LILLY — Jamie Hartline and his family live in a home where the winter temperature hovers around 70 degrees – yet their heating bills are less than some people’s sewer bills.
The Hartlines are part of a growing number of people in the Cambria-Somerset area heating their homes with wood or coal outdoor furnaces.
“Financially, I would do it again in a heartbeat. I don’t have any regrets,” said Hartline, who lives on the mountain overlooking Lilly. “The thing is, you have to be willing to do the work. It’s not easy.”
Morning and evening, Hartline, an elementary school teacher and a Washington Township supervisor, feeds the 38-inch box with six to eight large logs.
The fire tending is a small part of the work. He does spend much of the summer cutting firewood from the stand of hardwoods and softwoods growing on the 20-acre tract he owns around his house.
Hartline estimates it could cost as much as $3,000 a year to keep his home at 70 degrees using heating fuel. And with an initial expenditure of about $7,000, the furnace pretty much paid for itself in the first two years of operation.
But the savings go even further because his system also heats water year-round for his family of four.
The furnace work in the summer requires tending about every four days, he said.
Hartline purchased his outdoor furnace in 2005 in an initial wave of popularity repeated a few months ago when crude oil went to $150 a barrel. That price move got furnace salesman David Nolan’s phone ringing off the hook.
“There’s been a very big increase. This year (demand) has been very good,” Nolan said, estimating his workload has increased by 50 percent from 2007.
Robin Weaver, owner of Mahoning Wood Furnaces, said workers at her plant outside of Mahaffey struggle to meet the demand.
“We’ve been bombarded with orders. As soon as they’re made, they’re out the door,” Weaver said. “We’re months behind. We just can’t keep up.”
While Hartline’s costs are minimal because of readily available free timber, wood for a furnace could cost as little as $800 a year, said K.R. Zeigler, president of sales at Corle Building Systems, Imler.
Corle, a metal fabricating company with a long history in custom pre-engineered metal buildings, jumped on the outdoor furnace craze earlier this year and has doubled its projected sales.
“Last spring, we had plans to make 50 furnaces. We’ve already almost doubled our capacity,” Zeigler said.
Paul Miller, deputy director of the Northeast States for Coordinated Air Use Management, said 2005 figures – the latest available – show Pennsylvania with 11,800 outdoor furnaces. But it appears today’s figure is much higher and growing.
“When oil prices spiked (and gasoline was) $4 a gallon, there was a run on these devices,” said Miller, of the nonprofit group providing scientific data on air quality in the Northeast.
The problem is that the furnaces often are used in more densely populated areas, he said.
NESCAUM is encouraging state and local governments to adopt installation and operational standards to minimize problems.
“We got involved to try to get ahead of the curve,” Miller said.
Unlike many furnace owners, Hartline’s home is in a remote area with plenty of room between he and his neighbors.
Nolan understands the push to be free of high fuel prices.
“People can’t afford the heating oil. What are they going to do?” he said.
Common sense and consideration for the neighborhood is key, said Nolan, who is working overtime to install the furnaces he sells.
The unit needs to be away from structures, the flue needs to be tall enough to carry the smoke above the roof lines, and the fuel needs to be wood or coal.
“It’s a common-sense issue,” Nolan said.
Local News
In popularity and controversy, outdoor furnaces are heating up
- Local News
-
-
Johnstown man charged with giving fatal Methadone dose to girlfriend
A Johnstown area man has been charged in the death of his girlfriend, who died in August from an illicit drug that he allegedly gave to her while she was a patient at Indiana Regional Medical Center.
-
Somerset County teacher accused of using insulting names
School board members and administrators say they’re still investigating whether a teacher called her eighth- and ninth-grade algebra students names like “retard,” “idiot” and “moron.”
-
Seward tax preparer set to plead in federal court
A Westmoreland County tax preparer is scheduled to plead guilty or no contest to charges that he filed fraudulent income tax returns for his customers and asked some of them to lie to Internal Revenue Service investigators.
-
Blogging with heart
Anyone else have this issue: The more I know, the more I want to learn.
As I am writing my heart month stories for this week’s packages, I occasionally come across a term or description unfamiliar to me. So I look it up. And then the definition or article has something else that sounds important, so I look that up. -
Police probing financial irregularities at Indiana County parish
State police say they’re investigating financial “irregularities” at a Catholic parish with five worship sites in Indiana County, after the local diocese reported the problems to police.
-
Video: Young bear, wolf play together
It’s like something out of a children's book: A bear cub meets a wolf cub and they become the best of friends. Even though they are different species and ferocious predators, the unlikely couple stays pals for life.
-
Two Cambria district judge offices to be cut
Two of Cambria County’s 10 magisterial districts could be eliminated as President Judge Timothy Creany looks at realigning boundaries to cut costs while taking into consideration caseloads of the district judges and population changes.
-
Westmont couple inseparable, even in death
People who knew James and Marjorie Landis of Westmont said the two were nearly always together.
-
Company buys valuables from people ready to unload
Jan Hagerich’s buffalo nickel was “healthy” – which was unhealthy for her finances.
-
Special Olympics return to region
More than 300 athletes eager to show off their skills, along with 135 coaches, will be coming to the region to take part in the 2012 Special Olympics Pennsylvania Winter Games.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Johnstown man charged with giving fatal Methadone dose to girlfriend






