has both electrical and gas but how are we to know when there is no access. Well the new twist is that we are to find out about the bonding of the gas pipe via an equipment ground serving an appliance and if there is none then install a bonding jumper.
I look forward to tossing this new rule so I hope that nobody but me enforces it. Come to think of it, I know of a few corrections that I consistently find that the other inspectors aren't writing. I don't think that anybody is asking for a strap at over-bored top plates or deration of conductors for more that three in a raceway and more. I'm sorta fed up with the questions like "Since when can't a one inch conduit have 17 #12"? and "What does over-bored mean"?
I am pretty sure that the people in charge around here would say that I am in the wrong and that I should get on the same page as everyone else. And what the Hell, people aren't getting electrocuted and houses aren't burning down so why not get back in the fold?